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12 votes
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Hooters | Bankrupt
31 votes -
Book reviews: The Land Trap and Land Power
2 votes -
Idle complaints of indebtedness and isolation
Comment box Scope: information, explanation of psychological state Tone: neutral, bummed, defeated Opinion: yes Sarcasm/humor: none Hello. I usually talk about trains, except today, I just want to...
Comment box
- Scope: information, explanation of psychological state
- Tone: neutral, bummed, defeated
- Opinion: yes
- Sarcasm/humor: none
Hello. I usually talk about trains, except today, I just want to vent on my finances and my wishes for a less expensive world.
I have found myself in financial straits,as I had amassed debt last year, lost work for months and amassed more debt. It’s in the low tens of thousands. of course I also lost my healthcare because I live in a rich country run by morally destitute anti-intellectuals.
On paper, I will pay off the debt in 18-24 months, if god allows. I have work now.
This city’s transit system has been hobbled in bad faith and will be destroyed come January….Fares have already risen, service cut. My train to work will be cut because the state refuses to provide services for its most productive citizens. It is twice as long by bus, suicide by bicycle on roads built for tanks, so I will have to sacrifice time or life.
It seems the price of electricity has increased. I would generate my own, but it is impractical.
Sadly my possessions are breaking too. This is the way of things, it’s just miserable timing, and each discovery of a failing mechanism or dilapidated object piles onto the defeat. The window frame has rotted and the glass fallen -- the house is frozen. Not a single plant survives. (The landlord will fix it, but not hurriedly…..) Bulbs burnt out, rooms dark. My bicycle needs new brakes, a new chain, my helmet has been destroyed and should be replaced, but for now I have been riding without. The computer has broken after 14 years, admittedly about time…. An expensive thing to replace, so now I only have my phone, whose battery has degraded quite a lot and will not be usable for too much longer, and a small laptop on death’s door too. I had worn my single pair of walking shoes for 5 years until, yesterday, the sole fell off. (Thankfully, I have one more, but it is formal and uncomfortable) A new pair is more costly than I remember… I know a cheap one will disintegrate in a season and do nothing for the snow, and a quality one is beyond financial prudence. My jacket is worn and torn by years and embers, beyond my ability to sew, and I must darn and darn and darn all the socks and gloves with holes, which I hate to do, and i am not good at. The denim jeans are ripped, in a place difficult to patch, and the pockets torn. I cannot bear the cold the same anymore, so I also need an overcoat, which I cannot afford. The fitted sheets are inexplicably torn by some punitive act of god, probably irreparably. The pillows are compressed, worthless, and causing me pain. Even the tent, which I might use to regain some sanity in the woods, has had its elastic poles dried solid and is basically unusable. At least I have a few books.
My lifestyle is structurally cheap. Affordable city, relatively low rent, multiple housemates, no car, only occasional commute, no dog, no wife, no children. Not too much to pay for. I eat simply. I am content with it.
Yet somehow I find myself with hundreds of dollars of credit card purchases this month, more than an entire paycheck, and last was also more. Qualifying for a healthcare plan has reduced my medical costs, but the difference is withheld, and I’m realizing that often it costs more than it would cost out of pocket, so at best it makes no difference. The dental and vision are exorbitant, so I just hope I don’t get a cavity.
I suspect I need glasses, or will soon. I can tell my eyesight is beginning to worsen. But it’ll have to wait a couple years.
The fear of a worse medical emergency persists. The deductible is rather high for a plan that offers no HSA and the co-pay is unremarkable, the coverage limited. Perhaps the least useful healthcare plan I’ve ever had.
I do not gamble. I like to drink beer but have abstained recently. My hobbies are inspecting train and street infrastructure, studying the Holy Bible, moralizing on the internet and persuading the government to institute a better society. I lapse sometimes and make impulsive purchases, but not frequently. I have not even gone to see a game in two years.
It’s a great pain to review your statements and recognize that almost none of the purchases were wasteful, only a few technically unnecessary. There were just too many overall.
What upsets me most is the social distance I have gained from my condition of functional poverty. the agony of refusing visits, trips, games, concerts, shows, dinners, coffees, drinks grinds on me daily. Yes it is still nice to say hello, it is just not the same. The pity, or disgust, the symbolic offers of charity received. Mostly the confusion—the awkwardness, the unsolicited advice (which I don’t normally mind, but it gets old). I prefer to socialize with bourgeois progressives, academics and professionals who care about engineering and mathematics and government policy and theory. It’s what I care about. I do not really resent them, but everything they do costs more money than I possess, so it is difficult to see friends and I cannot hope to keep up with colleagues after work.
I don’t object to work but I resent the fact that I must pay for my own healthcare. I also resent that my government neglects my transportation and my safety. I resent the pollution of the air, the NIMBYism driving up rents and leaving the addicted even more hopeless. I acknowledge the mistakes I’ve made that have led me here. I can’t undo the past, but Congress could socialize all medicine in the next budget if it wanted to…. repeatedly chooses not to.
That’s all. I just wanted to complain. You can give me advice if you want. I’m relatively financially literate, just poor and human.
51 votes -
In the early 1990s, Sweden faced one of the worst economic crises in its modern history – the lessons for other countries, especially France, deep in its own budget crisis, are simple, if not easy
21 votes -
Financial collapse?
I'm extremely bearish on the US dollar and stock market and am wondering what other people think about how to prepare financially for the medium term future. I don't there's any other way you can...
I'm extremely bearish on the US dollar and stock market and am wondering what other people think about how to prepare financially for the medium term future. I don't there's any other way you can cut it: there's a debt crisis and, worse yet, I don't think the US will be able to convince bond buyers that they're serious enough about the issue to avoid a debt spiral. The fact that gold has cracked 4000 (almost 4200 now, with BofA setting a 5000 target) seems to suggest that central banks are similarly pessimistic about a financial collapse. What do y'all think about where things are likely headed?
40 votes -
The crisis of the US university started long before Donald Trump
32 votes -
How does tiny Denmark defy the odds to become one of the richest nations?
7 votes -
EU needs single regulatory framework and to break down fragmentation across its business, tax, debt issuance and securities law systems, according to Norway's sovereign wealth fund
15 votes -
Norway's party buses for school-leavers have become a trend that worries schools and parents alike
14 votes -
Hudson's Bay Company | Bankrupt
18 votes -
Klarna’s losses widen after more consumers fail to repay loans
38 votes -
OpenAI is a systemic risk to the tech industry
35 votes -
Party City | Bankrupt
14 votes -
American parents are stealing their children’s identities to access debt
27 votes -
Swedish battery cell maker Northvolt, which produces cells for electric vehicles, has announced that it has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the US
6 votes -
Chinese solar panel boom threatens Pakistan’s debt-ridden grid
9 votes -
US office Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities delinquency rate spikes to 9.4%, highest since worst months after the financial crisis
20 votes -
99 Cents Only Stores | Bankrupt
3 votes -
Danish firm DSV secures deal to buy Schenker, the logistics arm of German state railway Deutsche Bahn – will become world's largest logistics company
5 votes -
Redbox | Bankrupt
4 votes -
US appeals court blocks all of Joe Biden's SAVE student debt relief plan
45 votes -
Red Lobster | Bankrupt
21 votes -
How CoComelon captures our children’s attention
15 votes -
Alex Jones files for chapter 7 bankruptcy liquidation amid Sandy Hook debt
63 votes -
Eastern Air Lines | Bankrupt
4 votes -
Mennonites are pious Christians who eschew much of the modern world. But in Mexico even they have not escaped the pull of the drug cartels.
24 votes -
Finnish unions have called for industrial action to protest government proposals on labour law reforms which they say would adversely impact low-wage earners
10 votes -
New US bank-overdraft fee limits to go into effect
41 votes -
Six Flags | Bankrupt
12 votes -
Kettle of vultures
3 votes -
Patients don’t know how to navigate the US health system — and it’s costing them
50 votes -
The unexpected climate policy that could tackle both US national debt and China: Carbon pricing has the potential to become a bipartisan policy
26 votes -
I didn’t go to my dream school. Now I’m living debt-free.
22 votes -
How US car culture funnels drivers into debt, jail, and danger
19 votes -
Investors can't get enough US debt as Treasury bills are bought at a record pace
16 votes -
Buy now, pay later firm Klarna reports first month of profit in three years, as calls grow for sector to be regulated
6 votes -
US Education Department readies latest tranche of student debt relief but faces new legal challenges to the program
18 votes -
Credit card debt collection
38 votes -
Fitch downgrades US credit rating from AAA to AA+
65 votes -
Drexel and alumni increased the importance of private credit
3 votes -
US Supreme Court strikes down President Biden's student loan forgiveness: Now what?
117 votes -
Aid is the next battleground between China and the West
8 votes -
A $48 billion debt is crushing the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Paying it off could disrupt the future of New York City transit.
28 votes -
US President Joe Biden can probably forgive student debt even if Supreme Court of the United States rules against him
28 votes -
This nonprofit health system cuts off US patients with medical debt
14 votes -
Thoughts on brinkmanship with the US national debt?
Putting aside specific criticisms of the GOP as it exists today, what do you think of using the debt ceiling as a tool to reel in spending and put the US on a sustainable path with its national...
Putting aside specific criticisms of the GOP as it exists today, what do you think of using the debt ceiling as a tool to reel in spending and put the US on a sustainable path with its national debt? People make it out to seem backwards and manipulative, but this whole situation seems like we're driving a hundred miles an hour toward a cliff and the person saying we should slam the breaks is getting flack because it'll damage the car.
14 votes -
The high-wire drama of raising the US debt ceiling is making headlines again. Is there a better way? Perhaps Denmark has the answer.
5 votes -
Why the South has such low credit scores
9 votes -
The Biden-Harris administration's US student debt relief plan
35 votes