the only person i see deeming bands "cool" or "uncool" is Elphenor tho
is this just one big exercise in talking to yerself? :beatup: |
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you should get very discounted health insurance/free through the healthcare exchange. or what about medicaid? try http://www.myflorida.com/accessflorida/ |
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thanks reprise. |
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i don't man. i just did the assessment and that's what i got.
am i wrong? |
I don't know about Florida but here you can live with your parents and still get Medicaid if your parents aren't considering themselves part of your "household " in this instance, meaning they won't pay for your doctor visits and medicines. Same with food stamps.
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I'd try it again. You're essentially a household within a household.
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How many days late is too late to wish you a happy birthday? roughly 30? great, then there is still plenty of time: happy belated birthday, ilp!
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My broke adult child lives with me and needs health insurance. Can he get it?
Yes, but there are complications Published: October 07, 2013 08:53 PM Q. My son lives in our yard in a broken-down RV. He’s been unable to find steady work for many years. His only income is from an occasional odd job. We claim him as a dependent on our taxes. How does this all work with the new health care law? A. Sadly I’ve gotten several inquiries like this recently – the 52-year-old woman who lives with her parents and has been unemployed for years; the 28-year-old woman who’s moved in with her mother while attending community college. For families in this situation, there’s sort of good news, but with some significant asterisks, according to experts on taxes and the health law that I consulted. It starts with tax filing status, which is very important because it’s the basis for handing out premium tax credits to buy insurance on your state’s Health Insurance Marketplace. Parents who support adult children over the age of 24 (or, for that matter, any relative), can list them as dependents on their tax return. It’s a category called “qualifying relative” and here are the, um, qualifications The adult child must be single, not disabled, not pregnant, and not have any dependent children. His or her gross income for 2014 must be no more than $3,950. The parent or parents must provide more than half the adult child’s support, including food, housing, health care, clothing, transportation, utilities, and entertainment. (The IRS provides a worksheet for figuring all this out.) If this is your situation, your adult child can purchase health insurance on the marketplace and possibly get a premium tax credit to lower the cost based on your total household income. You read that right. Even though you may be on Medicare and have no need for other insurance, your son’s marketplace financial help is based on the total Modified Adjusted Gross Income of everyone in the “tax filing unit,” aka your household. |
i s'pose it depends if u file as dependent or not, most importantly.
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what did yer baby get you?
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Shouldn't you be writing?
Something else. |
Picked up Kenny's remains (my dog). Holy shit. The closure is nice but I cried harder than I've cried since Saturday. You could probably hear me heaving from a mile away. But it feels really good to have him home.
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sry flobes
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Thanks, but I need to stress again how good it feels to have him (his ashes) here with me, home. This is ultimately a positive.
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god damnit globes
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Shut up, I'm not crying. You're crying!
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Awww :cry:
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no they don't claim me as a dependent. but, like you said, open enrollment is over so I have to wait for the end of the year to sign up for medicaid.
i will check out the aca thing. thnx again. |
So I saw Us opening night because I was so excited about it.
It was fine. Not scary at all. : / |
o damn, i forgot that premiered last night
i'm guessing you were big on Get Out? |
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