Last fall, Rick Perry published a book called “Fed Up!” in which he called Social Security “a crumbling monument to the failure of the New Deal.” He was telling the truth then, but he’s running from the truth now — because he wants to be elected president.
In the book, Perry asserted that Social Security is unconstitutional, and he said the program was an affront to respect for the Constitution and limited government. He compared it to a “bad disease” that’s continued to spread. Perry said that individuals should be allowed to own and control their own retirement plans, so they could have “a retirement system that is no longer set up like an illegal Ponzi scheme.”
Every word he said there was accurate, but he’s now running from that truth. According to the Wall Street Journal, his campaign claims that the views in last year’s book — published less than a year ago — don’t reflect Perry’s current views:
“His communications director, Ray Sullivan, said Thursday that he had ‘never heard’ the governor suggest the program was unconstitutional. Not only that, Mr. Sullivan said, but ‘Fed Up!’ is not meant to reflect the governor’s current views on how to fix the program.”
As we enjoyed the sunset together, language and borders didn’t matter
For rest of my life, I’ll constantly re-interpret mother I didn’t know
Continued collapse of competence points toward decline of a culture
Partisans defend every kind of evil when it’s done by their own allies
Hope can be dangerous when the path ahead is dark and uncertain
Italy sending seismologists to jail for failing to predict big earthquake
Reality no longer seems to matter to dysfunctional culture in denial
Why do people who say they love each other cause mutual harm?