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Antwort in : /alt/activism/d
Absender   : bghauk@berlin.infomatch.com  (Brian Hauk)
Betreff    : Defend Social Security!
Datum      : Mo 13.04.98, 20:54  (erhalten: 15.04.98)
Groesse    : 3339 Bytes
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## Nachricht am 15.04.98 archiviert
## Ursprung : /misc/activism/progressive
Defend Social Security!
                                         {lead editorial}
*********************************************************************
from the Militant, vol.62/no.15                        April 20, 1998
  In the name of "educating" about Social Security and
preparing ways to "save" it, the Clinton administration
seeks to lay the groundwork to eventually dismantle this
social gain, which was won as a product of the struggles of
working people over decades. The union movement and all
working people have a stake in opposing these moves.
  The employing class prefers that workers die quickly once
they're too old or sick to sell their labor power. For them
it's a problem that workers live many years past retirement.
  Social Security, which provides cash benefits to the
elderly and disabled, is a piece of the social wage. It's a
portion of the wealth that the toiling majority produces,
which the working class has won from the bosses as a social
right for all. Like direct wages, each increase in the
social wage cuts into the profits the capitalists take from
the value produced by workers' labor. That's why the
employers and the politicians who represent them want to
roll it back, and put more of the burden for care of the
young, the old, and the disabled on individual families.
  Making Social Security an entitlement - available to
all - was also part of knitting working-class solidarity and
undercutting the dog-eat-dog competition fostered by
capitalism. That's precisely what individual accounts that
can be gambled on Wall Street do: tear down the fabric of
human solidarity workers have fought bloody battles to
weave.
  Like other social gains such as Medicare and Medicaid,
Social Security was enacted as a result of the massive labor
battles that forged the industrial unions in the United
States in the 1930s, and later extended in the course of the
struggle by Blacks for civil rights in the 1960s and '70s.
  The U.S. rulers are hesitant to take on Social
Security - which 44 million people depend on for most or all
of their income - directly. They probe at ways to encroach
on this entitlement, from raising the retirement age to
floating various "privatization" and means-testing schemes.
  By criticizing the most extreme "privatization"
proposals, the Democratic president tries to pose as a
defender of Social Security. But the course of the Clinton
administration has been to consistently set the stage for
greater inroads into the social wage. He promotes the myth
that there's "just not enough money to go around" and brags
about "ending welfare as we know it," referring to his
signature on legislation that ended Aid for Families with
Dependent Children, a piece of the 1935 Social Security Act.
  Fighting to defend and extend social entitlements is part
of defending the social protections needed to hold the
working class together in face of economic crises and the
divisions promoted by the bosses. The entire labor movement
should join in exposing Clinton's attack on Social Security
and organize to defeat it.
----------------------------------------------------------
The Militant
gopher://gopher.igc.apc.org:/11/pubs/militant

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