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Hmmmmmm

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Perhaps we are asking the wrong questions during election years.

Our Senators and Congressmen do not pay into Social Security and, of course, they do not collect from it.

Social Security benefits were not suitable for persons of their rare elevation in society.

They felt they should have a special plan for themselves. Many years ago they voted in their own benefit plan.

In more recent years, no congressperson has felt the need to change it. After all, it is a great plan.

For all practical purposes their plan works like this:

When they retire, they continue to draw the same pay until they die, except it may increase from time to time for cost of living adjustments.

For example, former Senator Bradley and Congressman White and their wives may expect to draw $7,800,000.00 (that's Seven Million, Eight-Hundred Thousand), with their wives drawing $275,000.00 during the last years of their lives.

This is calculated on an average life span for each.

Their cost for this excellent plan is $00.00. Nada. Zilch.

This little perk they voted for themselves is free to them. You and I pick up the tab for this plan.

The funds for this fine retirement plan come directly from the General Funds--our tax dollars at work!

From our own Social Security Plan, which you and I pay (or have paid) into--every payday until we retire (which amount is matched by our employer) we can expect to get an average $1,000 per month after retirement. Or, in other words, we would have to collect our average of $1,000 monthly benefits for 68 years and one (l) month to equal Bradley's benefits!

Social Security could be very good if only one small change were made and that change would be to jerk the Golden Fleece Retirement Plan from under the Senators and Congressmen. Put them into the Social Security plan with the rest of us and then watch how fast they would fix it.

If enough people receive this, maybe a seed of awareness will be planted and maybe good changes will evolve.
 
Good post. Not as provacative as suck my balls, but good nonetheless.
 
By Richard Willing, USA TODAY

Enron retiree Charlie Prestwood watched in shock last fall as $1.2 million worth of company stock in his retirement plan fell "like a horse dropping dead at the finish line." Prestwood, 63, who had accumulated his small fortune during 33 years as a welder and machine operator in a natural gas plant in Houston, was left with a retirement account worth about $5,300. But there was a consolation: The lifelong Texan was certain that he and fellow shareholders had a "pretty darn good case" if they sued the company executives who had touted the stock and the accountants who had helped to inflate its value, even as the company's fortunes headed south.
 
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