I LOVE MARGE BEAR; CHAINED CPI; FOR HISTORY BUFFS: JFK and the Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why It Matters

1 view
Skip to first unread message

SEIU721REFORMERS

unread,
Dec 31, 2012, 9:39:42 AM12/31/12
to
FROM MARGE BEAR

I don't think pissed really covers it!!!!

Alan Simpson, the Senator from Wyoming calls senior citizens the Greediest Generation as he compared "Social Security " to a Milk Cow with 310 million teats.

Here's a response in a letter from PATTY MYERS in Montana ... I think she is a little ticked off! She also tells it like it is!

"Hey Alan, let's get a few things straight!!!!!

1. 
 As a career politician, you have been on the public dole (tit) for FIFTY YEARS.

2.
  I have been paying Social Security taxes for 48 YEARS (since I was 15 years old. I am now 63).

3.
  My Social Security payments, and those of millions of other Americans, were safely tucked away in an interest bearing account for decades until you political pukes decided to raid the account and give OUR money to a bunch of zero losers in return for votes, thus bankrupting the system and turning Social Security into a Ponzi scheme that would make Bernie Madoff proud.

4. 
 Recently, just like Lucy & Charlie Brown, you and "your ilk" pulled the proverbial football away from millions of American seniors nearing retirement and moved the goalposts for full retirement from age 65 to age, 67. NOW, you and your "shill commission" are proposing to move the goalposts YET AGAIN.

5. 
 I, and millions of other Americans, have been paying into Medicare from Day One, and now "you morons" propose to change the rules of the game. Why? Because "you idiots" mismanaged other parts of the economy to such an extent that you need to steal our money from Medicare to pay the bills.

6. 
 I, and millions of other Americans, have been paying income taxes our entire lives, and now you propose to increase our taxes yet again. Why? Because you "incompetent bastards" spent our money so profligately that you just kept on spending even after you ran out of money. Now, you come to the American taxpayers and say you need more to pay off YOUR debt.

To add insult to injury, you label us "greedy" for calling "bullshit" to your incompetence. Well, Captain Bullshit, I have a few questions for YOU: 

1.
 How much money have you earned from the American taxpayers during your pathetic 50-year political career?

2. 
 At what age did you retire from your pathetic political career, and how much are you receiving in annual retirement benefits from the American taxpayers?

3.
 How much do you pay for YOUR government provided health insurance?

4.
  What cuts in YOUR retirement and healthcare benefits are you proposing in your disgusting deficit reduction proposal, or as usual, have you exempted yourself and your political cronies?
It is you, Captain Bullshit, and your political co-conspirators called Congress who are the "greedy" ones. It is you and your fellow nutcase thieves who have bankrupted America and stolen the American dream from millions of loyal, patriotic taxpayers. 
And for what? Votes and your job and retirement security at our expense, you lunk-headed, leech.

That's right, sir. You and yours have bankrupted America for the sole purpose of advancing your pathetic, political careers. You know it, we know it, and you know that we know it.

And you can take that to the bank, you miserable son of a bitch. NO, I did not stutter.

EVERYONE!!!
If you like the way things are in America delete this.
If you agree with what a Montana citizen, Patty Myers, says, please PASS IT ON!!!!

P.S. And stop calling Social Security benefits "entitlements". WHAT AN INSULT!!!! 
I have been paying in to the SS system for 45 years “It's my money”-give it back to me the way the system was designed and stop patting yourself on the back like you are being generous by doling out these monthly checks!
Marge Bear
***

Dear Congress: A Vote for the Chained CPI Is a Vote to Cut Social Security Benefits

Posted: 12/28/2012 4:25 pm
React

SHARE THIS STORY

Submit this story

The following letter was co-authored by Eric Kingson and Nancy Altman, co-chairs of the Strengthen Social Security Coalition, and sent to every Congressional office.

Our coalition of 320 organizations representing a broad cross-section of the American people respectfully urges you to reject the use of the less-generous and less-accurate chained-CPI as the basis for Social Security's cost of living adjustments for current and future seniors, people with disabilities, and other beneficiaries.

A vote for the chained-CPI is a vote to cut your constituents' Social Security benefits. The chained-CPI would pull $112 billion directly out of the pockets of beneficiaries over the next 10 years and much more thereafter. A typical Social Security retiree would lose roughly $500 in benefits at age 75 under the chained CPI as compared to the current law; $1,000 in their 85th year and $1,500 at age 90.

This may not sound like a lot of money, but two-thirds of seniors rely on Social Security for half or more of their income; one-third rely on Social Security for ninety percent or more of their income. Those benefits are modest, averaging just $14,900 a year for retirees, just $13,600 for all beneficiaries. A member of our coalition, the National Women's Law Center, has calculated that the cut translates to two weeks of food per month for an average widow who survives to age 95.

Some have suggested ways to shield the most vulnerable populations from the impact of the chained-CPI. The need to shield some from the harsh impact of the change underscores that it is simply a disguised benefit cut. Those proposals merely soften the blow to some, but by no means all, of the most vulnerable among us. For example, a bump-up in benefits after twenty years does nothing for those who are in their late seventies and early eighties. Even for those receiving the bump-up, most beneficiaries are never restored to where they would have been under current law. While exempting, or making off-setting changes in, the Supplemental Security Incomeprogram softens the blow for some very poor seniors and people with disabilities, the vast majority of Social Security beneficiaries, many of them with low or modest benefits, living in or near poverty, are not held-harmless.

Because current seniors are on limited, fixed incomes, the president, the vice president and many members of Congress have assured the public that they would not cut Social Security benefits for today's seniors. Voting for legislation that includes the chained-CPI repudiates that promise. Those supporting the chained-CPI are implicitly saying that they consider Social Security benefits too high, and that this year's 1.7 percent COLA adjustment is too generous.

If you oppose the chained CPI but believe it is necessary in order to obtain agreement on a deficit reduction deal, we remind you that Social Security has not and cannot by law contribute to the federal debt. The program is too important to be used as a bargaining chip in fiscal cliff negotiations.

For more information, please see Ten Things Members of Congress Should Know About the Chained-CPI [also below].

Sincerely,
Nancy Altman and Eric Kingson
Co-chairs, Strengthen Social Security Coalition

Ten Things Everyone Should Know About the Social Security COLA Cut
 
Here are ten things that we believe are important for members of Congress and their staff to know before voting on whether to cut the Social Security benefits of today's seniors and people with disabilities by changing the COLA. 
 
1) The COLA is part of Social Security's basic benefit. It is NOT a benefit increase. The COLA is designed to make sure that Social Security's modest but vital benefits do not erode over time. Without these annual adjustments, the benefits would slowly but inexorably lose their purchasing power.  Without it, the longer one lived, the less purchasing power her or his benefits would have. 

2) With the support of the overwhelming majority of Democratic and Republican members of the House and Senate, President Richard Nixon signed the COLA into law on July 1, 1972 saying that this "action constitutes a major break-through for older Americans, for it says at last that inflation-proof social security benefits are theirs as a matter of right, and not as something which must be temporarily won over and over again from each succeeding Congress."

3) In 2013, the COLA adjustment will be 1.7 percent and in 2012 it was 3.6 percent. There were no COLA increases in 2010 and 2011, however, because the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W) upon which the COLA is based, did not rise in the first three quarters of 2009 and 2010, respectively. The American Recovery & Reinvestment Act of 2009 provided a one-time payment of $250 to seniors receiving Social Security benefits to substitute for the lack of a COLA in 2010, but nothing was provided in 2011.

Social Security COLA: 2008-2013
2008- 2.3%
2009- 5.8%
2010- 0%
2011- 0%
2012- 3.6%
2013- 1.7%


4) The chained-CPI is not more accurate for seniors and people with severe disabilities. As 250 Ph.D. economists and more than 50 social insurance experts with Ph.D.s in related fields recently pointed out in an Economic Policy Institute statement, there simply is "no empirical basis for reducing the Social Security COLA."  In fact, "it is just as likely that the current COLA fails to keep up with rising costs confronting elderly and disabled beneficiaries."

5) The existing COLA understates inflation for seniors and people with severe disabilities because it does not take into account the greater proportion of income that seniors and people with disabilities spend on health care. In 2009, individuals aged 65 or older spent 12.9 percent of their incomes on health care, compared with 5.3 percent spent by people ages 25-64. What is more, health care costs have increased 50 percent more than prices overall since 1989. Moreover, the anticipated increase in the monthly premiums for the Medicare Part B (Medical Insurance) and Medicare Part D (Prescription Drug coverage will eat up all of the COLA of some beneficiaries and much of it for many.  These premiums are increasing well in excess of Social Security's COLAs.

6) The Consumer Price Index for the Elderly (CPI-E) for Americans 62 and older does a more accurate job of measuring the purchasing power of Social Security benefits. The CPI-E is an experimental price index intended to represent the consumption habits of households aged 62 or older that the Bureau of Labor Statistics created to account for the greater share of income seniors spend on health care, as well as other expenses such as housing. From 1982--when the BLS started employing the CPI-E--until 2007, the CPI-E increased 126.5 percent while the CPI-W rose just 110 percent. This suggests that a more accurate COLA based on the CPI-E should be more generous than the current one--not less.

7) The chained CPI would make an already-inaccurate COLA even less accurate. Some policymakers are discussing adopting a less generous COLA formula: the Chained Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (C-CPI-U), known more commonly as the chained CPI. Proponents of the chained CPI claim it is a more accurate measure of inflation because it accounts for higher-level price substitution, or the tendency of consumers to trade down for cheaper products when prices go up. But for seniors and people with disabilities who spend more of their incomes on health care, trading down is not a viable option.

8) The chained CPI cuts Social Security benefits more with each passing year, hitting the most vulnerable Social Security beneficiaries the hardest. For the average earner, the chained CPI would cut benefits by $560 a year at age 75 (a 3.7% cut), $980 a year at age 85 (6.5% cut), and $1,392 a year at age 95 (9.2% cut). These cuts would hit seniors hardest in late old-age when they are most economically vulnerable. Many individuals reaching this age have little to no retirement savings to rely on to make up the difference. Since elderly individuals living on modest fixed incomes spend, on average, $56 on groceries for a week, cuts of that size may mean foregoing food or needed medicine. Further, the inaccuracy of the current measure (CPI-W), disproportionately harms demographic groups with longer life expectancies--women, Asians and Latinos--and all seniors who live beyond their average projected life expectancies. The even more inaccurate chained CPI would impose additional harm. It would also hurt people severely disabled at young ages, such as soldiers wounded in combat. Additionally, the chained CPI would reduce means-tested Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits, imposing the greatest hardship on the poorest seniors and people with disabilities.

9) Shielding the most vulnerable populations from the impact of the chained-CPI, if it were to be enacted, underscores that it is a benefit cut. Some are proposing to shield some from the harsh impact of the chained CPI, but those ameliorations merely soften the blow to some, but by no means all, of the most vulnerable among us. For example, a bump-up in benefits after twenty years does nothing for those who are in their late seventies and early eighties. Even for those receiving the bump-up, most beneficiaries are never restored to where they would have been under current law. While exempting, or making off-setting changes in, the Supplemental Security Income program softens the blow for some very poor seniors and people with disabilities, the vast majority of Social Security beneficiaries, many of them with low or modest benefits, living in or near poverty, are not held-harmless.

10) The public opposes benefit cuts and believes that the majority of Members of Congress have promised that they will not cut benefits for anyone currently receiving Social Security benefits or aged 55 and over. Because current seniors are on limited, fixed incomes, the President, the Vice President and many members of Congress have assured the public that they would not cut Social Security benefits for today's seniors. Voting for legislation that includes the chained-CPI repudiates that promise. Those supporting the chained-CPI are implicitly saying that they consider Social Security benefits too high, and this year's 1.7 percent COLA adjustment too generous. Poll after poll shows that the American people strongly oppose reducing Social Security's cost of living increase.


NOTES
1. In November, 2012, benefits averaged just $1,132.86 for all beneficiaries. Social Security Administration, Monthly Statistical Snapshot, November 2012http://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/quickfacts/stat_snapshot/
2. Kingson, Eric, Testimony before U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions
Subcommittee on Primary Health and Aging, October 18, 2011http://www.help.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Kingson1.pdf 
3. SSA, "Statement on Signing a Bill Extending Temporary Ceiling on National Debt and Increasing Social Security Benefits--July 1, 1972," Nixon's Statements on Social Security http://www.ssa.gov/history/nixstmts.html#debt
4. Social Security Administration (SSA), "Prior Cost-of-Living Adjustments.http://www.ssa.gov/cola/facts/index.htm
5. SSA (2012) Cost-Of-Living Adjustment Information for 2012. Available athttp://www.ssa.gov/cola/
6. White House, "Seniors and social security," 2011.http://www.whitehouse.gov/issues/seniors-and-social-security
7. SSA, "Prior Cost-of-Living Adjustments." http://www.ssa.gov/cola/facts/index.htm
8. Bivens, Josh, Economic Policy Institute, "A Protection, Not A Windfall: Proposed Changes to Social
Security COLA Would Further Erode Retirees' Financial Security," 
July 1, 2011, pp. 1-2. http://w3.epi-data.org/temp2011/BriefingPaper320.pdf
9. Penner, Rudolph G., "Medicare's Premiums and Social Security's Cost-of Living Adjustments," Urban Institute, August 2011,http://www.urban.org/uploadedpdf/412377-medicare-premiums.pdf 
10. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Kenneth J. Stewart, "The experimental consumer price index for elderly Americans (CPI-E): 1982-2007," Monthly Labor Review Online, May 2008, p. 1. http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2008/04/art2full.pdf 
11. Strengthen Social Security Campaign, "Social Security COLA Cut: A Benefit Cut Affecting Everyone," 2011. http://socialsecurity-works.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/CPI-fact-sheet-with-graphs-7-25-11-FINAL.pdf
12. Based on personal communication with Gerald McIntyre, Directing Attorney of the National Senior Citizens Law Center, March 2012. The chained CPI would hit SSI beneficiaries twice. The initial federal SSI benefit - just $698 a month in 2012 for an individual - is adjusted each year by the CPI-W for changes in the standard of living. So, even before they qualified for SSI benefits, future SSI beneficiaries would sustain the equivalent of a small benefit cut, each year, if the chained CPI was used, as opposed to the CPI-W. Then, once someone qualified for SSI, as would also be the case for Social Security beneficiaries, the chained-CPI would result in smaller benefit adjustments going forward each year. 
13. "Public wants compromise on fiscal cliff, but specifics unpopular." Washington Post, December 20, 2012. http://www.washingtonpost.com/page/2010-2019/WashingtonPost/2012/12/18/National-Politics/Polling/release_186.xml

***
 JFK and the Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why It Matters 

Guys,

I have been a student of the Bobby, Martin and Jack assassination conspiracy theories for over twenty five years.

I could never accept the lone assassin theory of John Fitzgerald Kennedy because of one simple fact.

When Abraham Lincoln was assassinated, the government did not leave a stone unturned.  The government put many to hang in the gallows.

Yet, the Warren Commission found it fit to seal a significant amount of testimony for decades on the assassination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy.

Why is that?   Unless the government has something to hide.

At that very early point of my personal inquiry into probably one of the greatest mysteries of the twentieth century and or American United States history, I knew something was not right.

I attempted to attach a video file onto this email by the author of the book, JFK and the Unspeakable by Jim Douglass.

However, the file is too large.

What I have done here, should you be so inclined to view this remarkable video by the author about the incredible account of the dynamics surrounding the assassination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, is to provide you the web site and the name of the video which you will have to scroll to find  on the web page and locate the video to open.

For those of you who just want to get an idea of what the video is about, I went to Amazon.com and copied a review of the book by one of its readers.   The reviewer, Nick Anez has written a remarkable review on this book and encapsulates the subject of the books subject matter.

However, I find that the video by the author transcends the subject matter of contemporary twentieth century politics and puts this historical event in light of a higher authority.

I have put this book on my wish list at Amazon.com.  I had just ordered some items from Amazon.com along with a different book so I will wait a while before I get the book.   But I am chomping at the bit to read it.

Interestingly, the author remarks that he attended a trial investigating the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.

For those of you who are students of history and or the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., "On Orders To Kill" by William Pepper is another eye opener.

For those of you who pursue this video, I hope you enjoy the travel back into history.

God Bless

Rafe

***

Go to:


Click on the thumbnail picture of:

Jim Douglass: JFK and the Unspeakable

REVIEW BY: NICK ANEZ at AMAZON.COM
In James W. Douglass' outstanding new book, "JFK and the Unspeakable," the author explains the title in his introduction. Coined by spiritual writer Thomas Merton, The Unspeakable refers to "an evil whose depth and deceit seemed to go beyond the capacity of words to describe." Regarding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, the Unspeakable succeeded due to deniability by the nation's citizens of the horrifying truth of the event and to plausible deniability by the government agencies responsible for the murder. (Vincent Bugliosi's recent fictional paperweight is a perfect example of the plausible deniability that allows the Unspeakable to thrive.)

Many excellent books have proven that the assassination of JFK was the result of a conspiracy. Douglass verifies the certainty of the conspiracy and, as the subtitle of the book states, explains "Why He Died and Why It Matters." He scrutinizes the historical facts surrounding the assassination, from the creation of the CIA to the gradual obliteration of the freedoms upon which this nation was founded.

This book is primarily the story of John F. Kennedy who changes from a Cold Warrior to an altruistic leader willing to risk his life to ensure that the world's children will not become victims of a nuclear catastrophe. Equal time is spent on JFK's presidency as on the assassination but one of the many rewards of this book is the author's capacity to show the relationship between his policies and his death. And the book is a tragedy because it gradually becomes obvious that each step he makes toward peace steadily increases the hatred of his enemies who will eventually betray him.

It is also the story of the designated patsy, Lee Harvey Oswald. Moved around the country like a pawn by government agencies (as was the second "Oswald"), he was being set up as the scapegoat. Enter some despicable characters, including David Atlee Philips, James Hosty and, of course, Michael and Ruth Paine. Simultaneously, the Soviet Union was being set up as the evil empire behind the assassination, along with its satellite Cuba.

Douglass credibly illustrates the origin of the Crime of the Century. During President Truman's administration, the CIA was empowered to be a paramilitary organization with unlimited powers. Truman's successor, President Eisenhower, fell out of favor with the CIA when he planned a summit meeting with Soviet Premier Khrushchev. This was cancelled after a U.S. spy plane crashed in Russia. Eisenhower had reportedly ordered such flights cancelled and had his suspicions about who had ruined his peace plan. He subsequently issued his warning about the "military industrial complex" in his farewell address. But he didn't defy "this conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry." He left that task to his successor, JFK.

The Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba was planned by the CIA to regain control of the island and to re-open the casinos for organized crime. President Kennedy refused to provide air support for the Cuban brigade because he knew that he had been lied to by the Joint Chiefs of Staff and by the CIA; the invasion had been designed to fail without U.S. support but they hadn't told this to JFK who refused to fall into their trap. During the Cuban Missile Crisis, JFK once again enraged the CIA and the Joint Chiefs by resisting their tremendous pressure on him to take military action which would have led to nuclear war.

Following that crisis, JFK became intent on ending the Cold War by establishing a peaceful relationship with the Soviet Union. However, many CIA and Pentagon personnel believed that it was better to be "dead than red" and that it was preferable to destroy civilization rather than let the Communists rule. They also knew that war generated billions of dollars into the arms industry. As a result, they would repeatedly subvert the President's policies and isolate him within his own government. Enter some more despicable characters: Richard Bissell, Charles Cabell, Henry Cabot Lodge, Lyman Lemnitzer, Curtis LeMay and perhaps the most contemptible of all, Allen Dulles. Ironically, JFK learned to trust Khrushchev more than people within his own government.

At American University on June 10, 1963, JFK spoke about his desire for world peace. He communicated his resolve to form a new relationship with Khrushchev. He spoke about the necessity of a pursuit toward disarmament. He related his intentions to establish a Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. He acknowledged his country's past faults and recognized the Russian people as wanting peace as much as the American people. "And we are all mortal," he stated. Though this extremely important speech was ignored in the United States, it was disseminated throughout the Soviet Union, per order of Khrushchev, who was prepared to respond favorably to JFK's peace initiative. The speech also certified JFK's death warrant. With so many powerful enemies opposing his policies and hating him, JFK didn't have a chance as he was being maneuvered into the crossfire in Dallas.

President Kennedy was aware of the power of his enemies and he knew the dangers facing him. But he persevered and mandated that all U.S. personnel would be withdrawn from Vietnam; he was determined to never send in combat troops even if this meant defeat. He also refused to intervene militarily in Laos. He exchanged private letters with Khrushchev, which infuriated the CIA, and secretly initiated plans to attain rapproachement with Cuba, which further incensed the Agency. Cuba's Fidel Castro, whom the CIA hated as intensely as it hated Kennedy, was equally eager to begin an American-Cuba dialogue. In fact, Castro was meeting with a JFK representative when the President was murdered. JFK died a martyr and the forces of evil that killed him also killed his vision of peace.

Lyndon Johnson, the CIA's ally, assumed the presidency. He cancelled talks with Khrushchev and refused Castro's pleas to continue the dialogue. He reversed JFK's withdrawal plan from Vietnam as well as his plan to neutralize Laos. The military industrial complex took control of the country. The policy of plausible deniability led the way to assassinations of foreign leaders, the overthrowing of foreign governments and horrors committed all over the globe. If JFK had not been murdered, we would not have had the prolongation of the Cold War, the Vietnam War, Watergate, the purported War on Terror and the steady moral deterioration of America. Interestingly, one month after JFK's assassination, President Truman wrote an article for The Washington Post cautioning about the threat of the CIA taking over America.

The author meticulously examines the evidence and draws conclusions which ring with unassailable truth: (1) The CIA coordinated and implemented he assassination of President Kennedy, an act of treason which destroyed democracy in the U.S. (2) The Warren Commission was created to propagate lies to conceal the truth from the American people. (3)There has been a continued cover-up by successive administrations and their stooges in the mass media. (4)The murder of JFK is directly related to the current domination of the American people by powerful oppressors within a shadow government that will continue to insist that only sustained war can keep the country safe from its enemies, never admitting that they themselves are the supreme evil.

This is an exceptional book that will be used by future historians to determine the truth about the assassination and how it changed America. And it will also be used to honor John F. Kennedy as a courageous president who believed in doing God's work on earth. In doing so, he came into conflict with the Unspeakable and his life was extinguished.
--
********************
That's all folks!
 
To subscribe: send reply with the message: subscribe
 
To unsubscribe: send reply with the message: unsubscribe
 
Be sure to notice: [Message clipped]  View entire message at the bottom of page

SEIU Local 721 Reformers is an email address attempting to share information with SEIU Local Members, Stewards, Officers, Staff and Officials.
Rafe Garcia, Steward, is the custodian of this email address.
Those of us sharing, exchanging and participating in this forum are attempting to engage the membership to further the concept of a member driven Union.
We, you and all the rest of us have the best interests of the rank and file members, over 70,000 strong.
FOUNDED AUGUST 31, 2008

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages