MSNBC Contributor’s Open Letter To Dick Cheney: ‘Vets Need Food Stamps Too’
by John Prager
MSNBC's Ari Melber let Dick Cheney know what he thought of the former Vice President's claim that President Obama values food stamps over support of the troops.
Melber pointed out that funding food stamps and supporting of our
troops often go hand in hand--our troops need food stamps, as well.
In an open letter, Melber lets Cheney have it!
[box type="shadow"]Dear Mr. Vice President,
It’s me, Ari.
We hadn’t heard from you in a while, but you just called into Fox News about the president’s plan.
“It’s driven by budget considerations. He’d much rather spend the money on food stamps than he would on a strong military or support for our troops.”
Would
he? Let’s start with the false choice: our soldiers, or our food
stamps. Mr. Vice President, we live in a nation where many of our
soldiers and military families are using food stamps.
Military
families spend $100 million dollars in SNAP benefits on site at
military bases every year! In any given month, about 900,000 veterans
live in households that use food stamps, or SNAP benefits.
We should work towards an economy where our veterans have enough money that they don’t need SNAP. But right now they do.
Mr. Cheney, under your false choice, you wouldn’t be picking soldiers over “food stamps.” You’d be picking weapons systems
over the many soldiers on food stamps. But you know that. So why did
you grab this comparison out of the thin Wyoming air? Well, it’s a
common habit among some GOP politicians.
Here was Newt Gingrich in 2011.
“You want to be a country that creates food stamps? In which case, frankly, Obama is an enormous success. The most successful food stamp president in American history . Or do you want to be a country that creates paychecks?”
That’s
another false choice. While SNAP benefits are vital to many people who
are out of work or can’t work, one out of three households using SNAP
include working adults. But their wages don’t pay them enough to
survive. That’s key to the minimum wage debate: if people who work are
starving, do we want to subsidize them with benefits? Or require
companies to pay a living wage?
That came up when governors visited the White House this week, with a similar twist.
What I worry about, I heard a question over here about whether he mentioned the minimum wage. Yes, he did mention the minimum wage repeatedly to us. And what I worry about is, that this president, the White House, seems to be waving the white flag of surrender after more than five years now under this administration.The Obama economy is now the minimum wage economy. I think we can do better than that. I think America can do better than that.
The minimum wage economy?
That’s meant as some kind of slur. In a regulated market economy,
however, a large share of workers will always be paid the minimum
regulated wage. And while the president is the one trying to make that a
living wage, in the Cheney-Gingrich-Jindal worldview, simply thinking
about that income bracket is suspect.
There’s
a sense of contempt here for the president’s focus on such Americans –
the minimum wage workers, the people using SNAP – and a rhetorical
attempt to disappear the more popular members of this group (like
veterans) from the political mental image here.
Mr.
Cheney, I don’t imagine you or Gov. Jindal would criticize the
president “focusing” on our veterans on food stamps. Or our veterans
living on minimum wage – though they are part of those groups just the
same.
Yet
you seem to think you can smear President Obama by associating him with
a group of Americans disfavored in your political imagination –
regardless of the data. Maybe you think that passes as weighing in on
public policy.
And
you know, there was a time when that kind of double-barreled
military-welfare politicking helped Republicans win presidential
elections. But it hasn’t worked since, well… since you were still in the
White House.
And you know that, too.
Sincerely,
Ari[/box]
Ari[/box]
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