Anonymous wrote:and yet insurance doesn't charge the rich more simply because they are rich...so no SS isn't functioning as insurance.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This. At what point are we going to stop robbing Peter to pay Paul? The tax the rich mantra is getting old.Anonymous wrote:I'd like the damn thing to earn some interest somehow for starters. Right now, it's just a transfer payment from young to old.
I don't like a cap increase. Are you also going to do a payout increase? Of course not. This just proves how mathematically unsound it is. It's a pyramid scheme and at the end, the noobies are going to get screwed, b/c it won't be there for them.
Forget this uppermost brackets stuff. It isn't a welfare system and it was never meant to be. It's a retirment system.
Additionally, why is SSDI (disability) dipping into SS? Becuase everyone who collected 99 weeks of unemployment decided the next best route was to go onto disability for (unprovable) aches and pains. The system is being abused and people need to be told to FO.
Finally, I want Obama to return the close to $1 Trillion he took from medicare to fund Obamacare. Enough of this robbing peter to pay paul for votes crap.
It's not a retirement system. It's a retirement insurance system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:and yet insurance doesn't charge the rich more simply because they are rich...so no SS isn't functioning as insurance.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This. At what point are we going to stop robbing Peter to pay Paul? The tax the rich mantra is getting old.Anonymous wrote:I'd like the damn thing to earn some interest somehow for starters. Right now, it's just a transfer payment from young to old.
I don't like a cap increase. Are you also going to do a payout increase? Of course not. This just proves how mathematically unsound it is. It's a pyramid scheme and at the end, the noobies are going to get screwed, b/c it won't be there for them.
Forget this uppermost brackets stuff. It isn't a welfare system and it was never meant to be. It's a retirment system.
Additionally, why is SSDI (disability) dipping into SS? Becuase everyone who collected 99 weeks of unemployment decided the next best route was to go onto disability for (unprovable) aches and pains. The system is being abused and people need to be told to FO.
Finally, I want Obama to return the close to $1 Trillion he took from medicare to fund Obamacare. Enough of this robbing peter to pay paul for votes crap.
It's not a retirement system. It's a retirement insurance system.
Neither does Social Security.
Anonymous wrote:Point of clarification:
The Social Security Trust Fund is invested in U. S. Treasury Bonds, the same thing that investors treat as the world's safest investment.
http://www.cbpp.org/research/social-security/policy-basics-understanding-the-social-security-trust-funds
Anonymous wrote:and yet insurance doesn't charge the rich more simply because they are rich...so no SS isn't functioning as insurance.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This. At what point are we going to stop robbing Peter to pay Paul? The tax the rich mantra is getting old.Anonymous wrote:I'd like the damn thing to earn some interest somehow for starters. Right now, it's just a transfer payment from young to old.
I don't like a cap increase. Are you also going to do a payout increase? Of course not. This just proves how mathematically unsound it is. It's a pyramid scheme and at the end, the noobies are going to get screwed, b/c it won't be there for them.
Forget this uppermost brackets stuff. It isn't a welfare system and it was never meant to be. It's a retirment system.
Additionally, why is SSDI (disability) dipping into SS? Becuase everyone who collected 99 weeks of unemployment decided the next best route was to go onto disability for (unprovable) aches and pains. The system is being abused and people need to be told to FO.
Finally, I want Obama to return the close to $1 Trillion he took from medicare to fund Obamacare. Enough of this robbing peter to pay paul for votes crap.
It's not a retirement system. It's a retirement insurance system.
and yet insurance doesn't charge the rich more simply because they are rich...so no SS isn't functioning as insurance.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This. At what point are we going to stop robbing Peter to pay Paul? The tax the rich mantra is getting old.Anonymous wrote:I'd like the damn thing to earn some interest somehow for starters. Right now, it's just a transfer payment from young to old.
I don't like a cap increase. Are you also going to do a payout increase? Of course not. This just proves how mathematically unsound it is. It's a pyramid scheme and at the end, the noobies are going to get screwed, b/c it won't be there for them.
Forget this uppermost brackets stuff. It isn't a welfare system and it was never meant to be. It's a retirment system.
Additionally, why is SSDI (disability) dipping into SS? Becuase everyone who collected 99 weeks of unemployment decided the next best route was to go onto disability for (unprovable) aches and pains. The system is being abused and people need to be told to FO.
Finally, I want Obama to return the close to $1 Trillion he took from medicare to fund Obamacare. Enough of this robbing peter to pay paul for votes crap.
It's not a retirement system. It's a retirement insurance system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"To make all of Social Security solvent for the next 75 years would require the equivalent of any of the following: immediately raising the Social Security payroll tax rate to 14.98% from 12.4% on the first $118,500 of wages; cutting benefits by 16%; or some combination of the two."
In other words, raise the percentage close to where it was just a few years ago.
Also, where in this article do they reference that it runs dry because what's owed to the trust fund, over 2.7 trillion, has run out in combination with the amounts being added in each year.
Hold the phone. They CUT the percentage that earners pay in a few years ago? (Retirees forget these things.) if so, I doubt that was supposed to be permanent - sounds like something to put more money back in Americans pockets. So....yeah.....first thing would be to restore it. And the 2.5 percent is shared by employer and employee, so it's barely a 1% increase. Spread over 150 million workers it makes a big difference.
Let me correct myself. When I looked it showed it without the additional they add in for the medicare. I remembered them cutting it for a time but I will have to go back. I am self employed, pay the maximum at 15.3% and it doesn't separate it as fica and medicare. I am also paying additional medicare tax beyond the max.
Now, what I have been for is holding the employer contribution the same, lower incomes pay a smaller percentage and higher incomes pay more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"To make all of Social Security solvent for the next 75 years would require the equivalent of any of the following: immediately raising the Social Security payroll tax rate to 14.98% from 12.4% on the first $118,500 of wages; cutting benefits by 16%; or some combination of the two."
In other words, raise the percentage close to where it was just a few years ago.
Also, where in this article do they reference that it runs dry because what's owed to the trust fund, over 2.7 trillion, has run out in combination with the amounts being added in each year.
Hold the phone. They CUT the percentage that earners pay in a few years ago? (Retirees forget these things.) if so, I doubt that was supposed to be permanent - sounds like something to put more money back in Americans pockets. So....yeah.....first thing would be to restore it. And the 2.5 percent is shared by employer and employee, so it's barely a 1% increase. Spread over 150 million workers it makes a big difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"That's unlike a pyramid scheme, because in a pyramid scheme, there is no set of assumptions that will allow it to work forever. "
Uhhh, yeah. Hello! It's thus the very definition of a pyramid scheme.
Hello yourself. If you set payments in equal to payments out, a pyramid scheme only works when both are zero. If it's an insurance scheme, as social security is, then all you have to do is count payments in and set benefits to be no greater than that. That's how Metropolitan Life Insurance company has been in business since 1868.
You can call it whatever you want. Insurance, tax, lollipops.
Bernie Madoff (madoff madeoff!) did the same thing and is now in jail.
You should look at the social security trustee reports sometime. It's not in the state you think it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"That's unlike a pyramid scheme, because in a pyramid scheme, there is no set of assumptions that will allow it to work forever. "
Uhhh, yeah. Hello! It's thus the very definition of a pyramid scheme.
Hello yourself. If you set payments in equal to payments out, a pyramid scheme only works when both are zero. If it's an insurance scheme, as social security is, then all you have to do is count payments in and set benefits to be no greater than that. That's how Metropolitan Life Insurance company has been in business since 1868.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You guys are way down in the weeds. The thing is insolvent and you're arguing about mowing the lawn while the house is on fire.
It's not insolvent. When the trust fund runs out in 2034 or so, there will still be enough money to pay 75% of benefits forever. The trust fund was an add-on created by Ronald Reagan so he could kick the can down the road by raising taxes without cutting benefits while getting credit for being a fiscal conservative. But we should go back to what it was before, a pay-as-you-go system, just by balancing income and outflow. And I repeat if we DO NOTHING, there will be a 25% cut in benefits, but the system will last forever.
A) It's paying out more than it's taking in today.
B) Much of what's in the "trust fund" are IOUs, so the money isn't even there. It's been robbed for other things.
C) Medicare is even worse off that SS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You guys are way down in the weeds. The thing is insolvent and you're arguing about mowing the lawn while the house is on fire.
It's not insolvent. When the trust fund runs out in 2034 or so, there will still be enough money to pay 75% of benefits forever. The trust fund was an add-on created by Ronald Reagan so he could kick the can down the road by raising taxes without cutting benefits while getting credit for being a fiscal conservative. But we should go back to what it was before, a pay-as-you-go system, just by balancing income and outflow. And I repeat if we DO NOTHING, there will be a 25% cut in benefits, but the system will last forever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You guys are way down in the weeds. The thing is insolvent and you're arguing about mowing the lawn while the house is on fire.
It's not insolvent. When the trust fund runs out in 2034 or so, there will still be enough money to pay 75% of benefits forever. The trust fund was an add-on created by Ronald Reagan so he could kick the can down the road by raising taxes without cutting benefits while getting credit for being a fiscal conservative. But we should go back to what it was before, a pay-as-you-go system, just by balancing income and outflow. And I repeat if we DO NOTHING, there will be a 25% cut in benefits, but the system will last forever.
Anonymous wrote:"That's unlike a pyramid scheme, because in a pyramid scheme, there is no set of assumptions that will allow it to work forever. "
Uhhh, yeah. Hello! It's thus the very definition of a pyramid scheme.