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Hard Times?

Started by Shakey, April 25, 2008, 08:33:01 AM

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Shakey

I just about Andy getting a new job, Pete has a job interview and some others have mentioned being down on their luck.

It sounds as though this looming recession in the United States I keep hearing about is already affecting some members here!  Is that true or are these difficult times the result of something else?

I've heard about the housing market woes in certain pockets of the United States - is this the cause of the grief I read about from other members?



 

Brock Samson

It's a domino effect,.. I'm sure floating loans to folks with out the means to repay has alot to do with it,..
but there are other factors like the rising costs accross the board, particularly fuel prices...
I also belive that NAFTA and the exponental growth of our trade imblance has to be a factor.
The chickens have come home to roost. This was foreseen ten years ago.

1st_charger

I think its affecting all lines of work! And I fell for everyone thats down and am happy for those that things are looking up for with the new jobs! I'm looking at possibly being unemployed this July. The company I work for is sending all of there products to Mexico and China to be made. If I make it past July I am almost guarantied another 6 months of employment! After being here for 7 years I'm trying to way my options, I've never been unemployed.


ITSA426

There is so much to say that this will be a long topic or locked up shortly. 

I worked in the airline industry for 15 years and left by choice.  Lowering our standards, as CEO's make bazillions hasn't helped.  There is a hoarding of wealth in America that hasn't been seen since the beginning of the last century.  It will lead to collapse of the middle class. 

I don't know anybody that hasn't had to make a drastic change to keep their lifestyle.  Easy credit isn't the answer and working harder for less to be globally competitive doesn't seem to work.  Lower taxes aren't the answer if the tax money is simply paying down interest in a huge debt or buying corporate interests.  Here in Minnesota we're using tax dollars to build a ballpark for one of the richest men in the state; and his family business gets the revenue it produces.  Meanwhile, we're fighting for money to rebuild the Interstate - 35 bridge that collapsed. 

This country needs to rebuild it's infrastructure.  Doing that creates jobs and requires technology improvements that will be used here. Building the interstate highway system created jobs.  So did the rail system.  Rebuilding them would do the same.  We can do the same with energy and other non-military technology.  We just have to thinking short term and lowest bidder. 

We've allowed a generation of bad leadership and shortsighted thinkiing to bring this country down.  We need to think about what is best long term for our children and grandchildren.

Sorry for the rant.  This is a topic that touches me as a working class American, a veteran, and my religious values as a Christian.   

moparstuart

national debt is way to high , devalued dollar   :Twocents:l
GO SELL CRAZY SOMEWHERE ELSE WE ARE ALL STOCKED UP HERE

andy74

the political climate,price of fuels,and alot of other things are causeing the down turn we are seeing now-i am a frm believer that we as a country will pull out of the downward spiral we are currnetly in,but how long until it happens no one can know.i am a victim of a greedy boss who sold everyone of his employees out with no warning or remorse,and he is still living in his big house on the river,with his boats,cars and possesions thinking nothing is wrong.the sad truth is that there is not much that can be done with out a huge change in the way things are done,from the factory worker to the ceo of a large company,the entitlement attitude of most people has to change to fix whats wrong-the good people should be able to rise to the top,and the lazy should not be rewarded because they have time on their side.

rant over,for now

Mike DC

 
In the big economic picture, the US middle & lower-middle classes have gradually been pressured about as far as they can stand during the last few decades.  The wages are staying pretty flat (and aren't low to begin with) but the costs of living just keep climbing faster.  It's very difficult to live a cheap existence here.

But this particular current situation has been building for about the last decade.




We've really been due for a recession since the dotcom implosion on Wall Street in about 2000.  Not to mention 9/11.  The govt tried to stave off a recession instead of letting it play out like it needed to, and now we're in for a much bigger problem than they were originally trying to prevent.

Around 9/11 to 2002, the US govt basically allowed/encouraged a housing "bubble" of speculation.  Some people over-borrowing, some people refinancing & taking the cash now, some people just buying speculative real estate. 




Some people borrowed against the (artificially) increasing equity of their houses or else they just refinanced the existing loans.  It seemed that the real estate prices here would only go upwards.  And there were also some predatory lending practices going on sometimes too, with some of the subprime ARM mortgages.   

(But to be fair, the housing & real estate speculation idea probably wasn't 100% total lunacy to begin with.  There's been massive recent construction and this is basically still an uncrowded nation compared to the rest of the 1st world.  Lots of real estate prices in the US still do seem pretty low in comparison to a similar given house or property in many other countries.  But recently the market just overshot things and got way ahead of itself.) 



Now the housing value "bubble" is imploding.  A whole lot of people are finding that without ever-decreasing real estate values (often their primary assets), they're way overextended.  It's having a ripple effect on the whole economy way beyond just those in direct real estate trouble.  It's just the hitting of a long, long overdue recession here.   

 

ITSA426

Some people were taxed on that artificial equity, and now local governments are looking to raise the mil rates to keep the same tax base (income) even as housing values go down.  Just one more log on the fire.

SFRT

on the neg side, I live in SF and we have the most expensive gas in the country. premium is like 4.59 in my area. 4.19 at the 'cheap place'
I do a lot of overseas manufacture and my manu cost and shipping has gone up about 12% in the last year.

and  my business sales have been flat for 2 quarters in the US,


BUT my export sales to europe and japan have nearly tripled, since the lower dollar makes my goods seem 'a bargain' so the low dollar/higher fuel bit is more than offset by increased foriegn sales so I am coming out ahead lately.

the housing deal has no effect on me since I dont have any money invested in real estate and both the properties I lease are rent controlled. My tactic while I live in SF is that I lease stuff for 1/8th the cost of a mortgage and invest that extra money in other ways. When I retire I will re-locate to the most inexpensive place I can find and cash out the investments to actually purchase a property in full then kick back debt free.
Always Drive Responsibly



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bull

Quote from: ITSA426 on April 25, 2008, 09:41:56 AM
Here in Minnesota we're using tax dollars to build a ballpark for one of the richest men in the state; and his family business gets the revenue it produces.  Meanwhile, we're fighting for money to rebuild the Interstate - 35 bridge that collapsed. 
 

Local governments do this to increase their long-term revenue. They don't care if the little guy gets screwed any more than executives do as long as they get the money they "need" to justify their own existence.

Mike DC

 
That's modern govt.

If the plague broke out tomorrow, they'd try to stop it with eminent-domain land grabs and building a new ballpark.


hutch

Dollar needs to be a little stronger I think before things get better for most of us.  I dont see a winner in this election coming up.  The democrats are running to of the biggest Marixists we have ever seen as a nation and the Republicans are running an old fool that plays politics more than solves problems for his people.
In the words of Colonel Sanders,,,   "I'm too drunk,,, to taste this chicken"

andy74

Quote from: hutch on April 25, 2008, 11:27:40 AM
Dollar needs to be a little stronger I think before things get better for most of us.  I dont see a winner in this election coming up.  The democrats are running to of the biggest Marixists we have ever seen as a nation and the Republicans are running an old fool that plays politics more than solves problems for his people.
not to turn this political,but who can you vote for?i for one hope for hillary,but only because i see her as the lesser of 3 evils,i think bill clinton was a fine president(cant keep it in his pants but thats his problem)and i hope his experience would rub off on her,and the other two dont seem to have any plans on how to fix the economy,not that ive heard a lot of her plans either-i just know that we need a big change at the top,and someone who will figure out a way to get the us economy rolling again,and i dont see the old bastard or the obama doing so,jsut my ONLY political comment for the year

TeeWJay426

Read this little tidbit from Lee Iacocca. Personally, I think this guy should be who we put in the Whitehouse, even if he's older than McCain. He says it like it is, and I couldn't agree more. Especially given the three losers we have to pick from now!

http://www.infowars.com/?p=1627
74 Charger SE, 400 HP, 4-speed

Chad L. Magee

I am looking for a job right now, but that is because I am graduating from MU this semester (finally, all I need is three more Professors' signatures on my D4 form to make it official), and hitting the job market at the worst time (my usual luck).  The industrial market is not doing good right now, alot of the drug companies are having hiring freezes until the economy gets back on its feet, but the oil and plastic companies are doing good.  At least the universities have teaching jobs that are more sheltered from the lowering economy, but most want post doc experience first (a catch 22 situation).  I have found some promising research jobs that I have applied for, but have no interviews from them yet (but it is early in the game now, for these jobs you sometimes have to wait six months before they contact you).  Hopefully, I will get a few good job offers soon......
Ph.D. Metallocene Chemist......

hutch

Quote from: andy74 on April 25, 2008, 11:50:08 AM
Quote from: hutch on April 25, 2008, 11:27:40 AM
Dollar needs to be a little stronger I think before things get better for most of us.  I dont see a winner in this election coming up.  The democrats are running to of the biggest Marixists we have ever seen as a nation and the Republicans are running an old fool that plays politics more than solves problems for his people.
not to turn this political,but who can you vote for?i for one hope for hillary,but only because i see her as the lesser of 3 evils,i think bill clinton was a fine president(cant keep it in his pants but thats his problem)and i hope his experience would rub off on her,and the other two dont seem to have any plans on how to fix the economy,not that ive heard a lot of her plans either-i just know that we need a big change at the top,and someone who will figure out a way to get the us economy rolling again,and i dont see the old bastard or the obama doing so,jsut my ONLY political comment for the year

I just dont like how Hillary will get busted in a lie and then get out of it like it was nothing.  I think she just says what people want to hear so they will vote for her.   They are all doing that.  McCain,Obamma are just talking happy talk and have no real plan to fix things.

I think we are short on leadership all around right now in America.  I would like to see someone come into power and return us to the constitution and get away from all this class warfare business along with this war on drugs, war on poverty, war on terror. 

War on poverty has gone on for over 50 years now and we still have poor people.  War on drugs is over 25 years old and we have more drugs now than ever.

War on terror is just a way to get us all under the thumb of the federal government.  We have had so many rights stripped away because of this mess.   I can take care of my own family, I dont need the government telling me what I can or cant do in the event of something going wrong.

:Twocents:
In the words of Colonel Sanders,,,   "I'm too drunk,,, to taste this chicken"

chargerboy69

Quote from: hutch on April 25, 2008, 11:27:40 AM
Dollar needs to be a little stronger I think before things get better for most of us.  I dont see a winner in this election coming up.  The democrats are running to of the biggest Marixists we have ever seen as a nation and the Republicans are running an old fool that plays politics more than solves problems for his people.


I could not agree more.

As for the original question there are several factors playing into what we are going through. Government overspending, declining dollar, people overextending themselves on credit, oil prices, rising food cost and housing market, just because you get approved for that $300,000 house, doesn't mean you should buy it.

Indiana Army National Guard 1st Battalion, 293rd Infantry. Nightfighters. Fort Wayne Indiana.


A government big enough to give you everything you need, is a government big enough to take away everything that you have.
--Gerald Ford


                                       

The70RT

Quote from: andy74 on April 25, 2008, 11:50:08 AM
Quote from: hutch on April 25, 2008, 11:27:40 AM
Dollar needs to be a little stronger I think before things get better for most of us.  I dont see a winner in this election coming up.  The democrats are running to of the biggest Marixists we have ever seen as a nation and the Republicans are running an old fool that plays politics more than solves problems for his people.
not to turn this political,but who can you vote for?i for one hope for hillary,but only because i see her as the lesser of 3 evils,i think bill clinton was a fine president(cant keep it in his pants but thats his problem)and i hope his experience would rub off on her,and the other two dont seem to have any plans on how to fix the economy,not that ive heard a lot of her plans either-i just know that we need a big change at the top,and someone who will figure out a way to get the us economy rolling again,and i dont see the old bastard or the obama doing so,jsut my ONLY political comment for the year

I agree.... but if Hillary gets in no matter what happens they will blame her for what ever George did. I say put in the old bastard and let him TRY to clean up George's shit which will take 20 years if even at all....Im done!
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andy74

if Lee Iaccocca ran id vote for him,no matter how old he is,now there is a guy who can be a leader,and doesnt bow down to anyone,what is really what we as a country need

Brock Samson

 I don't think a president can solve this mess,..
sure we can think globaly but we must act localy..

I'm concidering all options, maybe even moving to Vancouver Island.. I thought I've had for several years now..
Hey Bronzy, can i sleep on your mom's couch?..  :shruggy:

hutch

Quote from: andy74 on April 25, 2008, 12:17:41 PM
if Lee Iaccocca ran id vote for him,no matter how old he is,now there is a guy who can be a leader,and doesnt bow down to anyone,what is really what we as a country need

He just wrote a book about how we are short on leadership that is a good read from what I have heard.  Not to be a dodge freak, but I think he was the old school type of leadership we need right now. 

I think lots of good people dont get into politics because its such a mess and they dont want to drag their familes into this mess and have everyones life put under a microscope or dragged into the mud.

we all have a past and no too long ago we did not care about what was in a persons past.   Now a persons past is their future in politics.

In the words of Colonel Sanders,,,   "I'm too drunk,,, to taste this chicken"

Mike DC

I agree.  A person's past has become too relevant to getting elected.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


QuoteDollar needs to be a little stronger I think before things get better for most of us.

That's the problem and the point.  Unfortunately we're never gonna get that stronger dollar IMO. 


It's not like this inflation is some kind of Act of God that's out of anyone's control.  The Fed-Res could reduce the money supply and kill this inflation dead in its tracks any time they felt like it.  But this inflation has been going on for years.  They've been doing as much as can be done while staying below the threshold where it draws attention.

The US is too far in debt to both its citizens in the future and to other countries.  Inflating a currency effectively reduces all debts that are measured by specific numbers of that currency.

 

Brock Samson


RECHRGD



I'm concidering all options, maybe even moving to Vancouver Island.. I thought I've had for several years now..
Hey Bronzy, can i sleep on your mom's couch?.. :shruggy:
Quote

Concidering??????  Sorry Brock, couldn't resist. :cheers:
13.53 @ 105.32

Brock Samson

well,.. at least i no the difference between to and too and their, there and they're....  :D

JimShine

The government holds some of the responsibility, but so do we, the citizens. The country in general needs a reality check. Most of us have been living far beyond our means and not stashing money away to provide security during times like this. Instead people are over extending themselves buying stuff they don't need. I understand we are free to make choices, but it appears that much of our society has been making very poor choices. I can point out more blue collar guys with a recreational vehicle, boat, collector car, multiple cell phones, home theater, etc. than guys that have real college funds and decent health plans for their kids. But then again, look at our example, the government. They are no better with handling money.

Brock Samson

very well said Jim...
there's these plastic cards arriving in the mail every few Mos...  :shruggy:


here's one of my favorite quotes...

From his autobiography, Wanderer:

To be truly challenging, a voyage, like a life, must rest on a firm foundation of financial unrest. Otherwise, you are doomed to a routine traverse, the kind known to yachtsmen who play with their boats at sea... cruising, it is called. Voyaging belongs to seamen, and to the wanderers of the world who cannot, or will not, fit in. If you are contemplating a voyage and you have the means, abandon the venture until your fortunes change. Only then will you know what the sea is all about. I've always wanted to sail to the south seas, but I can't afford it." What these men can't afford is not to go. They are enmeshed in the cancerous discipline of security. And in the worship of security we fling our lives beneath the wheels of routine - and before we know it our lives are gone. What does a man need - really need? A few pounds of food each day, heat and shelter, six feet to lie down in - and some form of working activity that will yield a sense of accomplishment. That's all - in the material sense, and we know it. But we are brainwashed by our economic system until we end up in a tomb beneath a pyramid of time payments, mortgages, preposterous gadgetry, playthings that divert our attention for the sheer idiocy of the charade. The years thunder by, The dreams of youth grow dim where they lie caked in dust on the shelves of patience. Before we know it, the tomb is sealed. Where, then, lies the answer? In choice. Which shall it be: bankruptcy of purse or bankruptcy of life?

Sterling Hayden (March 26, 1916 – May 23, 1986) was an American actor and author.

Mike DC

QuoteI can point out more blue collar guys with a recreational vehicle, boat, collector car, multiple cell phones, home theater, etc. than guys that have real college funds and decent health plans for their kids.

I totally agree with you here, up to a point.  But I also think too much gets made of this issue some cases.




A home theater can be built for a one-time cost of a few thousand bucks.  Same for an ATV. 
Cell phones are measured in hundreds of dollars. 
Collector cars?  Boats?  Maybe $5-25K for those things in a lot of cases? 


On the other hand, a decent college education can easily cost $20K in total.  Per kid.  Per year.  For just a state school.
Say they've got 3 kids, going for 4-5 years apiece (forcibly happens often with modern college class structures) . . . we're up around $250-300 grand so far, and we're still in state schools.  Denying yourself that extra $2000 home theater or even the $12,000 Trans Am isn't gonna make up much of that difference.



Your point is valid but I think people can overstate it sometimes. 

Especially with the electronic gizmos.  People always think of electronic stuff as "expensive" even though a new Nintendo system can cost less than a lot of kids' average mountain bikes.  On the adult-money scale they're usually not really that much.

My mother used to give me crap as a teenager about buying video games, as if her generation was much to frugal for "extravagances" like that.  But in raw dollars, the occasional video games I bought probably didn't add up to as much money as just what I spent school backpacks & supplies per semester.


JimShine

Even when I was college age, I don't think any of my freinds had college taken care of 100%, and I don't think it should be. But you should be prepared to contribute to it. The savings account also provides a handy nest egg during economic times like this. This is why it is the responsible thing to maintain such an account. People that overextend themselves naturally do not have the resources to make this happen, and much of middle class America is overextended. There is no justification for buying what you can't afford, be it a $10K car or a $20 video game.

Chad L. Magee

Quote from: Mike DC (formerly miked) on April 25, 2008, 08:58:22 PM
QuoteI can point out more blue collar guys with a recreational vehicle, boat, collector car, multiple cell phones, home theater, etc. than guys that have real college funds and decent health plans for their kids.

I totally agree with you here, up to a point.  But I also think too much gets made of this issue some cases.




A home theater can be built for a one-time cost of a few thousand bucks.  Same for an ATV. 
Cell phones are measured in hundreds of dollars. 
Collector cars?  Boats?  Maybe $5-25K for those things in a lot of cases? 


On the other hand, a decent college education can easily cost $20K in total.  Per kid.  Per year.  For just a state school.
Say they've got 3 kids, going for 4-5 years apiece (forcibly happens often with modern college class structures) . . . we're up around $250-300 grand so far, and we're still in state schools.  Denying yourself that extra $2000 home theater or even the $12,000 Trans Am isn't gonna make up much of that difference.



Your point is valid but I think people can overstate it sometimes. 

Especially with the electronic gizmos.  People always think of electronic stuff as "expensive" even though a new Nintendo system can cost less than a lot of kids' average mountain bikes.  On the adult-money scale they're usually not really that much.

My mother used to give me crap as a teenager about buying video games, as if her generation was much to frugal for "extravagances" like that.  But in raw dollars, the occasional video games I bought probably didn't add up to as much money as just what I spent school backpacks & supplies per semester.



MU for example is now the most expensive per tution hour of the Big 12 colleges and still rising with no end in site (there was an article in the local paper on this topic a few weeks ago).  Plan on averaging around $10,000 per year just for that part.  Now figure in that most students can no longer graduate in four years due to added requirements and such, so it usually is closer to five years, some even six.  So, now you are looking at $50,000+ for just the tution till graduation.  Then, you have to take in account books, gas for travel, housing, food, and more, each increasing the total cost.  Sure, you could say that students can get a job to pay for all of it, but it is a bit difficult getting a good job here, since there is a large supply of undergraduates thinking the same thing, while a lot of resteraunts are closing down.  That means a job with a minimum wage is pretty close to what you get, if you can get one.  The problem there is that leads into a lot less study time for exams, projects, lab reports, all of which subtracts the amount of hours that a student can balance in a week (thus, the lengthing of time needed to graduate).  I think that the total costs here are closer to $100,000-125,000+ for an average undergraduate from start to finish.  Once you get into graduate school, some departments will help fund the tution as part of your stipend, if you become a TA or RA, but only for a period of time..... 
Ph.D. Metallocene Chemist......

68charger383

Things don't appear to be looking better down the road for the rest of this year. The fed will more than liley cut the interest rate again twice which will further weaken the dollar and increase the thing no one is talking about.....Inflation!
1968 Charger 383(Sold)
2003 Dodge Viper SRT-10

TK73

Quote from: Mike DC (formerly miked) on April 25, 2008, 11:23:25 AM
 
That's modern govt.

If the plague broke out tomorrow, they'd try to stop it with eminent-domain land grabs and building a new ballpark.



Now THAT was funny!!   :smilielol: :smilielol:

  -  current government worker
1973 Charger : 440cid - 727 - 8.75/3.55


Now watch what you say or they'll be calling you a radical,
      a liberal, oh fanatical, criminal.
Won't you sign up your name, we'd like to feel you're
      acceptable, respectable, oh presentable, a vegetable!

PocketThunder

Quote from: 68charger383 on April 25, 2008, 11:12:07 PM
Things don't appear to be looking better down the road for the rest of this year. The fed will more than liley cut the interest rate again twice which will further weaken the dollar and increase the thing no one is talking about.....Inflation!

Amen brother.  :eek2:
"Liberalism is a disease that attacks one's ability to understand logic. Extreme manifestations include the willingness to continue down a path of self destruction, based solely on a delusional belief in a failed ideology."

bull

Quote from: JimShine on April 25, 2008, 07:56:55 PM
The government holds some of the responsibility, but so do we, the citizens. The country in general needs a reality check. Most of us have been living far beyond our means and not stashing money away to provide security during times like this. Instead people are over extending themselves buying stuff they don't need. I understand we are free to make choices, but it appears that much of our society has been making very poor choices. I can point out more blue collar guys with a recreational vehicle, boat, collector car, multiple cell phones, home theater, etc. than guys that have real college funds and decent health plans for their kids. But then again, look at our example, the government. They are no better with handling money.

:iagree: Exactly. People can blame Bush or Clinton or NAFTA (I like to blame it all on the existence of clowns and mimes) but the fact is individuals have put themselves into tight spots they can't get out of by overleveraging themselves financially through debt. Think about how many people you know who not only have a home mortgage and one or two car payments but also a second mortgage, $20k in credit card debt, a cell phone bill, a cable bill, a gym membership, a Netflix membership, child care, private school, college loans, etc. Add that to the rising cost of everyday items like groceries, gas, car repairs, insurance, electricity, yadda yadda yadda. You get my drift. So many people have put themselves so close to the edge of bankruptcy that one little nudge (such as a layoff, blown transmission or medical emergency) sends them over the edge. Your grandma used to tell you to save your money for what you want, be patient and buy it with cash. Have some money set aside for emergencies so when the washing machine goes belly up you can deal with it and still buy food next month. It's common sense but apparently the crazy concept of staying out of debt has gone out the window over the past 20 years or so.

Mike DC

   
I agree that the credit card debt situation is absolutely insane.  I don't know where people get off thinking that spending money with a credit card is somehow different from real money in cash.  But it certainly does seem to be the case.


------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


The social situation is part of it though.  Right now there is no stigma to being in debt, but TOTAL stigma to looking like a bum. 

I have several friends from wealthier circles than I'm from myself.  When I rub elbows with some of their peers, I've noticed that people admitting to being $60,000 or something in student debt is NO real social embarrassment at all.  Yet while I personally have no debt, I can get snubbed or treated better by the same people (especially the women) depending on how well I'm dressed & what I'm talking about. 

One specific time last fall, I got a real kick out of being snubbed by some chick when I was at a little get-together after having come right out of my garage wearing jeans & a raggedy T-shirt.  She didn't realize what I knew about certain people   -- I was worth a lot more than the well-dressed guy she was goign after.  (And I'm not even worth very much.) 


NHCharger

As a former builder don't get me started on the housing market. I saw the housing market slowing down THREE YEARS AGO when I built my last spec house. After that I just did additions/renovations. I survived the last recession of 91-94(barely). Many other builders in their late twenties/early thirties kept on building specs, I know some that were sitting on three houses last winter.These guys have never experienced a recession, during the last one they were still living at home with Mommy and Daddy and the only thing they had to worry about was who was going to buy them alcohol on Friday night and were they going to get laid on the weekend.

Another thing that chaps my ass is from the 50's to the 70's the housing market generally appreciated at 4-6% a year (there were a few ups and downs). From 2000 to 2005 housing around here appreciated at 15-35% a year. Spec houses I built in 1998 more than doubled in value in four years. Some of my customers  took out home equity loans and bought stupid stuff, like paying for a trip to Disneyland or buying a recreational vehicle. Things that added no value to their home. People that have no control over their spending habits are the first to cry they need help or claim they were duped and demand help from the government. If they didn't understand the loan agreement they were signing they shouldn't be buying a house, and people that sign up for interest only loans should not be allowed to procreate.

The economy is cyclical in nature. You can't alway have good times, and you have to be prepared and plan ahead to ride out the bad times. If you bought a house before 2002 and haven't taken out a huge equity loan you should be all set. My house has probably dropped 75k in value over the last two years. I don't care since I have no mortgage or any type of loan and plan on living here the rest of my life.

72 Charger- Base Model
68 Charger-R/T Clone
69 Charger Daytona clone
79 Lil Red Express - future money pit
88 Ramcharger 4x4- current money pit
55 Dodge Royal 2 door - wife's money pit
2014 RAM 2500HD Diesel

Mike DC

 
It's no different than with '71 HemiCudas. 

A situation emerges where everyone is buying it because everyone knows that everyone else will pay more for it later.  But like any true pyramid scheme, there's not enough "everyones" to continue that train of value increase forever.  Sooner or later the music stops.  Eventually somebody gets left holding something they paid a lot more for than they can sell it for now. 


TK73

Quote from: Mike DC (formerly miked) on April 26, 2008, 11:02:44 AM
   
I agree that the credit card debt situation is absolutely insane.  I don't know where people get off thinking that spending money with a credit card


Sanctioned at the highest levels of government.



http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/
1973 Charger : 440cid - 727 - 8.75/3.55


Now watch what you say or they'll be calling you a radical,
      a liberal, oh fanatical, criminal.
Won't you sign up your name, we'd like to feel you're
      acceptable, respectable, oh presentable, a vegetable!

bull

We just to learn to share more and help each other out. Carpooling, having friends over for dinner, etc. And if your buddy needs a little help playing his guitar, stop and lend a hand...

http://youtube.com/watch?v=i4BYMvVvMg0&feature=related

mikepmcs

Quote from: JimShine on April 25, 2008, 07:56:55 PM
The government holds some of the responsibility, but so do we, the citizens. The country in general needs a reality check. Most of us have been living far beyond our means and not stashing money away to provide security during times like this. Instead people are over extending themselves buying stuff they don't need. I understand we are free to make choices, but it appears that much of our society has been making very poor choices. I can point out more blue collar guys with a recreational vehicle, boat, collector car, multiple cell phones, home theater, etc. than guys that have real college funds and decent health plans for their kids. But then again, look at our example, the government. They are no better with handling money.

Jim described me perfectly on this quote.  I retired last year(june 07) from the Navy and still have yet to find a job that will pay the bills. His quote above is how I have lived my life and i'm paying for it dearly right now. I've lived off my savings for the entire time(actually lived off the artificial equity in my home as Mike DC so aptly put it in another quote)
My only justification for all this was the Navy was paying the bills, I have no family or kids and I was only responsible for myself.  Well, I decided to retire at 20 instead of doing 2 more years like I had planned(to try to make up for all those impulsive financial decisions) just because I wanted to stay in Maine and they only gave me Jax, FL or Whidbey, Wa  as choices.  Should have left for the 2 years and then came back but what's done is done.  Now I find myself in a lot of catch 22 situations.  The Veteran's Administration has given me a disability rating and I qualify for Voc rehab easily, but they will not give me the school I want due to my disability that they allowed me.  They will take care of you whether you want them to or not.(please don't be offended RD, I still appreciate the VA)  I also applied for a job at that same VA but guess what my disabilities did for me on that one. DOH!
The VA has suggested that I look in to the self employment realm but like everything else, it will take some time.  This state is not known for businesses staying in business too long, so that scares the crap out of me as well. 
I refuse to get a job that pays $10 bucks(or lower in most cases) an hour(i know poor choice when you are struggling).  I have my reasons for this and it has something to do with my lack of desire/inability to be around a lot of people.(loner/recluse)  I can function normally in this atmosphere as I did in the Navy but I choose not to if possible.
So I'm looking for a job that I will not have to jump from when another comes up or another.......
So to make a long story even longer, I'm flat broke and needing some winning lotto numbers quick. ::)
This topic started by Mike is entitled Hard times so that is what I wrote about rather than offering what little I know about the economy.  I've done research on my own and see some valid points made in the above replies.
But to think the next four years is going to get solved by this election would be lunacy on my part, no matter who gets elected.  I was in the military so it's easy to see where I lean but if the other gets elected, it's just going to be a lot of artificial growth, strength, money, BS..... again. Everyone will rally around for a while, stock market will surge, housing will go up, all on a speculation and a hope that it's going to get better soon.  This "recession" or what have you will all happen again cause we are cyclic just like everything else.
The troops will get yanked out like last time and the military downsized yet again and 9/11 will happen all over again eventually cause we didn't finish the job.  7 years have passed since then and I still haven't forgotten. Glance back in recent history and you'll find there is some truth in this statement.

Oh yeah, and to top it off, I wrecked my Charger last week, please check the parts wanted list cause I'll be looking for some stuff.  I'll be buying the fenders from AMD on, you guessed it, PLASTIC but hey I never said I wouldn't continue living my life like an idiot :icon_smile_big:
Anyone want to buy a 55 Chevy?

v/r
Mike
Life isn't Father Knows Best anymore, it's a kick in the face on a saturday night with a steel toed grip kodiak work boot and a trip to the hospital all bloodied and bashed.....for reconstructive surgery. But, what doesn't kill us, makes us stronger, right?

hutch

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-1656880303867390173

pretty cool movie if you got the time to watch it.  It goes over the creation of the federal "personal" income tax and the federal reserve.

:Twocents:
In the words of Colonel Sanders,,,   "I'm too drunk,,, to taste this chicken"

Shakey


Mike, I've thought about you a few times over the past few months - wondering where and how you've been.  Sorry to hear that you have fallen on some tough times.

An idea - you mention you were in the Navy - certainly during that time you have become familiar with some of the equipment that was used by you, or the Navy in general (ships, machinery, weapons, tools etc.)  Can you find out who the manufacturers are of this equipment and perhaps approach the company and try to land a position within the company, maybe training your fellow soldiers on how to use/operate/maintain said equipment?

I mention this because with all the activity in Iraq right now, military suppliers are booming!

I hope things turn around for you and the others affected by the economic situation.

chargerboy69

Mike,

Are you not getting anything from the Navy as far as pention yet? I was not sure if you had to wait until you turn 55.

My plan is to retire from a full time position in the Guard at 55 at a rank of E-7  or higher. And I know I can comfortably live off those government checks. As long as I can pass my yearly PT test.  :eek2:

Hope things turn around for you soon.

Tim
Indiana Army National Guard 1st Battalion, 293rd Infantry. Nightfighters. Fort Wayne Indiana.


A government big enough to give you everything you need, is a government big enough to take away everything that you have.
--Gerald Ford


                                       

mikepmcs

Mike,
Thanks for your sentiment.  Yes, I have thought about what you have suggested and if I were to be able to get out from under this house and move back to the Northern Va/DC area, I would be in much better shape to pursue exactly as you have suggested.  I do keep a look out at the local Army Station here for jobs in my area and I still look for openings at the Veteran's Administration.  The nearest Navy related installation is/are Bath and Brunswick(both 50+ miles away).  I know Brunswick wouldn't be a secure job as it is on the chopping block and there isn't much down there anyway.  Bath Iron(navy ship building) is a little further down the line but I know a few people that work there and it seems they are always in some state of flux.
The loom of non steady employment plus the 100+ miles a day scares me.  I live in a bad area for applying what I've learned during my service and trying to continue said experience in my civilian work. It just isn't around here. 
I do, as always, appreciate the suggestion. 

Now, how about another "where am I" game/picture from the master. :cheers:

Tim
Thanks
Yes, I get a retirement check every month from the Navy because I was on active duty.  It is not enough to pay all the bills though so I must seek out another career.  I retired as a CPO(e-7)
Stay in as long as they will have you! :cheers:

I'm sure everything will work out.
v/r
Mike
Life isn't Father Knows Best anymore, it's a kick in the face on a saturday night with a steel toed grip kodiak work boot and a trip to the hospital all bloodied and bashed.....for reconstructive surgery. But, what doesn't kill us, makes us stronger, right?