Editorials are posted and archived on JNOnline.com Social Insecurity Dry Bones merican Jews need to be wary of President George W. Bush's proposal to reshape Social Security as a private retirement investment rather than a collective income assurance program. As with his Medicare drug benefit plan, he has understated the costs and overstated the benefits. He's right to review the solvency of Social Security; but if his assumptions prove wrong, our synagogues and community social service agencies will be left to pick up the pieces for many of our seniors. The president argues that Social Security, launched in the Great Depression 70 years ago, is in danger of going broke because it is a pay-as-you-go system and the number of payers — current employees — is rapidly diminishing. He could adequately bolster the trust fund for retirees by modestly limiting some benefits and raising revenues with a 1 per- cent hike in the payroll tax and collecting on salaries greater than $90,000. Instead, he proposes setting up private investment accounts with some of the money that currently goes into the trust fund from which Social Security payments are made. He would have the government borrow perhaps $2 trillion to bridge the gap until these private investments build up capi- tal and start paying out to their owners. Unless you happen to be paid as an investment adviser, it is not a prudent idea. First, the "crisis" that Bush describes just doesn't exist now The Social Security trustees, a play-it-safe group if ever there was one, say the trust fund can pay full benefits for at least the next 38 years even if we do nothing. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office estimates it will be nearly half a cen- tury before the fund would run out. Precipitous action isn't necessary. Even if we had to act now, private accounts don't guarantee a solution. The president says individuals can and will make better judgments than the govern- ment about how to build their wealth. Some will — and many won't. The losers would wind up with far less to live on than the hardly generous payments sen- iors get now And those most likely to make unin- formed choices are those already at the bottom of the economic scale with no experience in picking among the bewildering array of stock and bond offerings. Take out the management fees that investment managers charge, and even more people — our chil- dren or grandchildren — enct.up worse off 30 or 40 years from now. Bush says investment choices should be left to individuals because if the govern- ment manages the funds, political pressures would determine which companies get the federal invest- ment dollars. But the government already does play an enormous role in business successes and failures. Think about the Pentagon's no-bid contracts to Halliburton or the tax breaks just lavished on firms that are going to be able to bring their overseas profits back into the country at a sixth of the tax rate they would normally pay. Arguing that privatizing Social Security is needed because we are going to run out of workers is like say- ing we should privatize the interstate highway system because we are going to run out of oil in 50 years and thus won't have the tax revenues to support the roads. The solution just doesn't match the problem. American Jews overwhelmingly support the basic Adios, Senora Many of her students remember the mock But Senora would never let us get away with wedding, when everything in the entire cere- it. mony had to be done in Spanish, right "One day no one in class completed a down to the traditional Hispanic desserts. major assignment and she failed us all. I At the end, they had expanded their vocabu- couldn't believe it at the time. But, in retro- lary and gained an appreciation of another spect, I really appreciate her for it. She stood culture much deeper than any textbook her ground even in the face of pressure from would allow. the entire class, as well as most of our par- GEO RGE Jennifer Raznick recalled the rhymes and ents." CAN TOR gestures Senora used to help students Bekah said it wasn't until later that she real- Re lity remember the tricks of tense and gender. ized that Gelman had done it "because of her Ch eck Last year, she became a Spanish teacher her- devotion to our class. I continued to apply the self in North Carolina. work ethic I learned in Senora's class all "I constantly re-teach her tricks to my through my college career." own students," she says, "always telling them, 'This This June, she will graduate from Harvard Law is how I learned to understand it.' School. "Senora was the first person I called when I decid- "If you came into her class and you didn't want to ed to teach. She guided me through the writing of work, you were in big trouble," says Katie Sloan, my first syllabus, my first test, the organization of another former student who is now at medical my classroom. school at Michigan State. "But if you put in the "She may not be teaching at Andover anymore. effort, it was a great experience." But her techniques and brilliant style of instruction Only certain teachers are given nicknames. One will go on — in the minds of her students and now of my journalism professors, for example, was called in the minds of mine." "Old Mister Drollery." This was not a good thing. I don't think any tough teacher can ask for more But in Judy Gelman's case, Senora was a term of than that. abiding affection. A EDIT ORIAL I t isn't easy being a tough teacher. Students resent it. Parents get riled. Administrators don't want to roil the waters. It may not be until years later that students even realize how much they got out of your class. Many of us recall a time when coming home from school with a bad report on grades or behavior would call down the certain wrath of our parents. Now parents are just as likely to threaten to sue the school district. Judy Gelman, who retired last week after 23 years of teaching Spanish at Andover High in Bloomfield Hills, was known as a demanding teacher. Someone who didn't back down. Many students deliberately avoided her classes. But those who went and learned Spanish from her still refer to her as "Senora," and they took away something more than another lan- guage. In her senior year at Andover, Bekah Parker recalls, "We would try to get away with slacking off. George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor@thejevvisluiews.com DICK CHENEY WARNED IRAN THAT IF THEY DON'T DISARM "ISRAEL MIGHT WELL DECIDE TO ACT FIRST" IT'S THE OLD "CARROT AND STICK" 'APPROACH BUT IT WOULD BE MCE IF, FOR ONCE, ISRAEL DIDN'T HAVE TO BE THE STICK! . www.mrdrybones.tom premise of Social Security: that no American who has worked hard should have to face old age fearful of not having enough for food and shelter. Our community institutions like retirement homes have worked in successful partnership with Social Security for decades. Now is not the time to change the rules. ❑ ❑ 2/ 3 2005 43