Thread: Dumaguete
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10-17-22 00:05 #648
Posts: 3049Originally Posted by Kuraku [View Original Post]
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10-15-22 21:53 #647
Posts: 5No nosy snitches in your life
Originally Posted by DCups [View Original Post]
I hope your neighbours filipina GF's and fucktoys don't squeal, regarding the weekly visit.
How open is your busty 22 year old filipina bombshell to threesomes?
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09-14-22 06:28 #646
Posts: 80Confirmed as described! I had to ask for what I wanted after "your massage is finished, sir, would you like some tea. " And of course there was an additional tariff, but considering there was not much else available, it was fine. The name on the door is Majikan Spa, and it is located in the Jabel Building on Flores Avenue, right next to J&J Hotelier.
Originally Posted by DCups [View Original Post]
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09-10-22 23:18 #645
Posts: 3049Originally Posted by Gern [View Original Post]
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09-10-22 12:31 #644
Posts: 80Any recent information or recommendations in Dumaguete?
I'll be stranded in Dumaguete for a few days next week, and I am wondering if anyone has any local contacts to recommend. I've read the forum, and done some additional research, so I know the pick'ns are slim. I've learned that there are a few massage parlors, but I will have to locate them and negotiate skillfully. I'll also have a look at the disco at WhyNot, but I understand that is all FL with no BF. Anyway, I am wondering whether anyone reading this forum might know someone who knows someone who can recommend someone. Feel free to PM if you wish. Thanks!
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06-26-22 23:15 #643
Posts: 3049Originally Posted by Sammon [View Original Post]
As luck would have it, I do have a half-Filipino son who is five who I support. I am in the process of getting his citizenship, passport and social security card from the USA Embassy in Manila. Finally got his Philippine Statistics Authority official birth certificate. It was easier to get my retirement visa approved. Anyway I visit my son regularly in Pampanga and he will come live with me and the new girlfriend in Valencia in the next year or two when his mom becomes OFW. If my new GF gets pregnant it is fine with me. More money from SSA and she will be happy. But she wants to finish her degree first which I help her with. Thanks, too, to Mr. Nice Guy. Cheers.
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06-26-22 15:24 #642
Posts: 807GC's, Visas & Immigration
Originally Posted by Sammon [View Original Post]
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06-25-22 11:47 #641
Posts: 3281Originally Posted by ExpatAmerican [View Original Post]
My suggestion for the cups is he needs to have a child to leave his assets when he dies. If he is successful in getting a green card for the child and the mother so be it.
Do not know the current rules and lag time. However he needs to find out once he has a child how many hoops he has to squeeze through. Because of sham marriages and fake DNA USA embassies have become smarter. First thing instead of wasting his sperm in AC, Subic, Cebu, Manila make the current GF pregnant. As he said he has never been married before and maybe he does not have any legal children. If so get busy. Most of us have been married and had children before the call of pussy all over the world enticed us to explore.
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06-25-22 02:38 #640
Posts: 6824And a bit more from the SSA.
https://www.ssa.gov/OACT/quickcalc/spouse.html
A spouse can choose to retire as early as age 62, but doing so may result in a benefit as little as 32.5 percent of the worker's primary insurance amount. A spousal benefit is reduced 25/36 of one percent for each month before normal retirement age, up to 36 months. If the number of months exceeds 36, then the benefit is further reduced 5/12 of one percent per month.
For a spouse who is not entitled to benefits on his or her own earnings record, this reduction factor is applied to the base spousal benefit, which is 50 percent of the worker's primary insurance amount. For example, if the worker's primary insurance amount is $1,600 and the worker's spouse chooses to begin receiving benefits 36 months before his or her normal retirement age, we first take 50 percent of $1,600 to get an $800 base spousal benefit. Then we compute the reduction factor, which is 36 times 25/36 of one percent, or 25 percent. Applying a 25 percent reduction to the $800 amount gives a spousal benefit of $600. Thus, in this case, the final spousal benefit is 37.5 percent of the primary insurance amount.
The penalty of a spouse (in this case, the missus) taking her benefit before age 65 is 25/36 (0. 69%) per month, and the penalty is permanent. I don't see anything in the SSA online that says you can take a benefit prior to age 62 (at least in the examples they give). In the OP's case, any child would be eligible for his / her benefit, but the missus might have to wait decades to be eligible for hers?
Is there an accountant in the house?
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06-24-22 23:50 #639
Posts: 6824Originally Posted by Dg8787 [View Original Post]
https://faq.ssa.gov/en-us/Topic/article/KA-02011
From the article:
If you have not worked or do not have enough Social Security credits to qualify for your own Social Security benefits, you may be able to receive spouses benefits.
To qualify for spouses benefits, you must be one of these:
At least 62 years of age.
Any age and caring for a child entitled to receive benefits on your spouses record and who is younger than age 16 or disabled.
Your full spouses benefit could be up to one-half the amount your spouse is entitled to receive at their full retirement age. If you choose to begin receiving spouses benefits before you reach full retirement age, your benefit amount will be permanently reduced.
You will receive your full spouses benefit amount if you wait until you reach full retirement age to begin receiving benefits. You will also receive the full amount if you are caring for a child entitled to receive benefits on your spouses record who is younger than age 16 or disabled.
If you do have enough credits to qualify for your own Social Security benefits and you apply for your own retirement benefits and for benefits as a spouse, we always pay your own benefits first. If your benefits as a spouse are higher than your own retirement benefits, you will get a combination of benefits equaling the higher spouse benefit.
Here is an example:
Mary Ann qualifies for a retirement benefit of $250 and a spouses benefit of $400. At her full retirement age, she will receive her own $250 retirement benefit, and we will add $150 from her spouses benefit, for a total of $400.
That might help regarding the new missus or child. However I can find nothing so far that would indicate the OP's claim that marrying would increase *his* benefit. There would be a separate benefit for the new spouse (starting at her age 62, or a penalized lesser amount if she wanted to receive it early), and also for any new children (to age 16).
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06-24-22 17:19 #638
Posts: 3256Originally Posted by ExpatAmerican [View Original Post]
Wife would not get any benefits until her retirement age and would have to be a US citizen abroad or reside in the US to obtain it.
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06-24-22 10:33 #637
Posts: 179Introducing Oral To a Virgin
Originally Posted by DCups [View Original Post]
(NOTE: there is no such thing as a "bad blow job"; some are just better than others.)
SS.
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06-24-22 09:51 #636
Posts: 3474Originally Posted by ExpatAmerican [View Original Post]
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06-24-22 08:27 #635
Posts: 173Originally Posted by DCups [View Original Post]
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06-23-22 08:31 #634
Posts: 355Originally Posted by DCups [View Original Post]