Social Security and Medicare, which combined eat up more of the federal budget than any other. And the ACA, which forces insurance companies to make available insurance for those with pre-existing conditions - a boon to members of the middle class who lose their jobs and their employer-provided health insurance.
I didn't lose my health insurance because I was out of work. The requirements of the ACA took an arrangement between me and my insurer and my health care provider and rendered it no longer sufficient under the law to the point that the insurance company quit offering health policies, period.
So, if I am in the insurance marketplace looking for a new policy, it is because of government I don't still have my old one. Any condition which developed in that time when I was insured has been legislated into a preexisting condition for a new insurer. The Government made that mess. I'm no "free rider", those a$$holes shot my horse.
As for Social Security, I have been paying into that since I was 14. Medicare or the equivalent program, too.
It isn't some freebie. Many of those years I paid the max.
If the Congress, being all "pragmatic" and "realistic" and such, put worthless IOUs in where the money was, I didn't vote to keep that going, because it was bullsh*t. The complacent people who let their votes be bought with those looted funds are part and parcel of the problem.
Still, a deal is a deal. It isn't something for nothing. I paid in, and if it doesn't pay back, the place to start stripping the assets of those who benefited from the fraud perpetrated is in the place those decisions were made: Congress.