In short, Social Security is not facing a financial crisis at all. It
is facing a need for some distinctly sub-cataclysmic adjustments over
the next few decades that would increase its revenue and diminish its
benefits.Politically, however, Social Security is facing the
gravest crisis it has ever known. For the first time in its history, it
is confronted by a president, and just possibly by a working
congressional majority, who are opposed to the program on ideological
grounds, who view the New Deal as a repealable aberration in U.S.
history, who would have voted against establishing the program had they
been in Congress in 1935. But Bush doesn't need Karl Rove's counsel to
know that repealing Social Security for reasons of ideology is a
non-starter. So it's time once more to fabricate a crisis. In
Bushland, it's always time to fabricate a crisis. We have a crisis in
medical malpractice costs, though the CBO says that malpractice costs
amount to less than 2 percent of total health care costs. (In fact,
what we have is a president who wants to diminish the financial, and
thus political, clout of trial lawyers.) We have a crisis in judicial
vacancies, though in fact Senate Democrats used the filibuster to block
just 10 of Bush's 229 first-term judicial appointments.With
crisis concoction as its central task -- think of how many
administration officials issued dire warnings of the threat posed by
Saddam Hussein or, now, by Social Security's impending bankruptcy --
this presidency, more than any I can think of, has relied on the
classic tools of propaganda. Indeed, it's almost impossible to imagine
the Bush presidency absent the Fox News Network and right-wing talk
radio.