by Higgenbotham » Sat Jun 06, 2026 3:32 pm
Higgenbotham wrote: Fri May 15, 2026 3:08 pm
Today I was at one of those school events where everybody gets an award. Then the kids that "tried hardest" and went from illiterate to reading a few words got another award. The high achievers got nothing. This is another case of following the money.
Disabilities are where the money's at.
That will rectify itself by the time the bottom of the new dark age is reached. The Archdruid says the survival rate will be 5%. I say less than 1%. 8 billion to something a bit less than 80 million ("a few tens of millions when the bottom is hit in two or three centuries"). But, hey, maybe everyone gets an award for just a little while longer on the way down. Until we run out of other people's money.
A few days ago I overheard a conversation between 2 women where one said, "Joe is going to get his 100% soon" and the other one replied that some relative of hers was going to "get his 100% soon" also. Then the first went on to say that once Joe gets his 100% they will no longer have to pay property tax. That seemed a little farfetched to me until I read this:
Do veterans that are 100% disabled pay property taxes?
AI Overview
In many states across the U.S., veterans who are rated 100% permanently and totally disabled by the VA are completely exempt from paying property taxes on their primary residence. Because it is a state-level policy, the exact eligibility rules, surviving spouse benefits, and application requirements vary.
The Exemption: In Texas, veterans with a 100% disability rating (or a determination of individual unemployability) from the VA are completely exempt from paying property taxes on their residence homestead.
Primary Residence Only: This exemption can only be applied to a single residence homestead that the veteran owns.
Surviving Spouses: The exemption can transfer to an unremarried surviving spouse if they continue to live in the home.
Disabilities are now where the money is at in the United States.
Cradle to grave and beyond for the surviving spouse.
Joe has a severe case of gout which has nothing to do with his military service. He was bowling at his wife's Christmas party. Quite well in fact.
Have another beer.
[quote=Higgenbotham post_id=94273 time=1778872116 user_id=100]
Today I was at one of those school events where everybody gets an award. Then the kids that "tried hardest" and went from illiterate to reading a few words got another award. The high achievers got nothing. This is another case of following the money. [u]Disabilities are where the money's at.[/u]
That will rectify itself by the time the bottom of the new dark age is reached. The Archdruid says the survival rate will be 5%. I say less than 1%. 8 billion to something a bit less than 80 million ("a few tens of millions when the bottom is hit in two or three centuries"). But, hey, maybe everyone gets an award for just a little while longer on the way down. Until we run out of other people's money.[/quote]
A few days ago I overheard a conversation between 2 women where one said, "Joe is going to get his 100% soon" and the other one replied that some relative of hers was going to "get his 100% soon" also. Then the first went on to say that once Joe gets his 100% they will no longer have to pay property tax. That seemed a little farfetched to me until I read this:
[quote]
Do veterans that are 100% disabled pay property taxes?
AI Overview
In many states across the U.S., veterans who are rated 100% permanently and totally disabled by the VA are completely exempt from paying property taxes on their primary residence. Because it is a state-level policy, the exact eligibility rules, surviving spouse benefits, and application requirements vary.
The Exemption: In Texas, veterans with a 100% disability rating (or a determination of individual unemployability) from the VA are completely exempt from paying property taxes on their residence homestead.
Primary Residence Only: This exemption can only be applied to a single residence homestead that the veteran owns.
Surviving Spouses: The exemption can transfer to an unremarried surviving spouse if they continue to live in the home.[/quote]
Disabilities are now where the money is at in the United States.
Cradle to grave and beyond for the surviving spouse.
Joe has a severe case of gout which has nothing to do with his military service. He was bowling at his wife's Christmas party. Quite well in fact.
Have another beer.