Posted on 06/23/2003 11:31:04 AM PDT by dwilli
Is anyone listening to this phony jerk? Do this idiot really believe that everyone can afford their own drugs. I pay for mine but there are lots of hard working people that can't afford the $300 a month I have to pay.
I have listened to Limbaugh since the days his first hour was local New York but the millions he has made turned him into a elitist fool.
My parents HAD prescription coverage (my mother had it because she was a retired teacher) but their bills were STILL upwards of $500/month.
So, if you want to make an argument about constitutionality I am willing to consider it. (Of course, I would prefer to push removing other unconstitutional programs first, like NPR.) But I am not willing to concede that this program isn't needed in some fashion or other by a great many elderly.
Let us clear this Up! Dwilli is the one who stated that FICA is not a TAX. I am laughing at his asinine assertion!
Also to give you an answer, my family owns a small corporation and we decided to pay ourselves very small salaries to stop paying those idiot FICA taxes.
Our accountant wondered why we were paying ourselves so little and we told him. He told us we need to pay ourselves dividends because they are not subject to FICA. So we lowered our salaries even more and made up the difference with dividends and thought it wonderful!
Until of course the IRS informed us that we are now in violation because we are avoiding paying the government their money! I guess FICA is not a TAX but rather a mandatory payment of funds to the government!
Really? Where do they put the money for safekeeping until I retire?
I know, I saw that and that SUCKS!! At least that was an incentive to try and get off them, if you actually had to tear them out of the booklet! Now no one will know if anyone is receiving any assistance, so why should they care! I'll bet it was the welfare department's idea to find a way to make sure they kept maximum recipients to justify their jobs!!
That's funny, I don't see it accounted in my 401k?
Can I invest it in a good mutual fund and make money, if it is for my own retirement?
But I don't care how it works at all!
I don't plan on it existing when I am old (I'm 35). I don't want it and I am trying desperately to save up and invest so I can care for my own self.
This certainly isn't helping me....
Oh. I see. It goes into a special account in my name where it sits there and no one can touch it except me, right? Isn't the money I pay in actually going to pay for someone who is already retired -- who isn't me? Somehow, in your mind, being forced to pay into an unsustainable Ponzi scheme is a contribution? I have no choice in the matter, but it's still a "contribution?" Kind of like how federal welfare spending isn't really spending -- it's actually an "investment." Puh-leeze. Is there any limit to your willingness to accept focus-group tested eupemisms in lieu of honest terminology?
Get some government jobs or enough civilian jobs to bring your income above the ceiling.
Typical social engineering arrogance and nonsense. First of all, you have no basis on which to assume anything about my income level.
Second of all, if I need any career advice from you, you may rest assured that I will most humbly ask for it.
But let me see if I get your point -- if I stop doing productive private sector work for which people are willing to pay me voluntarily in exchange for what they perceive as value, and instead go into some government work that people wouldn't pay for if left to their own devices and which creates no real value, then somehow I'm making a real contribution to the national economy?
Sounds like you could really use a good old fashioned "consciousness raising," to borrow a phrase that used to be in vogue among my left-wing baby boomer peers back in the '60s.
Or does it go into the icebox? Or into the crisper drawer? Does it go into the butterdish?
You are absolutely right. I have lived in Oregon and Washington my whole life and never once saw someone using food stamps. I moved to New York a few months ago and about 25% of the time the person in line ahead of me at the grocery store is paying with one of the new "food cards." There are slick ads on the radio telling you how you might already be eligible for these cards, "Even immigrants can apply without fear!"
Meanwhile, I know several people here who work 60 or 70 hours a week at good jobs and do everything they can to cut expenses but still can barely stay ahead.
Sorry for the rant, but this really makes me mad. If you're too ashamed to be seen tearing out food stamps, you don't really need them.
Are your parents going to pay for their medical care when they retire? No...they will be on Medicare. They have probably saved for their retirement with the assumption that they will have Medicare. Why don't you ask them what they think?
Then why all the emphasis on health and non-smoking by the Gov and the media and the baby-boomers?
Besides, I'm doing my part--I smoke cigars, drink, ride a motorcycle in addition to weightlifting and running. I think my chances of making to the golden age of grifting geezer are pretty low--with that I am happy...
Why don't you ask them what they think?
'Cuz I don't have any... My mom left when I was 13 and my dad died while I was stationed in Korea. I have no living family.
EPIC
FEE SCHEDULE
|
|
DEDUCTIBLE SCHEDULE
SINGLE
Annual Income |
Deductible |
Under $20,000 |
Not Available |
$20,001 - $21,000 |
$ 530 |
$21,001 - $22,000 |
550 |
$22,001 - $23,000 |
580 |
$23,001 - $24,000 |
720 |
$24,001 - $25,000 |
750 |
$25,001 - $26,000 |
780 |
$26,001 - $27,000 |
810 |
$27,001 - $28,000 |
840 |
$28,001 - $29,000 |
870 |
$29,001 - $30,000 |
900 |
$30,001 - $31,000 |
930 |
$31,001 - $32,000 |
960 |
$32,001 - $33,000 |
1,160 |
$33,001 - $34,000 |
1,190 |
$34,001 - $35,000 |
1,230 |
Over $35,000 |
Not Eligible |
MARRIED
Joint Annual Income |
Deductible |
Under $26,000 |
Not Available |
$26,001 - $27,000 |
$ 650 |
$27,001 - $28,000 |
675 |
$28,001 - $29,000 |
700 |
$29,001 - $30,000 |
725 |
$30,001 - $31,000 |
900 |
$31,001 - $32,000 |
930 |
$32,001 - $33,000 |
960 |
$33,001 - $34,000 |
990 |
$34,001 - $35,000 |
1,020 |
$35,001 - $36,000 |
1,050 |
$36,001 - $37,000 |
1,080 |
$37,001 - $38,000 |
1,110 |
$38,001 - $39,000 |
1,140 |
$39,001 - $40,000 |
1,170 |
$40,001 - $41,000 |
1,200 |
$41,001 - $42,000 |
1,230 |
$42,001 - $43,000 |
1,260 |
$43,001 - $44,000 |
1,290 |
$44,001 - $45,000 |
1,320 |
$45,001 - $46,000 |
1,575 |
$46,001 - $47,000 |
1,610 |
$47,001 - $48,000 |
1,645 |
$48,001 - $49,000 |
1,680 |
$49,001 - $50,000 |
1,715 |
Over $50,000 |
Not Eligible |
For Each Prescription Costing: | Enrollees Pay: |
---|---|
Up to $ 15 | $ 3 |
$ 15.01 to $ 35 | $ 7 |
$ 35.01 to $ 55 | $ 15 |
Over $ 55 | $ 20 |
I just want to opt out of the whole Social Compact--It's a net loss for me....
She is a widow about 50 and has no insurance.
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