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Rick Perry Was Correct
by
Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently
by Andrew P. Napolitano: A
Government of Waste
When Texas
Gov. Rick Perry, then in the early stages of his short-lived quest
for the Republican presidential nomination, referred to Social Security
as "a Ponzi scheme," he was excoriated by the press, left and right,
and by his fellow Republicans, as well. Earlier this week, government
actuaries revealed that Perry was correct.
That revelation,
which was greeted with a ho-hum by the media, basically announced
that by 2033, 21 years from now, the so-called Social Security trust
fund will be empty. The only reason this was even announced is because
we are approaching a presidential election campaign, and in response
to Perry's much-derided claim, the government's actuaries, who originally
told the Obama administration and the public that the fund would
be solvent until 2036, re-examined their numbers and concluded that
it will be in the red three years earlier than they thought.
This revelation
should come as no surprise to those who monitor the government and
its deceptive ways. When he first introduced Social Security, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt argued that under Social Security the federal
government would be holding your money for you. He deceptively fostered
the idea that Social Security would be a savings account, into which
employees and employers would make contributions and out of which
guaranteed monies would be paid to those who reached the age of
65. Essentially, he claimed that you'd get your money back.
The politicians
believed him, but the actuaries and the judiciary understood that
the government would never hold anyone's money for him – as if it
were the custodian of a bank account. In the first of several challenges
to the constitutionality of Social Security, the Supreme Court found
that the Social Security fund did not consist of your money. It
was merely tax revenue.
Did you know
that?
It also held
that since Congress' law-making authority is limited to the 16 discrete
delegated powers granted to it in the Constitution (a truism few
in Congress accept as binding) but its spending authority is open-ended
(a conclusion that must torment James Madison's ghost), Congress
could collect funds, claim it was holding the funds in a savings
account and then spend those funds as it saw fit – for those in
need after age 65 or for any other purpose.
Did you know
that?
And, in a curious
yet revealing one-liner in the Supreme Court opinion upholding the
constitutionality of Social Security, even the court recognized
that there would be no trust fund in the traditional sense when
it found that the tax dollars collected and supposedly designated
for Social Security were "not earmarked in any way."
Did you know
that?
Eventually,
the government would acknowledge that what it first called a savings
account and then called old-age insurance and then said would be
fortified by a trust fund did not even establish a contractual obligation
to those who have paid the Social Security tax – which would be
all of us. Thus, the feds have conceded and the courts have agreed
that the money you have involuntarily contributed to the so-called
trust fund is not yours and can be spent by the government as it
pleases, just like any other revenue that the feds collect.
Did you know
that?
The trust fund
is not money that the government "holds" for you, as FDR promised.
It is not money to which you have a lawful claim, as he claimed.
It is not a guarantee for you, as he led the public to believe.
The so-called trust fund is merely the difference between what is
collected and what is paid out. And the feds just acknowledged that
in 21 years, they are likely to pay out more than they will collect.
Perry did not
succeed this time in his quest for the Republican nomination. But
he did succeed in articulating a hard truth: The same federal government
that prosecutes people like Bernie Madoff for paying out more than
they collect does the very same thing under the color of law.
Is a Ponzi
scheme – which is basically theft by deception – lawful just because
the government runs it? The Supreme Court has said yes. Perry has
said no.
Governor Perry
is correct.
Reprinted
with the author's permission.
April 26, 2012
Andrew P.
Napolitano [send
him mail], a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey,
is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano
has written six books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent
is It
Is Dangerous To Be Right When the Government Is Wrong: The Case
for Personal Freedom. To find out more about Judge Napolitano
and to read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit creators.com.
Copyright
© 2012 Andrew P. Napolitano
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