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View Full Version : USDA uses Spanish soap operas to push food stamp participation among non citizens


Roverron
07-12-2012, 06:09 AM
The government has been targeting Spanish speakers with radio “novelas” promoting food stamp usage as part of a stated mission to increase participation in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), or food stamps.

Each novela, comprising a 10-part series called “PARQUE ALEGRIA,” or “HOPE PARK,” presents a semi-dramatic scenario involving characters convincing others to get on food stamps, or explaining how much healthier it is to be on food stamps.

The majority of the episodes end with the announcer encouraging the listener to tune in again to see if the skeptic applies for benefits or learns to understand the importance of food stamps to their health.

In addition to the Spanish-language outreach, the USDA is also pushing to get non-citizens enrolled in the program. The radio novelas overcome one of the hurdles the agency has identified as hampering participation: “lack of knowledge” about the program.

“Although many non-citizens are now eligible for SNAP, SNAP participation has been historically low among eligible non-citizen households,” reads a 2011 Guidance on Non-Citizen Eligibility. “In 2008, the participation rate for non-citizens was 51% and the rate for citizen children living with non-citizen adults was 55% as compared to the national participation rate of 67% among all eligible individuals.”

While USDA is targeting non-citizens for SNAP participation, the agency stresses that illegals are not eligible for benefits.

DID I MISS SOMETHING HERE? So, which is it? Is a "non-citizen" the same as an Illegal?

“Non-citizens who are unlawfully present, are not, nor have they ever been, eligible to receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits,” Browne told TheDC.

Robert Rector, the Heritage Foundation’s senior research fellow on welfare and family issues, noted that while illegals are officially barred from participation, the legal children of illegals are eligible for benefits, creating mixed households with the potential to be intertwined with benefit programs.

Rector added that promotions such the radio novelas are part of the current process of assimilation into American culture.

“The culture [non-citizens] are assimilating into is the culture of welfare dependence,” Rector explained to TheDC, noting that the five-year delay on receipt of benefits by non-citizens does not prevent the infusion of such a mindset.

“The essential thing is that if you bring in immigrants with a high school degree or less, they are going to cost the taxpayer a fortune,” he said. “That’s the bottom line, and you are going to pay for it one way or another.”

In the 1970s, one in 50 Americans were on food stamps —today that figure is one in seven. SNAP spending has doubled since 2008 and quadrupled since 2001.

Riverpigusmc
07-12-2012, 06:10 PM
Yup. "Hope and Change" has become "Hoax and Chains". I posted that thought on evil Facebook and pissed off half the world..which made it a good day, in my view

jmlutz
07-12-2012, 06:35 PM
The piece of shit living next door to me hasn't paid his rent in nearly two years, has killed another Mexican{yeah!} and pistol whipped a white man. And he is still drawing a whole lot of food stamps. Our government is really catering to that kind of action. Mike