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40 votes
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China’s lab-grown diamonds emerge as unlikely winner in AI boom
10 votes -
Sweden has halved its borrowing since facing financial meltdown in the 1990s, without raising taxes – and what Britain can learn from this experience
17 votes -
Why a 31-year-old software engineer wants to build a new neighborhood in wine country
8 votes -
How the Squamish struck gold in Vancouver
13 votes -
Interview with Eric Ries discussing his book about corporate governance
6 votes -
Who’s buying SpaceX and Anthropic?
Both are filing for IPOs. Are y'all buying at launch? I think I will.
31 votes -
Nasdaq rewrites its index inclusion rules ahead of SpaceX IPO
35 votes -
The rise of build-to-rent housing
16 votes -
Tokyo land is still >$85 million an acre
8 votes -
How has inflation changed your quality of life?
About every six weeks, I go on a "stock the pantry" shopping trip to buy long-keeping items and non-perishables in quantity - cat food and litter, Costco, etc. After two hours of shopping...
About every six weeks, I go on a "stock the pantry" shopping trip to buy long-keeping items and non-perishables in quantity - cat food and litter, Costco, etc. After two hours of shopping yesterday, I was a little shocked to realize I'd spent half of my take-home pay on a trip that previously was about 25% less expensive. No one item had drastically increased in price - everything had just gone up that much.
[I'm also smarting because my primary care physician announced she was switching to a concierge care model, and I just made the first quarterly payment. U.S. healthcare sucks so badly that I can't take a chance on the two-year waitlists for in-network primary care M.D.s who provide 10-minute "annual exam" visits in my area.]
I'm dropping subscription services, buying cheaper conventional food instead of organic, getting generic personal care products instead of brand names and using less of them, cooking even more at home, thinking about making my own cat food, skipping buying pretty flowers for outdoors this year... and still feeling like the budget isn't going to keep stretching.
I know a great many aspects of Western lifestyles aren't sustainable, and I've tried to do my part to minimize material consumption. But there are so many expectations that you'll pay for perhaps excessive shelter (we didn't need a house the size we have, but it was what was available and affordable), have a car for work, be able to pay for services for things you don't have time, skill, or physical capacity to do yourself, and other monetary drains. I'm losing some sleep.
What are you doing to cope with exorbitant rents/mortgages, skyrocketing utility and grocery bills, extravagant medical costs, unaffordable childcare and services?
Do you feel like your quality of life has declined, due to missing luxuries, anxiety, fewer opportunities to connect with friends and family, or anything else?
Open rant here.
54 votes -
Drawbacks to Iceland having its own currency likely exceed the benefits, the country's Finance Ministry said, citing the conclusions of a government-commissioned report
21 votes -
Iceland is again the world's most expensive country, surpassing Switzerland for the first time in years, calculations by a local trade union showed
9 votes -
Why Japanese companies do so many different things
47 votes -
Is there a "Razor" for the idea that "If a Billionaire is against it, I'm for it?"
Not sure if this is the right section for this post, might be better off somewhere else. But a sentiment I've seen more and more frequently online is the idea that there's a pretty simple "razor"...
Not sure if this is the right section for this post, might be better off somewhere else.
But a sentiment I've seen more and more frequently online is the idea that there's a pretty simple "razor" (like Occum's razor, or Halon's) that if a billionaire or huge corporation is telling me something is bad or will hurt people, it's usually a sign that the opposite is true. Or if a billionaire goes on the news and says that this new law is good for the poors and people should support it, it's a good sign to go out and vote against it.
Do we have a catchy name for it yet? I was thinking maybe "The Bezo's inversion" or something similar.
Edit: Shout out to /u/Rosco for expressing my intentions from this post better than I could have. The discussion in this thread didn't really go the direction I was expecting and that's probably on me for how I structured the original post.
I read this as more of a fun catharsis. We're in a society that is getting disproportionately out of whack. Wealth inequality is at a pretty untenable level, the average person is having a hard time getting by, and those with extreme wealth are actively trying to change our media, regulatory, labor, political landscapes to their benefit. I think a big of off gassing is warranted and this seems like a fun to way to engage with it. Obviously it's not actually going to function as a law, like I agree with Tom Steyer's stance on the Environment. But, on the flip side I came across the voter guide in the Palo Alto Daily in 2020 and it was literally the exact opposite - on every single proposition - than what I was planning to vote for. So it also kind of works? Regardless, it's harmless fun.
46 votes -
Bank boss sorry after describing workers as 'lower value human capital'
26 votes -
OpenAI is preparing to file for an IPO in the coming weeks
22 votes -
Startups in Berlin
10 votes -
Against money
21 votes -
Investment, animal spirits and algae
4 votes -
‘It’s shameful’: New York’s elite lash out at Zohran Mamdani’s second-home tax
69 votes -
Goldman Sachs flags Amazon and Alphabet for inflating S&P 500 earnings growth figures
39 votes -
Young people are falling behind, but not because of AI
23 votes -
US landlords want to be paid for pandemic losses and hope to reach a deal with the Donald Trump administration
24 votes -
Twitch donations IRL
9 votes -
GameStop makes $55.5bn takeover offer for eBay
16 votes -
Gray Media's chain-wide arbitration rollout
7 votes -
Are there alternative ways to invest savings?
What are some ways to grow your savings without investing it into the stock market/401k? In short, I don't want my savings to fund giant corporations. It seems like most mutual funds can't exist...
What are some ways to grow your savings without investing it into the stock market/401k?
In short, I don't want my savings to fund giant corporations. It seems like most mutual funds can't exist without a portfolio of such corporations despite calling themselves green or ethical.
I've been storing funds in CDs or HYSEs but wondering if there are any other avenues.
38 votes -
United Arab Emirates says it will leave OPEC, a blow to the oil cartel
29 votes -
Exporters without borders: why you should start a company instead of working in aid
18 votes -
Single, solo, poor, woman gets $500k pre-tax, how to make the most of it?
Hello all, long time listener, first time poster. First time poster because this is a throwaway account as it will have more personal info included than I'd like linked to my main account. The...
Hello all, long time listener, first time poster. First time poster because this is a throwaway account as it will have more personal info included than I'd like linked to my main account. The point of this post is to request guidance/advice/ideas from the always incredible, intelligent, and helpful people of Tildes.
The high level points:
- I am a female 40 year old, for lack of a better phrase, starving artist living in the US. I am single, live alone with my cat in an apartment, and have no debt.
- I have not held a steady/normal job in over a decade (mental health being a primary reason), my personal income has come from a couple of very small business ventures where I make things by hand, some freelance graphic design, the generosity of friends, and pet sitting. The latter is dead in the water as all my pets were in another state and I just moved in the last 30 days to a place that is much smaller and simply will not have the customer base to do the same, nor am I all that interested in pursuing it here.
- My primary method of financial support over the last decade was being the homemaker to my now-ex husband up until about two years ago when he informed me he no longer wished to be my husband. Since then my primary financial support was from my now-deceased father, who generously provided me with $2,500 per month to subsist on, with my previously mentioned ventures closing the finances gap as much as possible.
- Over the decade of being in a single income household and for the last two years subsisting off a "guaranteed" income of $30,000 per year I managed to learn to be extremely frugal wherever possible so as to not spend above my means and keep a roof over my head. I eat once per day, my overall health isn't great but I am attempting to address that, and thus far my "retail therapy" budget to give me a little boost of dopamine has been $50 per month that is generally spent in thrift stores. I wouldn't call it living so much as I'd call it surviving and am often unsure why I bother.
The issue/question at hand:
My father has passed away and with him my primary/only means of support, with his passing I have inherited just over $500,000 in a Traditional IRA. So my primary question is how to minimize tax burden and maximize return on his investments to make them last as long as possible while I figure out the next stage of my life.I am not opposed to getting a normal/steady job, but this is more difficult to obtain than one would imagine with a decade long gap in employment and an unwillingness to sacrifice the mental health gains I have made and gestures broadly everything else that is going on. There is also the bit of freedom that this amount of money provides that will perhaps allow me to double down on my small business ventures, investing in them/myself at a level that I was unable to do prior and therefore enabling them to become a primary source of support. So there is a thought of setting a budget, both monetary and time, to allow myself to try to grow my businesses first.
TLDR: Single, solo, poor, woman gets $500k pre-tax, how to make the most of it?
48 votes -
San Diego rents declined following surge in supply
19 votes -
Staged homes sell for 10% more and one week faster
33 votes -
Ticketmaster is an illegal monopoly, jury rules
74 votes -
Anthropic announces deal with Google, Broadcom, says revenue has tripled
31 votes -
Bitcoin’s creator has hidden behind the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto for seventeen years. But a trail of clues buried deep in crypto lore led to a 55-year-old computer scientist named Adam Back.
27 votes -
Falling demand for cardboard boxes — long a proxy for consumer spending — is raising concerns about the US economy
50 votes -
Can a country get too rich? Norway shows the potential pitfalls of uncommon prosperity.
24 votes -
US imports more from Taiwan than China for first time in decades
20 votes -
Gold eyes worst month against oil since 1973; mining stocks slump most since 2008
17 votes -
New technology promises to protect farmers from the next fertilizer shock
7 votes -
Nasdaq's shame - how to rig an index to appease a billionaire
15 votes -
Helium prices soar as Qatar LNG halt exposes fragile supply chain
37 votes -
YouTube lays claim to another crown: the world’s largest media company
13 votes -
Iran war spreading economic damage far beyond oil and gas markets
25 votes -
UK supermarket chain Iceland has abandoned its decade-long trademark battle with Iceland and instead promised a “rapprochement discount” for shoppers in the country
17 votes -
Gas prices soar as QatarEnergy halts LNG production after Iran attacks
27 votes -
Spotify's strong revenue isn't reflected in its stock market performance – investors fear growth will stall, while artists are voicing frustration over what they consider a miserly compensation system
24 votes -
Banks are becoming bulwarks for vulnerable American seniors
16 votes -
Norway's sovereign wealth fund impressed by artificial intelligence's ability to catch risks overlooked by both the media and external vendors
11 votes