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September 12, 2010 at 9:18 PM in reply to: NYT article: Housing Woes Bring a New Cry: Let the Market Fall #605210September 12, 2010 at 6:45 PM in reply to: NYT article: Housing Woes Bring a New Cry: Let the Market Fall #604089
Aecetia
ParticipantSDR- Very nice rebuttal to Sandra.
September 12, 2010 at 6:45 PM in reply to: NYT article: Housing Woes Bring a New Cry: Let the Market Fall #604177Aecetia
ParticipantSDR- Very nice rebuttal to Sandra.
September 12, 2010 at 6:45 PM in reply to: NYT article: Housing Woes Bring a New Cry: Let the Market Fall #604726Aecetia
ParticipantSDR- Very nice rebuttal to Sandra.
September 12, 2010 at 6:45 PM in reply to: NYT article: Housing Woes Bring a New Cry: Let the Market Fall #604834Aecetia
ParticipantSDR- Very nice rebuttal to Sandra.
September 12, 2010 at 6:45 PM in reply to: NYT article: Housing Woes Bring a New Cry: Let the Market Fall #605150Aecetia
ParticipantSDR- Very nice rebuttal to Sandra.
September 7, 2010 at 10:26 AM in reply to: NYT article: Housing Woes Bring a New Cry: Let the Market Fall #601548Aecetia
ParticipantThose hits just keep on coming:
Social Security’s objective — forcing people to save for retirement — is legit. Otherwise millions of us would seek handouts in our old age.
But Social Security has also played a central role in the massive, six-decade Ponzi scheme known as U.S. fiscal policy, which transfers ever-larger sums from the young to the old. In so doing, Uncle Sam has assured successive young contributors that they would have their turn, in retirement, to get back much more than they put in. But all chain letters end, and the U.S.’s is now collapsing.
The letter’s last purchasers — today’s and tomorrow’s youngsters — face enormous increases in taxes and cuts in benefits. This fiscal child abuse, which will turn the American dream into a nightmare, is best summarized by the $202 trillion fiscal gap discussed in my last column.”“Most likely, Washington will simply raise the retirement age and kick the can further down the road. This is what the Greenspan Commission did in 1983, knowing full well that by 2010 the system would be in even worse shape. I say, retire Social Security and replace it with a version that works. Do this by freezing the current system, paying today’s retirees their benefits, while paying workers only what they have accrued so far once they retire.”
September 7, 2010 at 10:26 AM in reply to: NYT article: Housing Woes Bring a New Cry: Let the Market Fall #601639Aecetia
ParticipantThose hits just keep on coming:
Social Security’s objective — forcing people to save for retirement — is legit. Otherwise millions of us would seek handouts in our old age.
But Social Security has also played a central role in the massive, six-decade Ponzi scheme known as U.S. fiscal policy, which transfers ever-larger sums from the young to the old. In so doing, Uncle Sam has assured successive young contributors that they would have their turn, in retirement, to get back much more than they put in. But all chain letters end, and the U.S.’s is now collapsing.
The letter’s last purchasers — today’s and tomorrow’s youngsters — face enormous increases in taxes and cuts in benefits. This fiscal child abuse, which will turn the American dream into a nightmare, is best summarized by the $202 trillion fiscal gap discussed in my last column.”“Most likely, Washington will simply raise the retirement age and kick the can further down the road. This is what the Greenspan Commission did in 1983, knowing full well that by 2010 the system would be in even worse shape. I say, retire Social Security and replace it with a version that works. Do this by freezing the current system, paying today’s retirees their benefits, while paying workers only what they have accrued so far once they retire.”
September 7, 2010 at 10:26 AM in reply to: NYT article: Housing Woes Bring a New Cry: Let the Market Fall #602186Aecetia
ParticipantThose hits just keep on coming:
Social Security’s objective — forcing people to save for retirement — is legit. Otherwise millions of us would seek handouts in our old age.
But Social Security has also played a central role in the massive, six-decade Ponzi scheme known as U.S. fiscal policy, which transfers ever-larger sums from the young to the old. In so doing, Uncle Sam has assured successive young contributors that they would have their turn, in retirement, to get back much more than they put in. But all chain letters end, and the U.S.’s is now collapsing.
The letter’s last purchasers — today’s and tomorrow’s youngsters — face enormous increases in taxes and cuts in benefits. This fiscal child abuse, which will turn the American dream into a nightmare, is best summarized by the $202 trillion fiscal gap discussed in my last column.”“Most likely, Washington will simply raise the retirement age and kick the can further down the road. This is what the Greenspan Commission did in 1983, knowing full well that by 2010 the system would be in even worse shape. I say, retire Social Security and replace it with a version that works. Do this by freezing the current system, paying today’s retirees their benefits, while paying workers only what they have accrued so far once they retire.”
September 7, 2010 at 10:26 AM in reply to: NYT article: Housing Woes Bring a New Cry: Let the Market Fall #602292Aecetia
ParticipantThose hits just keep on coming:
Social Security’s objective — forcing people to save for retirement — is legit. Otherwise millions of us would seek handouts in our old age.
But Social Security has also played a central role in the massive, six-decade Ponzi scheme known as U.S. fiscal policy, which transfers ever-larger sums from the young to the old. In so doing, Uncle Sam has assured successive young contributors that they would have their turn, in retirement, to get back much more than they put in. But all chain letters end, and the U.S.’s is now collapsing.
The letter’s last purchasers — today’s and tomorrow’s youngsters — face enormous increases in taxes and cuts in benefits. This fiscal child abuse, which will turn the American dream into a nightmare, is best summarized by the $202 trillion fiscal gap discussed in my last column.”“Most likely, Washington will simply raise the retirement age and kick the can further down the road. This is what the Greenspan Commission did in 1983, knowing full well that by 2010 the system would be in even worse shape. I say, retire Social Security and replace it with a version that works. Do this by freezing the current system, paying today’s retirees their benefits, while paying workers only what they have accrued so far once they retire.”
September 7, 2010 at 10:26 AM in reply to: NYT article: Housing Woes Bring a New Cry: Let the Market Fall #602610Aecetia
ParticipantThose hits just keep on coming:
Social Security’s objective — forcing people to save for retirement — is legit. Otherwise millions of us would seek handouts in our old age.
But Social Security has also played a central role in the massive, six-decade Ponzi scheme known as U.S. fiscal policy, which transfers ever-larger sums from the young to the old. In so doing, Uncle Sam has assured successive young contributors that they would have their turn, in retirement, to get back much more than they put in. But all chain letters end, and the U.S.’s is now collapsing.
The letter’s last purchasers — today’s and tomorrow’s youngsters — face enormous increases in taxes and cuts in benefits. This fiscal child abuse, which will turn the American dream into a nightmare, is best summarized by the $202 trillion fiscal gap discussed in my last column.”“Most likely, Washington will simply raise the retirement age and kick the can further down the road. This is what the Greenspan Commission did in 1983, knowing full well that by 2010 the system would be in even worse shape. I say, retire Social Security and replace it with a version that works. Do this by freezing the current system, paying today’s retirees their benefits, while paying workers only what they have accrued so far once they retire.”
Aecetia
ParticipantLove the perpetual punch bowl analogy.
Aecetia
ParticipantLove the perpetual punch bowl analogy.
Aecetia
ParticipantLove the perpetual punch bowl analogy.
Aecetia
ParticipantLove the perpetual punch bowl analogy.
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