How I Learned That Having Enough Food to Eat Should Be a Right, Not a Privilege

by | Oct 29, 2025 | The Truscott Chronicles

Campfire Club #5 Little Free Pantry, El Dorado, Arkansas and Holy Trinity Lutheran Outdoor Food Pantry, Dubuque, Iowa. Photos: littlefreepantry.org

How I Learned That Having Enough Food to Eat Should Be a Right, Not a Privilege

by | Oct 29, 2025 | The Truscott Chronicles

Campfire Club #5 Little Free Pantry, El Dorado, Arkansas and Holy Trinity Lutheran Outdoor Food Pantry, Dubuque, Iowa. Photos: littlefreepantry.org

The food stamp program back in those days, and the SNAP program today, is one of the best things this country has ever done. It didn’t end hunger, but it made a big dent. Having enough to eat should be a right, not a privilege.

Republished with permission from Lucian K. Truscott IV

Blissful ignorance. That’s what it is to go through life unaware that people around you—walking down the sidewalk, parked next to you at McDonalds, living in an apartment just down the street—are hungry.

Hunger leapt into the news this week when it became clear that the Trump administration would refuse to use some $6 billion in USDA contingency funds to pay SNAP nutrition benefits to recipients when regular funding for the program runs out on Saturday. You’ve probably seen the stories: USDA, in violation of the Hatch Act, incidentally, put up an intentionally false statement on its website that Democrats had “voted 12 times not to fund the food stamp program,” blaming the votes by Senate Democrats not to reopen the government on their wanting to “hold out for healthcare for illegal aliens and gender mutilation procedures” rather than provide food for hungry Americans. The Obamacare supplements that Democrats are holding out to keep funded have nothing to do with providing health care to “illegal aliens,” who are ineligible, or gender affirming care which is not covered by the Affordable Care Act.

Republicans just can’t help themselves. They make everything about immigration and “transexual for all,” as Trump continually calls anything having to do with any sort of departure from his executive order that there are only two genders, male and female, and fuck anyone who was born or believes differently.

It’s not about immigration and gender. It’s about hunger, and the fact is, if the USDA does not agree to follow the law and provide emergency funding for SNAP, or the Senate refuses to vote for an emergency bill that would fund the program, or if 23 states led by Democratic governors do not succeed with a lawsuit filed today that would force the expenditure of contingency funds for SNAP, 42 million Americans will fall into what is euphemistically called food insecurity on Saturday.

It’s not food insecurity. It’s hunger. About 16 million of those receiving SNAP benefits are children. Another 8.5 million are elderly, and about 4 million are adults with disabilities. Those people are among the 42 million who will begin going without adequate food on Saturday, or they will have to start making decisions about where they will cut their budget, like skipping rent or utilities, to leave money for food.

I’ve never gone hungry—not as a child, not as a young adult, not in middle age, and not now as I cruise through my “senior” years. But it doesn’t take much trouble in one’s life to become one of those who experience the gnawing terror of not having enough to eat. You might get laid off from a job, you might not be able to find a job, you might get in a car accident and have injuries that prevent you from working, or you might have just gotten out of prison and don’t have a place to live or a way to make a living, or you might be elderly and on Social Security and run out of money near the end of the month after paying your rent and utilities and grocery bills earlier in the month.

Or you might be a soldier in the Army who is not paid enough to make rent and car and insurance and utility payments and have enough left over to buy warm winter clothing for your wife and children and yourself…and buy enough food for your family until your next payday.

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Lucian K. Truscott IV

Lucian K. Truscott IV

Lucian K. Truscott IV, a graduate of West Point, has had a 50-year career as a journalist, novelist and screenwriter. He has covered stories such as Watergate, the Stonewall riots and wars in Lebanon, Iraq and Afghanistan. He is also the author of five bestselling novels and several unsuccessful motion pictures. He has three children, lives in rural Pennsylvania and spends his time Worrying About the State of Our Nation and madly scribbling in a so-far fruitless attempt to Make Things Better.

You can read Lucian Truscott's daily articles at luciantruscott.substack.com. We encourage our readers to get a subscription.
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