SUSSEX BOROUGH, N.J. – More students are taking to social media to connect their paltry “healthy” school lunches with first lady Michelle Obama’s food control campaign.

Parents are getting into the act, too.

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Several of them appeared at a recent New Jersey’s Sussex-Wantage Regional Board of Education meeting to voice their complaints about the meals their children are being served at school.

“Not everything is fine,” Sussex-Wantage parent Monika Tatar said at Wednesday’s board meeting, according to the New Jersey Herald. “I am disgusted by the food they (her children) bought. … You should try it because this is unbelievably bad.”

She said the peanut butter and jelly sandwich was dry.

At least one school board member acknowledged what parents and students are saying.

“I don’t know how we’ve had it said that there are no complaints,” board member Kenneth Nuss said. “I agree with the comments that have been made tonight and in the past.”

One “poor ugly soul” posted his visual reaction to Twitter. He’s holding a parody drawing of the famous Obama “Hope” propaganda poster from 2008.

Except in this one, the student is holding a “Thanks Michelle Obama” sign in one hand and a fistful of vegetables in the other. Below it is the #thanksmichelleobama hashtag that has become synonymous with skimpy school lunches.

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As shared by @tierney_flynnn:

More students are using the medium to show the world their skimpy, overcooked “healthy” offerings.

Garrett Campbell took a photo of his lunch at Boyd County High School in Ashland, Kentucky.

Two rolls, mashed potatoes with no gravy and two pieces of something that may or may not be meat.

Meanwhile, Taylor says this was her lunch at Ramsey Junior High in Fort Smith, Arkansas. It consists of a thin slice of turkey, baked beans, mashed potatoes and an apple.

Even more posted their lunches, too, perhaps attempting to prove the theory than calories can be burned out of food.

Michelle Obama says the “progress” she’s made at making these lunches healthier is “incredibly fragile.”

She calls on her supporters to be taking to social media to talk positively about her program.

“We need to be out there every day tweeting, Instagramming, myth-busting. We need to use every tool at our disposal: social media, marketing and advertising, even some old-fashioned community organizing,” she said in a speech Thursday, according to the Ventura County Star.

Students are doing just that – exposing the first lady’s program.