The GOP “Budget” – Starve the Poor

April 2nd, 2009

After having some trouble coming up with an alternative budget with actual numbers in it last week, Republicans managed to offer what amounts to the same old same old on April Fool’s Day. No one was surprised.

House minority whip Eric Cantor explains how he supports Rush Limbaugh as the Republican Party’s leading economist, with some really great “ideas.” Like cutting taxes for corporations and wealthy Americans, while slashing government spending on Medicare and Medicaid. Now, why didn’t Republicans think of this when they had complete control of the government over the last eight years? Oops… they did.


Meanwhile, Reuters reports in One in 10 Americans receiving food stamps that indeed, a record 32.2 million Americans are now receiving food assistance to the tune of just over $112 a month. This reflects the latest unemployment figures, 8.1% in February, the highest in a quarter century. Luckily, under President Obama’s stimulus plan, food stamp recipients will be getting a temporary 13% increase which still won’t actually feed a person for a whole month given rapid inflation of food prices, but will stretch the budget a little farther.

DKos diarist Dartagnan offers the Republican response to the situation of so many Americans finding themselves in need of assistance from the government to cover something so basic as food. It won’t surprise you any more than Limbaugh’s not-new “ideas” about how to keep the rich from having to pay their fair share toward the public good.

Seems Craig Blair, a state legislator in one of America’s poorest states – West Virginia – has introduced a bill that will require recipients of food stamps or any other form of government assistance to submit to random drug testing. He includes unemployment benefits in his plan, reflecting once again the tired old Republican worldview that insists that people down on their luck and in need of assistance are just lazy, drug-addicted bums that don’t deserve a handout (even if they’ve been paying for unemployment insurance for many years). That this testing would add an entire layer of bureaucracy and hoop-jumping doesn’t seem to bother him, nor does the additional millions of dollars it will cost the state to test those long lines of people at the unemployment office. Jerkwad.

But West Virginia wingnuts aren’t the only ones on the New Eugenics bandwagon. Lawmakers in 10 states are now considering the very same type of legislation. They tried this in both Michigan and Arizona, but those laws were either struck down in court or found to be so expensive they were unworkable. In Tennessee, state representative Susan Lynn introduced similar drug testing legislation, justifying it with the usual Repuglican sense of social justice…

“Taxpayers are concerned that they might be funding the monster of drug addiction, and they don’t want that,” Lynn said. “This is really no different than what people are used to.”

Wow. I didn’t know you could buy pot with food stamps! Did you? Can Rush Limbaugh use them to buy Oxycontin?

Amazing…

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