And what then will you cut from the general fund?
We could allow the Bush tax cuts to expire, we could cut military spending, we could cut corporate subsidies, we could close the tax loopholes for offshore companies, we could increase tarrifs on turnip imports, etc.
My point is not where the money would come from. My point is that when workers put more money into Social Security than they take out, it gets absorbed into the general fund without comment, but now that the process is getting reversed, suddenly everyone wants to push the idea that the general fund and Social Security are seperate.
If you treat Social Security as completely seperate from the General Fund, there is no problem. Social Security was been saving money for years. The date where the fund would be exhausted keeps getting pushed further and further into the future as the American economy keeps performing better that the Social Security Administration's overly cautious estimates. The trust fund was going to be exhausted in 25 years. Then it was 30 years. Then it was 35 years. Now it's 40 years. At this rate, Social Security is safe forever without changing a thing.
If you treat Social Security as part of the general fund, things look more dire, by why is that Social Security's fault? Social Security has been run responsibly, why does it need to change? And how can anyone justify any sort of tax cut one minute, then cry out that the government is broke the next when talking about Social Security if they are sharing the same checkbook?