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I don’t know if I agree with that. They spent the last 50 years working, paying into crap they were forced to pay into just so corrupt assholes could raid the piggy bank with no consequences. Now they want their money. I’d want my money too. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: They helped to bankrupt the Country, now they want even more free-rides... |
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Not me I sent my sons to the recruiter office. Want college? Go see Afghanistan View Quote Quoted:
Make better decisions. View Quote Quoted:
Medicare only covers hospitalizations and nursing homes for a specific number of days. After that, you are paying out of pocket. I had grandparents living in FL both went through extended hospitalizations and stays in the nursing home last year before they passed. Their life savings were demolished and they ended up in "Medic-Aid" beds before passing. Very sad. View Quote |
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This surprises anyone!!??
Worst generation in American history......sadly I am a boomer. |
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Quoted: Not everyone can serve. Because making student loans not discharge Le in bankruptcy and backed by Uncle Sam didn’t alter the behavior or costs associated for college administrators. Got it. Medicaid is the primary long term care payer in the country. Most people do not have private long term care coverage and then go broke paying for nursing homes. View Quote FIL's pension and benefits from his 50 year union career should have covered them but that went bankrupt in the 90s. |
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Learn from this young people...….don't be assholes who buy too many toys or spend way over your head and forget to save some fucking money.
Mismanaging funds is a RAMPANT problem in my generation from what I have seen anecdotally. And I was an accountant for well over 30 years. So MANY times I would say "you gotta start saving some money, blah, blah...….blah". It was like I was talking to a wall for god's sake. |
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And all those conservative families get to bankrupt their financial standing to pay for their own kids liberal indoctrination. Who has time for freedom or values cause muh jobs. View Quote If you're a trust fund hippy living in a tent on the streets of NYC, maybe that doesn't matter to you because your financial security allows you to rant about how unfair the system is for the 99%. |
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Quoted: We had the exact same options in paying Social Security that the smarmy young fuckers do. They took it out of our checks. So for all of you claiming we were "duped" why don't YOU just quit paying? Because you don't have a choice that's why. View Quote I happen to be slightly older than the "boomer" generation. Do you really claim that you knew the "trust find" was a fraud in 1965? In 1975? 1985? Where did you get that information? The government lied. The vast majority of the people believed the lie because the truth was difficult to find. |
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I happen to be slightly older than the "boomer" generation. Do you really claim that you knew the "trust find" was a fraud in 1965? In 1975? 1985? Where did you get that information? The government lied. The vast majority of the people believed the lie because the truth was difficult to find. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: We had the exact same options in paying Social Security that the smarmy young fuckers do. They took it out of our checks. So for all of you claiming we were "duped" why don't YOU just quit paying? Because you don't have a choice that's why. I happen to be slightly older than the "boomer" generation. Do you really claim that you knew the "trust find" was a fraud in 1965? In 1975? 1985? Where did you get that information? The government lied. The vast majority of the people believed the lie because the truth was difficult to find. |
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Their votes allowed that to continue. View Quote Please give us a list of all of the politicians who ran for Federal office in the last 30 years who advocated ending the Social Security program. Also please explain why you haven't ended the program by voting for politicians who advocate doing so. |
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Please give us a list of all of the politicians who ran for Federal office in the last 30 years who advocated ending the Social Security program. Also please explain why you haven't ended the program by voting for politicians who advocate doing so. View Quote |
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Probably the bravest political stand George W. Bush made was attempting to start the conversation, and it ended his domestic agenda. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Please give us a list of all of the politicians who ran for Federal office in the last 30 years who advocated ending the Social Security program. Also please explain why you haven't ended the program by voting for politicians who advocate doing so. |
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When they started putting all into the general fund I would imagine most knew it was a fraud by then. View Quote The money received by the Treasury in exchange for those bonds went into the general fund since day one. The "trust fund" never existed. Do you really think Joe Sixpack was paying attention to the "unified budget" plan when it was implemmented? If so, think again. |
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Quoted: Dealing with elderly relatives, most of them have made their peace with the fact they are towards their final laps around the sun. From reporting, it seems to be relatives who end up making medical decisions over an unconscious relative after a massive stroke who are at a loss of what to do other than expending all medical options. View Quote We need more clearly defined standards for "pulling the plug" on cases that are beyond medical help. I have a whole floor filled with people who are beyond help that cost between 500,000 to 1,000,000 per year. These people on average payed in probably 10,000 in their lifetime. |
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The law has required that every dollar not paid out in benefits must be used to buy a US government bond since the program began. The money received by the Treasury in exchange for those bonds went into the general fund since day one. The "trust fund" never existed. Do you really think Joe Sixpack was paying attention to the "unified budget" plan when it was implemmented? If so, think again. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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When they started putting all into the general fund I would imagine most knew it was a fraud by then. The money received by the Treasury in exchange for those bonds went into the general fund since day one. The "trust fund" never existed. Do you really think Joe Sixpack was paying attention to the "unified budget" plan when it was implemmented? If so, think again. That gave false impressions and was correctly brought back to off budget in the 90's IIRC. Moynihan IIRC criticized that "on budget" treatment and said it gave "false impressions" on how much money we had and what the government budget really was. When I saw them playing around with the accounting treatment I became suspicious that we were being suckered into thinking all was good...….it wasn't. |
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Nah, they started counting those funds in the budget in the sixties when I was a kid and was used by "politicians" to mean we had "funds" as part of the overall budget. View Quote But it was an accounting change, not a substantive one. I suggest you look up the original Social Security Act and find out what was done with surplus FICA taxes. It will be an eye opener for you. |
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The "unified budget" was adopted under Lyin' Lyndon. It was probably the only honest thing he ever did. But it was an accounting change, not a substantive one. I suggest you look up the original Social Security Act and find out what was done with surplus FICA taxes. It will be an eye opener for you. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Nah, they started counting those funds in the budget in the sixties when I was a kid and was used by "politicians" to mean we had "funds" as part of the overall budget. But it was an accounting change, not a substantive one. I suggest you look up the original Social Security Act and find out what was done with surplus FICA taxes. It will be an eye opener for you. Whenever I see Congress doing shit like that it makes me suspicious that they want to hide something or are trying to gain more "avenues" to tax and spend, etc. That's why IIRC, that sham accounting was reversed I think at the end of Bush Sr.'s term. |
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Quoted: They helped to bankrupt the Country, now they want even more free-rides... View Quote Well after 42 years of working for them. no life insurance, no medical insurance and my pension that was supposed to be somewhere around $3000 a month is actually $132.53 a month. A lot of us have been screwed out of promised retirement benefits that the companies were supposed to be setting aside money for all along. I am making it okay at the moment, but things like a $5,000 dental implant do hurt. The life insurance I was supposed to have in retirement I actually paid for by contributing extra while I was employed. But is was not true insurance, but a company held slush fund. Something conveniently left out of all the brochures. Turns out the company was "self insured". So, you young ones out there. Get some whole life insurance. Not a lot. but what you think is enough to cover your final expenses. Life insurance is not the Satan everyone thinks it is. And the younger you are the less exp0ensive it is. Use term insurance to cover the big expenses of your life. My wife's policy pays for itself now. She is covered for life at no additional expense to us. The cash value of the policy is more than the death benefit and earns a guaranteed minimum of 3.5% interest. Any young person who does not have a Roth IRA is a fool. If you are offered a 401(k) at work and do no contribute at least enough for the company match, you are an even bigger fool. My biggest advice to you young whippersnappers is do not trust one thing that your employers says about their benefits plan. You have to count on yourself. Take when they offer for free, but do not rely on them for any long term coverage plans. |
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No, I knew that but it gave false impressions of our real budgetary needs and revenue streams when they co mingled it accounting wise into the overall budget. Whenever I see Congress doing shit like that it makes me suspicious that they want to hide something or are trying to gain more "avenues" to tax and spend, etc. That's why IIRC, that sham accounting was reversed I think at the end of Bush Sr.'s term. View Quote It continued going into the general fund until a year or two ago, when the surpluses ended. Pretending that the taxes collected under the guise of financing Social Security weren't used to fund current expenditures was dishonest. |
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There was nothing false about treating the surplus of Social Security taxes as general revenue. The money ended up in the general fund. It continued going into the general fund until a year or two ago, when the surpluses ended. Pretending that the taxes collected under the guise of financing Social Security weren't used to fund current expenditures was dishonest. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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No, I knew that but it gave false impressions of our real budgetary needs and revenue streams when they co mingled it accounting wise into the overall budget. Whenever I see Congress doing shit like that it makes me suspicious that they want to hide something or are trying to gain more "avenues" to tax and spend, etc. That's why IIRC, that sham accounting was reversed I think at the end of Bush Sr.'s term. It continued going into the general fund until a year or two ago, when the surpluses ended. Pretending that the taxes collected under the guise of financing Social Security weren't used to fund current expenditures was dishonest. I became suspicious when they started doing that accounting wise...…….what was the reason?...…...why would they do that when SS was a separate Trust fund arrangement?...……..what are they trying to hide or misrepresent, and why? It made me suspicious. That is when I started thinking this might all be a sham. Then they stopped that around 1990 thankfully. But for me it was too late...…….I was and always have been suspicious after that accounting change. |
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Please give us a list of all of the politicians who ran for Federal office in the last 30 years who advocated ending the Social Security program. Also please explain why you haven't ended the program by voting for politicians who advocate doing so. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Their votes allowed that to continue. Please give us a list of all of the politicians who ran for Federal office in the last 30 years who advocated ending the Social Security program. Also please explain why you haven't ended the program by voting for politicians who advocate doing so. |
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Again.....its not being paid by the relatives. That is her paying for her own medical. Once her debts are settled, inheritance can be distributed.....not before.
Again.....to be clear.....the family is not paying her medical debts. Quoted:
As I said in my OP, her family (heirs) will get stuck paying those medical bills - because it will come out of their inheritance. View Quote |
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Of course GWB didn't propose that until after he was re-elected so no one could have voted for him based on that. View Quote The only previous candidate I can remember who ran on it was Pete DuPont, who was in the GOP primary in 1988. Teaching Econ in the 1980s I had a hard time convincing students that the SS Trust Fund didn't exist. |
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Terlinguachili: Probably bankruptcies due to medical expenses. Very common.
Nailcrusher: Ive always jokingly said most families are 1 serious medical situation away from bankruptcy. And many took huge hits to retirement funds when 2008-09 real estate / market crashed so hard. And its not just the Boomers. Id guess most age groups bankruptcy filings are increasing. People don't save anymore. Spend, spend, spend. View Quote So I see that there are five classes of families and people wealth wise in western civilization, and I think this is in agreement with the teachings of Jesus: the Rich - the rarely criminal and ultimate ingroup predator in our society. the Independent - who can purchase a degree of freedom from social mores, laws, medical costs associated with severe illness, and national obligation. the Cushioned Middle - who can afford a few severe illnesses. the Sustenance-Middle - who are one severe illness away from poverty. the Poor - the often criminal and ultimate ingroup prey in our society. Because of bad governance (I suspect it is usually over governance, and intentionally bad governance) since the Great Depression, the American public has become increasingly jeopardized by medical expenses. |
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SteelonSteel: I saw that with older folks in my own family. Pre boomers, one had a start in a retirement plan at work but the company president died and their plan was not enough to pay his death benefit. So they ended the plan and had the people transfer their contributed money into their personal IRAs. It was a big set back. Add in paying mooch kid’s bills, several vacations each year. Giant Christmas bills despite a low retired income. Yea. Not good looking by term View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes SteelonSteel: I saw that with older folks in my own family. Pre boomers, one had a start in a retirement plan at work but the company president died and their plan was not enough to pay his death benefit. So they ended the plan and had the people transfer their contributed money into their personal IRAs. It was a big set back. Add in paying mooch kid’s bills, several vacations each year. Giant Christmas bills despite a low retired income. Yea. Not good looking by term Lumpy196: Good. Eat dog food. You started this swirling vat of shit we live in. No, they didn't, and we should look at them with a degree of pity and self realization. The generation after Z will look at Y/Millennials with more contempt than we look at Boomers. As an aside, I think it is highly likely that Generation Z might decide to euthanize the Boomers. Neotopiaman: https://thenextrecession.files.wordpress.com/2014/06/us-total-debt.png
Total US debt doubled under the baby boomers. Now that they are dying off debt is unsurprisingly beginning to decrease. |
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Learn from this young people....don't be assholes who buy too many toys or spend way over your head and forget to save some fucking money. Mismanaging funds is a RAMPANT problem in my generation from what I have seen anecdotally. And I was an accountant for well over 30 years. So MANY times I would say "you gotta start saving some money, blah, blah....blah". It was like I was talking to a wall for god's sake. View Quote Had he not put so much of the business profits back into the business instead of retirement during the good years, bankruptcy probably wouldn't have been necessary. |
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61 and decided to check in. Been working since I was 15 and paying into the system since then, (part time jobs) and full time since 17. I would gladly forgo any ss payments if the fed.gov would refund all of my payments with a modest 6.5% return. However this isn't going to happen.
61 and have a mortgage payment. Hopefully will have it paid off by the time I'm 66. Was married for 35 years and had a paid off house at the time of the divorce. Daughters college tuition paid in full two weeks before her graduation. She did not have a penny of school debt. Sometimes you don't know what life holds in store for you.You play the hand that you are dealt and make the most of it. Will work till I'm 68 or so if my health holds out. I'm happy, healthy (now) go to the gym 3-5 days a week. Shoot and fish whenever I want. Best of luck and wishes for good or improved health to all of you. |
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If you can't get social handouts because you have too much cash, why not blow it all so you can enjoy nice things.
Because if not, all the money you saved up will be spent on medical and nursing homes. |
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