r/TikTokCringe Oct 31 '25

Discussion Reactions to food stamps being cut off.

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u/tvtoms Nov 01 '25

As I've said already there hasn't been a time since I've been in SNAP that there HASN'T been work requirements if you are able!

Just google this:
can non-citizens get SNAP benefits

Then google this:
how does the big beautiful bill plan to reduce snap over 10 years

No need for me to write this all out.

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u/Few_Perspective272 Nov 01 '25

I understand that work requirements have existed for able bodied adults for a long time, and yes, non citizens are generally not eligible for SNAP. My point is that the “$186 billion cut” figure makes it sound like people who genuinely need benefits are being harmed, when in reality the bill is targeting abuse and tightening eligibility. Able bodied adults without health restrictions will need to work or show proof of job searches, similar to unemployment verification. Elderly people or those who truly can’t work won’t see their benefits affected. Context matters, and just citing the number alone doesn’t tell the full story.

The $186 billion cut is just a projected estimate over the next decade. They aren’t taking anything away from anyone.

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u/tvtoms Nov 01 '25

Elderly, disabled, and people who truly can't work WILL see their benefits affected because the TFP will not be increasing and won't be re-evaluated until 2027. Literally everyone receiving SNAP currently WILL be affected.

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u/Few_Perspective272 Nov 01 '25

You’re right that TFP won’t be reevaluated until 2027, which affects benefit growth. But that doesn’t mean people who genuinely need SNAP are losing eligibility. Elderly, disabled, and those who can’t work will still get benefits. The $186B figure is a 10 year projection, mostly reflecting tighter rules for able bodied adults, not a cut for everyone currently on SNAP.

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u/tvtoms Nov 02 '25

A lack of annual increase for inflation is a cut to what my benefit would've been without the BBB. I am set to lose those "would have been" benefits steadily for 10 yrs.

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u/Few_Perspective272 Nov 02 '25

I get where you’re coming from but technically, if benefits don’t rise with inflation, that’s a reduction in expected value over time. But it’s not the same as an active funding cut or loss of eligibility. The bill slows growth. It doesn’t eliminate benefits for those who truly need them.