Must we destroy Social Security in order to save it?
Health and Social Policy
The Great Social Security Scare
Advocates of privatization are using the financial stress of the baby boomers’ retirement to undo the advances that Social Security has brought. Relieving the financial pressures, however, has become a phony excuse for privatization.
Why Boomers Don’t Spell Bust
We could afford the dependent baby boomer generation once–during its childhood. We can do it again when the boomers retire.
Democratic Possibilities
Emphasizing work and family could revitalize the Democratic Party. But only if progressives seize the moment.
Delivering for Young Families: The Resonance of the GI Bill
The problem isn’t that old folks get too much money from government — it’s that young families get too little. Recalling the GI Bill and the politics of generational solidarity.
One Pill Makes You Larger
The development of human growth hormone and antidepressants like Prozac has already begun to blur the line between “treating” an illness and “enhancing” an otherwise already healthy person, making it difficult for insurance companies to know how and what to pay for.
Saving Their Assets: How to Stop Plunder at Blue Cross and Other Nonprofits
Huge nonprofit corporations are now being converted to for-profit companies, to the immense benefit of corporate insiders. But they can’t take charitable assets with them. A victory in California shows what the public should insist upon.
State of the Debate: Dr. Business
A new book by a Harvard Business School professor who wants to reorganize medicine into “focused factories” shows just how scary the medical-industrial complex might become.
The Ultimate Self-Referral: Health Care Reform, AMA-Style
Why did the American Medical Association support Newt Gingrich’s proposals on Medicare? Not for the reasons the media suggested.

