"As you work and pay taxes, you earn credits that count toward eligibility for future Social Security benefits. You can earn a maximum of four credits each year. Most people need 40 credits to qualify for benefits. Younger people need fewer credits to qualify for disability or for their spouse or children to qualify for survivors’ benefits. During their working lifetime most workers earn more credits than needed to be eligible for Social Security."
2007-09-01 14:47:29
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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In order to get Social Security, you need to have paid into the system for 40 quarter years (equal to 10 years) and reach the minimum age (now 62 for reduced benefits), assuming that you have been living in this country. Thanks to an order signed by Mr. Clinton while President, if you enter this country when 65 or over, you qualify to receive payments, even if you never paid in. If the latest illegal-immigrant amnesty bill had passed, while we would still be required to comply for 40 quarters, the illegals would qualify after only 10 quarters. Even though it had support from both parties, thankfully there was not enough support to pass it.
2007-09-01 15:47:38
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answer #2
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answered by MICHAEL R 7
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I want to briefly mention the Social Security Act, the nexus Agreement you have with the king. You were told the SS# was for retirement and you had to have it to work. It sounds like a license to me, and it is, it is a license granted by the President to work in this country, under the Trading with the Enemy Act, as amended in March 9, 1933, as you will see in a moment. Was it really for your retirement? What does F.I.C.A. stand for? Federal Insurance Contribution Act. What does contribution mean at law, not Webster's Dictionary. This is where they were able to get you to admit that you were jointly responsible for the national debt, and you declared that you were a fourteenth Amendment citizen, which I won't go into in this paper or the Erie Railroad v. Tompkins case where common law was over turned. Read the following definition to learn what it means to have a SS# and pay a contribution:
"Contribution. Right of one who has discharged a common liability to recover of another also liable, the aliquot portion which he ought to pay or bear. Under principle of "contribution," a tort-feasor against whom a judgement is rendered is entitled to recover proportional shares of judgement from other joint tort-feasor whose negligence contributed to the injury and who were also liable to the plaintiff. (Note - tort feasor means wrong doer, what did you do to be defined as a wrong doer???) The share of a loss payable by an insure when contracts with two or more insurers cover the same loss. The insurer's share of a loss under a coinsurance or similar provision. The sharing of a loss or payment among several. The act of any one or several of a number of co-debtors, co-sureties, etc., in reimbursing one of their number who has paid the whole debt or suffered the whole liability, each to the extent of his proportionate share. -- (Blacks Law Dictionary 6th ed.)
Guess what? It gets worse. What does this date 1933 mean? Well you better sit down.
2007-09-01 16:57:19
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answer #3
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answered by dollars2burn4u 4
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Only the ones that worked for years. There is a supplement to ss, known as ssi that can be received by someone that has not paid in to ss. They have to be a disabled citizen.
2007-09-01 14:51:41
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answer #4
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answered by tomisohere 3
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Everyone who pays into the system. If you don't put in then you don't get in.
2007-09-01 14:45:27
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answer #5
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answered by noidea89 2
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No, only if you pay enough of quarters into it.
2007-09-01 14:54:08
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answer #6
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answered by The law is a form of tyranny. 4
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Not if Bush has anything to do with it!!!
2007-09-01 16:31:44
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answer #7
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answered by Texas Democrat 3
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No.
2007-09-01 16:52:41
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answer #8
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answered by DAR 7
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