
Social Security records show millions of impossible ages
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A startling discovery by Elon Musk’s DOGE team has revealed concerning discrepancies in the U.S. Social Security database, indicating an implausible number of Americans allegedly over 100 years old – exceeding 25 million individuals, with some supposedly predating the founding of the nation.
Musk took to social media late Sunday, sharing a revealing data table and making a tongue-in-cheek reference to supernatural beings.
“According to the Social Security database, these are the numbers of people in each age bucket with the ‘death’ field set to FALSE. Maybe Twilight is real, and there are a lot of vampires collecting Social Security,” Musk quipped.
šØ Stephen Miller just confirmed that foreign fraud rings have been using fake Social Security numbers to steal BILLIONS in taxpayer benefits!
And nowāDOGE is about to get the records. This could be HUGE! ā¬ļøpic.twitter.com/XBN5II6vWQ
— Wesley Hunt (@WesleyHuntTX) February 17, 2025
The data presented shows staggering figures across various age brackets, from nearly 39 million children under 10 to more improbable numbers like 3.5 million people between 140-149 years old, and even single individuals recorded in the 240-249 and 360-369 age ranges.
These numbers stand in stark contrast to official statistics. The U.S. Census Bureau’s 2024 estimates indicate roughly 101,000 centenarians nationwide, comprising just 0.03% of Americans. The Pew Research Center projects this number to grow to approximately 422,000 by 2054.
Even more rare are supercentenarians – those aged 110 and above. The Gerontology Research Group’s February 2025 data shows only 136 Americans in this category. Currently, Georgia-born Naomi Whitehead holds the title of oldest living American at 114 years old, while Sarah Knauss remains the longest-lived American, having passed away in 1999 at 119 years and 97 days.
2.7 trillion dollars in improper payments to Medicare and Medicaid OVER SEAS!
Democrats are worried about
Trump getting rid of Medicare, Medicaid, and social security, yet there is fraud of this magnitude!!This needs to be fixed!! pic.twitter.com/s7g5u99UHe
— Farm Girl Carrie š©āš¾ (@FarmGirlCarrie) February 13, 2025
Conservative voices have long expressed concerns about wasteful government spending and fraud within entitlement programs. The Social Security Administration’s apparent record-keeping inconsistencies suggest potential phantom beneficiaries receiving taxpayer-funded benefits, even as working Americans face delayed retirement due to economic pressures.
The existence of active Social Security records for individuals supposedly older than 114 years raises serious questions about the system’s integrity and the potential misuse of public funds.