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AmSpecBlog

McCain pees on the third rail?

... is how Matthew Yglesias calls McCain's decision to discuss Social Security. Never mind the fact that the Bush administration's lackluster attempt at reforming the system was the first time anyone sought to really fix the problem of social security running out of money. He then admits that the quote he's referring to *was* taken out of context, but how can he help not knowing what McCain's stance is when he's using diversions like his war record?


Well, Matthew, it's not exactly news that Republicans are concerned about Social Security. And it's not exactly "generations looking after eachother." It's more pandering to unions and the AARP than anything else.


What *I* don't get is why the Washington Post's Jonathan Weisman and Michael D. Shear are so earnest when they write that McCain has "sparked controversy":


If that payment system is a disgrace, it has been one since Social Security was created during the Great Depression. For as long as the popular program has existed, today's workers have paid the benefits of today's retirees. Future problems are projected as Baby Boomers retire and the ratio of workers to retirees begins to shrink to levels that may not be able to support the benefits now promised. But the system has not changed since Franklin Delano Roosevelt created it.


The "popular program"? Would that mean that income taxes are a "popular program," since, heck, we don't get to opt out of that, either? The whole problem is that the system has not changed since FDR created it! McCain was clear in saying that there's something wrong with the fact that young workers are likely not going to benefit from the system, given the way things are headed.


In fact, those who are "burbling" about McCain's "gaffe" are noting that things have always been this way. What about that change mantra?

topics:
Taxes, Social Security, Unions

J. Peter Freire is contributing editor of The American Spectator. Freire first came to the Spectator as an intern and editorial assistant under a journalism fellowship from the Intercollegiate Studies Institute. Since then, he has written for the New York Times, Reason, and Human Events. Prior to returning to The American Spectator, he was editor of Brainwash, an online journal of opinion from America's Future Foundation, worked for the Evans-Novak Political Report, and researched and wrote for the New York Times. Freire studied English Renaissance literature and political science at Cornell University, where he served as senior editor and columnist at the Cornell Review. He is also a 2008 Phillips Foundation Journalism Fellow and the CPAC 2009 Journalist of the Year.

You can reach his Twitter page by clicking here, or follow him @JPFreire.

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