

At 12:35 PM on November 5, 2025, I ordered food from Walmart and discovered I did not receive y SNAP benefits of $200 dollars. I am seventy-nine years of age.
I wondered at the gilded wall in the 60 Minutes interview. Is is a gilded wall to keep the poor out? How about a arch for the coming of the Prosperity Jesus? What if this is the…..
WALL OF PERPETUAL IMMURMENT
….that the Catholics used to punish sinners? There is a history of a Catholic Need to set up a EXTREME CONTRASTS between good and evil. The wealthy are addicted to this DUALITY – in the extreme punishment of the poor. Donald Trump is a wealthy tyrant who can not enjoy his wealth – unless he is in control of
THE GILDED STARVATION WALL
….that has the full approval of hundreds oof Christian Leaders.
To be coniued
John Presco
Local food pantry struggling to meet supply demands with SNAP benefits in limbo
by Gabrielle Bowman & KVAL.com StaffMon, November 3, 2025 at 4:41 PM
Updated Mon, November 3, 2025 at 6:12 PM

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- SNAP benefits
- Food pantry
- Food insecurity
- Lane County
- Catholic Community Services
- Food assistance
- Supply demands
- Federal aid
SPRINGFIELD, Ore. — Funds for those that rely of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) are still delayed causing people in the Lane County area, like Allexcis Jones, to rely on other sources like Catholic Community Services to help feed her household.
“It definitely had a big impact. We’re going to struggle this month for sure,” Jones said. “Our neighbors are even going to look through their pantry to help us out a little bit.”
Jones has four people in her household, including herself, who use SNAP benefits to help put food on their table. Without that money they are going to struggle.auto640x360, 790kbps854x480, 1450kbps1280x720, 2192kbps1920x1080, 3773kbps0.25×0.5xnormal1.5x2x
KVAL -{ }Local food pantry struggling to meet supply demands with SNAP benefits in limbo
“There is two of us in our household that receive food stamps. So that’s a loss of $600 a month we’re not getting anymore for food. So just really feeling at a loss, not really so frustrated, we are just hopeful it kind of gets all worked out and situated soon.” Jones said.
While at the food pantry on Monday, Jones was able to grab items such as bread, peanut butter, tuna and rice.
“Something is better than nothing for sure. I mean that will last us a week or so,” she said.
With uncertainty surrounding federal food assistance, food pantries like Catholic Community Services have been busy. The line to get in on Monday stretched to the street.
“We’re struggling to keep food on the shelves,” Associate Director for the service centers, Tami Kinman, said. “For example, [Monday] I am not 100% positive that we are going to make it through everybody.”
Local food pantry struggling to meet supply demands with SNAP benefits in limbo
by Gabrielle Bowman & KVAL.com Staff
Mon, November 3, 2025 at 4:41 PM
Updated Mon, November 3, 2025 at 6:12 PM

auto640x360, 790kbps854x480, 1450kbps1280x720, 2192kbps1920x1080, 3773kbps
0.25×0.5xnormal1.5x2x


(SBG)
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topics:
- SNAP benefits
- Food pantry
- Food insecurity
- Lane County
- Catholic Community Services
- Food assistance
- Supply demands
- Federal aid
SPRINGFIELD, Ore. — Funds for those that rely of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) are still delayed causing people in the Lane County area, like Allexcis Jones, to rely on other sources like Catholic Community Services to help feed her household.
“It definitely had a big impact. We’re going to struggle this month for sure,” Jones said. “Our neighbors are even going to look through their pantry to help us out a little bit.”
Jones has four people in her household, including herself, who use SNAP benefits to help put food on their table. Without that money they are going to struggle.
auto640x360, 790kbps854x480, 1450kbps1280x720, 2192kbps1920x1080, 3773kbps
0.25×0.5xnormal1.5x2x
KVAL -{ }Local food pantry struggling to meet supply demands with SNAP benefits in limbo
“There is two of us in our household that receive food stamps. So that’s a loss of $600 a month we’re not getting anymore for food. So just really feeling at a loss, not really so frustrated, we are just hopeful it kind of gets all worked out and situated soon.” Jones said.
While at the food pantry on Monday, Jones was able to grab items such as bread, peanut butter, tuna and rice.
“Something is better than nothing for sure. I mean that will last us a week or so,” she said.
With uncertainty surrounding federal food assistance, food pantries like Catholic Community Services have been busy. The line to get in on Monday stretched to the street.
“We’re struggling to keep food on the shelves,” Associate Director for the service centers, Tami Kinman, said. “For example, [Monday] I am not 100% positive that we are going to make it through everybody.”
Immurement (from Latin im- ‘in’ and murus ‘wall’; lit. ’walling in’), also called immuration or live entombment, is a form of imprisonment, usually until death, in which someone is placed within an enclosed space without exits.[1] This includes instances where people have been enclosed in extremely tight confinement, such as within a coffin. When used as a means of execution, the prisoner is simply left to die from starvation or dehydration. This form of execution is distinct from being buried alive, in which the victim typically dies of asphyxiation. By contrast, immurement has also occasionally been used as an early form of life imprisonment, in which cases the victims were regularly fed and given water. There have been a few cases in which people have survived for months or years after being walled up, as well as some people, such as anchorites, who were voluntarily immured.
Notable examples of immurement as an established execution practice (with death from thirst or starvation as the intended aim) are attested. In the Roman Empire, Vestal Virgins faced live entombment as punishment if they were found guilty of breaking their chastity vows. Immurement has also been well established as a punishment of robbers in Persia, even into the early 20th century. Some ambiguous evidence exists of immurement as a practice of coffin-type confinement in Mongolia. One famous, but likely mythical, immurement was that of Anarkali by Emperor Akbar because of her supposed relationship with Prince Saleem.
Synopsis
The series follows Marian Brook, a young woman entering 1882 New York City’s rigid social scene who is drawn into daily conflicts surrounding the new money Russell family and her old money van Rhijn-Brook family. The two are neighbors across 61st Street near Fifth Avenue on the Upper East Side of New York. The series explores conflicts of new money (who made their money through industrialism), old money (who have inherited wealth), the African-American upper class, and the domestic workers in service to the other three groups.
Numerous social and legal aspects of the age appear as subplots and themes, including the robber barons, the rise of organized labor, the social and legal power of women, the temperance movement, and the (then) scandal of divorce.
The Catholic Church has historically used forms of extreme deprivation, sometimes resulting in death by starvation or dehydration, as a severe punishment, particularly for nuns and monks who broke their vows. This was distinct from the voluntary fasting practiced as a form of religious asceticism or penance.
Local food pantry struggling to meet supply demands with SNAP benefits in limbo
by Gabrielle Bowman & KVAL.com Staff
Mon, November 3, 2025 at 4:41 PM
Updated Mon, November 3, 2025 at 6:12 PM
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