Chattanooga Times Free Press

CONGRESS IGNORES PRESSING NATIONAL BUSINESS, PRIORITIES

- Star Parker

As the House Select Committee to Investigat­e the Jan. 6 Attack on the United States Capitol started public hearings, we must ask what motivates those on the committee.

Is the sole concern the ideals of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and the Constituti­on of the United States? Or is it to get media to attack and undermine political opponents?

It is indeed possible that infraction­s of law can be investigat­ed without a carnival platform designed to mobilize media and national attention.

The public material of the committee already reeks of motivation­s other than seeking truth.

The committee has already announced on its website that the Jan. 6 incident was “one of the darkest days of our democracy.”

Really? Against a civil war where some three-quarters of a million Americans were killed, fighting over what American freedom is about, one incident of a few hours, where law enforcemen­t finally prevailed, was one of our “darkest days”?

There are just 24 hours in any day, so time taken on one matter means attention not given to other matters.

If these members of Congress really cared about our principles of freedom and democracy, they wouldn’t be ignoring every day other pressing matters in which the freedom of American citizens is blatantly violated.

Take, for example, that as the Jan. 6 investigat­ion monopolize­s media attention, on June 3 the trustees of Medicare and Social Security issued their annual report.

Both systems are in dismal shape financiall­y.

The cash shortfall of Medicare in 2021 was $409 billion. The projection is that Social Security will be out of adequate cash flow to meet obligation­s to retirees by 2035 — just 13 years from now.

The trustees estimate that there are only adequate funds in Social Security to meet 80% of benefits in 2035. The payroll tax, now 12.4%, would have to be raised 26% to generate sufficient funds to meet those obligation­s.

In other words, today every working American age 55 and below who plans to collect Social Security benefits at age 67 is paying a payroll tax into a system that cannot provide the benefits promised.

Let’s forget about the fiscal situation of the system for a minute. How about the issue of freedom that our members of Congress want us to believe they care about so much?

Take young citizens, age 21, fresh with their new degrees, entering the work force for the first time. Immediatel­y, 12.4% of their paycheck is deducted into a system they involuntar­ily enter, in which there are inadequate funds to meet promised benefits.

Shouldn’t these new young workers be able to say, “No, thank you, I don’t want to participat­e”?

Even if the system were not broken, and benefits could be met, in our free country, shouldn’t everyone be free to manage their own retirement?

According to the Committee to Unleash Prosperity, the average return of Social Security over the last 40 years was 1%. Over the same period, average return on stocks was 6%.

Back to these new young workers, by the calculatio­ns of the Committee to Unleash Prosperity, thes single workers, if they earned the median national income and were able to invest 10% of their income into a diversifie­d stock and bond portfolio over 40 years, instead of paying the payroll tax, could have annual income at retirement of $55,143 against $19,646 from Social Security.

So, hey, members of the Select Committee. Enough of pretending that you care about American freedom. How about wrapping up the carnival and getting down to the real challenges every American faces today?

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