SNAP usage
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What’s your guys’ take on that woman in Michigan that was using her SNAP benefits to buy flour/eggs/milk and such, but was using it to make baked goods that she would sell online as a business? An under the table business at that, which means no income accounting.
@LuFins-Dad said in SNAP usage:
What’s your guys’ take on that woman in Michigan that was using her SNAP benefits to buy flour/eggs/milk and such, but was using it to make baked goods that she would sell online as a business? An under the table business at that, which means no income accounting.
TBH, my immediate response was 'good for her'. I don't think prosecuting her is particularly useful, or kind for that matter.
Obviously, rich people love to look down at people on stamps as being worthless parasites, and her entrepeneurial spirit rather undermines that.
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I suppose not reporting incoming of selling muffins is a no-no, but overall I'd argue it is her right to do whatever she wants with the food. Throw it against the wall, feed it to dogs, whatever. That being said, I'd imagine SNAP has a rule that you can't resell things you buy, which would make sense. I'm glad @Horace feels better though, even though I can't empathize with the Banana Bread Incident that traumatized him in 2nd grade, I'm still glad.
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I think the critical question here is magnitude. Just how much of the baked goods was she selling? Was it lifting her income levels beyond the poverty levels? If so, by how much? Does the resupply costs push her back down? If not, then there could be a case of abusing the system…
Now, a smart Governor and state prosecutor would use this as an opportunity… Put her through a Small Business Administration course… Giver her an SBA grant for a woman owned business… Promote the crap out of her.
But Whitmer isn’t really a smart governor.
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I suppose not reporting incoming of selling muffins is a no-no, but overall I'd argue it is her right to do whatever she wants with the food. Throw it against the wall, feed it to dogs, whatever. That being said, I'd imagine SNAP has a rule that you can't resell things you buy, which would make sense. I'm glad @Horace feels better though, even though I can't empathize with the Banana Bread Incident that traumatized him in 2nd grade, I'm still glad.
@89th said in SNAP usage:
I suppose not reporting incoming of selling muffins is a no-no, but overall I'd argue it is her right to do whatever she wants with the food. Throw it against the wall, feed it to dogs, whatever. That being said, I'd imagine SNAP has a rule that you can't resell things you buy, which would make sense. I'm glad @Horace feels better though, even though I can't empathize with the Banana Bread Incident that traumatized him in 2nd grade, I'm still glad.
Thank you for respecting my lived experience, and realizing you can never possibly understand it.
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The race essentialists at MSN.com lead the headline with her skin color. Because of course they did.
Black woman in Michigan faces 10 years in prison for selling baked goods made with food stamps
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/black-woman-in-michigan-faces-10-years-in-prison-for-selling-baked-goods-made-with-food-stamps-video/ar-AA1OGchbMy guess is that the plea deal she rejected would have been a slap on the wrist, and not worthy of any national conversation. But since this went viral, I'm sure she's glad she took that path. This'll end ok for her one way or another, I bet.
