A "Pledge of Resistance" to Defend Social Security (and Defund the Empire)

by: Robert Naiman, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

A "Pledge of Resistance" to Defend Social Security (and Defund the Empire)
(Image: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: dboy, SqueakyMarmot)

For the third time in the last 20 years, establishment voices with high-profile slots in traditional media are trying to convince the public to accept cuts to Social Security by endlessly claiming such cuts are necessary, without giving coherent evidence to justify the claim. Twice, under former presidents Clinton and George W. Bush, these voices were defeated - but they didn't give up. And now they are in striking distance of their goal: the fact that Republicans have taken over the House, combined with the fact that the president appointed a deficit reduction commission which nearly recommended a cut in Social Security benefits - and might well have done so if Representative Schakowsky hadn't worked to undermine the co-chairs' plan - means that one can't be complacent; some reports have suggested that the president may indicate support for cuts to Social Security in his State of the Union speech. Of the two principal Washington political actors who will shape the outcome - the Republican leadership and the president's team - one is a determined adversary of the public interest, the other a very uncertain ally. The most successful anti-poverty program in US history is again in grave danger.

Twenty years ago, Social Security was called the "third rail" of US politics. Touch it, you die. But it turned out that was not true. The establishment greedheads were not, in fact, afraid to try to mess with this wildly popular program. Maybe Wall Street political power is the third rail.

In these two decades, Social Security hasn't been the third rail. Instead, it's been the grey goose of folk song legend. The knife couldn't cut him and the fork couldn't stick him. Try as they might, they couldn't kill him. Can the grey goose survive the next assault?

You might think that now would be the worst time to try to cut Social Security, with 10 percent measured unemployment, with many people's private savings having been wiped out, first in the stock market collapse and then with the collapse in house prices. You might think this is a great time to remember why we have Social Security: because it's secure. Housing bubbles and stock market bubbles may inflate and burst, industries that paid living wages may be shipped to Mexico and China, but since the program was established during the Great Depression, Social Security has never failed to pay scheduled benefits.

But this reality is being turned upside down. The presence of unnecessary suffering is being used not as an argument to alleviate suffering, but as an argument for creating more unnecessary suffering. "We all have to make sacrifices in these difficult times," although of course the people at the top of the income and wealth distribution - in particular, the high-rolling gamblers on Wall Street who brought down the economy - are not being asked to make any sacrifices.

So far, the public has not yet been rolled. In a new 60 Minutes/Vanity Fair poll, asked, "What would you do first?" 61 percent of respondents say raise taxes on the wealthy. Twenty percent say cut military spending. Three percent say cut Social Security.

If there were ever an issue and a time that seemed ripe for militant protest, this should be the issue and the time. It's the broad public vs. the establishment, and for the establishment to win, they seek an environment of unquestioning obedience, like in the Milgrom experiment, where people obey instructions to subject someone to torture (so they think) because that's what authority says to do. As in the Milgrom experiment, a little bit of protest can go a long way to disrupt the power of authority, because intuitively, most people know that what authority is saying is wrong. Authority says we have to accept Social Security cuts. It ain't so.

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In the 1980s, during Reagan's war in Central America, there was a movement called the Pledge of Resistance. The basic idea was that you sign a pledge that if Reagan invades Nicaragua, you're willing to get arrested in mass civil disobedience. Of course, people involved in the Pledge of Resistance did not just sit around waiting for Reagan to invade Nicaragua to take action. They lobbied Congress to cut off funding for the US-organized Contra terrorists who were killing Nicaraguan civilians; they wrote letters to the editor; they gave talks in church basements; they organized material aid to Nicaragua; they opposed Reagan's air war in El Salvador and US military aid to the death squad government there. The pledge was to "resist" US "intervention" in Central America by all the nonviolent means at our disposal, but the willingness to participate in mass arrests in the event of a US ground invasion was a fundamental animating idea.

We need a Pledge of Resistance now to defend Social Security from cuts to benefits, including raising the normal retirement age. If members of Congress know that if they refuse to pledge to vote against cuts to Social Security, their district offices are going to be occupied, that they and their staffs are going to be dogged at every public appearance, that their names are going to be mud in local media, support for cutting Social Security will evaporate.

Moreover, a pledge to resist cuts to Social Security will allow local activists to force a national discussion which traditional, establishment media have so far largely excluded: the one in which proposed cuts in domestic spending and proposed military spending are examined on the same chalkboard, so everyone can see and discuss the trade-offs that are implicit in the choices that are being proposed. This dialogue will allow antiwar activists to pursue the holy grail of antiwar activism: connecting the cost of the endless war with cuts in domestic spending for human needs.

There are two ways to think about Social Security. One way is to recognize that Social Security is a separately funded program with its own dedicated tax stream and its own Social-Security-tax-funded trust fund. According to this way of thinking, there is absolutely no urgency to do anything about Social Security in terms of the budget, because if the system were not touched at all, it is still projected to be able to pay scheduled benefits through 2037. If revenue adjustments are needed before then, there is plenty of time to enact them, and it would be far more sensible to consider doing so after the economy has recovered.

The other way to think about it is that there is one government budget which collects all the taxes and pays out all the expenses. According to this view, the (combined) government deficit is too big, and although Social Security is not the cause of projected deficits, nonetheless, Social Security is a good place to cut.

In the second view, in which the advertised goal is to cut the deficit in the combined budget, there's nothing magic about Social Security that indicates that it's an especially worthy place to seek cuts - except the fact that some folks are just looking for any pretext to cut it, and these same folks want to protect other parts of the combined budget (such as the spectacularly bloated military budget that funds their beloved empire) from any meaningful cuts. You will notice that op-eds and editorials demanding cuts to Social Security typically make a crucial omission and avoid mentioning how much money will be saved by the proposed cuts; still more, they will typically omit any consideration that cuts elsewhere in the budget – such as the military budget - would achieve the same savings, while leaving Social Security alone.

Consider, for example, proposals to raise the normal retirement age. How much would that save? How else could we save the same amount of money?

On September 29, the Washington Post editorial board - Fox on 15th Street - expressed outrage that President Obama, as portrayed in Bob Woodward's book, "repeatedly cites the cost of the war and the need to shift resources to domestic priorities," despite the fact, the Post assured us, that "spending on Afghanistan is well below 1 percent of U.S. gross domestic product." Thus, for The Washington Post, when considering the war, spending of less than 1 percent of US GDP is not a big deal.

At the time, I asked economist Dean Baker of the Center for Economic and Policy Research how much then-current proposals to raise the Social Security retirement age would save. He said they would save about 0.7 percent of GDP. For example, a proposal to raise the retirement age to 70 by 2040 would save $155 billion by 2020. (This figure is shown in CEPR's Deficit Reduction Calculator.) Thus, less than 1 percent of GDP is not a big deal when it is spending for the war that the Washington Post supports, but it is a very needed savings when it comes to proposals for cutting Social Security benefits by raising the normal retirement age, a proposal that the Washington Post - Fox on 15th Street - supports.

This is not a mere rhetorical point. In the next few months, the Obama administration is expected to make a decision about how fast to draw down troops from the military escalation President Obama ordered a year ago, a decision that is likely to dramatically affect the war's future cost.

The rough estimate is that it costs about a billion dollars, all told, to put 1000 US troops in Afghanistan for a year. Right now, there are 100,000 US troops, for an annual cost of about $100 billion.

Consider two scenarios for 2012-2014.

In scenario one, the number of US troops in Afghanistan until 2014 remains about the same as it is today, for a total cost of $300 billion between 2012 and 2014.

In scenario two, starting July 1, US forces in Afghanistan are drawn down over the next year, so that when President Obama runs for reelection in mid-2012, remaining troops will number about 40,000, roughly the same level as when he took office. They remain at around this count - about the same number of troops that we currently have in Iraq - until the US fully hands off responsibility for security in Afghanistan to a Karzai-Taliban power-sharing government at the end of 2014.

Even putting to the side all the savings past 2014 that scenario two would imply and ignoring reduced future costs for veterans' health care, if there are zero US troops there at the end of 2014, as opposed to tens of thousands of troops, scenario two would save about $150 billion between 2012 and 2014, compared to scenario one.

By comparison, cutting Social Security benefits by lowering the cost of living adjustment as called for by the co-chairs of the president's deficit commission would save about $70 billion by 2020, Dean Baker says. The co-chairs' proposal to raise the retirement age wouldn't even go into effect until 2027, so no savings from that would be seen for 17 years.

So, far from being uninformed, the public opinion to cut military spending rather than Social Security makes much more sense than the position of the Washington Post editorial board.

But what makes most sense won't necessarily carry the day if a media jihad for cutting Social Security isn't disrupted. We need to disrupt the Milgrom experiment for throwing Grandma off the bus. If you would sign a Pledge to Resist cuts in Social Security benefits, tell us in the comments.
 

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 Robert Naiman is policy director at Just Foreign Policy and president of Truthout's Board of Directors.


Comments

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I will sign the pledge, but

I will sign the pledge, but signatures on yet another petition aren't going to cut it. Please let us know when the protest actions will begin.



I would sign such a pledge.

I would sign such a pledge.



It's absolutely amazing that

It's absolutely amazing that this President is willing to cut Social Security. I like the term greed-head as possible slang for neoliberal, the term which best describes Obama's cut-throat, anti-middle class philosophy, which is really conservative Republican philosophy, undisguised. Obama is of the view that the middle class needs to be scavenged by Wall St. market mentality. Obama to me becomes more and more hideous as the days go by - what a compromised, soul-less and meaningless life he must live. What a monster he is.



I would sign a pledge.

I would sign a pledge. Let's get on with it



I would sign it, too.

I would sign it, too.



What has happened to all the

What has happened to all the money the Social Security fund has earned all these years? It has not gone into the Social Security fund, but into the general fund. What control do we have on money saved by cutting Social Security benefits? Does all that money go into Afghanistan to fight an unwinnable war? A rhetorical question, of course.

If we cut funding to the Defense Department, we'll be much further ahead.



I will sign a pledge and I

I will sign a pledge and I will go to Washington to protest and take a pitchfork with me.



Signing petitions is a

Signing petitions is a meaningless gesture because petitions won't make the evening news and no one reads them. I say let's grab our pitchforks and torches and start surrounding federal buildings in every city in the country if Congress starts trying to undo Social Security.

Politicians in the US don't fear We the People. They only fear the oligarchs and Wall Street. Until we turn that around, we are going to continue to be abused and impoverished.



I would guess that a very

I would guess that a very large portion of the economy is well-served by us elderly who are living within our Social Security dividends but spending and sharing them within family and communities neither hoarding nor gambling them away. Neither do we send our money off to offshore money holes to avoid taxation. Even though a lot of us do not have sufficient income for taxation, we do circulate our income as noted above, with family and communities.

Are all you Congress-people so well off that you can't turn you heads around to see how most of us manage to live our lives with decency, dignity and generosity?



I will pledge to go to jail

I will pledge to go to jail as an act of civil disobedience to any attempt to cut Social Security.

Sebastian Milito



I'm in. I have had enough of

I'm in. I have had enough of this. We are being robbed blind and no one seems to notice.



Will sign the pledge, but we

Will sign the pledge, but we need to get on our feet, storm the offices of the Congressmen trying to make these cuts and straighten them out. I watch the Senate daily and I can tell you that the Rs in there are treacherous. We need to grab them by the collars and bodily remove them from the building. They don't deserve to be there. Now we have a bunch of idiots in the House whose seats were bought for them. We need to make them more afraid of us than the Big Corps they really represent.



YES, YES, YES, I will sign &

YES, YES, YES, I will sign & walk the streets to get others to sign! Raise the pay in ceiling & this system will function for generations more for people who will increasingly be in need.Corporatists want us on our knees & grateful for their scraps. Sorry big fat fellas - we won't play possum for you.



Of course I'll sign. I'll

Of course I'll sign. I'll even stand on the street and solicit signatures. Somebody needs to draw up a petition, keep track of it, and make sure it goes to the right people. Beyond that, since neither Congress nor Obama give a rat's ass about what we think -- all they care about is what the bankers tell them to do. We need to be demonstrating en masse in Washington. Who wants to help organize that? (I am 67 and on the West Coast -- I can do work via computer and phone.)



I would sign the pledge.

I would sign the pledge. Just send it to me.



I will sign. Some compelling

I will sign.

Some compelling statements, true as far as I can tell(please excuse the recap):

The presence of unnecessary suffering is being used not as an argument to alleviate suffering, but as an argument for creating more unnecessary suffering.

"What would you do first?" 61 percent of respondents say raise taxes on the wealthy. Twenty percent say cut military spending. Three percent say cut Social Security.

...recognize that Social Security is a separately funded program with its own dedicated tax stream... ... there is absolutely no urgency to do anything about Social Security in terms of the budget, because if the system were not touched at all, it is still projected to be able to pay scheduled benefits through 2037.

...less than 1 percent of GDP is not a big deal when it is spending for the war that the Washington Post supports, but it is a very needed savings when it comes to proposals for cutting Social Security benefits by raising the normal retirement age.

...the public opinion to cut military spending rather than Social Security makes much more sense than the position of the Washington Post editorial board.



i will sine the pledge in a

i will sine the pledge in a new york minute.
how in this world did the average joe or jane re-elect the conservatives who promised they will serve the corporations and wall street only?



Absolutely~! And I hope that

Absolutely~! And I hope that some of us Truthout readers and responders will decide to start running for office somewhere!



I will sign a pledge.

I will sign a pledge.



Excuse me! Cut SS benefits.

Excuse me! Cut SS benefits. Social Security is independently funded and is in good shape> The politicians need to stop taking those monies and putting them into the general fund> Sign me up _ What else can I do to protest? Let me know - signing petitions doesn't do as much as action.



It is not only the constant

It is not only the constant repeating, this time around they crashed the economy to get us scared out of our shoes. These politicians absolutely MUST find a way of reducing entitlements so they can increase pork projects. ONLY public funding of campaigns will get these jerks working for us rather than THEM.

Jack Lohman
http://MoneyedPoliticians.net



Yes, AND Reframe the

Yes, AND Reframe the PU$ILLANIMOU$ PU$$YFOODER$ with say, a poster depicting a padlocked Social Security LockBox in the form of a sealed catlitter box; surrounded by jouncing, cross-legged FATCats and a title beneath stating: "Fatcats - Think Outside the Box"!



Social Security and Medicare

Social Security and Medicare are together
the bedrock of the social compact in this country,
if they are attacked, it means war, nothing less than war.



Of course, I'll sign

Of course, I'll sign



count us in always

count us in always



I will sign.

I will sign.



Absolutely I will sign a

Absolutely I will sign a Pledge of Resistance. Those of us on SS and Medicare will be on the streets without it. Sometimes I think that's what the government wants, is for us just to give up. I agree with the poster who said we spread our money around as best we can, to help others and family. It's getting harder and harder to survive. We've had no cost of living raise for 2 years, and the Plan D costs continue to rise.



You'll have to pry my SS

You'll have to pry my SS benefits from my cold dead hands...
and it's "http://www.stanleymilgram.com/"



Yes, I'll sign the

Yes, I'll sign the pledge!
Apparently that convenient "everyone" who will have to "make sacrifices" does NOT include the wealthy OR corporations! No, it's you and I, those of us in the "middle class," and even the poor, who are supposed to work longer hours and get paid less (while our unions are demonized), receive fewer services, while millionaires/Billionaires off-shore their income, count income as "capital gains," taxed at 15% – and demand – and GET – tax CUTS!
But it's never enough, not when even more money can be sucked upward through further shifting the costs of government and the military onto the middle class. Raid Social Security, but the military-industrial complex is sacrosanct. Cut school funding, unemployment benefits, PELL grants, and the like, but subsidies for ag-business remain untouched. Let the nation's infrastructure continue to deteriorate, but don't hesitate to grant drill permits to such as BP.
Is this really the United States of America? Or am I just having a bad dream?



I would give blood for

I would give blood for social security.

You get to a point where you're cornered, and all the other considerations are not important.



The Republicans have taken

The Republicans have taken over the Senate and Presidency too.



You bet - my husband and I

You bet - my husband and I will both sign and certainly willing to picket!



Of course, I will sign--as

Of course, I will sign--as would millions. The key, though, is to have a workable alternative to the demand to cut, cut, cut. We must re-implement FDR's Glass-Steagall. Now. With that, we can wipe out the speculators' debt, save Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and the state and local governments that are being destroyed for the sake of Wall Street debt collection, and put the country back to work with Great Projects, such as a modern-day TVA. But during the fight over the sham financial regulation bill, Obama and his collaborators in the 111th subverted efforts to bring back Glass-Steagall. Obama must be sent packing. Now. Section 4 of the 25th Amendment provides the straightjacket he needs.



Keep signing up folks,

Keep signing up folks, including me. Will this poll get the news media's attention? No, they are trying to keep all resistance quiet.



I will sign and help!

I will sign and help!



I'll sign. I'll make calls.

I'll sign. I'll make calls. I'll march.



I would definitely sign to

I would definitely sign to resist cuts to Social Security or raising the retirement age or privatization ... that is, if their Blackwater(XE) mercenaries haven't arrested all of us resisters and put us in their concentration-type camps they've been building and putting into readiness in the U.S. They've been preparing and fortifying police departments and educating them for civil unrest and for riot control, etc. We definitely should be prepared that there is something big in the "offing".



Please advise when the sign

Please advise when the sign up begins.Social Security benefits are off limits!



I will definitely sign –

I will definitely sign – and also sit-in if necessary. Please keep this effort moving.



I'm old, but not old enough

I'm old, but not old enough to hold the Government and their Tobacco Industry partially responsible for the fact that:

Medicaid and Social Security saved My Bacon!!

Weeks in a coma, numerous heart attacks and several operations... I'm extremely grateful for the system as it is. It could be far more inclusive.

I'm ready (even physically, now) to take to the streets to save these basics of life in America.

What's changed is our Governments new proclivity to Empire Building.

We could have done a lot more with what 60 consecutive years of war have cost than fill a few pockets and aggravate half of the world by killing people from all corners.

It's time to wake up, people, and let our so-called representatives know that we (the bottom 98% of earners, I think they call us "eaters") are fed up with America spending more on war and arms than the rest of the world combined!

I'll do whatever I can... find me a scenario, peaceful, of course, I'm there.



As of this year over 170,000

As of this year over 170,000 individuals have been homeless at least one day throughout the year.

Lets cut that number in half to come up with the number of homeless households in America this year. 85,000.

10,000 $100,000 homes could be built and made available for the homeless in this nation for every 1,000 soldiers in Afghanistan. Reducing the number of solders in Afghanistan by a mere 8,500 and for a cost of only 8.5 billion dollar, 85,000 families could be provided a nice quality place to live.

Home ownership is the first step to joining the middle class which has financed this nation for almost 100 years.

What will that 8.5 billion buy in Afghanistan? I dunno, but I know that as its spent over there, 85,000 families are still homeless over here in America.

If were gonna blow our money as a nation, at least blow it on Americans!



You folks don't get

You folks don't get it.
Social Security is history.
Obama and the neoliberals in Congress have determined the only way to "save" Social Security and "save" the economy is to privatize the system.
They're well on their way to convincing you the only way to insure Americans have enough money for a minimal standard of living during retirement is to turn all the money over to the private sector. The same bankers, financiers and speculators that brought you the Great Recession will soon be in charge of Social Security funding.
And you are all going to go along with it.
Just like you went along with the PPACA. "It was necessary". "It's the best we can do." "We can fix it later."

But by all means, sign another useless petition. And marching? Don't make me laugh. Fifty thousand Americans continue to die every year because of absent or inadequate healthcare. That doesn't get you in the streets. A couple hundred thousand homeless families, a million homeless schoolchildren, thousands of homeless veterans can't get you out of your chairs. America murders noncombatants indiscriminately, kidnaps, tortures and murders foreign nationals and trains Latin American terrorists. That doesn't get you in the streets. But the thought of losing your Social Security has everyone all Chris Hedges militant now? Do you honestly think you have any control over what Obama and Congress do?

Social Security, along with Medicare and Medicaid, are history. Get prepared for reality. Or don't. Those are the only options available right now.



I'll sign a petition to

I'll sign a petition to defend Social Security.

Social Security has not increased the deficit and in fact is not a pert of the real budget, the appropriations budget or what some deluded souls call 'on budget.'

The Social Security Trust Fund is now worth $2.3 trillion. That Trust Fund should be honored to pay Social Security benefits.



Yes, lets do something. If

Yes, lets do something. If this is the issue that moves people, and not all the many other injustice issues in the world, let's run with it. I tire of angry progressives armed with nothing but buckets of cold water that they only aim throw at their fellows ("you folks don't get it"). Should we just lay down and whimper as the capitalists run their bulldozers over us. I'll sign up for action.



signing up

signing up



Of course, I would sign --

Of course, I would sign -- and I will take action. Make the rich pay!! Especially the bankers!!



Yes yes. Will pass this on

Yes yes. Will pass this on and on.



I'm on board to sign the

I'm on board to sign the pledge.



Every time the antiwar

Every time the antiwar movement unites around funding social needs, it builds the base that really matters.

I will sign...

As long as we don't have to cool our heels waiting for this particular issue to reach its boiling point before we kick off building the protest and finding allies who are serious about fundamental social change.



A pledge of resistance over

A pledge of resistance over Social Security may be the one thing to motivate people to do something other than shop and watch TV. I'm in.



I REFUSE to cooperate with

I REFUSE to cooperate with evil. Furgit it, you corporate greed-heads. I spent my whole life paying into Social Security. Maybe yo DO want to take my money: But NO WAY! Up yours!



I pledge to save social

I pledge to save social security. Most that pay into the system probably will never use it because they will most likely be dead from all the diseases we have in this country. I believe the plan of who we call our leaders is to make us sick with all the junk processed foods and medicines that we are addicted to. With this plan we won't live when it's time to collect. We will live just long enough to pay into the system. This is the easier and smarter way to handle to funding issue. I pulled this information from the Natural News web site. Recommend everyone (including health care professionals) review this web site.



At 61, ss is all I'm left

At 61, ss is all I'm left with. If it's cut and I can't survive on it, I will steal food with no fear of the law. If I'm busted, at least I will have a roof over my head and 3 meals a day. Been in jail before, so have no fear of incarceration.



I'm in. I loved Ghandi, but

I'm in.
I loved Ghandi, but his methods were awfully slow.



Thank you Bob Neiman for

Thank you Bob Neiman for organizing this.

Plenty of folks can sign this Pledge, and SUPPORT those who go to jail. That's what we did in the eighties. We desperately need the supporters to get decent media, or we may sit in jail unnoticed.



I'll sign.

I'll sign.



If truthout puts the

If truthout puts the petition together, I will Sigh in an instant.



Have RootsAction tackle it;

Have RootsAction tackle it; I'll sigh AND sign.



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