You know, if they keep up with making the corn as widespread as possible it'll come back to bite them. One good plant disease could take out the entire annual crop.
You could substitute corn with any other major GM crop.
"You know, if they keep up with making the corn wheat as widespread as possible it'll come back to bite them. One good plant disease could take out the entire annual crop"
Actual wages were 0, we had no income at all.
For how long?
And about living on 2 dollars a day, yeah I suppose you could live off of rice and beans the entire time but I doubt with only two dollars per day you could achieve a diet varied enough to prevent disease, or developmental disadvantages.
It was about 87 to about 91 in Mississippi. Give or take 4-5 years. It was ~30 cents a day per person, and the price of food has about doubled since then, so GlyphGryphs numbers are too high. That 30c a month had to cover food, toilet paper, all over the counter medication, all sanitary, cleaning and health supplies and all transportation costs. We had to use the change from the food stamps to buy gas to get to the store/grandparents garden. Again 0 income.
The house the state put us in was caked with black mold, flooded regularly, and could not be kept under 130 degrees in the summer. You cant fight the state without a lawyer. If you have a lawyer you obviously don't need state support.
Any and all "income" counted more or less double against welfare. If you documented 20 dollars earned, you lost 40 dollars of support. Even if that "income" is the result of acquiring debt. In Mississippi you do not survive on welfare without undocumented income. At all. That the food stamp program would be scaled back at all, or even not expanded dramatically, is a horrific idea. We got "off welfare" when my mother went back to school, and used her student loan "income" to pay the bills so we didn't die. I know what hunger is.
The "room for abuse" for cash welfare I was talking about: Getting locked in a shed on starvation rations while someone else spends what little you had coming in. This is true for parents wasting the money intended to feed their kids on addictions as well as larger scale exploitation. Purposeful welfare in the form of dedicated food and rent subsidies puts a small but important barrier between that kind of abuse and the poor. Would Cash welfare also have helped? Absolutely. But as a complete replacement, I see too many risks.
There's also language in the Senate which would cut the food stamp program some by targeting abuse. The GOP-controlled House wants to restrict eligibility to save money. Working out a compromise bill will be difficult to say the least.
It's impressive how the cost of means testing almost always exceeds the money saved from people not getting help. If the GOP actually were against bureaucracy it'd be a good place to start.
And that is one of the reasons why I think that EVERYONE should receive welfare. You can significantly reduce the bureaucratic overhead.