Poor Man Survival
Self Reliance tools for
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A Digest of Urban
Survival Resources
Wow – Is our nation and the next generation screwed or what?
There’s a generational breakdown occurring with increasing
numbers of young people -- let’s define them as the under-30 crowd -- falling
into despair, dismay and even outright demoralization over the state of the
world. Put bluntly, many of them see nothing to gain by preserving the
status quo.
Conversely, the over 50 crowd has already paid into the system
and desperately wants to preserve the status quo. That’s where their
retirement dreams exist. With their finger now on the brass ring, it’s
simply unthinkable to ponder that it could slip out of their grasp.
This demographic divide, between those with nothing to gain and
those with everything to lose, grows wider every day.
The very worst of it all is that the system into which the young
are born ask them to perpetuate that same system by getting good grades, going
into college student debt, and then working extra hard as tax donkeys and debt
slaves for the rest of their lives.
As the above Millennial pointed out, it’s working in those often
pointless jobs, that is often responsible for destroying our planet.
The promises of the generations before them ring hollow.
The pension shave all been raided and hollowed out. Forced payments into
Medicare and Social Security are never going to be returned in kind and are
merely last-ditch payments to provide some measure of cover for the boomers
relying on them. Embarrassingly poor
infrastructure and massive piles
of debt and underfunded liabilities are the true economic bequeathments of the
prior generations to the next.
For a disturbingly large number of olders (not elders) the answer is “Know about what?” because they
are too deeply stuck in the current narrative to even notice the damage being
done, let alone mount an intelligent, thoughtful response to it all.
The Big Divide
Around the middle of February each year, the
US Treasury Department releases an annual report of the federal government’s
financial condition.
It’s called the Financial Report of the US
Government... and it looks a lot like an annual report that you might see filed
by a big company like Apple or Facebook.
Except that, unlike Apple and Facebook, the
US government’s annual report is absolutely gruesome.
This year’s report is no exception, save for
one humorous anecdote: they -just- released it. In other words, they’re a month
and a half LATE (given that the report is typically released in mid-February).
In Fiscal Year 2018, the government’s
total net loss was $1.16 TRILLION.
Uncle Sam collected $3.4 trillion in tax
revenue in FY18. But they spent over $4.5 trillion.
Of that $4.5 trillion spent, nearly
HALF went to Social Security and Medicare. (They also spent a record $523
billion just on interest payments on the national debt!)
This is extraordinary given that the Social
Security and Medicare trust funds are set to run out of money within the next
15 years.
In other words, despite spending almost HALF
the federal budget on Social Security and Medicare, both programs are
effectively insolvent.
As a matter of fact, on page 10 of the
report, the government estimates Social Security’s long-term funding gap to be
a mind-blowing $53.8 TRILLION (which is almost 10% worse than last year)
The federal government also tallies up its
assets and liabilities, just like any individual or company would do.
If you have assets (like houses, cars, cash,
investments) worth $1 million, and liabilities (credit card debt, mortgages)
worth $300,000, your net worth is $700,000.
The government has assets as well: a total of
$3.8 trillion. The single largest component of that-- $1.08 trillion-- is
STUDENT DEBT.
In other words, the government’s #1 asset is
the debt owed to it by young people across America. That’s pretty sad.
The next biggest asset is what accountants
call “property, plant, and equipment”, or PP&E. That’s the sum total of all
the land, government buildings, tanks, aircraft carriers, military bases, etc.
For Fiscal Year 2018, the government reported
$581 billion in equipment (mostly military), and about $500 billion in real
estate.
In total, the government’s $3.8 trillion in
assets sounds like a lot.
Except that the government’s liabilities,
i.e. the national debt, etc., totaled more than $25 trillion.
That makes the government’s net worth an
unbelievable NEGATIVE $21.5 TRILLION.
And that’s a lot worse than the government’s
negative net worth of -20.3 trillion in 2017, -19.3 trillion in 2016, -18.2
trillion in 2015, -17.7 trillion in 2014…
Notice the pattern?
If you add their own estimate of Social
Security’s unfunded liability, Uncle Sam’s total net worth is NEGATIVE
$75 TRILLION… which is almost precisely the size of the entire global
economy.
WOW-ARE Screwed or What?
Compared to Our Parent’s Generation…
After the war [WWII], my grandfather took a
job as a teacher. And on that single salary he was able to buy a house, provide
for his family, afford a car, and have a secure pension for when he retired.
His wife (my grandmother) started a small
hair salon in the family living room to earn money on the side.
They saved nearly every penny they ever
earned. They never went into debt.
And they invested conservatively, often
buying short-term government savings bonds that paid over 4% by the late
1950s-- well above the rate of inflation.
This wasn’t just my grandparents’ experience
either. Back then, this was the fundamental promise of America: you were
rewarded for working hard and saving money.
But now things are entirely different.
For starters, cost of living is totally out
of control. My grandfather’s teaching salary was more than enough to support
his family in a comfortable, middle class lifestyle.
Today that would be almost impossible.
More often than not, it takes two working
parents to make ends meet in a typical household.
Census statistics show that just 25% of
married households with children were dual income in 1950. Today it’s nearly
70%.
Plus, to even qualify for a lot of jobs
today, you must have a university degree… which carries its own enormous costs.
Even after adjusting for inflation,
a typical university education in the US costs over five times
as much as it did in 1960, according to the National Center
for Education Statistics.
A typical young person today emerges from
university with student debt exceeding $40,000. And millions of young people have
student debt exceeding $100,000.
Speaking of debt, my grandparents had none.
And they had plenty of cash savings, as was typical of their generation.
But today’s median household (according to
Federal Reserve data) has racked up consumer debt exceeding $30,000, with a
bank balance of less than $5,000.
And that bank balance earns a pitiful
interest rate of just 0.02%. So even for people who have savings, the interest
they earn doesn’t keep up with inflation.
Housing costs are also out of control.
Home prices are near record highs, making it
extremely difficult for young people to afford a down payment.
And rents have been steadily rising for
years, far outpacing the rate of inflation (and lackluster wage increases).
Perhaps that’s why a survey from Zillow last
year found that nearly 25% of 24-36 year olds were living with their
parents. They simply can’t afford their own housing.
Coincidentally, a study from the University
of Chicago last year showed that roughly 25% of people in their 20s
reported having zero sex in the previous 12 months, almost the same
amount as people living with Mom and Dad.
While this might sound comical, it matters:
young people are putting off children as well.
In fact, the US fertility rate is now at its
lowest level in DECADES, well below the amount necessary to maintain a stable
population.
It’s simply too expensive to have kids.
When my grandparents started having children,
the hospital bill was about $100.
Today it can easily be more than 100x that
amount. And the cost of rearing a child today through the age of 18 can now
exceed $200,000, not including university tuition.
Then there are retirement challenges as well.
Back in my grandparents’ era,
it was common for workers to have well-funded private pensions.
Today private pensions are
nearly extinct. And of the few that still exist, about 25% are insolvent.
Public pensions (as we discuss
frequently) are in terrible condition, with a mutli-trillion dollar funding gap
worldwide.
And then there’s Social
Security, which is in such financial ruin that even the Social Security
Administration admits the program’s trust funds will run out of money in 2034.
I also think back to how easily
my grandmother was able to start her own hair salon. She bought a pair of
scissors one day and started cutting hair in her living room. Simple.
Today you’d have to navigate a
mountain of permits, licenses, bureaucracy, and legal liability, the cost of
which is prohibitive for most people who dream about starting their own
business.
Unsurprisingly, Census data
show that the number of new startups in the US continues to decline.
This is a long way from the
original Promise of America, where the average person could work hard, save
money, and afford to retire.
Today, the system is no longer
designed to provide any of that.
Wages and savings don’t keep
pace with inflation. Debt has exploded. People are working harder and becoming less
prosperous. And retirement is anything but secure.
These problems can’t be fixed
in a voting booth. Or, by waiting for the Bolsheviks to engineer prosperity for
all. And, certainly not by following the
status quo.
A better solution is to walk a
different path altogether-- one of self-reliance and independence.
For example, you CAN secure
your retirement. Not by relying on a broken pension, but by taking matters into
your own hands with a more robust structure like a solo 401(k).
You can start a new business in
a tax-advantaged jurisdiction (like Puerto Rico, where you can pay just 4% tax
on your profits).
It's gotten so bad, 73% of Americans now die with debt... with
an average total of more than $60,000!
The LEFT Promises Free
Stuff-Guess What, Much of it is Already Available FREE!
There are thousands of free
resources out there that people can take advantage of to learn valuable skills.
For example, companies like
Microsoft will teach you programming languages – for FREE – and then encourage
you to apply for a job with them.
That’s an incredible opportunity
to learn real-world, applicable skills that you can use to create an income for
yourself.
In the same vein, Google
recently announced a partnership with 120,000 libraries across the US to teach
people how to code.
And 96% of Americans live near
a library.
(That is not counting the
thousands of other books you can learn from – for free – at the library.)
There are also websites (like
edX.org) where you can take dozens of courses from places like MIT, Stanford,
Harvard, etc., all for free.
Every time I hear someone
whining about wanting free university education, I always ask them how many
online courses they’ve taken. How many books have they read?
I typically receive nothing
more than a confused look in return.
But that’s the nature of
entitlements: people feel that they should have everything provided for them
without having to lift a finger to help themselves.
This mentality is becoming an
epidemic in the West.
Free enterprise, limited government,
individual freedom!
Thanks
to Simon Black for this input!
7 Trends That Are Radically Changing Your
Retirement
Here
are several ways in which your golden years probably will not resemble those of
your parents.
In a quarter-century, the
percentage of workers expecting to retire after the age of 65 more than tripled,
from 11 percent in 1991 to 37 percent in 2016, according to the Employee
Benefit Research Institute.
You’d be crazy to not take advantage of coupons,
promotions and discounts to grow your stockpile. Okay, so I don’t always get
twice the stuff for half the price like the crazy coupon ladies from the TV
show, but most of the time I average 40% to 50% off my grocery bill. I aim to
get at least a 45% discount each time I go to the store.
How do I do this? By making a shopping plan, sticking to it and
using extreme couponing strategies each time I shop. If you’ve never couponed
before, you may have to change your shopping habits to be successful. Most guys
(and some gals) have trouble being “couponers”; they are just too proud to show
up with a Ziploc bag full of coupons, watch the register and question the
prices. If you are on a budget and want to stockpile enough survival supplies,
you’ll just have to get over yourself. It’s either doing that now or elbowing
hundreds of other looters when disaster strikes.
Here’s the breakdown of extreme couponing strategies for the
uninitiated:
1.
Do not buy anything that is not on sale, unless you will die
without it. If you do it right, you will eventually have enough stuff to not
have to buy things if they aren’t on sale.
2.
Look through the flyers, circle items on sale and compare them to
the coupons you may have. The best deals on brand name items are made possible
when you combine sales and coupons.
3.
Most grocery stores and pharmacies offer loyalty cards. Get them,
learn to use them and take advantage of the discounts, points and promotions.
Frequently, sale prices are only valid for cardholders.
4.
Create an online account with every grocery store you frequent.
Here’s the deal, you can now preload most manufacturer coupons onto your
loyalty card and save a ton of time and a good amount of money on paper and
ink. On top of that, many grocery stores offer “personalized deals”, rewarding
you with deep discounts on your most frequently purchased items.
5.
Watch for mail circulars from your local stores. These usually
have a few manufacturer coupons and a ton of store brand coupons that will
allow you to get basic items at a fraction of the cost.
6.
Once you’ve made your shopping list, calculate the total cost and
stick to it. If you tend to overspend, go to the store with enough cash to buy
everything on your list – that’ll keep you in line.
7.
Don’t forget that you can run separate transactions if the coupon
comes with a limit on the number of items you can buy at that price.
Remember, to survive you have to be not only tough, but also
smart. Don’t misplace your pride – tough people look for bargains, too and
those who find them probably end up being the most prepared ones. If you need
more guidance on couponing, check out www.couponmom.com. This website not only teaches
you how to coupon, it offers weekly deals line up for top stores around the
country.
Studies
have shown that medical emergencies are often an enormous burden on so many
families. With 78% of Americans already living paycheck to paycheck, a
medical expense that’s large and unexpected could destroy a family’s financial
stability. In fact, about 2/3 of all bankruptcies in the United
States are due to medical expenses. Often the cost is much more than
families could ever hope to repay in a lifetime.
Because of the nature of these unexpected burdens, we’ve put together some steps that can be taken to survive the financial strain of an unforeseen medical emergency.
READ MORE: How To Survive the Financial Cost of a Medical Emergency
Because of the nature of these unexpected burdens, we’ve put together some steps that can be taken to survive the financial strain of an unforeseen medical emergency.
READ MORE: How To Survive the Financial Cost of a Medical Emergency
EMP
Disaster Survival
One of the disasters that preppers fear the most is an EMP
(electromagnetic pulse). Why? Because it would literally throw us back a couple
hundred years by knocking out the power and rendering all electronics useless.
That means no more cars, lighting, hospitals, internet, cell service, hot
water… the list goes on and on.
It's been estimated that 90% of people would die after a
year without power. To avoid being one of those people, you need to stockpile
things that are EMP proof.
As you will soon see, there are many items that are fully
invincible to an EMP. This list is presented in alphabetical order...
Donate Gift Cards to…
American
Military Family [AmericanMilitaryFamily.Org] –this non-profit uses them to
buy essentials for troops, veterans and their families who are experiencing
tough times. Mail to: AMF-POB 238, Firestone, CO 80520
A Final Note…
Contributors and subscribers enable the Poor Man Survivor to post 150+ free essays annually. It is for this reason they are Heroes and Heroines of New Media. Without your financial support, the free content would disappear for the simple reason that I cannot keep body and soul together on my meager book sales & ecommerce alone.
Social
Chaos Survival Guide: Savvy Precautions-Become Self-Reliant
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With thought and foresight, the envi
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You Can’t
Buy Life Insurance After You’re Dead-Prepare NOW for Emergencies. Resources-Solar
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Find
self reliance goods at:
Support
our efforts by shopping my storefront…
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Smoking Frog Feature, Shallow Planet Production
3 comments:
It was the worst of times, it was the best of times...I think our collective challenge [other than Democratic fueled division] is the massive reduction in buying power of the dollar coupled with how damned expensive the cost of living has become in America [thank you FED]. Health care in particular is a nightmare for many, even with insurance...food cost is scary, the price of autos is more than a damn house used to be just a decade or so ago in many parts of the country and the homeless population continues to skyrocket in areas where inflated home prices are stratospheric, namely the west coast [Leftist] where illegals and elitists and Hollywood types are the only ones who still live in the 'land of milk & honey' as everyone else has moved one...
I'm with Dave in that Dems have fueled so much division, hatred-it's all I see spewing from celebs and athletes despite their wealth. Schools seem to instill helpless revisionist crap and socialist moronic nonsense and dependence on government [I grew up pre-welfare & free school lunch days & we survived just fine even wearing hand-me-down clothing-oh no!] The nannie-state has created its own nightmare of little zombies.
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