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Boiled Down Money Goo

~ tips for propelling your financial future

Boiled Down Money Goo

Category Archives: saving money

Money Prick 101 – The Big Rig

08 Saturday Nov 2014

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, saving money

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4x4, big rig, diesel truck, economy car, hummer, pickup truck, SUV

Too many “men” trade their family’s security for their manly big rig image.  Don’t believe me?  How many guys do you know who sold their tripped out 4X4 diesel pickup and bought a beater economy car to save money for the emergency fund or kid’s college fund?

big rigLook around any parking lot.  Pay attention to what’s driving down nearly every street.  They’re everywhere – beasts like those hideous Hummers and other big ball rigs.  My wife calls these overblown vehicles “compensation rigs.”  These big muscle rigs are oversized to balance out something that is lacking.  Like brains, a backbone…or something else!

And ladies, if this fairy tale hits close to home then maybe you should wake up from your trashy romance novel trance too.  Women blow their share of money on “need something dependable” rigs every bit as much.  Whenever I see these full size SUVs choking the streets around town and crossing into my lane at every curve, like the drivers have a thumb up their rear end, I always figure it’s a woman driving.  No offense, girls, but maybe some orange cones and an abandoned parking lot are in order to work on some skills.

Now there’s nothing wrong with buying an impressive set of wheels, if you can afford them.  And that is the problem.  Too many people who buy these impressive rigs can’t afford them.  Really – who can afford them?  Only the rich and I can assure you, there aren’t that many rich people out there and they don’t drive that crap.

Don’t let a fancy rig wreak financial havoc on your family.  Put down your pride and swap the “ego rig” for an “eco rig.”  That is macho.

Excerpts from Money Prick by Taylor Young

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Babylon’s Secret

27 Tuesday May 2014

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

≈ 1 Comment

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accumulating weath, babylon's secret, formula for riches, gaining wealth, how do I get rich, how to get rich, richest man in babylon

Beyond repairHave you ever read about the great ancient city of Babylon and its wealth?  It seems that the city’s great wealth was in part the result of the successful accumulation of wealth by many ordinary individuals, not just the ruling powers.  How did the average person go about creating wealth?  What was Babylon’s secret?  Perhaps that centuries-old wisdom can still apply today.

Although how they actually did it may remain much of a mystery, curious suggestions thrive to this day.  As George S. Clason wrote about in The Richest Man In Babylon, it would be plausible that it included some timeless yet very simple personal finance principles.  Perhaps it was common sense then, yet so uncommon today.  What’s at the core of this wisdom?  Let’s review some pivotal bits from The Richest Man In Babylon.

Keep ten percent of all you earn.  That means pay yourself right off the top, before you pay anyone else.  And this is not to be spending money, but saving and investing money.  So make yourself survive on ninety percent to pay for everything else.  Control and reduce your expenses if necessary.  You won’t miss the ten percent.

Before investing the savings from your ten percent accumulations, get advice from experts.  Don’t fall for advice from family or friends unless they are rich (and not just looking rich).  Don’t fall for get-rich-quick schemes – that only works for the schemer selling you out.  And don’t let other idiots lose your money (or then you join the crowd).

Invest to make your money work for you – make it your slave.  Your investments have to earn children and grandchildren.  The power of compounding interest is the key.  Keep in mind that “a small return and a safe one is far more desirable than risk” (quote from The Richest Man In Babylon).venus and mars

Own your home.  Plan to pay it off sooner rather than later.  Make your refuge a great investment as well.  Buy location, location, location.  Think it through before plunging into buying a home.  Get council from experts (not real estate agents, bankers, loan officers, or family and friends who aren’t rich).

Be quick to take opportunities to earn more.  But get council from experts (or you become the expert) in whatever the opportunity/investment field is before plugging in.  The more of wisdom we know, the more we earn.

Do not take on others’ burdens (for lack of them trying and working).  You won’t win by bailing out friends or family who don’t want to make it on their own.  If you want to give them money for an absolute necessity, as in charity, that’s no problem.  Just don’t loan them money, be partners in their grand schemes, or otherwise support their lack of motivation.  But loaning can be good to some, so be a wise gold lender.

Work hard.  If you’re not willing to sacrifice and work your ass off for it, then you don’t deserve it and you probably won’t achieve it anyway.  There is no such thing as lady luck or free handouts.  “Wealth grows whenever men exert energy” (quote from The Richest Man In Babylon).

All, so true.  Thanks master Clason.

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Your Financial Success

14 Wednesday May 2014

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, Growing Wealth, Help is out there, saving money

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daniel murphy, free book, the success essentials, your financial success

Limited Time Free Kindle Book Offer

For the next five days only (May 14 – May 18, 2014) you can download Daniel R. Murphy’s new book, Your Financial Success – The Seven Essential Steps for Free on Kindle.

Your Financial Success“Your Financial Success” is right on the mark and highly recommended for anyone wanting to get their financial act together. This to-the-point and easy to understand book is full of the time-tested guidelines to help anyone, at any age, start making wise steps towards their financial freedom. I loved it and know from personal experience that these principles really work.

And if this good advice wasn’t enough, Murphy will send you “financial coach” email reminders for an entire year to review the key concepts of this book and supply you with continual encouragement to help motivate you to put these ideas into practice. Seriously, what do you have to lose?

If you do not have a Kindle you can learn how to download a free Kindle reader for your PC or Mac and learn about the features of this great new book at http://danielrmurphy.com/your-financial-success/

Don’t miss this great opportunity to get this book for free for a limited time.

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The Minefield of Tax Write Offs

08 Wednesday Jan 2014

Posted by moneygooguru in Growing Wealth, House, saving money

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mortgage, mortgage interest, tax write off, taxes

A lot of people brag about their “great tax write-off.” We snicker. Don’t get us wrong, if you are buying something because you need it and get a tax deduction on the side, that’s great. But when your decision to buy something is swayed because you’ll get the tax advantage, well, that’s laughable…and sad. Why? You’re spending a dollar to save a quarter.Beachy Peachy

One of the most common and largest tax write-offs for the average person or family is associated with the home mortgage. The interest is usually tax deductable. No one seems to do the math, though. We know of too many people who won’t pay off their house early because of the tax deduction, or just as bad, buy too much house because of the tax deduction. And because of not crunching the numbers, they will pay the bank a dollar just to save a quarter on taxes. They will lose seventy-five cents of every dollar they pay in interest! So why would anyone justify keeping a mortgage any longer than necessary or buying more house than they need just because they can write off the interest? The answer is, we’ve been duped.

As if paying a dollar to save a quarter isn’t bad enough, if you have a mortgage you’ll have to pay quite a bit in interest (and/or other deductions) before you even exceed the “standard” tax deduction to make it worth the bother. Did you get this? You have a choice every year to either take the standard tax deduction or itemize your deductions (basically just adding up mortgage interest, property tax, giving to dead presidentscharities, etc.). You can take the standard deduction even if you have no mortgage or any other deductions but if you itemize you’ll have to exceed this amount before it does any good. Unless your mortgage interest and other deductions exceed the standard deduction, you get nothing for all the pain. Why would anyone want to pay that much in interest when you already get a free standard deduction? The answer is, we’ve been duped again. Don’t even get us started on houses and the fact that they’re rarely a good investment when you have a mortgage… (we’re not against houses, just against buying them foolishly).

Tax write-offs are just an incentive to buy (and quite often using credit). They were not created with you in mind, but were created with “others getting your money” in mind. We don’t just fall for this in buying houses either. We may buy all kinds of stuff for our businesses too (vehicles, furniture, electronics, appliances, tools, etc.), thinking that the tax savings make it a good bargain. On the surface it does look like a bargain. But buying a bargain you don’t really need isn’t saving you anything.

Don’t let your tax write-offs be the reason you buy anything. Get stuff you need, charityyes, and take the tax deduction if it’s there. But if you can, avoid even being eligible for tax write offs. If you simply don’t want to take this advice and “have to” have a tax deduction, here’s the best one – give to charity! You’ll get the same tax deduction. You’ll still spend a dollar to save a quarter. But this time the dollar goes for something of a worthy cause, not to increase the bank’s profit. And you get paid back a quarter in tax savings for being so nice. Now there is a good incentive.

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Two Free Kindle eBooks

30 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, Growing Wealth, Help is out there, House, saving money

≈ Leave a comment

Thanks for being part of the Boiled Down Money Goo experience.  We thought you might enjoy these humorous tales of money woes and triumphs by our friend Taylor Young.  These are free on Kindle, September 29 & 30, October 1!

Cover How I lost a Million Dollars Twice

Money Prick Cover (Vila 01)

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Too Big For His Breeches?

14 Saturday Sep 2013

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, Help is out there, House, saving money

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bad investment advice, criticism, dave ramsey, money magazine, twitter

Dave Ramsey:  Does he sometimes shoot himself in the foot?  From a Crocodile Hunter comment, to an Oprah blunder to recent Tweets, if not shooting himself in the foot it’s a big ol’ foot in the mouth at times.

Money magazine published an article called, “Save Like Dave, Just Don’t Invest Like Him,” in its October 2013 issue.

The first part of the article pointed out some entertaining online comments from Ramsey, who was reacting to negative statements from critics.  I was a little surprised that Dave would stoop to Tweeting, “I help more people in 10 min. than all of you combined in your ENTIRE lives.”  And then there’s the, “Don’t want to get bit by the big dog, stay off the porch.”  Whoa, Dave.  Sounds a little more like “Dog the Bounty Hunter” type of comments to me.  And although Dave has helped a lot of people, including my wife and me, humility is always good.

But why the authors of the Money article brought these online comments up, I don’t really know other than for the entertainment factor.  Or was it to try to attack Dave’s character?  Granted, it is generally just good advice to not respond via the internet to internet attacks.  This should be “Author 101” or “Public Figure 101” kind of stuff.  Regardless, bringing all this up in the magazine article really reveals nothing about Dave’s true credibility as an effective personal finances councilor.  It seems that maybe the authors were fishing for something or someone to string up.

After discussing the online comments, the article attacks Dave’s investment advice.  Admittedly, the authors do point out that Dave’s advice is more geared towards getting people out of debt and not giving them specific investment advice, citing the fact that, “His bestselling book, The Total Money Makeover has about two pages describing which mutual fund to invest in.  There’s an entire chapter on how to save $1,000.”  So why, then, do the authors of this article move ahead to criticize his investment advice?

The first big criticism in the article has to do with Dave’s advice in investment recommendations, some vague and some now out of date.  “Ramsey’s investing advice is weak…,” they state.  Why the authors felt the need to go here is unclear.  More fishing?  After all, The Total Money Makeover, like many other of Dave’s books, was written in pre-2004.  Dave even recommends that you get real investment advice from a qualified professional.  These few paragraphs in the article really should have been left out, because they only muddy the water.  The main focus of Dave’s books is clearly to help people struggling with debt.  Beyond that he does touch on the type of investments to be thinking about once out of debt, but it’s not meant to be an end-all guide for the investments themselves.

The Money article made a big deal about Dave’s claim of 12% stock market returns.  According to the authors, most experts tend to agree that the actual average stock market return since 1926 has been closer to 10%.  Stock market returns can be calculated several different ways, showing the same average return, yet differing in actual returns.  For this reason the article says that, “Returns should be calculated as annualized, or compound, returns.”

Here’s an example of mine to help illustrate this point. What if you invested a bunch of money in the stock market and by the end of your first year your investments went down 50%.  Suppose the next year your investments double in value (100% increase by end of the second year).  The “average” return over this two year period is (-50% + 100%)/2 = 25%!  Sounds fabulous, right?  The actual net two year return is 0% (you’re only back where you started).  This is not to say that Dave made such a boneheaded math error.  I doubt he did.

But the authors spend a skewed amount of text talking about this 12% thing, perhaps making a mountain out of a molehill, considering that Dave’s main point in his investment advice is that you need to be invested in the stock market somehow to see the most appreciable gains in your investments over the long haul.  Most investors would agree with this.  Are the authors just looking to split hairs (which Dave is missing anyway)?  Nevertheless, it is curious that according to this article, Dave was still adamantly defending his 12% return number with a critic during one of his radio programs.  If the mainstream pencil geeks are saying 10%, why is Dave still holding onto 12%?

The next justified reaming is over Dave’s statement that you should draw off 8% of your money in retirement.  Many experts believe you greatly increase your chances of running out of money in your old age if you do this.  Instead, it is recommended that people only draw off 4% or less from their investments in retirement to guarantee that their money will last indefinitely.  Okay, Dave, maybe that one was coming.

Then the article made a surprise shot, not against Ramsey necessarily, but more towards those “religious Christians.”  Why any attempt to tie Dave’s nature, or bizarre comments of clients referred through Dave, to any religion?  It really makes no sense.  I got the feeling that the authors wanted to take a poke at that religion and reinforce a read-between-the-lines notion that, “See, just a bunch of radical, out of touch, lunatics so how could they be smart with money, too.“

Here’s what the article should have been mostly about, though the authors only spent the last third of the article discussing.  It has to do with the part of Ramsey’s business that recommends Endorsed Local Providers (ELPs) to people who may want professional investment advice.  Its sounds like a good service.  But those ELPs generally have to jump through some hoops with Ramsey and apparently, as hinted to in the article, provide a kickback to Dave for referrals.

If that’s true then here’s the main kicker.  The ELPs generally sell front-load mutual funds, meaning that these funds have to outperform non-managed funds (like the S&P 500) in order for you to come out ahead.  I’ve read so many articles over the years that discuss how non-managed mutual funds (like Index Funds) generally outperform many or most managed funds.  So, bottom line, you don’t want to take financial advice to buy a product from someone who stands to gain financially from that product.  Of course, Dave isn’t getting a commission on the front-load mutual funds.  But he steers you to the salesman of that product and perhaps receives a little reward for doing so.

Aside from the Money magazine article, we have a few bones to pick with Dave on other matters.

I am reminded about the Financial Peace University (FPU) course that Dave offers.  It’s a great course and worth every penny of the hundred dollars or so it costs per person for thirteen weeks of video (Dave is excellent in the videos) and class discussions.  We’ve taken it and facilitated it at our church several times.  It’s a lot of effort by church and community volunteers, setting it up, getting recruits (Ramsey does help with advertising flyers), collecting course money, ordering materials, securing a facility to show the videos and hold classes, prep time, presenting the videos, and time leading the class discussions.  Depending on the size of the class, several or many small discussion group “leaders” are needed too, all volunteers.  It’s a huge commitment for about three months. The only thing that has ever bugged me about this whole process is that no one makes any money from it, except Dave.  Granted, in the end, it does help a lot of people.

And then there was the “Oprah incident,” as my wife and I like to call it.  We were excited when, several years ago, we heard that our then hero, Dave Ramsey, was going to be on the Oprah Winfrey show.  We made a point to watch – and were disappointed.  At the critical moment of giving his wisdom-packed advice after hearing the plight of one struggling couple – Dave blew it.  I think he thought it would be a shocking surprise of an answer that would nail his reputation as a wise rebel personal finance counselor, but he spoke too soon.  He blamed the man for not knowing his wife had racked up a bunch of debt.  It was obvious to us, Oprah, and everyone else watching that clearly this man was not at fault.  Even Oprah said something like, “Oh, Dave, I don’t think so.”  Dave tried to pull his foot from his mouth after the commercial break, but unsuccessfully in our minds.

Speaking of foot in the mouth:  In one of his FPU videos, he made a comment about taking risk and getting burned and said something like, “If you play with crocodiles…”  He was referring to crocodile hunter Steve Irwin and that was long before Steve got killed.  I’ll never forget the time hosting an FPU class soon after Steve died.  That particular video had not been updated yet.  When it got to that part where Dave was putting his foot in his mouth talking about the Crocodile Hunter, there was a gasp from the audience.  I cringed in embarrassment.

Then, our personal beef with Dave.  Who knew there is a right way to get out of debt?!

We were always huge fans of Dave Ramsey, yet along the way we noticed that he could be as rigid as a square with his seemingly unbending, black and white approaches.  Sure, for people who are in debt up to their eye sockets he has to take a hard line, recommending they cut up credit cards to stop out-of-control behavior.  But 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.  While that is often true, 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.  People change.  Hello hero, goodbye zero.

If you’ve read any of Dave’s books or taken his Financial Peace University course, you’ve learned that because of his personal experience with creditors (who insulted him and his wife, among other things) that he has a strong disdain for credit card companies or getting a car loan of any type.

So Dave has his reasons for being rigid on things.  But that hard ass black or white approach ended up knocking the wind from our victory sail when we wanted to call in to the Dave Ramsey show and brag about our being debt free.  Let me back up just a hair first, though.

We did something Dave would not like at all.  We got a loan for a three year old car.  At that time, we owed about as much on our house as we did for that car.  Not long after, we decided to pull money from savings to pay off the mortgage instead of the car.  Why did we do it in that order?  So my wife could reduce her work hours without fear of a looming mortgage.  A large mortgage payment scared her more than a small car payment.  It wasn’t really about the amount of money owed or the interest rate.  It was about a life choice.  You see, working full-time while someone else got to spend most waking hours with our daughter bugged my wife.  She just wanted to cut back on her work hours. Weird, huh?!  So for us it was a no brainer:  Get rid of the highest risk debt first.

Talk about the irony.  Getting that car loan kept us off the Dave Ramsey show.  We were scheduled to shout, with a big ol’ southern drawl, “we’re debt free” on Dave’s radio show.  Then the producer declined to have us on the air because “Dave wouldn’t like” how we had gotten a taboo car loan.  We wanted to say “Hey, but we’re debt free – does it really matter how we got there?”  Who knew that we were debt free losers?

Enough of the criticisms, though.  If you’ve ever heard Dave talk about giving, and how so much more good could be done on this earth if, being out of debt, we could easily give more to good causes, then you understand where his heart is.  I believe Dave’s heart is truly to help others “get it” with money, so that the world is a better place for them and for others they can help as a result.  And he’s living that dream.

So this is for Dave Ramsey:  Despite all the criticisms, we still love ya, Dave.  You’re doing the world much more good than not, and that’s about the best legacy any of us can really hope for.  Just don’t be too proud to tweak your stances on a few things, if needed, as this crazy world continues to change.

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The Old Young and Young Old

09 Tuesday Apr 2013

Posted by moneygooguru in Fun, saving money, Time

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baby boomer, midlife crisis, old young, young old

over the hillAre you too old to be young, but too young to be old?  You’re likely from the “baby boomer” generation.  Having worked for longer than you have left to work, you’re starting to count down the years to when you don’t have to go into work anymore.  It’s still a long ways off but you find yourself thinking of it more and more.

You’ve probably cut back on some on your frivolous spending too, after looking at your weak investment statements.  You started saving too late, spent too much over the years, and now have too much time to make up for.

To make things worse, the younger people view you as old, and the gray hairs see you as a young whipper snapper.  You’ve already had a mid-life crisis in your forties.  You bought the sports car.  And you tried some partying like in your youth only to find you’re now a wimp.  Your round balding head is protruding ever more, as is your belly.

So what’s left?mid life crisis

Whether you see it or not, you’re actually in your prime.  You’re probably still pretty healthy.  You’re probably making more money than ever in your life.  Your kids are probably grown or mostly so.  You’re in a good spot!

Don’t get caught up in things!  Get caught up in the moments.  Enjoy the simple things each day.  Save away all the money you can and forget about it.  Instead, make life about enjoying things that don’t cost money.  If you had done this when you were younger, you’d be there already.  But it’s not too late.  Go for it.

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Nothing Like a Thrift Store

09 Tuesday Apr 2013

Posted by moneygooguru in Debt, Growing Wealth, saving money

≈ Leave a comment

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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

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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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