(H/T: Hot Air)
Let’s see, the government is here to help the downtrodden and those in need. And face it, when there’s lots of money (from us taxpayers), reality has no right to intrude on a government mission, right?
So, here’s a case where a WHOLE sub-group, an entire sub-culture, is refusing to help the government help them. These people have the audacity to tell our government that that they don’t have a need nor want the help!
Yet, there are some in our government that won’t take no for an answer. And will continue to waste our money and our government workers time to keep doing stupid things. In this case, the person best doing the head-constantly-pounding-the-wall for no real reason at all, our very own Dope of the Week, is:
Jeanne Carroll
Deputy Director of the Ohio’s Office of Family Stability in Ohio
The Cleveland Plain Dealer has this story (Emphasis in BOLD are mine. And I have taken out some "white space" to shorten the article up):
Counties caught in conundrum: getting Amish to take food stamps
Claridon Township — Tim Taylor’s job calls for finding ways to distribute food stamps to Geauga County’s Amish. He might as well be trying to sell them cars.
The horse-and-buggy crowd philosophically opposes the support program overseen by Taylor’s agency, the Geauga Department of Job & Family Services. Accepting public assistance is verboten within the Amish culture. It simply is not done.
Yes, these Amish, these gentle folk that have sadly been in the news for the wrong reason (the senseless shooting of little girls an a one-room schoolhouse in PA) have drawn this lady’s ire. She just refuses to understand that their whole philosophy of life is one dedicated to the worship of God and self sufficiency is a large part of that philosophy. Frankly, they just want to be left alone.
Have we, as a nation, gone so far down the road that we have to insist that we cannot take care of ourselves and that we have to take their help?
And if someone is in need within their local church, it is the duty of the brethren to respond and help. Frankly, this is the way it used to be before people got it into their heads that ONLY government could do this for people.
But Taylor is under orders to at least try to get them enrolled. The Ohio Department of Job & Family Services has asked Geauga and Holmes counties, which feature the state’s largest Amish populations, to lift dismal food-stamp participation rates.
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