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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 375.93-1.8%Nov 14 4:00 PM EST

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To: Box-By-The-Riviera™ who wrote (103679)11/14/2013 4:24:14 PM
From: TobagoJack2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) of 217774
 
Watch n brief on the great taking ...

The next crash is too much of an anticipated event, and the anticipatory seem convicted as to the ways & means of the lead up, i.e. high pricing and w/d of QE

It is unclear to me which part of the fed's simple policy people fail to understand / appreciate, that prices shall not fall, employment must rise, and the fed is prepared to monetize every instrument of collateral, and all at cost of zero.

Interesting experiment, let us watch.

In the meantime, am wondering if this below is correct. If so, then the taking just got enhanced, from those expecting to inherit from others 55 and over as they obamacare medicate and then die ...

http://armstrongeconomics.com/armstrong_economics_blog/

Medicare is Seizing Estates of anyone over 55.
Posted on November 13, 2013 by Martin Armstrong

Submitted by Glen Downs:
“So here’s the deal: since 1993 there has been a federal law requiring states to recover at least some of the costs of Medicaid-covered medical care for anyone 55 years old and up, from the estates of those covered.
States enforce this law, with their own laws and policies added in, differently in every state. But the general principle is there. Up until now the usual consequence has been things like this: Medicaid puts a lien on the house of someone in a nursing facility who has run out of money, and after they die, the heirs find they have to buy the house back from the state if they want it.

We haven’t had lots of people younger than 65 on Medicaid, because in most states simply earning less than the Federal Poverty Level did not qualify one for Medicaid.

And we haven’t had many people with lots of assets on Medicaid, because in most places you have to have less than around $2400 to your name before Medicaid will cover you. You can keep your house and your car, but Medicaid reserves the right to put liens on them and take them when you die.

But now we have the Affordable Care Act, and its expectation that everyone in the lower tier of income will end up in the Medicaid system. To accomplish this, they have dropped the asset test. So now we will have lots of people ages 55-64, who have assets but not a lot of income right now, for whatever reason, on Medicaid.
The kicker of it is, if you make the right amount to qualify for a subsidized health insurance plan, your costs are going to be shared and subsidized by the government. But if you go on Medicaid, you owe the entire amount that Medicaid spends on you from the day you turn 55.”


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