The debate that tore lit apart

The debate that tore lit apart

POSIWID: The Purpose Of A System Is What It Does Shirt $21.68

CRIME Shirt $21.68

POSIWID: The Purpose Of A System Is What It Does Shirt $21.68

  1. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    First the beans&rice man to stack cash
    then buy Rich Dad rentals ?

  2. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    I don't know about u guys, but I trust Dave. I like his thoughts on credit cards

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      Dave is based
      Crypto bros' and Neets in IQfy have a hateboner for him.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      Dave is based
      Crypto bros' and Neets in IQfy have a hateboner for him.

      Dave are for braindead low iq homies who can't tie their own shoelace without help

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        So the braindead think his based
        but the Crypto Bros' and Neets have a hateboner for him?

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        >Dave are..
        Dave is. Braindead

        But who needs help tying their shoes?

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      >I like his thoughts on credit cards
      Why?

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        because credit cards are shackles belonging to the bank slavers

  3. 2 months ago
    Anonymous
  4. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    they're both shit, just read an intro to finance textbook

    t. cpa

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      "Personal finance for proles is the same as corporate finance"
      You are a fricking moron and are probably a second year community college student at best

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        income is income
        assets are assets
        taxes are taxes
        compound interest is compound interest
        debt is debt
        any decent finance book will cover these topics on both micro and macro levels

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          Youre a moron who just took intro acg lmao, fricking embarrassing and superficial post

  5. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    newbie but arent these guys literally for low iq peeps. i know its for low iq, i bought their books recently
    t.certified moron

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      It’s more about a humble person feeling secure in their personal financial methods/knowledge than anything judgemental.

  6. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    I never get financial advice from a redneck. Save and make more money by not buying these snake oil books.

  7. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    >boomer A:
    Just eat rice and lentils lmao. You can totally buy a house if you work extra hours for Mr Sheklestein and stop eating avocado toast.
    >boomer B:
    Just buy property and rent it lmao.

    Both are moronic boomers with moronic ideas that don't apply to the middle class of today.

    The biggest problem of middle class today is that they're not making enough money to save, let alone invest, so the first boomer's advice is useless. Nowadays middle class cannot afford to buy property so the second boomer's advice is not good either.

    These morons are to finance what "Eat, Pray, Love" is to mental health. You might as well read "The Secret" and leave it all to the universe's energy.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      And the Rich Dad Poor Dad author is 1 billion dollars in debt.

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        >And the Rich Dad Poor Dad author is 1 billion dollars in debt.

        No man dies with debt. Spend everyone else's money and live large!

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      This. Both of these dudes are peak boomer mindset. In fact I place a good deal of blame for how fricked millennials and younger are on them. Both of them encouraged long term practices which actively harm younger generations. It made sense at the time, but they get trapped in the classic boomer trap that their generation is the only generation to ever exist or ever will exist with zero regard to how it affects the younger generations

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        My parents own 3 properties. They managed to do that riding lucky with marijuana stocks when Canada legalized weed.

        I don't know if I should feel like that's good for me, considering I have only a apartment but will inherit those properties in 40 years when they pass away. I work as a journalist to make ends meet.

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          My parents also own a lot of pretty lucrative properties. I’ve fallen on some pretty hard times recently and asked my father for some financial help until I get back on my feet. He flipped out, told me I was entitled, and hasn’t spoken to me in 4 months and then proceeded to tell my mother when she told him he needed to help out (they are divorced now) that I “need to be humbled”. In that same time frame he has taken two overseas trips to Europe, a 10-day long fishing trip to Alaska, and has hosted numerous expensive parties. He sold his business about a decade ago for $25 mil, cheated on and divorced my mother, married his mistress (she’s a gold digging prostitute), and removed his children from his will. I asked him why he doesn’t seem at all concerned about his children and grandchildren’s future his reply is some variation of, “I can’t take it with me,” or “I worked my ass off to enjoy my retirement and I plan on doing that. You need to figure it out yourself.”

          Mind you, I have been consistently employed since 18, graduated college, got married, had kids, and managed to purchase my own property without his help.

          The worst part is the vast majority of boomers are just now reaching retirement age and life expectancy keeps increasing. The boomer nightmare is only going to get worse until they finally all die off in about 20 years, at which point all property will be owned by either the ultra-wealthy, ccp, blackrock, or the government. Shits bleak and why i predict balkanization of the US in about a decade

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            >mind you..
            So then your good? what's the problem. Why the blog post.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            Read the second sentence. I have recently fallen on hard times having been let go from my job. I’ve got another solid offer on the table but I’ve been unemployed for about 3 months now and coffers are running dry

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            Dam it, bro.
            Hope it all works out
            Hug your kids and wife.
            Do the Dave Ramsey baby steps, unironically.
            What's 3-6 months in a lifetime. YGMI

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            Thanks fren.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            Remember this when he is a decrepit frick and you get to lock him down and feed him his feces.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Just eat rice and lentils lmao
      How to get scurvy

  8. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    >he hasn't ascended yet

  9. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    GOYSLOP vs GOYSLOP

    its very smart of israelites to outsource their propaganda to goyim sometimes. Makes it less obvious

  10. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    I dont get this guy with his debt. Doesnt he ever have to pay anything back with interest?

  11. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    If a book about money is not by a israelite it's worthless.

  12. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Real talk this is the only book you should read. Plenty of cringe, but a ton of practical information.

    Basically, spend 50-60% of you money on fixed costs, 20% on enjoying yourself, save and invest 20%.

    Take all 401k matches at a job, invest everything else in a Roth IRA and put everything there into a target date fund, consistently add to it every month for like 30 to 40 years (the younger you start investing the better, even if it's just $50 a month).

    Don't get into debt, if you do have it, make a plan right away to pay it off.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      That's fricking bullshit. We aren't boomers.

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        Literally the only book that will ever help you get your finances in order. Not like the other braindead books in this thread, and very practical advice. I recommend you read the book, easy to download online, it will help pretty much everybody who reads it.

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          Why would you wan t to have money at 65 when your life is over?

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        Knows everything about personal finance
        Can't be taught anything.

        Why would you wan t to have money at 65 when your life is over?

        Expenses don't stop at 65.
        It may not be as easy to earn money at that age. Causes for that could be health or job market bias against older employees.
        65 is the new 40, by the way. Watch your diet and exercise.

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          Go big or go home. We're jot frickimg women saving our pennies just to be become butthole old fart boomers.

          Live your life to the fullest and make it big. Follow your dreams.

          Don't be a fricking boomer.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            Well, at least your not complaining about how unfair blah,blah,blah.

            >Go big or go home
            is a rallying cry not a plan
            >Follow your dreams is a low key rallying cry not a plan.

            Get a solid plan and hit gas and hopefully
            YGMI

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      so you're saying i have to get a job

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Don't get into debt, if you do have it, make a plan right away to pay it off.
      Consumer debt is bad and should be avoided*; debt in general, though, is a tool that can be used responsibly to leverage small investments into larger returns. So long as the debt you take on is invested in something that will provide a higher return than the interest you'd pay on the debt, it can make sense, but you need to do that calculation and not just look at it as free money.

      *There are some 'advisors' out there who suggest that you can take out debt early in life to live better than you otherwise would, with the expectation that your income will rise and you'll be able to pay it off so long as you avoid inflating your lifestyle expenses. 9 times out of 10 this ends up being a trap that should be avoided due to the difficulty of most folks have avoiding lifestyle inflation when their income grows.

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        Define "bad". If consumer credit is really bad wouldn't it be a good idea to criminalize it? A lot of "bad" things are illegal.
        And if you can beat the market and get higher than normal returns why can't professional money managers do it without your help and letting you have a piece of what could be theirs?

        you can say what you like about Ramsey, but his system works. It might not be optimal, but it's a simple system that anyone can follow and see big 6/small 7 figures within their working lifetime. That's probably more than most of his audience can normally dream of. If you're educated and savvy enough to gloss right past his first 3-4 baby steps then really there's nothing he can offer you and you can look in to more advanced investing approaches

        >you can say what you like about Ramsey, but his system works
        If everyone took his advice you get the paradox of thrift

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          >Define "bad".
          Ultimately more harmful than helpful. In this case, consumer debt leads to short term benefits (the thing bought), but longer-term harm (an increasing portion of your income being dedicated to pay of medium/long term debts for those short-term benefits). If you use a credit card and always/generally pay it off entirely every month, then there aren't issues, but if you use it to pay for things you couldn't otherwise afford, then you often end up having long-term harms exceeding those short term benefits.
          >If consumer credit is really bad wouldn't it be a good idea to criminalize it?
          There can be occasions where consumer debt can be helpful (as a kind of bridge-loan), so I don't know that I would say it should be criminalized entirely, but I'd have no concerns with it being far more heavily regulated than it currently is.
          >A lot of "bad" things are illegal.
          Yes, and a a lot of bad things are also legal.
          >And if you can beat the market and get higher than normal returns why can't professional money managers do it without your help and letting you have a piece of what could be theirs?
          I'm not talking about taking out debt to buy stock, I'm talking about using it to fund a long-term investment or business; those still take work, which a 'professional money manager' isn't going to do. Debt can also been used to acquire assets that is likely to gain in value; for boomers this was housing; boomers who put down 20%, and then sold their house a decade later for twice what they paid kept that doubling in price to themselves. Sure enough you now see the 'professional money' (i.e. investment firms, corpo dollars, etc) buying up housing, so they are now 'doing it without your help' so to speak.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            >but if you use it to pay for things you couldn't otherwise afford, then you often end up having long-term harms exceeding those short term benefits.
            The thing is if the social utility of people buying things they can't afford is greater than the harm. Can everyone live within their means without making someone else poorer. How pareto efficient is this theory? Are you advocating something radical? Why should a purely rational individual care about the distribution of disutility?

            >I'm not talking about taking out debt to buy stock
            Maybe you should be. Why is financing stock buy backs any worse than other forms of investment?

            >I'm talking about using it to fund a long-term investment or business; those still take work, which a 'professional money manager' isn't going to do
            Thinking in the long term is very dangerous considering the millions of ways you could be killed right now

            >Debt can also been used to acquire assets that is likely to gain in value; for boomers this was housing
            But how rational is this? Why should large for profit institutions help you buy a home you can capture capital gains on when they could retain more of those gains otherwise?

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      This is entirely unrealistic for entire generations. If you aren’t boomer or early X basically 80% of you paycheck is going to essentials, often more. This advise again assumes a boomer economy for boomers. I’ve yet to see any sort of financial help book which realistically tackles the challenge millennials and later face. Best we can do is manage debt and hopefully have enough to cover basic living expenses.

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        For millennials and later, it's getting a decent job and working your way up until you have a 6 figure salary, then keeping that job/salary while you move back in with your parents for 6 months to save up a down-payment, and then buying something with ~10% down and paying PMI on top of your mortgage payments.

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          You're a homosexual boomer trying to cope. Life is changing and will not be the same.

          Trump will win or not but the US will probably collapse anyway. The empire is old and aged much faster than we thought.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            If you say so anon. FWIW, I'm not suggesting that having a 6-figure salary and needing to live with family to be able to save enough for a down payment is a *good* system; it very clearly is not.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            > life is changing and will not be the same
            Literally, What? And source?

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            Well, at least your not complaining about how unfair blah,blah,blah.

            >Go big or go home
            is a rallying cry not a plan
            >Follow your dreams is a low key rallying cry not a plan.

            Get a solid plan and hit gas and hopefully
            YGMI

            There won't be a country by the time yous are 65. Wake up.

            This advice was good 50 years ago.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            Ironically, what you are saying is what the radical boomer morons were saying 50 years ago. DUUUDE GOVERNMENTS AND THE STATE WON'T EXIST SOON, WHO CARES MAAAAAN. That's why so many boomers have nothing saved for retirement.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            >Ironically, what you are saying is what the radical boomer morons were saying 50 years ago. DUUUDE GOVERNMENTS AND THE STATE WON'T EXIST SOON, WHO CARES MAAAAAN.
            Guy you're speaking to sounds like an extreme doomer. During the cold war maybe the thought global thermonuclear war might break out at some point was more common but only left wing extremists were predicting some sort of socialist revolution or right wing militia preppers thinking government will totally collapse but that was always an extreme minority.

            > That's why so many boomers have nothing saved for retirement.
            Because they have pensions and such, you know things that galaxy brained neolib youngin's call ponzi schemes and prefer telling everyone to buy crypto and don't depend on anyone but the free market driving up prices

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          Bruh even with 6 figures life is barely affordable. Most millennials have to live with roommates or if they are married then both partners have to work to make ends meet. Even worse if there’s kids involved. Give it up. The idea that you just “work hard and save” and everything else will fall into place is a delusion only the incredibly rich, deluded, lucky, or old believe. The “American dream” millennials and later were brought up to believe in was systematically gutted and sold to the highest bidder by their parents. Shit is fricked. There’s no way out apart from inheriting insane wealth or falling into a good job. For perspective, low-income in places like CA and NY is $85-120k. Even in low-cost states low-income is around $65-80k. Average median income in US is $65k. Keep in mind this includes ALL salaries and income brackets, so likely much lower for millennials and younger just starting their careers

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            >Bruh even with 6 figures life is barely affordable
            Probably why anon said that you would have to move in with your parents even with a 6-figure salary.

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        the entire economic system relies on there being no acknowledgement of this fact by experts or institutions

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        the entire economic system relies on there being no acknowledgement of this fact by experts or institutions

        And when a finance book comes out addressing the post X generations, Y, Z, DOOMERS will condemn it as being Boomer tier advice.
        Personal finance advice doesn't change.
        Y and especially Z simply need the boomer pill administered like one would give a dog medicine, hidden inside their food.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Basically, spend 50-60% of you money on fixed costs, 20% on enjoying yourself, save and invest 20%.
      this is how you know this is completely and utterly detached and irrelevent, median wages in an average us city, not including coastal global tier cities either, has 80% fixed income minimum expenditures.
      These old boomers are so fricking stupid and out of touch that they can't imagine a time where their income did not allow for this type of asinine hairsplitting of half here, half there. Most millenials and gen z are effectively living paycheck to paycheck, even though in the 80k-100k range are entering what is now the lower middle class at best. This is not sustainable advice for anyone who wants to every buy a home or be retired. You need to simply make it big or have a nice day in this situation, which is why crypto scams, robinhood "investing" etc and "make yourself an LLC" RE scams have gotten so prevelant, as most people's gut instinct realizes that this type of conventional financial advice is total garbage.

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        >80% fixed minimum expenditures
        Income isn't fixed. Work overtime, get a part time job, change careers, change jobs.
        Expenditures aren't fixed. Get a roommate, move, carpool, don't eat out , don't consume alcohol or nicotine, don't spend money on tattoos, quit subscriptions, stop with the monsters, red bulls, Celsius.

        > 80-100k lower middle class
        Move out of NY or San Jose

        > living paycheck to paycheck
        Get a bigger paycheck
        Get an extra paycheck
        Lower expenses
        Don't follow your dreams, follow reality.

        Simple ain't Easy.

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          Dumb boomer homosexual. You honestly think most of us haven’t already done everything you just discussed? I work 3 jobs currently. 1 full time and 2 part time and still will never save enough to put in the bank or invest heavily enough for it to matter. It’s great this shit works for you, but your reality is far different than 90% of millennials and later.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            >you honestly think...
            Yea, I absolutely think that most of "us" haven't tried more than three of the suggestions.
            Or they try the suggestions but only for a 2-3 days then throw in towel and turn their shame into anger and point fingers at imagery adversaries.

  13. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    you can say what you like about Ramsey, but his system works. It might not be optimal, but it's a simple system that anyone can follow and see big 6/small 7 figures within their working lifetime. That's probably more than most of his audience can normally dream of. If you're educated and savvy enough to gloss right past his first 3-4 baby steps then really there's nothing he can offer you and you can look in to more advanced investing approaches

  14. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    i wish i could sell this dick for more money it would solve all my problems

  15. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    >Robert Kiyosaki, the heckin' personal finance guru, is $1.2 billion in debt
    The entire genre is just WWE-tier goyslop. If you want to learn how to manage your income and expenditure and invest wisely, all you need, and all you've ever needed, is a few second hand undergrad-level accounting and economics textbooks.

  16. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    I have never earned taxable income

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *