Setting Grandma’s Hair on Fire
by Patrick J. Buchanan
Social Security is a “Ponzi scheme for these
young people,” said Gov. Rick Perry in his first debate as a presidential
candidate. “The idea ... that the current program is going to be there for them
is a lie.”
Pressed by the moderator, Perry did not back down.
He doubled down, calling Social Security a “monstrous lie to our kids.”
Is not such language provocative, Perry was
asked. Retort: “Maybe it’s time to have some provocative language in this
country.”
Since Barry Goldwater suggested the program be
privatized and LBJ ran an ad of a Social Security card being scissored in half,
the issue has been “the third rail of American politics.” Touch it—and it kills
you.
Apparently, the Mitt Romney campaign thinks it
is still the third rail.
Falling on Perry’s perceived fumble, Mitt
declared that Social Security “is working for millions of Americans, and I will
keep it working for millions of Americans. ... Our nominee must not be someone
who is committed to abolishing Social Security but ... to saving Social Security.
Yet Perry never said he was going to abolish
Social Security. He said, “We need to be focused on how we are going to change
this program.”
Karl Rove, however, piled on, as did ex-Romney
aide Alex Castellanos:
“Rick Perry may have reassured the base with
some very fiery rhetoric, but what he didn’t do last night was prove in any way
that he could win independents or seniors or soccer moms. And ... he shot an
arrow into the heart of seniors. He set grandma’s hair on fire.”
Well, perhaps.
Yet, on the merits, Perry has more than a small
point. For the Social Security program has been relentlessly looted by a
Beltway political class that has used it for decades as the piggy bank of last
resort.
Social Security was originally designed in the
1930s to be a program where all workers would contribute during their years of
employment into a trust fund, from which they would receive a small annual
stipend to help with retirement, should they live to 65.
In the 1930s, not everyone lived to 65. Indeed, from
1950 to 1955, life expectancy for the average American male was 66 years.
In 1972, when Richard Nixon proposed a
10-percent increase in Social Security benefits, plus indexation—automatic
annual increases to cover inflation—the Democratic Congress raised it to 20
percent.
Fearing a congressional override if he vetoed,
Nixon signed, then claimed credit for the most generous Social Security benefit
increase in history, and went on to win 49 states.
But the 1970s became a decade of soaring
inflation, and Social Security payments, now indexed, soared along with it.
By 1982, Social Security was nearly bankrupt. A
commission led by Alan Greenspan was appointed to save the system. This was
done by raising the Social Security tax rate and tax base, and modestly
increasing the age of full retirement. Americans were living longer.
However, something else had been happening to
the Social Security trust fund. The hundreds of billions that poured into
government coffers in Social Security taxes each year had been borrowed by the
U.S. Treasury and used for operating expenses—fighting wars, funding food
stamps, etc.
Thus today the Social Security trust fund
consists not of gold, silver or tradable commodities and securities, but of
special-issue government bonds, IOUs, a promise by the Federal Government to
pay back what it has taken out and spent.
If Ford Motor did what the U.S. Government has
done—borrowed and spent all the cash the company, its employees and workers had
contributed to their pension fund, and used it for wages, salaries and
expenses, leaving IOUs in the vault—the executives would go to prison.
What is Social Security today?
Basically, it has become an inter-generational
income-transfer program where working people contribute 6.2 percent of all
wages, and their employers match it, and the money is then sent to the
Treasury, which sends it out in monthly checks to the 50 million on Social
Security.
If incoming funds don’t match what Social
Security recipients are entitled to, the Feds borrow the money from China or
somewhere else. If incoming funds exceed what has to go out in Social Security
checks, the Feds use the surplus to cover the deficits, and leave an IOU.
And there are other and serious questions raised
by the Ponzi scheme controversy. Is grandma’s generation, which fought World
War II, Korea and the Cold War, more alarmed by Rick Perry’s red-meat rhetoric
than by President Obama’s refusal to address the entitlement crisis threatening
the fiscal and financial future of the republic?
Is political correctness more important to
Americans than hearing the unvarnished truth about the condition of their
country?
If so, the country is in trouble, not just Rick
Perry.
Another Texan from another time, “Cactus Jack”
Garner, once said, “Sometimes you have to give it to ‘em with the bark on.”
For an America going steadily downhill, such a
time is now.
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