Disability is a $260 Billion Scam. This is Why
They may be firing up that Zamboni machine in Hell, but Trump has done something I agree with. He is telling people to get off of disability. Here is why I agree with him.
Omar Gonzalez had
spent the last year telling friends that the government was trying to spy on
him. He was sure people were trying to
break into his home. He put his cell
phone in a microwave. Gonzalez would
have been just one more increasingly crazy street person, until September 19,
2014 when he decided he had to tell President Obama that the atmosphere
was collapsing. At that point, Omar
became the luckiest man in America. I can imagine no other explanation for why he
is not dead. Mr. Gonzalez, armed with a
knife, leaped over the fence at the White House. Despite the presence of Secret Service
personnel, trained guard dogs, locks, barriers, and snipers all evidently on
stand down because—well—force is so…so…Republican, Gonzalez sprinted across the
lawn, and through the North Portico door.
He over-powered a guard at the door, ran through the foyer and on into
the East Room where he was finally subdued.
Thankfully, he ignored a staircase that led directly to the living
quarters of the Obama family.
This was an impressive display of
broken field running for a man receiving disability because of a bad foot. Omar’s disability comes from the military and
that is a different matter, but it did get me thinking about the skyrocketing
civilian disability enrollment that America is now facing. We do have people who rightly deserve
disability payments; I am not talking about those people. But, over the last 30 years, we the people have created a monster
that does not serve the truly disabled, costs us $260 billion each year and
sucks the dignity, productivity and self-worth out of our citizens.
The national average of workplace
disability is 4.6%. Utah
has the lowest with 2.9%; West Virginia
the highest with 9%. None of these
people, by the way, are considered, “unemployed” so they make employment
figures look better. That is a win for
the federal government but a real loss for taxpayers.
The
number of former workers who are now on disability keeps rising (from 2.5
million to 8 million since 1995), despite better medical care for all of us and
stricter laws prohibiting discrimination against the disabled.
There is no medical diagnosis
called, “disability.” As far as the
government is concerned you are disabled if you have a condition that keeps you
from working. But for every person who
tells me they are on disability, I can show you one with the same physical
condition that holds a job. For Heaven’s
sake, I saw a man with an artificial leg operating a logging truck! The difference in most cases is not the
ability to work but the will to work.
Life is neither easy nor pain free for anyone. We all play injured. It is part of the human condition. There is a part of me that wants to say,
“Stop whining!” but I digress.
Since 1995 the number of people on
welfare has dropped from 5 to 2 million.
During that same time the number of people on disability has grown from
2 to 7 million. All of this has been
accomplished by states such as Missouri
who hire private companies like Public Consulting Group to move people from
welfare (which the states must pay for) to disability (which the Federal
government pays for). The state of Missouri pays PCG a
bounty of $2300 for each person moved to disability and saves money in the
process.
It is legal, but it isn’t right, and
it costs much more than money.
The
idea of helping people disabled by accident or illness is a good plan. It allows us to both express our better
angels and give back some of the benefits which come from living in the richest
country in the world. But the road to
Hell is paved with good intentions, and a bureaucracy is Hell incarnate.
I doubt that the first plans for
disability payments included the possibility, nor even the probability, of spending $260 billion per year on 14 million
people. But there is no, “Murphy’s Law”
addendum added to legislation. While you
may want to do good, others just want to do well.
The types of diagnoses that make up
disability have changed a great deal. In
1961 heart disease topped the charts with 25% of all disabled. By 2011 that group only made up 10% of
disabled individuals, and had fallen to third place. In contrast, 1961 back problems were next to
the bottom of the list with 8%, now they make up 34% of the disabled, followed
by mental/emotional disorders at 19% as opposed to the 10% they were in
1961. Cancer, respiratory diseases and
diabetes maintain their positions near the bottom of both lists. Do you notice that conditions that are hard
to fake are either staying or drifting near the bottom? There is a lesson here.
Disability
is also being used as a substitute for unemployment. Historically, the two conditions rose and
fell in unison until about 2004. At that
time, disability claims began to rise steadily.
In many instances, when a major employer closed, people were guided into
disability instead of unemployment.
And
that leads us to the wickedest scam of all.
It is the Supplemental Security System is a program for people who are
both disabled and poor. Two-thirds of
all the children in this program are also diagnosed with learning
disabilities. Every learning disabled
child is worth an additional $700 to his family. If the school and child do well and start
demonstrating grade-level mastery, the family loses its paycheck. Parents don’t want that, so they sabotage the
child’s success. Has anyone ever done a
study to see what we are buying with that $700 per month per child? Do these children look like their parents are
spending $700 per month on them?
But
I don’t like to complain without offering solutions, so here goes. First, suspend all of those $700 child
credits going directly to the parents.
Instead, use the same amount of money to operate after school academies
for these students. Give them a hot
meal, certified teachers and one-on-one supervised study, homework, and
enrichment opportunities. If you are
trying to solve a learning problem, spend the money of education. Give it to doctor’s, dentists and dieticians
who work directly with the child and the family.
Second,
eliminate all disability payments to people whose lifestyle creates
disabilities. If you wracked up your car
and hurt your back while driving under the influence, that one is on you. If you smoke, your lung problems are
yours. If your diabetes is caused by too
much weight, tough, eat less and exercise more.
Finally,
put an actuarial test to these disabilities.
If most people can function with your complaint, so should you. We have people all over this country that
work with high blood pressure, diabetes, pain, heart and surgical
concerns. Everybody gets depressed;
everybody gets panicked, work anyway.
Now,
here is the up side. We keep spending
the $260 billion, but we divide it up amongst the people who truly are
disabled. They get more. Each year we weed out more malingerers and we
give more money to those left. America gets
more workers (reluctant workers, but that may change); the deserving get more
money; taxpayers aren’t subsidizing shirkers.
Win. Win. Win.
Cut
the waste and keep the faith.
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