That's quite a temper you have there.
Total administrative costs are less than 1 percent of total program outlays and payment accuracy is over 99.5 percent for each of the last 5 years.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/expectmore/summary/10008001.2006.html
Social Security is fine. It will not be bankrupt by 2042. You are referring to the trust fund's exhaustion. SS is a pay as you go system. The trust holds excess tax dollars till they are distributed. But since you insist, the actuaries at SSA predicted the trust fund would be exhausted in 2029...today it is 2042...tomorrow? The actuaries use extremely conservative assumptions in calculating their predictions. Actuaries can tinker with their formulae to keep SS in great shape for decades to come.
Unfettered capitalistic competition results in monopolies where quality is cut to shit, prices stay the same or go up and the consumer is left with few alternatives. That means we need government to moderate our markets.
Sometimes we have instances where the product is not amenable to the free market--like healthcare. Treating healthcare like a commodity is not only morally questionable, it results in failure when compared with UHC.
This site is old age and survivors insurance, that is purely a redistribution program, this does not include Medicaid and Medicare that actually provide services. The pay-out system may well have such a low overhead since they only cut checks. But I'm still highly skeptical. Anyway.
First of all just because I don't agree with your view on the Social Security system doesn't mean I'm not familiar with it, that's just plain condescending.
Ok, trust fund. What trust fund? There is no trust fund, politicians spend the trust fund as soon as the revenue comes in.
Social Security is going bankrupt, the very site posted confirmed that. When it was designed, people didn't live as long as they do now, and with the baby boomers retiring there aren't going to be enough providers to provide for the non providers. So you either have to increase payroll taxes or reduce benefits or both.
The fact Social Security is a pay as you go system shows how outdated it is. If people were allowed to invest or even deposit their payroll taxes into a bank account, then they could earn some interest, but no that would just make too much sense.
About the market thing, yes you need government to enforce the rules of a free market. Capitalism doesn't work unless people follow the rules, but the government regulating the markets? That's a terrible idea, government is slow, politicians take forever to make decisions. The market millions of corrections every day, nobody really controls it.
Government control of a nations market has been tried before, it was called the Soviet Union, it didn't work too well.
Treating healthcare like a commodity is not morally questionable. The free market comes up with brilliant solutions to problems if we just let it. Just look at the mini clinics that Wal-Mart and others were offering. Instead going through the hassle of going to the doctor when you have a minor problem, you can go to these small clinics without an appointment, be seen promptly, for an affordable price, and the pharmacy is right there! But of course NO the AMA had a problem with that because the mini clinics are motivated by "profit", what a crock! The market system can solve a lot of our problems if we just get our intrusive federal government out of the way.