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My Six Word Memoir

August 1, 2011 by Lazy Man 8 Comments

For those of you who don’t follow such things, there’s a thing in the world of blogging (often called a blogosphere) called a meme. Basically someone takes a topic, writes about it, and then “tags” others to write about it. I suppose if you don’t write about it, you get stuck being “it.” As we learned at an early age, no one wants to be “it.”

The point of the story is that I’ve been “tagged” by credit addict. I need to write six words that encompass my thoughts. So I had six words together:

Be Ben Franklin… healthy, wealthy, wise.

However, fate has changed my memoir. I was tagged for the same meme by Fat Man Unleashed to write one for Lazy Man and Health. This means that I’m going to have to split my single statement into two reflecting each personality.

Thus for Lazy Man and Money, I go with:

Money – freedom to do almost anything

This is really what Lazy Man and Money is about. I talk about being Lazy, but that’s just one example of what is possible when you are financially independent. I feel that it strikes a chord on some level with most people.

If you are curious what my health memoir is, please check my six word memoir at Lazy Man and Health.

The proper thing at this point is to tag some others. I’m not one to support pyramid schemes, so I’m going to tag three people total from my two websites. This is a more “sustainable” meme that will help it last longer. And rather than tag the big blogs, I’m going to bring attention to three blogs that have unique viewpoints, only a handful of posts, and could benefit greatly from your attention.

These sites are:

  • Money Millionaire
  • Rich Credit Debt Loan
  • Impersonal Finance

For those people the rules are simply:

  • Write your own six word memoir.
  • Post it on your blog and include a visual illustration if you wish.
  • Link to the person who tagged you in your post.
  • Tag at least three more blogs.
  • Leave a comment on the tagged blogs with an invitation to play.

Filed Under: About / Admin Tagged With: ben franklin, blogosphere, freedom, memoir, Money, money freedom, pyramid schemes

Frugalism vs. Capitalism III

July 25, 2011 by Lazy Man 4 Comments

Rich Slick over at Get Rich Slick has a rebuttal to my post yesterday. To continue the debate, here’s a rebuttal to his rebuttal…
1) By “that dollar will be taxed”, I mean that a dollar saved is dollar in your net worth. A dollar earned could be only 72 cents in your net worth. Trust me, I want to pay a ton of taxes. I’d like to pay 1M or more in taxes a year.

2) Yes there are risks to everything, but saving a dollar is not a risk. So the capitalist takes a risk, while the frugalist typically doesn’t. Yes, risk is a fact of life, but there are degrees of risk.

3) It’s the “without too much concern for the price or cost of an item” that leads to over-extending oneself. Yes, it’s not a guarantee, but it’s a risk of not concerning oneself with the costs of things. The frugalist doesn’t run this risk.

4) The “wasteful nature” that I was talking about was related to buying new cars with the idea of helping the economy. Meanwhile perfectly good cars go into landfills.

5) Yes we agree that a car isn’t an investment. I realize the phrase “depreciating investment” is an oxymoron, but it’s common vernacular to say, “I invested in new shoes today.” If this missed you then… (sigh and shrugs shoulders). Would you have preferred, “A frugualist doesn’t waste money on new cars and uses it to make more money?”

6) Do you want to teach me? Ben Franklin said a penny saved is a penny earned. Perhaps this could be a post in and of itself. I would really like to understand the math behind it.

7) For each Bill Gates how many people have filed for bankruptcy? Millions and millions? What if you just took $100 and played roulette hoping for black (or red) to come up 15 times in a row. I’m guessing you’d throw away a lot of $100 chips, but if you get it right you’ll have over $3M. Or you could just invest your life savings in some penny stocks. Do it wisely and you’ll join those names Rich Slick mentioned.

In the end, Rich Slick makes the perfect argument I was intending to make from the outset. Warren Buffet and Sam Walton were frugalists AND capitalists. Of course they didn’t make their billions by being frugal, but they are examples of how it is possible to be both.
Did I make a lot of assumptions about capitalists? Indeed. Did Rich Slick make a lot of assumptions about frugalists? Indeed.

Filed Under: Frugal, Investing Tagged With: bankruptcy, ben franklin, bill gates, buying new cars, capitalist, Net Worth, penny stocks, rebuttal, roulette, waste money

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