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Social Security, when it began, wasn’t a bad idea. The problem is what it has morphed into. We should get back to the “safety-net” that it was intended to be in the first place. But any changes should be “fair” to everyone. SS is a good (not great) program for the poorer citizens, but it’s a lousy “investment vehicle” for the more affluent. We could start by freezing the “top” benefit payment, and only increase payments for those not yet at the maximum level, until everyone is receiving the current maximum benefit. At the same time we could slowly start decreasing payroll tax rates (at a revenue neutral rate) back down towards the 1% where SS started out at. This would increase everyone’s paycheck, raise benefits for those who need it, and after a couple of generations it would bring the SS program back to the safety-net that it was intended to be. And as for those currently receiving the maximum benefit, start by gradually lowering the tax rates on benefits until SS benefits are back to being tax-free, just like when it started out.
Q: Does couponing have its own language? I’m trying to figure out this whole world of couponing. However, I feel like I’m reading a different language. Help! Please translate.
Dabbing at tear-filled eyes, 91-year-old Fred Goldstein still wonders why he was picked to be chauffeur and mechanic for a captain in the notorious Schutzstaffel, a feared Nazi paramilitary force better known as the SS, during the Holocaust.
Seventy years ago this week, Eric Straus was torn from his sleep in his German town by his father's screams that their synagogue nearby was in flames. Little did the 14-year-old boy know that across Germany, thousands of Jewish businesses were being systematically ransacked and destroyed.
Guest Commentary by Tom Patterson
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
By Jerry Brown, contributing columnist
Guest Commentary by Bill Richardson
Guest Commentary by Roc Arnett
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