| 12.23.04 |
Happy Holidays! We got the official rejection from Slamdance two weeks ago, along with about 2000 other films. The rejection got me to thinking about the length of the film so I cut a 2 hour version of it and watched it with my wife, Tsufit. We both felt that it wasn't nearly as good as the 2 hour 16 minute version. So I'm back to the longer edit. It wasn't that the film didn't get the point across, but that it didn't have the same emotional impact, the same atmosphere. I've also decided to add in another archival footage montage over one of the Daimon sections. Something I'll be working on this weekend before submitting the film to a slew of festivals next week. Thanks to Steve Harper, who played Gabriel, I may have a lead on a place to show the film for cheap. Regardless, the plan now is to start enlisting as many people as possible to spread the word on the film by giving away as many copies as I can. It's a project that will begin in earnest after the New Year. The idea is to create a viral promotion of the film in the hopes of eventually getting it into the hands of people who can help champion it within the film industry as well as in the press. But first, the holidays. In hope everyone reading this has a wonderful holiday. Below are some rambling about social security I had meant to post earlier but never got around to: With all the talk these days about the possibility of President Bush pushing forward some form of Social Security reform, I thought it might be useful to use this space for a bit of a thought experiment attempting tease out a possible Integral response to the issue. By extension this will become a rumination about other government programs as well, particularly those related to the elderly. First off, what is out goal? What is it that we really want to accomplish? Not what does SS accomplish today, but why have we created it in the first place? And why have we created Medicare? It seems to me that what we want to accomplish is to provide the causes and conditions for the elderly in our nation to live long, healthy, productive, rewarding, and financially secure lives. What are the factors that might contribute to the accomplishment of that goal? Let's start with the typical Integral aspects, the psychological, the physical, the cultural, and the social. What are the psychological aspects involved? What is it that people over 65 (the age of Social Security and retirement) are looking for personally? A sense of financial security, to be sure, but they are also looking for ways to ensure that their remaining years are fulfilling, emotionally, intellectually, and creatively. They are looking for love, companionship, and connection with family and community. They are looking for a sense that their lives have purpose after retirement from the workforce. They are also looking for alternatives for the direction of their lives now that work is not the driving force behind the organization of their lives. What about the physical aspects of the situation? People are living longer, but more people need assistance from the government to manage the financial burden of their medical care. And as we live longer, certain diseases, like Alzheimer's, become more prevalent. How do we keep people healthy and living as long as possible? How do we encourage prevention, which begins earlier in life, and at the same time deal with the medial issues that affect the elderly of today? What are the retirees looking for culturally? In part, to preserve a sense of their own culture, the culture of their particular generation, but also to understand and participate in the culture of the current generations. How do the current generations that dominate the nation's culture either value or undervalue the past and present contributions of the older generations? How can we encourage dialogue and exchange between the generations? What about the social aspects of the problem? How do we ensure the financial security of the elderly without bankrupting the younger generations? What legal and physical infrastructure do we need to provide in order to create the conditions where by the elderly can be live without fear of poverty? How do we deal with the financial costs of today's social security programs, while preparing for the rising costs for future generations of retirees? Okay, so those are some of the questions informing the discussion. And there have been a lot of possible solutions tossed about so far. One solution that is suggested is raising the retirement age of 65 to 68 or 70. The logic is that the 65 age limit was set when people rarely lived that long. The problem is that many companies are already pushing early retirement as a means of reducing employment roles and in tight economic times with competitive job markets there seems little likelihood that retirees would find work for those extra years. The other big suggestion is to allow people to take a portion of the money they are paying into social security and create personal investment accounts with it. The idea is that people will be able to have more money at retirement time by investing wisely in the stock market with the extra money from this account. It is a great boon for investment firms and potentially for some retirees. There are several problems with this of course, not the least of which is that people paying into social security now are paying the benefits of those receiving it now. It's a pay as you go system. So, retirement accounts would remove money from that system. To pay the obligations of social security and reduce the income to the social security coffers simultaneously requires either making current benefits smaller, or raising the social security tax levied on today and tomorrow's workers. There is also the question of what to do if the stock market tanks, or in situations where people have not invested wisely and are left with less money than they would have had under traditional social security. By and large, these suggestions, as well as others, are not really very bold or very likely to help the elderly. So, with all this as background, why don't I try to sketch out something I hope is an integral response to the problem? I'll make a series of suggestions concerning the different aspects of the problem. When possible I'll try to look at these locally, regionally, and nationally. First, we clearly define what we are trying to do. We are trying to provide the causes and conditions for the elderly in our nation to live long, healthy, productive, rewarding, and financially secure lives.
Well, those are some ideas. Just sketches. And vague sketches at that. At some point I'll need to figure out the numbers to back it up. The problem with my suggestions, and the problems with all of my suggestions in general, is that they are interrelated with other issues and dependent upon change in different areas. You can't talk about social security without talking about healthcare, immigration, jobs, the economy, etc. and any discussion that excludes them is limited and will produce limited and possibly dangerous solutions. But, it was a nice exercise and hopefully I can refine it in the future.
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