Please, Mr. Bush, I Want Some More
For those who don't get the reference, it's one of the classic lines in literature, theater, and movies. In Dicken's classic, Oliver Twist, the orphan, Oliver, asks the headmaster "Please, sir, I want some more". In modern day America, it's a question that's being asked as more and more Americans fall into poverty, despair, and hunger. But no, one can't say hunger anymore, you see under the Bush Junta the word hunger is no longer "scientific" enough for the USDA to use to gauge if someone isn't getting enough food to eat. Welcome to "very low food security"....
Some Americans Lack Food, but USDA Won't Call Them Hungry The U.S. government has vowed that Americans will never be hungry again. But they may experience "very low food security." Every year, the Agriculture Department issues a report that measures Americans' access to food, and it has consistently used the word "hunger" to describe those who can least afford to put food on the table. But not this year.... (more)Mark Nord, the lead author of the report, said "hungry" is "not a scientifically accurate term for the specific phenomenon being measured in the food security survey." Nord, a USDA sociologist, said, "We don't have a measure of that condition."
The USDA said that 12 percent of Americans -- 35 million people -- could not put food on the table at least part of last year. Eleven million of them reported going hungry at times. Beginning this year, the USDA has determined "very low food security" to be a more scientifically palatable description for that group.
The United States has set a goal of reducing the proportion of food-insecure households to 6 percent or less by 2010, or half the 1995 level, but it is proving difficult. The number of hungriest Americans has risen over the past five years. Last year, the total share of food-insecure households stood at 11 percent.
Less vexing has been the effort to fix the way hunger is described. Three years ago, the USDA asked the Committee on National Statistics of the National Academies "to ensure that the measurement methods USDA uses to assess households' access -- or lack of access -- to adequate food and the language used to describe those conditions are conceptually and operationally sound."
Among several recommendations, the panel suggested that the USDA scrap the word hunger, which "should refer to a potential consequence of food insecurity that, because of prolonged, involuntary lack of food, results in discomfort, illness, weakness, or pain that goes beyond the usual uneasy sensation."
To measure hunger, the USDA determined, the government would have to ask individual people whether "lack of eating led to these more severe conditions," as opposed to asking who can afford to keep food in the house, Nord said.
It is not likely that USDA economists will tackle measuring individual hunger. "Hunger is clearly an important issue," Nord said. "But lacking a widespread consensus on what the word 'hunger' should refer to, it's difficult for research to shed meaningful light on it."
Anti-hunger advocates say the new words sugarcoat a national shame. "The proposal to remove the word 'hunger' from our official reports is a huge disservice to the millions of Americans who struggle daily to feed themselves and their families," said David Beckmann, president of Bread for the World, an anti-hunger advocacy group. "We . . . cannot hide the reality of hunger among our citizens."
In assembling its report, the USDA divides Americans into groups with "food security" and those with "food insecurity," who cannot always afford to keep food on the table. Under the old lexicon, that group -- 11 percent of American households last year -- was categorized into "food insecurity without hunger," meaning people who ate, though sometimes not well, and "food insecurity with hunger," for those who sometimes had no food.
That last group now forms the category "very low food security," described as experiencing "multiple indications of disrupted eating patterns and reduced food intake." Slightly better-off people who aren't always sure where their next meal is coming from are labeled "low food security."
That 35 million people in this wealthy nation feel insecure about their next meal can be hard to believe, even in the highest circles. In 1999, Texas Gov. George W. Bush, then running for president, said he thought the annual USDA report -- which consistently finds his home state one of the hungriest in the nation -- was fabricated.
"I'm sure there are some people in my state who are hungry," Bush said. "I don't believe 5 percent are hungry."
Bush said he believed that the statistics were aimed at his candidacy. "Yeah, I'm surprised a report floats out of Washington when I'm running a presidential campaign," he said.
The agency usually releases the report in the fall, for reasons that "have nothing to do with politics," Nord said.
This year, when the report failed to appear in October as it usually does, Democrats accused the Bush administration of delaying its release until after the midterm elections. Nord denied the contention, saying, "This is a schedule that was set several months ago."
Yep, sad but true, the corporatist fat cats on Wall Street have the stock market pushed up to an all-time high, but that concentration of "wealth" is made possible at the expense of ever growing poverty and hunger. 12%! That's one in every eight of us..... Plus, The weaseal bastard Bushite's had the report delayed so as to not affect the election.
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Poverty and hunger may also cause obesity
I'm new here. But, from personal experience and some knowledge of nutrition it is obvious to me that many Americans are unable to afford foods that are less fattening and more nutritious. Buy the blue box of instant mac and cheese, frozen processed fish sticks and a can of sodium and chemical laden veggie of some type.
This is all many can afford. Where they would prefer to buy really fresh locally grown vegetables and fresh caught fish or shrimp, or even farm raised.
This and the multitude of cheap, convenient greasy, salt and chemical infested foods and the corn syrup surplus
drink to wash it down.
Yeah, it's industrial food for the poor...
and organic for the affluent. Plus, many urban areas have no "supermarket" stores. Residents often have little choice other than prepared or fast food.
Welcome to the website, btw. Pull up a chair and stay awhile...
Cp ;>)
Industrial food huh? Reminds me of a movie I saw a couple...
of times and the book I've read:
SOYLENT GREEN, The book was called: MAKE ROOM, MAKE ROOM .
Everyone remember those?
A mind once expanded can never return to its original dimensions.
Anne Hathaway: 1556-1623
The greatest derangement of the mind is to believe in something because one wishes it to be so.
Louis Pasteur
It's People!...
The surprise revelation in SOYLENT GREEN - It's People!... classic cult sci-fi flick. But I've never heard of the book....
CP ;>)
CP...the book was originally titled ...
Make Room, Make Room. I don't remember now how they changed that to Soylent Green...other than the name of the nutricious rations.
A mind once expanded can never return to its original dimensions.
Anne Hathaway: 1556-1623
The greatest derangement of the mind is to believe in something because one wishes it to be so.
Louis Pasteur
Kinda like BladeRunner?
Sounds like Philip K Dicks "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep", got changed to Bladerunner for the movie...
Another item popped up in Soylent Green...
there was a scene in the movie where one of the people decides to have himself euthanized(a common practice in the movie), voluntary euthanisia for those who were old and sick or just tired of fighting for enough food etc etc...and/the quality of life(missing completely).
They would volunteer, be given a choice of color in the room, their favorite music, and then were given an injection. Death was peaceful and immediate.
Of course, then the bodies were processed...I won't go further since the movie is still available for rental.
The euthanasia caught my attention...why not. After much thought, I am a proponent of voluntary euthanasia. Many seniors and chronically ill people would choose such an end at some point in their lives.
Fundies, of course, are against it. You gotta suffer they claim.
A mind once expanded can never return to its original dimensions.
Anne Hathaway: 1556-1623
The greatest derangement of the mind is to believe in something because one wishes it to be so.
Louis Pasteur
Plus the underpaid get the
Plus the underpaid get the privledge of paying MORE for the same dang stuff.
Yeah, retail plus at the
Yeah, retail plus at the bodega...
I agree with all of you.
I often buy food I would rather not eat, because I cannot afford healthier food. I live below the poverty line, but my reward from Bush's middle class tax cuts was a net tax increase (federal/state/county) of about $300 per year.
- Surviving Bush one day at a time. Politics Plus
"very low food security" is a euphamistic neocon term
"Very low food security" is a euphemistic term that speciously attempts to sanitize a more dystopian word.
Neocons excel at "framing" words and phrases like this to desensitize people. (Think "stay the course".)
George Lakoff's companion book, "Don't Think of an Elephant", tries to teach the left how to "frame" things in the same way -- better use of terminology and articulation to get our point framed in a better way that the masses will swallow more easily. (Think Pelosi’s “drain the swap” statement.)
Hungry is hungry. No one on the side the road has ever held up a sign to me that read:
"If being liberal means critical thinking and informed dissent, instead of blind obedience and ignorant nationalism, then I am all for it!"
restan
a regular potato may cost $.30----bag of greasy processed chips cost $2.99 fresh cabbage $ .80....cole slaw $ 2.50 /pound
fresh chicken $.69/pound KFC $ 5.99/LUNCH
I'm interested in good nutrition. why can't the poor eat better by buying fresh food than all the starchy processed food?
You can eat a little better for low cost.
...but only a little.
If you're one of the 90% of Americans who are chronically underpaid then you can get inexpensive, healthy CALORIES from whole grains and legumes alone (or nearly so).
Attempt to gain your remaining needed calories from healthy sources: Fruits and Vegetables, and you're out of luck...
I eat buckets of both each day, and it breaks the bank.
The SOLUTION:
Men need to regain their testicles. Drop the Conservative wussification of America and demand more than a Depression Era split of National Income.
I'm sure Paris Hilton will continue at her labors even with a pay cut. The same can't be said about potential economic powerhouses distributed throughout the land amongst the bottom 90%. Freeing up capital here will pay dividends that it never will amongst the inbred overfed crowd.
And you must also believe
And you must also believe (like your hero Dubya) that working two jobs is the "American Dream."
Why do you neocons hide behind the "Independent" label? Are you ashamed of your real feelings?
Homeless man set on fire:
Ever hear the kind of comments "rugged individualists" make about stories like this?
This SHIT comes straight to us compliments of the Conservative ME GENERATION. From folks like Indoorsmen Ted Neugent who actually think they are skilled and above the frey.