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Hispanics Social Security Fraud In US

[media=https://youtu.be/VpwXswyt-zg]

It's good to see this start coming out, I've noticed it for a while with people making absurd claims that hispanics are the healthiest and long lived group in the United States. It is clearly a coincidence then that a big chunk of their community is illegally in the US, are unhealthy as it gets, with AIDS, Hepititus and STDs common, stunted growth, and alot of the states they traditionally are attracted to like Florida and New York has high rates of Social Security fraud and identity theft.

You want to know why they are considered healthier? Because when they are senile or dead, someone else hijacks their social security number and uses it, a generation younger, and they know while that may pass muster for online forms, it doesn't slide in hospitals where they can quickly adduce you are not the age you are claiming to be.

So we end up with a bunch of immortals on paper walking around. It's common sense if you want to move up from doing mere under the table work, you need to be in the system, and that's the only option illegals have access to.

I'm waiting for one so stupid they buy the identity of a 110 year old when they are 40 and try to ride that identity out. A auditor will eventually pick up on that.
You are really trying hard to be that right wing cliche.
Crack down and assume nobody deserves a thing if they didn't prove it. Get cracking or they start slacking! Slavery doesn't happen by itself.
Diotrephes · 70-79, M
@Motzu It should be fairly simple to prevent Social Security fraud. Just fingerprint everyone.
@Diotrephes You would need finger print scanners able to meet FBI standards for electronic fingerprints at any business that prints checks, and not everyone has finger prints and so the courts would mandate alternatives, and some religion or cult will demand a similar exception (mark of the beast).

What you would end up with is a 2-4 grace period for banks and check cashing institutes to adapt to the law, and considerable hiccups in the Mennonite Community (mostly ex Amish people new to technology) confused and upset why the government is scanning them, and then also a tax for upkeep of all the databases, including security from hackers, and a call center for questions.

Then you will have the inevitable complaints that half the businesses servers are on Windows XP and not on Windows 11, and can't update to some software update the government suddenly thrusted upon them, that we gotta have multiple languages supported online when registering your fingerprints because some recently retured cambodian hill woman doesn't understand what is being said, natural disasters knocking out half the servers on the west coast, etc.

It will take a decade for everything to run simply, and will cost 30x the amount you would think it would. And 10% of that would be corruption, with some older democratic woman who is overweight being lead out in handcuffs because she figured out how to funnel funds out of the system for her own personal use, and she pleads innocent and will insist on collecting a paycheck until proven innocent at her trial.
Diotrephes · 70-79, M
@Motzu If people refuse to comply, then exclude them from the system. No appeals, no judicial reviews, no exemptions of any kind.
@Diotrephes judicial branch doesn't remotely work that way.
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