And now to respond to Lord J, something that I am already dreading.
This may soothe your trepidations whilst you read yonder reply...
~~~
We could fix Social Security in two minutes, by removing the cap on income subject to Social Security taxes. Anyone who makes under $100,000 a year wouldn't shell out a single penny, and the whole problem of SS's solvency would vanish for a century.
That's a pretty bold statement. More so than perhaps anything Genesis or I have said, as it is a specific proposal rather than something general. Is there some evidence to back up this claim? If the solution was really so simple, wouldn't Congress have implemented it by now?
Your rhetorical question first. I could pull out my hair, if I were of such a temperament, at the capacity of the Congress to not do what is best even when it would be simple. The "rich" people who stand to lose gold under any kind of progressive tax reform have cultivated a powerful shield for themselves in the form of the anti-tax movement that is a part of modern conservative ideology in America. For over a decade Republicans have instilled the slogan of "tax and spend" to deride their opponents and have achieved remarkable success in moving the
Overton Window on tax policy firmly into the realm of not whether taxes should be increased or decreased, but when taxes should be decreased, by how much, and for whom. The mood in this country has become so sour on the thought of higher general taxation that our national politicians feel they could lose their offices by championing higher taxes.
To put it another way, even though the conceptual fix is quite simple, the political cost of implementing that fix is perceived to be unbearable in present-day mainstream politics.
Your question of whether it would actually repair Social Security's fiscal solvency to lift the cap on SS-taxable income is answerable in the affirmative, although with the usual caveats of making general statements about long-term, large-scale revenue forecasts. The link provided by GenesisOne upthread contains some figures on the matter, and although the article is years out of date I find it noteworthy because the figures discussed therein were issued by the Bush Treasury Department, and I remember it being a damning report at the time (in liberal circles).
For the best figures, as determined by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, here's an informative 2010 summary table:
http://cbo.gov/ftpdocs/115xx/doc11580/11580_Summary.pdfLook for options involving changing the "taxable maximum" somehow.
Incidentally, a piece of advice I got in 11th grade, and has served me well: The "Congressional Budget Office" is an excellent source for information on matters concerning federal spending. Keep that name in mind when you go looking for such information. They are not a political office, but a part of the federal bureaucracy, and thus they are not motivated to conform to a party's platform positions.
If your revenue-based solution involves taxing only the rich, I can see why there is no political will to pursue it. It is politically perilous. $100,000 is no small chunk of change for most people. An individual can live very comfortably with that kind of salary. The highest income earners would have some justification in complaining why they shouldn't pay a share, too.
Either I am misunderstanding you here, or you miswrote something. It seems as though you are under the impression that the taxable income cap is $100,000 in actual taxes. That's not the case. Rather, the income a person earns is presently taxable up to about that amount. Thus, if you "earned" $64,802,000 in a given year, only the first $100,000 of it (give or take a few thousand) would be subject to the Social Security tax.
As for how much of that taxable $100,000 ends up being eaten by SS as tax, the rates are available here:
http://www.ssa.gov/oact/progdata/taxRates.htmlIt's only a few thousand dollars.
If the cap were eliminated entirely, then, for a person to actually owe $100,000 in Social Security taxes, they'd have to earn well over $1.5 million a year, if I'm doing my scratchwork right.
Discriminating against the rich might feel good to most of us, but it would still be discrimination. Any revenue-based solution would have to be some kind of flat-rate that would apply to everyone above the poverty line. What would that flat-rate be? I suspect the figure would make us faint.
It may be in this very thread, but in any case I've written in the past at the Compendium more elaborately than I care to now about the "discrimination" of institutions like progressive tax structures and the minimum wage. Flat-taxes are not as equitable as they seem because dollars of income are subject to diminishing returns. The first $10,000 you earn is much more crucial to your basic human needs than the, say, 447th $10,000 you earn. To nevertheless tax all income at the same rate denies this inherent truth and grossly favors the wealthy at the expense of the poorest.
Perhaps at some point humanity will become so longevous that a premise like Social Security will be fundamentally unworkable. Then we can reevaluate things like the age for which one qualifies, and the scope of benefits for recipients generally.
That point may be sooner than you think. I've been hearing a few things about the next major innovation in science that should put everyone on notice: biotech. (I'd post the links if I still knew them.) In summary, advancements in computers and the mapping of the genetic code are making it possible for medical treatments to be tailored to each individual's genetic profile. You will no longer see generalized treatments that can produce side-effects in some people. The net result of this innovation will be a longer lifespan; perhaps a great deal longer. Whether anyone can actually afford these future treatments is an open question, but the science at least will be there.
That's certainly a possibility that we should strive to understand and prepare to anticipate.
You'll have to forgive my pessimism on Social Security, but out of curiosity, what are the other fundamental threats to our nation that you see?
That probably deserves a whole new thread. Create it if you like, and I'll post when I can.
And now we shift gears...
I defy you to defend your claim that I am the arbiter of truth. That wasn't my intent at all! I was only suggesting that you and Genesis weren't being as objective as you should be and that the truth could be very different from either of your positions – or mine, for that matter. I sensed the argument degenerating into name-calling and that deserved comment. And I have a lot more to say on this matter since the last time I posted. There is a lot of intelligent discourse going on here, and I am a bit humbled reading through it, but it is being drug into the mud by the forces of ego, and that does the thread a disservice.
There are many lessons in this world that most people never get the opportunity to learn because there are too few qualified teachers. Unfortunately for the ego, one of those lessons is...
(Well, before we get to that, let us
salivate in the shadow of the highest of thoughts.)
...How To Behold The TRUTH!!!...
...by which I mean, how to cultivate awareness and critical thought. GenesisOne didn't realize it, but he was committing a great failing of personal character by the tenets of my philosophy, in that he was arguing a point--using other people's talking points, no less--without bothering to check his reasoning or facts, and without reducing his tone to a more tentative state.
I don't expect most people to understand why this is so harmful and even dangerous, although the victims of it will understand very quickly its power to wound. It's like this: Our system of politics is relatively democratic, in that we have free (if not fair) elections. What ordinary people say, especially when they say it en masse, or stand quietly by when others say it en masse, has direct consequences in shaping the law of the land. GenesisOne was making policy prescriptions that would upturn this country. Yet he had no idea he was doing that. Indeed, he thought he was making sense. Perhaps he even still does, if he hasn't completely abandoned this thread. And he contradicted me from his pedestal of ignorance, rather than engage in the honest debate he later claimed to want.
There are millions more like him, people who
believe their way to knowledge. Stephen Colbert characterizes such knowledge by its "truthiness," its power to
seem true. It's incredibly dangerous.
Fetuses are persons. Climate change is a lie. Blacks are lazy and aggressive. Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. Those are a few of the false truths people have been led to believe, with life-destroying consequences in each case.
We all, including I myself, are guilty of this failure of believing in objective truths without actually grasping whether or not they are true. I have dedicated my philosophy to the flight from this supreme ignorance, and I readily confront it in others too.
Going back to the first days of the Compendium, I have rubbed some people the wrong way with my occasionally-confrontational style. People you don't even remember used to sing the song you're singing now, about mud and ego and "Golly, J, you really ought to be a little more civil."
So bogus, that sentiment. So unworthy of me, and you. "Civility" is not the goal of debate, nor is it a means to the goal of debate. Civility is what you show when a stranger asks you for the time of day, or when some pedestrian is crossing the street a little later than the signal permits.
Understanding is the goal of debate, and there are two things to understand in
every debate:
1. The subject under discussion.
2. The perspective of the debaters.
I originally began this aggressive confrontational style as a social experiment, but I quickly learned its power and usefulness. A competent debater, or a self-aware person, or one who is both, will always be immune to anything along the lines of "You suck, moran!" Indeed, I don't even bother throwing such garbage at the people who aren't likely to react to it. And the people who
are likely to react to it, are bringing more to a debate than they realize.
Intertwined with any premise and any position is the motive of the person holding it. If
understanding is your goal, then you must
never come to a debate intending to
win. GenesisOne, not as a circumstantial thing but as a matter of character, made that mistake here. He and I have tussled before. There are always a few such people here on the General board who end up becoming object lessons, although some of them have later gone on to appreciate the lesson for themselves.
My goal in this thread is not simply to advance people's understanding of economics. Also present is a much larger ambition, which is to prepare people to be better human beings.
It's not mud I'm flinging, and whatever ego drives me to this quixotic quest is beside the point. I want people to understand the consequences of what they say.
At the very least, to learn to distinguish between assumptions and truths. I want people to add to a debate, thoughtfully and genuinely--not cheapen it into the same old arguments that never go anywhere. I want people to think for themselves rather than regurgitating the "wisdom" of others. I want people to learn to be okay with not knowing something, and to be okay with discussing it anyway.
But most of all, I want people to understand the consequences of what they say, and that means also understanding the ramifications of who they are, and why they say what they say, and how well or how poorly that intersects with who they want to be.
I promise you I am not mean for pleasure. I would frown upon a similar posture to my own in most other people, because I would fear its abuse. My goal is not purely altruistic, but it is not purely selfish either. People deserve to deserve the kind of society I want to live in.
I could be more like our Resident Expert, one Atticus F. Thought, whose considerable intellect has entertained some of these humanitarian notions long before I presented them. He is ever polite, ever respectful, ever civil. I can see how that engenders his popularity, and more importantly engenders community cohesion. There's a place for that posture. But there also needs to be somebody to teach the harder lessons. Thought makes the best of the community he's got. I'd like to build a better community, and then let him make the best of
that. And I don't just mean the Compendium.
I suppose the most important question here is whether it is more desirable to have less total discussion, but of a higher quality, or more total discussion, but at the expense of quality. In a sense, everybody's views at the Compendium are welcome. With one notable and embarrassing exception, the administration has never improperly banned anybody for their views or even necessarily their tone. What I do is, I sometimes add a price tag to entering a debate and behaving irresponsibly therein. Nobody can bullshit me. My only constraints are time and energy. The human equation is no threat.
Consider what we have learned here. We have learned not only that GenesisOne values debate for its power to help him learn, but also that his style was preventing him from reaching his goal. Rushingwind once got advice from Zephira's stepdad about how to reverse on a hill in a manual transmission car. It embarrassed her, but now she can reverse on hills in a stick shift.
Because of the nature of what I do, it's not as simple as "staying professional" by sticking purely to the subject matter and not bringing "personal" comments into it, because that
personal aspect is inseparable from the nature of the debate itself. What are the flaws of character, the limitations of ego, the warbles of psyche, that lead a person toward ignorance even when they are nominally trying to learn? The answers to such questions can be genuinely humiliating. If you're ever going to learn them at all, better to learn them early in life on some message board from a stranger you're likely never to meet and whose tactics you can happily detest. I think it would be even worse if I adopted a sympathetic rather than predatory tone. I don't want to inflict lasting distress on anybody. Being pitied can wreak such distress much more effectively than can being preyed upon.
I fail to see how these comments contributed to the discussion.
And now you see, or at least you see my answer: There are two parts to the debate, only one of which is the topic itself.
Calling someone a “jester” after pointing out the flaws of his argument (and then calling yourself a king by comparison) only points to a flaw of your own. You admitted having little more education on the subject of the debate, but you still managed to put yourself on a pedestal far higher than the one you just accused me of standing on.
I rather thought that was an apt analogy!
But in any case I flatter my own ego enough that I don't need other people to add a chorus. This isn't really about me, except to the extent that I consider myself competent to play the role of Illuminator, and to the extent that I too am a traveler on this journey away from ignorance and toward Illumination. Many of the failings I can now excoriate others for, I once committed myself. I don't have a vengeful nor a cruel bone in me, but I am absolutely ruthless. I am not bound by decorum in this setting, nor do I see any reason to try and be a popular figure when it means costing myself an opportunity to sharpen people's minds and inspire their own desires to become better people.
You justify this behavior by being right more often than you are wrong, and it is the gift that keeps on giving.
That! is the golden goose. I'd be insufferable if I weren't usually right. But I also wouldn't be so aggressive, if I weren't usually right. Cause and effect, my good Lennis.
I can appreciate such blunt honesty, but it lays bare a lack of emotional detachment from the debate.
My actual emotional attachment to confrontations like this is much different from what you deduce. I am extremely passionate about some of the issues I debate, but confrontations on those issues provoke little emotion in me unless they are contentious confrontations with people close to me. Usually, these debates--such as mine with GenesisOne--provoke little more than amusement or its counterpart annoyance.
Are those without intimate knowledge of a subject just supposed to keep their mouths shut?
A very good question, and one I addressed in an earlier post. I would simply have people not come into an argument looking for vindication and validation. I'd rather people came with a spirit of learning.
If you have an idea like, "Hrm, I think we can help fix the budget deficit by disbanding the Department of Education," and you're not really up to snuff on your knowledge of the issue, then why not pose your hypothesis as a question: "What would happen if we tried to fix the budget deficit by disbanding the Department of Education?"
If it's an honest question (as opposed to dishonest ones like "Do liberals know they suck?"), it is more likely to provoke reasonable, educational discussion--especially if others participating in the debate know more. Even if nobody knows much of anything, you can explore the topic together without bandying about conclusions, declarations, and edicts.