Tea Partiers Say They Would Absolutely Abolish Social Security

by sammielee24 108 Replies latest jw friends

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    I believe there are headlines in the newspaper archives....social security will fail...social security will be broke in 1975....social security will be broke by 1980....social security will be broke in 1985....it's a thorn in the Republican side and always will be ideologically - adjust the tax rates and money issues are fixed - the ideology remains the issue. sammieswife.

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    Let's try again - here's a novel idea!

    a fix to ensure that benefits end up where they're supposed to needn't be anything radical. You could raise the cap on Social Security taxes, for instance (the tax is only paid on the first $106,800 of income, meaning most people pay it on 100 percent of their salaries, while Alex Rodriguez pays it on less than 4 percent of his salary). If, on the other hand, you think the system is in crisis and is going broke, you're going to favor much more painful solutions.

    .....sammieswife.

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    > I am still not hearing a coherent answer on how to pay for the social programs into the future.

    As a Fiscal Conservative, my thoughts on this is very simple: If the people want Social Security, then it must be paid for. It must be paid for using two options... eliminate other programs or raise taxes.

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    Too logical Elsewhere...too coherent....sammieswife.

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips
    adjust the tax rates and money issues are fixed

    No, this is a falsehood. Impartial dynamic estimates demonstrate that you cannot raise taxes enough to create the revenues. And if you do, you will strangle the economy, and your revenues will fall despite the higher rates.

    You either have to outright kill the thing, or reduce the benefits in some way.

    I believe there are headlines in the newspaper archives....social security will fail...social security will be broke in 1975....social security will be broke by 1980....social security will be broke in 1985....it's a thorn in the Republican side and always will be ideologically

    Social security is already in the red this year, a decade ahead of schedule. And it isn't "your money", by the way. It isn't an individual retirement account that you own. It goes into the general coffers so that statists of all stripes can use it to pay off constituents. Social Security is the greatest ponzi scheme ever invented. Thanks, FDR.

    Keep whistling past the graveyard.

    BTS

  • thomas15
    thomas15

    Social Security was supposed to be self supporting. It isn't now. SS is/has been broke for years. The reason why it is still going is because it borrows money to pay out benifits. There is a point, somewhere in the future where there is no more money to borrow.

    When started, there were 30 workers paying for every person collecting benifits. Today there are 3 workers paying SS tax for every person collecting. If you cannot see how this cannot continue forever, then there is no point in me trying to discuss this with you as reality is not something you care about.

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    Burns, I don't see how your analogy applies to Social Security.

    The amount one gets paid from Social Security is directly proportional to how much money you have earned over your life.

    If you do not earn any money, you don't get any social security.

    Social Security is NOT a free hand out.

  • JWoods
    JWoods
    It goes into the general coffers so that statists of all stripes can use it to pay off constituents. Social Security is the greatest ponzi scheme ever invented. Thanks, FDR.

    And here is the problem with the editorial that says - "oh don't worry that is spends more than it takes in this year...it has a huge reserve that will last over 30 years..."

    That social security surplus is NOT IN THE BANK. It has been loaned to the government and used for the general fund for decades. The government is in no position to pay it back - except by the delusional printing of more money.

    As a Fiscal Conservative, my thoughts on this is very simple: If the people want Social Security, then it must be paid for. It must be paid for using two options... eliminate other programs or raise taxes.

    The problem with eliminating "other programs" to save social security is that there are no other programs vast enough to pay for the growing demands of social security. Raising taxes is also problematical, as it confines the economy, which is also in trouble.

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips

    Social Security is a scheme that would have made Bernie Madoff blush. Roosevelt himself said the following about the payroll taxes and the motivations behind this public marketing scheme:

    …those taxes were never a problem of economics.
    They were politics all the way through.
    We put those payroll contributions there so
    as to give the contributors a legal, moral, and
    political right to collect their pensions and
    their unemployment benefits. With those taxes
    in there, no damn politician can ever scrap my
    Social Security program.

    Assistant Attorney General Robert Jackson arguing before the court in 1937:

    …these benefits are in the nature of pensions or
    gratuities. There is no contract created by
    which any person becomes entitled as a matter
    of right to sue the United States or to maintain
    a claim for any particular sum of money. Not
    only is there no contract implied but it is
    expressly negated, because it is provided in
    the Act, Section 1104, that it may be repealed,
    altered, or amended in any of its provisions at
    any time. This Court has held that a pension
    granted by the Government is a matter of
    bounty, that the pensioner has no legal right to
    his pension, and that they may be given, withheld,
    distributed, or recalled at the discretion
    of Congress.

    A letter from an individual who lost his social security when Congress changed the law to deny benefits to those who were self-employed making over a certain amount:

    My position is that Congress has violated the
    sanctity of a contract, to which I am a party, . .
    . and it is a well-established principle of law
    that no valid contract can be altered or
    amended without the consent of both contracting
    parties. . . .
    Since the inception of the plan I have paid
    my premiums by payroll deductions until
    April 1947, when it became necessary for me
    to retire . . . from that time until January 1951 I
    received the benefits to which I was entitled. I
    engaged in business promptly thereafter as a
    self-employed person . . . as self-employed
    persons were not covered by the then existing
    statute. I continued to receive my social-security
    benefits until the new act.
    The people who get social security paid for
    it. It is their money, they invested it during all
    the years to the social-security fund. The social
    security is not a charity. It is a form of insurance.
    How has the Government the right to
    take the money away or to say how much
    these people can or cannot earn?

    Social Security is a welfare program paid for in current taxes and a redistribution of wealth. The idea that it is a retirement insurance or account in any way owned or controlled or inherently due to the financiers, taxpayers, is a facade that makes it politically untouchable. This lie is compounded by the claim that payroll taxes are kept in a trust fund earning interest to pay beneficiaries. The books are cooked. The funds are used as general funds and replaced with government bonds. In other words, the government borrows money from itself promising to pay itself back with interest. How does the government pay interest…well since all of its money comes from taxpayers, the taxpayers pay the interest and pay back the government bonds or IOUs. All smoke and mirrors in order to protect this coercive and government expanding program.

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    Like the article said - it ain't broke but if you don't like the answer, if you don't like the fix, you'll keep on harping about destroying it. He's right. I don't see much of anything by way of resolution here....makes the writer absolutely correct in his analogy of the Republican mindset. It offends ideologically - plain and simple. sammieswife.

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