Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

get the red out

(14,031 posts)
145. What's your problem?
Mon Mar 24, 2014, 08:27 AM
Mar 2014

My message was pretty benign. I've removed it so you don't have to see it.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

I wish I had a Thousand dollars to put away... yuiyoshida Mar 2014 #1
maybe not a thousand at once. what about $5 a week? Sunlei Mar 2014 #100
That 5 dollars a week gets eaten up when there is an emergency Marrah_G Mar 2014 #114
yes I know, had some of my $5 a week 'nestegg' spent on emergency. A tiny nestegg was there & Sunlei Mar 2014 #115
K&R n/t jtuck004 Mar 2014 #2
Ahhhh, yes. The success of that good ol' 'Murican rugged individualism ... Mika Mar 2014 #3
I love some of these financial planner guys right out of school Warpy Mar 2014 #4
Amen.... daleanime Mar 2014 #16
Great post. llmart Mar 2014 #85
federal Poverty Line needs to be adjusted too. $11,490 (for one) is to low. Sunlei Mar 2014 #121
it depresses people to "do the numbers" Skittles Mar 2014 #5
plus the daily bombardment of consumer advertising... grasswire Mar 2014 #30
OH I hear you! Skittles Mar 2014 #31
What a joke! llmart Mar 2014 #87
Also, why save when one illness can wipe it all out.... llmart Mar 2014 #86
you are correct Skittles Mar 2014 #96
I blew my retirement plan taking care of my Grandmother. Walk away Mar 2014 #101
There are many examples like yours. llmart Mar 2014 #103
But...like your kids...I was glad to have the $$$ to help. nt Walk away Mar 2014 #108
I have similar thoughts about the future Skidmore Mar 2014 #124
I hope you don't really believe that. llmart Mar 2014 #125
I believe that I have accomplished Skidmore Mar 2014 #128
I understand. llmart Mar 2014 #132
Better have children now and encourage them to have them marshall Mar 2014 #143
ooops to late! Walk away Mar 2014 #144
That's the same fear all us 'savers' have. We save for security in our retirement years. Sunlei Mar 2014 #104
You could also be hit by a terrible driver tomorrow. Go to Tuscany. Exultant Democracy Mar 2014 #112
Depending upon how well one saves, even a catastrophic illness may not wipe one out financially. Jgarrick Mar 2014 #118
Most people don't have your level of benefits. llmart Mar 2014 #122
Did I assert I was morally superior? As for being "lucky"... Jgarrick Mar 2014 #123
nice but Skittles Mar 2014 #136
Do the majority of jobs in the United States not have accumulated sick leave? Jgarrick Mar 2014 #146
Definitely not as good as Europe - TBF Mar 2014 #148
I have worked almost 40 years and have NEVER accumulated sick leave Skittles Mar 2014 #150
I am sorry to hear about your health TBF Mar 2014 #142
Thank you! The good news is that I've fully recovered. Jgarrick Mar 2014 #147
The whole notion of 'retiring' Erich Bloodaxe BSN Mar 2014 #126
This doesnt surprise me at all. DCBob Mar 2014 #6
+1000. You really have summed it up well here. closeupready Mar 2014 #41
Such a shame yeoman6987 Mar 2014 #106
Even if you do have more than that (1000) Dyedinthewoolliberal Mar 2014 #7
Well. it's safe enough if you put the 403b money in something safe, like a stable value fund. HERVEPA Mar 2014 #19
"...put the 403b money in something safe, like a stable value fund." pangaia Mar 2014 #133
Well... Adrahil Mar 2014 #42
I had retired with a decent amount of savings, until 2008 Divernan Mar 2014 #8
Same here. I had a fair amount in my 401K RebelOne Mar 2014 #11
Not smart. why didn't you move it to somethingin the 401k that wasn't risky. HERVEPA Mar 2014 #20
Nope, the way the market was failing, RebelOne Mar 2014 #83
Sorry, I don't understand your response. HERVEPA Mar 2014 #84
uh, you're aware you can put your 401k into bonds or even cash, right? dionysus Mar 2014 #152
Coulda, shoulda, woulda.... dreamstst Mar 2014 #117
you can thank GWB for stealing your savings in 2008. olddad56 Mar 2014 #82
Sorry to hear about yr truedelphi Mar 2014 #138
We've crunched the numbers spinbaby Mar 2014 #9
3rd Way Free Trading MISSION ACCOMPLISHED!!! bvar22 Mar 2014 #10
+1 daleanime Mar 2014 #17
+1 fleabiscuit Mar 2014 #21
"The 401(k)" ReRe Mar 2014 #26
+1. Great post. CrispyQ Mar 2014 #130
THIS ^ does NOT happen by accident. Roland99 Mar 2014 #80
Hmm, I just clicked on 'permalink' for that comment Erich Bloodaxe BSN Mar 2014 #127
Oh bvar - truedelphi Mar 2014 #140
401ks were meant to supplement traditional pensions. They were never supposed to be all of your Skeeter Barnes Mar 2014 #12
Do what everyone did 100+ years ago? madville Mar 2014 #43
pretty much yeah elehhhhna Mar 2014 #62
yes Marrah_G Mar 2014 #153
How are people supposed to survive? llmart Mar 2014 #88
Survive? Hah. Soylent Green time. nt Erich Bloodaxe BSN Mar 2014 #129
401Ks were meant to transfer wealth from the Working Class to Wall Street Bankers. bvar22 Mar 2014 #141
Retirement? What's that? progressoid Mar 2014 #13
I'm schiz re- this. snot Mar 2014 #14
I saved 10% of my income for a couple decades... magical thyme Mar 2014 #23
Totally relate marions ghost Mar 2014 #32
1 guarantee: death. I'd include taxes, but not if you land in the 1% magical thyme Mar 2014 #34
As a single mother there was never anything left to save Marrah_G Mar 2014 #105
Saving 10% of paycheck to paycheck will do that... Earth_First Mar 2014 #15
Massive for sure... n/t ReRe Mar 2014 #28
I don't have jack squat put away. Darkhawk32 Mar 2014 #18
Child support is "extortion" now? VanillaRhapsody Mar 2014 #27
Yes, it certain cases, it is. Darkhawk32 Mar 2014 #54
hmmmmm would love to hear the other side of this story... VanillaRhapsody Mar 2014 #57
Post removed Post removed Mar 2014 #58
NO, what is beyond the pale is that you Darkhawk32 Mar 2014 #59
Yeah, it is. Many (most...all?) states have child support calculators that impose a fine! Roland99 Mar 2014 #78
I'm sorry, You consider your responsibility to the support of the children only 50% of their 2banon Mar 2014 #71
So where's the mother in all this? Darkhawk32 Mar 2014 #73
Your reaction is as alarming as it is disturbing. eom 2banon Mar 2014 #92
uh...wtf??? Roland99 Mar 2014 #79
since when did the term "visitation" equate to "responsibility"? 2banon Mar 2014 #91
One that understands what Darkhawk was talking about, that's what kind Roland99 Mar 2014 #109
I actually know a guy that's been saving since his first job... Spitfire of ATJ Mar 2014 #22
gratitude deek Mar 2014 #111
I've often observed that those who got there easy assume anyone can. Spitfire of ATJ Mar 2014 #113
"not counting their primary residence or defined benefits plans such as traditional pensions" geek tragedy Mar 2014 #24
Yeah, not counting defined benefits plans not only skews it, it destroys the validity of the result. Gormy Cuss Mar 2014 #48
ideally, all assets should be considered. geek tragedy Mar 2014 #50
Age is certainly important because a 20 something has 40 years of future contributions. Gormy Cuss Mar 2014 #53
true true true. geek tragedy Mar 2014 #55
The problem is, it can take years to amass sizable savings, but only takes TwilightGardener Mar 2014 #25
^^^^^^^ n/t truedelphi Mar 2014 #139
I had my best earning years before I was 40 arikara Mar 2014 #29
Why wouldn't you count primary residence or a defined-benefit plan? Recursion Mar 2014 #33
then where are they going to live. olddad56 Mar 2014 #49
Well, you could always downsize SoCalNative Mar 2014 #81
You still have renter's insurance..... llmart Mar 2014 #90
Depends on where you live SoCalNative Mar 2014 #110
Well, when a loaf of bread is $3 and a gallon of gas goes for $4... Octafish Mar 2014 #35
Yet they spend $70 per month on a cell phone plan. lol cbdo2007 Mar 2014 #36
Forget the sarcasm tag or something? Cal Carpenter Mar 2014 #37
I have a cellphone plan for $60. leftyladyfrommo Mar 2014 #40
Disgusting comment. ForgoTheConsequence Mar 2014 #46
I used to pretend I had the relevant financial knowledge of other people too. LanternWaste Mar 2014 #52
Show me tazkcmo Mar 2014 #64
No, you're right... cbdo2007 Mar 2014 #68
I saved plenty for retirement. Le Taz Hot Mar 2014 #89
I guess +1 is the standard around here for Erich Bloodaxe BSN Mar 2014 #131
If I had a million in the bank workinclasszero Mar 2014 #38
People used to have retirement plans Marrah_G Mar 2014 #39
The elderly are doing okay Demobrat Mar 2014 #44
It will be worse for those after the boomers. ForgoTheConsequence Mar 2014 #47
No, it will be worse because boomers had parents with defined benefit plans Gormy Cuss Mar 2014 #56
Many boomers supported Reagan. ForgoTheConsequence Mar 2014 #60
The majority of boomers did not support Reagan. Gormy Cuss Mar 2014 #61
I'm an "old" Gen-Xer (born mid-late 60s) and that segment of that generation in general Arugula Latte Mar 2014 #63
Blaming whole generations, especially the biggest one in modern history, is just silly. Gormy Cuss Mar 2014 #67
Baby Boomers top supporters of war in Iraq. ForgoTheConsequence Mar 2014 #70
And that has nothing to do with your earlier statement that Boomers gave us Reagan. n/t Gormy Cuss Mar 2014 #74
No, but it has to do with my first statement. ForgoTheConsequence Mar 2014 #95
"61. The majority of boomers did not support Reagan." ForgoTheConsequence Mar 2014 #66
Those numbers do not support your claim. They do support mine though. Gormy Cuss Mar 2014 #72
Gen-X'ers couldn't vote in 1980. ForgoTheConsequence Mar 2014 #69
Yes, I know. In fact a number of Boomers couldn't vote in 1980. Gormy Cuss Mar 2014 #75
The majority could. ForgoTheConsequence Mar 2014 #94
Every age cohort went for Reagan in '84. Gormy Cuss Mar 2014 #107
I'm a Boomer - LiberalElite Mar 2014 #119
It's still your fault. Gormy Cuss Mar 2014 #120
Yes, thats what I meant Marrah_G Mar 2014 #65
the divide actually starts between the older boomers and the "younger boomers" Skittles Mar 2014 #97
No, it will be about 5-10 years from now as the boomers peak retirement wave hits n/t Fiendish Thingy Mar 2014 #98
It seems overwhelming to save for retirement when you're just trying to pay rent/mortgage, Arugula Latte Mar 2014 #45
if the federal government had to pay it's debts, it wouldn't have a $1000 either. olddad56 Mar 2014 #51
had one--then i got laid off--work till i die dembotoz Mar 2014 #76
Me too TexasBushwhacker Mar 2014 #149
The shift to 401k has been a disaster. Ed Suspicious Mar 2014 #77
it's really hard if you don't work for a company that has mackerel Mar 2014 #93
I understand about living paycheck to paycheck, or in fear of losing that job. Sunlei Mar 2014 #99
i totally agree but it is hard unless they take it from mackerel Mar 2014 #134
The first little bit saved is the hardest! Sunlei Mar 2014 #135
= get the red out Mar 2014 #102
I would compliment you on your TSA... dreamstst Mar 2014 #116
What's your problem? get the red out Mar 2014 #145
Message auto-removed Name removed Mar 2014 #151
How can they not include pensions, homes, or social security in this report. Jesus Malverde Mar 2014 #137
Latest Discussions»Latest Breaking News»Retirement: A third have ...»Reply #145