ChatterBank6 mins ago
Just Witnessed People Driving To A Food Bank To Pick Food Up.
These people weren't getting a lift, they were driving themselves and not all in old bangers either. Are people taking the proverbial?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Yes there are procedures regulating foodbank use. I agree with the other responses above; a casual passerby knows nothing of the circumstances of those who go into food banks, and anyway how do you know specifically they were collecting - are you going in and checking on all who enter?
The question reeks of small-minded sniping. As mentioned above, be grateful you're not in the position of having to use a food bank.
It's about priorities we have one of the most generous benefits systems in the world, they die in the channel to get here. If people choose to spend their dosh on things other than food then they are choosing to do that end of. They're all clutching a £15 pack of cigs, a £1000 pound phone and in this case they have a jam jar, they live on takeaways and wacky baccy. If they need a food bank that is their choice and our fault for being a soft touch. End of.
TTT is right. No one is starving. But he's wrong to say if they can afford a car they can afford food because he is unaware of their circumstances. They might have been quite well fixed before, say, illness took a toll or their job was no more. We don't know their circumstances but I do know people can't just arrive at a food bank and demand food. They have to be referred.
Perhaps a better way of putting it rather than "starving" is that there are people in food poverty, ie they're unable to buy enough food to ensure a sufficiently healthy diet for themselves and their families. There's a range of reasons for such circumstances, all of which will obviously be sneered at and dismissed by the uninformed but that doesn't change that food poverty exists and is a sad fact. And to reiterate again - we don't know the individual situations of those we see going into foodbanks. Obviously, no amount of repetition of any of the above is going to have any impact on those shrivelled-up enough to not care about the poverty of others and who seek only to carp, sneer and dismiss out of sheer ignorance. Perhaps they should go into foodbanks not to snoop and check up but to talk to those who volunteer so they can actually learn something about it and add a little humanity to their lives.
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