mhaze
Banned
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2007
- Messages
- 15,718
The problem with that is simply that SS payments are capped, and there is a ratio between payments, and earnings. Generally that's figured for the 40 highest earning quarters of employment.....I advocated that when lifting the earnings cap, rates should fall. This puts more money in the pockets of lower wager earners to spend, and because it is a relatively small amount when received per paycheck, it will not alter spending decisions the way rebates or other tax-cutting stimulus plans do.
So there's a sort of "fairness" in the existing and traditional earnings cap, for rich and poor alike. Eliminating the cap dramatically changes the nature of SS, yet the progressive blithely advocates this, while voicing alarm at Perry's wanting to have an honest discussion about SS. Quite curious.
I'ts either a program for people who work, and who thereby intend to put money aside for retirement, either in SS or in several buckets, or it's a charity program.
It's not Perry that's destroying SS as it's been historically. It's the liberal progressive, such as are commenting on this forum, who would do so.
For example: In the past decades, working professionals who had an IRA, perhaps a company 401k, and of course the SS, found that SS provided a portion of the retirement income. Now we are seeing (A) a tilt, as voiced on this forum by such as JoetheJuggler and others, that additional "means testing" may be applied to recipients.
Of course that would likely mean that an individual who had an IRA, and who had a 401k, and who paid SS, would likely not get SS benefits. This moves SS out of the category of "an average working-man's benefit" and into the category of "a charity". In turn that means that Ichabod's classroom peers who indicated they didn't expect SS benefits were likely right.
They sensed the collectivist and socialist tilt in progress. Or perhaps they simply realized the farcical nature of a government that was broke making promises.
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