But my wife, well my wife is getting a 5.8% raise in her income and for that I want to thank you all (at least those of you in the US). You see my wife receives Social Security and even though she has not worked since 1970 (that is in a job outside the home), her rather generous Social Security benefit goes up each year and thanks to the inflation calculation used by Social Security her benefit (and all other beneficiaries) is indeed increasing by 5.8% on January 1, 2009. Nice deal huh?

Is inflation 5.8% or anything near to that? Do seniors on average have to deal with many of the increasing costs that are faced by younger families? Have seniors had their entire lives to get ready for retirement? Does Social Security in any way consider the assets accumulated by many seniors over their lives and which can be drawn upon for living expenses (well at least before the market crashed)? :-5
It seems to me that the fundamental question is where should society be placing its limited resources? Today in America the answer is that a disproportionate percentage of those resources is spent on the elderly or as I call us the Seasoned Citizens.
So as the young family in America struggles to buy a home or simply make ends meet, pay day care expenses, save for college and retirement and pay health care bills and insurance premiums, the US mentality continues to automatically view all seniors as poor, fails to consider retirement income relative to working income (if you were low income while working you will be low income while retired) and creates greater and greater burdens on society for massive social entitlement programs¦and raises twice as large as those received by working people. :-3
For many seasoned citizens Social Security is their lifeline, for all younger Americans Social Security is a financial burden that will result is higher and higher taxes, higher interest rates and a burden that draws resources from society.
But thanks for the raise.
