The problem is most of the population of the US does not save for retirement that is why SS is neccessary. If you just got rid of SS as it is now most people would just spend that extra money that got each check and not save it in a 401k etc. It would be a lot worse later in life when these people are unable to work without a SS safety net.
Sure if everyone was super responsible with their money then i would agree that getting rid of SS is for the better. But with the eroding middle class and more and more people falling into lower income classes the chances of saving into 401k get slimmer and slimmer.
First of all, let's evaluate SS when it was created. When it was created the withdrawl age was 3 years past the life expectancy of people.
Now we're living 12 years past 65. How the hell does this work? The point of SS was designed not for retirement but people who saved up but end up living up a lot longer than they expected. You don't just chop off your head. Today I can save to live for 100. What happens if some miracle drug comes out and I live to 150? That was what SS was implemented for.
It's not so you can dick around and have enough money up til the day you retire and then you go BAM. Live off the government as a leecher for the rest of your life.
I'm not saying get rid of SS entirely. The concept is fine. Force people to save right? Because people are too dumb?
1) The lockbox principle is necessary: I'm sure anyone who believes in fiscal responsibility whether left or right should see that borrowing through SS funds and repaying it later with general funds is ridiculous. It's deficit spending. It's like a fucking payday advance loan or whatever the hell people do with terrible credit scores.
2) The SS fund is a general pool. If you want people to save, that's fine. It's like forcing everyone to put $1 in their piggy bank every week. Ok, so why can't it be MY piggy bank? My own funds? If you're forcing me to save, how about you let me manage it. You can argue 401ks and stocks are too risky. Fine, make it government bonds or some crap. There's stuff that gets you better than that ~1% ROR that your SS gets, but eliminate risky shit where people go completely broke. A balance, but in the end it needs to be me.
3) Better yet, allow people to opt out entirely and sign a waiver. You screw around? You lose your money? Don't come back and complain. Ever.
I'm not totally against the idea of building a safety net, but when the safety net is used to exploit government spending, that's ridiculous. When my money becomes someone else's money, that's ridiculous. My retirement is MY retirement.
Did you vote for Bush who expanded Medicare with prescription drug benefit?
So are you going to just be entirely retardedly black and white? I mean you're pulling a Bush here right? If you're not against Iraq you're a terrorist? Come on. Let's have a sensible debate here.
I already outlined certain things that make sense like the lockbox principle. Al Gore was right in that sense. But I also believed in Bush's idea of allowing younger folks the choice to opt out of SS which I believe to be a scam. Expansion of Medicare was a double edged sword. On one hand I hate Medicare, but on the other hand we're forced to pay into it. So if I'm forced to pay into it, making it better isn't that bad. Of course there was so much pork in that bill it just drove spending through the roof. So yeah, in the end I think it's a bad idea.
Also you know why this crap needed to be passed? Because Medicare sucked to begin with. Medicare gives us a lifeboat riddled with holes. You need Parts A and B and C to keep it afloat. Part D gives it paddles so you can row yourself to a fucking island. Sure I can just say screw the lifeboat and swim on my own, we've dug ourselves in the hole already. Part D just digs it deeper. It's a lose lose. Once again Medicare needs to die or get phased out because it's just gonna keep dragging us down.
I honestly think our efforts should be working to phase SS and Medicare out. It should be less and less in the budgets. The moeny should go into the people's hands. It's fine if you want to FORCE people to save, just allow them to have control of that money.
I say again. Look up the cost of private insurance for your father with his age and medical problems. Don't post in this thread again until you do.
Apples and oranges. Whether you agree with Spidey or not, at least use the facts on the table.
He's talking about SUPPLEMENTAL INSURANCE COST. His dad has already paid into Medicare. To tell him to consider the cost of private insurance right now without Medicare is worthless. If you want to compare the costs of the two, take all the money he's put into Medicare so far, allow it to grow at some shitty bank-dictated interest rate or whatever bonds grew at all these years, and look at his lump sum of money now. Does it pay for private insurance?
His dad has no choice but to accept Medicare unless he has a million or two stuffed in his mattress to pay for his own health insurance. We've already paid into it. Whether you like it or not, your money is there. Might as well put it to use right and accept Medicare coverage?