http://childpsychiatryassociates.com/treatment-team/kent-kunze/ Today we became Starvation Nation.
Peterlee Forty-one million Americans woke to find their SNAP cards in limbo. The government tried to freeze the nation’s food lifeline, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program that feeds about one in eight people, but two federal judges forced a pause. For now, the Department of Agriculture must tap its emergency reserves, buying time but not relief.
The shutdown has become more than political theater. It has become hunger deferred.
Eight hundred seventy-three billion dollars flow each year into defense. About one hundred billion a year once flowed into meals.
The arithmetic of this country still favors missiles over milk.
SNAP was built for survival. It paid for eggs, fruit, rice, bread, milk, the staples that fill lunch boxes and dinner tables. Its loss, even for days, is nothing short of a national confession.
The program began as a promise. In the shadow of the Depression, leaders vowed that no American would go hungry again.
SNAP cards carried that promise through decades of crisis and calm. Each one allowed a parent to feed a child without begging. It allowed an elder to buy food without choosing between heat and hunger. It was an oath between people and their government that survival mattered more than partisanship.
That oath broke this week, then stumbled back to its knees under court order.
Every state now braces for impact. Governors call emergency meetings. Food banks across the country report record demand. New York officials have pledged millions in emergency funds to keep shelves stocked. Shelters stretch to capacity. Truckers slow. Grocery stores go quiet.
And once hunger enters, it lingers. Ask Gaza.
Every dollar lost at the register ripples through the economy. Each canceled shipment means fewer hands at work. Each meal skipped is another unpaid bill.
Through all of this, the twenty-four-hour news hums with headlines about foreign aid, about the hunger of others. Gaza still starves, and we send sympathy wrapped in red tape. Gaza and Gary, Indiana now share a dark similarity: food as a sentence, survival as submission.
America has a gift for contradiction. We spend with ferocity and save with cruelty. We say hunger builds character. We say scarcity teaches strength.
We repeat these myths until they sound like principles. But hunger does not shape virtue. It erases it. It turns patience into panic. It turns citizens into supplicants.
SNAP is more than a card. It is a heartbeat of the economy. Each dollar spent builds circulation. Each purchase confirms the idea that food is not a privilege.
Food is proof that a society still recognizes its own people. When that proof disappears, so does trust.
The shutdown now stands as a moral ledger. Political salaries continue. Lobbyist dinners continue. The military continues to receive full funding.
Only the poor have been asked to pause. Only the hungry have been told to wait. America is not short on money. It is short on mercy.
The hunger that begins this month will not remain in one neighborhood. It will reach classrooms and hospitals. It will shadow police reports and emergency rooms. It will raise crime and lower attendance. It will shape elections more powerfully than any debate on television.
Because when given the opportunity, hunger votes.
We like to say America feeds the world. We call ourselves the global grain, the land of abundance.
Yet our strength now hides behind empty congressional seats and closed wallets.
When the history of this week is written, it will not read like a fiscal story. It will read like an obituary for empathy.
A country that once fed millions now counts their silence as savings. Every missed meal will mark another line in that obituary.
Hunger reveals truth. It does not lie or exaggerate. It asks the oldest question any country must face: Who matters enough to eat?
Today, we declared what kind of country we are.
