I just hope to live long enough to piss on Dick Cheney's grave even though I hate waiting in line...
I think the windfall provision act was written with regular working stiffs in mind, given that civil service pensions usually pay better than SS in general. As a fellow retiree, I'm just grateful for what I have. It's a pretty modest life, but nice. More people should have it so good.
True to some extent there, but I'd made some observations. In my "business" as a fed, you would get 55% of your high-three year's average pay after 30 years service. When I returned to CA to reconnect with fellow UC alums, some had spent years working for this or that county with closer to 80%, and there is general acknowledgement that CAL-PERS provided excesses state-wide. There is a general longstanding myth about federal wages on the one hand; I can't argue with the GOP adherents about pensions in the state here.
Am I complaining? Like you, I can say I have it "well enough." I can put money in savings almost every month. That wasn't the issue, really. For the Windfall Provision Act, there had been talk in recent years of overturning that. No hopes now. It seemed to me a punitive measure to simply discourage people who had chosen "public" careers. You may remember Elliot Richardson. He had written in WSJ in the late '80s an article entitled "Why Not the Best?" or something similar. It was in answer to the RR administration's general behavior regarding the public service. The darker side of those years was described by an organizational psychologist named Douglas LaBier, "Modern Madness: The Hidden Link between Work and Emotional Conflict." Some 20 or 30 pages were given to the Reagan years and its management of the agencies.
Civil Service retirement is good enough. I just think, if I'm under the threshold we've been discussing, that I should get the benefits of 15 years payroll taxes that anyone else would be granted together with an equivalent pension through their career or employment. As for the state and county friends, they were allowed to pay payroll taxes, and got both their government pension and their social security. Further, one jurisdiction -- say, San Bernardino County -- would deny SS participation for a policeman, while Riverside County next door would allow it.
As for Cheney. Certain 'crimes" have no statute of limitations. I say "99 years in the electric chair." Note the hypocrisy and subterfuge about this type of thing. Obama was determined not to pursue anything punitive, but to move on. Somewhere, after the 2008 election, someone described it as "mild magnanimity." Contrast that with Trump's behavior. Clinton did nothing wrong, even for mistakes overblown for their significance. We heard the "Lock her up" mantra all year. After the election, ol' Trumpie-boy finally says he won't do it -- not because he "can't," but because he's such a warm and wonderful fuckstick of a human being.
Here's a piece of drivel to peruse:
Comparing Trump and Obama "in common"
This little propaganda piece is supposed to get people in the mood to "settle in," "get along" and "go along." See? They're alike!