"On the field of ideology, 2005 was a lousy year for the American right. Twice--in the president's proposal to privatize Social Security and in the government's failure to save New Orleans--it confronted the public with the prospect of a radically reduced government. Twice, the public recoiled at the sight. In retrospect the year's biggest mystery is how George W. Bush thought he could privatize Social Security. Essentially Bush assumed the role of the national CEO who tells his workers he's dumping their defined-benefit pensions for some ill-defined 401(k) investment schemes. And essentially the American people responded with the same anger and anxiety that airline and auto employees have shown when their bosses reneged on their commitments of a secure retirement. The difference, of course, is that the American people have a lot more power as voters than they do as workers."
Harold Meyerson in The American Prospect discusses the human need for stability.
Thursday, March 23, 2006
Social Insecurity
Labels:
2000s,
George W. Bush,
New Orleans,
political history,
politics
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