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appalachiablue

(41,177 posts)
Mon Aug 14, 2023, 08:56 PM Aug 2023

This Day In History: Aug. 14, 1935, FDR Signs Social Security Act



This Day in History, August 14, 1935, FDR Signs Social Security Act. - Ed.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs into law the Social Security Act on August 14, 1935. Press photographers snapped pictures as FDR, flanked by ranking members of Congress, signed into law the historic act, which guaranteed an income for the unemployed and retirees. FDR commended Congress for what he considered to be a “patriotic” act. Roosevelt had taken the helm of the country in 1932 in the midst of the Great Depression, the nation’s worst economic crisis.

The Social Security Act was in keeping with his other “New Deal” programs, including the establishment of the Works Progress Administration and the Civilian Conservation Corps, which attempted to hoist America out of the Great Depression by putting Americans back to work. In his public statement that day, FDR expressed concern for “young people [who] have come to wonder what would be their lot when they came to old age” as well as those who had employment but no job security.

Although he acknowledged that “we can never insure one hundred percent of the population against one hundred percent of the hazards and vicissitudes of life,” he hoped the act would prevent senior citizens from ending up impoverished. Although it was initially created to combat unemployment, Social Security now functions primarily as a powerful safety net for retirees and the disabled, and provides death benefits to taxpayer dependents. The Social Security system has remained popular and relatively unchanged since 1935. - Video, https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/fdr-signs-social-security-act
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- SSA, Social Security Administration, ssa.gov, (1980s). - Ed.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Social Security Bill into law on August 14, 1935, only 14 months after sending a special message to Congress on June 8, 1934, that promised a plan for social insurance as a safeguard "against the hazards and vicissitudes of life." The 32-page Act was the culmination of work begun by the Committee on Economic Security (CES), created by FDR on June 29, 1934. The President transmitted the Committee's report to the 74th Congress on Jan. 17, 1935, almost equally dividing the 14 months spanning the work of the Committee and the work of the Congress.

50 years later, Wilbur J. Cohen, who was a 21-year-old research assistant to the Exec. Director of the CES and later served as Secy. of HEW writes: "If any piece of social legislation can be called historic or revolutionary, in breaking with the past and in terms of long run impact, it is the Social Security Act." Although the Congress modified many details of the Economic Security Bill introduced on behalf of the CES, most of the programs recommended by the Committee were adopted. Earlier installments in this series have discussed the changes as they occurred during the legislative process.

The Act established 2 types of provisions for old-age security: (1) Federal aid to the States to enable them to provide cash pensions to their needy aged, and (2) a system of Federal old-age benefits for retired workers. The 1st measure was designed to provide immediate assistance to destitute aged individuals. The 2nd was a preventive measure intended to reduce the extent of future dependency among the aged & to assure workers that their years of employment entitled them to a life income. For needy persons already aged 65 or older, old-age assistance was provided, by title I, through Federal grants-in-aid to pay half the costs of the pensions, provided that the Federal share did not exceed $15 a month per person.

In Mr. Cohen's judgment, the most significant long-range congressional modification of the original proposal was the deletion of the condition that States should provide a "reasonable subsistence compatible with decency & health." For the working population under age 65, the Act created, in title II, an "Old-Age Reserve Account" & authorized payments of old-age benefits from this account to eligible individuals upon attainment of age 65 or on Jan. 1, 1942, whichever was later..Other provisions of the Act included 4 programs recommended by the CES for promoting the health & welfare of children...

- More, https://www.ssa.gov/history/50ed.html
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This Day In History: Aug. 14, 1935, FDR Signs Social Security Act (Original Post) appalachiablue Aug 2023 OP
Rose Wilder Lane, Little House books, said this was the worst date in US history BigmanPigman Aug 2023 #1
I didn't know this, tx. What an awful, rabid woman, whoa. appalachiablue Aug 2023 #2
I have read about her for the last three years and she is horrid! BigmanPigman Aug 2023 #3
We really liked the stories & books as kids, like so many others. This just made appalachiablue Aug 2023 #4
They corresponded..... BigmanPigman Aug 2023 #5

BigmanPigman

(51,635 posts)
1. Rose Wilder Lane, Little House books, said this was the worst date in US history
Mon Aug 14, 2023, 09:19 PM
Aug 2023
https://www.midwestrewind.com/2018/02/27/book-review-setting-fire-myths-little-house-prairie/

She hated FDR and was a huge Libertarian, right up there with Rand and Paterson. The Little House books she ghost wrote for her mother, Laura Ingalls Wilder, wreaked of hatred for Dems.

https://fee.org/articles/rose-wilder-lane-isabel-paterson-and-ayn-rand-three-women-who-inspired-the-modern-libertarian-movement/

BigmanPigman

(51,635 posts)
3. I have read about her for the last three years and she is horrid!
Mon Aug 14, 2023, 09:27 PM
Aug 2023

She was the biggest hypocrite on the planet. I am still pissed off since I thought those books were "patriotic" from a young person's perspective but her form of "independence" was very different from what she promoted in her mother's books, which she basically wrote.

appalachiablue

(41,177 posts)
4. We really liked the stories & books as kids, like so many others. This just made
Mon Aug 14, 2023, 09:36 PM
Aug 2023

me recall reading something surprising about her years ago but not the full picture. Just appalling, wonder if she knew Ayn Rand...

BigmanPigman

(51,635 posts)
5. They corresponded.....
Mon Aug 14, 2023, 10:07 PM
Aug 2023
https://www.libertarianism.org/publications/essays/rose-wilder-lane#:~:text=A%20correspondence%20with%20Ayn%20Rand,but%20an%20activist%20as%20well.

"Rose’s writing reflected her growing concern with government encroachment on individual liberties. Her 1938 pioneer novel Free Land, the royalties from which financed Lane’s purchase of a home in Connecticut, would be her last published fiction. During the early 40’s, she wrote articles focusing on individualism, needlework, and sometimes both at once for Woman’s Day and other magazines. She also began work on The Discovery of Freedom, which by her own account was written in a “white heat.” In 1945, she began writing for the National Economic Council’s Review of Books. A correspondence with Ayn Rand that lasted several years began when Rand sent Lane a letter of thanks for her favorable review of The Fountainhead in that publication."

"Lane was not merely a theorist, but an activist as well. In 1945–46, she led a campaign against the introduction of zoning, which she saw as a violation of individual property rights, in her town. She also grew her own food to avoid wartime rationing, and later quit her editorial job with the National Economic Council so as not to pay Social Security taxes. Her prescience regarding the instability of that system was astonishing: throughout the 1950s she would describe it as unstable and a “Ponzi fraud.” Lane told friends that it would be immoral of her to take part in a system that would predictably collapse so catastrophically, as the example of Weimar Germany convinced her that it would."

I believe I read that they differed when it came to religion. Lane believed in God and not atheism.
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