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Business/Finance See other Business/Finance Articles Title: The single wisest thing you can do with your money The single wisest thing you can do with your money Editors Note: Today, the Daily is pleased to welcome back Casey Research founder and longtime PBRG friend Doug Casey. Below, Doug shows you the exact way to get the most out of your money
and a fool-proof way to keep it coming. From Doug Casey, founder, Casey Research: Theres a great deal more to becoming rich than buying the right investments and hoping for the best. The most important element in your strategy to win the battle for investment survival is your own psychology. Youve heard that your attitude helps your health and your golf score. Itll also improve your earning power. Its not enough to liquidate your past financial mistakes. Its more important to liquidate counterproductive attitudes, approaches, and methods of dealing with problems. The results that someone gets in life are an indication of how sound his approach toward life is. A sound philosophy of life gives good results. People with chaotic, unproductive, unhappy lives usually dont have anyone to blame but themselves. They rarely have a strategy for living and thus have no foundation on which to build a strategy for investing. Theres plenty of good advice available on the subject. Marcus Aurelius Meditations, The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin, Norman Vincent Peales The Power of Positive Thinking, Frank Bettgers How I Raised Myself from Failure to Success in Selling, and Maxwell Maltzs Psycho-Cybernetics are all helpful. One of the important things about the Greater Depression is that it will give you a chance to put your philosophy of life to the test. Almost anyone can get by in good times, but the years to come will separate the real winners from losers. Many will taste the thrill of victory or the agony of defeat firsthand; they wont need the vicarious pleasure of Saturday afternoon TV sports to experience life. There is, of course, no guarantee that just because youve developed a workable strategy that you wont still be a casualty in the battle for financial survival. There is such a thing as plain bad luck. But as Damon Runyon said, the bread may not always go to the wise, nor the race to the swift, nor the battle to the strongbut thats the way to bet. Tilt the odds in your favor by developing pro-survival attitudes, and the law of large numbers will take care of the rest. There are, of course, an almost infinite number of valid attitudes. Anything that works for you is as good as anything that works for me. But since the next step in the strategy (consolidation) deals with gathering physical goods, I dont want to leave any false impressions. You may be able to salt away 10 bags of silver, a thousand Krugerrands, and enough food to open a restaurant chain, but thats not nearly as important as knowing how to get them all back again if you should lose them for any reason. Thats one thing no one can ever take away from you and you can never lose: your attitude toward life. Scrooge McDuck had the right attitude. One of the most formative stories Ive ever read was an Uncle Scrooge comic written in 1953 by Carl Barks at Walt Disney Studios. It finds Scrooge McDuck at play in his bin full of money, diving and wallowing in it, doing what he likes best. As he leaves his bin to go out for his daily routine, it turns out his nephew, Donald Duck, has decided to play a prank on him by putting a fake newspaper on the park bench with the headline Coins and Banknotes Now Worthless!
Congress Make Fish the New Money of the Land. Scrooge sees it and is stunned. All his cash is worthless. He plops against a tree thinking he hasnt even one little minnow with which to buy a crust of bread. By the next frame of the comic book, however, the courageous old duck has picked himself up and is ready to get back in the race, saying, Well, theres no cause crying over bad luck. Ill get a job and start life all over again. Soon we find him down at the waterfront talking to a fisherman. He offers to paint the mans boat for a sackful of fish. Scrooge earns his fish and takes them to a clothing store where business is bad. He trades the fish for a raincoat. Back at the waterfront, he trades the raincoat to another fisherman for two sacks of fish. Since the fish are getting heavy to carry around, Scrooge trades the two bags to a farmer for an old horse, then trades the horse for 10 sacks of fish. By the end of the day, Scrooge has a mountain of fish: three cubic acres worth. As much of the new money as he had of the old. He looks at the cold, clammy fish and asks himself: How to count the new money? By the pound or by the inch? How to keep it? And how to spend it before it goes bad? Sorrowfully, he realizes fish arent as nice to play with as his old money. Fish dont feel good and they smell bad. All of a sudden, he doesnt want to be rich anymore. He hires a trucking fleet to take the mountain of fish to Donald, who always wanted to be rich. Donalds house is buried under dead fish. Donalds joke backfired, but Scrooge proved his point: You can start from scratch if you have the right attitude and come out ahead if you play your cards right. Scrooge didnt have a fish to his name when he had to start over, a lot less than youll have if you liquidate all your unneeded possessions. Theyre costing you money and tying you down. Transform the junk youve accumulated into cash, which you can redeploy the way Scrooge McDuck might. The next step in your plan is to start earning to add to your grubstakethat is, create more money. It was key to Scrooges second fortune, and its key to yours. But you must have the skills necessary to provide goods and services to others. Scrooge made his fish fortune by being skilled at business, but there are thousands of other skills. Gaining skills One of the most important parts of taking control of your life as a step to prospering in the years to come is to educate yourself and gain skills. That means a lot more than just logging eight years in high school and college. Going to college is one thing, but learning to make money is something else. Most people today appear to believe going to college is necessary for getting ahead. Its not. It may actually be a hindrance. A lot of people seem to think that simply going to college will bestow an education. In reality, all most people get is a diploma, which is very different. Eric Hoffer, the San Francisco longshoreman who never completed high school but has written such profound books as The True Believer, is an outstanding example of the difference between going to college and getting an education. Practical, marketable skills are often better acquired in trade schools, through self-teaching efforts, and through experience working from the bottom up in a field. A lot of teachers who finished first in their class couldnt run a successful hot dog stand and are hardly in a position to help their students learn survival skills. It would be a tragic mistake to devote all your resources to accumulating gold, hoarding commodities, devising clever tax schemes, and speculating, to the neglect of much more basic intangibles. The government may negate a lot of your efforts through its inflation, taxes, and regulations. And even if you overcome them, market riska bad judgement, an unexpected development, a failed brokerage housecan wipe you out. As can fraud, theft, a fire, or a war. And in the environment coming up, all of those things and many others like them could be greater dangers than they have been in the past. The only thing thats permanently secure is what you carry in your head: your attitude, your knowledge, and your skills. Who knows what skills may be required in the years to come? What youre doing now, be it teaching school, practicing law, laying brick, or selling insurance, may be in low demand. But preparing French cuisine, fixing autos, keeping books, or offering financial counsel may be in high demand. Or perhaps the other way around. The single wisest thing you can do with your money is not to buy gold. Its to take courses and acquire knowledge in other fields, as unrelated to what you are now doing as possible. Anything related to sciencein particular, technologywould seem especially suitable. Computer science, medicine, mechanics, agriculture, and electronics are all going to remain in demand. In the TV series Star Trek, the supremely knowledgeable Mr. Spock bailed the crew out as often as anyone. Its hard to imagine him unemployed, for that reason. More knowledge can only increase your understanding of the way the world works now
and if it stops working the way it presently does, youll be able to continue. It will then no longer be the end of the world if you lose your present job. And a lot of people will. Reeves Note: Most people have no idea what happens when an economy collapses, let alone how to prepare for it. Dougs latest video will show you how to protect yourself during the next crisis. Click here to watch it now. click2.palmbeachgroup.com/t/Bg/A5s/DFU/AAEggA/AAFLFg/oFc/AQ/yke7 Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)
The single wisest thing you can do with your money is not to buy gold. Its to take courses That presupposes that someone doesn't have more money than he could spend on such courses. and acquire knowledge in other fields, as unrelated to what you are now doing as possible. That sounds pretty stupid, especially without considering just what it is you are doing now.
Good advice for those under 50, for we older types, not so much.
The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable. ~ H. L. Mencken
I've been trying to get signed up with an online computer repair course. It is quite costly. Still hasn't gone thru and if it doesn't, I may go back to driving a truck. ;) "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
With Office Depot, et al, offering free computer repair, I'd say that trucking would be a much cheaper and better bet right now. (You could prolly learn computer repair on Youtube.) The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable. ~ H. L. Mencken
There are no such places nearby. You would have to travel quite a distance to find one. One that is honest is something else again. Been ripped off myself. :-/ "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
Artisan wrote here recently that the trucking industry is rolling along well and that there is money to be made for any driver willing to work. Something to that effect.
I know this and I do have a company that will hire me. Need to do more studying since it has been a long time since I've been behind the wheel of a big truck. ;) "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
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