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#501
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The younger people have spent larger fractions of their lives and their attentions spans hearing the Republican/Fox lies about Medicare and Social Security being doomed, that they'll never get it, etc. The older folks know better.
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#502
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They aren't doomed, but the trust funds don't have enough money to pay promised benefits. That's just a fact. Unless you think the Medicare and Social Security trustees are lying.
ANd older people don't know better, unless you mean they know what their self interest is: hold out as long as possible so that their wages won't be taxed more heavily and their benefits won't be reduced. Simple math says that barring privatization, benefits must go down, taxes must go up, or a combination of the two. Which is the reason young people find privatization attractive. |
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#503
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The only reason they're "doomed" is GOP intransigence in performing the necessary maintenance. The adjustments required are pretty small, but ideology requires them to eliminate them entirely, and tell lies about the reasons.
If you never change the oil in your car, it's "doomed", too. If you take a hard stand against changing oil, and yell loudly about the car being inherently doomed, and your kids will never get to drive it because it will be dead in the junkyard by then, then that's a self-fulfilling prophecy. You can even get your kids to believe it; they don't know any better and they're actually listening to you. But it's all bullshit nonetheless, and in exactly the same way. |
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#504
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Wow, a poll from june of 2011. That's helpful!
Notice that even back then, it said that people hated Ryan's plan when they actually heard about it. |
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#505
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The reason young people are not buying what the Democrats are selling here is because Democrats are portraying themselves as the party of the status quo on entitlements. Even when they've made good changes like many of those in the ACA, they deny that any real cuts have been made, which tells young people that nothing is really being done. And the youth are right. Any real cuts will always be postponed. |
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#506
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All the best polls on the Ryan plan were from 2011, nothing I can do about that. When better polls come out, those will be more authoritative.
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#507
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#508
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To clarify that last point: ACA takes some cash out of provider reimbursements for Medicare, as one of multiple incentives it has for private providers and private insurance companies to cut bureaucratic bloat and improve efficiencies. It does not cut care availability for its subscribers. Romney's ads, and current GOP rhetoric, do imply that, but that implication is a lie.
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#509
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Yes, I'm sure you think the "best" polls were the ones done before people learned about what the plan actually was.
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#510
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Wait a minute, you got kids, and they listen to you? Hey, fuck all this political talk, I want to know more about this! Fear? Bribery? Tell me, tell us all, and tell us now!
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#511
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http://abcnews.go.com/images/Politic...act_100423.pdf roviders for whom Medicare constitutes a substantive portion of their business could find it difficult to remain profitable and, absent legislative intervention, might end their participation in the program (possibly jeopardizing access to care for beneficiaries). Simulations by the Office of the Actuary suggest that roughly 15 percent of Part A providers would become unprofitable within the 10-year projection period as a result of the productivity adjustments. As much as Democrats try to obscure the issue, if you have a fee for service system, you cannot cut fees without also cutting services. Cut fees, less providers participate, seniors have less access. |
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#512
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![]() Defining truth and then declaring disagreement with it a lie. As the link in my other post shows, 10-15% of providers would become unprofitable. It's true that it's not the Democrats INTENT to cut Medicare benefits, but any efficiency drive will result in a few providers failing to meet the standards and becoming unprofitable, and thus no longer serving Medicare patients. |
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#513
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As if their overhead and bloat were beyond their control! As if the least efficient companies should be subsidized by the taxpayers! Come on now.
![]() And that's the only point you have chosen, or more likely been able, to rebut even partially. If you have a substantive argument, then stand and deliver. If not, then sit and think. |
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#514
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But isn't it an article of conservative faith that the Free Market (Blessings and peace be upon it!) would generate more efficient services and providers? Since your figures suggest that the majority of such providers would continue at a profit (85% or better, according to you). Where is the stern insistence on creative destruction, winnowing out the inefficient laggards, to the greater benefit of all!
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#515
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Trust me, yours will outgrow it too, someday. They pay more attention to you than you realize. |
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#516
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No...For example, it has been pointed out by some Democrats that SS would be solvent out for some unGodly number of years (70? if we can believe such projections) if you just raised the cap on the earnings subject to SS tax from the current value (somewhere around 100K) to 250K. So, no, you don't have to kill the system in order to save it if your goal is really to save it and not to kill it. |
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#517
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Wrt to Medicare, working people can take a look at their paychecks and see that the tax for it is quite small. Even a few bucks a week more would translate to a hefty % increase. Talk about raising revenue doesn't have to imply doing it to a collectivist degree- people still take home their pay.
Again, if it is cuts you are after, look at the military first. Americans' lives depend on the continuation of Medicare and Social Security. Do Americans' lives depend on the continuation of every active US military base in the world, for instance? I mean, as for the Nazis or the JIA, it really does appear from my humble and limited viewpoint that we got those guys and they are no longer a threat. Trim (more) bases in Europe and the Pacific. Let the 'freed troops' from those bases become a permanent reduction in the size of the active-duty force. Count the savings (unless your income depends on lobbying Congress to fund overseas projects using 3rd party contractors anchored by active-duty soldiers. If the contractor budget simply cannot be cut, transfer it to domestic projects, like infrastructure and oh gee I dunno, health care) As for Medicare cuts, a recent article in the New Yorker makes the case that significant gains in efficiency can be made in the medical field through things like standardization of best practices. Better outcomes and smaller bills. Here's the type of points he makes: Quote:
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#518
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But we're supposed to believe that all this easy to fix fraud and waste was just allowed to sit there for 40 YEARS, until Democrats decided to use it to fund a new entitlement. Yeah, that's credible. |
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#519
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#520
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And the capital gains rate is a bad deal for everyone who works for a living.
What's your point? That government should right all the bad deals, or only those that pinch the wealthy? |
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#521
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Just explaining why young people like privatization. It's the only possible way to get around either raising taxes or cutting benefits. Young people rightly believe that both solutions will fall exclusively on them. And they are right. We've had 30 years to hit the Baby Boomers in the pocket book to fund their own retirements. Now that they are retiring, it's like, "Oh wait, not enough money, we'll have to raise payroll taxes!"
If you're going to raise the payroll cap, we might as well just means test. |
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#522
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You're an incredibly dishonest debater. |
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#523
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My view is that it would change the nature of the program and that makes me dishonest? Get out of your bubble and see the world as the other side sees it.
Anyway, Social Security as it is now, is a system where what you pay in directly correlates with what you get out. That is a major part of the political viability of the program. Even if you're rich, you get out based on what you pay in. Sever that relationship and that changes the nature of the program. Now rich people pay in many times more than they get out, and we're defining rich not as the top 1%, but more like the top 10%. Now, what happens to Social Security politically when it's a bad deal for the top 10%? |
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#524
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Who cares? The rich are ALREADY trying to naysay the viability of SS and are salivating at the thought of all that money sitting there they can steal, er, I mean "privatize". If they are already doing whatever they can to steal, raising the cap is no added disincentive to the rich, and SS will be even more viable. Win-win for democrats if they grow a pair and defend social security as they should.
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#525
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The underlying subject here is responsibility. If you're conceding that point, then you're conceding a whole fucking lot else too.Quote:
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() As we say around here, "How's that workin' out for ya?" We already have IRA's and 401K's and such for anyone interested in having a private supplement for SS. But SS represents a guarantee, by design, and private investment doesn't.Quote:
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Last edited by ElvisL1ves; 08-18-2012 at 09:10 PM. |
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#526
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At least if our SS were privatized, then our SS fund could have been invested in Lehman Brothers. Rather than just the pension funds of a lucky few!
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#527
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However, Democrats aren't actually suggesting eliminating the cap. The only proposals I've heard would create a huge donut hole between the cap and $250,000. do that, and you don't raise enough revenue and have to cut benefits or raise the payroll tax on all workers. |
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#528
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Eliminating the cap creates a different social contract. |
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#529
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I don't see why things have to be drastic- the fund is scheduled to run dry decades from now. We have the ability to instate incremental changes that extend the viability of Social Security indefinitely. Say the cap rises (with inflation + .3%) per year for 20 years. Say benefits increase (with inflation - .3%) per year for 20 years. I bet that'd help plenty without anyone experiencing much suffering. It's a display example; with all the data one could devise a more accurate proposal. |
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#530
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Cite? Here's my cite: arithmetic. If every worker making over the cap is paying more in, but getting the same out, that's a bad deal.
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#531
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Except for the part where people with incomes higher than the cap are likely to be financially secure, whereas the people who need Social Security the very most are at risk if it is taken away. Maybe the whole concept overall is too 'socialist' for you, but the people aid the poor and old through government subsidies (and by no means to a collectivist degree either). Circumstances change the math, I am only suggesting adapting to it.
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#532
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You can get the same result by means testing, except when you means test, the fact that the program's nature has changed is more apparent.
So whereas Warren Buffet got his full benefits, future workers making more than $150,000 or so will simply have to do with less. And you wonder why young people think they are getting the shaft here. |
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#533
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Yes, because in the real world, lots of young people make over $150,000. So unfair!
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#534
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One quarter of voters in 2008 made more than $100,000. That's not a group you want to alienate:
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/res...s/#val=USP00p1 Which is why democrats don't actually support just eliminating the cap. They want a donut hole instead, where between the current cap and $250,000 would be exempt from tax. |
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#535
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I want a solution where the numbers add up- it doesn't have to be my personal idea. There is trouble with the trust fund long-term, but nothing that can't be fixed if we make some simple adjustments now. Incremental changes where nobody 'gets the shaft'. We just don't have to do anything drastic to solve the problem AFAICT. The Ryan plan OTOH seems to want to end all entitlements based on a forced misunderstanding of the situation in a way that benefits the wealthy, at a time when we are already being taken advantage of by the wealthy. What happens when 97% of the population puts all their labor into the system and gets nothing out? You get something like the French Revolution where the remaining 3% get strung up with piano wire, that's what. I would find that outcome unsatisfactory and believe incremental adjustments to the paperwork would be infinitely less painful. Anyway I am not so poor that I can't take a vacation. I'm off to climb some mountains and forget about all this stuff for awhile. Please don't think I am stomping away, I am just not going to be online for a few days. Ciao! |
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#536
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#537
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Paul Ryan was for government stimulus before he was against it:
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I am looking for this video to be featured in Obama campaign ads. Last edited by Fear Itself; 08-19-2012 at 10:11 AM. |
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#538
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Last edited by gamerunknown; 08-19-2012 at 04:20 PM. |
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#539
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I can guarantee you young people are not by and large wanting to opt out of SS because they want more money to party. I absolutely guarantee you if you polled young people who would opt out of SS if they could, that well over the majority want to opt out, because they don't want to pay for old people NOW who are robbing my generation with their unpaid wars etc.
I am as liberal as they come, and if I could opt out of SS I probably would...not because I don't believe in the program, but because I don't trust Democrats to actually fight back against the evil republicans who can't STAND any social safety nets. I literally don't believe in 38 years when I turn 65 that SS will be worth a damn because Democrats are willing to even negotiate SS benefits, which should be completely off of the table. You old are all robbing from your children and grandchildren and should be ashamed of yourselves, you're selfish and short sighted. Last edited by rogerbox; 08-19-2012 at 05:17 PM. |
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#540
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Of course, it affects you materially in a way it doesn't affect me, so I get how you're pissed. |
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#541
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My reading of the SSA.GOV site shows that 'what you get out' (the PIA, Primary Insurance Amount calculation) is progressive - it has a maximum benefit of less than $2500/month. Benefits do not increase directly with what you earn and pay in taxes - they are capped. Quote:
This example * shows that a theoretical 'rich guy' might have contributed $115,000 over 30 years. At $2460/month, it takes only 47 months for benefits to exceed contributions. Add in the employer contributions of $115,000 and you get another 47 months. So, after a bit less than 8 years, the 'rich guy' will collect more in benefits than taxes. * My cite also goes on to discuss the alternative investment return of SS taxes, but that is another debate entirely and should be ignored in the context of this discussion. |
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#542
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If you make more than the cap, you stop paying in - not paying more in. That is why it is called a cap... |
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