right. Ron Paul has said he's in favor of abolishing social security, just "not overnight." and we the people have said we want to keep social security. this puts Ron out of step with the majority of voters, particularly older Americans (many, if not most, republican) who payed into the system all their lives and have seen how useful it is.
and Ron's notion that sex is sinful unless you're married and making a baby is sure to turn off anyone who still has a pulse.
this only tells part of the philosophy. yes ideally he'd like to see the gov out of the business of providing SS, he thinks this is the business of your local community, who would know what the real needs are and who the real needy are. it's your neighbors and local community who is in the best position to know what a poor person really needs. what we see when gov does this is massive entitlement thinking and even worse tons of abuse. then there is the whole bureaucracy running the thing. it all makes it very inefficient. the idea is to let folks keep what they earn so they will mostly not need support and have a bit to spare for a needy person. further more it is so much easier to hold your hand out to the state anonymously then it would be to be depending directly on your local community. this is much more motivational to get back on your own feet. the idea is that private industry, when the playing field is level, will do a much cheaper and more efficient job of even SS and pensions for elderly and the disabled. then the money you pay in will be like a insurance account thats actually yours, which the gov can not steal like they did SS funds.
yes SS has been paid into, but that doesn't change the fact that they took the money and blew it. it is not there anymore, everyone who paid into it was ripped off. so promising it will be there in future would be just plain dishonest unless one also has a plan to come up with the shortfall to allow it to continue.