The far-left circus in Washington added another act this week when Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) took to social media to accuse Christians—yes, Christians—of wanting to starve the poor. In a now widely condemned post on X (formerly Twitter), Crockett railed against conservative efforts to curb welfare fraud, using her platform not to encourage responsibility or integrity, but to slam Christians for daring to question how taxpayer dollars are spent.

“It blows my mind that the party that touts its ‘Christian values’ is the same party that is SET on taking food from the hungry,” Crockett wrote, referencing the SNAP program (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program), the nation’s bloated and abused food stamp system.

Let’s be honest: This wasn’t a policy critique. It was a cheap, inflammatory smear against people of faith.

Crockett, who has already made a name for herself as one of the most unhinged freshman members of Congress, has been involved in multiple controversies since taking office. From threatening Sen. Ted Cruz to allegedly assaulting a journalist, her record of erratic, divisive behavior has become her trademark. But this latest outburst shows just how far she’s willing to go to score points with the radical left.

Her accusation? That Republicans—many of whom are Christians—don’t care about hungry Americans simply because they want accountability and integrity in government assistance programs. Heaven forbid we ask that food stamps actually go to those who truly need them, rather than serving as a crutch for generational dependence and fraud.

Conservatives across the country weren’t having it. One user on X fired back with a biblical rebuttal that sent Crockett’s argument straight to the mat:

“Let’s turn to the Bible, a verse for working and food: ‘For even when we were with you, we gave you this rule: “The one who is unwilling to work shall not eat.”’ — 2 Thessalonians 3:10.”

That’s right. Christianity doesn’t call for government coercion in the name of charity. It calls for personal responsibility, generosity of spirit, and voluntary compassion—not using the IRS as a weapon to redistribute wealth.

Another user nailed it:

“Show me where Jesus said, ‘When I was hungry, you delegated your responsibility to the government to feed me.’”

Still more pointed out the glaring truth Crockett and her ilk love to ignore: Government-run welfare is not charity. It’s bureaucracy, riddled with fraud, inefficiency, and abuse. Local churches, food banks, and community organizations are far more effective—and more aligned with actual Christian values.

One former addict shared,

“I’ve known two families who truly needed SNAP. I’ve known over 60 drug addicts who used it to trade for narcotics.”

That’s the hard truth liberal politicians like Crockett refuse to face. Instead, they scream “compassion” while pushing policies that trap generations in dependency, destroy family structure, and punish hard-working Americans who foot the bill.

Here’s the bottom line: Wanting accountability doesn’t make you anti-Christian. It makes you a responsible steward. But for radicals like Jasmine Crockett, any opposition to Big Government is painted as cruelty—even when it’s rooted in faith, facts, and common sense.

Maybe it’s time she read the Bible before she tries quoting it.