Anonymous ID: 720390 Aug. 23, 2018, 12:59 a.m. No.2710243   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0248 >>0260 >>0312

>>2710108

In case you missed it they didn't have to tell any lies.

 

Just copy real posts.

 

Think about that before you post more ammunition

 

Someday people won't be able to walk the streets in a Q shirt

 

Does that make you proud?

Anonymous ID: 720390 Aug. 23, 2018, 1:22 a.m. No.2710290   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0299

>>2710274

These people will

 

52.1% of Kids Live in Households Getting Means-Tested Government Assistance

 

Will they be called The Welfare Generation?

 

Today, they are Americans under 18 years of age growing up in a country where the majority of their peers live in households that take "means-tested assistance" from the government.

 

In 2016, according to the most recent data from the Census Bureau, there were approximately 73,586,000 people under 18 in the United States, and 38,365,000 of them — or 52.1 percent — resided in households in which one or more persons received benefits from a means-tested government program.

 

These included the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (food stamps), Medicaid, public housing, Supplemental Security Income, the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families and the National School Lunch Program.

 

The Census Bureau published its data on the number and percentage of persons living in households that received means-tested government assistance in its Current Population Survey Detailed Tables for Poverty.

 

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Table POV-26 indicates there were approximately 319,911,000 people in the United States in 2016. Of these, 114,793,000 — 35.9 percent — lived "in a household that received means-tested assistance."

 

That does not mean every person in the household received the aid themselves, only that one or more persons living in the household did.

 

When examined by age bracket, persons under 18 were the most likely to live in a household receiving means-tested government assistance (52.1 percent), while those 75 and older were least likely (18.8 percent).

 

But Americans in all the age brackets up to age 44 analyzed by the Census Bureau were more likely to be living in a household that received means-tested government assistance than the overall national rate of 35.9 percent.

 

For those 18 to 24 years old, the rate was 40.1 percent; for those 25 to 34, it was 36.8 percent; and for those 35 to 44, it was 37.4 percent.

 

 

For those 45 to 54, it dropped down to 30.6 percent — below the 35.9 percent overall rate.

 

But even when the Census Bureau excluded the school lunch program from its calculations, the percentage of those under 18 who lived in a household receiving means-tested assistance (44.8 percent) exceeded the percentage in any other age bracket.

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Twenty years ago, in 1998, according to Census Bureau data, only 36.9 percent of Americans under 18 lived in a household receiving means-tested government assistance. In 2008, the percentage broke 40 percent for the first time. In 2013, it broke 50 percent for the first time.