Tag Archives: national security

My Social Security

I’d just turned eleven when my youngest sister was born. Has nothing to do with anything but I used it to do more than just (unpaid) weekly chores from the Job Jar. I convinced my parents to hire me, as we were living ten miles outside of town, as their babysitter when they had to go to campus events. Fifty cents an hour to take care of my three year-old bro and the baby. Not bad as I was only getting fifty cents allowance per week!

At sixteen I got my working papers so I could get a real job during summers. Weeknights and weekends I was the neighborhood’s pre-eminent babysitter (having so many years valuable experience) and the price was now $1/hr. Now I was ready for big stuff, like teaching gymnastics and doing work for the college admissions office part-time. There was one part of my check receipt I didn’t understand. It was explained to me that by paying into this fund, when I was old I could get something called Social Security.

Fast forward to two years ago and there were serious decisions to be made, as serious as where to go to college and whom to marry. Infinite choices involving Medicare, and luckily we had a referral to a great broker who saw us through the decision-making process. Then when to take Social Security and I decided on my 65th birthday, and it actually started a couple of months later.

Interestingly, when I was indeed eligible, I got to sign into a portal called My Social Security. How quaint. Finally being able to see what I’d been paying for all these years. Then Donald Trump was elected. He still said he wouldn’t touch Social Security, Medicare or Medicaid, but I didn’t believe anything he said his first term (or as early as the 1980’s when I was in NYC’s real estate industry).

Now Elon Musk is taking his chainsaw to the federal government and calls Social Security a Ponzi scheme. The acting director of the Social Security Administration says if Musk’s Minions can’t get access to my work, salary and healthcare history and other personal data he’ll lock SSA employees out of the computer systems and checks will stop going out. And billionaire Commerce secretary Lutnick says if anyone who doesn’t get a check in the mail calls to ask whey, they’re a fraudster.

But I’ve only been on it for a little over a year! After I’m done with automatic deductions for Medicare parts A, B and D there are only a few hundred dollars that usually goes for dog food and care (even the new rescue) and some bills. Yes, I would miss the payments if they were not received, and no, I am not a criminal, just a long-term payer into MY Social Security.

Congress, stop sitting on your thumbs and do something! Trump won with 75 million votes. At least 72.5 million Americans are on Social Security. Get it? We vote.

Telling us we can’t arrange for Social Security benefits without coming into an office is fine. Just don’t shut down the offices and turn off the phones. Is that really too much to ask? You should be more concerned about fraudsters using SSA info to scam seniors out of their checks than internal fraud. And how about the Musk Minions let loose around our sensitive information at the SSA? They’re not vetted or trained. And they care not a whit about our privacy.

Today, it was reported that our VP, the heads of military and intelligence agencies conducted a clandestine attack and planned it not over secure government means, but on a private system that included a reporter! Battle plans and all from DOD’s Pete Hegseth. There’s an arrogance and ignorance here that is heart-stopping. National security, privacy and public records laws broken willy nilly. This entire charade must stop. Dee

Our National Security

We as U.S. citizens pay intelligence gatherers and analysts to keep us safe. They provide raw data to be synthesized for decision-makers on going to war or moving troops to potential problem areas around the globe.

Politicians, generals, admirals and the like make decisions to send troops into battle based on intelligence. That information is sacred because it saves American lives. It should not be stolen and stashed (and re-stashed) in public ballrooms and bathrooms of a former president’s golf club.

Today, after all this time, Donald Trump and his fellow indicted associates are in court trying to prove: that this indictment is a personal and political attack on the former president; and that the search was illegally conducted by the FBI.

I guess what bugs me about all this is that everything is always about Donald J Trump. If it rains today, it’s a personal attack on Donald J Trump because he wanted to play golf. If traffic snarls because of his moronic and overblown entourage, it’s everyone else’s fault. If no-one shows up to cheer him on in an empty park across from the courthouse, it’s because Joe Biden kept his supporters from the area.

I’m sick and tired of everything being all about Donald J Trump. He stole classified documents, stored them recklessly, and obstructed justice when the National Archives had to stop bending over backwards to not offend Herr Schitzinpantz leader of the Fourth Reich and involve the FBI. Then the FBI bent over backwards before finally issuing subpoenas then, months later, initiated a quiet search.

This is about our national security, our spies, our soldiers who put their lives on the line for our safety. It has nothing to do with Donald J Trump and his insufferable ego. It has to do with stolen secret papers that are supposed to be continuously maintained by professionals in ultra-secure facilities.

Perhaps if Judge Cannon rules that the search was illegal and tosses the case, it can finally go up for review by more competent judges who weren’t all named to the bench by one Donald J Trump. While we’re on the subject of judges, allowing a private body to recommend judges for political bona fides and loyalty to Donald J Trump leads to rubber-stamping of incompetent and even dangerous judges. Being a judge is a serious job, a reward for a sound mind, fairness and adherence to the rule of law, not solely to the potential leader of the Fourth Reich.

I grew up knowing that the world didn’t revolve around me. Normal people pass that stage by about age five. Our nation’s democracy is at stake in a big way. We have to choose our leaders on what they’ll do to benefit all the people, not just themselves. Running for president just to stay out of jail is not a good enough reason for me. I know I’m not the center of the universe but hope that there are enough of us citizens who care about all of us Americans, not just one. Pass it on. Dee