Gov’t panel does the bosses’ dirty work
Tries to cut Social Security, Medicare
By
Deirdre Griswold
Published Nov 17, 2010 6:09 PM
Another huge fraud is being perpetrated so the rich can get their way. Their
weapon is fear. The corporate media are full of pundits explaining the
government must cut the national budget or everything will collapse.
And how must it be cut? By going after Social Security and Medicare, first and
foremost. In other words, squeeze the elderly and the sick.
That’s the message now coming out of the commission appointed by
President Barack Obama to deal with the budget deficit. The bipartisan panel is
co-chaired by Democrat Erskine Bowles, a former Clinton White House chief of
staff, and Republican Alan Simpson, a former U.S. senator from Wyoming.
The commission was appointed last winter but held up its recommendations until
after the election. Both Democrats and Republicans were happy with that —
neither wants to shoulder the blame for what is undoubtedly the most unpopular
move in years.
The wealthy financiers and business moguls in the United States who make up the
ruling class have been on an offensive against the working class for many
years. They’ve restructured industry, replacing workers with machines.
They’ve taken their capital overseas to exploit even lower-paid workers
and then demanded that workers here accept less or else.
But with all that, their capitalist system went into a downward spiral three
years ago and, as far as jobs go, hasn’t recovered. Government revenues
fell with the capitalist recession. The administration threw trillions of
dollars at the banks and auto corporations to bail them out.
And last year the rich got their politicians at all levels of government to
vote for cutting the social service budgets — so there’d be plenty
of money to pay interest to the bankers on past loans and to pay the
military-industrial complex for all the costly hardware used to carry out
imperialist wars and invasions.
The federal government is deeply in debt and running a deficit. But why? Not
because workers here get too many benefits. Given the tremendous wealth that
exists in this country, the lack of good schools, health care, housing,
pensions and other needed state services is scandalous. The U.S. is way behind
other developed countries in these areas.
The other side of the coin — literally — is the miserably small
taxes on the rich, which have been cut and cut and cut while workers’ net
income has shrunk.
More money thrown at the banks, corporations and war machine. Lower taxes on
the rich. Result: a big deficit. That’s a no-brainer.
But the panel doesn’t see it that way. They want to raise the retirement
age of workers in this country to 69 and at the same time cut our benefits.
Yes, work until you drop, that’s the message.
Remember all that money you paid into your retirement with every paycheck? You
thought it was yours, that it was part of your wages being banked by the
government so you could retire in safety. No, suddenly it’s theirs to
play with.
This whole deal is so raw, so criminal, that not even all the members of the
hand-picked panel can go along with it.
Rep. Jan Schakowski of Illinois is on the panel. She knows you don’t have
to cut old age and medical benefits to balance the budget. She can’t
endorse the Bowles-Simpson recommendations and announced a plan to “keep
Social Security benefits intact, make deep reductions at the Pentagon and raise
corporate taxes to target profits and excessive pay for chief executives. ...
[It] would cut nearly $430 billion from the deficit in 2015, meeting
Obama’s goal of balancing federal spending and revenues, except for
interest on the national debt.” (Washington Post, Nov. 16)
She’s right. The money is there for Social Security, Medicare and much,
much more. There’s enormous wealth in the United States. Not one social
benefit needs to be touched. But it will take a massive struggle by all
affected to stop this offensive against the entire working class, one that is
cruelest against its most vulnerable members.
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
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