DISASTER
FUNDRAISING: IS THAT ALL THAT WORKS? It’s nearly impossible at this point to run
a normal fundraiser. Unless things get seriously dire we get no support. That is
one bad formula. We need fewer donations now than we have ever needed before.
That should be easier, not harder. If you are going to be a part of this, be a
part of it. Let’s finish the July fundraiser. / Marc Ash, Founder Reader
Supported News
Paul Krugman. (photo: NYT)
Democrats and the Expansion of Social Security
12 April 15
s Republican presidential hopefuls trot out their policy agendas — which always involve cutting taxes on the rich while slashing benefits for the poor and middle class — some real new thinking is happening on the other side of the aisle. Suddenly, it seems, many Democrats have decided to break with Beltway orthodoxy, which always calls for cuts in “entitlements.” Instead, they’re proposing that Social Security benefits actually be expanded.
This is a welcome development in two ways. First, the specific case for expanding Social Security is quite good. Second, and more fundamentally, Democrats finally seem to be standing up to antigovernment propaganda and recognizing the reality that there are some things the government does better than the private sector.
Like all advanced nations, America mainly relies on private markets and private initiatives to provide its citizens with the things they want and need, and hardly anyone in our political discourse would propose changing that. The days when it sounded like a good idea to have the government directly run large parts of the economy are long past.
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