The average baby boomer gets out twice as much tax as they've paid in.Kmar wrote:
Old people pay into social security and Medicare their whole life.
Fuck Israel
The average baby boomer gets out twice as much tax as they've paid in.Kmar wrote:
Old people pay into social security and Medicare their whole life.
Where did you find that? Paid in to what?Dilbert_X wrote:
The average baby boomer gets out twice as much tax as they've paid in.Kmar wrote:
Old people pay into social security and Medicare their whole life.
Way to generalize.Uzique wrote:
it's funny because it seems that every 'serious' poster here has a very narrow and select definition of what a 'worthy' job and citizen is... and it is almost entirely always basically limited to their own profession/industry/lifestyle. wonderfully stimulating.
http://www.urban.org/UploadedPDF/social … fetime.pdfKmar wrote:
Where did you find that? Paid in to what?Dilbert_X wrote:
The average baby boomer gets out twice as much tax as they've paid in.Kmar wrote:
Old people pay into social security and Medicare their whole life.
Last edited by Macbeth (2011-07-03 08:06:04)
Dignitas or pistol?Macbeth wrote:
I don't want to get married, and am not going to get old.?
Alcohol metabolites can be detected in urine for up to 3 days after ingestion.lowing wrote:
well, that will only be good if they show up drunk. wouldn't mean anything if they can stay drunk all the way up until "check day", then go draw a check.Wreckognize wrote:
I'm only ok with this if alcohol is included in the screening.
Yeah, what you've outlined is precisely what I am getting at. You just explained it much more conciselyFEOS wrote:
Way to generalize.Uzique wrote:
it's funny because it seems that every 'serious' poster here has a very narrow and select definition of what a 'worthy' job and citizen is... and it is almost entirely always basically limited to their own profession/industry/lifestyle. wonderfully stimulating.
@ Jaekus: What you're getting at is broader welfare reform, which tends to be a political third rail. The recipients don't want any changes, the other side (generally Republicans) want massive changes. The right answer is somewhere in the middle, that provides assistance, but still incentivizes the recipient to find long-term employment (which requires movement on the employer side, as well). It was tried under Clinton (bipartisan with the Republican-controlled Congress), and was generally successful. But more needs to be done, and at the state level.
seppukujord wrote:
Dignitas or pistol?Macbeth wrote:
I don't want to get married, and am not going to get old.?
They're going to find him the same way they found David Carradine.jord wrote:
Dignitas or pistol?Macbeth wrote:
I don't want to get married, and am not going to get old.?
Except it can be conclusively determined by law.Macbeth wrote:
Calling something unconstitutional is becoming the new race card. Just a thought.
That's fairly non sequitur. There are glaring differences between those two circumstances.rdx-fx wrote:
If it is legal for an employer to drug test employees, it should be just as legal to drug test welfare recipients.
Then solve one aspect of the problem at a deeper root: remove some of the black market value of drugs by slowly rolling back laws against them, controlling production and clinically weening people off them entirely.lowing wrote:
Sorry I do not support the tax payers being extorted in fear of what these assholes might do if they don't get to draw a fuckin' check.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
The idea of giving someone money while they're on drugs is irksome, but if they don't get money because of it, more people will just turn to crime to support their habit and the crime rate will skyrocket.
This is another case where the 'war on drugs' does more harm than good by making it such an expensive commodity.
Why not attack it on multiple fronts? http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2011-0 … otic-pillsunnamednewbie13 wrote:
Then solve one aspect of the problem at a deeper root: remove some of the black market value of drugs by slowly rolling back laws against them, controlling production and clinically weening people off them entirely.lowing wrote:
Sorry I do not support the tax payers being extorted in fear of what these assholes might do if they don't get to draw a fuckin' check.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
The idea of giving someone money while they're on drugs is irksome, but if they don't get money because of it, more people will just turn to crime to support their habit and the crime rate will skyrocket.
This is another case where the 'war on drugs' does more harm than good by making it such an expensive commodity.
We're not going to win the "war on drugs" any more than we won the war on alcohol.
I am all for legalizing drugs, taxing the shit out of it, and letting the people that choose to do drugs, figure their problem out for themselves. I do not support legalizing drugs, only to spend taxpayer money trying to save them from their own stupidity.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Then solve one aspect of the problem at a deeper root: remove some of the black market value of drugs by slowly rolling back laws against them, controlling production and clinically weening people off them entirely.lowing wrote:
Sorry I do not support the tax payers being extorted in fear of what these assholes might do if they don't get to draw a fuckin' check.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
The idea of giving someone money while they're on drugs is irksome, but if they don't get money because of it, more people will just turn to crime to support their habit and the crime rate will skyrocket.
This is another case where the 'war on drugs' does more harm than good by making it such an expensive commodity.
We're not going to win the "war on drugs" any more than we won the war on alcohol.
Last edited by Hurricane2k9 (2011-07-03 21:25:05)
Last edited by Shocking (2011-07-04 02:03:18)