Food stamp cuts are ideological, not fiscal: Republicans make the poor pay to balance the budget
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/11/04/food-stamp-cuts-are-ideological-not-fiscal-republicans-make-the-poor-pay-to-balance-the-budget/
Food stamp cuts are ideological, not fiscal: Republicans make the poor pay to balance the budget
By Gary Younge, The Guardian
Monday, November 4, 2013 13:58 EST
During a discussion at the University of Michigan in 2010, the billionaire vice-chairman of Warren Buffetts Berkshire Hathaway firm, Charles Munger, was asked whether the government should have bailed out homeowners rather than banks. Youve got it exactly wrong, he said. Theres danger in just shovelling out money to people who say, My life is a little harder than it used to be. At a certain place youve got to say to the people, Suck it in and cope, buddy. Suck it in and cope.
~snip~
In the five years since the financial crisis took hold, people have been sucking it in by the lungful and discovering how pitiful a coping strategy that is.
In Michigan, the state where Munger spoke, black male life expectancy is lower than male life expectancy in Uzbekistan; in Detroit, the closest big city, black infant mortality is on a par with Syria (before the war).
As such, the crisis accelerated an already heinous trend of growing inequalities.
Over a period of 18 years, Americas white working class particularly women have started dying younger. Absent a war, genocide, pandemic, or massive governmental collapse, drops in life expectancy are rare, wrote Monica Potts in the American Prospect last month. But this was a war on the poor. Lack of access to education, medical care, good wages and healthy food isnt just leaving the worst-off Americans behind. Its killing them.
This particular crisis, however, has also accentuated the contradictions between the claims long made for neoliberalism and the systems ability to deliver on them. The culture of capitalism, to which Munger referred, did not die but thrived precisely because it was not forced to adapt, while working people who kept it afloat through their taxes and now through cuts in public spending struggle to survive. Given the broad framing of economic struggles in the west exacerbated by the crisis, this reality is neither new nor specific to the US. Over the past 30 years the workers take from the pie has shrunk across the globe, explains an editorial in the latest Economist. The scale and breadth of this squeeze are striking
When growth is sluggish
workers are getting a smaller morsel of a smaller slice of a slow-growing pie.