I read that somewhere. Just now I went looking for it, to respond to you. I searched Google for "40 percent of Americans would be devastated by an unexpected expense"I keep seeing statistics like that but I'm not convinced. How do you even measure that? Just ask people? The results would probably be really dependent on how you ask the question.I've read something like 40% of Americans would find a thousand dollar unexpected expense devastating.
The most wealthy people take all the financial and personal risk. The rest just show up to collect paychecks. Then when the companies that employ them fail, they go work somewhere else. Anyone who wants to join the top rank just has to become an entrepreneur. Most of us don't have the guts. What would Elon Musk be worth if he had taken an engineering job at Texas Instruments or Apple?I've met many people that didn't have $400 for an emergency.
The top 50% of the country owns 95% of the wealth and the bottom 50% own the other 5%.
That's really cool, I like the idea. But I'm wondering how you're going to present this potentially-morbid gift to your young neices and nephews. Truly one of those cases where, "it's all in the presentation"?Re burial: In our family we get cremated. And, I make simple dovetailed oak boxes to hold the ashes, and a few life tokens. My dads contains his wings and a couple of medals, and his engineers seal. Mom’s has her birthstone ring with stones for us kids and the grandkids.
Plan to make them for all of my siblings, and their kids for this year’s Christmas gifts. Plan to use a dovetail jig, instead of hand cutting like I did for my folks. Dad would have known the difference, but not cared. Not sure the siblings will know the difference.
True. A poor man wins the lottery, and it's all gone in a few short years. A rich man loses his fortune on a bad investment or disaster, and he will usually make it back.Being broke is temporary, being poor is a way of life.
I've heard so many similar statistics, that I have to assume the sentiment is true, no matter how we debate the exact percentages and dollars. A huge fraction of our population fails to save in any way that cushions them from a single mishap. Didn't we just see evidence of that during COVID, when people were suddenly unable to pay a few months' rent due to temporary work furlough, etc.?I read that somewhere. Just now I went looking for it, to respond to you. I searched Google for "40 percent of Americans would be devastated by an unexpected expense"
Amen. Elon would be successful under any circumstances, he can't help himself. And take his fortunate away today, and he'll make it back again.The most wealthy people take all the financial and personal risk. The rest just show up to collect paychecks. Then when the companies that employ them fail, they go work somewhere else. Anyone who wants to join the top rank just has to become an entrepreneur. Most of us don't have the guts. What would Elon Musk be worth if he had taken an engineering job at Texas Instruments or Apple?
I lived in Miami most of my life, and that means I knew a lot of Cubans. The people Castro threw out were the successful people. The people who came later were people from the lower classes who generally came here for mercenary, not moral, reasons. They just wanted jobs.True. A poor man wins the lottery, and it's all gone in a few short years. A rich man loses his fortune on a bad investment or disaster, and he will usually make it back.
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Amen. Elon would be successful under any circumstances, he can't help himself. And take his fortunate away today, and he'll make it back again.