http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... lot&sub=AR" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;He speaks in apocalyptic terms, saying the debt is "completely unsustainable" and warning that "it will crash our economy." He urges fellow politicians, and voters, to stop pretending that this problem will go away on its own.
He administers his sermons with evangelical zeal. He will go anywhere and talk to anyone who will listen. When he is not writing op-eds and appearing on television, he can often be found speaking to liberal and conservative audiences alike about his "Roadmap for America's Future," a plan he says would fix the problem.
He is 40-year old Representative Paul Ryan of Wisconsin (hey D1B...isn't he your representative)...
He's not afraid of the controversy his proposals will stir up...especially for his own party leadership...
His main points are:Ryan's proposals have created a bind for GOP leaders, who spent much of last year attacking the Democrats' health-care legislation for its measures to trim Medicare costs. House Minority Leader John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) has alternately praised Ryan and emphasized that his ideas are not those of the party.
Ryan has not helped to make it easy for his leaders. He is a loyal Republican, but he is also perhaps the GOP's leading intellectual in Congress and occasionally seems to forget that he is a politician himself.
- Leave in place the current Social Security system for those 55 and over
- For those under 55, reform Medicare with vouchers to buy private insurance. The age for Medicare eligibility would increase over time from 65 to 69
- Future Social Security benefits would be reduced for many workers now 54 or younger. The would also have the option of putting $ into investment accounts from their Social Security taxes
- Gradually raise the retirement age to 70
- Eliminate taxes on interest, capital gains, and dividends
- Replace taxes on corporations with a consumption tax on what the businesses buy
- Freeze most government spending: Exempt would be Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and defense













