boyfalldown
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And on the food banks. I don't have the data, but I wonder whether this is really as new as people make it out to be. Through the church and affiliated charities this has been provided for as long as I can remember in some shape or form.
I wonder whether it is a bit like credit and loans. People hold no barriers and aren't afraid anymore of what the neighbours think. Thus making it more normal and mainstream than it used to be.
I think it is fantastic, as it has always been, as a measure of last resort. However when it becomes structural and part of everyday life, it acts like drugs dealers and creates a dependency. Ultimately I think some tough love is much kinder and will have lasting impact.
Wow. You equate food banks with drugs. And tough love? Really. Its one thing to recognise and be rewarded for your hard work. Of course thats spot on and as is should be Another to wish a two tier society full of haves and have nots which will create its own problems for all members of that society. And utterly fail to protect its most vulnerable members. Is that not a pretty poor measure of society?
There are some usage stats from one of the bigger charities here. They are pretty shocking. Especially the last few years http://www.trusselltrust.org/stats
I think this quote kind of says it all
‘People who are using food banks are not scroungers who are cynically trying to work the system. They are drawn from the six million working poor in this country, people who are struggling to make ends meet in low-paid or bitty employment.’ Revd Rowan Williams, former Archbishop of Canterbury and patron of Cambridge City Foodbank
maybe read this too? http://www.trusselltrust.org/resources/documents/foodbank/6323_Below_the_Breadline_web.pdf
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