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home >> global news >> global visionaries >> Is Social Security Broke?

Is Social Security Broke?
May 9, 2005

by Maya del Mar print version
print version (graphics)
The Social Security Pseudo-Crisis

The answer to this question is a resounding NO, contrary to what the right-wing spin doctors would have you believe. Look at the chart for the day that President Roosevelt signed the Social Security Bill. It is an even more stable chart than is that for the NY Stock Exchange. Out of the ten major planets, six are in fixed signs, which stay put, and three are in flexible signs, giving it sufficient flexibility to bend when it has to—which it has done.

I’ve tried to avoid getting into this, because it’s been clear that Social Security is not in crisis, and I haven’t wanted to deal with the lies, conflicting statements, hypocrisies, and pure spin of the Administration. However, it’s been pushed to the front of the nation’s consciousness, and I’m motivated to push back. Bear with me. This will take time, probably a few issues of Daykeeper.

Astrologically, we see transiting Saturn opposing the U.S. Pluto, giving it the reality test. This happens every 29-30 years. GW Bush’s Saturn is at this same degree as transiting Saturn, helping to propel him into this instrumental position.

(The last time Saturn opposed Pluto was in late 1975. At that time Pres. Ford nominated Donald Rumsfeld for Secretary of Defense and George Bush as CIA Director! The saga continues.)

The U.S. Capricorn Pluto is in the U.S. second house of money, showing the power of our structures of wealth. The Social Security Act was signed at the U.S. Pluto opposition, with Pluto in Cancer in the 8th house of shared wealth. Cancer itself is a sign of the people; Capricorn a sign of the elite. (The U.S. vigor—Sun—is in the hands of the people; the U.S. wealth—Pluto—is in the hands of the elite.)

When Franklin Roosevelt signed the bill in 1935, he stated its purpose clearly, “We have tried to frame a law that will give some measure of protection to the average citizen against poverty-ridden old age.” It is not an investment program; it is a straightforward insurance program to protect the PEOPLE. It has been a phenomenal success.

And in the eyes of many right-wing politicians who have been working long to dismantle “the welfare state,” (welfare to corporations and the rich is OK), its problem is exactly that. It is a successful people’s program. In fact, the most successful one.

Economist Paul Krugman, NY Times columnist who has tracked the Social Security Program, says, “Social Security is a government program that works, a demonstration that a modest amount of taxing and spending can make people’s lives better and more secure. And that’s why the right wants to destroy it.”

This right-wing desire to destroy Social Security began even before the ink was dry on the bill. Notice how familiar the following quotes sound (thanks to Jim Hightower in his great monthly sheet, Lowdown):

1936: Alf Landon, Republican candidate for President: “The promised benefits are a hoax.” (We know better.). “The taxes paid into the trust fund are wasted.” (They’ve been invested with an average return of 6.6%.). “The so-called reserve fund is no reserve at all.” This is not at all true. It has been a fund of trillions of dollars, used to pay benefits. George Bush, borrowing to pay for his tax cuts for the wealthy, has almost emptied it. More on this later.)

In 1964, Goldwater painted a picture of a collapsing system. He said it was not “actuarially sound,” and claimed that he merely wanted to “make Social Security solvent, to improve it,” as he called for privatization. Letting slip his real aim, Goldwater said, “Maybe Social Security should be abolished.”

Ronald Reagan followed this theme of saving Social Security through privatizing it.

On December 15, 2004, Bush convened an economic summit to talk about privatizing Social Security.

The day before, December 14, at an Economic Policy Institute press conference, economist Aaron Henry, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institute and chairman of the National Academy of Social Insurance Board of Directors, came out strongly against the proposals:

“At a time when the U.S. is borrowing $100 million an hour from abroad, the $5 trillion debt is escalating, medical costs hammer wages and profits, and the income inequity is skyrocketing—for an economic summit to discuss diverting revenue from Social Security is the most perverse agenda this administration has come up with to date.”

Kenneth Apfel, former Social Security commissioner, said the discussion has been solely around privatization, benefit reductions, age increase, and a change in the way benefits are calculated—all right-wing schemes to eventually disappear Social Security.

All of this comes at a time when Social Security revenues are in good shape, although right-wing spin would make the public think otherwise. According to the numbers used by everyone, including the President’s commission, Social Security can pay all promised benefits for the next 38 years without any changes at all. Later the Congressional Budget Office upped that estimate to 48 years.

By either measure, the “long-term problem” faced by Social Security over the whole next 75 years is actually less than it faced in each of the decades of the 50’s, 60’s, 70’s, and 80’s. During those decades, minor tweaks corrected the problems.

When pushed, economists will agree that Social Security is more financially sound than it has been during most of its 69-year history. Even with the CBO projections that the Trust Fund will run out in 2052, it still will not be “bankrupt.” Revenues will cover 81% of promised benefits.

Paul Krugman wrote in the December 7 NY Times that “to extend the trust fund into the 22nd century with no change in benefits would require additional revenues equal to only 0.54% of the gross domestic product.” This is roughly the portion of Bush’s tax cuts going to people with annual incomes over $500,000.

Tax cuts for the rich, or pensions for the elderly. What do we, the people, choose? What kind of a society are we?

Bush has another urgent reason for dismantling Social Security. Stay tuned for Part II.

From Maya del Mar’s Daykeeper Journal.

World-renowned astrologer Maya del Mar wote for Celestine Vision, the Mountain Astrologer, and  for her own web-based magazine, Daykeeper Journal. She combined 30 years of astrological work with keen intuitive skills and a lifetime of teaching and counseling experience to provide her readers and clients with insightful and humanistic astrological guidance.

Maya del Mar passed away on November 26, 2006, however her daughter, Susan Pomery, continues to operate the Daykeeper Journal website  in partnership with some very talented astrologers who are carrying on Maya's work.
If you'd like to contact them, please use this email address:
susan@daykeeperjournal.com


Read more of Maya's articles reprinted with her kind permission here at Satya Center in the Maya del Mar Archive.




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