Food Stamps for College Kids

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Let them eat baked potatoes.

Maybe I better explain.

I came across an interesting article at The Daily Caller Web site: more college kids are qualifying for food stamps.

Whereas government-funded grub has long been available to the working poor, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), through its Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), is eagerly expanding such benefits to college kids, too.

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Cartoon by Jeff Parker – Florida Today (Click to purchase)

For starters, says The New York Times, the USDA has worked to take the stigma out of receiving government grub. It now calls food stamps “nutritional aid.”

Recipients who once received actual stamps now receive a plastic card. It looks and works like a debit card. Only you and your grocer know who is really picking up the tab.

Though it’s not like college kids feel stigmatized by food stamps. Many can’t believe their good fortune.

That’s because the USDA has made it easy for them, regardless of their socioeconomic background, to qualify. Many college kids are “poor” on paper even if they’re from well-to-do homes.

And if they live at home with Mom and Dad, they still may qualify — so long as they can show that Mom and Dad prepare only half of their meals.

And so it is that many are receiving a few hundred bucks a month in free grub.

I surely could have used such assistance during my Penn State days in the early ’80s, but those were the unenlightened Reagan years, when many college kids WOULD have felt stigmatized for accepting handouts.

Boy, was I broke.

When school was in session, I worked as a cook, janitor, bouncer and grass cutter. I managed the dump of a rooming house where I lived.

We had a community kitchen and never locked the doors (the cockroaches needed to come and go, too!).

One day after I’d earned just enough dough to buy fresh sliced turkey and bread, the lunch-meat thief struck — no sandwich for me.

We never caught the jerk, but he surely suffered no stigma for receiving handouts.

I concocted what I thought was a clever strategy to spend less money at the pub. I sold my plasma twice a week — they drew my blood, spun off the plasma, then gave me back the rest — and I always planned my donations around happy hours.

Lightheaded, my blood thickened, one beer had the effect of three. My bar-tab savings were enormous.

The only food assistance I recall receiving came from Ralph, one of our rooming-house tenants.

Ralph was in his late 20s — he’d earned his degree years before but his mother wouldn’t let him return to the family farm until he found a wife – and he spent all of his time baking potatoes.

They sat all over the house.

The wrinkly spuds didn’t look very appetizing, but to a fellow stumbling into the kitchen low on plasma and high on Budweiser, they may as well have been the finest cuts of filet mignon.

Ralph’s “bakers” got me through my senior year of college.

In any event, it would appear our government is eager to get more people hooked on government handouts — President Obama’s latest budget includes $72.5 billion for food stamps, almost double the amount from 2008.

And while most college kids figure they’d be dumb not to accept free grub if we taxpayers are dumb enough to let our government to pay for it, I offer a different take.

Nobody minds when his tax dough is used to help the working poor and others who are truly in need, but food stamps for college kids?

Let the spoiled moochers eat baked potatoes.

—–

©2010 Tom Purcell. Tom Purcell, a humor columnist for the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, is nationally syndicated exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. For more info contact Cari Dawson Bartley at 800 696 7561 or email [email protected]. Visit Tom on the web at www.TomPurcell.com or e-mail him at [email protected].


Comments

17 responses to “Food Stamps for College Kids”

  1. Cal Avatar
    Cal

    “Nobody minds when his tax dough is used to help the working poor and others who are truly in need, but food stamps for college kids? Let the spoiled moochers eat baked potatoes.”

    That was a long road to “we’re seeing the nanny state expand right before our very eyes” but he did make his point.

    Why wouldn’t we want these “children” taken care of? If we’re going to be able to coddle them until they’re 27 on our health insurance policy why not give them taxpayer money for food while they’re in college? I mean, do you expect them to actually get jobs a help pay their own way through school? How callous is that, Purcell? You probably even want these children to pay back their student loans, don’t you Purcell? You’re a heartless sob, Tom.

    I heard the president say, “I do think that at some point you’ve earned enough money in America.” WTF, over? Did the president of the United States (who made roughly 5 MILLION dollars himself last year) actually say that?? How much is too much you arrogant dolt? Does Oprah make too much? How about Tom Hanks? Tiger Woods? And who are you of ALL people to even make such a statement to the people of this country? This is like AlGorithm who just bought a $9 million home near Santa Barbara lecturing us on reducing our carbon footprint. Gee, I wonder how Big Al is gonna get to and from the crib? That’s right! His own private jet! How else?

    How can you liberals stomach these pompous, hypocritical dirt bags? Excuse me. I mean these two-faced politicians. (I almost forgot I was talking about the Anointed One and the previous Side Kick.)

  2. Glen Avatar
    Glen

    Ah, the good old days of student hood. I can remember fellow students selling blood. I was a bit squeemish for that, However, I was able to gain addtional nourishment by playing cards for money while a graduate student at McGill. I was not a particularly good player, I simply had to find a rubber bridge table where the players were worse than I was. At low stakes, I was able to eat meat at least once a week. Perhaps we should tighten up a bit on the food stamps though. We need the blood!

  3. Joey Bidumb Avatar
    Joey Bidumb

    OBambi, the Great Prevaricator and Divider, had a SWAT team out on the streets of sleepy Quincy, IL in the event the Tea Party Protesters got out of hand….Isn't that little Nerdturd, Booby Fibbs, armed???? O.B.A.M.A.= One Big Ass Mistake, America…………..

  4. Lee Avatar

    Bull feathers when you are a student you need to eat. There is no shame in accepting food stamps. I took them for my wife and kids while I was in college. I could have worked at Mc Donalds and never gotten out of school. Last year I paid $22 K in taxes more than enough to pay back any food stamps I ever got. Being hungry in a bitch. Not being able to take you kid to the doctor when he or she is sick is worse. Thank you Barack Obama or I won't mention the things you did the first week you were in office for the enviroment. You may not be the best president ever but you are on a good start. No if you can nail those Goldman Sac scoundrels to the wall you legacy will be complete and you still have a lot of time left.

  5. Ann Avatar
    Ann

    I graduated from a 2yr college years ago at the age of 20. I am now looking to make a career change and am in college again to do so. My schedule in school makes it impossible for me to work more than just weekends at my job, and my coursework is heavy enough that I need the time after school to study. I can see where it is not such a bad idea to give theese kids food stamps. Many colleges now prohibit freshman from having a car on campus, and on campus jobs are limited usually to students who are enrolled through work-study programs so jobs on campus are hard to come by. It may just encourage these kids to eat more nutritionally as well since most college kids cannot afford to buy real food. On the same note, the food stamps should only go to college students who do NOT live in dorms since students who live in dorms pay a hefty stipend for food…my cousin pays 1500.00 per semester for his kid.

    I consider myself lucky that my boss will work around my school schedule but the reality is that with so many people who are out of work today and DO want a job, he doesnt have to do this. Im just fortunate in that respect. Not everyone will get that kind of a boss.

  6. mole Avatar
    mole

    What happened in Purcell's life that made him what he is? Look at ME – I ate baked potatoes and sold my blood to get through school, so YOU don't need help in getting a decent meal either. How does helping students get them "hooked on government handouts"? These "moochers" will graduate with a degree that will help them into a career where they will pay back their "free grub" many times over.

    There is one refreshing bit of news in Purcell's rant. He doesn't mind his "tax dough" going to help the working poor. It's great to see that under that crusty uncaring veneer lies a generous heart.

  7. grace Avatar
    grace

    not every college student is from a well to do home. i sure as hell am not. i accepted them, but when i started making more money and was more able to provide for myself, i told them and they cut them off. not everyone who gets food stamps are "moochers."

  8. Brenda Avatar
    Brenda

    Isn't receiving food stamps and going to college somehow and oxymoron? Seriously.

  9. Phil Avatar
    Phil

    How much of the college food stamp dollars will actually be spent on nutritional foods? Observe card recipients at your local convenience store and you will be shocked to see that everything and anything goes on the card including soda pop, cigarettes, candy, potato chips, and lottery tickets. I wonder, if a food stamp recipient wins the lottery using my tax dollars, can I share in the winnings?

  10. GoMoJo Avatar

    Phil:

    You can't purchase cigarettes and lottery tickets with food stamps. (http://usgovinfo.about.com/od/federalbenefitprograms/a/foodstamps.htm)

  11. geoff Avatar
    geoff

    GoMoJo: in Phil's paranoid fantasies you can.

  12. Leon Avatar
    Leon

    Just a quick comment.

    When I was in college, there were certain federal guidelines a student had to meet in order to be considered independent.

    – Over 25 years old

    – Married

    – Primary guardian of a minor

    – 18 year old former ward of the state.

    – Military Veteran.

    What the author fails to mention is whether these requirements would, which I suspect, apply to food stamp recipients. If they do, how does this make them any different from any other food stamp receipients. Actually, they should be encouraged to get a degree so they and their children can get off food stamps.

  13. Akuin Avatar
    Akuin

    Okay I gotta respond to this article…My family is -welll to do- on paper, and in debt in real life…I would have been damn grateful for those food stamps. I'm not some spoiled rich college kid I have to get Financial Aide to attend school, I work my butt off! Who the hell are you to make generalizations about College kids eh? All the college attendees I met are parents working two or more jobs with several kids and could have used the help too in bettering themselves. Wouldn't have stopped them working, but it might have given them the extra they needed to quit that second or third job so they could spend time with their children! (oh and these folks are usually in their 30s and 40s).

    There are always gonna be spoiled rich jerks scamming the tax payers but seriously! Don't paint us all with the same brush and pull up your big boy panties boohoo so things were harder for you big friggan deal all this makes you sound like is a pretty jealous man.

  14. MikeM Avatar
    MikeM

    When good old Tom went to college, it might still have been possible for students to work their way through without accumulating enormous debts. Back then, state legislatures still provided substantial enough subsidies to public universities to allow them to keep tuition low. Nearly half the "full time" students at public universities today work 20 hours or more a week outside of college. They don't have time to study and learn properly. Their courses get dumbed down so they can pass, and the quality of their degrees diminish.

    Cutting subsidies for public education at all levels in order to reduce the tax burden was a bad idea. Providing food stamps helps those serious students who otherwise could not afford to attend full time.

    Yeah, yeah, I also know some take advantage of it, and waste the extra dough the stamps save them on booze or drugs or something worthless.) But let's get off our high horses. It ain't easy to get ahead if you're not reasonable well off to begin with.

  15. Cal Avatar
    Cal

    Why stop at food stamps? Why not free dorm rooms and free tuition? Maybe we should pay _them_ to go to school for doing society a favor! And then we should buy them a car as a graduation present for going to class and making a 2.2 GPA. (Of course, it would be a small, fuel-efficient hybrid.)

    Along with that, we should pay for their first apartment for at least five years or until they turn 27 and become adults. And naturally they should continue receiving food stamps because how fair would it be to pull that safety net out from them just as they’ve become dependent on it? And of course, as everybody knows, health care should be free and I think we should consider gasoline subsidies for several years, too. (Gas is REALLY expensive.)

    No, you guys are right. Food stamps is a good idea for college kids. Just don’t be mean spirited and deny them anything else, okay? I mean, we’ve got plenty of money for this sort of thing as we’re only $13 trillion in debt as a nation. Oh sure, we’ve got $108 trillion more in unfunded liabilities to worry about (later, of course) so what’s a few hundred million for “free” food, right? After all, they are just children. And it's always all about "the children."

  16. Phil Avatar
    Phil

    GoMoJo:

    Are you saying that because the law states that certain items cannot be purchased with food stamps means that it isn't done? If you believe that this government program is exempt from abuse (by welfare recipients and store clerks alike) you are either a very trusting person or terribly naive.

  17. Elena Avatar
    Elena

    Purcell assumes that college students are all young, single adults without children, and parents who are able to help them out financially. This is far from the case in today's society. I work in higher ed, at two universities, one private, the other public. Both have many, many "non-traditional" students. With today's economic situation, many previously employed people are returning to college in an effort to change careers or re-start their previous ones. Most have families. Many have children that are also in college. While I haven't seen the statistics to back this up, I wonder what percentage of today's college students fit the traditional college student mold that Purcell and some other commenters focus on.

    Another assumption is that the students don't need to eat healthy food, and that they probably won't use SNAP benefits to purchase healthy foods anyway. Well, not true, at least based on my observations. Many college students are intensely health-conscious, and prefer to purchase healthy foods,

    Further, Purcell suggests that because he resorted to selling his plasma, everyone else should be willing to do so as well. Essentially he's saying, "I suffered, so you should as well". Does the same thing hold true for hazing and sexual harassment? Both of these have been justified using similar arguments.

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