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Young People: The Key to Republican Single-Party Rule
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All of this, of course,
ignores a series of realities:
1. Social Security is an anti-poverty insurance program, not an investment program. A third of its payments don't even go to retirees but, instead, are distributed to - literally - widows, orphans, and people so crippled or disabled that they can't work. (And people who outlive actuarial averages often get more back than they paid in.) 2. The "iceberg" Social Security will "hit" is based on very slow/low growth assumptions of the American economy (a continuation of the Bush recession for 75 years). But if the economy grows over the next 75 years at exactly the same rate it has for the past 75 - even including the years of the Great Depression - there will be no Social Security shortfall whatsoever. 3. The "high return" assumptions for private accounts assume the American economy will grow so fast that, if they're met, there would be no need for any Social Security reform whatsoever. 4. Even if Social Security does run low on cash in 2042 or 2052 (depending on which arm of Congress you're listening to), private accounts won't add a single penny to that cash-flow problem. In fact, the borrowing necessary to fund the first generation's private accounts will throw the system even further in the red. But the real Republican agenda here has little to do with Social Security. (Energizing "free market conservatives" like Greenspan, who have always thought of Social Security as socialism, is a bonus freebie, as is any payback to Wall Street for campaign donations.) It's really all about capturing the only demographic that voted as a block against Bush in 2004, to establish a future fifty years of Republican single-party rule. This is why it's so critical for Bush to carefully control who's allowed into his "conversations" about Social Security around the country. It's why the former Swift Boat folks are running such openly deceptive ads. It's why our tax dollars are illegally being used to push propaganda on young Americans about Social Security (propaganda that's even being repeated on youth-friendly venues like The Daily Show). And it's why otherwise rational and even usually honest Republicans are (although occasionally only mildly) "supporting the President" on this issue. And, most important, it's why Bush won't put forward a program to "solve" the funding problems that Social Security may or may not face 30 or 40 years from now, but instead simply talks about the "problem," and how he wants "young people" to get a "better return" and have "greater control" over their Social Security "investment." It's why he most likely will never put forth a comprehensive program: It'll conveniently be declared "dead in the water" because of "Democratic opposition" even before it comes out. And, thus, "win or lose," Bush and the Republicans will psychologically win big with the under-30 demographic. In fact, studies show Republicans may have already accomplished much of their goal. Even though there is no official "Bush plan" for Social Security, USA Today reported on February 16, 2005: "Support for Bush's plan is highest among the under-30 crowd, the only age group in which backers outnumber doubters." Republicans will say - over and over - that they valiantly tried to help young people get a better "return" on their taxes, but the Democrats and those terrible old people prevented them. They'll say they tried to solve a "crisis" and a "problem," and "reform" an "antiquated" Social Security system, but were outmaneuvered by evil Democrats, "liberals," and greedy old people. The Right Wing Noise Machine (so well documented by David Brock) will repeat this mantra so hard and so often that today's young people will be able to recite it from memory for the next fifty years. Divide and conquer has been the slogan of the Bush dynasty ever since Poppy first used television advertising to mentally merge Michael Dukakis with a black killer, pitting whites against blacks in America. It worked then, and Republicans are betting that pitting young people against the elderly will work just as magically now. Since the rise of Coors' and Scaife's Heritage Foundation, Rev. Moon's Washington Times, Newt and his Machiavelli Frank Luntz, Murdoch's Fox News, and Lee Atwater's Reagan/Bush "perpetual campaign," Republicans have been playing chess, planning a dozen moves and three to four election cycles ahead. They plan to win big among under-30's in their long-term electoral chess game, even as they set it up to appear to "lose" at short-term Social Security checkers. If they succeed - and they're already halfway there - single-party corporate/Republican rule could be a reality for the next generation and (especially if they maintain control of electronic voting machines) generations beyond. This outcome will foul our environment, further decimate our remaining middle class, and lead us into a brave new world of perpetual oil and religious wars, maintained by a brutal and intrusive corporate/police state. Progressive Democrats must immediately develop and implement a strategic, multi-step response to the Republican Social Security gambit, carefully targeted to the under-30 demographic, if Jefferson's Party and the Enlightenment ideals of our democracy are to survive. Thom Hartmann (thom at thomhartmann.com) is a Project Censored Award-winning best-selling author, NLP Trainer, and host of a nationally syndicated daily progressive talk show. www.thomhartmann.com His most recent books are "The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight," "Unequal Protection," "We The People," "The Edison Gene", and "What Would Jefferson Do?" ### |
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