2/1/2010 10:41:31 AM
2/1/2010 10:47:58 AM
2/1/2010 10:58:09 AM
2/1/2010 11:01:20 AM
Sure is. That'll learn ya.1) Search through the top most exported jobs 2) Find one that a 12 year old could do or someone willing to work for $5/hour3) ???4) Profit[Edited on February 1, 2010 at 11:12 AM. Reason : -][Edited on February 1, 2010 at 11:13 AM. Reason : Data input and tech support comes to mind]
2/1/2010 11:04:26 AM
there is a lot of jibber-jabber in this thread, so I just came to post:
2/1/2010 1:46:46 PM
^This.
2/1/2010 2:07:13 PM
2/1/2010 2:35:36 PM
2/1/2010 2:42:05 PM
^^, ^
2/1/2010 2:49:53 PM
2/1/2010 2:54:12 PM
I guess sarcasm doesn't translate very well on the internet.
2/1/2010 2:58:46 PM
I wish they would allow each tax payer on there tax return to say items they are willing to let there taxes pay for specifically for certain areas.Your total tax doesnt change but you give a percentage in which you want to go to certain things.That way on my federal return I can say how much I want to go to national defense and that I don't want any of my money going towards welfare. Similarly, for state tax I would like to be able to say how much I would like to go to different referendums for say 540 to complete etc.Obviously some of the money would have to come off the top for administration costs etc but just the idea of giving more power to the people giving money to the government than some bureaucrat making all of the decisions sounds like something I would like !Along with the same welfare thought I wish we had government jobs that we made welfare people do. For example when you meet with your welfare officer they discuss what you will be doing for the free wage you are earning until you can get back on your feet. Items like picking up trash on streets, painting over graffiti, helping renovate public buildings, planting flowers, cutting grass, etc etc. [Edited on February 1, 2010 at 3:25 PM. Reason : Welfare]
2/1/2010 3:19:40 PM
^I doubt anybody would give money to welfare if that's the case.
2/1/2010 3:21:51 PM
Someone has to believe it and want to give money for it , otherwise how did it get voted in? If the people who wanted it in are not willing to give money for it then get rid of it all together. If it looks like people are not going to give money because they don't like the idea of giving people something for nothing then maybe they would revamp it where they had government things they had to do in order to get the check. Then maybe people would be more willing to give if they see its people who are trying to work and earn money but just cant. Its amazing how giving people more power has its own way of adding checks and balances.
2/1/2010 3:30:18 PM
the only people who would believe in it are the people getting free checks every damn month.
2/1/2010 3:32:05 PM
Well those people are out numbered, they are not the ones who voted welfare in.Because of where I am from in Eastern NC I despise welfare. Too many examples of people on welfare with rims and extravagant things that a lot of working people cant buy. For me again if there is going to be a welfare program I expect them to be picking up trash on the highway every day, or other jobs to get that check.
2/1/2010 3:39:26 PM
i believe in itmy sister was on welfare and food stamps for a short period of timeshe got pregnant and married a piece of shit that beat her up. she left him and had nothing. she lived in "government subsidized" housing and used food stamps. but she used it as it was intended. to get through a difficult time and get back on her feet.she went on to graduate from college with a 4 year degree and has her own place in chicago working full time, paying taxes and being a productive member of society.
2/1/2010 3:40:45 PM
govt. needs to get a better grasp on unemployment, welfare, and disability. sure there are people that actually need it but the majority abuse it. also, lets make all drugs legal and tax the heck out of it.
2/1/2010 3:45:12 PM
^^ I am sure that your sister had some ability that a welfare office would have been able to come up with something for her to do to earn that money. She could have been a free tutor for struggling kids, free local art class, helped coach a softball team. All examples of things that a local welfare officer could place welfare people to do in order to get there checks
2/1/2010 3:57:35 PM
2/1/2010 3:58:03 PM
wdprice3 is a right wing nut joband my cuzinand my friend
2/1/2010 4:03:42 PM
Nancy Pelosi spent about $200k on liquor this year for her airplane parties. She spent about $2 million this year flying her and her family around in air force one while they got drunk on taxpayer liquor. That cuntdyke is exactly the reason NO ONE should want more taxes. Are you insane? I like having a job and income. Keep raising taxes until we all get put out of work and we look like fucking Haitians?
2/1/2010 5:15:43 PM
^^lol
2/1/2010 5:27:57 PM
2/1/2010 5:54:08 PM
I don't know why I bother but here it goes
2/1/2010 6:08:58 PM
The poor people are ruining this country!!!!!!!!!!!
2/1/2010 6:40:09 PM
He mentions a cap on welfare and you mention a program. Not the same thing. Most of which just simply went onto disability roles and put thier kids on it too for ADHD for an extra 500/month per kid. Simply awesome.
2/1/2010 7:07:22 PM
2/1/2010 7:18:47 PM
2/1/2010 7:23:48 PM
^^hello Florida.
2/1/2010 7:33:50 PM
Look, I despise abuses of welfare as much as any other fiscal conservative, but it's not welfare that you should be giving a shit about. It's such a drop in the bucket that it's all but inconsequential compared to tons of other things.Medicare and Social Security are 800-lb gorillas. Subsidies for everything from agriculture to Amtrak are a big money waster, too. Oh, and interest on our staggering national debt....oh, and not to mention the administrative costs of taking money to do things that the federal government is not supposed to be able to do to begin with, then returning it to the states...it would be more efficient for the states to just keep the money to begin with.
2/1/2010 8:52:53 PM
"entitlement programs"
2/1/2010 8:57:18 PM
2/1/2010 8:59:30 PM
the best way to eat an elephant is...one bite at a time
2/1/2010 9:23:31 PM
2/1/2010 10:43:12 PM
I agree cash, entitlements are the problems just not welfare.and scott in your rush to demonstrate just how big your wee wee is, you missed where I said most went on disablity (or got relabeled). Also, just a quick search on the internet:"the Economic Stimulus Act of 2009 will reverse the welfare-to-work provisions that Bill Clinton signed in the 1990s and again base federal grants to states on the number of people signed up for welfare rather than at a flat rate.[16] One of the experts who worked on the 1996 bill said that the provisions would lead to the largest one-year increase in welfare spending in American history.""Critics of the reforms sometimes point out that the reason for the massive decrease of people on the welfare rolls in the United States in the 1990s wasn't due to a rise in actual gainful employment in this population, but rather, due almost exclusively to their offloading into workfare, giving them a different classification than classic welfare recipient."
2/2/2010 9:11:18 AM
2/2/2010 9:43:45 PM
Thank you for the link. I might not be making myself clear. Why do you doubt that people would not be tempted to move onto disablity? I think reform is a great idea and, honestly, worked to a certain extent. However, its pretty naive to assume that people wont look to continue thier lifestyle. Many simply moved onto disablity or just became pregnant again. This is where the incentives were (for some)"A significant proportion of each year's SSI awards to disabled people aged 64 or younger go to TANF/SSP recipients""For both states and the individuals involved, it is generally financially advantageous for adults and children with disabilities to transfer from TANF to SSI. States gain because the federal government pays for the SSI benefit, and states can then use the TANF savings for other purposes. The families gain because the SSI benefits they acquire are greater than the TANF benefits they lose. The payoff to states from transferring welfare recipients to SSI was substantially increased when Congress replaced AFDC with TANF in 1996. States retained less than half of any savings achieved through such transfers under AFDC, but they retain all of the savings under TANF.""The incentive for TANF recipients to apply for SSI has increased over time as inflation has caused real TANF benefits to fall relative to payments received by SSI recipients.""The consequences of welfare reform and TANF operations for persons with disabilities and the demand for SSI is a long-standing matter of concern to the Social Security Administration as well as to policy analysts outside the agency""An average of 677,000 (SSI)awards were made per year for all ages under 65. About three-fourths of these awards (514,125) were to working-age adults (ages 18–64). Awards to children and adults increased by 24 percent and 11 percent, respectively, over the 2000–2003 period. TANF does appear to provide important intermediate support for children and adults who later receive SSI""Our analysis indicates that the incidence of SSI awards among TANF recipients has been much greater in recent years than it was during the early 1990s (Table 6). Award rates for children rose from an average of 0.92 per month per 1,000 child TANF recipients in 1991–1993 to 1.28 per 1,000 in 2001–2003. The change was even more dramatic for adults. On average in each month of 1991–1993, 1.55 TANF-linked SSI awards were made per 1,000 recipients. By 2001–2003, the average rate was slightly over 4 per 1,000 per month." (even thought totals went down in both periods)http://www.socialsecurity.gov/policy/docs/ssb/v66n4/v66n4p21.htmlI hope that helps scottAs for the stimulus, here is a heritage article (I know), but it has some good facts mixed in with the bias.http://www.heritage.org/Research/economy/wm2276.cfm[Edited on February 2, 2010 at 10:37 PM. Reason : .]
2/2/2010 10:34:23 PM
2/2/2010 10:54:01 PM
So thats all you got out of that article? I even cut and pasted the points for you about people moving onto disablity roles and what the advantages are. hahaOh and this one:"Our analysis indicates that the incidence of SSI awards among TANF recipients has been much greater in recent years than it was during the early 1990s (Table 6). Award rates for children rose from an average of 0.92 per month per 1,000 child TANF recipients in 1991–1993 to 1.28 per 1,000 in 2001–2003. The change was even more dramatic for adults. On average in each month of 1991–1993, 1.55 TANF-linked SSI awards were made per 1,000 recipients. By 2001–2003, the average rate was slightly over 4 per 1,000 per month." (even thought totals went down in both periods)You are now just trying to ignore my point all together. Which is fine. If you care to "discuss issues" then there is info you requested concerning my point.I suppose it would be another stretch for you to consider that as unemployment drops so do the numbers of people seeking assistance. http://www.ppionline.org/upload_graphics/Welfare_by_the_Numbers/slide3.gifLast one for the night, scott. I enjoyed it.
2/2/2010 11:18:21 PM
And just for the record. TANF is not the same thing as Welfare. It is simply one in a host of programs that make up different aspects of welfare. (my original point) When people talk about cutting welfare, I believe they mean cutting back on spending to most of the programs that benefit people who choose not to work. IE cutting the incentives to not be productive. I mentioned medicaid paying for braces while most insurances you pay for dont cover them.
2/2/2010 11:36:43 PM
It's saddening that I have to spell this out for you, but what you've just conveyed to me is that you don't understand numbers.Your claim: TANF recipients moved in large numbers to social security disability (SSI) after TANF reforms.The facts:
2/2/2010 11:43:04 PM
It's never just been about "welfare" specifically. Social Security and Medicare are the things that have to be dealt with. Government policy has nurtured a culture of dependency. There are a huge group of elderly people that depend on SS and Medicare for their lives. So, now we're in this predicament where it's either Grandma dies or we get crushed under our own debt. If we were going to phase out entitlements, it needed to start 15 years ago. We don't have 15 years to do it this time, though. That is the harsh reality that no one, myself included, wants to face, but we either face it or there will be dire consequences.
2/3/2010 8:43:10 AM
^I think you can start phasing out the plans, by moving younger generations into private accounts. Continue to pay current retirees with the employers portion, phase down reimbursements past a certain age, increase the age to get it. Stop putting these funds in the general fund would have solved this problem, but politicians just cant help themselves. I think the best thing for SS is private accounts that then can be willed to your family, thus building real wealth over time. The govt could then cover a difference up to a level. The medicare thing might take care of itself. There is about a 40% reimbursement cut looming, it keeps getting pushed back. Once that hits, a lot of doctors simply will drop the insurance. Making people pay for most routine care out of pocket. (this is a good thing) Im not sure what hospitals will do, but im guessing they will have no other choice but to take the lower payments. I think rural hospitals will close and the bigger ones can make it up in volume. Who knows.As for scott, I showed you what the incentive was to move to SSI, financially to the person and the state, and even showed you the govt conclusion that after reform the amount of people shifting from TANF to SSI increased. I dont know what else I can do for you. But thanks for your input."Our analysis indicates that the incidence of SSI awards among TANF recipients has been much greater in recent years than it was during the early 1990s"
2/3/2010 10:01:27 AM
I don't want higher taxes b/c I don't think I receive benefits fitting the taxes I already pay.social security needs to be removed from the 'one big pot' method to a 'you pay into your account attached to your SSN' it becomes a forced savings plan that the government runs and invests/subsidizes keeping up or slightly passing inflation. past a certain age you will be allowed access to the money.but that makes too much fucking sense so they won't do it.[Edited on February 3, 2010 at 1:06 PM. Reason : s]
2/3/2010 1:04:19 PM
2/3/2010 5:59:22 PM
i like that more and more people are agreeing that we dont need taxes. where is the law that says we have to pay taxes? not in teh constitution? private business does everything better. which is better, a barnes and noble or the library. BARNES AND NOBLE!private busnesses need to get politically angry and involved before we are just forced to pay money to support liberals and their voters (welfare).
2/3/2010 6:32:36 PM
2/3/2010 9:35:22 PM
^I think you could continue to put the employers portion towards the current retirees. So basically our generation would only get half the money. THe amount that collects wont be enough to cover the current retirees so you need to raise the SS cap, raise the age of retirement, cut benefits by a percentage, and have the govt cover the rest. Better draw out those IOUs on a short term basis than an infinite one.I think the best thing would be allowing your money to be willed to your family, thus building real wealth over generations.
2/4/2010 9:16:57 AM