tweoijfoi
15 years ago
Interesting.



https://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/21928 

Like all presidents, Barack Obama and his family will have to pay for their own food while they’re living in the White House. But does someone actually send them a bill? How does this system work?

President Obama may have his own executive chef now, but when his family and personal guests eat what’s coming out of the kitchen, he’ll have to foot the bill himself. Luckily for him, though, the government picks up the tab if he’s having a state function at the White House, which could get pricey since the White House’s website touts that its five chefs can crank out dinner for 140 or hors d’oeuvres for over a thousand people.

Does someone really keep track? Apparently, the White House functions like a luxury hotel in this regard. At the end of each month, the president receives a bill for his food and incidental expenses. Nancy Reagan was famously taken aback by this practice when an usher presented her first bill in 1981, saying, “Nobody ever told us the president and his wife are charged for every meal, as well as incidentals like dry cleaning, toothpaste, and other toiletries.” (Once they got used to the bills, though, the Reagans loved the White House; President Reagan often joked that all the amenities made it like living in an eight-star hotel.)

The president and his family get to pick what snacks they want, what brand of toothpaste they use, and what menu they want the chef to prepare for them, but it can still get a bit pricier than new commanders in chief expect. In a fascinating article in this month’s National Geographic, former White House chief usher Gary Walters said that he couldn’t remember any first families not complaining about the high prices of the food. Walters added that Rosalynn Carter was particularly miffed by the high-priced fare, which must have been a bit more expensive than what she’d been getting in Georgia.

wheelrite
15 years ago
who cares...

I don't.I'll send Michelle a case of Alpo...
surfish1961
15 years ago
At least something in Washington works.
HockeyDad
15 years ago
He should be able to cover it out of campaign fund petty cash.
tweoijfoi
15 years ago

who cares...

I don't.I'll send Michelle a case of Alpo...

wheelrite wrote:



Haha. That's right you only care if it's something negative about BHO, no matter how small.
wheelrite
15 years ago

Haha. That's right you only care if it's something negative about BHO, no matter how small.

tweoijfoi wrote:



True,,

But.I honestly can think of nothing BHO has done I agree with..
maybe there is.I just can't recall.


wheel,
DrMaddVibe
15 years ago
It all comes out in the wash, yeah?[frypan]
calavera
15 years ago
I pay for the food that my family and I eat everyday, so who f'ing cares?

Is the purpose of this article just to express the surprise than anyone with a job would have when they found out about a politician paying for anything with their own money?



J
DrMaddVibe
15 years ago

I pay for the food that my family and I eat everyday, so who f'ing cares?

Is the purpose of this article just to express the surprise than anyone with a job would have when they found out about a politician paying for anything with their own money?



J

calavera wrote:




I don't know. I thought EVERYONE knew that they paid for goods and services like everyone else.

We did break away from monarchies so we wouldn't act like them....right?
DrafterX
15 years ago
I bet he burns ethanol free gas.... 😟
rfenst
15 years ago
Who in their right mind truly gives a **** about this "issue"? You are worried about how a President's food gets paid for?
MIKEHARV
15 years ago
I would just like to add that all the American tax payers pay for not only my food but my entire paycheck...thank you guys
DrafterX
15 years ago

I would just like to add that all the American tax payers pay for not only my food but my entire paycheck...thank you guys

MIKEHARV wrote:





Do you get the guvment cheese too..?? 😕
DrafterX
15 years ago
I wonder what they feed the first puppy-dog..?? 😕
Kawak
15 years ago
Dems may use food-stamp money to pay for Michelle Obama's nutrition initiative
By Russell Berman - 08/14/10 06:00 AM ET

Democrats who reluctantly slashed a food-stamp program to fund a state-aid bill may have to do so again to pay for a top priority of first lady Michelle Obama.

The House will soon consider an $8 billion child-nutrition bill that’s at the center of the first lady’s “Let’s Move” initiative. Before leaving for the summer recess, the Senate passed a smaller version of the legislation that is paid for by trimming the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, commonly known as the food-stamp program.


The proposed cuts would come on top of a 13.6 percent food-stamp reduction in the $26 billion Medicaid and education state-funding bill that President Obama signed this week.

Food stamps have made multiple appearances on the fiscal chopping block because Democrats have few other places to turn to offset the cost of legislation.

Party leaders raided the budget to find off-setting tax increases and spending cuts to pay for their top legislative priorities, including the roughly $900 billion healthcare law. Congressional pay-as-you-go rules require lawmakers to offset all non-emergency spending.


Democrats have turned to the food-stamp program because funding increases enacted in the stimulus package last year were already scheduled to phase out over time. The changes proposed in the state-aid and nutrition bills would simply cut off that increase early, in March 2014. Because the cuts would not take effect for more than three years, Democratic leaders have voiced the hope that they will be able to stop the cuts in future legislation.

But House liberals are balking now, saying that while they swallowed the food-stamp cuts to pay for urgent funding for Medicaid and teachers, they will not vote for more cuts in the child-nutrition bill. In a letter sent this week to Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), 106 House Democrats urged the Speaker to take the House version of the child-nutrition bill, which does not slash food stamps, rather than the Senate version.

“This is one of the more egregious cases of robbing Peter to pay Paul, and is a vote we do not take lightly,” the lawmakers, led by Reps. James McGovern (D-Mass.) and Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) said of their vote on the state-aid bill.

The House version of the child-nutrition bill, authored by Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.), passed the Education and Labor Committee earlier this year, but lawmakers must find a way to pay for it before it comes to the floor for a vote. “Chairman Miller is working to find other ways to pay for this bill,” a spokeswoman said when asked if cuts to the food stamp program would be used.

A House leadership aide noted that the food-stamp decrease approved in the state-aid bill will not take effect right away and will leave the program at the same funding level it was at before the stimulus law was signed. “That doesn’t mean many Democrats are not concerned about the issue, but this is a process which gives us time to deal with immediate issues (like jobs) and helping the economy grow, while giving you time to deal with the food-stamp issue,” the aide said.

The nutrition bill is clearly a priority for Michelle Obama, who has made a push for healthy eating — one of her signature policy issues at White House. When the House version of the nutrition bill won committee approval in July, it marked the first time she weighed in publicly on pending legislation.

The Obama administration has not directly addressed the debate over the food-stamp cuts, but it is backing the Senate bill. “We strongly supported the Senate action and look forward to working with the House to get a final bill onto the president’s desk,” an administration official told The Hill.

The $4.5 billion Senate bill would expand eligibility for school meal programs, establish nutrition standards for all food sold in schools and provide a 6-cent increase for each school lunch to help cafeterias serve healthier meals. The $8 billion House version includes more money for expanding access to school lunches for children in low-income households.

The deeper food-stamp reductions in the Senate version would set an earlier date — in November 2013 — for eliminating the increased benefits passed last year. A family of four would see their benefits reduced by $59 a month, or about 9 percent. The bill would also cut funding for nutrition-education programs aimed at low-income neighborhoods and households.

“It’s very sad. I think it’s just illustrating what dire straits our federal government budget is in,” said Sheila Zedlewski, director of the Urban Institute’s Income and Benefits Policy Center. “It’s unprecedented to raid one safety net program to feed another.”

—This story was updated at 1:40 p.m.

FuzzNJ
15 years ago
I heard it was Hezbollah and the Nation of Islam.
donutboy2000
15 years ago
GEORGE SOROS !
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