The Kernel wrote:a huge bunch of line-by-line shit
First, thanks for doing the SDN "break a whole post into a bunch of quotes" thing. It's such a great style and does wonders for readability. I'm a terrible mentally-handicapped shitposter though, so I'm afraid I cannot respond in kind.
Before I get into the meat of your post, we'll clear this one up:
no you do have a choice in employment
Alright, your point, although changing jobs right now would be considerably harder.
Now, let's look at your big contentions:
People should have known better because it couldn't have matched the market
In Oregon, the pension system for current employees was overhauled several years ago so I don't know how exactly the earlier defined-benefits system was originally sold (although I do think Oregon was one of the areas in which the "take a pay cut/freeze now, we'll take care of you later" schtick was used), but I have no knowledge that the pension was at any point promised to be purely the product of investments and employee contributions. There is no natural law that states that the retirements of the old cannot be paid out of the labor of the young, although the latter may find it distasteful.
In other words, I find no reference in the definition of the word "pension" that states that it must be derived from market investments made by the pensioner, whether directly or on his behalf; nor that pensions cannot be in part (or even in full!) derived from tax revenue, whether by accident
or even by design. I therefore find little relevance in drawing analogies to failed market schemes and constantly bemoaning the "unfunded" nature of said pensions.
Stealing the balance for YOUR retirement from taxpayers is literally theft IRL because people lose out when private companies go bust
So, first, it's not my retirement. The current PERS that I contribute to is only a defined-contributions plan, and my pension won't be nearly so generous, and I'm only 25 so for all I know public education will be abolished by the time I'm ready to retire (or I might die before then, who knows?). I do appreciate the characterization though, as I dream nightly of pillaging the noble taxpayers to gild my loins... or something. Does it totally baffle you that I would argue in favor for a policy I would not directly benefit from, and in fact could ultimately pay additional tax money towards? (I imagine the response will be something along the lines of 'nuhh, you're just stupid!', but I could be mistaken.)
Anyway, I don't know how you think the bankruptcy claim can be legitimately applied to the government. A business goes bankrupt because it is no longer able to generate sufficient revenue to meet its financial obligations - because there are no further actions it can take to get money to the people it owes. The government is entirely capable of raising additional revenue by raising taxes or cutting spending on other areas, but it chooses not to. This is (very) roughly analogous to saying that you no longer wish to pay the full amount of rent on an apartment because it's cutting into your coke habit - you're skipping out on a debt not because you're
unable to pay but because you'd rather not.
Why should "the taxpayers" pay up? Because their representative government entered into an agreement on "their" behalf (including mine). That's how this whole "public employee paid for by
tax dollars" thing works; presumably the ultimate "customer" of my labor is society itself. What good is a population - as represented by its elected officials - who cannot be trusted to honor its agreements? Would you loan money to such a government? (I sure hope
someone will continue to do so!
) As long as the population is able to meet that commitment, they should do so.
If you seriously cannot abide by the agreements that your government entered into on your behalf - and there truly are a
lot of them, not just with your fellow citizens, but also with *gasp*
foreign governments (see that whole "treaties become the law of the land" part in the Constitution) - then your recourse is, bluntly, revolution. Overthrow the government and declare that the new republic will only honor those agreements made with the past government that it sees fit to. Otherwise, it's just
another campaign to destroy the middle-class welshing.