|  
                      In a good novel, writes blogger Randy 
                        Mayeux, �we can find quotes that speak to the issues of 
                        the age.� He�s referring to the much acclaimed �The Girl 
                        with the Dragoon Tattoo� and its relevance to the state 
                        of financial journalism in real life today. �Read it, 
                        and think about the financial reporting (and, really, 
                        most �journalism�) in this country over the last two-three 
                        years,� he says.  Some 
                        critics have taken the author Stieg Larsson to task for 
                        spending time on the state of economic reporting, suggesting 
                        that dragging in the issues of the day distracts unnecessarily 
                        from the enjoyment of a good murder mystery. For me it 
                        was one of the book�s highlights. The story�s central 
                        character, Carl Mikael Blomkvist, himself a financial 
                        journalist, says some pretty nasty things about his Swedish 
                        colleagues, especially about their tendency to go along 
                        to get along, to accept the official line or conventional 
                        wisdom about events.
 I was thinking about this the other 
                        day when I read on the front page of the New York Times:  
                      �Yet their preference for spending 
                        cuts, even in programs that benefit them, dissolves when 
                        they [the public] are presented with specific options 
                        related to Medicare and Social Security, the programs 
                        that directly touch millions of lives and are the biggest 
                        drivers of the long-term deficit.�  
                      The problem with that sentence is 
                        that the last dozen or so words in it are simply not true. 
                        Social Security is not one of the major contributors to 
                        the Federal budget deficit; it�s not a contributing factor 
                        at all. Now it�s possible that the reporter, Sheryl Gay 
                        Stolberg, doesn�t know any better, that she just read 
                        it somewhere and assumed it to be true. The problem is 
                        that the question has been explored so many times over 
                        the past year and the mythical contention between Social 
                        Security and the deficit exposed by so many experts in 
                        the field that one has to wonder why such misleading statements 
                        get past the Times� editors. �Just to be very clear, absolutely 
                        nothing needs to be done,� economist Dean Baker of the 
                        Center for Economic and Policy Research has written. �If 
                        we look at the projections from either the Congressional 
                        Budget Office or the Social Security trustees - they�ve 
                        yet to come out with their new ones, but in any case, 
                        the one from last year - the program could pay all scheduled 
                        benefits well into the future, at least twenty-seven years 
                        into the future. And even after that, it could still pay 
                        the vast majority of benefits, assuming nothing is ever 
                        done. Now, somewhere down the road, we�ll probably make 
                        changes in the program as we�ve done in the past. But 
                        the idea that somehow something has to be done anywhere 
                        soon, this is crazy. People have paid for those benefits. 
                         So, 
                        in effect, what we�d be doing is defaulting on the bonds 
                        that are held in the trust fund to pay people their benefits 
                        that - when they come due. So, nothing has to be done.� �Now, what�s going on is that you 
                        have this real craze about the deficit, because the reason 
                        we have the deficit, of course, was we had a collapse 
                        of the housing bubble,� continues Baker. � But there�s 
                        this obsession about the deficit - �we have to do something� 
                        - and you have people running around Washington saying, 
                        �Well, you know, we can�t do anything on healthcare, because 
                        we tried that and the insurance industry was too powerful, 
                        the pharmaceutical industry was too powerful, so therefore 
                        we have to cut Social Security.� It�s close to a non sequitur 
                        and should have people absolutely fuming at their representatives 
                        in Congress. But that�s where we are in Washington.� Evidently, Times columnist, 
                        Davis Brooks, doesn�t see it that way. Last week he was 
                        yapping away at how �Spending on Medicare, Medicaid, Social 
                        Security and interest on the debt� is driving up the deficit. 
                        He even proposed a new united front of �foreign aid people, 
                        the scientific research people, the education people, 
                        the antipoverty people and many others� to insist on action 
                        to� slow the growth of Medicare� and �reform� Social Security. 
                        Keep in mind that if the objective is to save money, any 
                        reform of Social Security means less of it. Brook has 
                        assigned to his new group the pompous title of �The Freedom 
                        Alliance.� Why any �antipoverty people� would 
                        join in an effort to cutback Medicare and Social Security 
                        is hard to fathom unless they just wanted more people 
                        to represent. �That�s right folks, you get to say 
                        whatever you want in the media now to further the cause 
                        of cutting Social Security,� economist Baker has said. 
                        He made the remark a year after hearing Cokie Roberts 
                        telling viewers that, �You could close this capital or 
                        turn it into condos and you could close down every domestic 
                        program that we have and you would still have a deficit 
                        because of Social Security and Medicare and interest on 
                        the national debt.� 
 �Well that�s not quite right. Social 
                        Security is running an annual surplus,� wrote Baker. �The 
                        money that program takes in each year in taxes and interest 
                        on its bonds exceeds what is being paid out in benefits. 
                        It�s not clear what Ms. Roberts had in mind when blaming 
                        Social Security for the deficit, but it has nothing to 
                        do with reality.� David Brooks is quite aware that 
                        the vast overwhelming majority of people in this country 
                        are opposed to cuts in Medicare and Social Security. Elderly 
                        Tea Party people aren�t buying that one. That�s why he 
                        trying to trick advocates for the poor and defenders of 
                        education into his absurd coalition. �Specifically, they 
                        have to get behind an effort now being hatched by a group 
                        of courageous senators: Saxby Chambliss, Mark Warner, 
                        Tom Coburn, Dick Durbin, Mike Crapo and Kent Conrad. These 
                        public heroes have been leading an effort to write up 
                        the Simpson-Bowles deficit commission report as legislation 
                        to serve as the beginning for a serious effort to get 
                        our house in order.� �Hatched� is the right word here. Imagine trying to tell students who 
                        are up in arms about the draconian cuts being made to 
                        public education these days that to their precarious futures 
                        should be added reduced Medicare benefits and cutback 
                        benefits or a privatized Social Security system turned 
                        over to Wall Street.  Actually, 
                        there is no Simpson-Bowles deficit commission report and 
                        Brooks knows that. The commission was a failure. It never 
                        produced a plan for dealing with the deficit or anything 
                        else. When it became apparent that the 14 out of 17 votes 
                        necessary were not there, the co-chairs, Republican, former 
                        Sen. Alan Simpson and a Democrat, former Clinton Administration 
                        Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles released their own proposals 
                        in their own names.
 Reality? Who said anything about 
                        reality? This Monday on MSNBC�s Andrea 
                        Mitchell Report, host Nora O�Donnell ripped into President 
                        Obama, accusing him of ignoring the recommendations of 
                        �his own fiscal commission� in his budget proposal. What 
                        �is he really doing about our deficit?� she sputtered. 
                        After saying, �we�ve got to get this clear,� she put up 
                        the above quoted David Brooks erroneous allegation about 
                        Social Security and the deficit. Take this from the prestigious UK-based 
                        magazine The Economist:  
                      �A year ago Mr. Obama set up a deficit-reduction 
                        commission, which duly produced a sensible report at the 
                        end of last year. He has failed previously, and failed 
                        again this week, to endorse the commission�s conclusions. 
                        He offered no specific proposals for cutting the cost 
                        of the biggest drains on the federal purse: health care, 
                        Social Security (pensions) and defense.�  
                      Again, Social Security pays for itself. Again, the commission reached no 
                        conclusion. It didn�t even take a formal vote. That last bit about defense is interesting. 
                        A lot of people in our country favor reducing the bloated 
                        and mostly irrelevant military budget. But you won�t get 
                        any support for that from the leading deficit hawks, nor 
                        from any of Brooks� Congressional �heroes.�  While 
                        Social Security and Medicare are usually linked in these 
                        discussions, the problems are not the same. The latter 
                        actually is linked to federal expenditures. But the problem 
                        is not Medicare itself; it the inexorable rise in medical 
                        costs. Don�t hold your breath waiting for anything to 
                        be done about that. Affect the huge profits of the pharmaceutical 
                        and medical devise industries, or the corporate hospital 
                        chains? Give me a break.
 Because of demographic changes, sometime 
                        in the future Social Security is going to need more money 
                        to meet the needs of retiring seniors. There is something 
                        that can be done about it. When President Obama was candidate, 
                        Obama he said: �I do not want to cut benefits or raise 
                        the retirement age. I believe there are a number of ways 
                        we can make Social Security solvent that do not involve 
                        placing these added burdens on our seniors.� And, �Currently, the Social Security 
                        payroll tax applies to only the first $102,000 a worker 
                        makes. If we kept the payroll tax exactly the same but 
                        applied it to all earnings and not just the first $97,500, 
                        we could virtually eliminate the entire Social Security 
                        shortfall.� Why can�t that be put on the table? 
                        Because it doesn�t fit the larger object Les Leopold wrote 
                        about recently on the Huffington Post 
                        :  
                      �Wall Street has a plan and a new 
                        logic that is quietly infiltrating the media and policy 
                        circles. It�s called `structural reform.� Although it 
                        is likely to involve some additional pain and suffering, 
                        it�s being sold as the new magic bullet for our ailing 
                        economy.�  
                      Leopold continued, �Structural reform 
                        is Wall Street speak for reducing what is often called 
                        the `social wage� for working people in every way possible: 
                        increasing the retirement age and cutting Social Security 
                        benefits, government employment and benefits, funds for 
                        public education, defined benefit pensions, and health 
                        care expenditures....and of course, extended unemployment 
                        benefits as well.� 
 Sometimes this business can get downright 
                        cynical and heartless. What is being promoted is not just 
                        to change Social Security and Medicare. It is to diminish 
                        them. It is - by any means necessary -- to devote fewer 
                        resources to the sick and elderly. Last July, columnist Michel Gerson 
                        wrote in the Washington Post: �Devoting resources 
                        to the sick and elderly counts many achievements and benefits. 
                        But we are reaching a point where these important priorities 
                        threaten to overwhelm everything else.� That�s utter nonsense. But Larson�s 
                        protagonist missed one important point. Writers write 
                        but editors edit and publishers publish. They all ought 
                        to be accountable. �Media coverage reflects what sells, 
                        and the political arena is no exception,� Tarsi Dunlop, 
                        who is the Director of Operations at the Roosevelt Institute 
                        Campus Network wrote 
                        February 10 on the new deal 2.0 site.  �Conflict 
                        and hypocrisy reign supreme, while the realities of policy 
                        are often left to fend for themselves. Social Security 
                        is a poignant example of such casualties. It is often 
                        the victim of misinformation and political agendas, which 
                        are designed to obscure the fact that a majority of Americans 
                        support the program. Most recently, Social Security was 
                        hijacked by the conversation about the national debt, 
                        yet another attempt by conservatives to reframe the narrative 
                        and detract from the facts. Consequently, the program�s 
                        fundamentals were once again lost to media spin, which 
                        sees no profitable advantage in telling a non-partisan 
                        story. The media�s reluctance to move beyond Republican 
                        sound bites is a fundamental disservice to Americans across 
                        the country. How else are they supposed to get the full 
                        story?� BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member 
                        Carl Bloice is a writer in San Francisco, a member of the National Coordinating Committee of 
                        the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism and formerly worked for 
                        a healthcare union. Click here to contact Mr. Bloice. |