thegriffinpages
AKA "Icicles"
So wanting to make as much money as possible makes one entitled? Okay. I guess I am...
But it does buy hookers!
You pay her to leave when she's finished.
Well this thread just got even more interesting!
Just because the middle class has been destroyed doesnt make 100k a lot of money.
When she's finished?
You're doing it wrong![]()
Your understanding of what the "middle class" constitutes has been completely distorted.
The two are very different. One can have an income of $40,000 from assets of $1m or one could earn $40,000 and have assets of $0 or even a negative net worth.Curious - because I don't know.
What defines "middle class" - for the sake of keeping things simple, we'll consider income/assets as the benchmark. What range constitutes middle class these days?
The two are very different. One can have an income of $40,000 from assets of $1m or one could earn $40,000 and have assets of $0 or even a negative net worth.
It's also going to vary by locality. The US is a huge land mass with wildly varying costs of living. One of the nice things about our jobs, we can live 1-2 hours drive away from city centers and live comparatively cheaply while still earning higher wages. Or commute and have ultra low living costs.
Somewhere between a buck oh five and bout tree fiddy.Okay. Let's narrow it further.
Strictly income. What's a Middle Class income?
That's literally what I tell people that think 100k is a lot of money. It's akin to Stockholm syndrome from declining wages and what has become the new norm as a standard of living financed via debt that they can't repay.Your understanding of what the "middle class" constitutes has been completely distorted.
Okay. Let's narrow it further.
Strictly income. What's a Middle Class income?
Well that sounds more like a rant than anything else. What you have to remember is while the "middle class" has shrunk, the top is growing as people move into it.That's literally what I tell people that think 100k is a lot of money. It's akin to Stockholm syndrome from declining wages and what has become the new norm as a standard of living financed via debt that they can't repay.
The only way to attain a 50s-70s(before the destruction of labor and unions) middle class lifestyle is a household income of 100k or more. A bit less in the flyover states.
Everyone else is delusional that they are middle class without that income or is financing the lifestyle, they don't actually have it. And that's one of the brilliant things to keep the proles placated this century. Consumer debt. Just comfortable enough not to cut the heads off the robber barons, but beholden to them similar to the sharecroppers of the 1870s.
The list goes on. Standard of living has considerably increased over time which is why you can't really compare apples to apples.
Just cut to the chase already and call for some bankstas hanging from lampposts! I miss circa 2007 Boris.I don't think anyone disputes that, you know, cool stuff has happened in the last 50 years. And yes we like our consumer electronics. What does any of this have to do with the vast, rapid, and exponentially increasing stratification of capital access?
I don't disagree with you on this.
Here's the situation of someone I know.... He got himself so far into debt with credit cards (multiple meaning more than 6), and student loans that his credit was down the toilet and out to sea. I'm talking in the 400s. His situation was so bad that he couldn't even qualify anymore for a real bank account. I think he used Amex Serve. He was working for peanuts at the time.
He was finally able to work up to a Construction Manager job that paid a wage that he could live on, so he started using the Snow Ball method to pay off is debt. He did that for a few years. That allowed him to rebuild his credit (regular payments and his credit responsibility lowered) so he could get a real bank account. He eventually qualified for a credit card to consolidate some of the payments with the highest interest rates.
Now he still has several credit lines open that he's paying on but its much more manageable and he can pay off the higher interest ones first while keeping minimum payments on the other ones. During this time he's been putting a little in savings as well.
My point is that this person successfully used Dave Ramsey's Plan to get out of crummy credit and to a point where he could worry about interest rates.
You pay her to leave when she's finished.
I don't think anyone disputes that, you know, cool stuff has happened in the last 50 years. And yes we like our consumer electronics. What does any of this have to do with the vast, rapid, and exponentially increasing stratification of capital access?
You understand that this person could have accomplished the same thing quicker while spending less money on interest without Ramsey’s BS by using basic math, right?