JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 27,766
I agree, with the same condition as before - "the needy" includes me and every other person that has been assured they will be covered by Social Security. It is one thing to claim that no one has been promissed any specific benefit. It is another entirely to claim that no one was promissed any benefit.
Are you saying that Congress lacks the authority to make changes such as means testing?
[I hope that's not what Perry is arguing as he proposes making huge changes (essentially ending Social Security).]
As someone has pointed out, if our hands are tied and we can do nothing, then de facto result will be that benefits will have to be reduced across the board. Surely Congress has the authority to change this and make more reasonable adjustments to benefits (assuming adjustments aren't made on the tax side to cover the changing demographics).
Social Security really is not an IRA. It really really is a tax. You don't have any guarantee of a personal benefit based on paying a tax.
Rather, the idea is that we all benefit from having a better society--one where unfortunate retirees are less likely to be compelled to subsist on dog food.
At any rate, I wish the discussion you and I are having here could be the discussion we're having nationally rather than the silly "Ponzi Scheme" debate. I'm not opposed to other moderate adjustments to account for the changing demographics. I'm personally in favor of both modest adjustments in benefits (including some degree of means testing) as well as adjustments to the amount of earnings the tax is based on to increase revenues (and potentially lower the SS tax rate).
ETA: And, since we have time due to the prudent investment of the surplus over the years, we could phase these changes in over a decade or two. This would help address people's reasonable expectations and give people plenty of time to make adjustments.
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