02-03-2005, 01:52 PM | #1 (permalink) | |
Crazy
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Bush's plan to forfeit your SS account profits
Someone tell me again why this scam is a good idea.
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02-03-2005, 04:19 PM | #2 (permalink) |
Registered User
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It is not a good idea. IMO Only because like the SS system we have now thesse accounts will gain a butt load of money and those in goverment can't keep theiir paws off of it and then they will start taking money from the private acounts. I think that we should take all the stuff out of SS except those who are retired. That is what it was meant for, we need to go back to the original plan if we want to fix it. There are too many different programs that draw off of it now. If we want to keep that money in SS we need to stop giving it all out for those who aren't retired.
Like if we put it into a lock box. |
02-03-2005, 05:45 PM | #5 (permalink) |
Still crazy after all these years
Location: Norther Cal
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Just so happened that I saw a retort to the WP story a few minutes ago:
http://drudgereport.com/flash3.htm
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I'm not prejudiced...I hate everyone equally. |
02-03-2005, 06:27 PM | #6 (permalink) | |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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Before I spend time on a lengthy post, I have two questions for the thread starter: #1 - What are the details of the SS plan the White House has given to Congress for approval? Oh wait, there are none, because there is no plan yet. We are looking at options. There is no proposal, there is no specific agenda.....how do you target something that is merely being discussed? Especially when the floor for discussion has been opened up to everyone, regardless of the letter after their name. So, we are going after a guy who sees something that has problems and wants to come up with a way to fix it. I love this, it is almost too funny to believe. "Bush is gonna [insert favorite catch-phrase] to [insert favorite group of people]" How can any say that something specific is going to happen when there isn't even a formal plan proposed? i.e. people are going to lose benefits Based on what information? This tired out crap is getting so old. #2 - You cannot try and further the argument from your link until you offer one little piece of information: ROI. What is the expected ROI of the Bush plan? What is the current ROI for a person in their 20's or 30's under the current plan (hint: it is a really depressing number). How can we discuss ROI if we are offered absolutely no facts whatsoever from the person starting this thread? Along with the ROI discussion regarding SS, another little important tidbit kepts getting left out: Ratios. Forget about ROI Forget about the amount of money SS has or will have Look at the freakin' history of the ratios. Looking at the ratios alone gives us more than enough reason to consider some type of major change to the SS system. I am not 100% set on the type of change, but when I look at the payee/payor ratios and where they are heading, I am scared and willing to look at almost any proposal for change. Another note: That link is nothing but fearmongering. The information "offered" up in the link completely contradicts the factual minimum requirements already set in place for any proposed change to SS. |
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02-03-2005, 06:27 PM | #7 (permalink) | |
Rail Baron
Location: Tallyfla
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02-03-2005, 06:32 PM | #8 (permalink) |
All important elusive independent swing voter...
Location: People's Republic of KKKalifornia
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Why not make the whole thing optional? I would rather not pay into it and I am certainly not depending on it. That's what savings and financial planning is for. Personal responsiblilty and accountablility go a long way.
I can manage my money better than the government for sure. |
02-03-2005, 06:35 PM | #10 (permalink) | |
Crazy
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Guess you missed the plainly obvious fact that this thread is about one the DETAILS which the White House itself says will be part of the Bush's SS plan. |
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02-03-2005, 07:01 PM | #11 (permalink) |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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you missed my point (and also, the last six words)
There is no official plan. We are in the beginning stages of what will be a long, drawn-out process full of changes. By simplying starting out with this being a scam, based on potentially inaccurate information, you do absolutely nothing to help the situation. The thing is, you want this to be a scam, you couldn't handle it any other way. This is why people on the right get frustrated with people on the left. Nothing but negative with no proposed alternatives. Knee-jerk reactions and boiler-plate comments won't help us in coming up with a plan that could potentially benefit millions of Americans for many, many years to come. Don't like some of the ideas? State why they are bad and offer up an alternative. All you do is go around and bash all things Republican. Can you do anything more than bash? How about offering something up in exchange for your pithy comments? We aren't going to get anywhere if this is the type of oppostion that is being offered. |
02-03-2005, 07:04 PM | #12 (permalink) |
Muffled
Location: Camazotz
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Edit: Removed, as it was not useful or conducive to discussion. Thanks to KMA-628 for thoughtful outside discussion on this subject.
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it's quiet in here Last edited by Kadath; 02-04-2005 at 09:58 AM.. Reason: Rethinking |
02-03-2005, 07:35 PM | #14 (permalink) |
Banned
Location: BFE
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How many people here actually think that there will be ANYTHING left in SS by the time they retire? I'm prolly older than most here, and the idea of getting half of what I put into SS back out again sounds GREAT to me, since I honestly don't think that I'd actually ever see a dime under the current system.
Half of something is far better than all of nothing. |
02-03-2005, 07:38 PM | #15 (permalink) |
Crazy
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OK KMA, here you go. DO NOTHING. THERE IS NO CRISIS.
We do not need to be leveraging ourselves into $1-2 trillion of new debt at the exact moment that we need to be spending enormous sums of money on Iraq. Bush's SS plan is a scam because SS will not have any financing problems for many decades. This reform movement is driven only by conservative ideology and not fiscal pragmatism. It is incredibly ironic that the GOP postures itself as wanting to do this for the sake of the fiscal health of Social Security and yet they sit there with a straight face and tell us that they want to wreck our federal budgetary health now IN WARTIME just so we can fix some fiscal problems that forecasters say won't even crop up for at least 40 years. That's reckless and ridiculus. Hardliners on the right have made no secret of their decades-old ideological dream of stripping down SS. Any truly level-headed fiscal conservative would instantly recognize that wartime, occupation, and reconstruction of an entire nation makes for the worst possible budgetary environment to reform gigantic social programs. It's really too bad that responsible fiscal conservatives have been pushed into irrelevancy by people who want to go with a max-out-the-credit-cards mentality. Unfortunately, the conservatives who are driving this reform movement have no sense of pragmatism where it comes to the budget. They're doing it now because this is the first time they've ever had the power in both Congress and the White House and they're scared as hell that if they don't do it right away that they could lose power in one of those places and never get the chance to do it again. They don't seem to care about unsustainably high levels of debt. They only want to ram through their ideology this first chance they get. Well sorry, I'm not willing to accept taking on trillions in debt for Social Security at the very moment we need tons of money for Iraq. That's just plain budgetary stupidity. Do first things first. Take care of Iraq and then take care of Social Security LATER because it is not in crisis now. IRAQ IS! I am not going to quietly sit by and watch the GOP wreck America's fiscal health just for their own personal ideological agenda. We literally have decades to address Social Security. We do NOT need to be doing it while we're in the middle of a wartime foreign occupation and reconstruction project on a scale not seen in more than half a century. SOCIAL SECURITY IS NOT IN CRISIS! Last edited by CShine; 02-03-2005 at 07:48 PM.. |
02-03-2005, 07:54 PM | #16 (permalink) | |
Banned
Location: BFE
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Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Social Security come into being during the Great Depression? Wasn't it changed during the years when we were reconstructing Europe and Asia? The time to deal with the problem is when it hasn't grown to crisis proportions yet. Social Security has always been about theft, plain and simple. It's never been long-term sustainable. And it needs to be massively pruned. If not us, who? If not now, when? |
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02-03-2005, 08:07 PM | #17 (permalink) | ||
Crazy
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Why is it so hard to understand that you don't take on huge debt for domestic programs when we're in a war that's already got us strapped for cash? Don't give us this "if not now, when" crap. When we are no longer spending trillions of dollars on Iraq, THAT'S when. |
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02-03-2005, 10:28 PM | #18 (permalink) | |
Loser
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SS is not in a crisis. It will eventually, maybe in the next 30 years, need to be adjusted slightly for a brief period of time and then it can be adjusted back. There is going to be a slight boom in retirees in about 40 years, after which there will be a decline. What a waste of power by a President to so obviously and devisively push such an unecessary change. But hey, atleast it's better than starting an unecessary war. Maybe he'll get distracted with SS and forget to invade Iran. Now that would be a good thing. |
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02-03-2005, 10:41 PM | #19 (permalink) | |||
Banned
Location: BFE
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In case you didn't realize it, we're ALWAYS spending "trillions" on SOMETHING or other. And we've always been spending trillions of dollars annually (well, within recent history) on domestic programs and entitlements. This will continue for the forseeable future. So when is a good time to deal with it? The more Liberals bellow about it, the better an idea I think it is. |
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02-03-2005, 11:57 PM | #22 (permalink) |
Easy Rider
Location: Moscow on the Ohio
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There is no Social Security fund. The SS money we pay goes into the general fund like any other tax and the benefits are paid out of the general fund like any other government outlay. So there is no fund to go broke, just current workers paying FICA taxes and current retirees taking money out of the general fund based on how much they earned over their lifetime. At present there is more FICA money going in to the general fund than there is SS money being paid out but in the future this will not be the case unless something is done. The longer we wait to do something, the more drastic the change will have to be, so doing something now makes sense.
The proposal to establish personal accounts is the first step to creating a real retirement fund. I am too old to benefit from this but younger workers should welcome this change. If the money I invested in SS over the years had been put to work in almost any average mutual fund I would have far more money than I will get from SS. The personal account would be a real fund that can be invested instead of just having the FICA tax going into the general fund. It is interesting that neither the Republican or Democrat polititians have proposed one change that would benefit SS and that is to make government employees (including themselves) pay FICA taxes like the rest of us. Instead they are excempt and have their own retirement plans which are put into real funds that can be invested. I'm sure they would want no part of having to join SS. If only we had the same choice. |
02-04-2005, 12:24 AM | #23 (permalink) |
Loves my girl in thongs
Location: North of Mexico, South of Canada
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/Arch13 looks over the constitution...
Nope, notin' in there about money when you retire. That leads me to my question, why on earth does this plan still exist? That the baby boom generation saved no money and bought on credit to dig their own hole is no ones fault but theirs. A problem for me this does not make. At it's current trajectory, this will be a problem for the younger generation to shoulder, and nothing about Mr. Bush's plan eliminates this. Even the presidents plan tactily acknowledges that the adminstration is afraid to reduce benifits or eliminate the system for the baby boomers. You speak about entitlments Daswig. Put your money where your mouth is and acknowledge that the entire principal of SS is one giant entitlment. And since it is, you shouldn't have any issue with killing the program here and now.
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Seen on an employer evaluation: "The wheel is turning but the hamsters dead" ____________________________ Is arch13 really a porn diety ? find out after the film at 11. -Nanofever |
02-04-2005, 12:26 AM | #24 (permalink) | |
Banned
Location: BFE
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02-04-2005, 01:33 AM | #26 (permalink) | ||||
Easy Rider
Location: Moscow on the Ohio
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They are reluctant to reduce benefits because they know that we are already getting so little back compared to what we have paid in. You will notice that the polititians and their fellow government employees have exempted themselves from SS, they know the return is far better in private plans. |
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02-04-2005, 01:33 AM | #27 (permalink) | |
Loves my girl in thongs
Location: North of Mexico, South of Canada
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It does nothing to mitigate the current problem of the babyboom genration that acts like Social Security is a right they have earned. Any real reform that is actually "reform" would feed the tough medicine to that generation that their failure to save doesn't mean they are going to get a dime. All this plan does is tell a younger generation that always assumed SS would be broke that they have a responsability to save and use the market to generate retirment income. It does nothing to releive the taxpayers, especially the younger ones, of supporting a generation that had no fiscal intelligence and now demands that a younger generation support them. Edit: it should be pointed out that the average baby boomer has saved less than 1% of anyhting they have ever earned. That some looked ahead is good. That others did not does not mean we should support them. If this is about making sure a future generation does not get stuck in this cycle, that requires the older generation to accept that they will not be getting what they put in. If the claim is that those in their 40's-60's are trying to do something good for the younger generation, then that requires not just talk, but action, including sacrafice.
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Seen on an employer evaluation: "The wheel is turning but the hamsters dead" ____________________________ Is arch13 really a porn diety ? find out after the film at 11. -Nanofever Last edited by arch13; 02-04-2005 at 01:38 AM.. |
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02-04-2005, 02:00 AM | #28 (permalink) | |
Easy Rider
Location: Moscow on the Ohio
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02-04-2005, 03:18 AM | #29 (permalink) | |
Banned
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When will we stop allowing moronic Bush to distract us from dealing with
pressing and important problems. Unlike Bush, even a broken clock is right twice a day: Quote:
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02-04-2005, 03:23 AM | #30 (permalink) | |
Banned
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Tell me again why you support Bush? Oh......factcheck.org has it all wrong?
The "war prezdent" has a much better grasp on this issue. He'll save our retire-munt!!!!!!!!!! Quote:
long before anything is done to effectively deal with our $650 billion annual trade deficit, average household debt, importation of 12.3 million barrels per day of oil, along with also using the additional 7.7 million barrels peoduced domestically, or 25 percent of total world oil production. Add the continued strain of financing the soon to exceed $8 trillion in federal debt, and the resulting impending U.S. currency crisis will make social security look like an insignifigant irritant. Since Bush has no plans to deal with this country's actual fiscal timebombs, he cooked this Bush Shit up as distracting "theater" for the masses to focus on.</h3> Last edited by host; 02-04-2005 at 03:35 AM.. |
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02-04-2005, 06:44 AM | #31 (permalink) |
Human
Administrator
Location: Chicago
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I have little faith in Bush's Social Security plan. Not because I adhere to the "OMGWTFBBQ privatization is teh evil!!!!111" mindset, but because 1) I'm not so sure the government has every TRULY privatized something and 2) the government will still be forcing people to give money to SS *on the basis the government knows better how to plan for their retirement than they do.*
In the past when the government has "privatized" something, it's only been a frankenstein child of private at public control. Take the CA energy crisis which was "caused by privatization." Nevermind the fact that the "privatized" version had more convoluted public regulations trying to falsly manipulate the market than existed when it was "public." Of course there were critics saying this, but no one listened to them.
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Le temps détruit tout "Musicians are the carriers and communicators of spirit in the most immediate sense." - Kurt Elling Last edited by SecretMethod70; 02-04-2005 at 07:51 AM.. |
02-04-2005, 07:02 AM | #32 (permalink) |
Rail Baron
Location: Tallyfla
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My whole question to those in favor of SS is why do you want to let the gov't save your money for your retirement? I sure as hell don't. It's my money, I'll save it how I want.
Please, I'd like to hear some of your reasons why the gov't is better at providing for your retirement than you are. |
02-04-2005, 07:11 AM | #33 (permalink) |
Human
Administrator
Location: Chicago
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That would require self-responsibility and self-thought. I'll take credit for my own screw-ups thank you very much, I don't need the government doing it for me.
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Le temps détruit tout "Musicians are the carriers and communicators of spirit in the most immediate sense." - Kurt Elling |
02-04-2005, 07:19 AM | #34 (permalink) | |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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First off:
Kadath: how is my post a troll while the title (which wasn't even true) and the tiny single sentence used to start off this thread weren't? Someone please tell me what kind of discussion can be started in this manner? Quote:
Frankly, I question this whole "no crisis" crowd that has cropped up overnight. If there isn't a problem with SS, why did we have the cnahges in the 80's? Why did Gore wanna put it in a "lock box"? Those questions aside, I have two serious questions regarding SS that I would like answered (I have asked them several times before here, but nobody ever tries to answer them). #1 - If there is not a problem with SS, please explain the payee/payor ratio. Why is it where it is? Where was it in the past? What is the history of changes to the ratio? #2 - The graph for the ROI on SS looks like a guy jumping off of a cliff to the right. It is scary how sharp and massive the decline is. How can you say there isn't a problem when looking at info like this? If the ROI graph for SS was a sales graph for a large company, you would see everybody with a "C" in their title jumping off the roof. I have much more to actually add to this discussion, but I would like to see how the 'no crisis" crowd answers these questions. |
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02-04-2005, 07:22 AM | #35 (permalink) | |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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The private sector would have been just fine if gov't hadn't tried to artificially control the market. I disagree here, the problems in CA had to do with the gov't and its wacky regulations and nothing to do with the actual owners of the energy companies. |
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02-04-2005, 07:49 AM | #36 (permalink) |
Human
Administrator
Location: Chicago
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um....that's what I said That's why I put the phrase "caused by privatization" in quotes.
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Le temps détruit tout "Musicians are the carriers and communicators of spirit in the most immediate sense." - Kurt Elling |
02-04-2005, 10:08 AM | #38 (permalink) | |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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First: my thanks to Kadath, that was refreshingly surprising.
Anyway, I found this and thought it very interesting: LINKY Quote:
It is especially relevant in that there is a media event involving the Democrats and the FDR memorial recently regarding their opposition to privatization. Invoke the memory of the founder of the system by disregarding his stated wishes? In all fairness, this is not proof that privatization needs to occur, but it does bring into the discussion that it was an ultimate goal for the plan. I am getting the impression that FDR actually thought about the ever-increasing number of retired people and ways of protecting his baby. In regards to some of Pelosi's comments on the matter: note the word supplement, not add on. |
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02-04-2005, 10:19 AM | #39 (permalink) |
Rail Baron
Location: Tallyfla
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In addition, the only reason SS was passed to begin with wasn't because democrats and republicans suddenly agreed on the issue, only that the republicans felt that if SS was not introduced more power would be given to the unions since they would then feel the need to control the entirety of workers' retirement funds. By passing SS legislation congress, in effect, was limiting the unions' power.
At no time did all of congress believe that SS was a good thing, only a necessary evil. |
02-04-2005, 11:28 AM | #40 (permalink) | |
Banned
Location: BFE
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account, bush, forfeit, plan, profits |
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