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About CarolynBI
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And here is a new one. Says it is from AARP Customer Support (yeah right) with an email address of newsletters@flashreel.de information in exchange for a free health monitoring kit. Umm no. Not responding. I am going through my spam - spammers are ...
0
Replies
0
Kudos
691
Views
It is now free to you once you take it IF you have the work credits (otherwise you still pay). That you paid into the system prior to taking it is irrelevant for the to free to you now with respect to not paying premiums for it once you retired. That...
0
Replies
0
Kudos
3998
Views
Lots of people take into account sunk costs for many things which makes no sense. Regardless of your sunk costs, if your income level says you get $2000/mo gross when you retire that is the size of the check minus whatever is taken out (for example B...
1
Reply
1
Kudo
4476
Views
I never said it was free. I said factoring in what you paid prior to retiring is taking into account sunk costs, money that you can’t get back regardless. Some people will never see that back in using Medicare. A others will use it a lot. Some paid m...
2
Replies
0
Kudos
4709
Views
Presuming you have enough work credits the premiums for A is now "free" to you when retired (not enough work credits and it costs money). That money is "sunk costs". It is money under the bridge so counting it as a current cost (unless you are actual...
1
Reply
0
Kudos
4831
Views
And here is a new one. Says it is from AARP Customer Support (yeah right) with an email address of newsletters@flashreel.de information in exchange for a free health monitoring kit. Umm no. Not responding. I am going through my spam - spammers are ...
0
Replies
0
Kudos
691
Views
It is now free to you once you take it IF you have the work credits (otherwise you still pay). That you paid into the system prior to taking it is irrelevant for the to free to you now with respect to not paying premiums for it once you retired. That...
0
Replies
0
Kudos
3998
Views
Lots of people take into account sunk costs for many things which makes no sense. Regardless of your sunk costs, if your income level says you get $2000/mo gross when you retire that is the size of the check minus whatever is taken out (for example B...
1
Reply
1
Kudo
4476
Views
I never said it was free. I said factoring in what you paid prior to retiring is taking into account sunk costs, money that you can’t get back regardless. Some people will never see that back in using Medicare. A others will use it a lot. Some paid m...
2
Replies
0
Kudos
4709
Views
Presuming you have enough work credits the premiums for A is now "free" to you when retired (not enough work credits and it costs money). That money is "sunk costs". It is money under the bridge so counting it as a current cost (unless you are actual...
1
Reply
0
Kudos
4831
Views
And here is a new one. Says it is from AARP Customer Support (yeah right) with an email address of newsletters@flashreel.de information in exchange for a free health monitoring kit. Umm no. Not responding. I am going through my spam - spammers are ...
0
Replies
0
Kudos
691
Views
It is now free to you once you take it IF you have the work credits (otherwise you still pay). That you paid into the system prior to taking it is irrelevant for the to free to you now with respect to not paying premiums for it once you retired. That...
0
Replies
0
Kudos
3998
Views
Lots of people take into account sunk costs for many things which makes no sense. Regardless of your sunk costs, if your income level says you get $2000/mo gross when you retire that is the size of the check minus whatever is taken out (for example B...
1
Reply
1
Kudo
4476
Views
I never said it was free. I said factoring in what you paid prior to retiring is taking into account sunk costs, money that you can’t get back regardless. Some people will never see that back in using Medicare. A others will use it a lot. Some paid m...
2
Replies
0
Kudos
4709
Views
Presuming you have enough work credits the premiums for A is now "free" to you when retired (not enough work credits and it costs money). That money is "sunk costs". It is money under the bridge so counting it as a current cost (unless you are actual...
1
Reply
0
Kudos
4831
Views
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Public Statistics
Date Registered | 12-12-2018 10:31 PM |
Last Visited | 07-20-2025 11:49 AM |
Total Messages Posted | 103 |
Total Kudos Received | 92 |