Dec. 4th, 2006
http://www.thornwalker.com/ditch/spartacus.htm
For those too lazy to click/read: basically, this guy wants people to opt out of receiving social security benefits, to refuse to take the payments that will/are being made to them by the government. He says it's a way of refusing to make the working pay for those who aren't working.
On the one hand, I can see the value in this. If people who don't need the money, don't take it, the system ends up having more resources for those who do need it, or more tax money for other things. I know many elderly people who could afford to do this. One of the things I dislike about socialism is that determining need is so hard. While I would like to help those who need it, and only those who need it, it's often really tough, not to mention expensive in bureaucratic terms, to figure out who needs it and who is lying to get it. (I believe there are a lot more of the former than the latter, mind you, and given a choice, I'd rather pay for a few cheaters than NOT pay for one person with a genuine need.) If people who didn't need it were to choose to opt out, it would make life simpler for those who believe that it's not unreasonable to ask the working to ensure that those not working can afford to eat and keep roofs over their heads.
On the other hand, I can see how such a movement would go in the long run. You get enough people opting out of any social system, and sooner or later there are enough people who can say, "We're all paying into this, but only X small number of people are using it. Let's stop paying for it." The mechanisms for that could be radical - cancel the program altogether - or more benign - give tax breaks to those who opt out, or rebate cheques on the amount they've paid in, or some other mechanism where the taxes that goes towards Social Security (or whatever it's called in your country) is partially or completely refunded to those not participating. Governments could get away with reducing the benefits, setting eligibility requirements, or other things to reduce the amount they're paying out. End result: the system stands the chance of being undercut far enough to force its collapse.
That's unacceptable to me.
For those too lazy to click/read: basically, this guy wants people to opt out of receiving social security benefits, to refuse to take the payments that will/are being made to them by the government. He says it's a way of refusing to make the working pay for those who aren't working.
On the one hand, I can see the value in this. If people who don't need the money, don't take it, the system ends up having more resources for those who do need it, or more tax money for other things. I know many elderly people who could afford to do this. One of the things I dislike about socialism is that determining need is so hard. While I would like to help those who need it, and only those who need it, it's often really tough, not to mention expensive in bureaucratic terms, to figure out who needs it and who is lying to get it. (I believe there are a lot more of the former than the latter, mind you, and given a choice, I'd rather pay for a few cheaters than NOT pay for one person with a genuine need.) If people who didn't need it were to choose to opt out, it would make life simpler for those who believe that it's not unreasonable to ask the working to ensure that those not working can afford to eat and keep roofs over their heads.
On the other hand, I can see how such a movement would go in the long run. You get enough people opting out of any social system, and sooner or later there are enough people who can say, "We're all paying into this, but only X small number of people are using it. Let's stop paying for it." The mechanisms for that could be radical - cancel the program altogether - or more benign - give tax breaks to those who opt out, or rebate cheques on the amount they've paid in, or some other mechanism where the taxes that goes towards Social Security (or whatever it's called in your country) is partially or completely refunded to those not participating. Governments could get away with reducing the benefits, setting eligibility requirements, or other things to reduce the amount they're paying out. End result: the system stands the chance of being undercut far enough to force its collapse.
That's unacceptable to me.