Monthly Archives: March 2025

Trumpettes

I’ve been looking for a club like this.  Newly-formed (c. January 2025), the group strives to promote unimaginably obscene wealth.  “Trillionaires for Trump” is following the lead of our Dear Leader in giving a golden middle finger to the peons of our world – you know, people like we bloggers, writers and other low-lifes.  We’re the ones who actually pay taxes and keep the economy functioning, but no one calls “Us” job creators.

Go ahead and check out this gang!  You might find your place in the world!

Image: Galerie

2 Comments

Filed under Curiosities

April 2025 Literary Calendar

Events in the month of April for writers and readers

Arab-American Heritage Month

Child Abuse Awareness Month

Dog Appreciation Month

Earth Month

Genocide Awareness Month

Global Astronomy Month

International Guitar Month

Mathematics & Statistics Awareness Month

National Alcohol Awareness Month (U.S.)

National Card & Letter Writing Month (U.S.)

National Fair Housing Month (U.S.)

National Humor Month (U.S.)

National Poetry Month (U.S.)

School Library Month (U.S.)

Famous April Birthdays

Other April Events

Leave a comment

Filed under News

Social Living

“Social Security is the biggest Ponzi scheme of all time.”

Elon Musk, February 28, 2025

For elected officials here in the U.S., Social Security is much like a live power line: touch it and they’re done.  Social security, along with Medicare and Medicaid, is one of those sacred vessels of American life.  It’s not just beloved; it is sacrosanct.

Thus, for a foreign-born oligarch like Elon Musk to disparage it as a “scheme” has become anathemic.  As something of a pseudo-president, Musk is head of the newly created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which has taken a hacksaw to a number of departments within the federal government.  The declared goal is to reduce bureaucratic weight by slashing jobs and merging together certain divisions within the system.  Nowhere in this morass of right-wing blather is a dedication to make people like Musk and their corporations to pay their share of taxes.  But that’s a different issue.

To place things in proper perspective – and put elected officials like Trump in their place – social security has too many safeguards to be considered a Ponzi scheme.  Before the Social Security Act of 1935, a large number of older Americans lived in abject poverty.  At the time it was common for families to take in older relatives.  But some people simply didn’t have that support and they were left to fend for themselves.  The concept of providing for those who simply couldn’t work or take care of themselves is nothing new.  Various societies throughout history have considered the fragilities of the human condition and sought to alleviate those difficulties.  It is simply immoral to abandon those who can’t care for themselves.  It’s also rather easy to look at those who won’t take care of their own lives and group them with the others.

The Social Security Act has been amended several times since 1935, but it differs from a Ponzi scheme in many ways.

1. Social Security is not fraudulent

A Ponzi scheme is a deliberate a fraud intent to mislead investors.

2. Social Security’s operators do not take a cut

Unlike with Ponzi schemes, Social Security is not a profit-generating gamble, and the officials who run it do not take a portion of it for themselves.

3. Social Security is operated in the open

Social Security is a transparent, government-run program with clear funding mechanisms. 

4. Social Security has built-in oversight

Unlike a Ponzi scheme, Social Security has many layers of oversight, auditing, regulation and legal and financial systems in place to ensure accuracy and transparency. 

5. Social Security offers realistic returns

The goal of Social Security is to provide basic income replacement, not to generate get-rich-quick returns.  Ponzi schemes often promise unrealistically high gains.

6. If financially stressed, Social Security can adjust funding and/or benefits

A fiscal imbalance in Social Security can be corrected, but a Ponzi scheme can’t.  Social Security beneficiaries can’t demand to be paid a balance in their account if they suspect something is wrong.  There can’t be a “bank run” on Social Security, and problems ultimately can be resolved.

It doesn’t surprise me that Trump and the Republican Party are targeting Social Security, or rather that conservative Republicans in general haven’t struck back at the president.  Social and political conservatives have always been leery about government programs designed to help people.  Before Franklin R. Roosevelt’s “New Deal” policies (designed and implemented to address the brutal impact of the Great Depression), government’s primary purpose was to enact laws and collect taxes.  The collapse of the U.S. stock market in 1929 and the subsequent financial calamities that ensued changed that mindset – at least among the more open-minded.  Social Security was just one project resulting from such forward thinking.

In 1944, Congress passed the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act (later known as the GI Bill) to assist those returning from military service during World War II.  It provided a myriad of aid and services to these individuals, such as education and housing.  Again, many conservatives denounced it as welfare.

Similar criticisms befell Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society” some two decades later.  From this massive undertaking, we got Medicare and Medicaid.  But, as Johnson declared, the government should ensure both “liberty and abundance” for all citizens – not just those who can afford it.  And as before, critics deemed it socialized medicine.

While it’s surprising that the U.S. federal government can operate with such alleged overspending – a bloated bureaucracy – it does provide substantial safety and security to most everyone here.  The attack on Social Security is monstrous.  Trump has sworn to leave it alone, but I personally don’t trust him.

I’m fast approaching the official retirement age of 62, yet I know I won’t be able to sit back in my quiet suburban home and embark on my dream life of being a full-fledged writer.  The Social Security system is supposedly insolvent.  Raising the official retirement age (as many, including Musk, have suggested) or reducing benefits won’t repair that problem.  Funding for the Iraq War alone could have made Social Security fiscally viable for generations.  Still, the program must be handled with care.  Touching it irresponsibly is, indeed, akin to touching that live power line.

3 Comments

Filed under Essays

Final Thoughts

“Thank you,” muttered the pastor, already looking more tired than when the service started.  “Now, would anyone else like to say a few last words before we proceed to the cemetery?”

I took a deep breath and stood.  “Yes, I would.”

“Very well.”

I looked briefly at the crowd and swallowed hard.  “I have to say my friend was a unique individual.”

Obnoxious little bastard!

“He never seemed to meet a stranger.”

Only made friends if they could do something for him.

“He could be funny and engaging.”

And rude and stupid!

“I always had the best time with him.”

If he didn’t run out on the tab – which he did more than once!

“We even thought of going into business together at one point.”

He had the looks, but I had the brains.

“A graphic arts business.”

Bastard wanted to turn it into a porn thing.

“It was a great idea, and I knew we’d go places with it.”

After a while, I wanted his ass to go straight to hell!

“I think we did our best, but you know how everything looks great on paper!”

He kept screwing up things!

“Still…I was sad when he got sick.”

Payback, bitch!

“I just keep thinking of those better times.”

Good one.

“And wished…in a way, he was still here.”

What?!

“Yeah, I do.”

Okay, now you’ve lost it!

“I know that sounds odd.”

That’s one way of putting it!

Everyone looked at me…confused.

Now you have their attention.

“Yeah…despite everything, I already miss him.”

More quizzical stares.

You know they’re going to talk about you after this is over, don’t you?

“I don’t care.”

Oops!  Didn’t mean to say that out loud!

“Excuse me.”  I couldn’t help but notice the raised brows and twisted mouths.

Might as well keep going.

I turned to the photo beside the coffin.  “Goodbye, my friend.  I hope to see you on the other side.”

And you really mean that?

“I really mean that.”

Several people turned to look at me.  I didn’t care.  As big a pain in the ass as he was…I already miss my friend.

5 Comments

Filed under Wolf Tales