Timetrvlr
Member
- Location
- central interior B.C., Canada
If Congress refuses to raise the debt ceiling and Social Security payments stop?
Same here my home is paid off and just utilities and animal care I try to hang on to home as long as you canI would like to think it would not stop for those already drawing our benefits. I do realize that things can go sideways so I have always been frugal and proactive about watching my money. So yes, it would not be fun but I could get by. If necessary I could sell the home. I have no debt just the normal utilites, food and animal care. The extras I have given up long ago just knowing we never know what will happen in the future and it is always better to be prepared.
Yes, this is my forever home unless my health get so bad I need to go into care. I have no intention to sale. It will be left to my son and he can decide if they want to live here or sale. I hope they will keep it as it is large, comfortable for a family and in a prime school district.Same here my home is paid off and just utilities and animal care I try to hang on to home as long as you can
That’s nice, we think alike I have put my son down for house also but the area has gotten Obadiah I do not want him to be hassled with the corruptio.Yes, this is my forever home unless my health get so bad I need to go into care. I have no intention to sale. It will be left to my son and he can decide if they want to live here or sale. I hope they will keep it as it is large, comfortable for a family and in a prime school district.
The SS Trust fund is not dependent on the General Revenue fund, not raising the debt ceiling will not affect disbursements.If Congress refuses to raise the debt ceiling and Social Security payments stop?
Yes, but not happily... I don't see it happening, too many voters effected.Can you survive if Social Security payments stop?
Yep, and if the government was just honest about that we'd all feel a bit better about it. And perhaps be able to make better decisions. Nothing really wrong with younger works paying for retiree's pensions. The problem comes in selling the fallacy of some kind of savings or trust fund with the Social Security taxes...I have never regarded Social Security as anything more than a Ponzi scheme. My SSA benefits are being paid mainly from new workers coming in to the system and new debt taken on by the U.S. Treasury.
LOL, reminded me of the Pythons.When my son was little he told me when he grew up I could live in a box in his living room.
Mine told me something similar.When my son was little he told me when he grew up I could live in a box in his living room. I wonder if I should remind him of that?
It's because the government is us, and the government, us again, does the prosecuting. Same reason its hard to sue the government.Not that anything the government does... is ever prosecuted.
Sad as it is trueI'll chime in with this. In 1996 Congress passed a law that states SSA and Medicare payments would continue in the event of a debt limit being breached. If you understand how the trust fund operated, you would realized that we are currently drawing down on the trust funds, as money leaving the fund is higher than money coming in. In essence... the trust fund is now moving downward.
As all trust funds are part of the debt limit, it is important for these funds to continue paying. To stop paying from these funds, while still collecting money, would cause these funds to balloon, expanding the debt, putting extreme pressure on all other obligations, especially the nearly 3 trillion in T-bills, that must be rolled over within the year. Which would send the interest rates into some extreme rates.
The problem being with the Treasury having a system that does not differentiate SSA/Medicare payments from any other obligations.
If the debt limit is breached, and the Treasury does not send out SSA payments, the Treasury will have violated that law. Not that anything the government does... is ever prosecuted.
Hilarious!LOL, reminded me of the Pythons.