Feb 8th 2012, 2:36:02
Oh I could go on and on about this one. Originally the Dept. of Agriculture established a program where the US would buy surplus agricultural products and process them to distribute to the needy (remember the government cheese? thats where that came from).
After a while, the big agri-business and food producers realized that there was a buck to be made, so they went to the D of Ag and said "look, you guys are not efficient. moving food is our business so let us take over the distribution of food to the needy and we'll provide better service". The plan was to provide the needy with faux money that could only be used to buy food. Then they could buy right off the shelf, and Food Inc. would get reimbursed by uncle Sam at a slightly discounted rate.
This is how the dept of Agriculture ended up running the food stamp business. The problem is that it was no longer about surplus agricultural production - it was all about producing food that was profitable for Food Inc. even at the discounted food stamp reimbursement rate. Along came the 1980's and early 90's and guess what starts showing up on the shelves of discount grocers more and more. Highly processed packaged foods made primarily of grain products, veg oil and salt - aka junk food. It turns out that when food manufactured treat food like chemistry they can crank out the poptarts pretty darn profitably.
Make no mistake, the way the $87B food stamp program is managed - it has become just as much of a transfer of wealth to corporate interests as any Halliburton defense contract in Iraq. An interesting side effect, and the basis of the recent push to prevent FS for being used to buy junk food, obesity rates get much higher as poverty increases. If you will follow the money, the biggest opponents of restricting FS usage is coming from Big Food and Agri-business. There are nearly 40M Americans receiving FS, thats a chunk of change worth fighting over.
Cheating Mod Hall of Shame: Dark Morbid, Turtle Crawler, Sov