• @Bytemeister
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    Ελληνικά
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    1 year ago

    That’s because it can also pay out in case you are disabled, so there is additional risk factors in there. Social security also needs to provide meaningful assistance at the time that you start taking from it, and needs to account for the inflation and changes in population demographics.

    We pay more into it than the amount we get out as well, because the net benefit goes beyond the money you “get back” when you retire. I guess if you really don’t want to pay for social security, you can take the loudest and most annoying of republican advice and “if you don’t love it, leave it”. Good luck, you’re gonna need it. Otherwise, act like a functional adult and quit complaining about one of the few things we spend money on that actually helps people.

    • @luckyhunter
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      -31 year ago

      That’s not a feature, that’s a bug. I don’t love it, and I’m not leaving. I just kiss that money goodbye as if I was setting it on fire every month. In the mean time I’ll continue to employ Americans at my company, pay taxes, and plan for the eventual demise of all financial institutions, because if they don’t fail I’ll at-least still be in a better financial position than 99% of everyone else.