So the Government shut down,
But I still have a job that I "get" to come to everyday.
I'll even get paid... sometime... eventually... :gofurslf: I think I'd rather be like the Federal Technicians that are actually unemployed, but are able to go find other work. It's harvest time, lots of farmers looking for help right now... |
I am still working but my part of the federal govt isn't part of the national budget, our ratepayers take care of us.
|
I'm still working, just not sure when I'll get another paycheck. That becomes the problem if this becomes drug out.
|
Gotta love partisan politics.
|
I'm in the same boat, still working, but who knows when we will next be paid. Grateful I still have orders, at least, it could have gone the other way since I'm on ADOS.
|
I'm working because I've been designated as excepted/essential. I'm limited on the work I can do, and have no idea when I'll get paid, although I'm sure to get it eventually. Those who were furloughed might get paid for the time they've been furloughed, but they won't know for sure until Congress passes a bill saying that they will get their back pay. I'm about ready to get out for good...! Tired of no pay-raises or bonuses for three years, sequestration, and now furloughs for who knows how long.
|
I was furloughed over the summer because of the sequestrations stuff but here were not affected by the shut down unless it drags on for months and we run out of working capital. I have some friends who work for NOAA fisheries and theyve been furloughed. I doubt anybodys getting back pay this time.
|
|
Quote:
Still working? I got the impression that you were looking at retirement a couple of years back. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
1 Attachment(s)
On that note, the downside to being considered an essential asset is that we can't take any leave.. so the leave I had planned for the week of the 14th may get canceled, if this damn shut down is still ongoing. Which if that's the case, it means we won't be paid yet either. Which will make me a pretty unhappy camper.
|
I suggest that you find out who your local representative is and politely explain your situation before you shank the shit out of him or her.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Oh..... wait..... |
Quote:
This is my biggest fear. It's over....we're already fooked (Obamacare) so stop showboating! In just a few months time we'll ALL see how bad of an idea this package is, and when it's grossly underfunded the whole country will turn on Obama. All they're doing now is turning straight party voters against them too. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Your dad pays a fraction of what you do, for what he gets here by default. A supplemental health plan would easily bring him up to your level, while still paying less than what you do. You could have even better than that, for less than what you pay now, if your system was set up right (the way that ours should be). |
Quote:
He pays similar for his Canada coverage that I do, prescription prices are very similar because my plan has a max for uncovered medication that I cannot pay over if no generic is available. His high management level coverage in the States just crushes anything I could get as a worker bee without spending a small fortune. Obamacare doesn't really bother me too much though. The only thing that I would like to see go is the individual mandate. That should of been shot down by the supreme court. |
Quote:
The best way to handle universal health care would be to take a basic rate from everyone who can afford it, for a basic level of care, then allow supplemental insurance to be added over and above that. The basic level of care would be overseen by a single payer system. Similar systems exist up here for auto insurance, and they seem to work reasonably well. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
On a side note, my sister in law is trying to get coverage in FL and they want to charge her $600/mo for a family of 4, FL being one of the states that didnt agree to the federal funding. as a test she put in NJ, and the same plan through the same company came to $190/mo with federal assistance because NJ is particpating. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
Without knowing when the next paycheck is coming, the fun is a bit dampered, but still get to carry on my plans. |
Quote:
|
You guys are a bunch of Debbie Downers! :lol: This guy found a pretty interesting silver lining to it all: http://www.roadandtrack.com/features...o-the-shutdown
|
Quote:
|
Oh the paycheck situation - for those of you with USAA, if you have an LES showing what you're supposed to be paid mid-month, they will grant you an interest-free loan for that amount. No, it isn't ideal, I hate having to take out loans for anything (except expensive and fast toys that are likely to kill me :lol: ), but if it means keeping you from going hungry until Congress gets their shit together, it's better than nothing.
|
|
Quote:
|
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
So I guess Monday isn't a bank holiday, so pay may come in then...
|
Quote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwzEpSJNaLs |
Yup. they need to toss out anyone who breathes the words "Tea party."
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
This same president has raised the debt ceiling HOW many times while in office? But...yet...holding the government accountable for it's spending somehow equates to "republicans are the debil" Call it whatever makes you feel more 'Murican (or elitist canadian for Papa :rockwoot: )but it damn sure ain't ONE sided fucktardedness |
Debt is growing, maintenance on the debt is growing, and the debt started growing with Bush but it's Obama's fault. Inflation exists. More people are on the social safety net than ever before. Your basic costs of doing business are rising, without increasing the services involved. Where does the debt ceiling go down?
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
This partisanship garbage is fucking ruining us... yet we live and breathe the shit... It's really scary to go back and look at what people were saying under Bush and how clearly they're tunes have changed - on BOTH sides. it's fucking sports teams... http://scottystarnes.files.wordpress...t_two_face.jpg |
Quote:
You can certainly blame the Bush administration for a lot of things, but if you get to the nuts and bolts of it, it wasn't just their doing... not by a long shot. |
Quote:
The ceiling does eventually have to be raised somewhat, as a matter of simple realism, due to factors like inflation. It's the AMOUNT that's at issue. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
On a lighter note, I got paid today!!! :rockwoot: :boobs:
|
Quote:
Quote:
I haven't heard anyone say they refuse to raise the debt ceiling. What I have heard consistently though is people saying they want spending reductions to get the rate at which debt is growing under control before they will increase the debt ceiling. We can make some cuts, sequestration pretty much proved that. Despite the post-apocalyptic vision the Obama administration and their lackeys in the media desperately tried to sell about sequestration the end result has ultimately been relatively painless. I fail to see the harm in trying to hammer out some additional cuts before we write another blank check for the next year or two. |
Quote:
If you want to reduce the budget then do it before the money is spent, dont talk about cutting back the day before bills are due. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
The second is who will you blame for it not providing the promised services, when it was cut off at the knees by the opposition? A crippled programme will not have a hope in hell of providing anything close to what the original proposals promised. Quote:
The spending that increased the debt started under Bush. It was necessitated by a lack of controls on fiscal institutions that started decades back and hasn't been corrected by successive governments; both Republican and Democrat. Take a look at a graph of debt vs. year, corrected for the value of the dollar of any given year, and note when the majority of that debt took a big upswing. Odd how conservatives simply have different ways to waste your money, isn't it? The Province of Ontario went through a microcosm of what you're experiencing, back in the '90s. The then-Premier started by spending his way out of a recession and then changed horses in mid stream, deciding to go for fiscal restraint and cut-backs. Either strategy has been proven to ultimately work but, unfortunately, only if you stick to your guns. His actions screwed our economy for a decade and it could have been even worse. |
He says it all for me
[youtube]A3BHujm3cpY[/youtube] |
Quote:
The rest of his points may be quite valid but they're serious issues that require both a fair bit of time, and voter involvement, to address. Yes, take the money out of politics. How do you do this? By voting out liars. By voting out those who work only as part of a political machine, rather than doing the will of the electorate. The voters do that and as long as you have people who will vote based solely on what party a politician is a member of, that mess will never be fixed. Hidebound voters seem to be the majority, with a very small swing percentage making the ultimate decisions. And the banking issue needs to be addressed. For one thing you need to follow our lead, in requiring that banks have more basic capital backing their investments. Reduce the amount of funny money and you limit the number of failures. Those are long term goals though, not the immediate issue. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Cut off at the knees? How so? They were working with effectively unlimited resources for the 3 years they had to build out the exchange website and that has been a clusterfuck. That may have been crippled by a lot of things, but none of them appear to be the opposition. I'm not aware of a single provision in Obamacare that hasn't been funded so far due to the opposition. Quote:
The spending now is different and meant to build growth in the American economy. So far in my view and after years of this going on the results have been shitty. What I mentioned before doesn't help either, the roadshow that happens every time cuts are mentioned. The Democrats and the media went on a jag for months before sequestration about how devastating it would be if sequestration went in to effect. The end result barely moved the needle. I think we can make some cuts and I don't see pushing for them as an unreasonable position. |
Quote:
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/0...nthly-premium# |
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Looks like the senate just veto'd the deal without ever reading it
Default we come! :rockwoot: Hope you got groceries and cash today! |
Where are you seeing this? Everything online says they have a deal right now...
|
Heard it in the waiting room on the TV (Faux news)
All I could find online about what was being said: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013...udget-impasse/ |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:07 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.