The only hope for post boomer generations is the soylent green option.
I'd call that nonsense, except for the fact that I've seen much more factually accurate nonsense.
Even in a worst (rational) case scenario, post-boomer generations will still get about 70-80% of current SS benefits with
no changes in current law or policy.
Remember that trust fund I was talking about earlier? The one with $2 trillion in high-quality assets? When "Social Security goes broke" as GWB put it in his charmingly typical (i.e. lying) way, in about 2040, the boomers will be in their 70s and 80s and in the process of dying out. At that point, SS
will be reduced to only paying out from current income.
That does not mean that it will be broke, any more than you are broke if you have a steady and well-paying job but no savings account. Current projections are that the steady-state income for the next fifty years or so after that will be sufficient to cover about 70-80% of promised benefits. While you may not like living on only 70% of what SS now offers, it's far from "soylent green."
And, of course, that's based on demographic projections. While our projections for the number of retirees we'll have in 2040 are fairly firm (we know how many babies were born in 1985 -- or more accurately, 1983, since the retirement age has been raised once), we don't really know how many twenty-something-year old workers we will have in 2040 since they've not been born yet and we don't know what immigration policy will be like in the 2030s. The projections that the SS has published have deliberately been tarted-up using worst-case demographic assumptions for political reasons -- basically, so that GWB could try to sell his "let's privatize social security" plan, and so the 70-80% numbers, while credible, are conservatively credible and could be substantially larger if we see another baby boom or burst of immigration.
And the fact that baby boomers have already seen their retirement age increased (from 65 to 66) suggests that it's not as politically impossible to adjust boomer benefits as you seem to think. Granted, it's rapidly becoming less and less fair to do so (boomers are already starting to retire based on the plans they made in 1999, and changing the rules at the last minute would be deeply unfair, but there's still time, for example, to raise the retirement age by another year for people born after 1960 or so....