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Ready for the $9 Big Mac, for real?

Yes, I get annoyed when I am trying to have an intellectual argument and someone continuously argues things that make no sense.

Welcome to my world.

I blame you for not knowing what has ben rehashed multiple times, and the eligibilty for Medicare also changes based on age, which hour referenced input at healthcare.gov would have shown. Telepathy would involve what is not laid out for you.

What makes no sense to me is that we are suddenly discussing Medicare instead of Medicaid (the first time I thought it was a typo, but you have repeated talked about Medicare now). What makes no sense to me is that you infer that I don't think raising the minimum wage will affect inflation, despite my posting hypothetical price increases. What makes no sense to me is that you can say "Hypo: Family of three in SLC with one wage earner " and expect others to infer that there are two adults and a two-year-old from that sentence.

Finally, what makes no sense to me is that you think it is politically feasible to have a negative income inducement built into the welfare system. Your scenario is the same as saying "if a person supporting two others currently makes $7.25/hour, and gets a job offer for $15/hour, they should turn it down based on the short-term economic considerations". If that were really true, it would be a rallying cry for the Republicans in this political climate. They would be passing welfare-cutting bills as often as they try to repeal the ACA. It would not be an occasional claim of some small paper or some person on a message board; it would be hammered in over and over in talking points.

I'm not out of things you have posted in this thread that make no sense to me. I'm just tired of listing them.
 
Zzz. Your last post sums it up. Your comments are used time and time again to deflect from your illogic. You use my phone's autospelling to try and prove a point. Concentrate on my misuse of one world to deflect from all of your ********.

Have fun living in the same world as my IT guy. A know it all that knows far less than he thinks. Sad.
 
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I meant that he was not living up to the ideals he espouses, yes. It was derogatory of his behavior. I have no objection to many Christian ideals.

Glad to know that you agree you used it as an insult. As close to an apology as he will get.
 
Then why did you add more to it after I posted a response?


I had actually hit "edit" either before your response or before I saw your response.

The thing is, if you look at what I post on here, it is generally one of a few things:

1) Puns, jokes, etc. I take a light-hearted approach to most things

2) Jazz related opinions (I have strong opinions, and am a big fan like many here. Excluding last season, I have only missed 4-5 games since the NBA established league pass, and even those I recorded and watched later).

3) General news discussions and general opinions

4) Responses to (hopefully) further discussions. Usually short and sweet (with an exception to this thread, and perhaps the Bundy Ranch thread, where a lot of nonsense regarding the history of property law was being thrown around.


I was an early adopter on JF for years(opened a new account/username after the server crash), and have seen your crap all over this site. I have seen many people get pulled into your debates, which like here, often deflect rather than make salient points that add to a discussion. To date, I have avoided getting involved with your crap, but I let myself get pulled into this thread (Largely to discuss issues with Franklin. And while I disagree with some of his views, I respect his views, and can have a reasonable discussion with him). Somehow I got pulled into your crap, and I should have realized early one that your deflection tactics would never let this discussion move forward.

It is sad that you use Jazzfanz as a conduit to try to display your intellect (I think you really just annoy most people). Most posters on this board live and learn. Having seen your drivel time and time again, I see that you just live.

I doubt you have made any salient posts on this board that have convinced members of anything. Scratch that, you did change my view on one thing. I used to be completely against abortion, but after our discussion I clearly see it makes sense in cases of incest.

I am doing what I should have done years ago. I am blocking you, because reading your posts is a waste of time. I have a feeling I am not the first to do so, and if you continue on like this, you will likely be speaking to yourself in the not too distant future.
 
Glad to know that you agree you used it as an insult. As close to an apology as he will get.

I don't expect or want an apology. I insulted him plenty of times in this thread. The difference is, I insulted him to try and and further the discussion (he continually wants to debate issues that he is wrong on, and won't move on. Often this is due to his poor recollection skills or lack of reading comprehension--when he continually misconstrues the law, as he did with regard to Section 8, you almost have to call him on his comprehension skills). His insults were mostly to deflect away from the discussions and attempt to distract from his clearly erroneous logic. His views are so backwards on many issues (I don't care where you stand politically--he just has so many facts wrong). Really, an insult from him is taken as a compliment from me.

Honestly Stoked, I don't know how you have the patience to debate with him as much as you have.
 
I don't expect or want an apology. I insulted him plenty of times in this thread. The difference is, I insulted him to try and and further the discussion (he continually wants to debate issues that he is wrong on, and won't move on. Often this is due to his poor recollection skills or lack of reading comprehension--when he continually misconstrues the law, as he did with regard to Section 8, you almost have to call him on his comprehension skills). His insults were mostly to deflect away from the discussions and attempt to distract from his clearly erroneous logic. His views are so backwards on many issues (I don't care where you stand politically--he just has so many facts wrong). Really, an insult from him is taken as a compliment from me.

Honestly Stoked, I don't know how you have the patience to debate with him as much as you have.

One Brow did not deflect he cleaned your clocks. Stop sniffling on The Stokeds shoulders. Admit you are wrong like a real man and move on. Crying and insulting because you have been proved wrong is childy.
 
[size/HUGE] boobs [/size];890319 said:
One Brow did not deflect he cleaned your clocks. Stop sniffling on The Stokeds shoulders. Admit you are wrong like a real man and move on. Crying and insulting because you have been proved wrong is childy.

Perfect! Having you defend One Brow's logic only bolsters my statements.
 
I don't expect or want an apology. I insulted him plenty of times in this thread. The difference is, I insulted him to try and and further the discussion (he continually wants to debate issues that he is wrong on, and won't move on. Often this is due to his poor recollection skills or lack of reading comprehension--when he continually misconstrues the law, as he did with regard to Section 8, you almost have to call him on his comprehension skills). His insults were mostly to deflect away from the discussions and attempt to distract from his clearly erroneous logic. His views are so backwards on many issues (I don't care where you stand politically--he just has so many facts wrong). Really, an insult from him is taken as a compliment from me.

Honestly Stoked, I don't know how you have the patience to debate with him as much as you have.

There are two sides to One Brow. The side you have seen in this thread and the side that brings very good insight and info to the debate. It's a coin flip.
 
[size/HUGE] boobs [/size];890319 said:
One Brow did not deflect he cleaned your clocks. Stop sniffling on The Stokeds shoulders. Admit you are wrong like a real man and move on. Crying and insulting because you have been proved wrong is childy.

I kinda like that... "The Stoked"
 
[size/HUGE] boobs [/size];890341 said:
Why your statements can not stand up themselves?

They do, but it was nice of you to come to his support. I appreciate it.
 
You continue to ignore the numbers. I provided links to show where benefits are provided, and concrete proof that at $31k and change which benefits would not longer be available. Even taking away the Food stamps (maximum number) when you factor the losses of FICA (actual numbers), Medicaid, housing, your argument is defeated. With their income @ 7.25/hr full time, they would qualify for a max amout of food stamps $5160. I think it is safe to say they will get the middle level food stamps in any state. Let's say $2500, but I will still leave the full amount out of my calculations (as the only numbers I provided were the max--although, you deflect my entire argument by stating I used the max $ for food stamps when you did the same thing with housing (30% is the MAX an individual will pay out of pocket for housing when they qualify for section 8. I used your numbers to appease you, even though they would pay less out of pocket in Utah as I verified by phone. Again, I have no documentation, so I will use your lower numbers). If you don't like my numbers, disprove them. Either way, when you realize to get minimum care they are paying roughly $12k for full insurance when Medicaid would be free or essentially free, your argument that they would be better off is dead wrong.

OK. Lets take away anything I used Max numbers and keep the reset: $6550 housing+$12k insurance (deductible alone, not including the small monthly premium that the subsidy mostly covered), for coverage that still is not as good as Medicare)+999.44 FICA. THE NUMBERS ARE STAGGERING. These three numbers alone put them at a major loss. And this is not taking into account food stamps (they would qualify for a large amount), pell grants ($$thousands more$$) smaller tax return, etc. Again, these numbers are all documented with links in prior posts.

Again, if you want to continue to argue over numbers, prove me wrong instead of spitting out conjecture. Show me a non-subsidized (or subsidized if you want to change my hypo and take away employer coverage to the employee) insurance quote with comparable coverage to Medicaid for two mid 30s adults and a 2 year old, that, compiled with the documented housing, fica, tax losses, FICA. Otherwise, everything you are spitting out is worthless. Put up or shut up.



Yes, I have shown that. I have shown the the benefits phase out (links provided previously) for all but WIC, including pell grants. For housing, I am using the 30% of income that you provided and is the max out of pocket for the family under HUD/section 8. Accurate, and if off, the numbers are in my favor. For insurance, I used actual quotes with MAX subsidies. Again, more than accurate. FICA using actual calculators which I provided. Accurate. Same for loss of tax credit. Accurate. Food stamps were the item I used the max amount, and I removed it.

Again, prove me wrong. You can't.



Private colleges have had the largest increases. Enrolling a larger share of the population means more students=more $. Costs per student actually go down when you have a larger student body. Again, flawed logic. Private colleges are increasing because they can (the $ is available from guaranteed loans, so why not?). They generally want to make money, when the state institutions have to get approval from the legislature for tuition increases. Completely different animals. Your flawed logic is laughable.


I'm not saying there are not other factors, but there is a huge amount of evidence that the government's guarantees of student loans (and higher amounts) have caused the numbers to rise.

https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordeba...oans-are-part-of-the-problem-not-the-solution
https://www.usnews.com/opinion/arti...government-is-to-blame-for-high-college-costs
https://mercatus.org/expert_comment...ve-college-tuition-student-debt-record-levels

https://www.cato.org/publications/p...e-unintended-consequences-federal-tuition-aid

It is a fact that tuition increases are nearly 5x the cpi since 1985. You honestly believe that the student loan changes were not the primary factor? All the evidence points against your statement SMH.




You are looking only at the employer-based premiums. Morgan looked at the entire market. (. Surprise, surprise. Prices in delaware on the ind. market have increased 100% .

I'm guessing no one but us is reading these responses at this point, but I'd be interested to see how much premiums have gone up for the members on this site. It was much higher than 12% for me. The funny thing, is when Obama pushed this, he said premiums would go down. LOL.

And they are expected to rise at 13% again. Two years in a row (at least in FL):
https://articles.orlandosentinel.co...o-rates-20140804_1_health-insurance-oir-plans




That is not what I said. I said under the ACA there is a max 90 day wait. Prior to the ACA employers had more leeway. And I didn't say you couldn't get insurance. I'm saying if you had a pre-existing condition prior to the ACA, even if you sign up for insurance, they will exclude coverage (so you would not have insurance coverage) for that condition. If it was quite clear to you, then you would not have responded the way you did. Getting insurance to cover an existing condition is pointless if it pre-existing conditions exclusions. Prior to the ACA, insurance excluded pre-existing conditions for 12 moths.



OK, show me the policies. Seriously, back up your responses. You are full of ****. I am speaking about facts. You are spewing inaccurate statements and I am clearing them up. Prior to the ACA, private insurance did not have pre-existing conditions waivers (except for a few things like pregnancy which the law required) If it shuts you up it is because you were dead wrong. Don't deflect to me because you are throwing out inaccurate blubber. The plan you are referring to did not not have pre-existing exclusions as you say, and you know it.



Again, if they could have charged large penalties, this may have worked, but the Supreme Ct. nixed that. Then penalties are so small that they don't even begin to cover those who add insurance after being sick. Another ridiculous statement. So instead of paying $100/mo for homeowners, I can pay $95 a year and still get coverage if my house burns down (purchase a policy after the fact). Seriously, your logic is simply laughable.



Yes, I was clarifying what I would prefer. No need for k plans, health, etc., to come from employers, and there would be no more pretax deductions, so no need to have health care through employer. Again, I think a single payer system would be better than what we have now in many ways. Individuals would pay a pure flat tax. No more tax credits, deductions, etc. Right now the tax system is another tool used to redistribute wealth (as I mentioned, my hypothetical family of 3 that pays $0 in taxes gets a nice refund anyway). It should not be so. It should be a true tax system. No more gaming the system, etc. It would cause the tax rates to go way down (effective rates would likely go down for the middle class), and everyone would pay a fair effective tax rate. And capital gains would all be taxed the same. A simple system, where everyone pays. And the Warren Buffets of the world would actually end up paying more in taxes. Again, as I stated, it will never happen. Too many lobbyists to fight against it. Too many jobs at risk.



The problem is, the costs just to administer all the new taxes, penalties, etc., is very prohibitive. Yes, insurance must provide coverage for a few more things, I am fine with that. It is the rest that is a cluster****. The reporting alone is costing over $100 per participants in our plans. Even more so for the self-funded employers. Not to mention the legal and compliance fees. The problem is, if we go single payer, I worry that it will be running in the red like Medicare. Our country does not have a great track record of taking over privatized functions.





That is true. We would still have innovation, just at a lower rate. Over 75% of clinical trials are privately funded according to U.C. Berkeley. https://undsci.berkeley.edu/article/0_0_0/who_pays
My statement remains the same. I also wasn't implying that the only medical innovations come from the U.S.


Again, you may want to take a reading comprehension course. If his rent is up to $700, at minimum wage he would pay 30% (max) out of pocket. So he would pay 30% (max) for a rental all the way up to $700/mo. And if he made $15/hr full time, he would pay 100% in rent. Again, your statement:

makes absolutely no sense. And you follow it up with another comment that makes no sense.




HAHHAHA. So now you are admitting that an increase to $15/hr would contribute to inflation. Nice.


Did you read this article you posted? If anything, it gives good reasons not to raise the minimum wage.





I clearly showed charts that Medicaid would no longer be available to someone making $15/hr full time, contrary to your statement that the raising of minimum wage would not reduce welfare "dependance" as you would say.

I also showed the number show the fall off in benefits is more than the $ cash increases. And again, these numbers were actual calculations for housing (links provided, and I even used the 30% number you provided (which is the MAX amount the family pays out of pocket--I actually called to confirm the actual #s. I guess max amounts are OK for you to provide as an example when they back up your argument, but when I did the same with food stamps you dismissed MY ENTIRE ARGUMENT. Your logic is laughable and inconsistent) loss in tax credit, Medicare, FICA. Not taking into account food stamps and potential Pell grants, which would supply thousands more, etc. The losses would be far in excess of the wage gains. Even if all 3 family members received a max insurance subsidy of $4678(no employer coverage), the plans would still cause them to pay a family deductible of $12,600 with a small premium $3.39/mo. When you look at the total costs of any plans (deducible, co-insurance, premiums), the total costs nearly cover the difference in wages by themselves. The very cheapest plan was $5360, which had a max out of pocket of $6,600 (in addition to the premiums). Or again, about $12,000. You even try to argue that the government is not the reason for tuition increases with a flawed argument that public tuition is not rising at the same rate as private (of course they are not!). I really don't get it. It is like you are arguing just to argue. Can you clearly not see how your statements were off? You say I have "presented no reliable evidence to the contrary". $6,550 housing (your 30%+utilities. max out of pocket for participant)+2999.44 (loss of tax credit and FICA--Again, clearly documented with a tax calculator listed previously)+approximately $12,000 for health care which still is not as good as Medicaid is over $21k in lost benefits compared to the $16k gain. This does not include food stamps, Pell, or other benefits that I could not give you documented numbers (other than the max, which again, I used to the detriment of the calculation by causing the family to pay more for rent then they would have to (which results in an actual larger loss in benefits due to the wage increase). So I played by your game. Used max numbers in your favor when you requested it. Removed max numbers to my detriment (food stamps completely removed). The numbers don't lie. And I don't need any calculations to show you were wrong about not losing medicare, a glaring error on your part you will not acknowledge. The chart I listed earlier obviously documented that you were wrong, so you deflected. I repeat, show me something different.


You say you admit when you are wrong, but based on this your continued incorrect statements that you do not acknowledge, you clearly are unwilling to. I show your flaws and you refer to my christian character. Again, nice deflection. I have no problems with people of any religion, including atheists. I'm guessing based on your comments you are one of those atheists who think they are better than everyone else based on your beliefs. Give me a break.

Instead of attacking my logic with conjecture, please show actual calculations, based on fair comparisons (comparable insurance, etc.), to back up your statements that the fall off in benefits will not be more than the $$$ gained. You won't, because you can't. You will continue to deflect, try to find holes in my numbers without providing your own. Generally, a great debate tactic, but I am not taking the bait. Say what you will, but if you can't provide different numbers to my hypothetical that back your claim, using all of the benefits I listed that this family will lose, any response you make is worthless.


Your extra long posts are prime example of the lengths people who believe absurd **** will go to to convince themselves a belief = truth. I wish I could fit it an entire one into my signature.


Bottom line is your theoretical family of 2 adults, 1 child, with only 1 adult working, and for minimum wage is such a rarity that it's utterly stupid to use as an example.


To your Section 8 hypothetical, it's much more likely that 1 of these 2 parents works at Walmart, at minimum, making $12 or more per hour, and will pay $600 of the $700 voucher as is. Getting a $3/hr raise would be over $6k/yr with a maximum housing voucher loss of $1200.


Using the calculations found here you can come up with a whopping monthly food stamp allowance of $72.40/month that would get lost.


You've also given zero consideration to the "reservation wage" level that would make it worth while for the other adult to obtain a night or weekend job. At $7.25/hr, it might not be worth the headache to work 2 nights/week for the extra $377 less taxes per month. However, at $15/hr, it may be worth the extra $754/month, less taxes, and the family is much better off than living in section 8, dependent on food stamps, living paycheck to paycheck, and feeling like there is no way out. I'm sure they're screaming "raise the poverty level" when that extra $15k/year is coming in.
 
Your extra long posts are prime example of the lengths people who believe absurd **** will go to to convince themselves a belief = truth. I wish I could fit it an entire one into my signature.


Bottom line is your theoretical family of 2 adults, 1 child, with only 1 adult working, and for minimum wage is such a rarity that it's utterly stupid to use as an example.


To your Section 8 hypothetical, it's much more likely that 1 of these 2 parents works at Walmart, at minimum, making $12 or more per hour, and will pay $600 of the $700 voucher as is. Getting a $3/hr raise would be over $6k/yr with a maximum housing voucher loss of $1200.


Using the calculations found here you can come up with a whopping monthly food stamp allowance of $72.40/month that would get lost.


You've also given zero consideration to the "reservation wage" level that would make it worth while for the other adult to obtain a night or weekend job. At $7.25/hr, it might not be worth the headache to work 2 nights/week for the extra $377 less taxes per month. However, at $15/hr, it may be worth the extra $754/month, less taxes, and the family is much better off than living in section 8, dependent on food stamps, living paycheck to paycheck, and feeling like there is no way out. I'm sure they're screaming "raise the poverty level" when that extra $15k/year is coming in.
.



First, I never stated that this was a typical scenario, and I understand an increase in wages would affect many families differently. That is obvious. Brow stated that if minimum wage increased to $15, the fall-off in benefits would be less than the increase in wages at any stage. I threw out one example. It would be the same if they both worked 20 hours, which may be closer to reality. Either way, I used one example and went with it. I never said this was the typical scenario, and in fact I think I alluded to the opposite. I don't think they will be screaming to raise the poverty levels, but politicians surely will.

I looked at your food stamp calculation, it is way off. You used gross income. In your example, the family would get at least to $260 a month (calculating in my head) based on the instructions on the site you linked. You can also deduct from gross income all utilities which I left off, so the amount would be much higher than your $72.40. In my example it would be over $4,600/yr based on federally provided minimum snap benefits with no other deductions for medical care, etc. which would all be lost out making $15/hr FT. So that is another $4,600 of documented lost income to add to prove my point. Hell, even not taking into account health care the losses for Section 8, food stamps, tax credits and FICA put the family close to breaking even after an increase to $15/hr. Add in the loss of Medicaid and they get bit in the ***. Thanks for the link.

A minimum wage of $15 (tied to inflation) would be great if we had simultaneous legislation that kept the FPL at a similar rate (tied to inflation). If you want to discuss reality, many people in these situations will actually cut back their hours to keep getting welfare, it seems to be part of the ever eroding human condition. In states such as NY people get get more in welfare than a teacher can in wages. Ridiculous.
https://benswann.com/welfare-recipients-in-new-york-can-now-earn-more-than-teachers/
 
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Brow stated that if minimum wage increased to $15, the fall-off in benefits would be less than the increase in wages at any stage. I threw out one example. It would be the same if they both worked 20 hours, which may be closer to reality. Either way, I used one example and went with it. I never said this was the typical scenario, and in fact I think I alluded to the opposite. I don't think they will be screaming to raise the poverty levels, but politicians surely will.

I'm pretty sure OB would agree with you that in a few limited circumstances the wage raises would be cancelled out in lost benis. I think he alluded to the varying circumstances several times, but TBH I couldn't follow your logic quite often, so OB's responses were even harder to keep up with and I couldn't figure out what either of you were trying to say, other than arguing with each other for the sake of it. If that was your only point then it's a pretty much a given in discussing any Federal tax and transfer payment policy. The effects will vary from situation to situation.


. A minimum wage of $15 (tied to inflation) would be great if we had simultaneous legislation that kept the FPL at a similar rate (tied to inflation). If you want to discuss reality, many people in these situations will actually cut back their hours to keep getting welfare, it seems to be part of the ever eroding human condition. In states such as NY people get get more in welfare than a teacher can in wages. Ridiculous.
https://benswann.com/welfare-recipients-in-new-york-can-now-earn-more-than-teachers/

I don't see people in the same negative light as you do, but I'm not naive enough to think some won't game the system.

Besides, the Clinton welfare-to-work requirements combined with very severe cuts to federal welfare programs year after year make it a pain in the *** to live as one of Reagan's Welfare Queens. That's a ****ty life, and honestly, if someone wants to live it who doesn't need to then IDGAF about the waste if it means helping the many more who are forced into that corner and cannot get out.

Welfare is not a big issue in this country. The opposite is true after the 30 year erosion of our support programs.


.
I looked at your food stamp calculation, it is way off. You used gross income. In your example, the family would get at least to $260 a month (calculating in my head) based on the instructions on the site you linked. You can also deduct from gross income all utilities which I left off, so the amount would be much higher than your $72.40. In my example it would be over $4,600/yr based on federally provided minimum snap benefits with no other deductions for medical care, etc. which would all be lost out making $15/hr FT. So that is another $4,600 of documented lost income to add to prove my point. Hell, even not taking into account health care the losses for Section 8, food stamps, tax credits and FICA put the family close to breaking even after an increase to $15/hr. Add in the loss of Medicaid and they get bit in the ***. Thanks for the link.


The instructions are plain and clear, and you are mostly wrong on both accounts. You use gross income, this is clear in the "example". You can only deduct utilities if they are 1/2 your adjusted gross income, which is an outlandish amount in this case.
 
I'm pretty sure OB would agree with you that in a few limited circumstances the wage raises would be cancelled out in lost benis. I think he alluded to the varying circumstances several times, but TBH I couldn't follow your logic quite often, so OB's responses were even harder to keep up with and I couldn't figure out what either of you were trying to say, other than arguing with each other for the sake of it. If that was your only point then it's a pretty much a given in discussing any Federal tax and transfer payment policy. The effects will vary from situation to situation.




I don't see people in the same negative light as you do, but I'm not naive enough to think some won't game the system.

Besides, the Clinton welfare-to-work requirements combined with very severe cuts to federal welfare programs year after year make it a pain in the *** to live as one of Reagan's Welfare Queens. That's a ****ty life, and honestly, if someone wants to live it who doesn't need to then IDGAF about the waste if it means helping the many more who are forced into that corner and cannot get out.

Welfare is not a big issue in this country. The opposite is true after the 30 year erosion of our support programs.





The instructions are plain and clear, and you are mostly wrong on both accounts. You use gross income, this is clear in the "example". You can only deduct utilities if they are 1/2 your adjusted gross income, which is an outlandish amount in this case.

You can only deduct housing, not just utlilities if it is more than half if your net income. Read again and look at the example, which is very close to yoyr walmart worker except for child care deduction. In both of our hypos there would be a deduction for housing. You start at gross but calculate based on net.

And yes, at one point I realized OB would argue just to argue. I threw a bunch of OT issues to see what he would say, and of course he argued over every one. I was bored in a hospital while a family member was in the icu over this last week. Most of this was to kill time and take my mind off of my family situation.

My point was with a randomly selected hypo, some families would be worse off. Seems like a reasinable theory, but one OB just will not accept apparently. Time to move on.
 
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You can only deduct housing, not just utlilities if it is more than half if your net income. Read again and look at the example, which is very close to yoyr walmart worker except for child care deduction. In both of our hypos there would be a deduction for housing. You start at gross but calculate based on net.

Since you continue to misunderstand, I'll quote it for you here so you can get the calculation straight.

Allowable costs include the cost of fuel to heat and cook with, electricity, water, the basic fee for one telephone, rent or mortgage payments and taxes on the home. (Some States allow a set amount for utility costs instead of actual costs.) The amount of the shelter deduction cannot be more than $478 unless one person in the household is elderly or disabled. (The limit is higher in Alaska, Hawaii and Guam.)



And yes, at one point I realized OB would argue just to argue.

Let me restate what I meant: you were arguing just to argue; OB attempted to reason and asked questions so you could clarify and convince him that you are right.


I threw a bunch of OT issues to see what he would say, and of course he argued over every one. I was bored in a hospital while a family member was in the icu over this last week.

Junior. You think it's a surprise that you were trolling? Guess what, we're bored with time to kill too. Not only do we not care, it fills our day up seeing how far you will go for attention. Keep it up please, it's a good act. But lose the icu excuses.
 
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