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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The age of collections when SS was started was exactly 1 year over the average life expectancy at the time. Now people collect for almost as long as they pay in, and the amount they collect has no resemblance to the amount they paid.
Also, I believe Galveston was allowed to vote on wether they wanted to be in S.S. Or not.
Those persons who voted NO, are now are very wealthy!
If there were no Soc Sec safety net, many more than 20% would rise to the occasion. Not all of them would, though. It would be good to privatize it with IRA-like accounts, but it's hard to do b/c the system needs today's workers' contributions to pay today's benefits.
To get off this scheme, people would have to save for their own retirement plus pay additional tax to pay for current benefits. It's like admitting aloud we have this de facto debt (promised future benefits) and starting to pay it off. I don't see this happening.
http://www.ssa.gov/history/idapayroll.ht...
You answer that what I said is not philosophically correct. I do not dispute that - and I made that comment myself.
The article that you linked to did not discuss the biggest difference that I see: that with SS, people will have 'something' for retirement; without SS, most people will save nothing - and they will therefor have nothing. This is the problem that I am grappling with: the same human rationalizations that cause people to put 'too many cattle on the common' will cause people to put 'too few bucks in the retirement account'. This is not because they are evil; this is not an implausible scenario (per experimental evidence); this seems to be because they are human.
Jan
What is the theme of your book?
He was playing chess.
I may be retired but I have a lot of distractions.
Believe it or not, I'm trying to write my own novel.
I'm pleased that you find my thoughts of interest!
Chile and other countries experience would suggest that your concern about 80% of the people not having enough for retirement is completely unfounded. Social Security is a very bad deal. Take a look at this article on point https://ari.aynrand.org/blog/2014/07/14/....
No one has the right to force somebody to do something for their own good - and countries that do always end up putting the average person in a worse position.
Of course the idea of us "borrowing it from China" isn't exactly true. We soaked up all the investable money and had to start printing money (quantitative easing) to keep spending -- at least 4.5 trillion worth.
I suppose we could just print money to give out as social security checks. The public can't even tell the difference between debt and deficit anymore.
I can understand your disagreeing with me; I would like to disagree with me. What I have written is where logic has lead me.
Jan
Ayn Rand was brilliant and her philosophy had a huge influence on me. (I read Anthem in grammar school and AS in HS.) But if some aspect of her philosophy does not 'work' in the real world, it does not work. There have been many experiments done on optimism in the human species and their results consistently show that people overestimate the probability that 'good times' are just around the corner and everything will come out well. The further in the future 'the corner' is, the more optimistic they are. (Psychopaths estimate the probabilities much more accurately, interestingly enough.) I actually think that +-2SD of the human population will not provide for retirement (so, somewhere around 80%).
So I have to say that in order for retirement system to 'work' it has to be able to 'get' (motivate/cause) that 80% to save for their future. A SS system that puts our involuntary donations into a privatized account is certainly better than the SS system we have right now. I can live with that until someone clever figures out how to motivate people to do it on their own.
Jan
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