Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

The entitlemen­t can is getting too heavy to kick

- By Mitch Daniels

SO another congressio­nal session is half over and, we’re told, is likely to go by without a mention of the moose on the American table, our prepostero­usly out-ofcontrol federal debt. It’s not as though the stakes are high: just our standard of living, national security, all the discretion­ary activities of government and literally our future as an autonomous, self-governing people.

Every honest observer knows what will cause the coming crunch, so aptly termed by Erskine Bowles as “the most predictabl­e crisis in history”: the runaway autopilot programs we call “entitlemen­ts.” Without changes there, no combinatio­n of other measures can come close to preventing the reckoning.

We all understand the silence. Our political class was long ago scared witless by the career-killing cheap shots aimed at anyone daring to commit candor about the topic. retirement­s, but instead they’ve been blowing it for years on all sorts of less important things.

“That’s not all. They’ve lied to you about how the system actually works. During your working years, your taxes pay the benefits for those already retired. The deal has always been that, when it’s your turn, those still working will pay for yours. If you didn’t know that — if you thought you were just getting your own money back — it’s not your fault. The politician­s didn’t want you to know what was really going on. But starting soon, there won’t be nearly enough workers, and nowhere near enough money, to keep the promises they’ve made to us. Shame on the whole lot of them.

“Here’s the good news: There is still time to do some simple, common-sense things to save the safety net. Just for one example: Why do we send retirement checks to Warren Buffett? When the system is running

out of money, shouldn’t we let the millionair­es and billionair­es provide for themselves and conserve the money for those who really need it? There are plenty of other steps we could take that won’t hurt anyone now or soon to be in the system, or anyone ever who really needs the protection. But the big shots don’t want you to know about them, because then they’d have to admit to the mess they’ve made of our great Social Security system.

“Our political class has botched a lot of things these past few years, and the way they’ve undermined our safety net is one of the worst. Let’s pull together to save it while there’s still time. Our parents left us peace of mind and security. Let’s fire the

politician­s we’ve got and elect some who will do the same for our kids, and theirs.

“They’re wrecking Medicare, too, by the way. But let’s get into that at next week’s town hall.”

Nah, never mind. Even on this topic, where such rabble-rousing is actually pretty accurate and fair, one cannot really countenanc­e it. Another crying need of our times is to stop tearing at and start rebuilding confidence in our institutio­ns and those leading them. But the debt danger is, as they say these days, existentia­l. Facts and fastidious­ness have gotten us nowhere.

If not a little demagoguer­y, what do you suggest?

 ?? Tim Brinton ??
Tim Brinton

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