As usual you didn't try to give any specifics, you just said that there would be an increased burden on families (no shit, my first sentence in a previous post said "let families shoulder that burden") and acted as if pointing that out disproves anything. The point is that more than half of our budget is spent on the elderly, a cost clearly not equivalent to that of letting families support their own elderly, yet in the past there was never this massive epidemic of old people just being kicked to the curb and starving to death.
SciFiers live in zeroscarcity environments.
You live in a libertarian fantasy land. It's not much better.
There was never a massive epidemic of old people because old people have only started living as old as they do very recently in the history of humanity. Families also used to tend to live together and structured their lives accordingly when the economy afforded them that opportunity. It's still the case that some families do this out in bumfuck nowhere, but it's not the case of most families living in urban areas. What you're asking for simply isn't plausible on any mass scale, and if you had your way there would be an increase in elder mortality.
As usual, you ignore a host of other conditions and circumstances and choose to focus solely on the ones you care about, with no regard for how the whole impacts the particulars.
Real solutions would be acceptable. The problem is that what you propose usually isn't realistic.
Define "very recently". The age at which old people die has not changed dramatically over the last 150+ years; you may be confused by average life expectancy statistics which are skewed by very high rates of child mortality pre-1900s.
The reason families don't live together anymore is significantly *because* of government assuming the role of caretaker. Are you suggesting that old people don't live in urban areas right now? Like, they retire and we ship them off to a nursing home in a cornfield in Kansas, because urban population density is too high? I'm sure you'll say that's not what you're arguing at all, but again you don't even attempt to provide data or reasoning for why this is such an insurmountable burden.
Well there are politically realistic proposals and actually functional proposals. I never suggested that there was an overlap.
Dude, quit arguing. You're not winning your point with me with this semantic volleyball.
It appears inevitable from your training.
What I mainly meant is that a higher percentage of people are living longer. This mainly has to do with advancements in modern medicine and elder care, which is basically what I assume you're saying we should stop wasting on the elderly (unless they or their families can pay for it) since they no longer contribute to society.
It's not that I don't see a problem with the situation economically speaking. I just find your perspective to be rather draconian. In short, I don't think it's realistic to ask families to shoulder the burden. If they're forced to, it will either likely affect the health and well-being of the younger members of the family; or they'll choose not to, in which case the elderly individual would most likely die. I simply don't see these as the only two options, and I do think there's a way to pay for elder care via proactive medicine and health planning, and by taxing more from the super-wealthy.
I'm saying that it's easier for rural families to take care of extended family, including the elderly, than it is for urban families. I don't have statistics for this, but it makes perfect sense considering average cost of living in rural areas and the ability to afford more amenable housing for larger families.
Maybe you should have picked a wife with nicer in-laws if you think that living with them will literally cause health problems for you.

for sure, but USA also decided it wasn't a personal responsibility to save for retirement so here we are. And even though it's a fucking money hole, I think it's the right decision.