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Hunger report bites Bush
By Jim Hightower
At the 1988 Democratic convention in Atlanta,
I gave a podium-pounding speech in which I characterized George
Bush the Elder as “a man who was born on third and thought he’d
hit a triple.”
Little did I know then that the president’s namesake
son, George W., would prove to be even more lost in the ether
of inherited wealth. I wouldn’t expect someone who prepped both
at Houston’s tony Kincaid Academy and at Phillips Academy in
Andover, someone who summered at the family’s ocean-front mansion
at Kennebunkport, someone whose family money and connections
have paved his way into Yale, into the oil business, into the
governor’s mansion and, now, into the money as Republican presidential
frontrunner, to have any personal connection to the world of
poverty in our country. Still, I was stunned just before Christmas
to hear just how far removed Gov. Bush is from Planet Earth.
The US Department of Agriculture had released
a report documenting the persistent problem of hunger in America,
giving a state-by-state listing of food shortages and hunger
problems — a report made all the more poignant by the fact that
the decade of the nineties has been widely and loudly hailed
as a period of unprecedented prosperity for the US. In the state
listings, Texas was right up there at the top, ranking Number
Two in the percentage of its people experiencing food shortages,
malnutrition, and hunger. The report found that 13 percent of
the 20 million people in our state are not getting enough food
for adequate nutrition, and that five percent (roughly a million
folks) are getting so little that they suffer the pain of hunger.
This doesn’t mean that these Texans are starving to death, but
that families are so hard hit that they’re having to skip meals,
water-down cereal, and cut back so severely on nourishment that
they are suffering chronic malnutrition.
Such reality is no small embarrassment to Bush,
who is running for president on the theme of “compassionate
conservatism” and is bragging about his performance as Texas
governor. He claims credit for all the economic good that has
happened in our state during his tenure, so how to explain this
bit of economic unpleasantness?
By denial that the problem exists. Instead of
attacking hunger, he attacked the report. Speaking to the media,
Prince George got that rich boy smirk he can’t seem to get off
his face, and said: “I saw the report that children in Texas
are going hungry. Where?” he scoffed. “You’d think the governor
would have heard if there were pockets of hunger in Texas.”
Wouldn’t you, though! But hungry people don’t
bring $1,000 checks to the governor’s mansion, so they’re easily
overlooked by this governor. If he truly gave a damn, all he
would have to do to locate hungry Texans is to visit any of
the state’s food pantries, both rural and urban, where there’s
been nearly a 40 percent increase in the number of families
needing food assistance in the past year. “Where can I get hold
of Mr. Bush?” asked the head of the Community Food Bank of Victoria.
“I’d like him to come visit our food bank to see how empty our
shelves are right now. We’re scrounging for food.” But the scoffing
governor needn’t even take a ride to find reality -- there are
two charitable food kitchens within walking distance of the
governor’s mansion. The people going to these hunger centers
are not druggies and derelicts, as he might assume, but working
families -- food banks report that 60 percent of the people
coming in have jobs in the booming economy that Bush brags about
-- but their pay is so low they’re not able to make rent, pay
for transportation and other essentials, and still afford adequate
food.
But, hey, says “the Bombastic Bushkin” (as his
frat pals called him in his partying days), this federal report
is not about hunger, but about me! He suggested to the media
in New Hampshire that USDA had released the hunger data just
to embarrass him: “yeah, I was surprised that all of a sudden
a report floats out of Washington, DC as I am launching my campaign
for president.”
What a self-centered and clueless brat! This
is hardly the first time the problem has been reported -- there
are at least eight reports in the past four years documenting
Texas hunger, including one by Texas A&M University that opens
with this stark finding: “Conservatively, hundreds of thousands
of people -- and one out of every four children -- in Texas
can be classified as hungry.” But Mr. Compassionate has a sorry
history of avoiding this issue -- in 1995, he vetoed a bill
that would have created a state food security council to study
hunger in Texas and to help local officials deal with the problem.
Apparently, Bush doesn’t want to see, hear, or speak about the
ugly truth of hunger in our state -- it hurts his image.
Source: Znet: www.zmag.org
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