funnier, baby boomers are THE entitlement generation.
Tu Stultus Es
What? The guy that wrote the article writes fairly often on the subject and his solution is to institute means testing before benefits are paid out. Old people have much more in assets than the younger people they currently draw tax dollars from, and therefor it is effectively generational theft.Ilocano wrote:
Funny. I read the article as entitlement youth expecting something now from long term retirement plans.
Last edited by Jay (2012-07-23 13:45:12)
You pay into Medicaid, are you clamoring for coverage by that system? There's plenty of things you pay into that you receive no tangible benefit from.Ilocano wrote:
No. You pay into it. You should get back the expected returns of what you paid into it. Income level when taking out benefits is irrelevant.
Like, if you are a millionaire at retirement, should you still get your 401K?
As for your second post, nah, that's your culture. Have you visited any Asian retirement homes?
how have you not been pegged a racist with all your "azians r superior" comments.Ilocano wrote:
No. You pay into it. You should get back the expected returns of what you paid into it. Income level when taking out benefits is irrelevant.
Like, if you are a millionaire at retirement, should you still get your 401K?
As for your second post, nah, that's your culture. Have you visited any Asian retirement homes?
Check the article. Older people have paid into it and are getting upwards of 10 times the amount back. Younger people are paying into it and only getting 80% back, and the rate is decreasing quickly.Ilocano wrote:
No. You pay into it. You should get back the expected returns of what you paid into it. Income level when taking out benefits is irrelevant.
Like, if you are a millionaire at retirement, should you still get your 401K?
As for your second post, nah, that's your culture. Have you visited any Asian retirement homes?
Last edited by mtb0minime (2012-07-23 13:54:24)
When you don't adjust for inflation.mtb0minime wrote:
Check the article. Older people have paid into it and are getting upwards of 10 times the amount back.
Jay started the lumping.eleven bravo wrote:
how have you not been pegged a racist with all your "azians r superior" comments.Ilocano wrote:
No. You pay into it. You should get back the expected returns of what you paid into it. Income level when taking out benefits is irrelevant.
Like, if you are a millionaire at retirement, should you still get your 401K?
As for your second post, nah, that's your culture. Have you visited any Asian retirement homes?
This. How long have the younger generation been putting money into the system? I damn well should expect more after putting into the bucket for 40+ years, versus someone just starting in the workplace.Macbeth wrote:
When you don't adjust for inflation.mtb0minime wrote:
Check the article. Older people have paid into it and are getting upwards of 10 times the amount back.
And it had what to do with asians exactly? Did I call out any specific race?Ilocano wrote:
Jay started the lumping.eleven bravo wrote:
how have you not been pegged a racist with all your "azians r superior" comments.Ilocano wrote:
No. You pay into it. You should get back the expected returns of what you paid into it. Income level when taking out benefits is irrelevant.
Like, if you are a millionaire at retirement, should you still get your 401K?
As for your second post, nah, that's your culture. Have you visited any Asian retirement homes?
"I think we've lost something by dumping our parents in retirement homes. Instead of reverence for elders as sources of wisdom and knowledge, we treat them as yucky things to be tolerated on holidays."
keiro.orgJay wrote:
And it had what to do with asians exactly? Did I call out any specific race?Ilocano wrote:
Jay started the lumping.eleven bravo wrote:
how have you not been pegged a racist with all your "azians r superior" comments.
"I think we've lost something by dumping our parents in retirement homes. Instead of reverence for elders as sources of wisdom and knowledge, we treat them as yucky things to be tolerated on holidays."
Inflation doesn't have anything to do with it. Older people are expected to make more money. They've had more time to climb up the corporate ladder. That wasn't the point of the article. The point was that there are a ton of people about to collect, and already collecting, social security and medicare benefits that they don't actually need. Does the prospect of an extra $1200 a month make you salivate or something? That wouldn't even pay my rent for my current apartment. "It's mine, I earned it" doesn't fly since most people take out of the system more than they ever put into it. It should be a program for those who actually need it to survive, not people with multi-million dollar investment portfolios living off of the interest.Ilocano wrote:
This. How long have the younger generation been putting money into the system? I damn well should expect more after putting into the bucket for 40+ years, versus someone just starting in the workplace.Macbeth wrote:
When you don't adjust for inflation.mtb0minime wrote:
Check the article. Older people have paid into it and are getting upwards of 10 times the amount back.
It's not "old person puts $500000 in and gets $500000 back, meanwhile young person puts $50000 in and gets $50000 back".Ilocano wrote:
This. How long have the younger generation been putting money into the system? I damn well should expect more after putting into the bucket for 40+ years, versus someone just starting in the workplace.Macbeth wrote:
When you don't adjust for inflation.mtb0minime wrote:
Check the article. Older people have paid into it and are getting upwards of 10 times the amount back.
No. Old person puts in $50K, gets $500K (out of the hat number) compounded. Young person after five years at $5K, gets $40K.mtb0minime wrote:
It's not "old person puts $500000 in and gets $500000 back, meanwhile young person puts $50000 in and gets $50000 back".Ilocano wrote:
This. How long have the younger generation been putting money into the system? I damn well should expect more after putting into the bucket for 40+ years, versus someone just starting in the workplace.Macbeth wrote:
When you don't adjust for inflation.
It's "old person puts $50000 in and gets $500000 back, meanwhile young person puts in $50000 and gets $40000 back".
Its always been a ponzi/insurance scheme - boomers demanding back what they paid in are scammers - most of them are in fact demanding lifelong benefits they haven't paid in enough to fund if it were a hypothecated scheme.Ilocano wrote:
No. You pay into it. You should get back the expected returns of what you paid into it.
Older people always vote for the conservative candidate. News at 11!SuperJail Warden wrote:
Was looking at the voter demographics for the 2016 election. Found something funny.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_St … mographics
The young overwhelmingly voted Clinton, and Boomers Trump. It is just like Brexit.
Baby boomers are from Washington to Wales seem determined to fuck up as much as they can before they die. They really are the worst generation.
These numbers are even crazierunnamednewbie13 wrote:
Look at the numbers though. 56/35. 45/53.