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@elvis: "The Millionaire Next Door" is one of my all-time favorite books. It statistically debunks the myth that most American millionaires inherited their money. For those living with illusions, the vast majority of American millionaires (defined as assets - debt, not including house) are first generation business owners, and a large number are recent immigrants. There's no corruption or generational wealth involved, just a lot of elbow grease.
@CBOEtrader: Nice analogy with overeating and obesity. So many people try to argue the negation of assertions like "most wealthy people work hard". Why? Because the statement is so obviously true that it's almost impossible to attack directly. If we diagrammed Hardworking vs. Lazy, Rich vs. Poor, then we wouldn't find many people in the Rich/Lazy category (especially pre-retirement).
@tatupu 70: Hard work is a prerequisite to wealth. That doesn't mean hard work is an automatic entitlement to be wealthy---it's just the price of admission. We live in the Land of Opportunities, not the Land of Guarantees. Also, I was puzzled by your "Microsoft secretary" theory. So let me get this straight. She gets lucky by receiving Microsoft stock that eventually makes her a millionaire. And... what? Is she somehow less entitled to the profits of her good luck? Does that make her morally inferior to the heart surgeon who built his own practice? Or do we somehow become entitled to confiscate wealth from lots of people just because the occasional wealthy person got lucky? Bottom line, it's their money, not ours.
@all: I've found some of the arguments on this thread enlightening, but others are just abjectly ridiculous. The assertions that luck counts more than skill or work ethic for building wealth were particularly appalling. It's like someone read Gladwell's "Outliers: the story of success" with a cynical filter. It's true that you can find plenty of examples were hyper-rich (not just ordinary wealthy) people got lucky with either their initial conditions or their ideas. That doesn't invalidate the fact that most wealthy Americans busted their butts to attain their modest wealth, and they did it though average means available to anybody. Every Bill Gates and Warren Buffet is outnumbered 10000:1 by "small" millionaires like surgeons, chief engineers, senior partner lawyers, small business owners and others who attained wealth via education, savvy or pure hard work. I can't imagine that anyone could reasonably believe that there are more lucky millionaires than self-made millionaires, especially in the face of empirical proof.
@all: I’ve found some of the arguments on this thread enlightening, but others are just abjectly ridiculous. The assertions that luck counts more than skill or work ethic for building wealth were particularly appalling. It’s like someone read Gladwell’s “Outliers: the story of success†with a cynical filter. It’s true that you can find plenty of examples were hyper-rich (not just ordinary wealthy) people got lucky with either their initial conditions or their ideas. That doesn’t invalidate the fact that most wealthy Americans busted their butts to attain their modest wealth, and they did it though average means available to anybody. Every Bill Gates and Warren Buffet is outnumbered 10000:1 by “small†millionaires like surgeons, chief engineers, senior partner lawyers, small business owners and others who attained wealth via education, savvy or pure hard work. I can’t imagine that anyone could reasonably believe that there are more lucky millionaires than self-made millionaires, especially in the face of empirical proof.
You forgot to mention "Tenacity" because sure you can work hard to make money or develop your ideas. But if you are not tenacious you will either fail, or lose it all shortly after success.
If you don't have Tenacity then you better hope for the Luck route.
Tenouncetrout: Agreed. I'd go one step further, and suggest that if someone lacks Tenacity, all the Luck in the world won't help them. Easy come, easy go. How many lottery winners just blow it all and end up back in their original circumstances?
@Brand-
My point--which I didn't do a very good job of making--was that I thought Elvis greatly simplified what it takes to be a millionaire(or successful in general terms). I got the impression that he was implying that all it takes is hard work. And if you're not successful, it's because you're just not trying. Or lazy.
I just wanted to make the point that it takes more than hard work to be successful--but I agree that it is a prerequisite.
Wow staynumz you are very trusting of this administration. You should listen to Glenn Beck sometime, he asks a lot of good questions about the safety of taking a drug from this administration. I guess you are one of those liberal elites that can’t stand someone like GB asking questions though.Seriously, people are questioning the vaccine just because it was released under the Obama administration?! So what's wrong with it? What are are the side effects that are so prevalent that it's got people talking?
I also liked the Millionaire Next Door. Other good reading include: The Richest Man in Babylon, Think and Grow Rich. The Power of Positive Thinking. Tough Times Never Last but Tough People Do, and the book with the longest title I've ever seen: All You Can Do Is All You Can Do But All You Can Do Is Enough.
I believe individual prosperity is within the grasp of most individuals. It starts with a "can do" attitude. Its a mind-set that says 'no one can stop me.' It means stretching yourself. It means pushing yourself. It means outworking other people. It means doing more than your job requires. It means telling that little voice we all have in the back of our minds "SHUT UP - I'm not listening to you anymore." It means making a committment to yourself that failure is not an option. Your new "fight sone" is going to be that popular song a couple of years ago "I get knocked down, but I get up again, you're never going to keep me down." Stay away from negative people and small thinkers. Think big. "Big plans stur the souls of men." Always be positive. When someone asks "How's it going?"...smile and say "UNBELIEVABLE" !!! (that covers it both ways), and notice the reaction you get. Others will be positively affected by your new enthusiasm.
Some young people identify successful people and pattern themselves after the successful person. Dress for success, look the part, fake it till you make it. Night school, tech school, self study, digging, scratching, doing whatever it takes. No one can stop someone who is DETERMINED to succeed. As I've said in the past "who is it up to?"
Darn - I'M GOOD....I just might start Honest Abe's School of Success !!
If you want prosperity do this:
Teens
1. Graduate Highschool, participate in athletics and scholastic activities...enjoy the last few moments you have with being pampered by your parents.
20's
2. Attend College, Trade School, Apprenticeship or even get a job to build up expertise in a skillset that has a large potential for future profits
3. Save 25% of your earnings during this period
4. Do not get involved with credit card debt, buy with cash
5. Do not get involved with financing a new car, buy at an auction
30's
6. Take your skillsets learned during your 30's and apply them to an entreprenurial effort, c-level position....increase your earning power.
7. Start a family, buy your first home
8. Invest in rental income in areas where you will gain a profit
9. Continue to save 25% of your income
10. Continue to drive the car that you bought at the auction, or go pay cash for another.
40's onward
11. Save, Save, Save
12. Raise your kids
13. Grow your business, earning power and family.
14. If you have equity in your house, and/or see that housing is at the peak of its next bubble......sell, sell, sell.
Nomograph saysIt seems you will do whatever it takes to discredit, insult and bombard the Obama administration with your rhetoric. This is very similar to the rhetoric surrounding Bush when he was in office and I am wondering when will it cease?....its not productive.Khalid Sheikh Mohammed will be tried, convicted, and executed with near 100% certainty. New York City is the most appropriate place for justice to be served. It’s perfectly simple. Other than “Holder is a loser†or other AM talk radio arguments, why shouldn’t a trial and execution take place? New Yorkers don’t seem afraid of it, so why is the AM crowd so scared? The answer is simple: the Obama administration is finishing up more of Bush’s loose ends, and folks like staynumz are having a hard time with that. They want him to fail. Stay numb my friend, stay numb.Haha…more scared of AM rhetoric. So predictable. I wouldnt call him a loser, I would call him stupid. he obviously was not prepared for basic questions that might be asked. Graham: Where would you try bin laden if captured tomorrow. Holder: (stutter, stutter…..uhm, we would follow protocal. LOL Dummy, protocal is guantanamo. You are changing protocal. WHERE WILL YOU TRY HIM? Yeah, tough question.
Wrong. He is still classified as an enemy combatant. And if military tribunals are not a good option, why is owebama still having them as we speak? Why do you think the hairy guy should be tried here and not all enemy combatants that are picked up around the world?If someone is picked up on non-US soil, attacking our military specifically, then I don't have a major issue with them being tried in a tribunal, at least in regions where there is no stable local government. The US civil system has no authority over crimes committed outside of our borders. Even the conventions are somewhat vague on this, since these paramilitary organizations weren't much of an issue back then. It was either "you're a member of an enemy army" or "you're a criminal". For someone who is accused of attacking civilians, or civilian infrastructure, it's a civil matter. Very simple. Please give one argument for why KSM shouldn't be tried in a civilian court. Did he attack our military? Is he a member of the military of a country that we're at war with? It seems to me that he planned an attack on our civilian infrastructure. Do you think Timmy McVeigh should have gotten a military tribunal? How about Jeffrey Dahmer? Where do you even draw the line? Why are you so in favor of giving so much power to the military anyway? Isn't that the sort of big government crap you people are usually against (well, that and railing about the "unconstitutionality" of taxes or health care or something, ignoring things that are actually in the constitution like habeas corpus).
I really don't understand this assumption that tax rates have anything to do with prosperity. The world is full of countries with wildly varying tax rates, and there is little to no correlation with economic prosperity.
You'd pay about the same amount in taxes in Switzerland as you would in Bosnia (both much, much lower than the US).
Most of sub-saharan africa has little to no taxes (the government, or local warlods, just confiscates everything else)
Please cite some actual arguments for how lower (or higher) taxes would make much of a difference at all. History shows us that it does not.
If tax rates are too high, people simply don't pay them, and prices / wages tend to be offset to cover the difference anyway.
If tax rates are too low to cover expenses, governments just borrow (there are very few "prosperous" countries that don't have an enormous debt).
Factors that actually affect prosperity are:
1. Governmental stability. Bitch about our government all you want, but would you prefer a dictatorship or a bunch of warlords?
2. Infrastructure. You need good power grids, clean water, and adequate roads to support business development.
3. Security. If your country is constantly at war and being invaded, it's difficult to prosper (and this usually affects both 1 and 2).
Find a country that has all three of those things and you will find a prosperous nation. Find a country that is severely lacking in any of them and you'll find a country that is not that prosperous.
Actually, the original premise put forth by elvis is that we need a much smaller government, which in turn would require less taxes. I'm a little skeptical about his number that the government consumes 45% of GDP---if that corresponds to the $1.2T/year stat, then I'm surprised that our economy is so small.
But to elvis' point, if you take Kevin's #1-3 (stability, infrastructure, security), then our government has taken on a rather huge array of supplemental duties. I wouldn't mind if we got our federal government back towards defense, justice and basic Constitutional functions.
Actually, the original premise put forth by elvis is that we need a much smaller government, which in turn would require less taxes. I’m a little skeptical about his number that the government consumes 45% of GDP—if that corresponds to the $1.2T/year stat, then I’m surprised that our economy is so small.
But to elvis’ point, if you take Kevin’s #1-3 (stability, infrastructure, security), then our government has taken on a rather huge array of supplemental duties. I wouldn’t mind if we got our federal government back towards defense, justice and basic Constitutional functions.
I would love it!
I wouldn’t mind if we got our federal government back towards defense, justice and basic Constitutional functions.
and free Jameson shots for every one!!!!
Actually, the original premise put forth by elvis is that we need a much smaller government, which in turn would require less taxes. I’m a little skeptical about his number that the government consumes 45% of GDP—if that corresponds to the $1.2T/year stat, then I’m surprised that our economy is so small.
But to elvis’ point, if you take Kevin’s #1-3 (stability, infrastructure, security), then our government has taken on a rather huge array of supplemental duties. I wouldn’t mind if we got our federal government back towards defense, justice and basic Constitutional functions.
Having those three things is what puts you in the league of 'places where you would actually want to live if you had a choice'.
Once you get to that, though, it all becomes a matter of the kind of lifestyle you prefer living and what you want to prioritize.
I'd point out here that there really isn't that much of a quality of life difference based on the size of government or the tax base.
Really, take a look at countries that meet my three criteria for prosperity, and then look at the size of government. In all cases it's fairly large (on order of 10-15% of GDP -- about the same as the US despite that bullshit 45% figure that was tossed around previously). It's really just a matter of how we choose to spend it. Do you really think there's all that much of a difference amongst wealthy countries in terms of quality of life? Go visit sometime and you probably won't.
Personally, I'd be OK with the size of our government (in terms of overall spending) if we spent about a third as much on defense and about twice as much on education, and ultimately have a stable tax / spending structure that allows us to take on debt in times of crisis but pay it back during times of prosperity (taking on debt when the economy is strong makes no sense whatsoever).
I don't necessarily believe that we need the government to run health care, but I also don't think it matters much if we do. I do know that our current system is just plain broken, though, and any of the systems in use by other wealthy countries would be better for us.
I also think we should kill off antiquated subsidies for agriculture and businesses of the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Ultimately, I don't really mind if I pay higher taxes as long as it means better quality of life. Yes, I will gladly pay good money if it means good education for everyone, or better power grids, or cleaner water, or healthier air, or whatever. I'm not a big fan of paying $1m per soldier to fight an unwinnable war or to shell out cash to farmers in order to keep food prices artificially high.
@elvis--
McAfee won't even let me go to mwhodges site-it says to go there with extreme caution. He must be a real pillar of the economic community.... I'd take what he says with many grains of salt.
Kevin, I tend to agree with your point that quality of life is pretty similar in stable countries with good infrastructure and adequate resources. From this and the "young people" thread, I personally don't think the U.S. could collapse into anarchy. I think we're headed towards the same fate as Europe. The state is paying for more, but the price will be diminished social mobility (I've seen that firsthand in Germany), and much lower growth. By definition, the government is a consumer, not a producer.
That said, sometimes I wonder if we're on the Roman road of fighting endless wars, which can eventually bankrupt a country. Look how destabilizing Germany became when they were bankrupt far beyond their ability to support the debt.
It seems like kind of a simple choice to me. I’d take the ‘correction and healing’ choice over the ‘collapse’ choice any day. I choose Freedom and Liberty.
sounds like a false choice to me.
@Elvis-
Or it could be that the politicians know more than you and are actually making the correct choices as we speak. Judging from your earlier posts, I'm fairly certain that this is the case. The only thing you are right about is "too much war"....
You talk a lot about having a "sound currency". Any idea what effect that would have for companies who export? Or for companies considering building a new plant (in the states vs. overseas)? For jobs in the US? Think about it...
Plunging America into massive debt and crushing interest payments is not making wise choic es. Just wait till interest rates start going UP, what then - print more money? Maybe you haven't noticed America has painted herself into an economic corner.
Yes, going back to sound money would be painful, so is detox - but its the right thing to do. Continuing to building our financial house of cards higher and higher, knowing the house is built on unstable soil is downright stupid. Do you know why? (Hint: it's GOING to collapse). And the higher the house of cards is allowed to grow, the worse its going to be when it all falls down.
Tatupu70, are you a politician...or just ill informed about whats happening around you? By your comments I can't tell the difference.
@Elvis-
Or it could be that the politicians know more than you and are actually making the correct choices as we speak. Judging from your earlier posts, I’m fairly certain that this is the case.
Y
Are you kidding me? I can't think of a single thing the "politicians" have done right in the past 10 years. They certainly effed up the economy and haven't done a thing to solve the growing problem with deficit spending.
And these are the same private companies that will handle our health care under the dems. Confidence inspiring?Now I'm really laughing. You're blaming a private company's problems on Obama? You really need to watch it--the hypocrisy is becoming very obvious. Government intervention is bad, but letting private companies work is also bad. Hmmm.....
Not quite as insane as blaming boosh for katrina. And these are the same private companies that will handle our health care under the dems. Confidence inspiring?We don't blame Bush for Katrina; he is to blame for appointing an incompetent to head FEMA, ignore the problems that occurred as a result of the poor response, and for congratulating the people responsible for the poor response while people were hungry, homeless, in horrible squalor in the convention center, and barely surviving. He is to blame for using the incident as a PR ploy rather than responding with the the people and supplies necessary to help during a horrible time in our lives. Your train of thought, if there is one, is hard to follow and you make no real sense. You should continue to do everything you can to stay numb - but share with us what you use to do so; if only we could follow suit we might be able to translate your posts into something understandable.
I am blaming owebama for the way he handled the response to the swine flu vaccine.Nomograph says
Don’t you *ever* get tired of being wrong? Don’t you *ever* question what you hear on AM talk radio?I bow to thee, dear Nomo.
2nd class, right you are. Many posters don't understand deficit spending. Think of it as spending money you haven't earned yet. This is not a very good idea.
Posters could learn more by reading "Web of Debt", "Empire of Debt" or anything by Ron Paul. Happy Thanksgiving.
Are you kidding me? I can’t think of a single thing the “politicians†have done right in the past 10 years. They certainly effed up the economy and haven’t done a thing to solve the growing problem with deficit spending
No arguing that we had 8 years of one of the crappiest Presidents ever. So, I would agree that we had 8 years of bad decisions. But if you'll remember the 8 years before Bush, there was a balanced budget. So, it's not really that long ago...
Kevin, I completely disagree with your assertion that “There really isn’t that much of a quality of life difference based on the size of government or the tax base.
Try spending 5 minutes in another country. Have you ever even visited another wealthy country?
mwhodges.com is a link farm. I'd love to see how someone could claim that 45% of GDP is consumed by the government.
Kevin, how on earth can you say "I'd love to see how someone could claim 45% of the GDP is consumed by government?" Perhaps you didn't really read the information on mwhodges.com?
ITS SPELLED OUT IN PLAIN ENGLISH, COMPLETE WITH CHARTS, GRAPHS AND SOURCE'S OF DATA.
The data is from the Bureau of Economic Analysis and the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Go back and really READ it this time, its so obvious even a cave man would understand it.
Or it could be that the politicians know more than you and are actually making the correct choices as we speak. J
Tatu, you said "Or it could be that the politicians know more than you and are actually making the correct choices as we speak."
So you agree with increased deficit spending? Bailouts etc?
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