On May 1, 12:10 pm, emoneyjoe <
emoney...@iglou.com> wrote:
> On Wed, 1 May 2013 03:38:32 -0700 (PDT),
maxwel...@my-deja.com wrote:
> >On Apr 30, 10:04 pm, emoneyjoe <
emoney...@iglou.com> wrote:
> >> >> >> >>>
news:8e9d1edf-c96e-46b3...@a8g2000yqp.googlegroups.com:
>
> >> >> >> >>>> Reagan quadrupled the debt, "wouldn't obama have to spend 30
> >> >> >> >>>> trillion to quadruple the debt like reagan/bush did. " -
> >> >> >> >>>> Last post: Aug 3, 2009
>
> >> >> >> >>>> --
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090803030351AA74Tvr
>
> >> >> >> >>>> --
> >> >> >> >>>>
http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1350&dat=20040701&id=lGRPAAAAIB
> >> >> >> >>>> AJ &sjid=JQQEAAAAIBAJ&pg=1983,53818
>
> >> >> >> >>>> (Toledo Blade)
>
> >> >> >> >>> Hmmm. I have 50 cents in my pocket. Assume you have a thousand
> >> >> >> >>> dollars in yours. Which of us can double our amounts the quickest?
>
> >> >> >> >> Let's say I have a thousand dollars in my pocket. You are a Kenyan
> >> >> >> >> born village idiot who has never held a real job or had to earn his
> >> >> >> >> own money. You think half of my money should be yours because you are
> >> >> >> >> lazy, stupid and think I am lucky. Who should take his black ass down
> >> >> >> >> the street and bullshit someone else?
>
> >> >> >> >Ahhhh, racism.....the scapegoat for anyone who is out of ideas and can't
> >> >> >> >think for him or herself.
>
> >> >> >> Where do you see racism, or is there such a
> >> >> >> thing as half-racism? :-)
>
> >> >> >>A lot of the Reagan budget went to the
> >> >> > >build up of stealth, the world situation was
> >> >> >> such that it was a good idea.
>
> >> >> >Why did he fight against tax INCREASES, then ??
>
> >> >> Probably because his advisors knew that
> >> >> the baby boomers were entering the work
> >> >> force in the highest number during the 1980s.
>
> >> >Exactly. It was a brilliant scam of scams. The SSA
> >> >Act of 1983 increased SS taxes and with the baby
> >> >boomers created a surplus that for nearly 30 years
> >> >has been invested in special US treasury bonds.
>
> >> Since when does a government scam itself?
>
> >It scams the people. Not hard to comprehend.
>
> I can't tell if you are talking about
> "the people as the government", or
> of individuals being scammed.
>
> The only way an individual doesn't
> get his money's worth is if he doesn't
> live long enough to get all his money
> back and dies without survivors eligible
> for benefits.
They get scammed when the trust fund
doesn't pay out as it should and cuts
are made instead. Baby boomers are
responsible for the surplus and the surplus
should be paid to them as planned in 1983.
>
> Unless something is done, the trust
> fund will run out of money in 10 years
> or so, there is time to make fixes.
Wrong, You should read. It should be
solvent until 2034. You are a victim of
mis-information or maybe you were thinking
of Medicare.
>
> >> Wasn't it the democrats and socialist democrats
> >> (a nice term for pinkos of the time) that promoted
> >> the SSA without a rational mechanism to deal
> >> with inflation?
> >> I am a perfect example of the lack of any
> >> financial planning in the SSA, I probably have
> >> collected 20 times what I paid in, and I sure
> >> ain't no baby boomer.
>
> >> The SS trust funds have not helped with
> >> federal funding except to liberal democrats
> >> who think money can be spent twice, if
> >> the money wasn't borrowed from the trust
> >> funds it would have been borrowed from
> >> somebody else.
>
> >Borrowed?? why? to pay for tax cuts?
>
> No, I call it federal borrowing when
> any entity buys US Savings Bonds,
> all others call it investing.
But had there not been the big tax cuts....
then there would not be the need for
the borrowing.
>
> The "money" can't just be put in
> a bank vault and sit there, it is all
> emoney now, just bits on a computer
> disk, the government doesn't have to
> sell treasury paper to the trust funds
> and pay interest, congress just thinks
> it looks better if the trust funds collect
> interest even if the government (people)
> pays the interest to itself.
>
> >> >It help fund the govt in lieu of other taxes.
>
> >> Only in your delusion.
>
> >It paid for tax cuts.
> >$2.7 trillion US
>
> No it didn't, the money is still in the
> trust funds as treasury paper drawing
> interest, how in the world can you claim
> it paid for anything.
>
> If you put money in a CD, do you
> claim the bank paid for anything with
> that money?
If you don't believe that the money in
a CD or bond is used for other purposes
then I am wasting my time with you.
It has to be paid back, but unlike a bank
the govt decides when and how.
>
> >> >Now to complete the scam the current republicans
> >> >want to reform (cut) SS just as interest is starting
> >> >to flow to SSA and just before the principle gets
> >> >paid back. It is called theft.
>
> >> What principal gets paid back?
>
> >$2.7 trillion in bonds.
>
> It gets paid back anytime the trust fund
> needs payout money. Whether or not
> the government has to borrow the money
> to pay it back with is not an issue at all.
Yes it is an issue because certain politicians make
the debt and taxes and issue. Congress can make
decisions on slowing down the payout to SS receipients.
That is what is happening now. If they slow it down then
less borrowing from other sources is needed and taxes
don't have to be raised.
>
> >> The past 12 months saw the first time
> >> that payouts exceeded payins,
>
> >Correct.
>
> >> that means
> >> at least one of the trust funds is shrinking,
> >> and something will have to be done some
> >> time soon to avoid having to use general
> >> funds to pay the OASDI payouts.
>
> >It is the interest on those bonds that is being
> >paid out. The principle on the bond is not.
>
> Only because the payins are still
> enough that the principle doesn't have
> to be gone into, that is a good thing
> for the future of the trust fund, but
> a few more people turning 66 and
> less people with jobs and that could
> change quickly.
But according to you that should not be a problem
since " It gets paid back anytime the trust fund
> needs payout money"
>
> >> You have a different twist on the
> >> complaint about SS, most of those
> >> who don't know the facts think they
> >> will never get back what they paid in,
> >> which is wrong if they live to be 72
> >> or maybe 75 depending on when
> >> they retire and how much they
> >> earned.
>
> >You make a good case for cutting
> >current SS receipients.
>
> No, dummy, don't believe the
> leftist gossip, nobody even thinks
> of cutting current recipients, all
> the fund fixes would be in retirement
> age, increased max FICA earnings,
> or possibly higher FICA rates.
But by age 75 everyone should at least
break even. So why not limit the payouts
that you seem concerned about?
>
> >> The people that planned the
> >> financing of SS were dumb as dirt,
> >> or knew it could not work, but they
> >> wanted the social-ism caring kind
> >> of government.
> >> Then as the rates went up and
> >> benefits were added, the financing
> >> got even more silly.
>
> >> The SS taxes harmed the economy
> >> from 1937 until last year by taking
> >> more taxes than was paid out in
> >> benefits.
>
> >> Now we have people saying that
> >> there is a hundred Trillion or so in
> >> unfunded liabilities, not counting
> >> the national debt and the interest
> >> on it.
>
> >> Why you think doing what has
> >> to be done to keep the fund(s)
> >> solvent is beyond me, the fund
> >> money is kept separate (in the
> >> accounting) even though Clinton
> >> used it to reduce the debt owed
> >> to the public.
>
> >Yes, but those bonds are a liability
> >to the US treasury.
>
> So what, they borrowed the money
> from the fund back then, the fund gets
> the interest, it makes more sense than
> putting the money in risk investments.
>
> >Other monies
> >will be needed to pay for those bonds.
> >This is why some want to cut SS.
> >You are falling for the big lie.
>
> No, you are falling for the biggest
> lies of all, nobody wants to cut any
> current SS benefits, if they did I would
> be screaming bloody murder.
>
> You are correct to be concerned,
> not about current benefits or retirees
> not getting back what they paid in,
> but about the future viability of the
> debt maintenance, the continued
> increase in the debt of about a Trillion
> a year is something that needs to be
> fixed.
>
> It isn't a question of blame, it is
> a necessity to plan for some way
> to keep going without going into
> default, because the job picture
> is not going to improve much,
> federal tax revenues are not
> going to increase much, and
> the deficit problems will continue
> unless radical changes are made.
From what I read from you then the $2,7T owed
to SS should simply be replaced by other borrowing.
And the FICA tax should be raised or at least the amount
of income it applies to.
Problem solved.
>
> We should all hope and pray
> with all our might that it doesn't
> result in more authoritative socialism.>> I use this nym because I am
> >> out to try to make some sense
> >> of the federal debt and to find
> >> ways to avoid an eventual very
> >> disastrous default.
>
> >> Congress and the president
> >> must be in confused denial to
> >> think the present situation can
> >> be resolved with spending cuts
> >> and increased taxes.
>
> >> >> That eased up completely by Clinton's
> >> >> second or third year.
>
> >> >> The economy was really broken in 1980,
> >> >> not necessarily because of anything Carter
> >> >> had been doing, just the fact that women
> >> >> were entering the work force for the first
> >> >> time in droves, the baby boomers too,
> >> >> demand for everything was driving up
> >> >> prices, and interest rates went sky high
> >> >> because more people were borrowing
> >> >> than had money to loan.
>
> >> >> It took more than 4 years to really
> >> >> get straightened out, but it did, and
> >> >> the democrats coerced Bush I to
> >> >> raise taxes after he said he wouldn't,
> >> >> maybe that helped cause the job
> >> >> problem that caused him to not
> >> >> get a second term.
>
> >> >> The demand didn't just start
> >> >> during Carter, it was so bad in the
> >> >> mid 1970s that we could not use
> >> >> catalog prices on industrial and
> >> >> commercial electric equipment
> >> >> and supplies, we had to check
> >> >> invoices and estimate what new
> >> >> stock would cost, else we would
> >> >> have been selling for less than
> >> >> what it would cost to replace
> >> >> inventory.
>
> >> >> The problem is just the opposite
> >> >> now, demand is so low in some areas
> >> >> it is nonexistent, there is only a fraction
> >> >> of the money circulating now locally,
> >> >> and it is getting worse.