Reform Social Security for Those Who Need It Most
As it stands, the program effectively redistributes money from younger and poorer people to richer people.

The United States is at a crossroads. You may have heard that Social Security is politically impossible to reform. But that belief will be hard to sustain. In a few years, the Social Security Trust Fund will be exhausted. When that happens, Social Security benefits will be cut across the board by 21 percent—that is, unless Congress changes the law. Either way, changes are coming.
The question that remains is which change we will go for. That choice will have long-lasting consequences.
But first, let's review how we got where we are. Social Security is facing a permanent cash-flow deficit that started in 2010. Every year since, the payroll tax revenue has not been enough to cover all the benefits paid to current retirees. To make up this difference, the program has been relying on trust-fund assets that once accumulated as a surplus.
Between the Social Security reform of the 1980s and 2010, the payroll tax collected more revenue than necessary to pay for benefits. That extra revenue, the surplus mentioned above, was handed out to the Department of Treasury to pay for bridges, wars, and other things in exchange for IOUs, or a legal promise to repay Social Security when payroll tax revenue no longer covers all the program costs.
In 2033, there will be no more trust-fund assets left for the program to use. At that time, Social Security benefits must, by law, revert to being paid only with revenue earmarked for Social Security. That means current payroll taxes and other dedicated revenue sources like the tax on Social Security benefits.
Now that we understand why benefits will get cut, let's look at the options we have.
Democrats would like to keep all the benefits and raise taxes on higher-income people quite dramatically. This is a ridiculous idea. The damage caused by jacking up the payroll tax to the level required to restore solvency isn't worth the benefit.
There is an alternative that makes far more sense. Today seniors are generally wealthier than younger workers and are overrepresented in the top income quintile. Keeping every dime of your Social Security whether you are rich or poor means the program effectively redistributes money from younger and poorer people to richer people. That's not right. We should have a system that redistributes money only to those who need it the most.
Enter Andrew Biggs and Kristin Shapiro. In their new paper, "A Simple Plan to Address Social Security Insolvency," they note that if the scheduled 21 percent cut is implemented on "an equal percentage basis for every retiree," it would "double the elderly poverty rate and reduce total income for the median senior household by 14 percent."
Instead, they suggest that when a program becomes insolvent, "the executive branch in fact possesses considerable discretion to allocate those limited funds in a reasonable manner." The idea is that the president at the time of the trust-fund exhaustion would pay full Social Security benefits to those in greatest need first.
Specifically, starting in 2033, if Congress hasn't reformed Social Security, cap monthly benefits to $2,050. That would cover full benefits for about 50 percent of retirees, arguably those who depend the most on Social Security. The benefits for the other half of retirees, the higher-income ones, would be distributed on a progressive basis. The higher one's income, the larger the necessary cut would be.
I understand that voters, seniors, politicians and just about everyone else would prefer those benefits not be cut at all. This is not happening. Maintaining all the benefits and paying for the gap with borrowed funds requires $40 trillion over 30 years. If you add the $75 trillion shortfall for Medicare, this option exposes us to dramatic consequences like inflation.
The bottom line is that Social Security is getting reformed no matter what politicians are telling us. The program, which was designed at a time when not working was almost synonymous with poverty for seniors, needs to be updated for the 21st century. And, while benefits need to be cut one way or another, it can be done relatively fairly.
We should all be grateful that capital markets and the stability of American institutions make so many seniors so well off and so well prepared for retirement today. The way forward is to take care of those seniors who truly need help, using the tax revenue we are already raising. There are no better and more politically feasible ideas on the table.
COPYRIGHT 2024 CREATORS.COM
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Libertarians for wealth transfers?
My Magic 8 Ball suggests that this is not libertarian: “Signs Point to No”
More like libertarians who realize that a partial solution that is politically do-able is better than the perfect solution that will never happen.
Like the collapse of Venezuela "will never happen"?
The collapse of the US is what I'm trying to avoid. Venezuela looks like a lost cause that already has collapsed in all but name.
Yeah, WTF Reason.
Why are they so fucking obsessed with this. Benefits will be cut by 21 percent. That’s the damn solution.
Not :congress, somebody do something!
Nope! Libertarians' GRANDPARENTS voted for wealth transfers. My g'parents voted to keep FDR in power: not my parents, and certainly not I.
I'm a retiree now. I didn't want to "contribute" to SS when I was a young adult, but I had no choice because it was *required by law*. And it was legally required because the beneficent FDR told my grandparents, "We're all in this together."
It was the only way FDR could sell the idea. Plus typicalDemocratic party BS, right?
I'd be happy to take a hair cut on the large sum I've "contributed," if I could get part of it back in a one-time settlement. Then I'd be done with this freaking mess I never wanted any part of.
^^^Hear! Hear!
As Paulie Cicero was known to say "Fuck you pay me!"
Those who payed in , get paid out. That’s the deal.
That was the claim, but SCOTUS has long since ruled that the payout part can be altered at any time, that this is not a contract with a guaranteed payout.
I doubt it was ever the claim. FDR's Brain Trust designed Social Security as a Ponzi scheme with the express purpose of making it hard to undo. The lockin we see now was their intent.
I can’t wait for the boomer uprising.
Hear, hear!
I'm convinced the D party's long-term goal is to make every citizen a client of the State.
Reform it for all by sunsetting it. Ponzi schemes are bad, mkay.
The problem is it's a Ponzi scheme. Sunsetting the young who pay the tax also sunsets the old who depend on the benefit.
FDR's Brain Trust set it up this way on purpose, bragging it would make it near impossible to ever unwind. You have to find some way to sunset the tax while still paying the benefits.
Sunset it or it will sunset itself with battles all the way down into the oblivion.
Those relying on it may want to get into gardening, and not stupid annual flowers, and learn about the wonders of ramen noodles. Hard times might be coming for the Madison Ave boomer, groomer, consumers. Not being a dick, just keeping it real.
You can't pretend you're a politician and just demand "sunset it!" without saying how to do that.
Keep that part of it real. How do you pay current retirees if you've sunset the current tax?
How do you pay current retirees if you’ve sunset the current tax?
We just bite the bullet and pay it out of the general fund, which is what is going to need to happen eventually anyway. We can bleed a bit now, or we can bleed a whole lot later. Not bleeding isn't one of the available options.
You've got $1.5 trillion of payroll tax to make up. Where's that coming from?
Yes, yes, I know there's a helluva lot of fat to trim. It's still $1.5 trillion.
We went an additional 1 trillion in debt in the last 100 days.
Great! Is that your answer? It just ain't gonna happen. You may as well wish for fishes.
Luca Brasi sleeps with the fishes. O/T and random, but I just had to post that
See Vivek Ramaswammy on Lex Friedman. It’s an incredibly long interview. Hint..pull a Meili Argentina.
You sunset it inasmuch as allowing people to opt out. And pay out to those receiving the benefits in proportion to what comes in after that. If half now comes in, everyone gets half of what they had been.
People currently paying in and are many years until they are eligible aren’t going to see anything; why should they be forced to fund crap they will never realize?
It was always a Ponzi scheme. Those ignoring this, making poor choices, having unfortunate circumstances doesn’t change that or that it is wrong forcing people to remain in the Ponzi scheme.
Or just continue to consume at unsustainable rates by putting more burden on fewer people paying in, raiding Roth IRAs, capping income eligibility at lower levels, CBDC, and the like. I still think it fails with all of that.
There is nobody above the fed govt to bail them out unlike other entities in the past such as steel mills.
Need more people paying payroll taxes. Long as they're not immigrants of course.
No, we need more illegal immigrants paying taxes, including those being paid under the table. There's a way to do that... and it ain't payroll taxes.
The SS system is already progressive. So your solution is to allow more low income workers to come in, Pay less lifetime SS, then get SS pay outs having paid less in.
Brilliant sarc. Brilliant.
Noncitizens don’t generally get Social Security. Though if they work legally they pay into it.
A noncitizen (also called an “alien” for immigration purposes) may be eligible for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) if he or she meets the requirements of the laws for noncitizens that went into effect on August 22, 1996. In general, beginning August 22, 1996, most noncitizens must meet two requirements to be potentially eligible for SSI:
https://www.ssa.gov/ssi/spotlights/spot-non-citizens.htm
Why can’t you take 5 seconds to not look fucking retarded every day.
And say zero got SSI. Now you’re openly advocating theft lol.
SSI is not Social Security.
Social Security is for retirement.
SSI is primarily for disabled people.
The solution to govt theft is not more of it. And putting someone making bubkis on a wealth redistribution system is setting it up for a bigger future failure. Let’s have the SS California turn around, and disembark their crew onto the Titanic.
You have to find some way to sunset the tax while still paying the benefits.
Remove the income cap on the payroll tax. No one under 40 has to pay the employee part of the payroll tax, nor will they receive any benefits. They get to use the money for some other retirement scheme that will pay better, and when everyone who is today over 40 dies, the payroll tax dies too.
I think Chase Oliver is proposing something similar.
Where have I heard remove the caps, make the wealthy pay more from before... the DNC I believe. Fuck those who make more than you I guess.
Opt outs is the correct libertarian answer.
What’s wrong with removing the cap other than the people who suggested it?
Opting out is great, but it doesn’t pay for current promises.
And I really don't give a fuck about what you say the true libertarian answer is.
What's wrong is that removing the cap won't bring in nearly enough money to solve the problem. It's a sound-bite, not an actual solution. It could be a step in the right direction but it's a very, very small step - and it's one with enough adverse consequences that it's probably not worth the effort.
It only delays the cliff about a decade. It is dumb.
Noticed you responded to what she said instead of attacking her. So you are capable of pretending to be a human being. First I’ve ever seen of it. Impressive. I really didn't think you had it in you.
Combined with a phase out.
*shrug*
It's still a lot better than what the next president will do: nothing.
Phase out, how? How do you excuse the workers paying the payroll tax and keep paying the retired beneficiaries? They are flip sides of the same coin. Just yelling "phase out" doesn't do squat.
First removing the caps effects both pay in and pay out. So it delays, doesn’t fix.
Secondly the system is already highly progressive so you want even more of a wealth transfer, like a Democrat.
So in both your responses your solution is for government to take from some to give to others. Such a one true libertarian.
That’s called Socialism. All the rage these days are kids calling themselves Libertarian Socialists.
Will even add that every year I hit the cap I take put the 6.2% they normally remove for SSI and invest it each paycheck in my own owned funds. But you want to take this away from people more successful than you. Fuck off.
Psocialism
"What’s wrong with removing the cap "
I can't believe an ostensible libertarian needs to be told this, but it's wrong because it will mean a wealth redistribution.
Today, benefits are capped at less than $47,000 per year. In return, people are capped in how much they have to pay a year- about $10,500.
If you remove the cap on taxes then you will have people paying much more into the fund, without getting an increase in benefits. Which is basically progressive wealth redistribution writ large. People in the top 1% will be paying more each year than they will draw each year from the benefit.
Now you might say that you don't care about this. But it isn't a libertarian position.
Thats another point. The wealthy or upper middle class working people end up having any SS income taxed back to the Feds. It’s a scam all the way around.
On paper the well off are receiving the transfers, on tax day they’re paying a percentage of (or most of it) back to that black hole called the federal government.
In a few years, the Social Security Trust Fund will be exhausted. When that happens, Social Security benefits will be cut across the board by 21 percent—that is, unless Congress changes the law. Either way, changes are coming.
What Trust fund?
There is a file cabinet in West Virginia with the US Government bonds that make up the trust fund.
The trust fund was only the excess payroll taxes. The primary source for paying benefits has always been the current payroll tax.
I know you know this, but too many people don't, they just think there's a stash somewhere like Scrooge McDuck's vault full of T-bills.
Or somewhere in a Delaware Beach House garage.
This!
Words matter, and those of us who are trying to reduce the scope of the problem need to avoid the gimmick phrases "trust fund" or "lock box". This is a ponzi scheme pure and simple. But killing is will only happen at the cost of national suicide. Better to reform to the maximum extent politically possible while we can. It will take politicians who place the nation ahead of self and party, but maybe we'll get lucky.... some day.
I know how to fix this! I'm a Kamala voter!
Ha! You people are so dumb. We'll just raise it by 30% the year before!
Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha
How do we pay for it? “We just pay for it”- AOC
"Specifically, starting in 2033, if Congress hasn't reformed Social Security, cap monthly benefits to $2,050. That would cover full benefits for about 50 percent of retirees, arguably those who depend the most on Social Security. The benefits for the other half of retirees, the higher-income ones . . . "
Not even close.
I live mostly on social security, after 45 years of working with a gun to my head taking between 7.3% and 15.3% of my earnings. The return on that 'contribution' now leaves me in the lower half of annual income. And your proposal would cut that income by a third.
No thank you very much.
You need to go back to the drawing board and figure a way to phase out the program over a generation with some kind of optional buyout.
(Of course, the issue there will be all the people who opt out, then wind up with no retirement because they invest in a unicorn farm)
You can download all your annual deductions from ssa.gov, and google to find annual returns for the Dow Jones and S&P 500. I ran my deductions through a calculator; I would have enough from the DJIA right now that 5% withdrawals would be 3 times as high as the SSA benefit, and 5 times as high from the S&P 500. The S&P 500 has averaged 10% returns for the last 10 years, meaning it would still be growing above inflation.
I then reran those calculations for every period starting in 1926 when the S&P 500 began. The worst starting year (which I do not remember) resulted in 96% of the SSA benefit; the best was 7 times as high.
Actually, it was a couple of years ago during COVID, but the general principle remains. Everyone would be better off if the government simply forced everyone to put the same 15% payroll tax into an indexed mutual fund. Not only would retirees have more retirement income, they'd have the principle to pass on to their kids.
What good is that? The government wouldn’t be able to use those funds to send help to Ukraine.
They use borrowed money now, this would let them borrow more money. Think how much more taxes are available with that 10% payroll tax suddenly freed up!
> What good is that? The government wouldn’t be able to use those funds to send help to Ukraine.
Or buy the geriatric vote.
Would have been nice that when Bush proposed something like this back in his second term that the Dem/media complex didn't act like he was going to put senior citizens on the streets...
Social Security and Medicare are the biggest spenders in the federal budget, and this has to stop.
I recommend the following idea.
Have a proposed buyout of all those on SS.
Those on SS would be offered a onetime million dollars buyout which would be tax free to those who choose who choose this option.
In return, they will never get SS, Medicare, Medicaid, or any other federal government money ever again.
Those who refuse the buyout will still get their monthly payments along with Medicare or Medicaid.
I believe the buyout will ease the strain on the taxpayers in the long run.
The spending has to stop in DC otherwise there is a real possibility the US will end up as broke as the old Soviet Union or the Weimer Republic.
SS would be a great place to start.
I suspect you do not realize what a small amount $1,000,000 is.
(Especially if the democrats claim this election)
Still and all, it would be the individual to make the choice of a buyout or not, not some government hack.
How would you pay for those million dollar lump sums? More borrowing?
And you don't need a million. S&P 500 returns have averaged at least 10% over the last ten years. Taking out 7% (so the rest matches inflation) would be $70,000 a year.
I'm sure the buyout will hurt, but in the long run, it will save the taxpayers billions especially if you include the cost of Medicare and Medicaid.
Long term’s nice. But you can’t get to long term without passing through the short term of coming up with all that money.
ETA and yes, it would save piles of money. The payroll tax could be 1/3 its current size of it went straight to indexed mutual funds, although I have no idea of the impact of add $1.5 trillion to mutual funds. But you can't just dream up all those lump sums from the Magical Money Tree.
Given that the current maximum benefit of SS is $47k a year, taking the buyout would be the smart move.
The department of Education would be a better place to start.
Followed by:
DHS
HUD
HHS
and all the rest not allowed by the US Constitution.
IRS first
Honest question, considering health insurance in this country is employer driven, and I think that is why medicaire is even a thing, how would retirees get medical coverage?
This is why I can't take establishment libertarians at all seriously. Their answer here is "keep paying, get nothing". People got sold on a lifetime of higher taxes on the promise that they'd get something in return. Now that the whole Ponzi scheme is about to go bust, you want to tell the people who were forced to pay the most into the scheme to keep paying without even a promise of anything.
If you want to get rid of Social Security, fine, good riddance. I won't even ask for a refund on the money extorted from me. But, don't sit there and tell me it's now going to be a forced handout. You want to be generous with "those who need it most"? How about advocating to pay for it with a tax on college staff and endowments?
Exactly. There are a lot simpler ways to make sure the rich don't get SS, but capping it at half? Not gonna fly.
The solution to SS is – mostly local.
Back in my great granddads day, in small town Kansas, the town set aside land so seniors, the disabled, orphans, etc could have a place where they could live and sustain themselves at a slower pace. It was a place where they were comfortable so that even when the velociraptors and zombies would invade to pick them off, they wouldn’t flee. But that extra food freed up the rest of the town from being rampaged.
It was a win-win for almost everyone. Now - SS and Medicare are all about the money - but velociraptors and zombies don't eat money.
Means-tested social security payments is a reasonable proposal but I don't think there anywhere near the discretion in law necessary to allow the Executive Branch to implement that unilaterally. If you want to implement means-tested payments, Congress has to say so.
^The correct answer
Outlaw the AARP. They run a scare campaign against any sort of reform of either SS of Medicare.
Yeah, I know, freedom of association and freedom of speech, but at least get all of the reform-minded to talk about that part of the issue (the hyperbole that your 95 year old grandma is going to wind up dying of a simple infection while starving to death in the cold).
Means testing would be a likely possible solution. It's already part of Medicare with those with incomes above certain thresholds paying a higher premium. Why not do the same for the payouts on SS?
First, without any doubt, they will raise the retirement age.
Then, they will reduce or eliminate benefits for anyone who is "rich" by "rich" they will mean "not starving"
Then, they will raise taxes on the rest of us.
The borrowing into oblivion will continue apace the whole time.
This is not happening. Maintaining all the benefits and paying for the gap with borrowed funds requires $40 trillion over 30 years. If you add the $75 trillion shortfall for Medicare, this option exposes us to dramatic consequences like inflation.
Lol. dramatic inflation is coming whether you would have it not.
Raising the retirement age is the way. It is what they will choose in the near future. The sooner they choose it, the better. Because they need to graduate it in.
Means testing, as a Libertarian, is preferred. There is no better way for people to shitcan SS than for it to become a welfare benefit.
"Social Security has run out on you and me"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68LAbJtd4uk
PRIVATIZE IT….
It’s the best way to end the Gov-Gun’em down “Security for [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s]” conquering and destroying the USA one Constitutional Violation at a time.
And being entirely UN-Constitutional and treasonous it doesn't require Congress or the President; all it takes is an HONORABLE SCOTUS ruling.
Or put more bluntly…
If you don’t want to live in a Nazi-Germany.
STOP re-authoring the USA definition (US Constitution) into a [Na]tional So[zi]alist h*llhole.
After paying in at the upper limit for much of my working life, rightly or not, I have an expectation of benefits. I will accept two alternatives to continuing the benefit I just started:
1. Return all of my contributions in a lump sum.
2. Pay me in non-cash assets. The US has lots of federal land. An acre on the south rim of the Grand Canyon or in Yellowstone would be acceptable.
I think a land grant is actually an interesting idea. Though, we all know that the people getting the Yellowstone properties would be the Zuckerbergs. Nevertheless, I'd love that idea.
But the actual answer is going to be increasing the age. Most of the insolvency can be addressed just by returning the expected number of years paying out back to what it was when SS was started. I don't like that, but it is pretty much what every financial analyst looking at the problem thinks will happen.
How does increasing the retirement age help? If you plan to raise the retirement age without adjusting monthly payments you will simply cut the average total lifetime payout per recipient. How is that any better than just reducing the current monthly benefit by 21% to maintain solvency?
When the Social Security Act was passed, the retirement age was intentionally set at several years beyond the average life expectancy of the potential recipients. Returning to that rule for retirement age would drop the total lifetime payout to zero for over half the population. The 21% cut returns the program to break-even. Increasing retirement age arguably returns the program to the surpluses it maintained during its early decades.
Dramatically increasing the retirement age would also drive substantially different behaviors among retirees and potential retirees. I believe those behavior changes would probably be a net positive for society but its a complex question.
"Returning to that rule for retirement age would drop the total lifetime payout to zero for over half the population."
That might have made some sense when workers had to pay in only 1% of their income (along with 1% paid in by the employer). It was then more like insurance and less of an annuity. But it would be a very hard sell to force workers to pay in 6.2% of their income (plus same by their employer) with a very good chance of getting nothing in return.
For a programmatic solution, offer a bounty on anyone receiving SS benefits, but only to other eligible seniors of equal or greater age. The successful hunter gets 10% of the victim's benefit, and the feds get to retire the other 90%. They can also sell the TV rights.
Get back to us when you have completed the environmental impact study on all those bodies decomposing.
Because with a bunch of untrained half-blind 'seniors' wobbling around with their walkers, shooting anything that looks like it might be old, the first responders will be in the firehouse playing poker and eating lasagna with the phone off the hook.
What are other countries doing?
Taxing their citizens to death.
The shorter version: From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.
This article doesn’t sound very Randian, or even the least bit libertarian.
The answer is not so simple, and it has multiple parts. But ultimately, we should get the Federal government out of the annuity funding business over the space of several decades (~60 years). And nobody wants to put Grandma or Grandpa into the streets, or have to take them into their homes. SSA is here to stay, in some form.
For anyone 55+, you're locked into the existing SSA system.
For 0-54, and people born through 2030, you get a hybrid plan.
After 2030, citizens and legal resident aliens get a regulated, private funded plan (not too much unlike Chile) invested in low cost, total market index funds. Optionally, that could be 'seeded' by the Federal government with a one-time payment of 10K at birth into the system....and/or have it augmented by contributions of parents (to an annual limit).
What to do?
1. OASDI taxes will have to increase from the current 15.3% to something on the order of 17% to fund existing and future retirees through a 60 year transition period. That represents maybe $10-$15 per bi-weekly paycheck for someone making ~100K (adjust proportionally for different salary). That phases out over time.
2. If you want to target more benefit to lower income people, then adjust the first bend point upward from 90% to 100%. You would then adjust the second bend point to something like 25%, and maybe phase out any benefit after the second bend point (currently 15%, but you could make this 0). My point: You can adjust AIME and the bend point percentages.
3. The Fed Gov Thrift Plan is a great model, particularly for low cost index funds. This is the model I would use for benefits, albeit with fewer choices (fewer choices = fewer opportunities for Congress to do mischief on the regulatory front). US based, US owned plan administrators (Think Blackrock, Fidelity, Vanguard, Schwab, etc - but must be domestic).
4. We can increase the retirement age (I don't recommend this).
5. We can implement means testing for current (not hybrid, or private) system retirees, with benefit phaseouts for ultra high income retirees (1MM+ annual income).
To solve the problem, the SSA program must evolve. What it evolves to is where libertarians can provide thought leadership. Libertarians don't want a government funded plan by taxation, so evolve the SSA system that way.
Everything falls apart on the path to evolving the plan from here to there. That is where the debate should be. What is a viable path to transition the plan?
"In a few years, the Social Security Trust Fund will be exhausted."
It doesn't matter how much you think you're owed. Turning your government Socialist already STOLE it. Do you think Venezuela government still owed its citizens after the nation collapsed?
The Socialist bank is NOT sustainable; never was. 'Guns' don't/never-did make sh*t. The well is dry.
Are all of you crying about what you 'paid' as concerned about what you did to *EARN* your COVID checks? I think not. Maybe that was your final Socialist dispersment.
"How to make the socialism work / pay-out" by fudging, adjusting numbers and continuing to VIOLATE the Supreme Law of this Land that will never fix anything.
The socialism has got to be gotten rid of.
Grandma can visit her LOCAL welfare office if she needs too.
OR the LOCAL prison system where all the ‘needs’ are taken care off.
Really; it’s the Socialist Democrats who rightfully belong in prison.
For their ?free?-ponies 'armed-theft' criminal spree.
Ask for a refund on that PhD, de Rugy. I was "poor" when I started working, but my wages increased over the years. That's why Social Security looks at 35 years of earnings, not just the last year. And I paid Social Security tax on each and every dollar I earned. My Social Security payments aren't ripping anybody off. I paid and I want it back. What is more lubbertarian than that? All those so-called "poors" you're shedding crocodile tears over can start showing up at the office instead of bitching about no more telecommuting and start earning the pay raises that will increase *their* Social Security payments.
So it can't be privatized because??? The fact it isn't privatized is exactly how you're going to be ripped off. When the "halls of justice" are the supplier you have no "halls of justice".
So, let me see if I understand correctly…
Those who took money out of the government coffers, in the form of student loans to enhance their career earnings, get their “debit” forgiven.
Those who put money into the government coffers, in the form of social security taxes to avoid poverty in retirement, get their “credit” forgiven.
Sure, that seems fair.
Nothing like some ex post facto 'fuck you' to seniors who have been giving in to SS their entire lives.
If we have to cease providing social security to Americans in order to fund social security, medical care, and foreign nations in wars amongst themselves then so be it. It is our DUTY to destroy our own nation to fund theirs!