Rubepublicans and Democrats agree on something

Ugh.
japhy
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Re: Rubepublicans and Democrats agree on something

Post by japhy »

Overlander wrote: Tue Sep 24, 2024 11:36 pm Straight from the Guardian article on Trumps “Economic Poan” at his speech in Georgia.

These women are chiming in on support for Trumps plan:

“ I want to hear him be more detailed when he says he’s going to give corporations tax breaks. I understand how it benefits everybody – they’ll lower the unemployment rate, which will make for more tax revenue from people – but not everybody might understand that.”
People's understanding of how this all works is laffable.

If you lower my taxes, more money goes into my personal wealth. I already am hiring all of the employees my business needs. I am not hiring "more" because I have more spare million$ and love company in the office.

But if you insist on cutting my taxes because I am a "job creator" I don't know what to say other than, thanks rubes. For reference purposes my tax refund last year was $66K and dividend income was very nice was well. It's not that I won't spend it "wisely" or something. But this is the BS the R's have been selling you for years and it never has paid out for you like it has for me, and it never will. But if you don't see a problem with the inequity in trumpty plumpty's concept of a plan, I can only guess that you just love seeing people who don't need it, get more benefits than you do. And I can live with that and retire comfortably which was the subject of this thread before it devolved.

Keep the checks comin' rubes. I will buy you a beer next time you are in the Empire.
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Re: Rubepublicans and Democrats agree on something

Post by jfish26 »

japhy wrote: Wed Sep 25, 2024 8:33 am
Overlander wrote: Tue Sep 24, 2024 11:36 pm Straight from the Guardian article on Trumps “Economic Poan” at his speech in Georgia.

These women are chiming in on support for Trumps plan:

“ I want to hear him be more detailed when he says he’s going to give corporations tax breaks. I understand how it benefits everybody – they’ll lower the unemployment rate, which will make for more tax revenue from people – but not everybody might understand that.”
People's understanding of how this all works is laffable.

If you lower my taxes, more money goes into my personal wealth. I already am hiring all of the employees my business needs. I am not hiring "more" because I have more spare million$ and love company in the office.

But if you insist on cutting my taxes because I am a "job creator" I don't know what to say other than, thanks rubes. For reference purposes my tax refund last year was $66K and dividend income was very nice was well. It's not that I won't spend it "wisely" or something. But this is the BS the R's have been selling you for years and it never has paid out for you like it has for me, and it never will. But if you don't see a problem with the inequity in trumpty plumpty's concept of a plan, I can only guess that you just love seeing people who don't need it, get more benefits than you do. And I can live with that and retire comfortably which was the subject of this thread before it devolved.

Keep the checks comin' rubes. I will buy you a beer next time you are in the Empire.
You can draw a line in (Sharpie?) ink connecting the 80s magic beans of trickle-down economics to the Trump-cult-era reverse-occam’s-razor conspiracy theorizing.
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Re: Rubepublicans and Democrats agree on something

Post by japhy »

jfish26 wrote: Wed Sep 25, 2024 8:36 am
japhy wrote: Wed Sep 25, 2024 8:33 am
Overlander wrote: Tue Sep 24, 2024 11:36 pm Straight from the Guardian article on Trumps “Economic Poan” at his speech in Georgia.

These women are chiming in on support for Trumps plan:

“ I want to hear him be more detailed when he says he’s going to give corporations tax breaks. I understand how it benefits everybody – they’ll lower the unemployment rate, which will make for more tax revenue from people – but not everybody might understand that.”
People's understanding of how this all works is laffable.

If you lower my taxes, more money goes into my personal wealth. I already am hiring all of the employees my business needs. I am not hiring "more" because I have more spare million$ and love company in the office.

But if you insist on cutting my taxes because I am a "job creator" I don't know what to say other than, thanks rubes. For reference purposes my tax refund last year was $66K and dividend income was very nice was well. It's not that I won't spend it "wisely" or something. But this is the BS the R's have been selling you for years and it never has paid out for you like it has for me, and it never will. But if you don't see a problem with the inequity in trumpty plumpty's concept of a plan, I can only guess that you just love seeing people who don't need it, get more benefits than you do. And I can live with that and retire comfortably which was the subject of this thread before it devolved.

Keep the checks comin' rubes. I will buy you a beer next time you are in the Empire.
You can draw a line in (Sharpie?) ink connecting the 80s magic beans of trickle-down economics to the Trump-cult-era reverse-occam’s-razor conspiracy theorizing.
Pyramid schemes always trickle up.
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Re: Rubepublicans and Democrats agree on something

Post by Sparko »

I know a guy who bought a new Aries K with his AmWay profits.
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Re: Rubepublicans and Democrats agree on something

Post by japhy »

My parents "sold" AmWay and Sasco Aloe Vera products for awhile when I was a kid. At one point they were sitting on piles of Sasco merchandise they couldn't sell, cuz everyone they knew in our small town was also a "distributor". In the end it was what they gave their family for Christmas and birthdays for years just to get rid of it. I think a bunch of it went in a dumpster when we cleared their house out when they retired and moved to an apartment. I member coming home from college to find a bedroom had been turned into an Aloe Vera showroom. Oddly enough the couple who sat at the top of the pyramid in our area were charismatic Christians who spoke in tongues and my catholic parents were bedazzled by this phenomenon/parlor trick. At one point in this endeavor I member them borrowing money from my sister and I who were in college and working on the side, to pay their taxes and my almost missing my tuition payment cuz my student loan didn't come through in time. My sister and I would work like hell during the summers and stockpile cash to pay for the next year's school expenses and took out student loans, so my parents knew we had cash. Looking back it was weird, I have always connected the three things. Even at 19 years old I felt the whole thing was predatory.

Sooooo, there is a bipartisan movement to "fix" one part of the SS mess. But it is taking some wrangling and in the end will just increase the shortfall. But it does seem like it corrects an inequity in the system. And it may mean that my postal worker brother won't end up living in my basement or my sister's, he can stay in his girlfriend's basement cuz she will find him a more useful source of revenue in a few years.
Eileen Kleinman always thought it was unfair her working as a Cincinnati, Ohio school teacher meant her Social Security would be reduced when she retired. However, that might be changing.

Last week, the bipartisan Social Security Fairness Act secured enough support to force a House vote. The Act would repeal the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) and Government Pension Offset (GPO) that reduce Social Security benefits for certain retirees who also receive pension income. If the bill passes, it will go to the Senate for a chance to become law.

Together, WEP and GPO affect nearly three million Americans including police officers, firefighters, postal workers and public-school teachers.

Windfall is definitely a misnomer,” said Kleinman, 73, who still works as a substitute teacher and in retail. “There is no windfall.”

How do WEP and GPO affect Social Security?

The Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) reduces Social Security for those who receive so-called “non-covered” pension income from jobs, typically public sector roles, that didn’t contribute Social Security payroll taxes. The reduction can be significant - up to half the pension amount.

The Government Pension Offset (GPO) reduces survivor or spousal benefits if a person’s pension is non-covered. GPO affects fewer people, but it cuts the Social Security benefit by two-thirds of the pension amount.

For example, if you receive $1,200 a month from the pension, your spousal or survivor benefit would be reduced by $800. If the benefit is $800 or less, the GPO would reduce it to zero.

The rules were intended to prevent Social Security from overpaying people who worked in non-covered pension jobs, policy experts said. People with earnings outside the Social Security system can look like low earners.

Since Social Security replaces a higher percentage of prior earnings for low-paid workers than for higher-paid workers, those who received healthy government salaries for decades would receive the same advantage in Social Security calculations as longtime low-income workers, they argued.

Why do some Americans think WEP and GPO are unfair?

Some analysts note that people who earn a non-covered pension may have worked other jobs that paid into Social Security. Not getting the money back that they paid toward retirement isn’t fair, they said.

“These are people who earned credits toward Social Security benefits from second jobs outside of their career in government paid jobs,” said Mary Johnson, independent Social Security and Medicare policy analyst. “They should not be penalized for having worked as firefighters, teachers, or any other government job. Hard working people deserve to receive the full amount of their Social Security benefits.”

How is retirement affected by reduced Social Security?

For divorced, retired police officer Mike Barker, 67, the reduction in Social Security means he’s still working a $15-an-hour job in Brimfield, Ohio.

Since Barker worked other jobs, he said he accumulated enough credits for $700 per month in Social Security that would be reduced because of his government pension. After WEP, he would receive $168 every month in Social Security, but that was just shy of his Medicare Part B payment that’s deducted from Social Security.

“They kept sending me bills every month,” he said. “The frosting on the cake is that I’m still working four days a week. They take Medicare and Social Security out of what I make now, even though I’m collecting. I went to payroll, and they said they have to.”

Every week, $23.72 is withheld for Social Security and $5.44 for Medicare, Barker said.

“If I had that $600 to $700 more a month in Social Security, I would give this up,” he said about his current job.

Is repealing WEP and GPO the right move?

Eliminating WEP and GPO would cost about $196 billion over 10 years, the Congressional Budget Office estimates.

With Social Security already facing cuts in 2033, according to the Social Security and Medicare Boards of Trustees, a repeal would make things worse, some economists said. Social Security cuts could come a year or more sooner, the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimates.

The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, seen as center-left, suggested updating WEP and GPO instead, possibly using a proportional formula that would calculate Social Security benefits based on income earned from jobs that paid into Social Security. For example, if 75% of a person’s earnings come from these jobs, then the person would receive Social Security equal to 75% of what they would have gotten if all their earnings had come from those positions.

A proportional formula wouldn’t have a great effect on Social Security’s solvency, it said.

What are the odds the Social Security Fairness Act will pass?

No one knows for certain if the bill will become law, but a guaranteed vote in the House is “as close as we ever got,” said Barker, who's still not convinced a gridlocked Congress can push it through.

According to Rep. Garret Graves (R-LA), one of the bill’s sponsors, the petition should get a vote in the House in the coming weeks.

“I am still working and paying into both systems,” Kleinman said. “I hope this gets favorably resolved before I retire.”
As I see it there really is only one logical solution to this problem. Vote Rubepublican and give me more tax cuts.

I am a job creator for fucks sake, you know I will do good things for you with the money.

Free beer and band performances at Solstice 5!
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Re: Rubepublicans and Democrats agree on something

Post by Shirley »

Wasn't your father a dentist, japhy?
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Re: Rubepublicans and Democrats agree on something

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Shirley wrote: Thu Sep 26, 2024 10:02 am Wasn't your father a dentist, japhy?
Yes, and mom was the head nurse at a hospital. So they had some money, and their kids paid their own way through college which cut expenses. My dad loved investing and was active in trading and such. But not very successful at it. Getting sucked into two pyramid schemes is not really a great track record.

Some people have knack for projecting investments out long term and some don't. When I met Annie she had been contemplating buying a business from a woman. The business was one of those craft experience things that are periodically popular. Annie worked there at night as the artist leading people through the process of making a mosaic while drinking wine. You know the schtick, the "drink and dabble industry" we call it. Annie was good at hosting/leading it and the owner had run the thing for 5 years and was tiring of her "hobby business dabble" and offered to sell the thing to Annie. First, Annie wanted to see the books. Annie's education was in art but she has a shrewd business sense.

Look at all of the money this place is making!

OK, but your doctor husband owns this building and charges you no rent. Also gross revenues have been dropping as the novelty of this concept wears off.

Yes but we will endload the deal for you and finance it so that it is affordable. The deal included a clause where the rent was fixed for 7 years and increased rapidly in year 5-7, but you could not move the business or you paid a penalty.

Annie told her that the person who bought these terms would go out of business in year 7. In the meantime all of the the business income would mostly go the seller. She declined the offer.

She did follow the business for the next few years, just to see what happened. It closed in year 7.

We are complimentary in the sense that we can see opportunity when it presents itself and we are always sort of looking for it. But we can quickly discern if it makes real money sense.

The Empire makes no money sense. But it is something we both have a strong belief in and it fits within our disposable income budget. Some people buy ATVs and trailers, or boats, or 85 inch TVs. We wanted a dying town just to see if we could figure out a way to bring it back to life and have fun doing it. We will never get the money back, but we knew that going in and money was never the point.
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Overlander
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Re: Rubepublicans and Democrats agree on something

Post by Overlander »

japhy wrote: Thu Sep 26, 2024 11:36 am
Shirley wrote: Thu Sep 26, 2024 10:02 am Wasn't your father a dentist, japhy?
Yes, and mom was the head nurse at a hospital. So they had some money, and their kids paid their own way through college which cut expenses. My dad loved investing and was active in trading and such. But not very successful at it. Getting sucked into two pyramid schemes is not really a great track record.

Some people have knack for projecting investments out long term and some don't. When I met Annie she had been contemplating buying a business from a woman. The business was one of those craft experience things that are periodically popular. Annie worked there at night as the artist leading people through the process of making a mosaic while drinking wine. You know the schtick, the "drink and dabble industry" we call it. Annie was good at hosting/leading it and the owner had run the thing for 5 years and was tiring of her "hobby business dabble" and offered to sell the thing to Annie. First, Annie wanted to see the books. Annie's education was in art but she has a shrewd business sense.

Look at all of the money this place is making!

OK, but your doctor husband owns this building and charges you no rent. Also gross revenues have been dropping as the novelty of this concept wears off.

Yes but we will endload the deal for you and finance it so that it is affordable. The deal included a clause where the rent was fixed for 7 years and increased rapidly in year 5-7, but you could not move the business or you paid a penalty.

Annie told her that the person who bought these terms would go out of business in year 7. In the meantime all of the the business income would mostly go the seller. She declined the offer.

She did follow the business for the next few years, just to see what happened. It closed in year 7.

We are complimentary in the sense that we can see opportunity when it presents itself and we are always sort of looking for it. But we can quickly discern if it makes real money sense.

The Empire makes no money sense. But it is something we both have a strong belief in and it fits within our disposable income budget. Some people buy ATVs and trailers, or boats, or 85 inch TVs. We wanted a dying town just to see if we could figure out a way to bring it back to life and have fun doing it. We will never get the money back, but we knew that going in and money was never the point.
This story points out an interesting dynamic in actually OWNING a business. It is the singular thing that folks like Oussy cannot wrap their heads around.

Owning a business and being profitable can only be obtained when you hit certain MANDATORY percentages in your profit performance. I have then engraved in my brain.

It alarms me how many people in business don't have any idea what it actually takes to be profitable.
They purchase an item at a price, lets say $100.
They say they want to be at 25% profit, so they sell it for $125. (Confusing mark up with actual margin)
It should have been priced at $134.

People who say that a company is making a killing have no idea what it costs to get to the retail sale. Buy at "A"...Sell at "C"...but not keeping track of "B" will eat you up. But, you won't know it until your accountant breaks the news to you.
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Re: Rubepublicans and Democrats agree on something

Post by Overlander »

japhy wrote: Thu Sep 26, 2024 11:36 am
Shirley wrote: Thu Sep 26, 2024 10:02 am Wasn't your father a dentist, japhy?
The Empire makes no money sense. But it is something we both have a strong belief in and it fits within our disposable income budget. Some people buy ATVs and trailers, or boats, or 85 inch TVs. We wanted a dying town just to see if we could figure out a way to bring it back to life and have fun doing it. We will never get the money back, but we knew that going in and money was never the point.
Exactly the conclusion that I came to when I was contemplating spending 1.25 million on an RV park in Center. It was to some degree a vanity project for my family, but also, the deeper we got into it, just stopped making financial sense.

Younger Overlander would have jumped in with both feet. Decisions and investments made by current Overlander have to be examined in this way. Does this idea get me closer to a great retirement...or farther away?

But, watching what has developed in the Valley (largely a result of Japhy and Dexione's vision, spirit and effort) has made it a VERY interesting and fun place to visit.

When Japhy delves into describing the area and its people, he is not exaggerating. So many great people, so many different cultures and infinite natural beauty. It doesn't hurt that you will most likely run into some Jayhawk folks...even if some of them have only recently become Jayhawk folks.
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japhy
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Re: Rubepublicans and Democrats agree on something

Post by japhy »

The average salary for my engineering employees is around $40/hr or $83K annual salary. My break-even multiplier is around 2.5. So my billing rate to make a 20% profit on that employee is around $120/hr.

Employees sometimes think we are making a killing on their time on an hourly basis. But they get paid time off, health insurance, disability insurance, matching 401K; and there is office rent, equipment and supplies; and they are likely only around 85% actually billable. 2.5X their salary is break-even on payroll. If we run short of work, we have to pay them regardless. We started giving them an end of year spread sheet that shows salary plus benefits to show their complete compensation package. It is significantly more than their salary.

Most projects are fixed fee, so if I fuck up the estimate, it comes out of my pocket. When projects start as sketchy ideas and have fees of $250-500K and a duration of 3-5 years, a small miscalculation can be expensive when my costs might be $600/hr. Many of my projects come in with the caveat; no one has ever built anything like this before, or this is not covered by current building codes or engineering design standards. The founding partner once said of my projects, "I wouldn't touch this with a 10 foot pole." The risk is high, but I like the mental challenge.

I have had a pretty good run, I will be glad to retire from engineering and start my next career.

My new job title is leaning towards, "Senior Dilettante", it has a nice ring to it.
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Overlander
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Re: Rubepublicans and Democrats agree on something

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Ah yes, the ol “productivity v efficiency” formula.

Most people, usually the ones whining the loudest, have no fucking idea the expense of simply opening the doors for them to show up to work.
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