A Quote by Mark Meadows

Unfortunately, Democrats don't want to wage a war on poverty or improve program integrity; they prefer talking points. — © Mark Meadows
Unfortunately, Democrats don't want to wage a war on poverty or improve program integrity; they prefer talking points.
Can we not wage a war and emerge victorious against poverty. Let us defeat poverty.
I want to wage war against illiteracy, poverty, unemployment, unfair competition, communitarianism, delinquency.
Through a policy driven approach we have wage a war against poverty and we are confident we will win this war.
At the current $5.15 an hour, the federal minimum wage has become a poverty wage. A full-time worker with one child lives below the official poverty line.
You can't lift people out of poverty simply by tweaking the tax system, or by raising the minimum wage by a few cents, or by reducing student debt slightly. These might be necessary components of a larger anti-poverty program, but you have to accept they are pieces of a much larger puzzle.
I prefer being able to choose who I want to help or what I want to improve in the world by making a lot of money myself rather than just going out there and talking about things. If you have money to do things, it's much better than just talking about them.
I thought in this country, the best social program was a job. Yet minimum wage jobs aren't paying enough to keep families out of poverty.
I thought in this country, the best social program was a job. Yet minimum wage jobs arent paying enough to keep families out of poverty
[A] family with two kids that earns the minimum wage still lives below the poverty line. That's wrong. That's why, since the last time this Congress raised the minimum wage, 19 states have chosen to bump theirs even higher. Tonight, let's declare that in the wealthiest nation on Earth, no one who works full-time should have to live in poverty, and raise the federal minimum wage to $9 an hour.
Though we talk peace, we wage war. Sometimes we even wage war in the name of peace. Does that seem paradoxical? Well, war is not afraid of paradoxes.
I want us to raise the national minimum wage, because people who live in poverty should not - who work full-time should not still be in poverty.
My home policy: I wage war; my foreign policy: I wage war. All the time I wage war.
The real tragedy of minimum wage laws is that they are supported by well-meaning groups who want to reduce poverty. But the people who are hurt most by higher minimums are the most poverty stricken.
I'm a warrior at heart; I'm an ex-Navy Seal. I'm too old to wage war anymore, and so now I wage it mentally. And so I find politics very stimulating; it's war without guns.
We are unnecessarily wasting our precious resources in wars... if we must wage war, we have to do it on unemployment, disease, poverty, and backwardness.
Ludicrous concepts…like the whole idea of a 'war on terrorism'. You can wage war against another country, or on a national group within your own country, but you can't wage war on an abstract noun. How do you know when you've won? When you've got it removed from the Oxford English Dictionary?
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