The Case for Giving Lunch to All Students Instead of Embarrassing a Hungry Few

Wimberger didn’t go into element on who he considers to be “elite knowers”—be they educators, directors, dad and mom, or pediatric health experts who support balanced nutrition programs for children no matter their dad and mom’ or guardians’ degree of wealth or poverty. Nor did he expound on the ethical convictions that equate taxation with theft within the context of a social contract that advantages society. 

Because the writer of the Healthy School Meals for All Act, Shelton felt compelled to answer Wimberger and his conspiracy principle of a “bigger social political agenda at work.” Her open letter follows.

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