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Boiled Down Money Goo

~ tips for propelling your financial future

Boiled Down Money Goo

Category Archives: Debt

Nothing Like a Thrift Store

09 Tuesday Apr 2013

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, Growing Wealth, saving money

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diverse investments, drive older car, eat out lunch, read books, rent instead of buy, save money, stay home, take care of health, thrift store, vacation

So many stories from people who have actually gone from rags to riches can be summed up with this simple truth:  They don’t have to use thrift stores because they use thrift stores.

my millionBut it’s easy to think, “If I were rich, I’d do this and buy that and travel there…”  But would you really?

Oh yes, if you suddenly won the lottery and or came into a surprise inheritance you probably would spend it like there’s no tomorrow.  That is what usually happens with “easy come” money.  It’s becomes “easy go.”  The reason for this has to do with one’s behavior with money.  If your behavior with money has kept you broke, then even if a pile of money is thrown at you, you’ll soon return to being broke.  A wise proverb says “A dog returns to its own vomit.”

On the other hand, if you actually scrimped and saved and planned your way from rags to riches, then the money choices you made along the way will likely stick as part of your character and remain even after you get there.  Why would you go through all the trouble to become wealthy, having learned the tricks to do it, only to blow it all away carelessly?  You wouldn’t, because the tricks become engrained.  The actions become you.

What actions?  Well for starters, things like this:it's paid for

Check for bargains at the thrift store, yard sales, want ads and Craigslist even though you can afford to buy new.

Drive an older paid for car even though you can afford to buy any new car.

Take more modest local vacations even though you can afford to fly to Hawaii or anywhere else.  Better yet, throw in some stay home vacations.

Refuse to buy anything on credit, with the exception of your home (and only then if you have at least a twenty percent down payment).

When you go out to eat, go out for lunch instead of dinner.

Rent a home instead of buying until you’re sure you can afford it easily on one income.

Rent stuff that you don’t use frequently (like that pickup truck to haul an occasional load, tools you only need once in a while).

Don’t collect stuff.  Instead, downsize and sell off everything not used on a daily basis.

diversifySave as much money as you can, and invest it in diverse things.

Read books on how to win with money.

Take diligent care of your health.  It will save you a bundle when you’re older.

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Is Time On Your Side?

07 Thursday Mar 2013

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, Growing Wealth, saving money, Time

≈ Leave a comment

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consumerville, dead presidents, get more time, lost time, million dollars, money with plan, party, time for money, time prison

If you had several million dollars and never had to work again, what would you want to do with your time?  Party!  How one would spend their precious time is really at the heart of most people’s wildest dreams when they imagine not having to work.  But since most of us are not wealthy, how we spend our time is tangled up with how we spend our money.  Since most of us blow most all the money we earn, we are not able to spend our time as we please.  That bites.
gold stash - ha!

We trade our time and ultimately much of our lives for money.  That’s the harsh and depressing reality.  Would you drag yourself to work and put up with the office dramas and divas if there weren’t some dead presidents in it for you?  Yet even piles of money won’t add any more days to your life.  The best we can do is to figure out how to squeeze more time out of each day to do the things that we really want to do.

I’m not talking about time management.  No, we should understand the true cause of why we can’t spend our time as we please.  We should hope that it slaps us upside the head.  It should, because the reason we’re time-poor is right in front of our faces.  Just look around your house, your garage, your driveway, your yard.  See all the balls and chains?

If you want more time each day to do the things that matter most to you, then you’re going to have to trade something for it – your spending frenzy and fascination with stuff.  You’ll have to grow some gonads to do this right.  For many of us our stuff, and our desire to buy more of it, is a time prison.  We are slaves in the land of the free.  Yes, the biggest irony in our society.dead presidents

We have to work too much, because we’re spending all we make buying way more than we need.  Then to add insult to injury we’re spending most of our spare time taking care of it all and little time actually enjoying it.  Such is the vicious cycle living in mega consumerville.  Much of our lives, our energy, our opportunities, are ultimately traded for stuff.  And our time is squandered, flushed down the drain, out of reach.

The solution is really pretty radically simple:  Learn to tell your money where not to go and then someday it can tell you not to go to work anymore!  That would be sweet.  Your income (no matter what the level) is your greatest tool for gaining your freedom, for adding time to every day.  So get mad about being robbed of it!  Defend your money like a mother bear seeing a threat to her cubs.  What you do (and don’t do) with your money is far more important than how much you make!

game planMoney with a plan will stick around and give you time to enjoy.  An impressive wad without a plan will mysteriously wander off and suck away all your spare time with it.  And hope.

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The Pyramid Scheme of Banking

25 Monday Feb 2013

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, saving money

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

banking, cash is king, FDIC, federal deposit insurance corporation, fractional reserve banking, freedom bell curve, pyramid scheme

Recently, I re-read the book “The Freedom Bell Curve” by Robert Minteer.  The author (who happens to be my brother) makes a strong case for why most businesses and institutions function like a pyramid scheme, economically enslaving the people at the bottom.  The “Topsoppers,” those at the top of the pyramid scheme of power, derive their power from the “Mopsoppers” (those companies and individuals caught on the corporate ladders trying to work their way up to become Topsoppers) and the “Boppers” (those at the bottom working like slaves and hoping to someday “arrive” at a Mopsopper standard of living).

SchemesWhether it’s the government, the legal and medical professions, insurance “industry” (though they produce nothing), the banking establishments or any number of other big businesses making up the Topsopper and Mopsopper organizations, their success and riches come at the expense and hard work of the Boppers who make up the common factory line worker, tradesperson, craftsman, burger flipper and cubicle geek.  The majority of those who buy all consumer products are Boppers, often borrowing money to do so.

The Topsoppers and Mopsoppers are always at varying times acting as the middlemen in trading, setting the prices and terms.  Minteer says, “In any trading, when the terms of the trade fluctuate, one trader gains and the other loses – but the middleman always gains.”  The ones who lose are most often the Boppers – the workers at the bottom who are also the consumers.  The system is set up against us.  And the banks play a large role in helping things stay that way.

What have banks really done for us?  Hmm…let’s see…

1. The banks make money by paying us a token interest rate on our deposits, and then loaning them out at a much higher interest rate.  They NEED us to make money.  Yet currently, it’s an insult what banks are paying as savings account interest rates – a fraction of one percent!  It amounts to nothing for the average person who saves.

2. The banks make money by practicing fractional reserve lending whereby they in effect can loan out ten times the amount of actual deposits that they have on hand.  But what if all the depositors want their money all at once (it has happened before, and will surely happen again)?  No problem, you say, the banks are insured through the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).  Do you want to try to get your money back from the government during a crisis?  The government will first bail out the Big Boys before worrying about the Boppers.Great Cook Off

3. Even without your borrowing, the banks make a killing from the average “customer” by charging fees and penalties.  A few bucks from everyone, month after month.  It’s robbery.  Less and less people are saving money so the banks have resorted to another means of extortion.

4. The banks (including credit card companies) encourage the average consumer to borrow and borrow, though it is stupid.  They want to keep us in bondage, ever paying back interest and needing to borrow more and more.

So the basic obvious question is this:  What good to us is our money in a bank, or using a bank for anything?  We’re getting paid squat for interest.  In a crisis we may not get our money (especially in a timely manner) so it’s not necessarily safe or liquid.  And in reality we’re losing money just to keep it there or do business with them.

We need to “begin the process of ceasing our support” to the pyramid scheme. The first and most important thing to do is to get out of debt by any means possible – by selling stuff, selling everything if necessary and starting over, working overtime, downsizing and paying off all debt!

Then, strongly consider whether you need a bank for anything!  Do you REALLY need your credit card or debit card?  You can survive without a checking account.  Do you need the bank’s “great” interest payments on your savings account?  Do you need their hassle?  Seriously, what good are they?  HAVE YOU MADE MORE FROM THEM THAN THEY HAVE TAKEN FROM YOU?!

What’s wrong with using cash and coin anyway?  The banks (and others) have lied to us to get us to stop using cash, coins or just plain trading and bartering!

Keep it SafeMight your spare money, your cash and coin, do just as well in your mattress, a home safe, or some other hiding spot?  Surely you can find some safe place to stash your stash.

Think about it, if we all got out of debt and then saved our surplus money safely ourselves, to invest how WE (not the banks) wished, that would greatly limit the banks’ power.

Wouldn’t that transfer a great power back to the people?  Yes!  Let’s do it. Let’s QUIT SUPPORTING THE PYRAMID SCHEME!

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The Money Masters

03 Sunday Feb 2013

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt

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federal reserve, federal reserve act, fractional reserve banking, greenbacks, national banking act, national debt, the money masters

Recently I watched an awesome documentary called The Money Masters, by Bill Still.  What a great history of the use (and misuse) of money and lending by governments and the banking monopolies!  Seems like there is a workable solution to the problem of government debt.  Why isn’t anyone listening?

Here are a few thoughts just from the summary section of this 3-1/2 hour documentary.

Steps to Getting Out of National Debt and Away from the Debt Based Banking System

  1. Pay off national debt with debt-free U.S. Notes (bills, not bonds).
  2. Abolish fractional reserve banking/lending.  Proportionately raise bank reserve requirements (eventually to 100%) as debt is paid off (to limit inflation).
  3. Repeal the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 and the National Banking Act of 1864.
  4. The U.S. should withdraw from the International Monetary Fund, the Bank of International Settlements and the World Bank.

Bills over BondsNumerous U.S. presidents (such as Jefferson, Madison, Lincoln) have supported printing our own currency rather than borrowing it (such as in the days of the Greenbacks).  Many have opposed the Gold Standard (which puts the power of money in fewer hands since gold is more scarce than silver or paper currency).  Yet these great ideas did not catch on.  Why?

Until these ideas take hold, we’d better be prepared for more economic troubles ahead.

Protection during a Depression

  • Get out of debt (personal)
  • Get liquid
  • Own your house
  • Have some silver coins (pre 1965 good)
  • Have some gold

For more information and a complete history on this topic, read the book, The Money Masters by Bill Still, check out their website http://themoneymasters.com and by all means take the time to watch the awesome video http://beaconoftruth.com/money_masters.htm (conclusion starts at 03:02, how to fix U.S. debt starts at 3:10).

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Don’t Flush Us Uncle Sam

02 Saturday Feb 2013

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt

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Tags

government debt, national budget, national debt, national deficit, uncle sam

Don’t Flush Us Uncle Sam
By Daniel Minteer
 
We’re still in the red
And feeling quite blue
Our money’s still leaving
With our sanity too
 
Come on Uncle Sam
Let’s get out of debt
The bankers won’t thank us
But our children will I bet
 
Then hope’s on the horizon
While growing our stash
Our lives getting grand
Even better with cash
 
But we’re still in the red
Our neighbors blue too
Let America shine
It’s much up to you
 
 

 

This poem was put to a short music video and uploaded to the Peter G. Peterson Foundation website, campaigning against national debt.  They called this video “a rock anthem.”

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Run From A Reverse Mortgage

10 Wednesday Oct 2012

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, House

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

borrowed money, expensive mortgage, financial advice, financial tips, home equity, home loan, reverse mortgage, reverse mortgage issues, reverse mortgage pitfalls

Have I Got A Deal For You

Perhaps you’ve heard of the claimed benefits of reverse mortgages, which are touted to help you out in retirement if you’re short on monthly income.  And after all, these products are endorsed by more than one glib and graying famous actor so they must be good, right?

You know the drill:  Get a reverse mortgage and have no more mortgage payments!  All it takes is being at least sixty-two years old and an easy government-insured loan against your home equity.  You receive a lump sum or monthly payments for years to come and get to live in your house too!  What a concept!

I’m not here to say that reverse mortgages are some great evil.  But they do seem a bit devious.  I’ve always been leery.  For some reason, a red flag goes off every time I see one of those poker face ads.

For Sale: Borrowed Money

With a reverse mortgage you greatly increase the risk that you, your spouse or your family will get into financial hot water down the road.  Obviously, someone wouldn’t consider a reverse mortgage unless they were a little strapped for income in the first place.  First big red flag!  Who are they targeting?  Don’t those pesky payday loan stores target people who can least afford it too?  Hmmm…

So basically, because we need extra money to live on we are going to borrow it (with our house as security), right?  When does borrowing money to live on ever make sense?  At some point, especially if you did this at a relatively young age, you will run out of money.  Then what?  Eventually it ALL has to be paid back, with interest and fees.  Is your house really going to appreciate enough to keep up with all that?

You Mean It Will Cost Me?

You are still responsible for paying the insurance, taxes and maintenance on your home after getting a reverse mortgage.  So is it possible or even probable, being so short of cash in the first place, that you may not be able to make some of the insurance or tax payments along the way?  I recently read an interesting article (Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, 11/2012) that reported that 9% of reverse mortgage borrowers were at risk of foreclosure because they were behind on tax and insurance bills.  Another red flag.  Ouch!

Is it also possible that you may slack on doing all the necessary house maintenance since you’re on a tight budget?  If maintenance was neglected for many years (since to keep the house it will always be a priority to pay taxes and insurance first), then so much more money will be lost when your house is eventually sold.  Whose loss will this be?  The bank’s loss?  Your spouse’s or family’s loss?

And then the final red flag is the cost of the loan itself.  These are expensive loans.  You’re going to have to pay for an up front insurance premium (up to 2% of the value of the home, regardless of how much you borrow), loan origination fees (some up to $6000), traditional closing costs like appraisals and title searches, and other monthly service fees that will rob a huge amount of money from your home equity right off the top.  Any time you have a bank or lending institution “help” you with money you can guarantee that they will profit at your expense.  That’s just how they work.

Should I Or Shouldn’t I?

Given the costs of the reverse mortgage loan, your home insurance, property taxes, and required maintenance, how can you possibly come out ahead?  The answer is, you can’t – unless the housing market in your area is so hot (or is hot at the time the loan needs paid back).  Can you ever be sure of the housing market?  This is not something I would want to gamble my largest asset on at any age.  But if you do take the gamble, the lender will profit handsomely up front – and that’s really what’s driving this whole push on reverse mortgages.

So before being tempted by a reverse mortgage, please consider that you would likely be far better off financially, with more peace of mind and with much lower risk, to simply sell your house and rent a nice little downsized house or apartment.  You can take the profit from the sale of your home, bank it or invest it in something low risk and still draw off a nice steady income for much longer.  As we’ve said many times, there is no shame in renting.  And living without debt is so much more peaceful.  That’s what I want in my old age.

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Middle Class Losers?

04 Wednesday Jul 2012

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, Growing Wealth, House, saving money

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financial challenges, get out of debt, housing bubble, market crash, middle class, rich getting richer, weather the storm

We just read yet another financial article, The American Dream Shrinks, that says how the middle class are getting poorer and the rich are getting richer. That may be true, but one doesn’t necessarily result from the other.

The fact that the middle class is getting poorer is not because rich people are taking our money. We (the authors) are middle class, yet we are not poorer since the national financial fiascos starting in 2007 (initially, yes, but not once the storm calmed). In fact, we bought a house at the height of the housing “bubble” and actually paid it off during the recession.

Yes, we lost half of the money we had in the stock market. And our house value slumped. But in 2007 we had no other debt but the mortgage, no car payments, no student loans, no credit card debt or any other payments. Granted we’ve been able to keep our jobs while we continued to live cheap, drive older paid-for cars and save. All the extra money we could squeeze out of each month’s budget we put on the house.

The stock market has made comebacks since then. So overall, we’re at least where we were in 2007 or better. But the point is – we did not end up poorer, because we’ve finally wised up about preventing others from taking our money (usually in the form of interest payments, but also in frivolous purchases).

Job losses, health issues and other crises can bring on financial challenges, even disasters. But it doesn’t always have to be the case. With no debt, it is much, much easier to weather the storms.

If the rich are getting richer, it’s only because they have figured out how to weather the storms. Understand this: Rich peoples’ houses (if they are big and fancy) can drop in value way more than modest sized houses after a bubble burst and are harder to sell. Rich peoples’ stock market investments drop as much as they do for the rest of us in a crash too. They’re not immune to economical disasters, usually just better prepared for them.

And that can be us – prepared for the bubble bursts, the job losses, the market dips and other unexpected hits to our finances. The first thing to do is get out of debt! It’s surprising how little you can actually live on if you have no debt.

We know a couple who has very little debt other than the mortgage. The husband lost his job. The wife works just thirty hours per week. They can still make their house payment and even continue to save some money on one income because their debt level is so small.

Getting out of debt is the only way to go, folks. Let’s quit blaming the rich for making us poor. Because it’s really not them doing it.

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Would You Pass the Marshmallow Test?

07 Monday May 2012

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, Growing Wealth, saving money

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This article is by Daniel Murphy, Books2Wealth.  It is very insightful as to the issue of delayed gratification, which many of us struggle with.  And when it comes to personal finances, that can be disastrous.

Would You Pass the Marshmallow Test?

In 1972 a study was conducted called the Stanford Marshmallow Experiment. Young children were given a single marshmallow and told that if they did not eat it for 20 minutes they would get another one. If they ate it they would not get another one. Some of the children could not wait the 20 minutes and ate the marshmallow. Other children could wait and received a second marshmallow after the 20 minute wait. This of course is a test of our ability to delay immediate gratification for the promise of a greater reward later on.

The study then tracked these children through adolescence. They found that the children who could wait for the second marshmallow were better adjusted children, were more successful in school and more likely to successfully attend college. They got better grades and scored higher on aptitude tests. You can actually watch these children in this study in this three minute video.

We naturally see waiting for something as a form of deprivation. It takes more wisdom and self-control to see that postponing immediate gratification can pay off greatly in the long run. Rather than seeing this as deprivation, we can learn to see it as an investment in our future.

Each of us is in this marshmallow test every day. The way we spend our time and our money is the same kind of marshmallow test. Those of us who are better at postponing that immediate gratification reap much greater rewards over the long term. Those who cannot wait get less out of life.

In today’s articles we explore various forms of “deprivation” through spending less money and more wisely using our time. The more we can see this not as deprivation but as an investment in our future the more successful we can be. Like most lessons of success, this is a simple lesson to learn, but not an easy one to live.

Are you an impulsive marshmallow eater, or can you wait to double your marshmallow enjoyment? The answer may well decide how fruitful your life will be and how much wealth you will build. Replace the idea of deprivation with the idea of investment and you will reap the benefit time and again throughout your life.

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Debt Free Loser

12 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, House

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Tags

dave ramsey, debt free, get out of debt, pay off car, pay off house

Who knew there is a right way to get out of debt?!

We have always been huge fans of Dave Ramsey, yet along the way we have noticed that he is as rigid as a square. Always doing things the safe way. Like a drug counselor, Dave assumes that everyone in debt is a debt addict and must avoid it at all times. Maybe it’s because he gets tired of giving good advice, only to watch people not follow it.

We have found that many people just need to start paying attention to why they are negatively charged! Once smart folks start paying attention, they figure out the right things to do and then do it. Hello hero, goodbye zero.

Take us for example, we got out of debt in a strange order, yet we still got to the finish line in the same amount of time. First we paid off the credit cards, then the house, then the car. Why in that order? So I (Deborah) could reduce my work hours without fear of a looming mortgage. The order of debt payoff was based on lowering all of the risks, not just the lowest remaining debt. A large mortgage payment scared me more than a small car payment. And working full-time while someone else gets to spend most awake hours with our daughter bugged me. I wanted to cut back on my work hours. Weird, huh?!

Factor in all the risks before making any decision. Things can be replaced, people can’t.

Talk about ironies. Getting a car loan (so we could mail a check to pay off the mortgage) kept us off the Dave Ramsey show. We were scheduled to shout “we’re debt free” on Dave’s radio show a while back and the producer declined to have us on the air because “Dave wouldn’t like” how we got here. Hey, but we’re debt free – does it really matter how we got there! Who knew that we were debt free losers?

We still love ya, Dave.

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Money is tied to your body in more ways than one

20 Tuesday Dec 2011

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, Health and Food

≈ Leave a comment

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debt and health, debt and stress, debt free, feel young, finances and health, lower stress, money and health, stress free

When you think of “health” and how to improve yours, do you ever think that how you treat money has anything to do with it? Health and how you deal with your finances are very much related, maybe as much as health is affected by sleep habits, nutrition and exercise. Read this article, Get Out of Debt For Your Health to find out how to eliminate one of the most common health problems.

Of course the reverse is true too – you can’t work hard, make money or get out of debt as easily if you’re not healthy. Sounds too simple but quite often we don’t take advantage of all the free information that is available to help us. Find out more about taking care of yourself at Dr Gily’s health promotion and weight loss site.

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