The Shutdown Is Starving Americans
November SNAP cuts hit early, food banks are overwhelmed, and the federal priorities couldn’t be clearer.
The warning signs are no longer hypothetical.
We’re still in October, but states across the country are already alerting residents: your November SNAP benefits may not arrive. From Minnesota to Texas to New York, officials are openly warning that, unless something changes in Washington, food assistance for millions of families will be delayed, reduced, or cut off entirely.
The USDA has told states to pause transmissions to EBT systems, effectively placing a freeze on the machinery that delivers food to tens of millions of Americans. If no resolution is reached, benefits will vanish just as grocery prices spike and colder months begin — a worst-case scenario for families already on the edge.
And yet, this crisis isn’t happening in isolation. It’s unfolding inside a broader economic reality that makes it all the more cruel.
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A Perfect Storm of Hunger
While SNAP recipients wait in limbo, grocery prices continue to climb — driven in part by Trump’s renewed tariffs on imported foods. School districts across the country have ended pandemic-era free lunch programs, forcing low-income families to start paying again. And food banks, once a last line of defense, are seeing overwhelming demand from not only SNAP users, but now from furloughed federal workers who are also going without pay.
This is more than a funding gap. This is a collapse in the basic systems that keep Americans fed.
And it’s been building. Quietly, but with intention.
Earlier this year, the USDA cut off key programs that connected local farmers to school cafeterias and food banks. The Local Food for Schools program is gone. The Local Food Purchase Assistance program? Gone. These weren’t abstract pilot projects. They were direct pipelines of fresh food from American farms to hungry families and kids.
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Meanwhile, pandemic expansions of school meal access have expired. Most children in this country are once again forced to qualify based on strict income cutoffs — a bureaucratic hoop that ensures many kids fall through the cracks.
The System Is Breaking — and Food Banks Can’t Hold It
All of this has sent a tidal wave toward food banks — institutions that are already strained. In city after city, demand is doubling. Shelves are emptying faster than they can be restocked. And now, those same food banks are also fielding lines from furloughed TSA agents, postal workers, and national park employees.
In a country with this much wealth, that should be unthinkable. Instead, it’s becoming routine.
The Hypocrisy Is Hard to Ignore
We’re told we can’t afford SNAP. Can’t afford school lunches. Can’t afford healthcare.
But just this month, the Trump administration moved to send $40 billion to stabilize Argentina’s economy — a country that, for the record, already has a form of universal healthcare. And of course, we continue to send billions annually to Israel, which also operates a national health system.
This isn’t an argument against foreign aid. People around the world deserve safety and dignity. But when the American government cuts aid abroad — like the near-destruction of USAID by Trump’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) — and still refuses to fund basic needs at home, it becomes impossible to deny:
We don’t lack resources. We lack the will to spend them on our own people.
Austerity at Home, Blank Checks Abroad
Even the money saved by slashing foreign aid isn’t coming back to feed Americans. It’s being swallowed up by record military budgets, tax breaks for corporations, and expanded surveillance infrastructure.
We are constantly told that food, housing, and healthcare are luxuries, that helping Americans is “fiscally irresponsible,” that it’s our duty to sacrifice for the good of the budget.
But when those same voices greenlight endless overseas spending, the mask slips.
This isn’t budgeting. It’s something much darker.
Moral Nihilism Disguised as Budgeting
We cut food aid to the poor. We refuse healthcare to the sick. We tell children there’s no money for lunch.
But there’s always enough for foreign bailouts, weapons systems, and corporate subsidies.
That’s not fiscal conservatism. That’s moral nihilism disguised as budgeting.
If the government refuses to fund the basics of survival for its own people, what exactly is it for?
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Sources:
November SNAP benefits are at risk from the government shutdown. See how each state depends on food stamps. — Business Insider
Food assistance is safe through October, but it may be at risk if the shutdown continues — AP News
3.5 million Texans will see food assistance halted if government shutdown continues — The Texas Tribune
USDA’s Rollins says food stamp funding to dry up in two weeks — Roll Call
USDA Cuts School Food Program: List of States Impacted — Newsweek
USDA cuts over $1 billion in funding for schools, local food purchases — Reuters
SNAP on hold for 2 million people in Pa. during government shutdown — WITF
What to know about SNAP benefits amid government shutdown — ABC News
Trump warns Argentina of aid cut if its politics move leftward — AP News
What to know about the Trump administration’s $20B bailout for Argentina — ABC News
Rubio says 83% of USAid programs terminated after six‑week purge — The Guardian
USDA cancels $500M in food deliveries, leaving food banks scrambling — WashingtonPost.com








My adult disabled daughter is unable to get more hours at work and is on food share. Fortunately she has us to help her if the November aid doesn’t come but what about all of those people who don’t have family who can help? This will also have a trickle down affect as less money will be spent at grocery stores affecting their bottom line.
Grinding us down is the objective, to make us too weak. Cruelty is the point. We must find the will to speak, protest and vote. Although I do feel so frightened about what is happening