Sal Santamaura
Member
The issue seems to have been that public employee unions result in burdensome "entitlements." You previously noted that we agreed about police and firefighting positions justifying shorter careers because of the health effects that go along with them. Now you've mentioned that teaching is more stressful than private-sector work. Perhaps that career also deserves 20-year retirements?...my wife started teaching at 21 and could have retired at 51. Neat! I could have used that. She could not stand the stress and quit. She became a private secretary. So...... it begs the issue...

I'm not writing just to pick apart your arguments. Rather, these posts are attempts to point out that there isn't a simplistic, generic problem as the corporate media would have everyone believe. There are many problems. Each has one or more causes and effects. It's important to evaluate our problems analytically, postulate reasonable solutions and try them out for efficacy. Sort of like systematically approaching challenges in the lab....You can pick my arguments apart all you wish, but it does not change the fact that CA is broke, Kodak is Broke, the system is broke and the list goes on and on. I don't care to pick anyone apart in detail as the situation is too diffuse to do that...One statement of fact cannot express the problems. But, we must fix the generic problem...Have fun with this one...

Social Security can be fixed quite easily. Simply modify the FICA withholding so it's flat rather than regressive. Currently, anyone earning more than $110,100 per year stops paying into Social Security. End that limit so FICA becomes a "flat tax." This one change would keep the system solvent and able to pay 100% of promised benefits for the next 75 years while maintaining the age for full retirement benefits at 67. I think you'd be able to collect quite a bit....I'll probably never get to retire. Not because people won't be allowed to, but cancer will probably get me before I turn 73 or whatever the SS age limit will be raised to in 30-40 years.
He's one of the many abusers of "the n word." Nobody needs that much to retire. Wants, perhaps, but in no way needs....One of my friends who left EK said that he needed $6 - 8M to retire at 65...
...The fact that you have doubts is the best indicator of a broken system...
I suspect you're right.I'm guessing you and I think they are broken for different reasons.
