For Alicia Spradley, it all started with a quick prayer.

Spradley from Chicago had seen the news that federal food aid was pausing at the start of November due to the government shutdown. With local food banks already stretched thin, she worried that her neighbors might soon go hungry.

So, on Monday night, she closed her eyes and asked, “What can I do to help?”

A few hours later, she came across a post on a Facebook community group about becoming a “grocery buddy” — someone who buys groceries for a stranger or anyone at risk of losing their food benefits. Without hesitation, Spradley wrote her own callout, offering support.

  • batdad90@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Here come all the “feel good” stories of good people stepping up while our government lavishly spends and produces manufactured starvation.

    To clarify, I’m proud of people stepping up to help and do the right thing but this situation is beyond fucked.

    • snooggums@piefed.world
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      2 days ago

      This is like neighbors helping each other during a flood or hurricane, a positive support network to address a crisis that should not be normalized as a long term solution.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Maybe but that flood or hurricane was an “act of god” even if society’s actions made it more likely and more serious. Meanwhile this crisis was directly and immediately man made. It’s not like you can blame probability or the vagaries of weather or claim climate changes indirect, this is directly caused by sociopaths that are somehow in control