This Forum has been archived there is no more new posts or threads ... use this link to report any abusive content
==> Report abusive content in this page <==
Post Reply 
 
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Votes - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
How might Social Security impact the planning and budget of today and the future?
12-14-2012, 07:33 AM
Post: #1
How might Social Security impact the planning and budget of today and the future?
In the future Social Security is one of the problem, what else could be a problem in the future?

Ads

Find all posts by this user
Quote this message in a reply
12-14-2012, 07:41 AM
Post: #2
 
Social Security is not a problem. In fact Social Security has so much money in it, many administrations have greedily eyed moving its bounty for other purposes. Before us is the most serious, well financed, and determined effort to undo the Social Security Act since its inception in 1935. For people to make sense of the conflicting messages on this topic, we must understand who is behind the campaign to "reform" Social Security, what this campaign aims to achieve, and how it misrepresents its goals.

The Bush administration and Wall Street lobbyists are exerting their best efforts at salesmanship. They have attempted to create a sense of urgency in the American public, using traditional marketing methods to sell us another colossal lie. Taking them up on their offer would mean cheating generations out of a program that has served our country well for decades. You ought to read a book by Joe Conason titled "The Raw Deal: How the Bush Republicans Plan to Destroy Social Security and the Legacy of the New Deal."

The Raw Deal explains the Right’s privatization goals, Bush’s hard-fought campaign built on a stacked “study,” the corporate interests behind those efforts, the media blitz to undermine confidence in Social Security, and how we can stop the swindle.

Ads

Find all posts by this user
Quote this message in a reply
12-14-2012, 07:41 AM
Post: #3
 
Dear Pottc, unfortunately the problem is that Social Security is virtually empty because the money over the last 25 years has been moved around. The trust fund is actually full of bonds from the government to the government, not actual money.

One of the big problems we are going to see is a near collapse of our infrastructure. Communities all across the nation have been putting off repairs to their water facilities, or just privatizing them and leaving them to rot. This is why there is now such a huge market for bottled water for every day use, when before this was thought to be ridiculous. There is very little uniformity in our national electrical network or grid, and until it is brought into modernity the grid remains vulnerable. About five years ago there was a black-out that hit the northeast for almost two days because one station was overloaded. The progression of the internet technology is making control of this infrastructure extremely vulnerable as well.

The problem with drugs is getting worse, not better. I don't like knee jerk reactions to this subject, but the enslavement of people to criminals is a national tragedy. Legalization is not an option, because every vice that has been legalized has just gone from being a problem to being a catastrophe (alcoholism, unregulated health care, gambling, pornography, etc). When the pusher goes from being the local stoner to the multinational corporation, we will really be in trouble.

We like to think the gap in income and wealth is just jealousy, and maybe it is, but it is turning way too much of our population against patriotism and against capitalism in all of their forms. Just telling people that they should feel lucky that they don't live in Haiti will only work for so long (I've heard that on conservative radio more than once).

Energy is going to be a problem because we still have a fossil fuel monopoly and the fuel is starting to run out. The lead lobbyist of the American petroleum industry was on C-SPAN a few months ago, and he said the world can only produce oil at its current rate for about 40 more years. We should have been working on an alternative source of individual energy a generation ago, because it will take decades to rework the infrastructure for a new fuel.

The world is just running out of credit for our debts. We have already borrowed from every country in the world and we have already depleted Social Security and Medicare, and even the retirement accounts from private industry are very shaky, some have already collapsed. When the money is no longer any good, the entire society will collapse.

Just a few things to look forward to.
Find all posts by this user
Quote this message in a reply
Post Reply 


Forum Jump:


User(s) browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)