Ayn Rand and Social Security
Posted by overmanwarrior 10 years ago to Government
Social Security was a stupid idea, and it never should have been enacted. It is an insult to stick the government in between Americans and their so-called retirements. I resent every deduction taken from my paycheck as a theft stolen from me, because the government will never be in a position to pay me back all the money I have “invested” under coercion. I have personal friends who hate Social Security so badly they have essentially given up their citizenship over the issue. One of those friends had began plotting his deferral from the Social Security system in the 5th grade—no kidding. He was a very smart kid and while the other kids were talking about the rock band KISS and the new show on television called The Dukes of Hazzard, he was planning on how to legally refuse his obligations toward Social Security. As an adult, he gave up his citizenship after years of legal entanglement—but—he doesn’t pay into the system, because as he was always right, Social Security is stolen money not granted by an infant when they are issued a card after being registered by their parents. His argument was that his parents didn’t have a right to commit him to a life obligation into such a contract with the government.
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Jan
On your main point, I'm not sure I understand what you're saying. I can only say along with the author of the main post is that, regardless of the fact that there really is no "Social Security Trust Fund", the fact remains that you contributed money that were deemed "not taxes", that you would get back someday, and I believe that is right that you should (even if it doesn't approach what you put into it).
To use a slightly different, shorter term example: if on April 15th you filed your income taxes and found you had "overpaid", would you not expect your refund back?
But to return to your other point, I think we need to figure out a reasonable plan for younger people to opt out of Social Security, actually, suspend it altogether and advise them to find an alternative, while still keeping the obligation to pay benefits to those who contributed to the program, and are too old for "opting out" to mean anything to them. And some point, Social Security would no longer exist, and the principle of people providing for their own old age would be restored.
It was a simple study based on sound investment principles, and studied what you could have at 65 if you took your average SS "contribution" starting at the beginning of your working career, and put it into it in a very safe investment earning maybe 3%. Given compound interest etc., the study showed you would have a nest egg of at least $1M, and this is where my memory fails me, it may actually have been a significantly higher number.
No wonder at the time of it's original implementation, attempts to pass legislation allowing you to substitute or "opt out" of SS were fought so hard and defeated.
This is almost made moot by the ACA...but I still have hope that will be repealed. Soon. Please.
Jan
It is fine to say that we should use Ant and Grasshopper...but I ask: How many of your friends have substantial retirement accounts? Very few of mine do. So what happens when the 80% of the people in the country who do not provide for retirement get too old for work?
I do not have a Randist answer for this. I think one of the persistent problems with Ayn Rands philosophy is that she hopes that we will be good and wise if we are free. Since my observations run counter to that, I would respectfully suggest that if the gov taxed each citizen a 'retirement' fee, put that money in an individual account that was owned by the citizen (and which became part of his estate) and which was both privately handled and firewalled from gov use (as funds or as collateral) we might have a workable system.
As it is, dbhalling's idea of transferring our SSA funds to actual investment accounts would be a big relief. I agree that this is philosophically sub-par, but I struggle to imagine a workable system that does not compensate for human short-sightedness.
Jan
Saw The Fountainhead too.
I have the feelings of a wah-wah hatchling, though.
Not really. I just thought it amusing to write that.
Welcome to the Gulch!
However, the benefit of the deductions phases out so if you weren't going to get any benefit from the deduction you could ignore the requirement for providing SSNs -- no harm, no foul.
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