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October by Lepage
Sketchdump IV
Musée d’Orsay, Palais de Tokyo, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Nantes - janvier/février
Jules-Bastien Lepage, Portrait de Mademoiselle Xoupp (1869)
The LePage administration likes to tout how it has reduced the number of people who receive social services in Maine. If fewer people get government help, the thinking goes, the problems that caused their need for help also have been magically eliminated.
Data show this isn’t true.
Take hunger. A new report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture found that the percentage of people in Maine who don’t have enough food has risen. In the Pine Tree State, 16.4 percent of households reported being food insecure, on average, during 2014-16. During the previous three-year period, 2013-15, 15.8 percent of households reported being food insecure. Nationally, the percentage of food insecure households dropped from 13.7 percent to 13 percent in that time, continuing a downward trend. Meanwhile, Maine has risen two spots to become the 7th most food-insecure state.
Here's Mister Thirty-Nine Percent taking another swing at teachers. So tired of this man.
Jules Bastien-Lepage, Laura, Lady Alma-Tadema (1879)
"[Gov. Paul LePage] just assumes that if he makes life in poverty even more miserable, the jobs will somehow appear," said Elizabeth Lower-Basch with the Center for Law and Social Policy.