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What I Saw At The Social Security Office
Self | 16 Mar 2012 | Relictele

Posted on 03/16/2012 8:32:28 AM PDT by relictele

A state DMV office is the stock-standard exemplar of government bureaucracy, sloth and outright hostility but I recently had occasion to visit a Social Security office. At the risk of stating the bleeding obvious, the Feds make the states look like amateurs.

But government in all its forms – particularly their indefatigable Fagin-like clawing at small coins – was on proud display even before I entered the hallowed halls of Social Security. I used on-street parking and fed the meter a few quarters. At one point it jammed, which caused the yellow violation flag to appear. After a bit of man-against-meter Greco-Roman wrestling it complied and I received 75 cents’ worth of parking for the $1.50 in quarters I supplied.

It just so happened that a meter maid was walking by. I nearly asked her about my situation but knew there would be a strong possibility of a refund only being granted after posting a third-class letter to somewhere in the US Minor Outlying Islands and awaiting the results of a six-week forensic investigation by the Department of Coin Rolling. Besides, she was too busy slipping a parking ticket under the wiper of a car with a blue handicapped placard prominently displayed on the dashboard.

On to the Social Security office, located somewhat poetically in the basement. Upon entry you are confronted with a computer sign-in kiosk – and a gung-ho security guard seated behind a desk. ‘There are five choices on the screen,’ he announced. ‘Pick one and take your number from the printer.’ Alas, no option for ‘Scrap this bankrupt, convoluted train wreck of a Ponzi scheme.’ Instead of waiting for the choice to be made, he soldiered on with his speech. ‘No guns, knives, sharp objects? Put your cellphone on vibrate!’ My two-inch penknife was still attached to my keyring, but I elected to stage perhaps the smallest act of rebellion in history by opting not to disclose this fact.

Of three service windows, only one – that’s 1/3 of available resources for those scoring at home – was in use. The others literally had window blinds drawn closed. Already a metaphor-rich environment, then. About half a dozen souls were scattered across the waiting area and it looked like a casting call for a film adaptation of a Stephen King novel. Taking pride of place was AC/DC Man – short hair, mustache and glasses, wearing a black t-shirt bearing the band’s logo. To be fair, he’d hung on to his black-and-turquoise, zebra-print, high-top basketball shoes long enough (two decades plus) for them to be ‘vintage’ rather than merely out of date. He seemed perplexed by the guard’s speech and was positively at sea where the take-a-number system was concerned. He eventually found a chair and within 30 seconds began snoring loudly despite being seated upright. Awakened by his own racket, he looked around and remarked to a woman two seats away: ‘I went to bed at 2:30 and got up at 3:30. That ain’t a good combination! But if it’s your birthday what else are ya supposed to do?’ The b-word hung in the air. We are all conditioned to say Happy Birthday but the sad spectacle of a 55 year old man fishing for a birthday greeting was too pathetic for words and so the silence remained – except for the heavy breathing through his nose which persisted even now that he was awake. And then his phone rang loudly with one of those frantic Keystone Kops tones. The guard frowned.

The Social Security office had the institutional beige walls and tile floor with three photos of the Great Men – President Obama and two others (presumably Social Security figures) affixed to the wall albeit in a wholly unnecessary stair-step arrangement, lest we forget who the top dog is. Placards and posters featuring Star Trek’s George Takei wearing a faux-Starfleet uniform (braided sleeves but no logos of course – Uncle Sam doesn’t do royalties) were everywhere – on the walls, on a table. Smiling George encouraged us to ‘Boldly Go’ (geddit?) to the Social Security web site rather than bother them in person. It was the kind of advertising campaign that could only have come from the mind of government – because what could be more persuasive than a gay Japanese-American actor from a television series that premiered nearly half a century before? George was joined, inexplicably, by Patty Duke on some of the placards. Patty never appeared on Star Trek (considering she was starring twice over in her own Patty Duke Show at the time) but she wore her velour top with the gold braid just the same.

Back to the ‘action’ at the window where a couple (?) were pleading their case. Hers was an ensemble featuring a tanktop that gave us a playful glimpse of amateur tattoos on the shoulder blades, visible bra straps and acid wash denim. His was a gray t-shirt, olive drab clamdiggers, and mid-calf black socks combination with provocative flashes of fish belly white legs. Hers was a random bird’s nest of hair in a shade of blonde not found in nature. His was a ponytail that reached his waist. I dubbed him Bipolar Bill.

I can only do justice to their farcical conversation with the window clerk by quoting it verbatim:

He: ‘Yes ma’am. I have a mental health problem known as bipolar disorder. I have been getting SSI but it was being sent to a responsible party and I need to change the person receiving it.’

(Inaudible response from window clerk)

Her phone began ringing. More Keystone Kops soundtrack. The guard frowned some more.

He: ‘I need to change it to her (gesturing to his companion). Is the next check going out on the first of the month? The person it has been going to is in some trouble with the law so I don’t want it going there anymore.’

The clerk withdrew and after a slight delay, the door opened. This was a case for the SSI sleuths! They are experts at changing mailing addresses, but not so good at detecting bogus claims of mental illness. Ah, well, it got the line moving again.

Eventually my number was called but not before AC/DC Man strode to the window. Confused by my challenge to his place, he animatedly told the clerk ‘She had A209, I have A210!’ My own ticket was C389, but I was next in terms of arrival time and that was the ticket she called. This nonsensical system is also used at the state DMV, and it’s another frightening look inside the bureaucratic mind. They attempt to mask the true length of the queue, apparently, by splitting it. Sequential numbers – infinite and understood by everyone since grade school, even AC/DC Man and Bipolar Bill, are replaced by a pointless letters-and-numbers scheme of A112, B483, C235, D549 etc.

At last I could submit my simple (?) request for a replacement Social Security card. Here again was the flower of bureaucracy. I had completed my application electronically (using their PDF file) but the clerk took this hard copy of an electronically completed form…and began typing my information into her computer. Hello? What about the web site advertised on every vertical surface of the waiting room? What about Boldly Going? What about George and Patty and their gold braids? Wouldn’t giving the citizen the ability to enter his information directly be a much more efficient use of the site, even if identification documents needed to be presented in person later? After taking 10 minutes to type in nothing more than a name, an address, a birth date, a passport number and the names of two parents, the clerk disappeared and returned with a printout. Whew, that was close. I thought someone might get the idea to place a laser printer (small, quiet and fast these days) on her desk where it might be easily reached.

After the guard’s friendly greeting, it was time for more trust, dignity and respect from our government. ‘Read and confirm all that under penalty of perjury. If you attempt to falsify information or defraud Social Security you can be prosecuted in federal court.’ It just makes you swell with red, white and blue patriotic pride, doesn’t it?

They say Americans don’t do irony but any sane person interacting with the US Government will develop the ability rather quickly. The irony of most of us being forced into a system at or near birth without having a say in the decision. The irony of being threatened while attempting to voluntarily comply with the system. The irony of converting electronic data to paper only to watch it converted back to electronic data. The irony of someone 'disabled' enough to require a responsible party but magically able to shed the disability on command in order to change the mailing address of the check when the responsible party turns irresponsible. The irony of a system that functions by confiscating a productive individual’s income before it ever reaches that individual only to have it lavished upon the likes of Bipolar Bill and AC/DC Man: able-bodied but made feeble-minded by drunkenness, sloth, ignorance, low expectation, and a government quite eager to perpetuate this dysfunctional symbiosis in order to amass votes and power.

The final irony: I already have a perfectly good Social Security card. I’ve held onto the same one since I first received it and it features the fourth-grade cursive version of my signature. To protect it (i.e. to comply) I once had it laminated. But the state DMV refuses to accept a laminated card, no doubt because it might require them to scan or photocopy it more than once in order to obtain an image. And so I had to comply in order to comply.


TOPICS: Government; Humor
KEYWORDS: socialsecurity; vanity
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1 posted on 03/16/2012 8:32:31 AM PDT by relictele
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To: relictele
But the state DMV refuses to accept a laminated card

Of course they would.

Doesn't it say right there, "Not to be used for identification purposes"?

ML/NJ

2 posted on 03/16/2012 8:41:17 AM PDT by ml/nj
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To: relictele

Very well written. And spot on.

Such a shame, the state of our country.


3 posted on 03/16/2012 8:41:57 AM PDT by Lucky9teen (Peace is that brief glorious moment in history when everybody stands around reloading.~Thomas Jeffer)
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To: relictele

This is a brilliant rant. And very parallel to the experience I had in a Social Security office years ago trying to get my young daughter her SSN, which had not been provided when she was born.

}:-)4


4 posted on 03/16/2012 8:46:14 AM PDT by Moose4 ("Oderint dum metuant" -- "Let them hate, as long as they fear." (Lucius Accius, c. 130 BC))
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To: relictele

I had to go through two security checkpoints. Then, they killed me. Really....I’m dead now. I went back to try and claim “death” as a disability, but they said they couldn’t do that as dead people can work for the social security administration. I should’ve worn a diaper.


5 posted on 03/16/2012 8:46:22 AM PDT by blueunicorn6 ("A crack shot and a good dancer")
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To: relictele

If Barack Obama walked into that Social Security office and asked for a duplicate of his SS card would their response correctly be “which one”?


6 posted on 03/16/2012 8:47:02 AM PDT by House Atreides
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To: relictele

I retired in February. I am receiving pensions from three Fortune 100 companies for whom I have worked over the 43 years I have been employed. I notified SS first and then the three employers. I got my first monthly payment(direct deposited to my checking account as I requested) from all three companies in March. My first SS payment is supposed to be deposited in April but, they may need to mail me a check if they can’t work out the enormous difficulties of direct deposit by then.

res ipsa loquitor


7 posted on 03/16/2012 8:48:07 AM PDT by muir_redwoods (No wonder this administration favors abortion; everything they have done is an abortion)
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To: relictele

Had similar expieriences in CA only there war no caucasians anywhere in sight and the only words in english I heard came from the armed gaurd in there room. Of the other 6 or 7 languages being spoken, I did recognize spanish but the eastern european and asian languages were only vaguely familiar.


8 posted on 03/16/2012 8:48:55 AM PDT by Breto (The Establishment party is killing our country)
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To: relictele

Very nice writing about a sad, scary situation.


9 posted on 03/16/2012 8:49:13 AM PDT by SuzyQue
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To: muir_redwoods

I receive SS as of last year. No problem getting direct deposit, however when it is coming is anyone’s guess. From the 3-23 of the month.
You would think that these checks are just spit out by computer and wired on the same day each month.
oh, well


10 posted on 03/16/2012 8:52:17 AM PDT by svcw (CLEAN WATER & Education http://www.longlostsis.com/PI/MayanHelp2012.html)
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To: relictele

Hilarious relictele!


11 posted on 03/16/2012 8:56:20 AM PDT by Mountain Mary ("This is OUR country and WE will decide"... Mark Levin)
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To: relictele
I had the same problem....old card I'd laminated and needed another one. Lines long as hell. Losers, losers and more losers. Not a grey hair old guy like me anywhere.

In line for hours viewing sluts in PJ bottoms and tube tops with babies, no baby daddy, looking for SSI, fat-asses in too-short T's and bermuda pants in a rented wheelchairs looking for SSDI.

Tons and tons of old parent foreigners accompanied presumably by their newly immigrated anchor-children looking to sign them up for SS (apparently there are reciprocal agreements wherein payment of 1 rial,rupee, or squashbug per week translates to a bonafide SS payment and full credit).

My number finally called. Met at the door by some woman who identified herself as Mr. TokenSSAJob's 'Facilitator'.... I was escorted behind the circus tent and introduced to Mr. TokenSSAJob himself. blind as a bat sitting at a keyboard and computer screen. Ms. Facilitator READ each line of the application to him as he magically typed everything and then a USA ADA representative danced out of a corner, shook some chicken bones and threw them on the table and blessed the accomplishment.

I never got the card...had to repeat the whole thing again. After much convincing of the incredulous lady I got to plead to, finally got another one a month later.

When I applied for my SS this time, thankfully I did it online and actually got hold of some dear lady somewhere in the country who actually knew what she was doing.

12 posted on 03/16/2012 8:57:21 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: relictele
I had a completely different experience with the SS Administration. Did the paperwork on line via the SS web site. A couple weeks later, I received a telephone call from a pleasant young lady in the Fairfax VA SS office suggesting that it would be financially better for me to delay my date of payment start by 3 months to January 2012 and she explained why. I agreed and she changed it on the spot. The first direct deposit showed up exactly when it should have.

I suspect there's a huge variation in quality of service between various SS offices and their typical clientele.

13 posted on 03/16/2012 8:57:48 AM PDT by JackOfVA
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To: JackOfVA

The ones you see in person are mostly idiots and token hires. The smart ones who know about computers and actually know there job handle the online stuff.


14 posted on 03/16/2012 9:00:28 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: relictele

Hate to say it, but, where I live, the Tax Office and DMV are models of efficiency.

I’m not using a bit of sarcasm here. They really are.

For instance, if they keep you waiting more than 15 minutes in the DMV, your license fee is waived. Really.

Forsyth County, Georgia DMV: fast, efficient, polite. Its like going to a Chick-fil-A!


15 posted on 03/16/2012 9:06:11 AM PDT by Little Ray (FOR the best Conservative in the Primary; AGAINST Obama in the General.)
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To: relictele
A state DMV office is the stock-standard exemplar of government bureaucracy, sloth and outright hostility...

My last couple of visits to the NJDMV were surprisingly quick and relatively painless. I was treated with courtesy by folks acting in a professional manner, and with no hint of hostility.

Of course, I had read all the requirements and come prepared with the pertinent items ready for processing. That might make a difference!

16 posted on 03/16/2012 9:10:43 AM PDT by JimRed (Excising a cancer before it kills us waters the Tree of Liberty! TERM LIMITS, NOW AND FOREVER!)
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To: relictele
The DMV may still be the worst — or maybe they just have the advantage of dumber laws to work with.

I purchased a vehicle out of state for which I received the title, sales receipt, safety inspection report, and insurance card. Since I had to work during the hours the DMV was open I sent a family member to drop off the forms I had mailed to me (You can't get the vehicle registration form on line even though you can get the application for a temporary dealer's license and the permit to operate a parking facility) And pick up the temporary plates so I can get the truck and drive it 60 miles to have the official state sniffer shoved up the tailpipe and go through the process all over again.

After three trips to the DMV in one day including one to get a copy of my license and an article of mail They said I had to appear in person and could not have a representative get the plates. I have to simply appear and then, and only then, will they hand over the plates. I also need to have the thing towed over the state line because I need to go through a state that does not recognize temporary plates.

I'm starting to think there is somebody behind a desk somewhere that just thinks up the most ridiculous hoops to make people jump through to comply with arcane and silly regulations.

Paging Mr. Orwell...

17 posted on 03/16/2012 9:10:48 AM PDT by Cowman (How can the IRS seize property without a warrant if the 4th amendment still stands?)
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To: relictele

Sad but well done. I expected the whole affair would have been much worse.

Social Security, in their shining new offices here, is another gubment place I avoid like the plague. I did have a client in the same office building where the local IRS facilities are located. Between the smoking refugees out in the parking garage and the spectacle of lunch and quitting time, which seems to begin just about any time after lunch, you get a good view of the fine civil servants who are getting to look into the most private areas of your life and the keys to the security of your financial present and future. Chilling does not begin to come close to the fear it strikes in me to witness this spectacle, parade of miscreants and equal opportunity employment poster people.


18 posted on 03/16/2012 9:15:47 AM PDT by Sequoyah101 (Half the people are below average.)
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To: relictele
I'll see your lunacy and raise you one. This is the honest truth:

I took my 18-year-old son in to the Minnesota DMV to get him a state ID card. Not a license, just a state ID so he could get a job. After an interminable wait, I was finally summoned to a window where a surly clerk GUARDED BY AN ARMED OFFICER demanded two forms of ID. I soon found out that the guard served another purpose: he acted as an interpreter. The clerk could not speak a word of English.

So there I stood, forced to prove the citizenship of my native-born son before a woman who was likely in the country illegally. Oh, and the "guard" was a Somali.

To top it off, my papers were not in order and my son was not able to get the ID card.

19 posted on 03/16/2012 9:16:59 AM PDT by IronJack (=)
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To: relictele

bfl


20 posted on 03/16/2012 9:24:15 AM PDT by Skooz (Gabba Gabba we accept you we accept you one of us Gabba Gabba we accept you we accept you one of us)
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