William Greider of The Nation has written a excellent description of the coming assault on the social safety net.
Trillions have been stolen, yet rather than recapture it and hold people accountable, the folks who were responsible for the integrity of our financial system and failed to prevent trillions being stolen (or worse) are now proposing that the wider population is to blame. (See my comments on documentary I.O.U.S.A. )
This type of propaganda is dangerous spin and underscores why it is so important that as many people as possible start asking the question, “Where is our money and how do we get it back?” Yes, there are ways we can get the money back. First, however, we need to establish that it is missing and we want it back.
If we need resources for any purpose in this country, the first step is to restore and recapture monies that have been stolen in violation of the Constitution and US appropriations and laws.
The following is an excerpt from Greider’s piece from The Nation, “Looting Social Security.”
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Governing elites in Washington and Wall Street have devised a fiendishly clever “grand bargain” they want President Obama to embrace in the name of “fiscal responsibility.” The government, they argue, having spent billions on bailing out the banks, can recover its costs by looting the Social Security system. They are also targeting Medicare and Medicaid. The pitch sounds preposterous to millions of ordinary working people anxious about their economic security and worried about their retirement years. But an impressive armada is lined up to push the idea–Washington’s leading think tanks, the prestige media, tax-exempt foundations, skillful propagandists posing as economic experts and a self-righteous billionaire spending his fortune to save the nation from the elderly.
These players are promoting a tricky way to whack Social Security benefits, but to do it behind closed doors so the public cannot see what’s happening or figure out which politicians to blame. The essential transaction would amount to misappropriating the trillions in Social Security taxes that workers have paid to finance their retirement benefits. This swindle is portrayed as “fiscal reform.” In fact, it’s the political equivalent of bait-and-switch fraud.
Defending Social Security sounds like yesterday’s issue–the fight people won when they defeated George W. Bush’s attempt to privatize the system in 2005. But the financial establishment has pushed it back on the table, claiming that the current crisis requires “responsible” leaders to take action. Will Obama take the bait? Surely not. The new president has been clear and consistent about Social Security, as a candidate and since his election. The program’s financing is basically sound, he has explained, and can be assured far into the future by making only modest adjustments.
But Obama is also playing footsie with the conservative advocates of “entitlement reform” (their euphemism for cutting benefits). The president wants the corporate establishment’s support on many other important matters, and he recently promised to hold a “fiscal responsibility summit” to examine the long-term costs of entitlements. That forum could set the trap for a “bipartisan compromise” that may become difficult for Obama to resist, given the burgeoning deficit. If he resists, he will be denounced as an old-fashioned free-spending liberal. The advocates are urging both parties to hold hands and take the leap together, authorizing big benefits cuts in a circuitous way that allows them to dodge the public’s blame. In my new book, Come Home, America, I make the point: “When official America talks of ‘bipartisan compromise,’ it usually means the people are about to get screwed.”
The Social Security fight could become a defining test for “new politics” in the Obama era. Will Americans at large step up and make themselves heard, not to attack Obama but to protect his presidency from the political forces aligned with Wall Street interests? This fight can be won if people everywhere raise a mighty din–hands off our Social Security money!–and do it now, before the deal gains momentum. Popular outrage can overwhelm the insiders and put members of Congress on notice: a vote to gut Social Security will kill your career. By organizing and agitating, people blocked Bush’s attempt to privatize Social Security. Imagine if he had succeeded–their retirement money would have disappeared in the collapsing stock market.
To understand the mechanics of this attempted swindle, you have to roll back twenty-five years, to the time the game of bait and switch began, under Ronald Reagan. The Gipper’s great legislative victory in 1981–enacting massive tax cuts for corporations and upper-income ranks–launched the era of swollen federal budget deficits. But their economic impact was offset by the huge tax increase that Congress imposed on working people in 1983: the payroll tax rate supporting Social Security–the weekly FICA deduction–was raised substantially, supposedly to create a nest egg for when the baby boom generation reached retirement age. A blue-ribbon commission chaired by Alan Greenspan worked out the terms, then both parties signed on. Since there was no partisan fight, the press portrayed the massive tax increase as a noncontroversial “good government” reform.
Ever since, working Americans have paid higher taxes on their labor wages–12.4 percent, split between employees and employers. As a result, the Social Security system has accumulated a vast surplus–now around $2.5 trillion and growing. This is the money pot the establishment wants to grab, claiming the government can no longer afford to keep the promise it made to workers twenty-five years ago.
Actually, the government has already spent their money. Every year the Treasury has borrowed the surplus revenue collected by Social Security and spent the money on other purposes–whatever presidents and Congress decide, including more tax cuts for monied interests. The Social Security surplus thus makes the federal deficits seem smaller than they are–around $200 billion a year smaller. Each time the government dipped into the Social Security trust fund this way, it issued a legal obligation to pay back the money with interest whenever Social Security needed it to pay benefits.
That moment of reckoning is approaching. Uncle Sam owes these trillions to Social Security retirees and has to pay it back or look like just another deadbeat. That risk is the only “crisis” facing Social Security. It is the real reason powerful interests are so anxious to cut benefits. Social Security is not broke–not even close. It can sustain its obligations for roughly forty years, according to the Congressional Budget Office, even if nothing is changed. Even reports by the system’s conservative trustees say it has no problem until 2041 (that report is signed by former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, the guy who bailed out the bankers). During the coming decade, however, the system will need to start drawing on its reserve surpluses to pay for benefits as boomers retire in greater numbers.
But if the government cuts the benefits first, it can push off repayment far into the future, and possibly forever. Otherwise, government has to borrow the money by selling government bonds or extend the Social Security tax to cover incomes above the current $107,000 ceiling. Obama endorses the latter option.
Follow the bouncing ball: Washington first cuts taxes on the well-to-do, then offsets the revenue loss by raising taxes on the working class and tells folks it is saving their money for future retirement. But Washington spends the money on other stuff, so when workers need it for their retirement, they are told, Sorry, we can’t afford it.
Federal budget analysts try to brush aside these facts by claiming the government is merely “borrowing from itself” when it dips into Social Security. But that is a substantive falsehood. Government doesn’t own this money. It essentially acts as the fiduciary, holding this wealth in trust for the “beneficial owners,” the people who paid the taxes. This is the bait and switch the establishment intends to execute.
Peter Peterson, a Republican financier who made a fortune doing corporate takeover deals at Wall Street’s Blackstone Group, is the Daddy Warbucks of the “fiscal responsibility” crusade. He has campaigned for decades against the dangers that old folks pose to the Republic. Now 82 and retired, Peterson claims he will spend nearly one-third of his $2.8 billion in wealth–he ranks 147 on the Forbes 400 list of richest Americans–alerting the public to this threat (leave aside the fact that old people have already paid for their retirement or that Social Security’s modest benefits are equivalent to minimum-wage income). The major media treat him adoringly. Most reporters are too lazy (or dim) to check out the facts for themselves, so they simply repeat what Peterson tells them about Social Security.
It is a frightful message. Peterson describes a “$53 trillion hole” in America’s fiscal condition–but the claim assumes numerous artful fallacies. His most blatant distortion is lumping Social Security, which is self-funded and sound, with other entitlements like Medicare and Medicaid. Those programs do face financial crisis–not because the elderly and poor are greedily gaming the system but because the medical-industrial complex has the profit incentive to drive healthcare costs higher and higher. Healthcare reform can solve the financing problem only if it imposes cost controls on private players like the insurance and pharmaceutical industries.
Peterson is financing a media blitz. His tendentious documentary–I.O.U.S.A.–opened in 400 theaters and was broadcast on CNN with appropriate solemnity. Last September Peterson bought two full pages in the New York Times to urge the next president to create a “bipartisan fiscal responsibility commission” once he was in office (Peterson was for John McCain). This group of so-called experts would be authorized to design the reforms for Congress to enact. But Peterson does not want Congress to have a full, freewheeling debate on the particulars. The reform package, he suggests, should be submitted to a single “up-or-down vote by Congress, as is done with military base closings.” That’s one of the gimmicks intended to give politicians cover and protect them from their constituents. It is profoundly antidemocratic. But that’s the idea–save the government from the unruly passions of citizens. Peterson’s proposal also resembles the notorious fast-track provision, which for years enabled presidents to steamroll Congress on trade agreements, no amendments allowed.
Peterson’s proposal would essentially dismantle the Social Security entitlement enacted in the New Deal, much as Bill Clinton repealed the right to welfare. Peterson has assembled influential allies for this radical step. They include a coalition of six major think tanks and four tax-exempt foundations.
Their report–Taking Back Our Fiscal Future, issued jointly by the Brookings Institution and the Heritage Foundation–recommends that Congress put long-term budget caps on Social Security and other entitlement spending, which would automatically trigger benefits cuts if needed to stay within the prescribed limits. The same antidemocratic mechanisms–a commission of technocrats and limited Congressional discretion–would shield politicians from popular blowback.
The authors of this plan are sixteen economists from Brookings and Heritage, joined by the American Enterprise Institute, the Concord Coalition, the New America Foundation, the Progressive Policy Institute and the Urban Institute. “Our group covers the ideological spectrum,” they claim. This too is a falsehood. All these organizations are corporate-friendly and dependent on big-money contributors. No liberal or labor thinkers need apply, though the group includes some formerly liberal economists like Robert Reischauer, Alice Rivlin and Isabel Sawhill.
The ugliest ploy in their campaign is the effort to provoke conflict between the generations. “The automatic funding of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid impedes explicit consideration of competing priorities and threatens to squeeze out spending for young people,” these economists declared. Children, it is suggested, are being shortchanged by their grandparents. This line of argument has attracted financial support from some leading foundations usually associated with liberal social concerns–Annie E. Casey, Charles Stewart Mott, William and Flora Hewlett. Peterson has teamed up with the Pew Trust and has also created front groups of “concerned youth.”
Trouble is, most young people did not buy this pitch when George W. Bush used it to sell Social Security privatization. Most kids seem to think Grandma is entitled to a decent retirement. In fact, whacking Social Security benefits, not to mention Medicaid, directly harms poor children. More poor children live in families dependent on Social Security checks than on welfare, economist Dean Baker points out. If you cut Grandma’s Social Security benefits, you are directly making life worse for the poor kids who live with her.
The assault sounds outrageous and bound to fail, but the conservative interests may have Obama in a neat trap. Their fog of scary propaganda makes it easier to distort the president’s position and blame him for any fiscal disorders driven by the current financial collapse. He will be urged to “do the right thing” for the country and make the hard choices, regardless of petty political grievances (words and phrases he has used himself). Obama’s fate may depend on informing the public–now, not later–so that people are inoculated against these artful lies.
I am retired and barely have enough money to pay utilitie bills and food prices are outrageous, eventough I get food stamps I still need to put out a chunk of money on food. Help, Help.
this is simply OUTRAGEOUS in my estimation? when is the elite going to STOP pulling wool over all our eyes? wakeup Americans
Get into cash or hard assests, i.e. Gold, Silver, Realestate. buy Wheat and other grains from farmers when prices are low and pay them to store it for you until prices jump at certain times of the year, then sell direct to flour users. I contracted with a farmer to plant me a thousand acres of white wheat this year. cut out the middle men. get out of 401k’s IRA’s and major cash in U.S. banks, get rid of credit cards and use cash or hard money, pay the penalty and dump you’re 401 and IRA. They will soon have it, and you will have no say in the matter.
What do you have against people that make more than $107k per year? You do know that Social Security is based upon how much you pay into it, right? So folks that make $250k per year receive the same benefit as those that make $107k per year.
What I’m concerned about is that Congress will remove the SS taxation cap and not increase the SS benefits…
And, please someone correct me if I’m wrong… I thought that even if you are retirement aged — if you make too much money, you receive reduced or no social security. So, in effect, we get screwed twice. We pay into social security, never to receive what we’ve paid into it.
I’m in my 30’s and am expecting to not receive a dime from the nanny state. Medicare, medicaid and social security have nothing to offer me. I’m responsible for planning and providing for my own future financial security. I find Ms. Fitts’ commentary on our financial system enlightening — and yes, the wall streeters have stacked the deck against us, but quit whining about people that are making over 100k — we go to work and have problems just the same as you.
I’m sorry that I left the comment above and hope that you will delete it, Catherine. It had been a few years since I had read about the supressed energy, but I learned today that the website has been outed as a Psy-Op. I’ll provide the link to the discussion that tracked down this information- fascinating that this deliberate mind-bending is so deep. Who to trust?
I do not think Mr. Marc is one of the wealthy above the $107,000 cap, I just think he has a different perspective on what is going on in the world, as do we all. My only problem is the need to insult or claim that people who agree with the conclusions of Ms. Fitts or William Grieder are some how less intelligent or are crazy. It seems like a simple, “I’m sorry Ms. Fitts I do not agree with your’s or Mr. Grieder’s view of the situation and here is why…”, would be enough to say you do not agree. It’s fine to disagree but there’s no need to insult people by claiming “they’ve been gutted intellectually”. Oh well I guess.
Anyway, interesting article. Thanks for the information.
Excellent article. I am NOT an american but this article opened my eyes regardless. I wonder why most of the americans (including Mr. Marc Sheffner) still have their eyes shut and cannot see this conspiracy.
The retirees must be given access to decent Social Security benefits which they have been paying since last 25 years. I wonder how Mr. Marc Sheffner would feel if somebody takes his savings of 25 years and tells him that he cannot get access to it.
Or perhaps Mr. Marc is one of the few privileged americans having incomes way above the present $107,000 ceiling for Social Security. It must feel really wonderful not paying a penny of tax on one’s income above this ceiling, isn’t it Mr. Marc ?
Greed has many layers and can be insited by simple seeming Truths (myths), like Self Reliance.
Note that one income in the 1950’s, 60’s and even into the 70’s could raise a family and retire. Now it’s two incomes and quickly headed toward three incomes.
Every work day I see the educated and self sufficient blame those making financial mistakes but not taking into account financial ignorance. Inflation education is not required in public education and is not accurately taught in the Financial Planning college text I am now reading.
The great manipulator FEAR is such an effective version of greed that it could take down my social security benefit too. It takes a strong map to read our political economy. I appreciate how Solari peels back the layers so it’s easy to see the greed driving so many things. There is so much human capital to be taped in our nation that we could raise the standard of living significantly.
This one pushed some buttons,
Brad
Gary North does not believe in the “insiders conspiracy” theory, and he explains why over at mises.org (also on lewrockwell.com), in an article entitled “Economic Fascism and the Bailout Economy”: ” The conspiracy of well-placed insiders is now tottering. The whole structure of the national American political system has rested on the solvency of the largest American banks. These banks have all been called into question. They are now gutted.
The thought that commercial bank insiders actively demolished trillions of dollars of their own equity as part of a conspiratorial plan is so imbecilic, so outrageous, so ludicrous, that I am convinced that these conspiracy worshippers have lost whatever remained of their minds. They have been gutted intellectually, just as the banks have been gutted financially. …
The American conspirators have lost the one thing that they thought they had: control over the nation and the nation’s finances by means of the fractional reserve banking system. That system is coming unglued, just as Ludwig von Mises said it would, just as Murray Rothbard said it would, and just as those other Austrian economists who understand the enormous weakness of the fractional reserve system had said would eventually take place.”
Go read the whole thing: it pulls no punches. I wonder what you think, Catherine?