HelloFresh Had a Peculiar Post for Pride Month. It Caused an Uproar
DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin Absolutely Bodied Mikie Sherrill for Lying About ICE Detent...
Here's Who's Suing to Stop Trump's America 250 Event
Wait, Did a Dem Senator Really Say This Regarding Justifying Support for Graham...
Bill Maher: Artists Fleeing America 250 Concert Makes It Seem Like They Hate...
And This Is Why No One Watches the WNBA Part 675
Dems Are Going to Get Shucked Hard in Maine
Scott Jennings Says Ballot Harvesting Should Be Punted Into the Sun
NY Congressional Candidate Pushed COVID Theory Pushed by China, and She Just Might...
Zohran Mamdani Has an Historically Illiterate Take on Soccer
Does Anybody Have the Answers?
Donald J. Trumpberger
You Can’t Fake Real
When Students Rise, Tyrants Tremble
The Housing Market Needs President Trump’s Solutions
OPINION

Michelle Obama’s Bumbling Bureaucrats: Let Them Eat Snacks!

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Michelle Obama’s Bumbling Bureaucrats: Let Them Eat Snacks!

In response to the growing outrage over the one-size-fits-all, top-down lunch menu regulations handed down by Michelle Obama and bureaucrats in Washington, DC, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack offered an incredible response: Let them eat snacks!

Advertisement

Translation: no need to evaluate the program that is being met with dissatisfaction from coast-to-coast. We’ll just create another program.

ABC News reports:

"It's not surprising that some youngsters will in the middle of the day be hungry,” Vilsack told ABC News, responding to the controversy. “I remember my two boys when they came back from school they were always hungry, we always had snacks prepared for them.”

Vilsack said the Obama Administration is working with school districts to create snack programs and encouraging parents to pack extra food for their active students to munch on before football practice or band rehearsal.

Why not just give them enough to eat at lunch?

"’We understand that change is difficult,’ Vilsack said. ‘Some folks love it, some folks have had questions about it, but that's to be expected when you're dealing with 32 million children and you're dealing with over a hundred thousand school districts.’"

Advertisement

So Vilsack’s answer to upset students in Wisconsin: eat a snack. The same message goes for hungry kids who have spoken out in South Dakota and Massachusetts: eat a snack. And the school cafeteria worker in Montana who dared to question the program: serve the food and pipe down.

Apparently the government is not interested in listening to the people about the problem it’s created. But what else is new?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement