Your post has mingled multiple programs under the Social Security Administration as if they are the same thing in order to support your theory. When the facts are examined regarding the various separate programs that you comingled, I believe that your assertions don’t hold water. The real info is readily available at
www.ssa.gov but I will give you a summary below.
I personally don’t want to return to relying on the hope that individuals and private groups will help our seniors or those who are totally disabled. We cannot count on human kindness to prevail in every instance even when it is a relative in need, so why would we expect people to support needy strangers? Donations are already down to charities and churches since the economy hit the skids, so at the time that the most people are in need, the very groups proposed as a replacement for governmental assistance are least able to help.
Never did I say the various SS benefits are identical. But they are all administered under the same agency and work in a theoretically complementary fashion. Thus, they are all rather inconsistent parts of one program.
People generally apply for SSI and SSD at the same time, and the process allows for that. The reason being that since disability is a critical criterion for both, but since the past tax paid may be questionably adequate to reach the “threshhold” for SSD, it is prudent to apply for both benefits at the same time. Dual applications are processed as one, and one is put in one or the other depending on the outcome of the initial determination or the appeals to the Administrative Law Judge or the U.S. District Court of Appeals, wherever it ends up.
It starts to get weird when one considers that if one is a bit short on contribution or “quarters”, and thus assigned to SSI, one’s eligibility is “means tested” when it comes to assets. (income too, but that’s another thing) SSD, however, is not. SS Retirement is not. Therefore, one might have immense wealth and still receive SSD or SS Retirement, but far less would disqualify one from SSI. Income from investments is disqualifying under SSI, but not under SSD or SS Retirement.
If one receives SSI, one is not eligible for Medicare until age 65, whereas if one is SSD, one is eligible after two years, regardless of age or financial ability to obtain private insurance. One dollar in contribution long or short could make the difference between being in one program or the other. Allowance is made for younger disabled workers, so that a very young worker might qualify for SSD whereas if he was older when he became disabled, he would be SSI notwithstanding that he had contributed more to the system.
It’s possible to qualify for both SSD and SSI at the same time.
I realize the system is supposed to be “payback” for contributions made in the past. However, the two really aren’t related, except when it comes to the distinction between being eligible for SSI only rather than SSD, and the benefit level. Absurdities abound. If one became disabled at some time when he was paying in the maximum, he would be paid at the maximum as long as he remained on SSD, which could be for life. If, however, he went all the way to retirement age without becoming disabled, and the maximum contribution changed upward in the meanwhile, his benefit would be less than the SSD benefit.
There is no actuarially sound relationship between what is “paid in” and what is “paid out” under any social security program. That’s part of the reason the whole program is scheduled to go broke.
My point in all of this is not, and was not, to say there are no distinctions among the various benefits, and your suggestion of disingenuousness on my part is duly noted. I assure you, however, that disingenuousness was not my intent. I am aware of the theories underlying each program. I did, and do, note in passing that the “social safety net” programs do not address need well, and the political rationales for each are not all that rational. Those in greatest need tend to receive the least, while those in least need, and many with no need at all, tend to receive the most. But because we are talking about Catholic social doctrine here, it is my fundamental position that the social safety net programs we now have are not consistent with it.