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July 2015

 

By Anthony J. Sanders

sanderstony@live.com

 

I pray Congress will take some time out of their August vacation to read the 226 page 9th edition of Health and Welfare (HAW) and unanimously pass the free Disability Insurance Reallocation Tax (DIRT) and Old Age, Survivor and Disability Insurance without Income Limit Law (OASDI WILL) Acts, when they return to conclude fiscal year 2015 with a Social Security Amendment.  Biographer Catherine Drinker Bowen’s 1966 book about the American Constitutional Convention in 1787 titled, The Miracle in Philadelphia, notes in August, Gouverneur Morris said, “It takes seven years to make a shoemaker…Fourteen at least are necessary to learn to be an American legislator”.  At age 41 I will have received Social Security Disability Insurance (DI) for exactly fourteen years in September 2015.  Just in time to save the DI Trust Fund by reallocating the Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) tax rate, from 1.8% DI 10.6% OASI to 2.3% DI 10.1% OASI in FY 2016 to save the DI trust fund at no cost to taxpayer, for free, beginning October 1, 2015.  Furthermore, to balance the federal budget it is necessary to fund the DI Trust Fund and the United States Postal Service (USPS) by eliminating the maximum taxable limit on income on the 2.3% DI tax January 1, 2016 and then legislate a federal budget surplus by taxing the rich the entire 12.4% OASDI WILL on all income beginning January 1, 2017.  Congress-members, earning $174,000 a year, have been unable to authorize themselves a raise since 2009.  The maximum taxable limit on social security contributions is $118,500 (2015).  In 2016 the WILL asks the average Congressional salary to pay less than $1,277 to save the DI trust fund and hopefully afford the Postal Service at the end of the year, as the result of the rising maximum taxable limit and non-growing wage of Congress.  The combined OASDI tax on all income would cost the average Congressperson less than $6,882, out of their pocket, to balance the federal budget, if they agreed to pay 12.4% OASDI tax on all their income beginning January 1, 2017.  Try the DI WILL in 2016, if the DI surplus can afford the Postal Service deficit at the end of the year or Congress is otherwise satisfied with the accounting of their tax-payments, buy the OASDI WILL in 2017, balance the federal budget and justify their first 3% annual pay-raise since 2009.

 

Democracy relies upon the accuracy of OASDI Tables IV.A and Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Table 4.1 Outlays by Agency.  The SSA Chief Actuary Stephen C. Goss’s letter to Shaun Donovan OMB Director, titled, ‘Potential Reallocation of the Payroll Tax Rate Between the Disability Insurance (DI) Program and the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) Program’ dated February 5, 2015 was wrong to use the actuarial DI shortfall statistic of 2.7% proposed by the President. The exact same mistake is corrected by this 9th edition of Health and Welfare at a rate of 2.3% DI 10.1% OASI beginning October 1, 2015 until 2018 when the rate changes to 2.2% DI and 10.2% OASI.  Now that the math is done OMB and the SSA Actuary would be ready to synchronize their tables, if a mathematically sustainable budget and/or trust fund account, did not require that accounting fraud be first abolished, as a moral pre-requisite.  One scenario where Congress might not want to pay the full 12.4% OASDI WILL, but definitely would want to pay the 2.3% DI WILL to save the DI Trust Fund and potentially pay the Postal Service, if the 130% growth in revenues is as high as expected at the reallocated 2.3% rate, is if OMB is unable to abolish the Allowances and Other Defense Civil Columns row (2009-2015 for $360 billion in debt relief, older years are concealed in and must be subtracted from undistributed off-setting receipts for a zero sum).  A second scenario is if OMB does not agree to permanently, or at least until 2020, limit DoD spending to less than $500 billion and HHS spending to less than $1 trillion.  A third, even more likely scenario, is because the SSA Actuary and President are unable to agree with the extraordinarily difficult mathematics of the OASDI tax reallocation, therefore morally unprepared for tax-base expansion, and an Actuary who can do the math has not been appointed.  

 

Free DIRT (Disability Insurance Reallocation Tax) Act of 2016-2020 HA-7-7-15

 

To avoid burdening the U.S. Supreme Court with the responsibility for criminally convicting the SSA Actuary, Commissioner and Trustees (ACT) in 2016 for deprivation of relief benefits under 18USC§246 when they conspire to cut DI benefits to 80% because the DI Trust Fund will be completely depleted under “current law”, whereas: (a) the SSA Actuary has not gotten right FDR’s infamous “pain the OASDI tax rate calculus”, that takes a week to differentiate the first time, the Chief Actuary has responded to the President in regards to the OASDI reallocation question with a common wrong answer – 2.7% - October 1, 2015 is not too late for Congress to get the OASDI FICA tax rate right to avoid depletion of the DI Trust Fund in FY2016; (b) SSA administrators are peculiarly obsessed with continuing their $666 persecution on DI beneficiaries in violation of the 42 month limit (Revelation 13:10) when a beneficiary receiving $600-$699 a month should automatically receive an increase to $700 plus annual COLA thereafter; (c) Congress and other rich taxpayers should not be compelled to contribute their incomes above $118,500 (2015) to the attached, but separate roll-call vote, on the 130% increase in tax-base that would be derived from the OASDI Without Income Limit Law (WILL) and shared with the U.S. Treasury, until the SSA Actuary has calculated the baseline in dollar amounts for the optimal OASDI reallocation tax rate, projected to pay benefits until 2020, at no cost to taxpayers, free.

 

To immediately amend the DI tax rate from 1.80% to 2.30%, from 0.90% to 1.15% for employees and from 0.90% to 1.15% for employers under Sec. 201(b)(1)(S) of the Social Security Act 42USC(7)II§401 and amend the OASI tax rate from 10.60% to 10.10%, from 5.30% to 5.05% for employees under 26USC(C)(21)(A)§3101 (a) and from 5.30% to 5.05% for employers under 26USC(C)(21)(A)§3111 (a) to avoid depletion of the Disability Insurance (DI) Trust Fund in 2016 without increasing the overall 12.4% OASDI or 15.3% OASDI and Hospital Insurance (HI) tax-rate under 26USC(A)(2)§1401 beginning October 1, 2015.

 

To amend the DI tax rate again in 2018 to 2.20% from 2.30%, from 1.15% to 1.10% for employees and from 1.15% to 1.10% for employers under Sec. 201(b)(1)(S) of the Social Security Act 42USC(7)II§401 and amend the OASI tax rate from 10.10% to 10.20%, from 5.05% to 5.10% for employees under 26USC(C)(21)(A)§3101 (a) and from 5.05% to 5.10% for employers under 26USC(C)(21)(A)§3111 (a) without increasing the overall 12.4% OASDI or 15.3% OASDI and Hospital Insurance (HI) tax-rate under 26USC(A)(2)§1401 to maximize efficiency until a deficit appears in the OASI Trust Fund in 2019.

 

Without Income Limit Law (WILL) Act HA-20-7-15

 

To abolish the maximum taxable limit on DI contributions on January 1, 2016 and OASI contributions January 1, 2017 and repeal Adjustment of the contribution and benefit base Section 230 of the Social Security Act 42USC(7)§430.

 

To require the Social Security Administration to pay for SSI Costs beginning January 1, 2017. 

 

To share profits in excess of social security program costs to the general fund of the U.S Treasury on a sliding scale beginning in 2017 DI 50/50 prioritizing the $22 billion + 2% annual growth cost of USPS, and OASI 10/90 to eliminate the federal budget deficit.  In 2020 OASI would share at negotiated rates an estimated 25/75, by 2025 OASDI would share 50/50 and by 2030 OASDI would save to pay for the peak in costs of Baby Boomer generation in 2035 that might raise the overall OASDI tax rate from 12.4%.

 

Speak of World Wide Welfare not Sustainable Development: A Book Report HA-16-7-15

 

The Millennium Development Goals, MDGs, for 2015 are continued indefinitely in a new system of accounting for Sustainable Development Goals, SDGs.  The scientific goals of the MDGs were mostly successful in reducing extreme poverty by half between 1990 and 2015.  I am of the opinion speaking of “development” has stunted the growth of “World-Wide Welfare” rhetoric and calculus and we are left to care for our own “social welfare”, at least in the United States and Greece.  To be more inspirational on the topic of urban flight the U.N. should consider purchasing the “permaculture” copyright that is more inspirational to the rational consumers and producers of food, technology and land.  Permaculture needs a little more work to feed the cities and little more welfare to shelter impoverished urban refugees on farms for free. The theory that hydrocarbons cause both air pollution and oceanic thermal warming and cooling may help these corporations to adopt climate change science under both the 1992 UNFCC and the 1982 Law of the Sea.  Energy corporations are hereby asked to report (1) adoption of climate change science under the Law of the Sea and the UNFCCC, (2) maritime regulation of the use of de-icer in Arctic water, and (3) patrols of the NOAA Sea Surface Temperature (SST) anomaly map, to the public for free.  States are hoped to be better regulate cloud seeding and oceanic hydrocarbon heating and cooling pumps to control global warming and end the climate crisis with an informed public of welfare beneficiary regulated weather modification technology.  The Food and Agriculture (FAO) of the UN projects that global agricultural demand in 2050 will be 60 percent higher than the three-year average for 2005—07.  Global agricultural production has grown 2.5-3 times over the past century and can rightly be described as cornucopian, with enough food produced to feed the entire human family.

 

Book 2 Attorney General Ethics (AGE)

 

To amend Chapter 2 Soldier’s and Airmen’s Home §41-70.  The American Legal System has failed, lawyers are either behind bars or drunk on power. In 2001, the majority of the 93 million judicial cases filed, were processed by 15,555 state trial courts operating under the supervision of the county; 13,515 of limited jurisdiction and 2,040 of general jurisdiction, operated by 29,266 judges.  There were 55.7 million traffic cases filed, 15.8 million cases were filed with the civil division, 14.1 million Criminal cases, Domestic Relations processed 5.3 million cases, 2 million criminal cases were filed in Juvenile Courts and 276,408 cases were filed with the Appellate Courts.  A civil law system must be instituted by lowering law school entrance to high school graduates and the bar exam to BA and terminate the licenses of all lawyers who are elected or appointed to public, commercial or social office, a Civil-law Amendment III to the Annotated United States Constitution calls for 4 year terms for elected federal judges, with a two term limit for justices, and one year term for chief justice, to repeal the constitutional right to bear arms and quartering of troops in people’s homes, to change the name of prosecutor to district attorney, elect licensed social workers to adjudicate traffic, divorce, mental illness, substance abuse, tenant-landlord and small claims, and funeral directors to avoid Probate, to abolish the death penalty, to abolish federal police finance, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) and transfer control of the stockpile and licensing to Drug Evaluation Agency (DEA) in the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), to change the name of Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) to Bureau of Firearms and Explosives (FE), to change the name of the Court of International Trade of the United States (CoITUS) to Customs Court (CC), to change the name of the Office of Violence Against Women to Office of Women’s Rights, to ratify Optional Human Rights Protocols, and to safely reduce the jail and prison population to less than 250 per 100,000 residents legal limit…Quiz 

 

Book 3 Health and Welfare (HAW)

 

To amend Chapter 3 National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers: Free Disability Insurance Reallocation Tax (DIRT) Act: To immediately amend the DI tax rate from 1.80% to 2.30%, from 0.90% to 1.15% for employees and from 0.90% to 1.15% for employers under Sec. 201(b)(1)(S) of the Social Security Act 42USC(7)II§401 and amend the OASI tax rate from 10.60% to 10.10%, from 5.30% to 5.05% for employees under 26USC(C)(21)(A)§3101 (a) and from 5.30% to 5.05% for employers under 26USC(C)(21)(A)§3111 (a) to avoid depletion of the Disability Insurance (DI) Trust Fund in 2016 without increasing the overall 12.4% OASDI or 15.3% OASDI and Hospital Insurance (HI) tax-rate under 26USC(A)(2)§1401 beginning October 1, 2015. To amend the DI tax rate again in 2018 to 2.20% from 2.30%, from 1.15% to 1.10% for employees and from 1.15% to 1.10% for employers under Sec. 201(b)(1)(S) of the Social Security Act 42USC(7)II§401 and amend the OASI tax rate from 10.10% to 10.20%, from 5.05% to 5.10% for employees under 26USC(C)(21)(A)§3101 (a) and from 5.05% to 5.10% for employers under 26USC(C)(21)(A)§3111 (a) without increasing the overall 12.4% OASDI or 15.3% OASDI and Hospital Insurance (HI) tax-rate under 26USC(A)(2)§1401 to maximize efficiency until a deficit appears in the OASI Trust Fund in 2019. Without Income Limit Law (WILL) Act: To abolish the maximum taxable limit on DI contributions on January 1, 2016 and OASI contributions January 1, 2017 and repeal Adjustment of the contribution and benefit base Section 230 of the Social Security Act 42USC(7)§430. To require the Social Security Administration to pay for SSI Costs beginning January 1, 2017.  To share profits in excess of social security program costs to the general fund of the U.S Treasury on a sliding scale beginning year end 2016 DI 50/50 with the  USPS, and OASI 10/90 to eliminate the federal budget deficit. In 2020 OASI would share at negotiated rates an estimated 25/75, by 2025 OASDI would share 50/50 and by 2030 OASDI would save to pay for the peak in costs of Baby Boomer generation in 2035 that might raise the overall OASDI tax rate from 12.4%. To limit Health and Human Services spending to less than $1 trillion. To require the Department of Agriculture (USDA) to hire an actuary to sustain Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP) growth in an annual report to Congress. To require the Veteran’s Administration (VA) to hire an actuary to account for service member contributions and matching funds in an annual report to Congress. To replace welfare Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) with licensed social workers and non-social worker representatives. To provide Medicaid for free to everyone earning less than 150% of the poverty line and open Medicaid to reasonably priced premiums for everyone else. To prohibit medical billing to nationalize health insurance assets. To ratify ILO Conventions 132, 156 and 183.  To levy a 1% UN FICA and corporate income tax for world-wide welfare in 2020Quiz