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Why Save Social Security? Revisited
by
Jacob G. Hornberger,
March 18, 2005
My article Why Save Social Security? generated so much email, both pro
and con, that I thought I would share some of the
comments with you, along with my response to some of the
points made by them.
Email supporting repeal
Please continue this attack to eliminate this
purely socialistic travesty. You are the first to
recommend abolishment, and you are the one to carry
it through. As a long time supporter, Ill try
to help.
We have truly reached that point (on way too many
fronts) where the first and foremost duty of a responsible,
rational individual is to restate the obvious.
I agree and have for some time now. To say it out loud has a
tendency to get one a dirty look.
Why do we have to retire from our jobs?
Why do we think we arent going to really live until
we dont have to work? How come we dont notice
that the people who live the longest, the healthiest and
the happiest are the people who are working into their
old age? Why dont we realize that work is good for
us?
So far, Socialist Security has stolen over $20,000
from me and another $20,000 in matching contributions
from my employers. I would gladly let them keep every
penny theyve stolen to date, if theyll just
stop stealing it now. When I think of all I could do for my
family and all my children and future grandchildren could
do with the money that is currently stolen, I get
frustrated. Why so many selfishly hold on to this
socialist program when they know in their hearts that the
check they receive does not come from money they put in
but is stolen from the hard earned labor of their
children is beyond my comprehension. Personally, Id
much rather work hard and be poor because Im taking
care of my parents than to work hard and be poor because
I have to pay for a bureaucratic leviathan which throws
my parents a few crumbs. People decry the loss of family
unity but I place the blame for this loss squarely on the
shoulders of the socialists who have replaced their faith
in God, church, family and community with dependence on
the state.
Email supporting gradualism
I find no fault with what you say in your article
Why Save Social Security, but how
does one abandon or fix social security? Havent we,
as an aging nation, become dependent on the promised
result? Or will one or two upcoming generations be
forcefully yanked off the safety net? I
cant find anyone with a plan! ... only calls for
change ...
I fully agree that privatization is the real
answer, yet I see the need for road-building
... Just as I do on the healthcare issue, which cannot be
answered with a simple let the market take care of
it! Unless we show a pathway to get from here to
there while making clear where there
is we are just more noise in the signal.
Sayings have both denotations and connotations. The
phrase saving Social Security has the
denotation of
preserving the current system. The Bush proposal
obviously is not intended to do that. It is intended to
increase freedom of choice in providing for ones
own retirement. Therefore the phrase must be considered
in light of its connotation. It means that nobody
dependent on the current system is going to suffer
deprivation.... It is a functional method of making vital
moves in the direction of philosophical principles.
Email supporting Social
Security
At this time I live on social security. Bravo for
the Christians who would slash Jesus throat for another nickel
they can take from those less fortunate. I dont
want to see the system I paid into given to the rich.
However if SS were shut down tomorrow I would still
survive as I have always been prepared for the unexpected.
The question you do not answer is should what you ask for
occur, how will those totally dependent on SS survive?
I suppose we should bring back the poor houses too.
No better yet lets increase the homeless
population. You are an elitist who is hung up on labels.
Social Security must be bad because it sounds like
socialism or is socialism. So what? There is nothing
wrong with having fail safe programs that are not in the
hands of no less corrupt corporate thieves.
Can not agree with your article. It is not that
people cant be trusted to save money
for retirement instead of having Social Security to fall
back on in their last years. A large percentage of the
nation is living from hand to mouth because of low paying
jobs with no health insurance and are forced to save with
the Social Security taxes taken out of their paychecks
and they have to make do with whats left
over.
My response
In my original article, I asked a very simple question:
Why save Social Security? Let me rephrase the question:
Why not simply repeal, not reform, Social Security?
Doesnt an opposition to repeal connote a lack of
faith in freedom and free markets? Isnt the
underlying theme of the critics and the reformers that we
simply cannot trust freedom and free markets? Arent
they really saying, If we repealed Social Security
today, old people would starve to death and die in the
streets? Doesnt that response reflect a
woeful lack of faith in the American people and how they
would respond if they were free to keep their own money?
Doesnt it suggest that coercion is needed to ensure
that the American people are good, caring, compassionate, and responsible and, if so, isnt that a sad testament to what the socialistic welfare state has done to people?
Why do I favor the immediate repeal, not reform, of
Social Security? First and foremost because it is morally
wrong for one person to take what doesnt belong to
him, either privately in some back-alley holdup or
through majority vote and the coercive apparatus of the
state. That is, if I hold you up, saying, Im
taking your money to help my mother, thats
stealing, which is morally wrong. Is there any
difference, morally speaking, if I enlist some
legislative body to take your money and give it to my
mother? Of course not. Thus, repealing, not reforming,
Social Security would help restore America to a sound
moral basis, one based on the freedom of people to keep
their own money and decide what to do with it. Reforming
Social Security continues the immoral foundation of the
system for at least some length of time.
Second, there is absolutely no doubt in my mind
none that no one would starve to death and no one
would die in the streets. Why? Because, as I have stated
time and time again, politicians and bureaucrats are not
the only good and caring people in the world. You can
trust most people to honor their mother and father on a
voluntary basis. You can trust most people to help others
who are in need. After all, look at the results of the
recent request for relief for foreigners in the tsunami
disaster. Look at what rich people such as Bill Gates
give away every year.
One big problem is that the American people have lost
faith in themselves and in freedom. Second only to the
abandonment of morality that came with Social Security,
that loss of faith is probably the most tragic
consequence of enacting this socialist program. Social
Security has operated as a narcotic, making Americans
feel hopelessly dependent on it making them
believe that they could never survive without it.
But they can and they would survive if Social Security
were repealed today no doubt about it.
Many old people are wealthy they dont really
need to be plundering and burdening young people who are
struggling to start families.
Some old people are less well-off and might have to
return to work. Whats wrong with that? Remaining in the workplace, especially among younger people, can make an older persons life much more fulfilling and rewarding, especially if the alternative is simply to sit in some dark corner at home every day.
Some old people are truly unable to manage. They would
depend on their children or other family members, on
church groups, or on charitable organizations.
Thats what genuine compassion is all about, not the
coercive apparatus of the Social Security Administration.
The power of truth, principles, and ideas
One of the most interesting feedbacks to my article appeared in the form
of a
blog by one Robert Capozzi on an interesting website
entitled freeliberal.com that describes itself as "left-libertarian" (and which, by the way,
often links to FFF articles).
Describing me as a
soapbox lunatic, Capozzi stated that the idea of repealing
of Social Security (as compared to reforming it) should be rejected because it is, to
use his words, far outside the mainstream.
His blog stated in part,
Hornberger still asks the question: So, why
not repeal Social Security or even gradually
demolish it rather than simply reform it or, even
worse, save it? I guess this is a serious question,
so Ill offer a few responses: because it wont
happen ... because 95% of the population perhaps
more would not support abolition ... because SS
represents the sole or majority of the income for many
people in America.... Hornbergers questions and
analysis are not wrong. They are, however,
simply irrelevant.
So, what Capozzi appears to be
saying is that even though repeal is the right solution
to Social Security, we shouldnt advocate the right
solution because 95 percent of the American people are
against it. In other words, apparently our beliefs and
convictions should be compromised hidden from
public view when they are unpopular.
Yet, if popular opinion constituted a valid reason for a
person to abandon or hide his convictions and principles,
how would mankind ever have advanced through the ages?
Many of historys greatest ideas have challenged the
prevailing mood of the times. Freedom of religion.
Freedom of expression. Freedom of the press. The right to
keep and bear arms. Due process of law. Habeas corpus. If
it werent for people willing to challenge the establishment
with new, often provocative ideas, mankind would still be mired
in the ignorance, poverty, and enslavement that have characterized most people throughout history.
What does Capozzi say about people such as Socrates,
Jesus, Adam Smith, Henry David Thoreau,
Frédéric Bastiat, Leonard Read, Ludwig von
Mises, and Ayn Rand? That they were all soapbox
lunatics who should have kept quiet because their
views were far outside the mainstream? That
they should have settled for reform instead of standing
firmly for their convictions and beliefs? That mankind
would have been better off if they had joined up with the
95 percent who opposed their unpopular ideas?
Moreover, doesnt Capozzis position imply the
futility of persuasion that is, isnt he
suggesting that people are either unable or unwilling to
change their minds when confronted with a different idea
and with persuasive arguments in favor of it?
Most important, mustnt we remain true to ourselves
and to our principles if we are to bring enlightenment to
others? As Edward R. Murrow put it, To be
persuasive, we must be believable. To be believable, we
must be credible. To be credible, we must be
truthful. In his essay Penalty of
Surrender, Leonard Read put it this way,
Intellectual integrity simply means to reflect in
word and in deed, always and accurately, that which one
believes to be right. Integrity cannot be compromised. It
is either practiced or not practiced. George Washington summarized it like this: If to please
the people, we offer what we ourselves disapprove, how
can we afterwards defend our work? Let us raise a
standard to which the wise and honest can repair; the
event is in the hands of God.
Conclusion
We need a rebirth of freedom and political morality in
America and a restoration of self-reliance, can-do, self-
esteem, responsibility, compassion, and voluntary
charity. Americans must recapture a belief not only in
freedom but also in themselves and in others.
Theres no better place to start than by repealing,
not reforming, Social Security.
Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
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