1. Stop electing politicians whose main political objective is to gut social programs like social security, medicare, TANF, etc. It's been part of the Republican playbook for years, hobble the programs until they are unable to effectively provide what they promise, and then use that failure as a justification for eliminating them entirely all in the name of 'shrinking government.'
2. TAXES - It's basic accounting - if you want nice things, you have to find a way to pay for them. Expanding payroll taxes for the middle class is one way, but it would be more effective to close the tax loopholes and go after tax-cheaters among corporations and extremely wealthy families that cost the US trillions of dollars per year.
3. Decrease spending - I'd be okay with limiting social security to those who actually depend on it. The wealthy can pay their own way, and whatever happens with social security doesn't really affect them in any meaningful way. Apart from limiting benefits to just those who need them, we should also be looking at government spending overall - especially in the military - to find where there is excessive wastefulness - this money could also be diverted to programs that actually help people (not corporations or wars).
4. Encourage more personal saving among those who are likely to depend on social security in their old age. If you're living paycheck to paycheck, there's not much leftover at the end of the month to plan for retirement. Increasing the amount of money the poor have and at the same time limiting their vulnerability to being entirely wiped out by an unexpected crisis (i.e. through unexpected illness, accident, or misfortune) will alleviate dependence on the system overall as well as improve quality of life overall. We do this by making sure that working people can earn a living wage and strengthening the social programs that Republicans are trying to destroy.
5. Building communities - The US has become atomized, and independence has become more toxic than a virtue. We've lost the ability to share and look out for one another, and this means that those who require more care (i.e. the elderly) have less support from people around them. While this is very much cultural, the government can focus on policies that promote community or limit its erosion. This could also mean strengthening families - not in the regressive conservative sense of enforcing 'traditional family values' on everyone, but in actually supporting them with the resources they need to thrive (helping them to build security in every sense of the word. STOP offloading this responsibility onto religious organizations that exchange their help for indoctrination - they're predatory and exploitive, not real help.






