Quarken, while you are pleased to supply the information related to your personal circumstances, the large majority of those, what you always miss is those among the salaried
working class, where SSA is concerned. It's great you're fortunate enough to have resources that some might have that are inherited, but most families can't plan their retirement,
hoping to inherit as progeny of affluent parents. Most earn what they have instead and while supporting a family, attempting to provide for the post secondary education of that family, hardly have the opportunity to save as you seem to believe they should be able to.
You asked about how my parents were going to afford retirement. I told you.
As far as inheritance, you are wrong again. My grandfathers wealth will divided 3 ways & pass through my mom. Since she & I are not on perfect terms, and she is not the most financially responsible person, so I don't expect to see any of it. I will see one third of one half of whatever my father has. He does well, but whatever I may end up getting probably wouldn't pay off my mortgage, much less cover my retirement.
I am, in actuality, one of the salaried workers you describe. My retirement plan depends solely on what I save in my 401k & having a paid off mortgage when I retire. I do not expect any SS/medicare or even a penny of inheritance. I expect to live comfortably, and it hasn't taken anything more than minimal efforts, just good decision making & a responsible personal budget. This is something anyone of even modest means should be able to do assuming they don't get caught up in debt, consumerism & poor life choices such as dropping out of school or having children outside of a stable marriage. Sure there are hard luck cases, but that is why it SS/medicare should be a safety net rather than 20+ years on the dole.
Numbers are just numbers and reality is a completely different issue. The one number you failed to include was the value of the dollar and the fluctuations among the international
currencies. Another factor that changes with the rise of fall of capitalist economy with period of boom and bust. Anecdotal information? I doubt since it appears to not be an issue in
your personal circumstance, you didn't bother to check the rules of who receives what and how under the government regulations found at the government sites of SSA, SSI and Medicare. If you take the time to familiarize yourself with that information, you can also search for relevant statistics.
That is only relevant if you plan on living in another country when you retire. I won't be converting any of my dollars to euros unless I move to Europe. Everything else is reflected in the inflation figure.
Please feel free to elaborate on whatever you think I am missing in SS/medicare benefits with actual empirical data. I am anxious to see what you have to back up your anecdotal assertions.
Regardless, how you would like to deny others benefits, a typical characteristic of the Me generation, most especially related to those who never have provided for a family, or who
continue to have family provide for them, the truth is that of the three benefits mentioned, only SSI is one that is designed to assist those who are impoverished. Neither SSA nor
Medicare were never intended as you insist on categorizing them as entitlements related to income other than the amounts related that in retirement when one complies the with
established regulations created by legislation. Neither SSA nor Medicare were created nor designed as what you appear to believe are "welfare" programs.
The "Me Generation" is a synonym for baby boomers. I'm not a baby boomer, and when I referred earlier to the "me" plan, I was referring to a retirement plan where I am responsible for "me," not the govt. Personal responsibility seems to be sadly lacking among retirees such as yourself who feel entitled to rely on the shrinking ration of workers such as myself to support you. We know the benefits you enjoy will not be there when we get to be your age, and you are complicit in this failure by expecting the govt to take care of you even when you may be able to care for yourself.
SS/medicare were intended to be a safety net. There is no question about this. Again, when SS was established, the retirement age was the same as life expectancy at the time. The program was never intended to give people a 20+ year hand out to those who can easily work or rely on their own savings. I am sure you have no problem continuing to bankrupt future generations you will leave behind; you will not have to pay the bill.
Do they teach history in Utah high schools? Is it a requirement for graduation? Do they only teach students how to learn how to identify dates or teach about such programs and the evolution of them as a part of Federal law came about? If you continue to express the opinion the entitlement to SSA and Medicare are income qualified and suggest they are only some sort of "welfare" entitlement, you'll continue to make a fool of yourself as neither is as you seem to believe they are. Then some such as you claim to be appear to instead
depend on a different form of welfare provided by depending on the work of those who preceded you while you assume you'll be cared for from the cradle to the grave based on
the work and earnings of those who came before you. Just your personal welfare program?
I didn't go to high school in Utah, but why not add one more incorrect assumption to your list.
Studying history is certainly worthwhile, but the problem is that people like yourself always expect that the future continue just like the past in linear fashion. Look no further than all of the rhetoric about how Saddam & Iraq was just like Hitler & Germany to see how misleading this mentality can be.
The fact is that the business as usual program of increasing life expectancy & increasing benefits for retirees is a train wreck in slow motion. I have no problem raising taxes to cover reasonable benefits, but raising taxes will not be nearly enough. Sooner or later will have to either scrap the programs all together or cut benefits. The fool is the person who chooses to ignore the problem so that they can take their hand outs without any consideration of the bankruptcy they are creating for the generations left behind. This is a blatantly selfish mentality thinly veiled behind some hard luck anecdotes of starving seniors. Sooner or later more people will catch on, and the party will be over.
Let me know when you've grown up a bit and really have some ideas about reality of the rest of those who share this nation with you. LOL, maybe you'll be so fortunate as the to candidate of the real topic of this thread, find yourself a beer heiress like McCain did. Moving back on topic, wonder if he will turn down his military retirement or his Senate retirement? More entitlements some also look on as welfare though he has paid into one and earned the other with his service.
Seems like to me McCain, other than his current wealthy wife, if one considers the retirement he's entitled to as you do those who are salaried or when they even work under contracts are required to pay into SSA and Medicare, as others are required to, he's been sucking at the Federal teat, for a lifetime. LOL, little one, who do you figure is also paying for his medical care?
Calling military retirement benefits welfare is plainly ridiculous. I am no fan of McCain, but I honor his service, and he is entitled to the military benefits he has earned.
If he benefits from his wife's inheritance, then that's his business, and has no relevant bearing on this discussion. FWIW, I favor taxing inheritance as regular income from the first cent. That is, however, a completely different discussion worth its own thread.
LOL, Quarken write or call your M.C. maybe they will be willing to change to current law to suit you. Somehow I doubt even your two GOP Senators, Hatch or Bennet fail to understand that those programs you want to dispose of are what is known as the "third rail" of politics. As to the claims you make about having to pay, but with no expectation
of receiving benefits. There are many ways to continue both systems. One is to raise the current cap on the top end of earners. It is unrealistic today. I would assume that when
the SSA trust fund was placed into the federal budget what was there went almost immediately and what is paid in today only covers the monthly benefits because the trust fund has
long since been gone. Wonder how far the trillions wasted on the killing fields in Iraq might to do be used to continue to provide. Or the interest being paid on that Chinese Credit
card on all of those cash advances? Any ideas about that?
It is clear that politicians of both parties lack the political courage to address the growing entitlement problem. I have no hope of seeing a solution until it is far too late to salvage even a means tested system. Certainly the war in Iraq has been a costly misadventure in terms of both lives & money. I have a brother in law who will be serving a second tour there in about a month. I can only hope for him & ever service person there to return safely. I sincerely regret what better use the money & lives could have been put too than there. Unfortunately, there is no easy solution at this late point.
As for China, we are probably quite lucky that we have a country so willing to finance our consumerism. The truth is, our fates are now tied. As our dollar falls, so does the value of the vast amount of our debt they hold. I only hope that this doesn't lead to more protectionism as seems likely based on recent political rhetoric. Protectionism hurts both sides of the lost trade relationship. Ironically, our best tool for exporting democracy is trade. In the long run we may follow our failure to produce a democracy in Iraq militarily with a failure to nurture positive political developments elsewhere with protectionism. In any case, these are also subjects deserving of their own thread.