Vindicarre wrote:
Technical, or not, I used terms understood in the industry, and not understood by you. That was my mistake.
Thats what I meant by technical terms.
Diamondeye wrote:
It serves the purpose of defining what SS is based on: The practice of paying old investors with money from new investors.
Except that this is not the entirity of a Ponzi scheme, and SS is not based entirely on such a concept. It is
supposed to have investment income, and maintain a surplus to cover times when that is insufficient. Again, a Ponzi scheme necessarily requires ever-expanding population base, SS is designed (in theory) to run a surplus when it has a high pay-in and a use that money to cover times when it must pay out more (the degree of realism of this plan notwithstanding)
Diamondeye wrote:
This is the argument I was waiting for. It is the perfect argument of Statists. The State says it is (or isn't) so, therefore it is (or isn't). There is no rebuttal against such an argument, and if one desires to go continue down this road by the use this argument (especially in light of your own statements on the matter), it would be pointless to continue.
First of all, so what if it's an argument of "statists"? It's true. Fraud is defined by law, and that's what governments do - make laws. I see you just ignored that I pointed out that the law might be unConstitutional just so you could get mention of "Statism" in there, because we all know getting an "-ism" out is a major victory in internet discussion, and I pointed out that it might be ethically questionable, but you didn't bother to address that either.
Diamondeye wrote:
It isn't a Ponzi Scheme because it doesn't have to be, or it wasn't intended to be a Ponzi Scheme? Ponzi bought investment instruments, when he couldn't fulfill his obligations, he turned to the methodology now known as a Ponzi Scheme.
I'm well aware of his history, but either way, it's not a Ponzi scheme; it does not have the same underlying concept. It is, in fact, physically impossible for it to be one because it's "clientele" is determined by the size and longevity of the population, not by investment seeking.
Quote:
It's not a Ponzi Scheme, because it doesn't need an infinite pool of new investors? Why is it mandated that we pay in to SS, if it doesn't need the new investors? What would happen if an inordinate number of "investors" decided to pull their investment out (as is the downfall of most Ponzi Schemes) of SS?
This has nothing to do with it. It's explicitly set up to be a steady-state over time cash-in, cash-out system. People are not being told (regardless of what they tell themselves) that they will come out ahead; if they die before drawing any payments, they lose it all. SS does not require an infinitely large pool of investors; it simply requires a fairly steady birthrate and steady life expectancy. The
eventual investors may be indefinite, but a Ponzi scheme requires investors come in at a rate dictated by the promised return. SS does not; surpluses can (in theory) run at times to cover times when there is not one and taxes can be used to cover deficiencies as well.
Quote:
It's not a Ponzi scheme because the Gov't has the power, over the currency issued by the Gov't, to make the "investments" worthless? That makes me feel comfortable with my "investment" into SS.
Whether you're comfortable or whether its a good idea for the government to do so has nothing to do with whether its a Ponzi scheme.
Quote:
The monetization portion is only there because the Gov't has taken the actual money paid in by "investors", and replaced it with a non-negotiable, proprietary instrument, the details of which are defined by the Gov't. Yet, it still leaves the fact that a Ponzi Scheme uses new money to pay off old money, and so does SS.
You are relying on one little bit of what makes a Ponzi scheme and its resemblance to social security to call them the same thing. It is irrelevant why the monetezation option exists, or how it works. Your claim "well, they both use new money" makes the definition excessivly broad. It is as if you were to say "ducks have wings, and X-wing fighters have wings, therefore ducks are X-wing fighters."
Diamondeye wrote:
The only characteristic it shares with a Ponzi Scheme is that it uses new investors money to pay off old investors. Coincidentally, that is the only express characteristic of a Ponzi Scheme.
This is false. It is NOT the only express characteristic of a Ponzi scheme. A Ponzi scheme promises profits, and does so fraudulently. If the SEC definition you were using does not take that into account (and it appeared that it did) then it is excessively broad, and of questionable Constitutionality for enforcement purposes itself, since it allows simple poor decisions to be characterized as a form of fraud.
Diamondeye wrote:
Except for the fact that a Ponzi Scheme is fraudulent because it's a Ponzi Scheme. Paying off old investors with money from new investors is fraudulent. SS uses money from new investors to pay off old investors. SS isn't using this method of self perpetuation by accident, it's using it by design.
Circular argument.
Diamondeye wrote:
Quote:
I also do not believe that political discourse in this country is well served by this sort of rhetoric.
I do not believe that the citizens of this country are well served by being forced to pay into a Ponzi Scheme.
You've shown no good reason to think that they are. You have excellent arguments against SS on the merits of the actual system, so why it's so all-fired important to get an inaccurate label applied to it is beyond me. I can only attribute it to the overall Board competition to see who can express outrage at the government in the loudest and most condemnatory terms.