Politics, Politics, Politics

10 Ways the Trumps Are Eating Through Your Tax Dollars


Under normal circumstances, Americans would assume a Republican president would usher in an era of fiscal responsibility. Although changes are coming and some people are going to benefit, taxpayer money has been flowing rather freely on Capitol Hill since the election. A report from The Washington Post outlines that the taxpayers are fronting a lot of money to pay for the Trumps and their “elaborate” lifestyles. ...

https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/8c9d5746-3cc6-3b5c-a080-e6dc62a5174b/10-ways-the-trumps-are-eating.html
 
Why is the press swallowing Trump’s nonsense on taxes, the deficit and economic growth?
Newsweek Neil H. Buchanan,Newsweek

There are serious concerns that Donald Trump's ceaseless rhetorical attacks on the news media could lead to very non-rhetorical violent attacks on reporters.

Trump hates to be the subject of negative coverage, so he attacks the messenger rather than changing his message.

One of the reasons that Trump is angry is that news organizations have made some efforts to prevent Trump's outrages from seeming at all normal.

The word "lie," which used to be all but taboo in American journalism when discussing politicians (and certainly presidents) has been ****** into service in response to a president who lies constantly.

Even so, habits of mind persist. There is, for example, a running list of Trump's lies in The Washington Post , yet the most recent update, "President Trump's List of False and Misleading Claims Tops 1000," uses all of the euphemisms for "lie" but contains not a single usage of the l-word.

What is all too easy to forget is that, even now, Trump benefits from journalistic habits and rituals that make him look much more effective— and his policies much more defensible— than the evidence can support. It turns out that, especially on policy matters, reporters seem to have a default mode that gives Trump a pass and treats him as perfectly normal.

With a huge debate looming over whether Trump and the Republicans will be able to transfer trillions of dollars to the super-rich from everyone else, this journalistic sloppiness matters.


The pack mentality of journalists is a well studied phenomenon, of course. Coverage of stories in the two fields in which I have some claim to expertise— economics and tax policy— is especially likely to fall back on conventional wisdom.

To some degree, this is a matter of generalist reporters being ****** to write about technical topics and thus becoming overwhelmed. When in doubt, the mantra seems to be, repeat what everyone else seems to be saying.

But lack of expertise cannot explain all of the useless coverage that we see. Before he founded Vox, Ezra Klein made a sharp observation about how the press treats stories about the federal budget deficit:


“ For reasons I've never quite understood, the rules of reportorial neutrality don't apply when it comes to the deficit. On this one issue, reporters are permitted to openly cheer a particular set of highly controversial policy solutions.

Klein wrote those words four and a half years ago, and they remain true today. Even though the standard conservative story about deficits was disproved in spectacular fashion by the Great Recession and its aftermath, it is still the safe journalistic move to nod sagely when Paul Ryan spews more nonsense about "looming debt crises" and all that.

Speaking of our Speaker of the House, he also continues to benefit from a media narrative that treats him as something other than the pure political hack that he is. Even though Ryan is now being widely mocked for his spinelessness in failing to stand up to Donald Trump, there is still the sense among mainstream journalists that Ryan is somehow still "a good and smart man who means well," or something.

The fact is that Ryan's reputation as a policy wonk was, as Paul Krugman never stopped reminding people, based on nothing more than Ryan's having ceaselessly presented himself as a policy wonk.

One cannot even say that Ryan's budgets never added up, because his budgets were never detailed enough to be assessed. He would simply designate (via "magic asterisks") where money in the future would be saved, and the press dutifully called his PowerPoint presentations "serious."

Even in the current environment where Ryan's weakness is on display for all to see, we are reminded in mainstream publications without criticism or irony that Ryan has "many fans in the Republican establishment, who see him as an avatar of moral leadership and someone who is revolted by the president’s low-road political style—if only he could bring himself to say it."

What is that moral leadership? Ryan certainly uses moralistic language, but anyone can do that. What is the content?

He completely misrepresents the evidence to claim that poor people are caught in a dependency trap by government programs, allowing him to say that taking from the poor and giving to the rich is good for poor people's souls. Without that tissue-thin cover story, Ryan is simply a ruthless advocate for tax cuts for the rich and spending cuts for everyone else.

And that has also been true of Trump all along. He has differed from Republicans on international trade (at least rhetorically, even though he has done nothing of policy substance while in office that would ruffle the feathers of the Republicans' business base), but Trump is ultimately all about huge tax cuts for the rich and businesses.

Whatever else one can say about Trump's willingness to shift positions and contradict himself, he has consistently said that he wants to pass enormous regressive tax cuts.

Given Trump's track record, one might think that reporters with a renewed vigilance about presidential deception might think more critically about how they report on Trump's White House.

But when it comes to policy— as opposed to political issues like Trump's open affection for white supremacists, about which the press has been admirably aggressive— the old rules apply.

It is not, moreover, just the technical stuff that suffers from reporters' unquestioning stenography. Take this relatively standard formulation, where a reporter is describing policy differences among the White House staff and Republicans in the aftermath of Steve Bannon's firing: "Those differences are still harming Trump’s effectiveness as he tries to kick-start a sputtering legislative agenda..."

What makes anyone think Trump is doing that? Where is the evidence that Trump is trying to do anything with a legislative agenda, or that he even has one?

I realize that this is a matter of emphasis, but when all of the evidence points to the conclusion that Trump has no legislative agenda, and when the few times that he is supposed to talk about policy issues he strays into hateful nonsense, why would a neutral reporter think that it makes sense to describe Trump just like any other president who is struggling to get something that could be called an agenda through Congress?

Again, that example is relatively mild, but that story had followed one by two other reporters for The Post , who wrote:

“ Worries on Thursday that [ director of the White House Economic Council, Gary] Cohn might join the exodus of business leaders after two White House corporate advisory boards disbanded in the wake of the events in Charlottesville helped send the Dow Jones industrial average down 274.14 points, or 1.2 percent, the largest sell-off in three months.
Investors feared that the Trump administration might lose a leading architect of the president’s economic agenda just as it approaches a critical juncture.


The problem here is that the reporters are stating uncritically that Cohn is a "leading architect of the president's economic agenda," and although they attribute this view to "investors," a truly neutral reporter would have done one of two things:

(1) state that there is serious question about whether there is an economic agenda at all, and even if there is, question whether Cohn is the "leading architect" of that agenda's only known plank, which is tax cuts for the rich,

or (2) write that "investors fear that further upheaval in the White House will derail any effort to deal with must-pass legislation like the federal budget."

I am not saying that good reporters would only say negative things about Trump or Cohn, but I am saying that it does everyone a disservice to blithely mention Trump's agenda when it is not at all obvious that he has one or that Cohn is architecting anything.

Seriously, other than some version of an enormously regressive tax cut (which Cohn teased this past Spring with a one-page list of bullet points that were a study in vagueness), what is Trump's agenda on any other economic issue? Infrastructure spending? He is in favor of some kind of privatized plan, sort of, unless he is uninterested in it this week.

The debt ceiling? The federal budget for the next fiscal year? What is Trump's agenda? If we cannot describe it, why act as if it obviously exists and that everyone knows what it is?

But it gets worse, because reporters in the top newspapers that Trump calls "the enemies of the people" do not merely casually ascribe content to the formless void that is Trump's policy views, but they even give Trump's nonexistent policy specifics credit for magical powers.

A business columnist for The (failing) New York Times recently offered this nugget:

“ Stocks slid on Thursday in part on worries that the president’s ruptured relations with business would damage his plans to jump-start economic growth.


Trump has "plans to jump-start economic growth"? Tell me more! Yes, Trump has said that he will pass tremendous policies that will increase economic growth, but The Times is not the White House press office.

It is not a reporter's job to say that an agenda would jump-start growth, even were an agenda actually to exist. Where are the journalistic caveats, like talking about policies that "Trump's advisor say" will increase growth?

The most down-the-middle way to describe what was happening is that Wall Streeters (and the business community more generally) have eagerly anticipated some kind of big tax cut ever since Trump improbably won his narrow victory last year. Stocks fell not because of worries about economic growth but because investors see a golden opportunity to cut their own taxes being threatened.

And if there really was worry among investors that growth might be lower than it could have been if the tax cuts had passed, it is at least incumbent on a neutral reporter to point out that the available evidence on tax cuts and growth is exactly contrary to that conventional wisdom.

Because the fact is, as I have written over and over recently, even some top conservative economists are admitting that the economic evidence for a causal link from tax cuts to economic growth is nonexistent.

Even if I were guilty of over-reading that (lack of) evidence, however, it is at least important to report that there is serious doubt about the presumed tax-cuts-to-growth connection.

Instead, yet another Post reporter wrote this last month: "Now, the size of the tax plan is in doubt, and that could hurt chances for hitting the 3 percent (or better) growth level Trump has promised."

Now we have not only accepted that there is certainly a link, but that the link is unambiguous and can be calibrated in a way that the size of the tax cut might be too small to achieve Trump's objective to increase growth to three percent annually. If the tax cuts are too small, we are told, the growth will be too slow.

Not only is there no evidence to support any of that, but there has been widespread discussion in many major media outlets over the past few months of the evidence that economic growth cannot possibly be increased to three percent, because of changes in demographics and other trends that are not going to be responsive to policy changes.

Note that nearly all of my examples in this column have been from The Post and The Times , which are the two non-TV news sources that Trump attacks most viciously. And reporters for both of those papers have done impressive and essential investigative work on the Russia story and many other aspects of Trump's mess of a presidency.

This makes it all the more depressing that the habits of mind among those reporters who cover economics and tax stories continue to be so lazy and have not been updated to the current reality of White House dishonesty.

It is especially bad because this kind of unthinking reinforcement of the conventional wisdom on tax cuts is exactly what not just Trump but the entire Republican establishment feeds on when pushing their regressive agenda.

I would obviously be pleased if reporters started to use my views as their default positions, but I am more than willing simply to hope for something resembling balance.

Reporters should stop treating assertions that are either known to be false or are at least highly contestable as the uncontested truth. Is that too much to ask?

Neil H. Buchanan is an economist and legal scholar and a professor of law at George Washington University. He teaches tax law, tax policy, contracts, and law and economics. His research addresses the long-term tax and spending patterns of the federal government, focusing on budget deficits, the national debt, health care costs and Social Security.
 
Business

Should Taxes Be Raised or Benefits Cut to Fix Social Security? The Public's Response Wasn't Even Close -- The Motley Fool
The Motley Fool 9 hours ago .

According to the latest snapshot from the Social Security Administration (SSA), around 41.9 million retired workers are receiving a monthly benefits check, and of those workers, some 61% count on that check for at least half of their monthly income. Social Security's importance in helping seniors meet their financial obligations simply can't be overstated. Big Social Security benefit cuts may be just 17 years away What also can't be said enough is just how much trouble America's most important social program is in over the long term. The latest annual report from the Social Security Board of Trustees pegged 2022 and 2034 as major inflection points. Beginning in 2022, the program will begin to ...
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/m/755...b129f4a9fd7/ss_should-taxes-be-raised-or.html
 
IT's OUR fucking money they robbed to begin with!

Social Security/Medicare

RAIDING THE TRUST FUND


The Big Lie


The Looting of Social Security



Throughout history, governments around the world have misled and deceived their citizens, at least some of the time. Sometimes the deception could be justified on the basis of national security concerns. But, at other times, the only thing at stake has been political power and greed. That is the case with the embezzlement of $2.7 trillion of Social Security money and the spending of that money for wars, tax cuts and other non-Social Security programs.

The United States of America has had its share of government scandals from Teapot Dome, under President Harding, to the Watergate scandal, which brought down Richard Nixon, to the Iran Contra scandal under Reagan, and the Monica Lewinsky affair under President Bill Clinton. These scandals have garnered a lot of news coverage and resulted in political casualties. They have also called into question the integrity of government, in general, during the periods of heavy news coverage. But, in each of these scandals, public concern over government dishonesty, in general, has been only temporary.

Most Americans want to trust and feel good about their government, and government distrust is usually limited to politicians of the opposite political party. In other words, Democrats usually do not trust Republicans, and Republicans do not trust Democrats. When one party is caught up in a political scandal, the other party goes on the offensive until they have made as much political hay of the incident as possible. But what if there are offenses against the public in which members of both parties are equally guilty? There is no political gain from exposing misconduct in one party if the other party is equally guilty. On the contrary, secrets that both parties want to keep from the public are very hard to expose.
When I first discovered that the government was systematically embezzling Social Security money, and using it for non-Social Security purposes, I didn’t want to believe what I had found. I did a lot of research in an effort to disprove my findings, but the deeper I dug, the more evidence I found that the crime of mishandling Social Security funds had enjoyed bipartisan support from the very beginning. The only way the government could have gotten by with the scam for so many years was by extensive bipartisan support and a trusting public.

The public trust of the government was strengthened when Ronald Reagan became President in 1981. Millions of Americans had welcomed Reagan into their homes for years, as the host of “Death Valley Days” and “The General Electric Theatre.” He was loved by many from the day he entered the White House. No matter what went wrong during his years as President, Reagan seemed to almost never be blamed directly. He was often called the Teflon President because almost nothing of a negative nature seemed to stick to him. As a trained professional actor, Reagan had an uncommon degree of charisma. He soon became America’s most loved modern-day president, and he was seen by many as an elder statesman, and even a beloved grandfather figure. Some people even suggested that his likeness should be carved onto Mt. Rushmore with other great former presidents.

A man with the talents of Ronald Reagan could tell a lot of big lies and possibly never get caught. Reagan told more than one whopper. His first one was straight out of fantasy land. Reagan said he would cut income tax rates by 30 percent over a three-year period, and end up with more revenue than before the cut in rates. You don’t have to be an economist to figure out that, if the government wants to increase revenue, it would usually raise tax rates—not lower them.

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Reagan’s big lie about getting more revenue with lower tax rates led to his biggest lie of all. Once it became clear that supply-side economics was not working, Reagan had a big crisis on his hands. His promises to reduce the deficits and lower the national debt flew right out the back door. Reagan did not want to admit that his economic plan had failed and he didn’t want to rescind his cuts in income tax rates. He desperately needed to find a new source of revenue to offset the revenue which had been lost because of the cut in income tax rates.

****************************************************************************************

Alan Greenspan, who was worth his weight in gold as an advisor to Reagan, came to the rescue. He pointed out that there was a way to get more revenue without touching the income tax cuts. Greenspan told Reagan that they could raise payroll taxes, and say they were doing it to strengthen Social Security. Then they could use the surplus revenue just like income- tax revenue.

***************************************************************************************
It was a clever plan. The surplus Social Security revenue from the payroll-tax increase wouldn’t be needed to pay actual benefits for 30 more years. Why not just put the money in the general fund, for now, and let future presidents worry about replacing it. It probably didn’t seem like such and evil deed to Reagan and Greenspan at the time. After all, they were only “borrowing” the money. Hopefully some future president would repay it. But the real effect of their action was to take money from working baby boomers, in the form of increased payroll taxes, and give that money to some of the richest Americans in the form of big income tax cuts.

It must not have taken Greenspan very long to convince Reagan to begin embezzling the Social Security surplus revenue, because Reagan took his first action toward getting his hands on the money by writing a letter, which greatly exaggerated the plight of Social Security, to Congressional Leaders on May 21, 1981, just four months after taking the oath of office as President. Excerpts from that letter are reproduced below.
“As you know, the Social Security System is teetering on the edge of bankruptcy. Over the next five years, the Social Security trust fund could encounter deficits of up to $111 billion, and in the decades ahead its unfunded obligations could run well into the trillions. Unless we in government are willing to act, a sword of Damocles will soon hang over the welfare of millions of our citizens…



Social Security was definitely not “teetering on the edge of bankruptcy” in 1981 as Reagan claimed in his letter to Congressional leaders. The 1982 National Commission on Social Security Reform, headed by Alan Greenspan, issued its “findings and recommendations” in January 1983. The Commission accurately foresaw major problems for Social Security when the baby boomers began to retire in about 2010. But that was nearly three decades down the road. In addition to the long-term problem of the baby boomers, the Commission found a possible short-term problem for the years 1983-89. But the outlook improved and became favorable for the 1990s and early 2000s. The possible minor problem for the years 1983-1989 was based on very pessimistic economic assumptions. So, at the time Reagan informed Congressional leaders that Social Security was teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, the overall condition of Social Security funding was fairly sound for the next three decades.

Reagan wrote a follow-up letter to Congressional leaders dated July18, 1981, which included:

“The highest priority of my Administration is restoring the integrity of the Social Security System. Those 35 million Americans who depend on Social Security expect and are entitled to prompt bipartisan action to resolve the current financial problem.

At the same time, I deplore the opportunistic political maneuvering, cynically designed to play on the fears of many Americans, that some in the Congress are initiating at this time…
…In order to tell the American people the facts, and to let them know that I shall fight to preserve the Social Security System and protect their benefits, I will ask for time on television to address the Nation as soon as possible.”

This second letter to Congressional leaders was still another big lie. Social Security was certainly not Reagan’s “highest priority.” Like other conservatives, Reagan had hated Social Security from the day it became law in 1935. He was a hardliner when it came to all government social programs. He called unemployment insurance “a prepaid vacation plan for freeloaders.” He said the progressive income tax was a “brainchild of Karl Marx.” And, he called welfare recipients “a faceless mass waiting for handouts.” Reagan referred to Social Security as a “welfare program” and, during the 1976 Republican Presidential Primary, Reagan proposed making Social Security voluntary, which would have essentially destroyed the program. There is no way that anyone who knew Reagan’s record would accept his claim that Social Security was his highest priority. He had always wanted the program eliminated, or at least privatized.

Reagan’s scare tactics worked. Congress passed the Social Security Amendments of 1983, which included a hefty increase in the payroll tax rate, in a record time of three months. The tax increase was designed to generate large Social Security surpluses for the next 30 years. The public was led to believe that the surplus money would be saved and invested in marketable U.S. Treasury Bonds, which could later be resold to raise cash with which to pay benefits to the boomers. But that didn’t happen. The money was all deposited directly into the general fund and used for non-Social Security purposes. Reagan spent every dime of the surplus Social Security revenue, which came in during his presidency, on general government operations. Social Security, which Reagan claimed he was trying to fix with the legislation, never saw a penny of that money.

It would have been bad enough if Reagan had been the only president to raid the Social Security trust fund. But his successor, George H.W. Bush picked up right where Reagan left off. Bush had promised the voters during the campaign that he would not raise taxes by saying, “Read my lips. No new taxes.” With the Social Security surplus as a huge slush fund, Bush did not need to raise taxes, but he raided the trust fund and spent the money, just like Reagan. However, the secret practice of looting the Social Security trust fund did not remain a secret for very long. Members of Congress began tosee what was happening to the Social Security surplus, and they did not like what they saw.

Some members of Congress were appalled by the embezzlement, and a few tried to end the theft. On October 13, 1989, Senator Ernest Hollings (D-SC) lambasted the Bush administration for its mishandling of Social Security funds. Excerpts from the speech are reproduced below:

“Of course, the most reprehensible fraud in this great jambalaya of frauds is the systematic and total ransacking of the Social Security trust fund in order to mask the true size of the deficit…The Treasury is siphoning off every dollar of the Social Security surplus to meet current operating expenses of the Government…The hard fact is that, in the next century, the Social Security system will find itself paying out vastly more in benefits than it is taking in through payroll taxes. And the American people will wake up to the reality that those IOU’s in the trust fund vault are a 21st century version of Confederate banknotes.’

A year later, on October 9, 1990, Senator Harry Reid of Nevada made the following statement on the Senate floor:

“The discussion is are we as a country violating a trust by spending Social Security trust fund moneys for some purpose other than for which they were intended. The obvious answer is yes…

The trust funds resources are there for the well-being of those who have paid into the Social Security System. We should use those resources to see that Social Security recipients are treated well but also treated fairly and treated equitably.

It is time for Congress, I think, to take its hands—and I add the President in on that—off the Social Security surpluses. Stop hiding the horrible truth of the fiscal irresponsibility that we have talked about here the past 2 weeks. It is time to return those dollars to the hands of those who earned them—the Social Security beneficiaries and future beneficiaries…

I think that is a very good illustration of what I was talking about, embezzlement, thievery. Because that, Mr. President, is what we are talking about here…On that chart in emblazoned red letters is what has been taking place here, embezzlement.
During the period of growth we have had during the past 10 years, the growth has been from two sources: One, a large credit card with no limits on it, and, two, we have been stealing money from the Social Security recipients of this country.



”I think that is a very good illustration of what I was talking about, embezzlement, thievery. Because that, Mr. President, is what we are talking about here…I publicly commend and applaud the vigorous activity generated by the Senator from New York because… on that chart in emblazoned red letters is what has been taking place here, embezzlement.”

Out of this heated debate on the issue of government misappropriation of Social Security money, came Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s proposal to cut Social Security taxes in order to deny the government access to the tempting surplus Social Security money. Senator Moynihan, who had been a strong supporter of the 1983 efforts to strengthen the Social Security system, was outraged that, instead of being used to build up the size of the Social Security Trust Fund for future retirees, as was intended, the Social Security surplus was being used to pay for general government spending.

President George H. W. Bush was furious over Moynihan’s proposal. In response to reporters’ questions, Bush replied, “It is an effort to get me to raise taxes on the American people by the charade of cutting them, or cut benefits, and I am not going to do it to the older people of this country.”

But President Bush was in fact taking money from a fund that was supposed to be used to provide for “the older people of this country” and using it to fund general government. Despite the strong efforts, way back in 1990, to put an end to the raiding of the Social Security trust fund, President George H.W. Bush continued to loot and spend every dollar of the Social Security surplus.

Later that day, Senator Moynihan responded to the president’s statement in a speech on the Senate floor. Moynihan said, “Mr. President…If there is a problem of dissimulation, I would suggest that it resides with the present practice of usingSocial Security trust funds as general revenues. My distinguished friend, the Republican Senator from Pennsylvania, Senator Heinz, has used a very direct word for this. He says it is called “embezzlement.”



Because Moynihan believed the American people were being deceived and betrayed, he proposed undoing the 1983 legislation by cutting Social Security taxes and returning the system to a “pay-as-you-go” basis which would have provided only enough revenue to take care of current retirees. Moynihan’s position was that, if the government could not keep its hands out of the Social Security cookie jar, the jar should be emptied so there would be no Social Security surplus



George H.W. Bush looted every penny of the Social Security surplus generated during his term, and Bill Clinton continued to treat the surplus as if it were general revenue. The money continued to be “embezzled” and spent, with almost nobody aware that the crime was taking place. However, the crime finally came to light again during the 2000 presidential campaign.



The unlawful spending of Social Security money for non-Social Security purposes, became a major campaign issue in 2000. Al Gore and George W. Bush both acknowledged that the government was spending Social Security revenue for non-Social Security purposes, and both candidates pledged to end the looting.

During his acceptance speech at the Democratic national convention, Al Gore announced that, if he was elected president, he would put Social Security funds into a Social Security lockbox for Social Security and for Social Security only. Gore’s dramatic announcement brought the looting of Social Security back into the limelight. When Senator Moynihan’s 1990 bill to repeal the 1983 payroll tax hike failed to become law, the looting of Social Security continued, unchanged, for another decade until the issue resurfaced during the 2000 presidential election campaign.



Bush also promised to keep his hands off Social Security money. Bush reiterated this pledge to the American people over and over, and further cemented it with a statement in his first State of the Union address, delivered on February 27, 2000. In no uncertain terms, Bush said, “To make sure the retirement savings of America’s seniors are not diverted to any other program, my budget protects all $2.6 trillion of the Social Security surplus for Social Security, and for Social Security alone.”



Like so many of his other promises, Bush broke that promise. He “embezzled” and spent every dollar of the surplus Social Security revenue generated during his two terms as president, making him the biggest contributor of all to the real Social Security problem.



In addition to the embezzlement under both Reagan and George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush looted and spent all of the Social Security surplus revenue that flowed in during their presidencies. So we can’t blame the whole problem on Reagan. He was just the one who figured out a way to use Social Security money as general revenue, and his successors followed his example.

Medicaid and Medicare are government-sponsored healthcare programs in the U.S. The programs differ in terms of how they are governed and funded, as well as in terms of who they cover.

Medicare is an insurance program that primarily covers seniors ages 65 and older and disabled individuals who qualify for Social Security, while Medicaid is an assistance program that covers low- to no-income families and individuals. Some may be eligible for both Medicaid and Medicare, depending on their circumstances. Under the Affordable Care Act (a.k.a., "Obamacare"), 26 states and the District of Columbia have recently expanded Medicaid, thus enabling many more to enroll in the program.

Comparison chart
Medicaid versus Medicare comparison chart
Medicaid Medicare
Overview Medicaid in the U.S. is an assistance program that covers the medical costs of low- to no-income families and individuals. Children are more likely than adults to be eligible for coverage. Medicare in the U.S. is an insurance program that primarily covers seniors ages 65 and older and disabled individuals of any age who qualify for Social Security. Also covers those of any age with end-stage renal disease.
Eligibility Requirements Strict income requirements related to Federal Poverty Level (FPL). With expansion under the Affordable Care Act, 26 states cover at or below 138% of FPL. States that opted out have a variety of income requirements. Regardless of income, anyone turning 65 can enroll in Medicare so long as they paid into Medicare / Social Security funds. People of any age with severe disabilities and end-stage renal disease are also eligible.

Services Covered Children more likely to have comprehensive coverage in all states than adults. Routine and emergency care, family planning, hospice, some substance and smoking cessation programs. Limited dental and vision. Routine and emergency care, hospice, family planning, some substance and smoking cessation programs. Limited dental and vision.

Cost to Enrollees Varies by state, with some imposing deductibles. Usually low, but much may depend on what little income one has. Part A costs nothing for those who paid Medicare taxes for 10 years or more (or had a spouse who did). Part B in 2014 costs $104.90/mo for most. Part D costs vary, usually around $30/mo. Medicare Advantage costs vary.
Governance Jointly governed by the federal and state governments. Affordable Care Act sought to make more Medicaid rules universal, but the Supreme Court ruled states could opt out. Entirely governed by the federal government.
Funding Variety of taxes, but most funding (~57%) comes from federal government. Sometimes hospitals are taxed at the state level. Along with Medicare, Medicaid accounts for roughly 25% of federal budget. Payroll taxes (namely, Medicare and Social Security taxes), interest earned on trust fund investments, and Medicare premiums. Along with Medicaid, Medicare accounts for roughly 25% of federal budget.
User Satisfaction Relatively high High
Populations Covered All states, D.C., territories, Native American reservations. Around 20% of population on Medicaid. 40% of all childbirths covered by it. Half of all regular AIDS/HIV patients. All states, D.C., U.S. territories, Native American reservations. Around 15% of population on Medicare.

How is Medicare funded?
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), a branch of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), is the federal agency that runs the Medicare Program and monitors Medicaid programs offered by each state.
In 2011, Medicare covered 48.7 million people. Total expenditures in 2011 were $549.1 billion. This money comes from the Medicare Trust Funds.

Medicare Trust Funds
Medicare is paid for through 2 trust fund accounts held by the U.S. Treasury. These funds can only be used for Medicare.
Hospital Insurance (HI) Trust Fund
How is it funded?
• Payroll taxes paid by most employees, employers, and people who are self-employed
• Other sources, like income taxes paid on Social Security benefits, interest earned on the trust fund investments, and Medicare Part A premiums from people who aren't eligible for premium-free Part A
What does it pay for?
• Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance) benefits, like inpatient hospital care, skilled nursing facility care, home health care, and hospice care
• Medicare Program administration, like costs for paying benefits, collecting Medicare taxes, and combating fraud and abuse
Supplementary Medical Insurance (SMI) Trust Fund
How is it funded?
• Funds authorized by Congress
• Premiums from people enrolled in Medicare Part B (Medical Insurance) and Medicare prescription ******* coverage (Part D)
• Other sources, like interest earned on the trust fund investments
What does it pay for?
• Part B benefits
• Part D
• Medicare Program administration, like costs for paying benefits and for combating fraud and abuse

Who pays for Medicare?
Medicare is funded by the Social Security Administration. Which means it's funded by taxpayers: We all pay 1.45% of our earnings into FICA - Federal Insurance Contributions Act - which go toward Medicare. Employers pay another 1.45%, bringing the total to 2.9%. (If you're self-employed, you must cough up the entire 2.9%.) The Medicare deduction on your paycheck might say FICA-HI. The HI refers to Health Insurance, and it's your premium cost for all Medicare coverage.

While the portion of our FICA taxes that cover payments into the Social Security system are levied only on the first $118,599 in earnings for 2016, the Medicare tax is levied on every penny you earn.
You will also pay some Medicare costs yourself when you start using the plan.
 
Business

Robert Reich: On Labor, Tragically, Trump Was Right
Newsweek Robert Reich,Newsweek 5 hours ago .


This article first appeared on RobertReich.org.

This will be the first Labor Day of the presidency of Donald J. Trump, who came to office riding a wave of anti-establishment anger from average working people. No one can say they didn’t see it coming.

By the time Trump was elected, the typical American household had a net worth 14 percent lower than the typical household in 1984. The richest 1 percent owned more than the bottom 90 percent.

Trending: Donald Trump Lost Expert in Countering Extremism to the Anti-Defamation League

Last year’s annual Wall Street bonus pool alone was larger than the annual year-round earnings of all 3.3 million Americans working full time at the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour.

While 90 percent of US adults born in the early 1940s were earning more than their parents by the time they reached their prime earning years, only half of adults born in the mid-1980s are earning more than their parents in their prime earning years.

Most also have less economic security than their parents. Nearly one out of every five American workers is in a part-time job. Two-thirds are living paycheck to paycheck.

Most are working more hours than they worked decades ago and taking fewer sick days or vacations.

The gap in life expectancy between the nation’s most affluent and everyone else is also widening.

Increasing numbers of Americans on the downward economic escalator are succumbing to opioids, chronic liver cirrhosis, and poisonings that include ******* overdoses.

The standard explanation for why all this has occurred is that most American workers are no longer “worth” as much as they were before digital technologies and globalization. So they must now settle for lower wages and less security.

Rubbish.

This doesn’t explain why workers in other advanced economies facing similar forces haven’t succumbed to them nearly as dramatically as have workers in the United States.

Or why the pay of top executives at big companies has soared from an average of 20 times that of the typical worker 40 years ago to almost 300 times now.

Or why the denizens of Wall Street, who in the 1950s and 1960s earned comparatively modest sums, are now paid tens or hundreds of millions annually.

And it can’t account for the decline in the starting wages of recent college graduates. A college education is now a prerequisite for joining the middle class but no longer a sure means for gaining ground once admitted to it.

To attribute all this to the impersonal workings of the market, and assume it’s because most workers aren’t “worth” as much as before, is to ignore the increasing ability of moneyed interests to alter the system for their own benefit – demolishing trade unions, turning full-time employees into contract workers, and monopolizing industry.

America’s economic and political elites could have used their growing political and economic clout to help workers get ahead – through better schools and more affordable college, comprehensive job retraining, wage insurance, better public transportation, and expanded unemployment insurance.

They could have pushed for universal health insurance.

They could have paid for all this by accepting, even lobbying for, higher taxes on themselves.

They could have sought to reduce their own political clout by demanding limits on campaign spending.

But they did the reverse: They spent more and more of their ever-growing wealth and power to rig the game to their own advantage.

As a result, trust in all the major institutions of our society has plummeted.

In 1964 more than 60 percent of Americans thought government was “run for the benefit of all the people” while just 29 percent said government was “pretty much run by a few big interests looking out for themselves.”

Nowadays the numbers are almost reversed, with 76 percent believing government is run “by a few big interest” and just 19 percent saying government is run “for the benefit of all.”

In the early 1960s most Americans said they had a “great deal of confidence” in the nation’s major companies, banks, and financial institutions.

Now just one in ten has a great deal of confidence in them.

In his first seven months as president, Trump has done nothing for American workers. In fact, his attempt to undermine the Affordable Care Act, his retreat from Labor Department regulations boosting overtime pay, and his proposed tax cuts for the wealthy and big corporations will make most workers worse off.

But he is in office because of their anger and distrust, and he’s still feeding off it. “The establishment protected itself, but not the citizens of our country,” Trump said in his inaugural address. “Their victories have not been your victories; their triumphs have not been your triumphs.”


Tragically, Trump was right.

Now all of us are paying the price.
 
That's a lot of words. Except wages are starting to increase. Which is more than a word, that's actually empirical data. Outside of that, and some free association from Mr. Reich, specifically about college graduates where he seems to place blame everywhere except on the colleges, I guess he's right.
 
Except wages are starting to increase
yes and it's about time...but that is only because there ARE jobs out there... and they can't get workers... because they won't pay!
to get those workers they have to increase wages... and it's about time!

I thought it was all pretty accurate... but then I am biased towards the middle class!

AND somehow we have lost control of government and need to get it back... hard to do with so much greed and big money buying what they want
look at the Cock brothers... right now happy as pigs in ******* with all Trump is doing for them.... and they didn't want to support him????
 
what goes around....comes around!


Flashback: 20 Texas GOP Representatives and Both Senators Voted Against the Sandy Relief Act

Hurricane Harvey is on pace to produce the greatest single-storm rainfall in the United States in at least a century and may wind up being one of the costliest natural disasters in U.S. history. To make matters worse, since much of the damage is occurring inland and outside of the 100-year floodplain, insurance coverage will be low. Naturally, a congressional relief package will be forthcoming. Which means it's time to turn to another round of Southern Republicans Who Voted Against the Hurricane Sandy Relief Package but Will Soon Want Federal Disaster Money for Their Flooded Homes. (Previous contestants included the congressional delegations of Florida and Louisiana.) This time the spotlight ...
https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/9a57179d-2d7f-390b-b90a-624f5a5839db/ss_flashback:-20-texas-gop.html
 
Flashback: 20 Texas GOP Representatives and Both Senators Voted Against the Sandy Relief Act
Yes, it is worth remembering that the Texas Governor was against relief aid as well ... until they got hit with some Texas size tornadoes and suddenly OUT came the palms of their hands towards Obama, and wanting to know why it was taking so long. Same thing with the SNAP program ... wanting to cut school lunch aid program BUT want their farmers to get that extra money (Snap, by the way is a part of the farm aid program) everytime a crop gets wiped out.
THEN, every time the Texans get pissed off at the government, they start their threats of secession from the government.
I really do feel sad for the Texas towns, but those Republican politicians there certainly do need "reminded" that the HELP does other ways besides to THEM. Also interesting to note that only 1:5 have flood insurance ... they're going to need a tremendous amount of help there. Most Red Cross aid and donations are channeling to Texas now ... good time to say our blessings and give $100 or whatever we can afford to the Red Cross.
 
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Establishment Republicans are the same as Establishment Democrats. Both an embarrassment. Neither fiscally conservative.

I gave to the Cajun Navy. I'd personally not give to the Red Cross having seen them work a disaster, and having seen how top heavy they re. But to each his own.
 
I still don't think Trump will be around a full year!
his popularity keeps dropping no matter how much he tries to deny it
and after his Az rally he fired one of his aids because the crowd was small
Mueller keeps getting closer and he knows it...every week more comes out..emails linking him to knowing about Russia... now the Trump tower in Russia thing... the lies.. and the right keeps supporting him... wonder what they will say when the Mueller thing comes out... although now there are even a few on the right trying to stop Mueller ( the Fl man) wanting to "defund" Mueller....just to much on him not to sway even more public opinion

not even going into his racists views... or his peddling his own products...even during his Harvey trip!

hh you have been awful quiet lately......
 
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WOW


Chelsea Clinton Subtly Shades Ivanka Trump Amid Reports Her Old Friend Visited Putin's Private Office

Chelsea Clinton and Ivanka Trump have a longstanding friendship despite their parents’ bitter political rivalry in the 2016 presidential election. But a new tweet sent by the former first ******* about the current first ******* have many calling “shade.”



It all started with The New York Times, which on Monday published a report about a 2015 email exchange between President Donald Trump‘s business associate Felix Sater and lawyer Michael Cohen that claimed Sater had made arrangements for Ivanka’s 2006 trip to Russia.

The trip, Sater alleges in his email, included a private stop at Vladimir Putin’s private office where he wrote that Ivanka sat “in Putin’s private chair at his desk and office in the Kremlin.”

Ivanka, 35, confirmed to the Times that she took “a brief tour of Red Square and the Kremlin” in 2006 as a tourist. Although she didn’t recall sitting in Putin’s chair, she said it was a possibility that she did — adding that she has “never met President Vladimir Putin.”

But many of her critics on Twitter saw Ivanka’s insider experience as another example of the president’s dangerous ties to Russia — especially since Sater had boasted that building a Trump Tower in Moscow would help get the Russian government on Team Trump.
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...ivate-office/ar-AAqW51M?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=ientp
 
Poor Trump ... getting the treatment Obama got from congress during his presidency ... "Payback's A Bitch" isn't it?

The media noticed Ivanka wearing stiletto high heels to tour the flood yesterday. How "stylish" You know stilettos are IN this year for floods and hurricanes. And Trump tours the flooded areas and doesn't address the people once ... just promotes his new caps that we can buy on his website for $40, and thanks the people for "turning out" ... LOL .... "ohhhh you're soooooo welcome, President Trump" .... we would have shown up even if there was a flood or hurricane or something ... wait .... there WAS a flood and hurricane. See how we love you President Trump? :rolleyes:
This family just "doesn't get it" ... never will!
 
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The media noticed Ivanka wearing stiletto high heels to tour the flood yesterday.
More fake news - and really, whats it matter anyways? It's not like she is out there rescuing people. It's just petty crap to bitch about.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...eels-in-a-disaster-zone/ar-AAqWvLD?li=BBnbcA1
However, as the Trumps disembarked from the plane in Corpus Christi, Texas, the first lady was wearing much more sensible footwear: white sneakers.
 
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