Ryan and his family have a long history of relying on government, just like any and all of us do.
Rep. Paul Ryan is back to his old tricks, demonizing people who rely
on government to improve their lives. This week, his target was food
stamp recipients.
He's already come out in favor of $20 billion in cuts that will throw
an estimated two million children, elderly, and disabled Americans off
food stamps. But now Ryan -- the millionaire Wisconsin Congressman who
was Mitt Romney's VP running mate last year -- is pushing an amendment to eliminate food stamps for people who have $2,000 in savings, or a car worth more than $5,000.
Ryan and his family have a long history of relying on government, just like any and all of us do.
Last summer, in his speech
to the GOP convention in Tampa, Ryan told a story about how, after his
father's death, his mother "got on a bus every weekday for years, and
rode 40 miles each morning to Madison." He explain: “She earned a new
degree and learned new skills to start her small business.It wasn't just
a new livelihood. It was a new life. And it transformed my Mom from a
widow in grief to a small businesswoman whose happiness wasn't just in
the past. Her work gave her hope. It made our family proud. And to this
day, my Mom is my role model.”
Ryan meant this as a celebration of his mother's lift-herself-by-her-own-bootstraps spirit.
But shouldn't someone remind Ryan that the bus was a public service,
that the road was built and maintained by government, and that the
University of Wisconsin in Madison is a public institution?
This is the Paul Ryan whose budget plan would have slashed funding
for public education, roads, and public services that are the
investments we need to lift people out of poverty and strengthen our
economy. Now he's taking aim at the most vulnerable people in society --
food stamp recipients.
The full article is available here