Dec. 23rd, 2004

Woo!!!

Dec. 23rd, 2004 12:24 am
weaktwos: (Default)
Well, tonight was a delightful night, spent with friends over a good bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon, chocolates, and good discourse.

I got home a wee bit late, only to discover that Santa tossed a surprise my way! I love driving at night, especially when Cadillac Ranch comes on my ipod! If you were on I-5 or 99 South and saw some woman getting her shout on, that was me.

I'm listening to some of Santa's deliverables right now, as I have some Christmas gifts to wrap.

Thanks again, Santa. :-)
weaktwos: (Default)
...and celebrating Christmas...

Merry Christmas!

It's kind of weird being largely non-religious and yet still into Christmas. However, it is immensely fun, and I do so enjoy the music, the festivities, and the good wishes.

So, to all of you:
-may your holiday be full of joy, love and laughter.

For those of us with dysfunctional families:
-may the holiday argument be resolved quickly, and with minimal loss of family heirlooms.

For those of you who are lonely:
-may you find the companionship you desire or realize that you're having a damn good time being solitary.

For those who are travelling:
-may your road that is travelled be less travelled by others.

For those who wear holiday hats all day at work to cheer people up:
-may your hat hair work itself out with much speed.

For those who have to work on the holidays:
-may the work go quickly and smoothly, and may much revelry be had with coworkers.

Ugh

Dec. 23rd, 2004 07:53 am
weaktwos: (Default)
Jamster.com has taken over Comedy Central advertising. And their screen savers, ring tones, or wallpaper is nothing better than "ass".

Memeage

Dec. 23rd, 2004 10:14 am
weaktwos: (santa4)
Ohmigod! I'm like sooooooooooooooooo trashed!

xmas party at weaktwos's house!!


shaunathan
shaunathan drank 8 stouts.

shaunathan made violent love with dawneywawney on top of the television.

shaunathan has signalled their intentions of abandoning all of their LJ friends and booking themselves into a Thai monastery.

hangedwoman
hangedwoman drank 2 cognacs, 9 tequilas, 13 whiskeys, 12 poteens, 10 mescals and 11 vodkas.

Oh the powers of persusasion! cremlian managed to convince a less than sober hangedwoman that the milkman had run away with their dentures. hangedwoman began chewing on the sofa, realising 5 hours later that they had a healthy set of teeth!

blue_telescope
blue_telescope drank 7 ales, 5 whiskeys, 5 bloody marys, 15 aftershocks, 13 everclears and 12 vermouths.

weaktwos
weaktwos drank 14 champagnes, 9 absinthes, 7 white wines, 2 coffee liqueurs and 15 kahluas.

weaktwos
weaktwos drank 12 white wines, 5 pernods, 15 stouts and 9 rums.

chainsawraven
chainsawraven drank 15 red wines, 9 sambuccas, 2 mescals, 3 white wines and 8 aligator bites.

cremlian
cremlian drank 15 pulques, a cognac, 11 absinthes and 3 red wines.

shaggy
shaggy drank 2 sambuccas, 4 white wines and 9 cognacs.

vernard
vernard drank 2 poteens, 2 aligator bites, 3 bloody marys, 6 mescals and 2 whiskeys.

dawneywawney
dawneywawney drank 2 poteens, a mint julep and 12 pernods.

4 people thought it would be a wise idea to donate their stomach contents to weaktwos's kitchen floor!



Xmas Party?

Drunken fights, hammer attacks, glorious turkeys, ridiculous amounts of alcohol, sex, drugs and rock n roll


Enter your name below to experience the ultimate in complete useless bollocks!






Drunken Hero







This would never happen...at least my drink consumption...unless they were counting sips.
weaktwos: (Default)
What are your thoughts, folks?


The GOP's Sabotage of Social Security


Robert Scheer

December 21, 2004

Just my luck: I finally get to be a senior citizen only to discover that the president considers my longevity a grave threat to the nation. Apparently, my collecting Social Security checks for as long as I have left on this Earth is going to help bankrupt the economy and/or be an unbearable burden on young Americans.

That's why, after seven decades of unmitigated success in protecting seniors from the vagaries of market forces, the White House now wants to turn Social Security itself over to the vagaries of market forces. The conservative mantra, whether it comes to energy policy, war in Iraq or education, is to siphon public money into the private sector whenever and wherever possible, through such gimmicks as agribusiness subsidies, school vouchers and the hiring of private mercenaries.

Greed perfectly meshes with ideology in the Republican Party, and the attempted sabotage of Social Security is just another example. While the followers of Milton Friedman talk about the free market in religious terms, Wall Street is slavering at the possibility of one of the biggest potential windfalls in human history if the Social Security spigot is turned its way. The attendant investment fees alone would be enormous — certainly higher than the minimal 1% overhead costs the current Social Security system consumes.

What's astonishing is that despite the recent spate of abrupt corporate bankruptcies and Wall Street corruption scandals, the president would have us believe only stockbrokers can save Social Security, and the stability of the entire fund would be tied to a stock market that has been known to tank now and again. Further, even the president's key advisors admit that the short-run cost of "privatizing" Social Security would add trillions of dollars to the Bush legacy of federal government red ink.

While I am all for expanding opportunities to invest in tax- deferred retirement accounts (like 401k's), it does not follow that Social Security should be exposed to the same risks. Social Security is the safety net for the elderly that has since its inception protected millions from facing abject poverty upon retirement — even if their pensions should evaporate, as they did for the employees of Enron.

Along with Medicare, Social Security is the key reason seniors are no longer the most impoverished class in our society or a crushing burden on their children. This last needs to be mentioned to counter the argument that ensuring the security of baby boom seniors would impose an intolerable burden on younger workers. For who is going to replace those Social Security checks, should they stop coming because Grandpa picked the wrong stock? The kids and grandkids, that's who, if they have any real family values.

I speak out of an experience I'm sure many of you share. My mother retired after 40 years as a garment worker, after which she lived with me until she died at the thankfully old age of 88. Her presence was of great emotional value to our family, but because of her two-decade bout with Parkinson's, it would have represented a serious financial burden on my wife and me had it not been for government support.

The president says the system that has served us well in the past is no longer sustainable. He, or rather those cooking the books for him, attempts to scare us with projections that the Social Security trust fund will begin to run deficits 38 years from now.

But those numbers assume no dramatic change in the increasing ability of seniors to retire later and otherwise continue to earn income that is taxable. The anti-Social Security crowd is trying to make this a young-versus-old generational fight, even though seniors still pay taxes like anybody else. We even pay taxes on most of our Social Security earnings, if our household income rises above a pittance.

If the president is truly worried about the federal coffers running dry he should stop cutting taxes for us better-off folk and stop spending so much money on boondoggles like the occupation of Iraq. However, if it turns out that we need additional taxes to cover the obligations of the Social Security trust fund four decades from now, so be it. After all, money distributed to the elderly through Social Security is poured right back into the economy.

For three-quarters of a century, Social Security has guaranteed us all a life of modest dignity as we live out the end of this mortal coil.

So — if you'll pardon this senior's use of a curmudgeonly truism — I say if it ain't broke, don't fix it.

Profile

weaktwos: (Default)
weaktwos

January 2017

S M T W T F S
1 234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Aug. 4th, 2025 02:10 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios