Article

Solving Social Security

Topic: Death and DyingPublished July 6, 2009

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,061 legacy views

Watching Bill Maher last week, I was arrested by his suggestion that those who qualify for Social Security and are well-off should not collect their government checks, but should instead let their share continue to nourish the severely undernourished Social Security system. I think it’s a good idea. rnSocial Security has become an entitlement in the United States because all employees are legally required to pay into it. I don’t think it should be. rnHere’s how Wikipedia explains Social Security: “Social Security in the United States currently refers to the federal Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI) program. “U.S. Social Security is a social insurance program funded through dedicated payroll taxes called Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA).” rnI gave up my Social Security rights years ago. My logic went like this. When I was a child, my father was killed in a plane crash. Social Security checks arrived monthly for me from the time I was five until I was twenty-one. My brothers, younger than I, received a monthly check, too. We were survivors. Those checks made my childhood a relatively financially comfortable place. rnFast forward ten years. I became a minister. Under the Internal Revenue Code, a minister may apply for exemption from Social Security Tax with the understanding that the minister will not qualify for benefits later. It’s predicated on the notion that we preachers don’t have jobs that we’ll retire from, but that we have callings that are so strong that we’d rather die in the pulpit than retire. rnThat’s not why I applied for the exemption. I applied for the exemption because I figure I already got my share of Social Security. I’m no longer entitled to it. Let someone else have the few thousands that I’ve put in. rnsocial_security_626_article.jpg rnWhen Bill Maher made the suggestion about some of us leaving our shares in the system, as visions of that ever-running clip of Bernard B. Madoff swirled in my head, I remarked that Social Security is really a sort of Ponzi scheme. My partner whirled on me and pounced: You’re right! rnWikipedia explains Ponzi scheme thus: “A Ponzi scheme is a fraudulent investment operation that pays returns to investors from their own money or money paid by subsequent investors rather than from any actual profit earned.” rnIsn’t that a pretty good description of how Social Security works? rnBill and his guests were also talking about a temporary cessation of payroll taxes which would put instant money into our pockets if we are employees. I liked this more and more. A cessation of payroll tax influx into Social Security whilst a bipartisan task force revamps it sounds good to me. rnA client of mine just returned from a wrenching week with her nonagenarian parents who aren’t really ill, but aren’t really well either. They require 24-hour nursing care. Part of what’s going toward paying that cost is Social Security programs. I don’t begrudge them their benefits—they paid in their share—but it does make me wonder. rnMy client lives 2,000 miles from her parents. Two siblings live within five minutes by car. No one wants to take these national treasures into their homes. I don’t blame them—it’s close to impossible to be a fulltime caregiver. rnDeath and dying have become a multi-billion dollar industry because we no longer have a tradition of caring for our elderly, or letting go. My client’s parents live in a lovely assisted living community, cared for by strangers. rnI can’t help but think that if we were all to return to our heritage of taking care of one another, that Social Security might no longer be an entitlement and might just be able to take care of itself.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

This month (May 2022), I have another lump in my throat and a knot in my stomach. The pain is deep for me and hundreds of others who are tired. We are tired of turning on the television or hearing on the internet of another shooting. The Buffalo and Uvalde shootings hit me especially hard. It was my birthday weekend (May 13) for the Buffalo shooting, and I was high on LOVE. I enjoyed John P. Kee in concert (Los Angeles, CA) and the taste of my chocolate covered edible. The we

December 31, 2022

Article

The passing away of a loved one is a trying time for any family. It can be challenging to think of funeral arrangements as the family wants to grieve the passing away of the family member. Funeral services are a helping hand in such a scenario as they take the entire responsibility on their shoulders and assist the bereaved family in every possible way. Earlier, the funerals in Narre Warren were mostly dominated by males as it was a male-dominated industry. However, a lot has

November 23, 2022

Article

Cannabis smokers frequently report that when stoned, their musings have a free-wheeling quality and ideas appear to be associated in surprising and fun loving manners . An investigation just distributed online in Psychiatry Research recommends that this impact might be because of the medication causing 'reckless' examples of spreading movement in memory, something known as 'hyper-preparing'. Preparing is a very much examined impact in brain science where experiencing one idea

May 27, 2021

Article

For murder, though it have no tongue, will speak. So said the Bard—and it seems he was right on the money. Murder doth speak and has an echo far more pressing than any comment on the living. After all, we are, to this day, asking ourselves this: are we predisposed to kill, or are we puppeteered? Understanding the Reptile Brain Also called the triune brain, the reptile brain is a part of every human being’s cerebral makeup. This is the part of the brain associated with our

April 30, 2021