Yes, he once corrected me vociferously on sm
Posted By: Anony1 on 2009-06-08
In Reply to: Had Mr,.TechSupport meant it as a joke, he would - (00
the difference between a blighted ovum and an embryo.
Hey bud, I have ovaries - I know which is which. :p
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I have been corrected
My brother says he no longer uses the file-sharing site, as he now knows that it is very illegal, but the site he uses now only allows downloading onto an iPod.
Sorry, corrected post from above.
I meant to say I WOULD NOT accuse him.
I stand humbly corrected
You are a people hater.
OMGosh!! i stand corrected.
i'm not against eating meat but certainly don't want to be eating bug 'derivatives' or such without knowing it. oh barf. it just sounded way too outlandish to be true. give me ordinary poisonous red dye any day...
I stand corrected. Here's the info from the Social Security website...
Even if he or she has never worked under Social Security, your spouse at full retirement age can receive a benefit equal to one-half of your full retirement amount and can qualify on your record for Medicare at age 65. (If your spouse will receive a pension for work not covered by Social Security such as government or foreign employment, the amount of his or her Social Security benefits on your record may be reduced.)
Your spouse can begin collecting the benefits as early as age 62, but the benefit amount will be permanently reduced by a percentage based on the number of months up to his or her full retirement age.
Your spouse who is caring for your child who is also receiving benefits can receive the full one-half benefit amount no matter what his or her age is. Your spouse would receive these benefits until the child reaches age 16. At that time, the child's benefits continue, but your spouse's benefits stop unless he or she is old enough to receive retirement benefits (age 62 or older) or survivor benefits as a widow or widower (age 60).
If your spouse has also worked under Social Security--If your spouse is eligible for retirement benefits on his or her own record, we will always pay that amount first. But if the spouse benefit on your record is a higher amount, he or she will get a combination of benefits that equals that higher amount. It doesn't matter if your spouse starts getting benefits before, after, or at the same time you do--we will check both records to make sure that your spouse gets the higher amount.
If your spouse continues to work while receiving benefits, the same earnings limits apply to him or her as apply to you. If your spouse is eligible for benefits this year and is also working, you can use our earnings test calculator to see how those earnings would affect your spouse's benefit payments. (Your spouse's earnings affect only his or her own benefits; they do not affect your benefits or those of any other beneficiaries on your record.)
For Medicare, from that section it reiterates what I said...
Medicare is health insurance for people age 65 or older, under age 65 with certain
disabilities, and any age with End-Stage Renal Disease (permanent kidney failure
requiring dialysis or a kidney transplant).
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