Over at The Patriot Hangout board, one member brought up an excuse of how the system uses a specific date from the mid-1800s to indicate that the data in that field is unknown or unverified. Seems reasonable for old systems with outdated programming, until you realize that didn't prevent those with unknown birth dates to continue receiving benefits.
It wouldn't cost much to find out if someone is alive or deceased and worth finding who was cashing in. Why were no notices sent requesting birth certificates, SS cards, current IDs, and proof of continued existence after a certain age, like say 100 years old? If they refuse to comply, cut off benefits, impose penalties, and begin fraud charges.
Common sense is nonsense in Clown World it seems.
It wouldn't cost much to find out if someone is alive or deceased and worth finding who was cashing in. Why were no notices sent requesting birth certificates, SS cards, current IDs, and proof of continued existence after a certain age, like say 100 years old? If they refuse to comply, cut off benefits, impose penalties, and begin fraud charges.
Common sense is nonsense in Clown World it seems.
A trail goes two ways and looks different in each direction - There is no such thing as a timid woodland creature - Whatever does not kill you leaves you a survivor - Jesus is NOT a bad word - MSB