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re: 56% of GOP voters want govt to pay more in monthly SS benefits/medicare

Posted on 5/17/24 at 2:17 pm to
Posted by BCreed1
Alabama
Member since Jan 2024
1452 posts
Posted on 5/17/24 at 2:17 pm to
quote:

quote:
The terms of the Loan from the US Citizen to the US Gov.


What do you call a loan you are forced to make? It's not a loan. It's a tax.



Forget the word "LOAN". It does not changed the ACT passed by Congress and signed by the President. The terms within that ACT remain the same:

SEC. 202. (a) Every qualified individual (as defined in section 210) shall be entitled to receive, with respect to the period beginning on the date he attains the age of sixty-five, or on January 1, 1942, whichever is the later, and ending on the date of his death, an old-age benefit

Period. Nothing you are even trying to argue applies to this.


quote:

quote:
Name the act that says the Federal Gov agrees to take your money and give you, as an individual, anything that you will take ownership of.


We both knew you were not going to be able to name one because there isn't one.

Posted by David_DJS
Member since Aug 2005
18170 posts
Posted on 5/17/24 at 3:08 pm to
quote:

Period. Nothing you are even trying to argue applies to this.

In your mind, but you are programmed by fedgov. I'm skeptical of everything government does, and that includes putting "weighty" words in an order that impresses guys like you to the point you advocate for it.

quote:

We both knew you were not going to be able to name one because there isn't one.

Because your question is just more nonsense.

"Name the act that says the federal gov agrees to take your money"

Do you not understand what you're suggesting here? And you wonder why I consider you a big gov't type. I mean, there isn't a guy that believes in small/limited gov't that would ever think (let alone type out for public consumption) - "the federal gov't agrees to take your money" is a logical way to describe a tax.

So where is that example of a loan that is forgiven when the lender dies, even if repayment hasn't even started?
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