Swordsmyth
Member
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2016
- Messages
- 74,737
Victims of theft don't have a right to steal from others to recover their loses, I'm sorry for their loss but if they can't recover their money from the perpetrators it is their problem. (especially those who voted for the culprits)What about the lifetime of theft committed against people near or at retirement age? Doesn't that count for anything?
Suppose there's 2 people, John and Fred who are 65. John works his entire life and saves about a half million for retirement. He would've saved a million except he had 500k stolen at gunpoint by the government, supposedly for his retirement. Fred is in and out of prison for child molesting and has been on welfare his entire life so he has no retirement savings and since he has never had a job he's never had his income stolen for retirement. Now suppose we want to cut back spending on SS. There's 2 basic ways to do it. We can reduce the benefits across the board so that both John the hard worker and Fred the child molester, both get their benefits reduced equally. Or we can just cut John off completely and keep his stolen money, while maintain the same payment to Fred. So now Fred, the child molestor gets rewarded with a salary equal to or probably exceeding hard working John's salary. Do you not see the moral problem with this? This is what you are supporting.
I want to stop handing out stolen money to anybody but due to the "throwing little old ladies out on the street" factor the closest we can get is a phase-out plus means testing.
This isn't about "general welfare", this is about preventing theft, a military is required to prevent foreign theft but forced retirement savings is theft in and of itself and it is an invitation to the greater theft of stealing the funds and bankrupting the system. (which is what has happened)The military is a benefit to everyone(general welfare), so the theft required to support it is not nearly as bad as income redistribution. You could also make the argument that forced retirement savings is a general benefit. You CAN'T make that argument about a communistic means testing retirement program.