Anonymous wrote:Number two is a no-brainer. Yes, I like the bump up in my paycheck at the end of the year, but if I'm making that much already, I won't miss it that much either if I keep paying my FICA.
Anonymous wrote:You guys are way down in the weeds. The thing is insolvent and you're arguing about mowing the lawn while the house is on fire.
Anonymous wrote:"To make all of Social Security solvent for the next 75 years would require the equivalent of any of the following: immediately raising the Social Security payroll tax rate to 14.98% from 12.4% on the first $118,500 of wages; cutting benefits by 16%; or some combination of the two."
In other words, raise the percentage close to where it was just a few years ago.
Also, where in this article do they reference that it runs dry because what's owed to the trust fund, over 2.7 trillion, has run out in combination with the amounts being added in each year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I would stop the ability to claim SS if you've never paid in.
Who gets SS if they don't pay in? I thought you had to have 40 quarters of earning, and the benefit is figured in your top 35 years.
There are benefits for children and spouses.
https://www.ssa.gov/planners/retire/yourchildren.html
https://www.ssa.gov/planners/retire/yourspouse.html
PP. Oops. Forgot about that.
Workers are paying for their own spouses and children. I don't see anything wrong with that.
Can you explain to me how? A worker with income contributes to SS. When that person retires, he can draw on the SS that he contributed. And if he has a minor child, that child receives a SS benefit. And if he has a spouse that never worked, that person is also entitled to receive a SS benefit. 3 people can draw benefits from a single persons contribution. More if there was ever a divorce with a marriage lasting over 10 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I would stop the ability to claim SS if you've never paid in.
Who gets SS if they don't pay in? I thought you had to have 40 quarters of earning, and the benefit is figured in your top 35 years.
There are benefits for children and spouses.
https://www.ssa.gov/planners/retire/yourchildren.html
https://www.ssa.gov/planners/retire/yourspouse.html
PP. Oops. Forgot about that.
Workers are paying for their own spouses and children. I don't see anything wrong with that.
Can you explain to me how? A worker with income contributes to SS. When that person retires, he can draw on the SS that he contributed. And if he has a minor child, that child receives a SS benefit. And if he has a spouse that never worked, that person is also entitled to receive a SS benefit. 3 people can draw benefits from a single persons contribution. More if there was ever a divorce with a marriage lasting over 10 years.
A person receives a SS retirement benefit and their minor child does too? Never heard of that.
As for the spouse, she only receives a benefit if she is over 60 and the wage earner dies. Not at the same time based on the spouse's earnings but only if she has earned the required credits on her own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I would stop the ability to claim SS if you've never paid in.
Who gets SS if they don't pay in? I thought you had to have 40 quarters of earning, and the benefit is figured in your top 35 years.
There are benefits for children and spouses.
https://www.ssa.gov/planners/retire/yourchildren.html
https://www.ssa.gov/planners/retire/yourspouse.html
PP. Oops. Forgot about that.
Workers are paying for their own spouses and children. I don't see anything wrong with that.
Can you explain to me how? A worker with income contributes to SS. When that person retires, he can draw on the SS that he contributed. And if he has a minor child, that child receives a SS benefit. And if he has a spouse that never worked, that person is also entitled to receive a SS benefit. 3 people can draw benefits from a single persons contribution. More if there was ever a divorce with a marriage lasting over 10 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This. At what point are we going to stop robbing Peter to pay Paul? The tax the rich mantra is getting old.Anonymous wrote:I'd like the damn thing to earn some interest somehow for starters. Right now, it's just a transfer payment from young to old.
I don't like a cap increase. Are you also going to do a payout increase? Of course not. This just proves how mathematically unsound it is. It's a pyramid scheme and at the end, the noobies are going to get screwed, b/c it won't be there for them.
Forget this uppermost brackets stuff. It isn't a welfare system and it was never meant to be. It's a retirment system.
Additionally, why is SSDI (disability) dipping into SS? Becuase everyone who collected 99 weeks of unemployment decided the next best route was to go onto disability for (unprovable) aches and pains. The system is being abused and people need to be told to FO.
Finally, I want Obama to return the close to $1 Trillion he took from medicare to fund Obamacare. Enough of this robbing peter to pay paul for votes crap.
It's not a retirement system. It's a retirement insurance system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I would stop the ability to claim SS if you've never paid in.
Who gets SS if they don't pay in? I thought you had to have 40 quarters of earning, and the benefit is figured in your top 35 years.
There are benefits for children and spouses.
https://www.ssa.gov/planners/retire/yourchildren.html
https://www.ssa.gov/planners/retire/yourspouse.html
PP. Oops. Forgot about that.
Workers are paying for their own spouses and children. I don't see anything wrong with that.
Anonymous wrote:This. At what point are we going to stop robbing Peter to pay Paul? The tax the rich mantra is getting old.Anonymous wrote:I'd like the damn thing to earn some interest somehow for starters. Right now, it's just a transfer payment from young to old.
I don't like a cap increase. Are you also going to do a payout increase? Of course not. This just proves how mathematically unsound it is. It's a pyramid scheme and at the end, the noobies are going to get screwed, b/c it won't be there for them.
Forget this uppermost brackets stuff. It isn't a welfare system and it was never meant to be. It's a retirment system.
Additionally, why is SSDI (disability) dipping into SS? Becuase everyone who collected 99 weeks of unemployment decided the next best route was to go onto disability for (unprovable) aches and pains. The system is being abused and people need to be told to FO.
Finally, I want Obama to return the close to $1 Trillion he took from medicare to fund Obamacare. Enough of this robbing peter to pay paul for votes crap.
Anonymous wrote:This. At what point are we going to stop robbing Peter to pay Paul? The tax the rich mantra is getting old.Anonymous wrote:I'd like the damn thing to earn some interest somehow for starters. Right now, it's just a transfer payment from young to old.
I don't like a cap increase. Are you also going to do a payout increase? Of course not. This just proves how mathematically unsound it is. It's a pyramid scheme and at the end, the noobies are going to get screwed, b/c it won't be there for them.
Forget this uppermost brackets stuff. It isn't a welfare system and it was never meant to be. It's a retirment system.
Additionally, why is SSDI (disability) dipping into SS? Becuase everyone who collected 99 weeks of unemployment decided the next best route was to go onto disability for (unprovable) aches and pains. The system is being abused and people need to be told to FO.
Finally, I want Obama to return the close to $1 Trillion he took from medicare to fund Obamacare. Enough of this robbing peter to pay paul for votes crap.