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SNAP Work Requirements: Fair Rule or Unfair Burden?

I want to share a story from my own neighborhood. My neighbor Mike is in his early 50s and lives alone. He used to work in a factory for over a decade—steady job, steady pay. He thought he could rely on that income for the rest of his life. But when the factory shut down, he lost everything overnight. Since then, Mike has been piecing together odd jobs: moving furniture, short-term shifts at construction sites, unloading trucks at the supermarket. Wherever someone needed labor, he showed up. The problem is, gig work isn’t stable. Some months he can scrape together 100 hours; other months, he barely gets a few shifts. No matter how hard he tries, he can’t control whether the work is there. SNAP has become his lifeline. Without it, he can’t even cover the basics—rice, pasta, cooking oil. But the rules hit him especially hard. As an “ABAWD” (Able-Bodied Adult Without Dependents), he must work at least 20 hours a week or else he can only receive 3 months of SNAP benefits in a 36-month period. Imagine that pressure. Every time he gets a short-term gig, his first thought isn’t “how much will I earn?” but “will this count toward my 20 hours? Will I lose food assistance next month if I fall short?” One day outside the corner store, he told me: “It’s not that I don’t want to work. I’m out there looking every day. But I can’t decide how many hours people are willing to give me. If SNAP cuts me off, I can’t even afford instant noodles.” And Mike isn’t alone. Across the country, thousands of people are in the same position: The instability of gig work — delivery drivers, temp jobs, patchwork shifts. They can’t guarantee steady weekly hours. The toll of age and health — middle-aged workers pushing their bodies just to keep up. No dependents, no exemptions — they fall right into the strictest rules. I understand the argument for work requirements: fairness, accountability, taxpayer responsibility. But here’s the real question—should people who are already working hard be punished just because their hours don’t add up? So I want to hear from you: Do you think SNAP’s work requirements are fair? Yes — they encourage employment and reduce dependency. No — they strip away the last safety net from people who are already trying. Maybe — we need more flexible rules for gig and temp workers, or better support like job training and childcare. #SNAPLife

SNAP Work Requirements: Fair Rule or Unfair Burden?
Nelleda Johnson

Racism was already bad. It never changed. There's more racist in the government than there is on the street. It's in both parties, the Dems and the Reps. Trump just brought them out of the woodwork. This is just my opinion, but not one damn president is squeaky clean, and Gov is just following the leader. Every race has oppressed themselves. There's no race any better than the next. Yeah, there may have been some slaves that were sold by their own people, but the Yt race took it and ran with it. Every damn race is tainted, so be careful what you ask for. You might wake up one of these to find out that you have just as much melanin in you as I do. God created one race, and that's the human race. We all bleed the same. When I bleed, it doesn't come out brown, just like when you bleed, it doesn't come out white. When we leave this world, God's not going to separate us.

The Black Apple News Network

Glamour and Jerky: Kerry Washington Reveals She Ate in a Met Gala Bathroom Due to Severe Allergies Behind the dazzling gowns and A-list glamour of the Met Gala lies a reality for some attendees that is far from luxurious. Kerry Washington recently pulled back the curtain, revealing that during the fashion world's biggest night, she was forced to eat her own snacks in a bathroom stall to avoid a medical emergency. The Scandal star made the surprising confession during a November 20 appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live!, detailing the extensive list of severe food allergies that make catered events a minefield. When host Jimmy Kimmel asked about her dietary restrictions, Washington replied, “Oh, God, how much time do you have? It’s really sad.” She then outlined a daunting list of allergens that includes: All seafood (not just shellfish) Sesame (seeds and oil) All nuts except peanuts and almonds Mango MSG With such common and high-end ingredients off-limits, the beautifully plated meals at galas like the Met become inedible and dangerous. Kimmel noted the difficulty, to which Washington confirmed her practical, if undignified, solution. “At all these fancy galas, when they give you plates of food, like at the Met Ball, I’m eating jerky in a bathroom somewhere,” she shared. The image of the impeccably dressed actress secretly eating jerky from her clutch in a restroom starkly contrasts with the public perception of the opulent event. Her story highlights the unseen challenges and necessary precautions that come with managing serious health conditions, even on the red carpet. It’s a reminder that behind the celebrity gloss, the need for safety and a simple snack trumps all. Tags: #KerryWashington #MetGala #JimmyKimmelLive #FoodAllergies #CelebrityNews #Scandal #Actress #Health #DietaryRestrictions #RedCarpet #Hollywood #GalaLife #BehindTheScenes #Jerky #AllergyAwareness #MetBall #EricaGeraldMason #Parade #PublicHealth #CelebrityLifestyle #InvisibleIllness #SelfCar

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