That would be valid, except that they receive far more in benefits than they ever paid in (or would ever have received if they'd stuck the money in an interest bearing account).Quote from bungrider:
...those seniors have been paying out SS and medicare taxes all their lives and should reap the benefits...
Quote from colina:
We are on track, well almost,
- America has lost 3 million private sector jobs in the last two years
-Long term unemployment has more than tripled
-Unemployment is higher than it has been since 1994
-A 4 Trillion dollar National debt
-1.4 million Amercians have lost their health insurance
- Millions of seniors can't afford perscription drugs
- Middle class families can't send their kids to college because they don't have the money to do it
- Bankruptcy cases have increased a record breaking 23 %
- Business investment is at its lowest level in more than 50 years
- CEOs' make more than 500 times what their workers' make
- Middle class is shrinking
- We have the greatest gap between the rich and the poor of any industrialized nation
AND THIS IS AN ECONOMY THAT IS IMPROVING
Quote from AMT4SWA:
As long as my taxes keep going for killing terrorists!!!!
BTW, I don't need any bureaucrat to find, create, or maintain my employment! I am completely self sufficient!
Quote from tatertrader:
Budget 101 huh? If only it were that simple.
This is a point of great debate for sure - but it is completely incidental to the original discussion (not irrelevant - just incidental).
The fact remains however that SS is not currently bankrupt and the current surplus is derived from revenue IN HAND - not simply projected. For example:
According to the 2000 Social Security Trustees Report, the Social Security fund spent less than 75 percent of what they collected in 1999, leaving a surplus of nearly $134 billion for the year. They now have more than $896 billion in their surplus account (closer to 1.2 trillion now I think)
The problem is that, according to projections made by the Trustees, the fund actually will begin spending more than it takes in around the year 2015, and the surplus will be depleted in about 2037. After that, the amount collected will only pay about two-thirds of the benefits guaranteed to retirees, survivors, and the disabled. In 1983, a similar shortfall (the fund was completely wiped out that year) caused Congress to raise the payroll tax.