the SSI system exists as it does because we haven't accepted on the social level that a growing percentage of the population is not able to contribute productive work in the modern economy.
I don't understand. It seems to me that we HAVE accepted that on the social level and so are paying that growing percentage of the population so that it doesn't starve (or turn to crime, etc.).
Basic Income solves a somewhat different problem -- that of people not willing to work.
It seems to me that we HAVE accepted that on the social level and so are paying that growing percentage of the population so that it doesn't starve (or turn to crime, etc.).
I think we're disagreeing about the use of 'accepted' rather than the facts: I mean that the media consensus is not that we have 'surplus population' who should be paid to not starve or cause too much trouble, but that we have a growing number of people with disabilities, and that the labeling as 'disabled' is a significant portion of why the voting public is willing to spend taxpayer money on them. I understand you to use 'accepted' to mean that SSI is still funded and protected by public opinion against significant cuts.
A post from Gregory Cochran's and Henry Harpending's excellent blog West Hunter.
The commenter Ron Pavellas adds:
The Wasserman Test.