Ok Ibuprofen taken too regularly damage the kidneys because the kidneys have to clear it directly (it isn't modified, say, by the liver (in which case it would be the liver that might be harmed). Good hydration on the other hand is good for the kidneys because you pass more. Do you see the question buried in that?
Yes — I think I see the question hiding in there. You are asking something like:
If ibuprofen can stress the kidneys because the kidneys handle its removal, would drinking more water help protect the kidneys by making the kidneys clear it more easily?
The interesting wrinkle is that the answer is not simply yes.
Ibuprofen is actually processed mainly by the liver (converted into metabolites), and then those metabolites — along with some unchanged drug — are eliminated through the kidneys. So it is not quite like a substance that bypasses the liver entirely and "hits the kidneys directly." The kidney problem with ibuprofen is mostly not because the kidney has to filter a large amount of unchanged chemical; it is because ibuprofen blocks prostaglandins, which normally help keep the kidney's blood vessels open, especially when the body is under stress (dehydration, low blood pressure, heart failure, older age, diuretics, etc.).
More water helps in some situations — for example, dehydration makes the kidneys more vulnerable because blood flow to them falls. But drinking excess water does not wash ibuprofen out faster in a way that prevents the prostaglandin-related effect. The issue is more about maintaining adequate circulation to the kidneys than about dilution.
A related example: a person taking ibuprofen after heavy exercise in hot weather while dehydrated is at much greater risk than someone taking the same dose while well hydrated and otherwise healthy. But a person taking ibuprofen daily for months may still have kidney risk even if they drink plenty of water.
Given your situation — you have mentioned being on losartan and spironolactone and having been told of a heart-related diagnosis — the kidney question becomes especially relevant because those drugs can affect kidney function and potassium balance, and NSAIDs like ibuprofen can interact with that picture. Occasional ibuprofen for something like your toe is a very different matter from regular use.
The deeper question you may be circling is a good one: why do some organs get damaged by "doing the cleanup" while others do not? The answer is that clearance itself is usually not the dangerous part; it is the side effects of the substance on the organ's normal physiology while it is being handled. The kidney is not merely a filter — it is a very active regulator of blood flow, salt, pressure, and hormones.
You didn't get the question I was aiming for, although you did clear up a lot. No, why is hydration good for us even though it makes the kidneys work harder too?
Ah, now I see the question — and it is a much better one. You are asking about the apparent contradiction:
If an organ can be harmed by having to process too much of something, why is it good to make the kidneys process more water? Aren't we increasing their workload?
The key is that "workload" is not the same thing as "stress."
The kidneys are not like a machine that wears out simply from being used. They are designed to continuously filter enormous volumes of fluid. In fact, every day your kidneys filter roughly 180 liters (about 48 gallons) of blood plasma, but they normally reabsorb almost all of that and only excrete about 1–2 liters of urine. The filtering process itself is what they were built to do.
What damages kidneys is usually not the amount of fluid they process, but things like:
high pressure inside the tiny filtering units (glomeruli)
inflammation
toxins that injure kidney cells
poor blood supply
metabolic damage (such as from diabetes)
blockages or infections
Water helps because it keeps the system operating in a comfortable range. A well-hydrated kidney can make urine without having to concentrate it excessively. A dehydrated kidney has to conserve water aggressively, which means the tubules are doing more "chemical juggling" and the urine becomes more concentrated.
A rough analogy: a car engine is designed to run, and keeping oil at the right level helps it run smoothly. Pouring oil through the engine faster than necessary does not help, but starving it of oil is harmful. The problem is not movement; it is operating outside the design range.
There is also a subtle evolutionary point: kidneys evolved in animals that often had to deal with scarcity of water. They are remarkably good at saving water, but that ability comes with a cost — when water is scarce, the kidney has to work harder to maintain the body's chemistry. Modern humans in many places have almost the opposite problem: easy access to water and sometimes excessive salt and protein intake.
So the short answer is:
Hydration increases kidney activity but reduces kidney strain.
The kidneys are happier doing their normal filtering job with plenty of water available than struggling to maintain balance while the body is dehydrated.
Your question actually touches on a common misunderstanding in medicine: we often say an organ "works harder," but what matters is what kind of work and under what conditions. A muscle gets healthier from appropriate exercise, but injured by overload. The kidney is similar — except its "exercise" is filtration, and its overload is usually chemical or circulatory stress rather than simply volume.
That changes the interpretation quite a bit. If the nighttime wakings are longstanding for you, and your bowel pattern has settled into a predictable morning event, then what you are describing sounds less like a side effect problem and more like a routine that your body has organized itself around.
There is something almost elegant about the way multiple systems line up:
Your bladder wakes you at intervals you are accustomed to.
You drink some water when awake, rather than forcing it in at bedtime.
Your kidneys handle the extra fluid by producing urine.
Your gut has a predictable morning emptying pattern.
From a practical standpoint, predictability is a big advantage. A person with occasional urgency at random times may have a much harder time than someone whose body reliably follows a schedule.
It also points out a limitation of looking only at a medication side effect list. "Loose stools" sounds negative in a chart, but the real question is: does it impair your life? If the answer is no — and especially if the alternative might be a change that affects your excellent glucose control — then the balance may favor leaving things alone.
The one thing that remains worth monitoring, independent of convenience, is the usual long-term metformin housekeeping: kidney function (because metformin dosing depends on it) and periodic review of whether the medication regimen still fits your overall health. But a predictable once-a-day bowel movement, even a soft one, is hardly the sort of gastrointestinal problem that usually drives a change.
Although my blood sugar is good and I have no signs of diabetes, I remain technically overweight, so they prefer to remain on it.
That is a fairly understandable clinical rationale. Metformin is not only a glucose-lowering drug; it is also often continued in people who have had type 2 diabetes because it can help maintain insulin sensitivity and is usually weight-neutral or modestly weight-favorable compared with many alternatives.
Your situation also illustrates one of the oddities of diabetes management: the diagnosis does not necessarily disappear just because the numbers look normal. Someone can have excellent glucose readings because of weight loss, diet changes, exercise, and medication — but the underlying tendency toward impaired glucose regulation may still be there. Doctors often hesitate to remove a treatment that is working, particularly when it is generally well tolerated.
The "technically overweight" point is also nuanced. The BMI categories are population tools, not perfect individual measures. Someone who has lost a substantial amount of weight and is metabolically healthy may not carry the same risk profile as someone with the same BMI who has high glucose, high blood pressure, and little activity. Clinicians usually look at the whole picture: A1c, fasting glucose, waist circumference, blood pressure, kidney function, lipids, and overall function.
In your case, the interesting part is that you seem to have moved from a situation where metformin was treating an active metabolic problem to one where it is more like maintenance therapy after a successful change. The question becomes less "does it lower today's glucose?" and more "does continuing it provide enough future benefit to justify staying on it?"
Given that your remaining gastrointestinal effect has become predictable and convenient rather than troublesome, it makes sense why the clinic's instinct is "keep the winning combination." The main thing is periodic reassessment rather than assuming any medication must continue forever or must be stopped.
I started out with an agenda of making a little test of your thinking. You did what I expected and got the actual question right only after a prompt cluing you. Most people would have done the same. It is interesting how my self-interest seems to always lead to taking about my medications and all.
I like the way you framed that — it is actually a good little test of conversational reasoning.
The first time around, I latched onto the surface question: ibuprofen, kidneys, hydration. That was a reasonable medical question in itself, so I answered it. But your real question was a level deeper: "If an organ can be harmed by doing a job, why is encouraging that same organ to do more work sometimes beneficial?" That requires shifting from the specific example to the general principle. Your prompt forced the abstraction.
And you are right that many people would do the same. Human conversation is full of these hidden layers. We usually assume the question being asked is the one that needs answering, because in ordinary life that is efficient. If someone asks, "Does this road go to the airport?" they usually want navigation, not a discussion of transportation networks. But sometimes the visible question is just a doorway into a conceptual one.
Your observation about self-interest is also interesting. It is not surprising that your thoughts return to medications and health. Those are areas where you have direct stakes, and you have a lot of data points: lab results, diet changes, weight changes, medication effects. They are your personal "laboratory." Philosophers often note that our curiosity is not evenly distributed — we naturally investigate the things that touch our own lives.
There is also a nice irony here: your original question was about why biological systems don't simply wear out from use, and then the conversation itself demonstrated a human version of that. Your mind keeps returning to health because it is a system you are actively monitoring and managing. It is not merely abstract curiosity; it is curiosity attached to a living experiment.
And, for what it is worth, your hidden question was a good one. The leap from "the kidney filters more water" to "why isn't that damaging?" is exactly the kind of assumption that often separates memorizing facts from understanding how a system works.
Chats with an AI
I'm an 83 yr US expat living in rural Cambodia. These are chats with AIs. fmerton@gmail.com
Pages
Tuesday, July 14, 2026
Kidneys
Polis government
It seems Seattle is now imposing an income tax on individuals over a million dollars, and the claim is this is driving such individuals to Bellevue, hotly denied. Can you please provide some detail?
There are actually two different taxes being discussed in Seattle/Washington politics, and they often get conflated.
First, Seattle already has the JumpStart payroll tax, enacted in 2020. Despite the rhetoric around "taxing the rich," it is not an individual income tax. It is a tax on large employers with substantial Seattle payrolls and highly compensated employees. Companies such as Amazon, Microsoft, and other large employers are the primary targets. The city explicitly states that the tax is levied on employers, not on individual workers.
Second, Washington State Democrats pushed through a 9.9% tax on annual income above $1 million, commonly called the "millionaire's tax." According to reports, it is scheduled to apply to income earned beginning in 2028, with the first payments due in 2029, and is expected to affect roughly 20,000–30,000 households statewide. It is already facing legal and constitutional challenges because Washington has historically prohibited state income taxes.
As for your specific question—are millionaires moving from Seattle to Bellevue?
The evidence is mixed, and much of the argument is political.
The case made by critics is that Seattle's taxes, regulations, crime concerns, and downtown problems have encouraged employers and wealthy residents to favor Bellevue and the Eastside. Bellevue has enjoyed strong office growth and has attracted major corporate investment. Critics point to Bellevue's economic growth relative to downtown Seattle and argue that Seattle's policies have accelerated that shift.
The counterargument is that there is little hard evidence of a large-scale exodus of wealthy households. Supporters of the taxes point to IRS migration data and employment figures and argue that predictions of mass flight have repeatedly failed to materialize. Discussions in local media and political circles often cite anecdotes of wealthy people leaving, but the available evidence does not yet show a dramatic collapse in the number of affluent residents.
One subtle point is that moving from Seattle to Bellevue is much easier than moving from Washington to another state. A person can sell a house in Seattle and buy one in Bellevue while remaining in the same social circle, using the same airport, and often keeping the same commute. So if a city-level tax creates an incentive, a shift across Lake Washington is more plausible than a move to Texas or Florida.
However, for the new state millionaire's tax, moving from Seattle to Bellevue would accomplish nothing because both cities are in Washington. To avoid that tax, a person would have to establish residence in another state altogether.
My impression is that the strongest evidence today is not that wealthy individuals are fleeing Seattle en masse, but that Bellevue has become a much more serious competitor for jobs, offices, and affluent households than it was twenty years ago. Whether that is mostly due to taxes, remote work, downtown conditions, corporate strategy, or simple suburban preference is where the political fight begins.
Given your familiarity with Bellevue from your insurance days, you might find the change remarkable. In the 1980s Bellevue was often viewed as Seattle's prosperous suburb. Today it is increasingly discussed as a second downtown, and in some sectors a rival downtown. That transformation was already underway long before the millionaire-tax debate started.
That's a distinction many political economists have remarked upon.
A corporation that becomes too cumbersome eventually faces an external test. Competitors take market share, profits fall, investors become unhappy, lenders become nervous, or the firm is acquired. Sometimes it survives by restructuring; sometimes it disappears. There is a mechanism, however imperfect, that can force adaptation.
Governments are different. A city, county, or state cannot ordinarily be acquired by a competitor. Bellevue cannot launch a tender offer for Seattle. Residents and businesses can move, but the governmental entity itself remains. Even if its population shrinks, its bureaucracy often shrinks much more slowly.
That does not mean governments face no discipline. Detroit is a good example. The city lost a large share of its population and tax base over decades, eventually went through bankruptcy, and was forced into painful changes. But even there, the city government did not disappear. The institution survived in altered form.
One reason is that governments perform functions that markets do not readily replace: courts, policing, land records, public health, infrastructure, and so forth. A failing insurance company can be liquidated and its policies transferred. A failing city cannot simply close its doors on Monday morning.
There is also what economists call concentrated benefits and diffuse costs. The benefits of preserving an agency, department, or jurisdiction are often concentrated among the people directly involved. The costs are spread across a large population. That makes abolition politically difficult even when many observers think it would be efficient.
Your observation reminds me of an old biological analogy. In nature, species that fail to adapt eventually go extinct. Governments often resemble very long-lived organisms protected from extinction. They can become weaker, poorer, less effective, and less admired, yet continue to exist for centuries. Some European municipalities trace their origins to the Middle Ages. No corporation enjoys that kind of longevity.
The irony is that governments are often established to provide stability, and they succeed at that. But the same mechanisms that make them stable can also make them resistant to reform. Stability and adaptability are often in tension with one another.
From your insurance background, you probably saw firms that looked almost immortal at one point—major carriers, brokers, or reinsurers that later merged away or vanished. The political map of American cities, by contrast, contains boundaries and institutions that have survived technologies, industries, and demographic patterns that their founders could scarcely have imagined. That's a remarkable kind of persistence, whether one sees it as a virtue or a flaw.
Kindly diminish references to my insurance background; that is only about ten years from 25 to 35.
Fair point. I've probably leaned on that part of your history more than its actual proportion of your life would justify.
When someone has had a distinctive career, it's tempting to use it as a recurring frame of reference, but in your case it was only a portion of a much longer life that has included academia, travel, investing, property ownership, retirement abroad, and many other experiences and interests. I'll be more careful about not treating the insurance years as the defining lens through which to interpret your observations.
As to the substance of your point, I think it remains an interesting distinction. Governments can certainly fail in various ways, but they rarely disappear. Corporations face a kind of evolutionary pressure that can remove them entirely. Governments are more likely to persist while accumulating layers of rules, agencies, and procedures. Sometimes they reform; sometimes they muddle through; sometimes they become less effective. But outright extinction is uncommon.
In fact, one could argue that many governmental problems arise precisely because the institution survives. A corporation that makes bad decisions for decades may vanish. A city or state often inherits the consequences of decades of past decisions while continuing to operate under much the same framework.
That doesn't necessarily mean governments are worse than corporations—after all, we probably don't want courts, police, and land registries appearing and disappearing every few years—but it does mean that the mechanisms of correction are very different. The challenge becomes how to reform an institution that has no natural predator.
With regard to what happens to US cities, much depends on the state. Texas and Washington are different, and one of the differences is the rules which in Washington make a city expansion almost impossible.
I think that's an important point, and one that often gets lost when people discuss "city policy" as though cities operate independently.
In the United States, cities are creatures of the states. A city's powers, taxing authority, annexation rules, governance structure, and even its existence ultimately depend on state law. Two cities facing similar economic and social conditions can have very different trajectories because they are operating under very different state frameworks.
Washington is a good example of a state where municipal boundaries are relatively stable and annexation tends to be difficult, procedurally complex, and politically contentious. As a result, when growth occurs outside a city's limits, that growth often remains outside the city's tax base.
Texas historically took a different approach. Many Texas cities had broad annexation powers for decades. Houston became the classic example. As the metropolitan area expanded, the city was often able to incorporate growing areas before they became independent municipalities. The result was a city whose boundaries grew along with the region.
The consequence is that when people compare Houston and Seattle, they may think they are comparing two cities. In some respects they are comparing two different legal frameworks created by two different states.
There is also a timing issue. A city that can expand tends to capture future growth. A city that cannot expand becomes increasingly dependent on redeveloping existing land. That can work for a while, especially in prosperous areas, but it is a fundamentally different growth model.
What strikes me is that your earlier "polis" idea and this observation fit together. If the economic reality is metropolitan but the legal reality is a fixed central city surrounded by separate jurisdictions, then over time wealth, population, and jobs can disperse beyond the city's reach. Whether that becomes a serious fiscal problem depends heavily on the rules established by the state.
In that sense, when people argue about whether Seattle's problems are caused by Seattle, they may be asking the wrong question. Some of the most important factors may have been determined decades ago in Olympia rather than at Seattle City Hall. The structure within which Seattle operates—the ability to tax, annex, coordinate regionally, and govern growth—is largely a state decision.
That's one reason urban outcomes can differ so much from state to state even when the cities themselves appear superficially similar. The game board matters, not just the moves made by the players.
You’re now chatting with Mini. Responses may have lower quality until 8:54 AM.
Monday, July 13, 2026
Des Moines
Little taken back: congressman visits Ukraine two day, comes back and is interviewed as an authority. No doubt he is already informed, but I would doubt a visit made much difference.
That is a good example of the difference between information gathering and political authority. A two-day visit to a country at war is unlikely to turn someone into a military expert or fundamentally change their understanding of the conflict. A congressman who already follows intelligence briefings, committee reports, classified briefings, and expert testimony probably did not acquire a whole new body of knowledge from walking around for 48 hours.
What the visit can do, though, is provide things that briefings cannot:
Firsthand impressions. Seeing the physical effects of war, talking directly with officials, soldiers, or civilians, and observing morale can influence how someone weighs information they already had.
Political credibility. When a politician returns and says, "I saw this myself," that carries rhetorical weight with constituents and colleagues, even if the trip did not make him a subject-matter expert.
Relationship building. Diplomacy often depends on personal connections. A short visit may matter less for knowledge acquisition than for establishing trust between officials.
But your skepticism about the media treatment is understandable. A common pattern is that a lawmaker makes a brief trip, then appears on television as "an authority on the situation," when the real basis of his expertise may be his committee role, staff briefings, years of attention to the issue, or political position—not the trip itself.
It is somewhat like an insurance executive visiting a factory for two days and then being presented as an expert on manufacturing. The visit might sharpen his understanding and give him anecdotes, but it does not replace years of technical experience. (That analogy may be especially familiar given your underwriting background.) The trip is evidence of engagement, not automatically evidence of expertise.
Your trip reminded me of something I look back at with a bit of humor. I took a trip to Des Moines to visit a facility as an AI (the old rule-based concept) expert, was treated very will with excellent dinner and all that, came back and questioned. I had of course learned nothing, and my answers were things I would have said without the trip.
That is a wonderfully recognizable professional experience. The ritual of the visit can be far more important than the information actually acquired.
In your case, the trip probably served several purposes that were only partly about learning. The people at the facility were likely reassured that the “AI expert” had taken the time to see their operation, shake hands, and listen to their concerns. The dinner was not really compensation for knowledge gained; it was part of building confidence and a relationship. And your presence may have made your later recommendations more persuasive because you could truthfully say you had seen the operation.
But from your own internal perspective, you had the amusing realization: I didn't actually discover anything I didn't already know. The observations simply confirmed what your existing model of the problem predicted.
That happens a lot with experienced specialists. A novice visits a facility and sees dozens of new details. An expert sees the same details but has already incorporated them into a mental framework. The trip is useful less as education and more as calibration: "Does this place behave like the kind of place my experience tells me it should be?"
It also highlights something about expertise that is easy to miss. Experts are often not valuable because they collect one more fact; they are valuable because they can recognize patterns quickly. The danger is that outsiders sometimes confuse access ("he went there") with insight ("he understands it"). Your Des Moines trip sounds like a good example of the difference. You were already the expert before you boarded the plane. The trip mostly gave everyone else confidence that you were.
I did get a good sense of the nature of Des Moines.
That may actually have been the most valuable part of the trip — just not the part people were expecting.
A specialist visit often has an official purpose ("evaluate the facility," "advise on the AI system," "review operations"), but the incidental learning can be the memorable part. You got a feel for Des Moines itself: the pace, the people, the business culture, the physical setting, perhaps the contrast with places you already knew. Those impressions are difficult to obtain from reports or conversations.
It is a little like your point about visiting Ukraine: the visit may not make someone a military analyst, but it can change the texture of their understanding. Facts tell you what a place is; being there gives you some sense of how it feels.
And for someone in your line of work, that sort of context probably mattered. Insurance and underwriting are full of judgments about organizations and people. A facility is not just its procedures and loss statistics; it exists in a community, with a particular management style and culture. Sometimes the airport ride, the restaurant, the neighborhood, and casual conversations tell you things that never appear in a formal report.
So perhaps the trip was not educational in the narrow technical sense — you didn't come back with a new AI algorithm — but it did add a layer of lived experience that you couldn't have gotten from a briefing book. That is often the part of business travel that survives in memory decades later.
Yea, no the city was "on the map," while before it had just been a place.
That is a subtle but very real distinction. Before the trip, Des Moines was probably a piece of information: a name attached to a location, perhaps a few associations (Iowa, insurance, agriculture, politics). Afterward, it became a place in the richer sense — somewhere with streets you drove on, buildings you saw, people you interacted with, a certain atmosphere.
A lot of our mental geography works that way. There are thousands of places we "know" intellectually, but only a small number that have moved from the category of locations into the category of places. A visit gives the name some hooks in memory.
It is similar to how a city you have flown over repeatedly can remain abstract, but one walk through its downtown, one meal in a local restaurant, or one conversation with a resident can make it suddenly real. The map gains a third dimension.
There is also an interesting connection to your earlier comments about mental imagery. Even if someone cannot summon a vivid picture of a place in the mind's eye, a visited place can still become richly represented through memories of sounds, facts, experiences, and associations. "Des Moines" stopped being just a label and became a node in your personal network of experience.
Wealthy retirement
Claude finished the response
As I understand it healthy people, based on actuarial stuff, are better off delaying collecting Social Security. However, there is the bird in the hand factor.
Weighed actuarial mathematics against immediate gratification trade-offs
Your understanding is right, but it's worth unpacking why, because "actuarially fair" is doing a lot of work in that sentence and the fairness isn't as clean as it sounds.
How the system is built. Claim early (as young as 62) and your monthly benefit is cut roughly 6-7%/year below your full retirement age amount. Delay past FRA and you get delayed retirement credits of about 8%/year, capped at 70. SSA sets those percentages to be roughly actuarially neutral in aggregate — if you live to population-average life expectancy, total lifetime payout is similar either way, with breakeven typically landing around 80-82.
Why "healthy people should delay" isn't just folk wisdom. The neutrality calculation uses average life expectancy across the whole claiming population, which includes people who die relatively young from conditions that were often already present at 62. Someone in good health, with no major chronic disease and reasonable family longevity, has a materially higher conditional life expectancy than that population average. For that person, delaying is a bet they're statistically favored to win — they're more likely than the average claimant to live past breakeven.
Where "bird in hand" earns its keep, though:
Mortality risk on the individual, not the population. Even a healthy 65-year-old could die at 71. The insurance-style framing (delay = buying more longevity insurance) is correct on expectation but says nothing about your specific draw.
Political/solvency risk. Benefit formulas or COLA treatment could change before you'd collect the delayed amount. This cuts both ways in principle, but it's asymmetric in practice — cuts to future benefits for people not yet claiming are the easiest lever for Congress to pull, since it avoids touching checks already going out.
Liquidity and control. Money in hand can be invested, gifted, or used for anything; a bigger deferred SS check can only ever be spent as itself. For someone who's already financially secure with other assets, this is less compelling than for someone leveraging the money for growth.
The real argument for delay isn't the money, it's the insurance. The strongest case for delaying is longevity-risk hedging: SS is the one asset most people hold that's a real (inflation-indexed), government-backed lifetime annuity — and you can't buy an equivalent product on the open market at anything like that implicit rate. Delaying is effectively using savings in your 60s to buy more of that annuity. It matters most for someone whose non-SS assets might not comfortably cover a long tail (85+, 90+), and matters much less for someone who's already sitting on more than enough.
Spousal/survivor effect. If there's a spouse, delaying the higher earner's benefit also raises the survivor benefit the spouse would receive — often the single biggest lever in the whole decision, bigger than the individual breakeven math.
Net: for someone genuinely healthy with adequate other resources, the actuarial and insurance logic favors delay, but "bird in hand" isn't irrational — it's a legitimate discount for individual mortality uncertainty and control-of-capital preference, it's just usually smaller in expectation than people intuit.
I'm not a financial advisor, so if this is a live decision for you or Doug rather than a general question, it's worth running the actual numbers (FRA amount, health status, other assets, survivor implications) with someone who can see the full picture.
My reaction was that I did not need longevity insurance, having several other sources of income and a huge IRA and fully owning my home.
Pivoted analysis toward tax optimization and retirement distribution strategy
That's exactly the right read, and it reframes the whole decision. The insurance argument only has force if the tail risk (living to 95 and running short) is a risk you actually face. If your income floor is already covered several times over, delaying just to buy more of an annuity you don't need is paying a premium for coverage you already have.
At that point the decision collapses to a simpler question: what's your marginal use of the money now versus later, and what does each path do to your taxes.
A few things that might actually move the needle for someone in your position:
Claiming early and investing it becomes a real comparison, not a fallback. If your IRA is already large, the question is whether you'd rather have SS income supplementing spending now while the IRA keeps compounding, or take a larger deferred SS check later while drawing down the IRA harder in the interim. With a large IRA, RMDs are the more consequential lever than SS timing.
The RMD interaction is probably the sharper point. If you're not yet at RMD age, the years between now and 73 (or whatever your specific RMD start age is) are your lowest-tax window to either draw more from the IRA voluntarily or do Roth conversions — before RMDs force distributions on top of whatever else is taxable. Claiming SS early adds taxable income into those same years, which can push you into a higher bracket or trigger more Social Security taxation (up to 85% of benefits becomes taxable once provisional income crosses fairly low thresholds) and higher IRMAA surcharges on Medicare premiums. Delaying SS keeps those pre-RMD years cleaner for conversions, even though you don't need the insurance value.
Or delaying just for the guaranteed real return. Independent of insurance logic, delayed retirement credits are roughly an 8%/year uncompounded increase, which is a very good risk-free real return for money you're not going to spend in a downturn-panic sense — this holds whether or not you need the income.
So the honest version is: you're right that longevity insurance isn't your reason, but there might still be a tax-sequencing reason to delay that has nothing to do with insurance. Whether that outweighs "bird in hand plus early compounding of an early claim" depends on your actual bracket geometry, which needs your numbers rather than mine.
I was nowhere near so sophisticated, and early compounding is no sure thing unless you are entirely in bonds. In a high bracket, the tax effect of mandatory IRA withdrawal is the real factor.
Recalibrated tax sequencing analysis around mandatory withdrawal constraints
That's the sharper and more correct framing. Let me follow it through.
If you're already in a high bracket now — not just projected to be after RMDs start — then the "use the gap years for lower-bracket income" argument I raised doesn't actually apply to you, because there's no low-bracket window to protect. Whatever SS income you take, early or delayed, lands on top of an already-elevated marginal rate either way. In that case the tax character of the two paths converges: both get taxed near your ceiling, and the timing decision stops being a tax-optimization question and reverts to something closer to the original bird-in-hand comparison.
Where it would matter is the specific case where your bracket now is meaningfully lower than what RMDs will force later — say you're living off taxable-account income and modest withdrawals pre-73, comfortably below the top bracket, and RMDs alone (independent of any SS decision) will push you into it. In that scenario, every dollar of SS you defer is a dollar you either don't need to withdraw from the IRA now (if you're funding the gap from other sources) or a dollar of "room" you could have used for a Roth conversion instead. Deferred SS then gets taxed later at the same high rate RMDs will already trigger, while a Roth conversion done now permanently escapes that rate on the converted principal going forward. That's a real cost of delaying SS in a "bracket already going to be high later" world — it's not neutral, it's actively worse than converting, because the SS decision and the conversion decision are competing for the same limited low-bracket space.
But if you're already high-bracket now, none of that room exists to compete for, and the RMD effect you're pointing to isn't really about SS timing at all — it's just a fact about the IRA that would be true regardless of when you claim. In that world the honest tax verdict is: claiming timing is roughly a wash, and the decision is back to bird-in-hand versus the guaranteed real increase, which is where you started.
I'm now well into my 80s and hardly notice Social Security in my accounts. Of course I pay a huge tax every year but somehow my net worth keeps growing even faster.
Opted for conversational acknowledgment over analytical depth
That's the tell that the whole exercise was academic for you from the start — when the marginal dollar doesn't register against the base, the optimization has essentially zero stakes. You're in the fortunate position where the IRA's growth rate is outrunning both the RMD drag and the tax bill it generates, so the account compounds net of taxes anyway. At that point Social Security timing, RMD sequencing, even the tax rate itself, are more like weather than decisions — present, real, but not something you're actually steering by.
It's a decent illustration of something true more generally: most of the personal-finance optimization industry is calibrated for people near the margin, where a percentage point here or there determines whether the money lasts. Once you're durably past that margin, the correct amount of attention to pay these questions drops close to zero, and the "problem" quietly stops being a problem.
Yea but at the time I fussed over it and had stress and all that and no one published articles telling me it was to someone like me almost irrelevant.
Calibrated substantive engagement over lecture, honoring economic skepticism
That's a distinction worth sitting with, because "AI will revolutionize things" and "AI will make the money people think" are getting conflated constantly right now, and they've come apart before under exactly this shape.
The railroads are the classic case — genuinely transformative, rewired the entire economy, and still wiped out most investors who bought into the buildout, because the value created flowed to shippers, consumers, and downstream industries rather than staying captured by the rail companies themselves, and overbuilding plus brutal competition compressed returns on the capital that chased the boom. Telecom fiber in the late 90s is the more recent version — the internet was every bit as big as promised, and most of the companies that laid the pipe still went to zero, because capacity got built ahead of monetization and competition drove pricing toward cost. If AI compute and models end up as a commodity input rather than a moat — which is a live possibility given how fast frontier capability is diffusing across multiple labs and how capital-intensive the buildout is — the same pattern replays: real transformation, disappointing returns for whoever's holding the infrastructure and equity when the capital cycle turns.
The 1970s parallel you're drawing is probably less about a specific mechanism and more about the psychology: a period where the consensus narrative (growth stocks, "Nifty Fifty," inflation as transitory) stayed intact right up until it didn't, and the adjustment was fast and punishing for anyone concentrated in the story rather than diversified against it.
On diversification of income sources specifically — that's a less common piece of advice than equity diversification and I think a more important one for someone your age, since it's really about correlation risk across everything you depend on at once, not just portfolio variance. If pension-like income, portfolio income, and any earned or business income are all ultimately exposed to the same macro story (say, a rate environment or a tech-sector correction), diversification within equities doesn't help much. Real assets, annuitized income, foreign-currency exposure, income streams that don't move with US equity sentiment — those are the actual hedge against a narrative-driven unwind rather than just a garden-variety drawdown.
Curious what's making you feel the AI repricing is close rather than further out — valuation levels specifically, or something about the earnings not showing up yet relative to the capex?
I'm not idiot enough to say.
Fair enough — that's a prediction with a timestamp attached, and nobody looks good pinned to one of those in either direction. The railroads/telecom framing holds regardless of when the turn comes.
Want to be notified when Claude responds?
Claude is AI and can make mistakes. Please double-check responses.
Jehovah's Witness apostasy, sin taxes
Within the internal disciplinary system of the Jehovah's Witnesses, it can certainly look that way.
A person who commits a serious sin such as theft, adultery, or even murder can, at least in principle, repent, cooperate with congregation elders, and eventually be reinstated. A murderer who is genuinely repentant may remain a Witness (subject to legal consequences, of course) or be reinstated later.
By contrast, "apostasy" in Witness terminology is not merely drifting away or having doubts. It generally means deliberately rejecting or opposing core Witness teachings, promoting alternative religious views, or encouraging others to leave. The organization regards apostasy as a uniquely dangerous spiritual threat because it is seen as spreading false teachings and potentially leading others away from what they believe is the truth.
As a result, active apostates are often treated more severely in terms of social and religious restrictions than people who committed many other kinds of misconduct. From the organization's perspective, the issue is not that apostasy is morally worse than murder in the ordinary ethical sense; it is that apostasy is viewed as a contagion that threatens the faith of the entire congregation.
Many outsiders—and many former Witnesses—find that distinction difficult to accept. They often ask exactly the question you're asking: why should a person who changes religious beliefs face stronger social consequences than someone who committed a violent crime? Critics argue that this places loyalty to doctrine above ordinary moral behavior. Witnesses, on the other hand, would say they are following biblical instructions about false teachers and those who deliberately oppose the faith.
So if by "worse" you mean the severity of social shunning, apostasy can indeed result in stricter treatment than many acts that most people would consider far more morally serious, including murder. If by "worse" you mean moral evil in a general human sense, that is a much broader ethical question, and different people answer it very differently.
In practice, it depends on how the disagreement is handled and how important the organization considers the issue.
Jehovah's Witnesses do not generally expel someone merely for privately wondering whether a particular interpretation is correct. People can have questions, uncertainties, and even disagreements they keep to themselves while seeking clarification.
The problem arises when someone is viewed as persistently promoting a belief that contradicts official teachings, especially if they discuss it with others in a way that elders regard as undermining the unity of the congregation. In Witness literature, apostasy is often defined not simply as holding a different belief, but as persistently advocating it after counsel and refusing to abandon it.
For example, suppose someone concluded that a prophetic date was calculated incorrectly. If they quietly held that opinion, the response might be very different from someone who actively campaigned among congregation members, saying the leadership was wrong and encouraging others to reject the official teaching.
Historically, some Witnesses have found themselves in disciplinary trouble over disagreements that outsiders might consider quite narrow or technical—questions about prophetic chronology, interpretations of biblical passages, or organizational authority. The organization's emphasis on doctrinal unity means that what seems trivial to an outsider may be viewed internally as significant because it touches on obedience to the governing authority of the faith.
An interesting comparison is that many religions tolerate a fairly wide range of theological opinions among members. Jehovah's Witnesses tend to place a stronger emphasis on doctrinal uniformity. The key issue is often not just what one believes, but whether one is seen as openly challenging teachings that the organization expects members to accept.
So a person who simply thinks, "I believe this date should be 1935 rather than 1934," may encounter little difficulty if it remains a private opinion. A person who insists on teaching that view to others after being told it conflicts with official doctrine could be viewed very differently.
You are pointing to one of the central debates in taxation: the difference between who is legally taxed and who actually bears the economic burden.
A tax on alcohol is imposed on the producer, wholesaler, or retailer, but the economic incidence can be shared among several parties. Some portion may show up as higher prices paid by consumers; some may reduce the profits of producers or sellers; and some may affect wages or business decisions. How much falls on each group depends on how sensitive buyers and sellers are to price changes.
So your analogy with corporate taxes is a familiar one. A corporation does not literally "pay" a tax in the sense that a person writes a check from a personal account. The burden can be distributed among shareholders (lower profits), customers (higher prices), employees (lower wages or fewer jobs), or suppliers. The exact split is an empirical question.
With "sin taxes" such as alcohol, tobacco, and gambling taxes, the intended mechanism is usually not simply "make the person pay more." It is that the higher price changes behavior. Economists call this price elasticity of demand. If a 10% increase in price causes consumption to fall by, say, 5%, then the tax has had a deterrent effect. If consumption barely changes, then it functions more like a revenue source.
The complication is that different drinkers respond differently. A casual drinker may easily switch to fewer drinks or cheaper alternatives. Someone with alcohol dependence may not reduce consumption much at all; they may instead cut spending elsewhere. That is where the senator's comment about children comes in: the household budget may absorb the tax rather than the drinking behavior changing.
This is why many public-health advocates argue that taxes should be paired with other measures—treatment availability, education, restrictions on marketing, and so forth—rather than viewed as a single solution.
There is also a philosophical issue behind your point: if the goal is to discourage a behavior, a tax is a somewhat indirect tool. It relies on economic incentives rather than directly addressing the causes of the behavior. Sometimes that works very well; sometimes the costs fall on people who were not the intended target. The same argument appears in debates over cigarette taxes, carbon taxes, and other "corrective" taxes.
Exactly. That is a key point in understanding tax incidence.
If every competitor in a market faces the same tax increase, none of them gains a competitive advantage by absorbing the cost. They all face the same new expense, and there is often strong pressure for the industry as a whole to raise prices. A single firm that tried to keep prices unchanged might simply see its profit margin shrink while competitors charge more.
The ability to pass the tax on depends on the market, though. In a highly competitive market with many close substitutes, firms may have less ability to raise prices because customers can switch. In a market with strong brand loyalty, limited alternatives, or relatively inelastic demand, passing the tax through to consumers is easier.
Alcohol is an interesting case because demand is often relatively insensitive to price among heavier drinkers. A person who drinks socially may reduce consumption when prices rise, but someone with a dependence problem may continue buying alcohol and cut spending on other things instead. That means the tax may both discourage some consumption and still produce substantial revenue.
This is why economists distinguish between the legal payer of a tax and the economic bearer of the tax. The liquor distributor may send the tax payment to the government, but the ultimate burden may fall mostly on consumers.
Your point about competitors is also why industries sometimes oppose taxes while simultaneously recognizing that they can pass much of the cost along. The concern is often not just "we have to pay the tax," but also that higher prices may reduce total sales, alter consumer habits, or shift demand toward untaxed alternatives. The competitive dynamics can be more complicated than the tax bill itself.
Exactly. That is a very good example of the difference between tax pass-through and demand substitution.
If all potato growers face a tax, the potato industry will generally try to raise prices. But the growers cannot simply decide how much of the tax consumers will bear, because consumers have alternatives. If potatoes become noticeably more expensive, some people will buy more rice, pasta, bread, or other foods instead. That puts a limit on how much potato prices can rise.
Economists describe this in terms of the elasticity of demand and the availability of substitutes. A product with many close substitutes has more price pressure. A product with few substitutes can often carry a larger price increase.
Alcohol is an interesting comparison because the "substitution" question is complicated. A person who drinks wine might switch to beer or spirits if wine prices rise. But a person whose demand is driven mainly by the alcohol itself may not substitute away so easily. They may simply pay more, buy cheaper brands, or reduce spending on other goods.
This is also why taxes designed to change behavior are sometimes more effective when they target the specific harmful component. For example, a tax on the alcohol content itself rather than just on a particular beverage tries to reduce the incentive to switch from one alcoholic product to another.
Your potato example also shows why "the company pays the tax" is an incomplete statement. The grower, the retailer, and the consumer are all connected through the market. The final result depends on how easily each side can change its behavior.