Difference between revisions of "Monthly tugboat"

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(the tugboat inceases are automatic. it goes up each year on his birthday :()
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[[Category:CWC-isms]]
[[Category:CWC-isms]]
This user heard from a friend that there are certain rules by the Social Security Administration, that by accepting the monthly tugboat you are not supposed to amass asset in excess of $2000 (exact rules I don't know - he's the paralegal who used to deal with social security issues). Regardless, he assured me that unless Chris have proof of being disabled for work, he is very eligible for fraud charges. Can we report him to the SSA?
US Social Security Administration - www.ssa.gov
1470 Pantops Mountain Place, Charlottesville - (434) 295-1144 (Office reopens on 6th of July, I heard)

Revision as of 23:03, 2 July 2010

Tugboat.jpg YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK!
The contents of this page have been bought with taxpayer money!
Social Security Administration seal.png


Yet AGAIN I am waiting for my next tugboat from my Social before I can even pay a Website to Host me and grant me a better .com domain name than sonichu.com
Chris to Miyamoto, complaining about how long his free money is taking
What Chris believes a monthly tugboat is. Your tax dollars at work, gentlemen.

The monthly tugboat is Chris's euphemism for his Social Security Disability Insurance check. Essentially, the United States government has a taxpayer-funded program to financially support disabled individuals whose injuries or ailments leave them unable to work.

Chris receives roughly $800 each month, with $450 going to his parents for room and board. The rest of it generally goes towards video games or straight up his ass. However, $350 per month is nowhere near enough to satisfy Chris's need for games, porn, PlayStation Network downloads, a constant supply of Chicken McNuggets, and, as of recent, alcohol. As of July 2009, he owed at least $2000 in credit-card debt, some on cards of his own and some on cards he stole from his parents.

Challenged by a correspondent in the Mailbag, Chris claimed that he is not wasting his taxpayer-funded tugboat, because he is putting that money back into the economy and indirectly paying the tugboats of others. According to Chris's logic, by purchasing his useless commercial goods, he is paying sales tax which the government puts directly back into the hands of the needy. This is a tremendous leap of faulty rationalization, even for Chris, and he fails to elaborate on his shaky economic theories in any detail. If you thought he didn't understand money before, you ain't seen nothing yet.

On the advice of his father, Chris doesn't get a job because the tugboat gives him more money overall. However, Bob is somewhat wrong. For every dollar made in his income, two dollars would be removed from his tugboat but he'd probably still make a fair amount of money. In fact, he'd make more money overall if he just ditched his tugboat and actually got a job.

In the father call, Chris claims that his disability check is "a stepping-stone in the right direction of [him] moving out". Clearly, Chris doesn't believe wasting his disability check on video games and porn will somehow aid in his moving out. He is well aware that he will inherit his family's home and that he will never need to work, and he plans to do both. In other words, Chris plans to keep getting his tugboat for the rest of his life.

Rough calculations and estimations say that if Chris lives into his 80s, given reasonable "cost of living" increases to his tugboat annually, he will receive roughly $900,000 to $1,000,000 over his lifetime (In this day and age however, that's chump change and he'd amass a larger fortune if he simply got off his ass and got a career). However, it's extremely unlikely that his fat ass will live anywhere near that long.

See also

The CWC-tionary

Relationships: Attraction Location | Boyfriend-free girl | Darling | Dating education | Friend Zone | Gal-pal | Heart Level | Homos | Infinitely-High Boyfriend-Factor | Love Quest | Noviophobia | SLGBTQ | Sweetheart | Sweetheart from the Ground-Up

Sex: China | Comeuppance | Duck | JULAY | Mass debating | Negligent | Pedofork | Pickle | Recycling | Soul Bonding | Virgin with rage | Virginia is for Virgins | Women's rights

Himself: Biological clock | Butt garments | Captain's Log | Christian Love Day | DIRTY, CRAPPED BRIEFS | Fuzzy-Wuzzies & Prickly-Wicklies | Honest Content | I'LL BREAK YOU DEAD | Monthly tugboat | Muscle bra | Random-access humor | Saga | Scale of Respect | Tomgirl |

Stressors: 4-cent_garbage | GOPony | HEXBox | JERKS | Jerkops | Kick the Autistic | Manajerks | Naïve | Niggos | Pmurt | Private Villa of Corrupted Citizens | Slow-in-the-minds | Tobacky

Fantasies: Curse-ye-ha-me-ha | Dimension | Fangs | Godjesus | Iron Curtain | OC | Un-clit

Comics: Anchuent Prophecy | Da Update | Electric Hedgehog Pokemon | Nombie-zazis | Parody | Rosechu | Sonichu | Sub-Episodes | Sweetbolt


See also: Chris and English | List of phrases Chris copied from media

This user heard from a friend that there are certain rules by the Social Security Administration, that by accepting the monthly tugboat you are not supposed to amass asset in excess of $2000 (exact rules I don't know - he's the paralegal who used to deal with social security issues). Regardless, he assured me that unless Chris have proof of being disabled for work, he is very eligible for fraud charges. Can we report him to the SSA?

US Social Security Administration - www.ssa.gov 1470 Pantops Mountain Place, Charlottesville - (434) 295-1144 (Office reopens on 6th of July, I heard)