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'General Motors, Sears and Toys R Us: Layoffs Across America Highlight Our Shredding Financial Safety Net' (nbcnews.com)

New submitter Bruce Henry shares a story: Today's aging workforce faces an uncertain future. The announcement this week that General Motors will lay off 15 percent of its salaried workforce and shutter multiple plants in North America was a sobering reminder of how far the American worker has fallen. Unlike most large private sector corporations today, thousands of employees at GM still enjoy some union benefits. The company has reportedly set aside $2 billion for layoffs and buyouts. It's not much, but it's something -- many workers, if they are laid off en masse, will be far less lucky. Some older Americans are lucky enough to have been grandfathered into generous pension plans and others hope social security and personal savings will be enough to sustain themselves. But for millions of younger people, the outlook is bleaker -- an ever-diminishing social safety net, with retirement dependent almost entirely on how well they manage savings. Two-thirds of millennials have nothing saved for retirement.

The private sector pension as we once knew it is all but dead. Public sector pensions, meanwhile, are under attack at the state level. "Companies don't offer pensions anymore. Social security, when it was established, was meant to be one leg of a stool," says Gerald Friedman, an economist at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. "One leg would be the private pension through employment, a second leg personal savings, and a third leg social security. Social security is now the only source of income of a lot elderly have." What, if anything, are our politicians doing about this? Progressives rail against President Donald Trump, but real retirement security has not been a big enough part of the conversation on either side of the political spectrum. Millions of Americans are in danger of entering their final decades unable to afford ballooning medical bills and cost-of-living expenses. This is a huge problem, and one that liberals in particular should have capitalized on this election cycle.

554 comments

  1. Drowning? Here have an anvil. by AlanObject · · Score: 0, Troll

    I thought trade wars were easy to win.

  2. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trade wars? Heaven't each of these companies been in a a downward spiral.. no, I take that back... power dive for the last decade?

  3. Not all companies last by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Companies don't last forever but other companies do take their place. Lamp oil and carriage companies were once giants of their day.

  4. Modern Progressives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    They only care about identity politics & migrants now. They've completely sided with corporate interests to further these 2 causes, global warming be damned.

    1. Re: Modern Progressives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Those are the wolf in sheep's clothing establishment Democrats.

      Take a look at what Bernie Sanders and the new Democratic Socialist wing of the Dem party are saying and doing. They are the progressives.

      Those wolves (including Obama and Clinton) are the corporate butlers.

    2. Re:Modern Progressives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's cause their voters don't work. Welfare's the same whether you're retired or not.

  5. glad to have visited /r/politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I miss slashdot, news for nerds. This is news for partisans. I'm very close to removing Slashdot from my list of sites.

    1. Re:glad to have visited /r/politics by DirkDaring · · Score: 1

      You and me both. ENOUGH with the politics.

    2. Re:glad to have visited /r/politics by ogar572 · · Score: 1

      Agreed.

    3. Re:glad to have visited /r/politics by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

      I strongly disagree and will be creating a political party to further my beliefs in undending political screaming.

  6. Here, have a liquor bottle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's the only kind of hammered you'll get while bashing yourself against the anvil of the establishment.

    Whether you are in China, Russia, or the US, your retirement outlook is bleak unless you have a lot of kids to financially support you, and enough of them do well enough financially to supplement your income without crippling theirs.

    One of the cornerstone problems with America in particular is the cultural distaste for people living at home with their parents. If children plus parents were to pool their assets towards household bills and savings toward future expansion or land purchase, most american extended families could better take care of themselves. However finding a family with enough non-sociopathic members, and people who are not ashamed of living at home to leverage this is approaching impossible. Which is too bad because there are many ways Americans could re-empower themselves and their loved ones if they would just stop caring about societies expectations (and if their parents would be a bit less judgey of assholes) and work together to create a more solvent future for their collective. But that's too red and commie for most Americans.

    1. Re: Here, have a liquor bottle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You hit a nail on its head.

    2. Re: Here, have a liquor bottle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed. Anytime individuals plan to pool resources it is socialism. Anytime corporations plan to pool resources it is capitalism.

    3. Re:Here, have a liquor bottle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Things are trending differently. I'm seeing homes going from huge living areas back to more separate areas with bedrooms and shared, Jack/Jill bathrooms. "Mother in law" places are popping up too. Most likely this is for AirBnB though, for people to make a quick buck while hotels have to actually pay taxes and maintain health standards.

    4. Re:Here, have a liquor bottle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >cornerstone problems

      No, that would be the growing percentage of company earnings taken by the elite.

    5. Re:Here, have a liquor bottle. by fluffernutter · · Score: 1, Insightful

      ...says the slashdot poster living in his parent's basement.

      Seriously though, it is well established in Slashdot that companies have no obligation to bring their jobs to where people live, and if you don't make enough money you should move to where the jobs are. Are your parents supposed to move with you? Your parents parents?

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    6. Re: Here, have a liquor bottle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or answer The Burger King ad on this web page! I talks about starting a car rear there and shows a thirty some thing person.

      Such great tie in

    7. Re: Here, have a liquor bottle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the strong minded against the weak minded, by your own foolish culture and hetritage.

  7. #MAGA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...right

  8. News For Nerds by coach_jl · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Back when Slashdot was "News for Nerds" this story wouldn't be posted. Not sure why it is here other than a limited connection based on all of us wanting to retire at some point. Also, pensions were dropped in favor of 401Ks, less risk to the company and more challenge for the worker. Still, not sure why this is Slashdot worthy. Obviously, my two cents.

    1. Re:News For Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the Yahoo-esque stories get the most clicks.

      -Orange Man is bad
      -Dey took our jerbs
      -Celebrity said a tech thing

    2. Re:News For Nerds by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Back in the day there were frequently stories about "brick and mortar" stores having trouble or closing.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    3. Re: News For Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's good that things are being talked about... Light a fire under everyone's asses because it needs to happen. Believe me, I remember niftier times... But right now, the world is on fire, and all the bullshit needs to burn.

      Someday the world will be niftier again.

    4. Re:News For Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yep.

      Honestly, it's not so much that stories like this get posted, it's that nerd shit I only sort of care about but that made this site News for Nerds DOESN'T get posted.

      I'm sure there's some crazy project out there someone is doing with Linux that's mostly useless but kinda cool that we're not hearing about. There's some weird anime that I'm never going to watch but that's right up CmdrTaco's alley that we could be hearing about. Someone doing something cool but useless like 3D printing a new case to "fix" a Neo Geo Mini. Stuff that's pointless and silly but is nerdy stuff worth discussing.

      E3 comes and goes, and Slashdot posts nothing. SDCC comes and goes - nothing. Granted these are giant commercial events pandering to nerds, but Apple does a keynote and we get a day of junk over every single announcement so clearly that's not the bar.

      You want to know why Slashdot is dead? It's because we get political bullshit stories like these that are clearly biased, but never get pointless stories about actual nerdy crap. I suppose there's probably some random reddit out there that's like the old Slashdot, full of random open source passion projects and nerdy asides about anime and comic books and science fiction. But it's clearly not today's Slashdot. (And hasn't been well over a decade at this point, so yeah. I know. I must be new here. I still miss the old News for Nerds Slashdot.)

    5. Re:News For Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Back when Slashdot was "News for Nerds" this story wouldn't be posted.

      It pushes Slashdot's socialist agenda.

    6. Re:News For Nerds by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Informative

      From "This Day On Slashdot":

      2005, Canada moves to keep skilled workers: https://it.slashdot.org/story/...

      200, Election results certified: https://slashdot.org/story/00/...

      Slashdot has always had stories about issues that affect nerds, like employment and politics.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    7. Re:News For Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      pensions were dropped in favor of 401Ks, less risk to the company and more challenge for the worker

      And much easier to fleece the participants. People who work in small companies got the short end of this deal, where fees of 1%-2% are common. That level of fees will have you giving up 1/3 to 1/2 of what should have been yours over a typical career of 40 years. If you work at a small company with a ripoff 401k plan, you are being punished for the benefit of those who work at large companies who can leverage their size. The entire system is a scam.

      The solution is simple, but it will never happen: allow people with ripoff 401k plans to use a "solo 401k" instead. These are offered by trustworthy companies like Vanguard, Fidelity, and Schwab.

    8. Re:News For Nerds by Known+Nutter · · Score: 1

      From "This Day On Slashdot":

      2005, Canada moves to keep skilled workers: https://it.slashdot.org/story/...

      200, Election results certified: https://slashdot.org/story/00/...

      Going back quite a ways, don't you think?

      --
      Beware of the Leopard.
    9. Re:News For Nerds by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Days of yore, when dinosaurs roamed the Earth and software came on punched stone tablets.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    10. Re:News For Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So who won in 200? Satrap?

    11. Re:News For Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My retired gov't worker friends have a single issue on their minds when it's time to vote: which candidate is most likely to preserve their pensions and give them a cost-of-living increases. People who are receiving guaranteed(-ish) pensions live in a completely different economy than people who are still working or who rely on investments (like 401k's, IRA's, etc). Personally, I like the idea of eliminating guaranteed pensions so everyone has skin in the economic game.

    12. Re:News For Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Politics was a section added around 2000.
      This has nothing to do with politics, nor economics.

    13. Re:News For Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because people comment on them and draw an audience; however, I do get where you are coming from.

    14. Re: News For Nerds by Kyr+Arvin · · Score: 1

      It's good that things are being talked about... Light a fire under everyone's asses because it needs to happen. Believe me, I remember niftier times... But right now, the world is on fire, and all the bullshit needs to burn.

      The world is the same as it's always been. We just view it differently, and we're always talking about it, and there is no escaping the fighting over it.

    15. Re:News For Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...so everyone has skin in the economic game."

      I disagree, this is exactly how you end up trashing the planet. If everyone values the economy too much, then it leads to all kinds of horrendous consequences.

      Some additional resources.

    16. Re:News For Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm visualizing a stone patchboard using jungle creepers and the occasional amusing animal

    17. Re:News For Nerds by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Back when Slashdot was "News for Nerds" this story wouldn't be posted.

      That's quite a declaration from someone with a UID in the 4.5million. When was "back when"? 2017? 2016?

    18. Re:News For Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least we're not speaking German!

  9. No worries by PGaries · · Score: 0

    Tax cuts for the rich will solve this problem.

    Signed:
    The Republican Party

    1. Re:No worries by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      Seizing all the income from the rich won't solve it, either. Surprise! It would net an additional $500 billion a year...if they all continued to work for $0 a year.

      To pay for expensive goodies for all, all must be taxed. Now we're back in the 53% argument territory...third base! -- Lou Costello

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    2. Re:No worries by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      Start taxing the middle and lower class more - they're the ones with the power to vote out the politicians who keep doling out more and more benefits with no ability to pay for them and keep signing bigger and bigger spending bills for defense. When the politicians start getting voted out because everyone starts actually having to pay for what they are promising and voting for instead of rolling the debt bill astronomically higher, there will be change. The time is pretty short. Once more than 50% of the people are getting a free ride tax wise, there is no hope of change - not that there's much now.

    3. Re:No worries by pgmrdlm · · Score: 1

      Raise taxes on companies to pay for all the deadbeats.

      Signed, the Democratic party.

      --
      Anonymous comments are as pathetic as the anonymous "sources" that contaminate gutless journalism from the New York Time
    4. Re:No worries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a traitor and you'll hang from your faggot neck. -Judge

    5. Re:No worries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically speaking, this has been going on since the Reagan years, when taxes for the rich were much higher. How's it working out so far?

    6. Re:No worries by pgmrdlm · · Score: 1

      You will be the victim of a bigot/hypocrite like yourself in a drive by shooting. You will suffer a slow and painful death, and if karma works. Your family will die the same way at the same time.

      --
      Anonymous comments are as pathetic as the anonymous "sources" that contaminate gutless journalism from the New York Time
  10. Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It can only be your responsibility to provide for your financial safety. It seems many people misunderstand that word: "responsibility". It does not mean blame; it means you can't count on someone else to fix it. Sometime in your life, likely more than once, something financially horrible (and possibly horrible in other ways) is going to happen to you. It probably won't be your fault, but it will be your responsibility to carry on.

    Shit's going to happen, so be as prepared as you can. For most of the time sine WWII, excepting the recent "great recession", six months expenses as savings would carry your through a layoff. Maintain medical insurance, and that amount will also see you through a medical catastrophe, or at least contain the debt to something manageable. Don't voluntarily take on debt and you've won half the battle.

    If your under 50, don't expect social security to be worth enough to matter. Sucks, but yelling about it won't pay for your retirement. The younger you are, the more you'll get advantage from a 401K or IRA. Especially if you're in your 20s: sticking money away in a broad-based stock index fund and ignoring it for 40 years has amazing leverage, and that young you should plan on no useful assistance of any kind.

    The lack of someone else providing you a safety net will suck. But you know that's how the world works, so plan accordingly, as best you can given your circumstances. You can't fix the overwhelming national debt ($178,000 per taxpayer!), but you can avoid carrying debt, and save what you can.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    1. Re:Responsibility != Blame by sycodon · · Score: 0

      In the past, a single house hold earner could provide for a family. Now it takes two.

      What's changed? THAT'S what we need to look at.

      I suspect it will be a mix of increased costs due to:

      Government regulations and their impact on manufacturers.
      Industry practices...required because they can. fees surcharges, penalties, etc.
      Increased consumer materialism. You HAVE to have the big screen TV, you HAVE to have that 4 wheeler, new car, etc.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    2. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. you are BORN into a system. That system must provide for everyone, not only for the fat cats.

    3. Re:Responsibility != Blame by AmiMoJo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In Communist Europe we do safety nets collectively. It's not perfect but it's a hell of a lot better than what the US has.

      Socialism FTW.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    4. Re:Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In the past, a single house hold earner could provide for a family. Now it takes two.

      What's changed? THAT'S what we need to look at. ...

      Increased consumer materialism.

      Yup, we wanted more stuff. Oh, sure, there's also been some added income inequality quite recently, but the 1950s was a long time ago. We want each kid to have his own room. We want each adult to have a car. We take color TV, an electric refrigerator, a dishwasher, and a washing machine for granted. Back when "single house hold earner could provide for a family" those were all considered luxuries to be aspired to. And it's not like this is frivolous stuff, but we have raised our expectations and there's a cost to that.

      Anyway, which do you (you the generic slashdot reader, not sycodon specifically) have control over: the unfair income distribution in the US, or the amount that you. personally, save? Which can you personally fix, and which can you only shout about on the internet? Not that you have to pick one, of course, do both! But shouting "life is unfair" on the internet is not a retirement plan. It is really easy, though, and doesn't require sacrifice to make it happen, so it's a distraction from the hard thing you know you need to do. We humans like our distractions.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    5. Re:Responsibility != Blame by dcw3 · · Score: 0

      Best advice I've seen on this site in a long time.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    6. Re:Responsibility != Blame by skaralic · · Score: 2

      In the past, a single house hold earner could provide for a family. Now it takes two.

      What's changed? THAT'S what we need to look at.

      I suspect it will be a mix of increased costs due to:

      Government regulations and their impact on manufacturers. Industry practices...required because they can. fees surcharges, penalties, etc. Increased consumer materialism. You HAVE to have the big screen TV, you HAVE to have that 4 wheeler, new car, etc.

      More people in the work force.

    7. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. Amazing how some people can keep on dispensing the same old Kool aid.

    8. Re:Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 1

      In America we made different choices. We can fight about which choice is better (Merica!), but they're not going to change for anyone's convenience. So, reality being what it is, savings are a good thing. Heck, the only world in which savings are a mistake is on where you expect social collapse, either anarchy or the government seizing all your savings. Plenty of Americans are stocking up ammo instead of investments, but history says that's overly pessimistic.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    9. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Women entered the workforce.

      When you basically double the number of workers, don't expect wages to increase.

      Also, people waste tons of money on gadgets that they didn't have in 1960.

    10. Re:Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 2

      Women entered the workforce.

      When you basically double the number of workers, don't expect wages to increase.

      I think you've got that wrong. What we can consume as a nation is more-or-less what we can produce as a nation. If twice as many people work, we should end up with twice as many goods and services. And our standard of living has gone up far more than 2x since the 50s.

      One person working will buy far more now than in the 50s, it's just that it's less than what we've become accustomed to in the past 60-odd years.

      Also, people waste tons of money on gadgets that they didn't have in 1960.

      Sure, but we also expect medical care based on an MRI instead of guesswork, and a car that has seatbelts and won't slide off the road in the rain, and a house with more rooms than people, and so on. Most of the difference in expense isn't frivolous stuff, it's important stuff. But we do get more.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    11. Re:Responsibility != Blame by thrich81 · · Score: 1

      Other factors you didn't list (at least for the USA):

      1) The rise of 2 earner households provided the means for a bidding war for some goods -- real estate and housing for example, which disadvantages 1 earner households so much that the mere rise of the 2 earner households made the necessity of a 2 earner household almost self-fulfilling.

      2) Related to your last item, but not exactly the same - Many items which were luxuries or non-existent 50 years ago are considered necessities now -- examples, air conditioning in houses and cars, travel by air, and of course personal computers, Internet. However this is somewhat lessened because many of these (air travel) are fantastically cheap compared to the past. Gasoline at $2+ per gallon is about the same after inflation. Average houses are considerably larger than they used to be.

      3) Health care -- much more expensive than it used to be, but also much more effective, and to some extent the populace is driving the costs up through their own obesity "epidemic" related to cheap sugar and meat available now, which both were relatively more expensive 50 years ago. And related to #2, many ailments we just lived with in the past (crooked or missing teeth, for example) are considered necessities to fix nowadays.

      4) Longer lives (related to #3 above) are driving up retirement costs. And older people are much more expensive to keep healthy (or just alive, from watching my relatives) so a positive feedback to #3.

      Government regulation has likely been a net reduction in costs or neutral at least. Government used to regulate air travel, rail transport, and trucking much more than they do now. The government break up of AT&T led to an immediate increase in competition in communications services and hardware. Back in the AT&T days residential customers had to lease their phones from the company.

      I'd like to see what it would cost to live now what a middle class lifestyle was in the 60's, but the differences are large enough that it would be difficult to calculate.

    12. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are literally the poster boy for autism. You absolutely know how the world should work and yet know nothing at all about how it actually works.

    13. Re:Responsibility != Blame by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      Savings are a good thing, but the majority of people can't save enough to pay for cancer treatment. More can afford to save up enough to cover periods of unemployment, but not all. And people at the bottom have far more to lose - if you are rich you probably won't lose your home, but if you are poor you may well do.

      Socialism is insurance. Cheaper insurance than any commercial policy.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    14. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're against "civilization"? Every man/woman/child for themselves?

      No need to work together to raise a barn or build a freeway?

      Nothing outside of your control will ever happen to anyone, and if it does, oh well, sucks to be them?

      Lots of people invested for decades and hit retirement right when the last bubble burst, and it burst bigly. You can see them waving "hello" to people just inside the doors of the local Walmart.

      Stop posting until you either live a little and gain some experience about how the world actually works, or continue posting that you're an uncaring POS so we can all remember to avoid you when you have a bad day/month/year.

      You're on your own, the rest of us are going to work together.

    15. Re:Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 1

      So you're against "civilization"? Every man/woman/child for themselves?

      No need to work together to raise a barn or build a freeway?

      Nothing outside of your control will ever happen to anyone, and if it does, oh well, sucks to be them?

      Taking care of everyone is a laudable aspiration. It's worth remembering, however, that "you" are part of "everyone". Start with your own financial responsibility. Sadly, that will put you above the average in the US. Then how about your family's?

      Those are things you can actually fix. They're within your power, much as they can be difficult. Maybe when you've demonstrated that you can do it, that you actually understand the sacrifice needed, and the investment decisions, and how to pursuade your own family to defer gratification, maybe then you'll be the right person to tell strangers how to do the same.

      Charity begins at home, but if you're doing well you'll have the resources to give to others. To be the generous one offering his own resources to help, not the sad sack saying "other people who are not me should totally care for the poor".

      "Someone else should pay for my retirement because that's more civilized" is perhaps a nice sentiment. I'm not so sure you have any inborn claim on the labors of others, but it sounds nice and all. What it's not is a retirement plan. What it's not is a plan to provide a house for your family. What it's not is a plan to keep providing a house for your family when your suddenly laid off, or your wife needs cancer treatment.

      Sentiment is great, but also have a plan. Those very things outside your control are coming, never doubt it. What's inside your control is to prepare for them, as best you can.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    16. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      None of the shit you list as a luxury costs a lot of money today. I would get to retire a week earlier by buying a dishwasher. A $400 dishwasher today was the same as spending $42 back in the 1950's. Not too shabby on a median $3,100 salary.

      One big difference between then and now is many households having two+ cars. The expense is about the same with a new car in 1955 costing about $1,500 or roughly $14,000 today. Another big difference is the inflation. Stuffing a dollar under your mattress in 1920 and pulling it out in 1965, it has lost roughly half it's value. Stuff a dollar under your mattress in 1965 and take it out in 2010, it has lost 85% of its value. Stuff a dollar under your mattress in the year 2000 and take it out today, it has lost roughly 42% of its value. The standard savings vehicle for most Americans for a long time was a savings account at a bank. It kept up with and exceeded inflation in many cases netting very modest but real gains. Now they must gamble on the stock market with their money to stay above inflation, despite record low inflation rates for much of the early part of this decade.

    17. Re:Responsibility != Blame by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      In the past, a single house hold earner could provide for a family. Now it takes two.

      What's changed? THAT'S what we need to look at.

      I suspect it will be a mix of increased costs due to:

      Government regulations and their impact on manufacturers.
      Industry practices...required because they can. fees surcharges, penalties, etc.
      Increased consumer materialism. You HAVE to have the big screen TV, you HAVE to have that 4 wheeler, new car, etc.

      You're mostly wrong - since the 1970's, inflation has increased at a steady rate, but wages haven't kept up; in fact, real wages have been decreasing over the past few years, while inflation has continued to grow.

      So the question you should be asking is, "Why haven't wages grown along with inflation?" and the simple answer can be found in the CEO wage gap and greedy shareholders only concerned about short-term financial gain for themselves, consequences be damned.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    18. Re:Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Stuffing a dollar under your mattress in 1920 and pulling it out in 1965, it has lost roughly half it's value. Stuff a dollar under your mattress in 1965 and take it out in 2010, it has lost 85% of its value.

      Guess when we went off the gold standard? Trick question; we actually went off the gold standard under FDR when he made it illegal for Americans to own gold, so that they couldn't redeem the notes that the government was no longer actually backing with gold (this is a thing that actually happened). But we admitted we were no longer on the gold standard in the 60s.

      The standard savings vehicle for most Americans for a long time was a savings account at a bank. It kept up with and exceeded inflation in many cases netting very modest but real gains. Now they must gamble on the stock market with their money to stay above inflation, despite record low inflation rates for much of the early part of this decade.

      Beyond a few month's savings for emergency, loaning money to banks is just a bad plan. A savings account has never been a way to stay ahead of inflation - that's not what it's for. Ownership of the means of production, via some broad-based index fund, takes the purchasing power of the dollar out of the picture. Year-by-year the stock market is effectively random, but over multiple decades it's dependable. It gets harder when you near retirement, as you need bonds (though own your house outright by then), but at that point you'll have something worth talking to a financial advisor about.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    19. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You actually don't (financially) need more bonds near/during retirement. Reducing risk during retirement years is unnecessary because retirement lasts nearly as long as work and thus enjoys the same returns-averaging effects. The data has always showed that retiree portfolios provide more money, more dependably, when they remain around 75% stock. See the study that spawned the famous "4% Rule" (itself often misunderstood) for one example. The difference is psychological. Retirees are psychologically more risk-averse because they are immediately dependent on (a tiny portion of) the funds. But, unless you're swimming in money relative to your needs, a stock allocation lower than 50% is just a horrible idea.

    20. Re:Responsibility != Blame by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      This sounds lovely until you realize that the majority of the population is working low-wage jobs where saving for retirement is impossible.

      And you also remember that people to not peacefully starve to death.

      So no, you can't just say "oh, you gotta handle this yourself". Unless you want to see what people do instead of peacefully starving to death.

    21. Re:Responsibility != Blame by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      Good luck when that national debt is mostly paid by printing counterfeit money to devalue what you earned. Deadbeat borrowers come out ahead

    22. Re:Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 2

      Take the time to understand the math behind Merton's portfolio problem.. Interestingly, this is a solved mathematical problem, if you can give your utility curve. Basically, volatility sucks when you need money every month. For the same reason that dollar cost averaging is awesome when you're first investing, withdrawing a fixed amount every month from a volatile source is a terrible idea.

      But, unless you're swimming in money relative to your needs, a stock allocation lower than 50% is just a horrible idea.

      If you have a way to decide when the market is low, and draw from bonds when the market is low and from stocks when it's fine, you can get by with a low bond percentage. Some would argue that if you can do that, you're already a billionaire, but I think you can. But it's an active approach where you're aware of the market. To just blindly take out $X/month, you come out ahead wit lower yields and lower volatility. In short, your lifetime value is yield over volatility^2 once you start drawing down.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    23. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      [...] Sometime in your life, likely more than once, something financially horrible (and possibly horrible in other ways) is going to happen to you. [...]

      Marriage.

    24. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Kyr+Arvin · · Score: 1

      We take color TV, an electric refrigerator, a dishwasher, and a washing machine for granted. Back when "single house hold earner could provide for a family" those were all considered luxuries to be aspired to.

      These are related. All of those advances are much cheaper now than they once were. And they are needed (well, maybe not multiple TVs) because we don't have time to spend all day home-making anymore. Staying home and living life like we did before the modern age? That's the luxury, though people only sometimes aspire to that.

    25. Re:Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 1

      This sounds lovely until you realize that the majority of the population is working low-wage jobs where saving for retirement is impossible.

      Median household income is just under $60k. You can save a lot on that.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    26. Re:Responsibility != Blame by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Median household income is just under $60k. You can save a lot on that.

      If you're single.

      Median household is not single, and has two kids.

    27. Re:Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 1

      Single you can save a lot on $30k, IMO.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    28. Re:Responsibility != Blame by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      If you have no kids. If we're going to divide the median household in half, you have one kid.

    29. Re:Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 1

      Household expenses don't scale linearly. This is why "households" are a thing: it's advantageous for a family to pool its resources.

      Not saying it's easy to save at these income levels. It requires hard sacrifices. E.g., it's easy to dismiss "status symbols" as unneeded, but that can be a big deal for your kid in high school. It takes discipline and practice to prioritize your spending such that you can live with the result, and it's harder still to do that for 2.

      It's hard, but people do hard things all the time, and it's easier with support and cultural backing. The generation that lived through the Great Depression had these habits, but it has gradually faded from our culture.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    30. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's simply not true. My house was built in 68. You know how much it sold for? I'll give you a hint, it was no where near the 400k that it would go for now.

      Cars were also made out of crazy things like iron which make them expensive, heavy, and prone to breakage. They also cost a whole lot less than today. College, even as far back as the 80s you could hold down a part time job to pay for a university. Now you'd be lucky to work full time to afford community college. A lot of this stuff costs way more even when adjusting for inflation.

      Setting a broken bone in the 60s wasn't a whole lot different than setting one today but I guarantee it costs at least an order of magnitude more to do now. Same with vaccinations. Polio was a big deal, can you imagine a nationwide effort to vaccinate now? It would be crazy expensive.

      My grand parents lived on a single income as a farmer in upstate New York, they had a tv, a car, a fridge, even a dish washer later in the 80s although my grand mother always preferred to hand wash. They raised 13 kids somehow many of which got odd jobs at a young age to help out. It wasn't easy then but it would be pretty impossible now. I can only imagine the health insurance premium alone!

    31. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's changed? THAT'S what we need to look at.

      Supply and Demand.

      Women entered the workforce.
      Women are 51% of the workforce.
      So the supply of workers doubled.
      Therefore the wages dropped.

      The increase in consumerism is because there are now more people earning money with their own wallets to pay for it-- for example, how many shoes would a man allow his wife to have if he's the one who has to pay for 'em? And how many shoes would a woman buy for herself if she's making her own money?

    32. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Most people don't earn enough money to actually provide for retirement on their own. The union pensions, in theory, were a way to provide a group responsibility for a savings plan that was cheaper than individual savings, similar to insurance. The snag was that these turned out to be badly run, with financial advisers who got extra greedy and took high risks, etc. But going it alone doesn't cut it if you're only making $25K a year and have nothing leftover at the end of the month to put into a high fee low return investment plan, much pay into a mortgage.

      Also remember that in the past the sage advice was to always put money into a bank's saving account, which is terrible advice today because they pay no interest. The financial education about how to survive in a stock market exchange without losing is not there. 401K is great but not many people have access to one.

      At some point you must rely upon somebody else, nobody can be 100% responsible with no one else in the picture. Paying into the union pension plan *is* presonal responsibility, the fact that it ends up bankrupt isn't due to a lack of personal responsibility any more than a 401K losing half its value overnight because of a bank scandal is due to the employee's lack of personal responsibility. If someone ends up with a million dollars of medical bills, is the problem a lack of responsibility for not being able to save even more?

      It's fine if you've got it all handled on your end. But don't blame every other human being for not being as lucky as you are.

    33. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      I'm rather cheap. I don't buy a lot of stuff. And I have high salary. But I do NOT feel financially secure. I am in a very high cost of living area that assumes you have a dual income, and I am not good at investing, and I started squirreling money away late in life because I went back to school.

      I've seen some people retiring early with a pretty solid plan, and other people having to continue working long after normal retirement age. The difference between them was not that one was smart and the other dumb. Much of the differences are based on luck; being in the right company at the right time, having unexpected expenses, believing your financial adviser, etc.

    34. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It can only be your responsibility to provide for your financial safety.

      Your solipsism is winding your way down the path of narcissistic anarchy. Turns out the whole concept of finance is based on interactions with others though, and it has worked out relatively well, despite the all too often abuse that occurs.

      And FWIW, the Stock Market is not safe, just ask any of the victims of various supposedly secure investment companies. Nor is currency. Or gold. Sorry, but there is no security in things, they have no free will. People do, and people can act either to your benefit or detriment. And all of it is still depending on your fellow humans.

      Therefore, individual collectivism aka, socialism is the safer path, and no, we can't just yell, but sometimes you do need to do so to get things done, that is why it is constitutionally protected, though even that relies on constant vigilance.

      You really have too much of a tendency to suborn your reasoning to your desired outcome, which leads you to worry about the income of the average American versus the debt when it is actually the productivity of the nation, such as expressed in GDP that matters, when factored against the growth of said debt, it is lower than your own portrayal depicts with its deceitful perspective.

      And that isn't even counting the wealth of the nation as a whole. It is vast pool in itself.

    35. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Darinbob · · Score: 2

      In America, we linked unions to socialism, and we linked socialism to communism, we linked social security to socialism too, and so the whole thing became a political minefield. Safety nets became a bad thing as a consequence, everyone being told that if you can't make ends meet then you lacked personal responsibility (unless it's my grandma, she was just unlucky, but your grandma on the other hand is a burden on the system you commie).

      Americans however are indeed saving money. We have economists that don't like this (savings means not spending), but we are saving whether that be in retirement accounts, contributing to pension plans, etc. The snag is that a lot of plans are underfunded, investment planners and banks take too many risks, and that there are many large increases in expenses (a family can be bankrupted from a single medical bill).

    36. Re: Responsibility != Blame by mapkinase · · Score: 1

      > You can't fix the overwhelming national debt ($178,000 per taxpayer!)

      Somebody explained to me that in case of America it's a good thing, because of the role of dollar as the global currency

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    37. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The past you're referring to is an anomoly. Most people use the 50's, 60's and early 70's as that "past", when that was true. A single earner (usually the husband) could afford the middle class lifestyle, which meant a modest house, one new car, one used car, and one family vacation (usually driving) per year.

      The thing to realize is that is not the norm. There are three major things that are different from then and from now, and they are things that cannot be changed:

      1) In that era, the world was rebuilding from a half-century of warfare and depression. Only the US stood unscathed, financially sound, and a massive industrial capacity; the rest of the world was in tatters and trying to rebuild with no industry to supply their rebuilding. As such, the US had a major growth cycle that fueled the middle class growth.

      2) Only men entered the workforce. This meant the salary growth options and retirement pension plans were reliable because the companies men worked for had long-term prospects as the US industry rebuilt the world; when you retired they could afford the pension.

      3) People lived relatively healthy lives, having been through the war, but in many ways the generation that won the war tried hard to provide for their children what they did not have when they were kids, and they had the income to do so. The medical technology put their life expectancy in the high-60's to 70's.

      What's different now:

      1) The world rebuilt. Now other countries are competitive with the US, not on par but the supply chains are global, not just American any more. The AMerican economy had to adapt to others being able to stand on their own. This limited the long-term growth prospects of American companies, and made long-term retirement plans unaffordable.

      2) Women entered the workforce. Now many families went from single earner to two-income households. Many lifestyle expenses, such as housing and vehicles, are bought by households, so when the family-households increased in income by 50 to 72%, their purchasing power went up, raising prices, and lowering the purchasing power of non-dual income households. This fundamentally changed the economics of the middle class.

      3) health care quality has improved, lengthening people's lives. Those kids who got all the stuff they wanted from their parents in the 50s and 60s? They're the baby-boomer retirees, who are 1) rife with problems like heart disease, diabetes, and obesity, and 2) living a life expectancy 5 to 10 years longer than their parents. This means pensions pay for much longer than they were originally designed, and the healthcare and insurance model is strained.

      These are macro-economic forces. THey cannot be changed. We're not sending women back to the homes, we're not going to kill off every person over 70, and we're not going to destroy the rest of the world so teh US economy has growth prospects. The economy must change to adapt to the new reality, the old reality just doesn't work any more.

    38. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very easy answer to that. The dipshit 3rd wave feminists of the 60's convinced tens of millions of women that being a wage slave was liberating, while being a stay at home mom was this idiotic life of worthless servitude. Massive increase in the labor supply, with demand not increasing to compensate = stagnant wages since the 70's. Inflation, however, has kept right on trucking, hence the need now for 2 incomes rather than 1.

    39. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The single person earning is mostly a lie. Look back to the 1920s and back. Usually the whole family was involved in making money. Including the children. Mom usually had a side gig. The kids did something to earn their keep. etc etc etc. the 1950s to 1970s was semi unusual (in the united states). In that we could sustain on one income. Because the rest of the word had basically blow itself to hell and were re-building. By the time they got nice and built up the united states had somehow thought that was 'the new norm'. Well it is not.

      Want to see see real poverty? The median income in parts of china is 90 cents a day. WHO defines extreme poverty to be less than 2.50. The median income in the US is 44k.

      But here are a few things I have learned in life. 1) it is not fair. 2) shit happens 3) sometimes life is good. Plan on 1 and 2 happening at the same time.

    40. Re:Responsibility != Blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit, my grandfather supported 12 kids bought a house and bought a new car off the lot every 3 years till the 80's on a factory income. What changed is employers stopped paying in line with increases in inflation and productivity because people with high incomes and leisure time tend to get involved in things that harm their bottom line, like expect them to not dump industrial waste into the water supply.

    41. Re:Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 2

      my grandfather supported 12 kids bought a house and bought a new car off the lot every 3 years till the 80's on a factory income. What changed is employers stopped paying in line with increases in inflation

      What changed is: those factories went out of business. GM, Chysler, most steel in the US, bankruptcies across the board. Mostly due to pension costs.

      tend to get involved in things that harm their bottom line, like expect them to not dump industrial waste into the water supply.

      When's the last time the US lit a river on fire? That sort of thing has gotten better over the decades, not worse.

      The lord can make you tumble
      The lord can make you turn
      The lord can make you overflow
      But the lord can't make you burn

      Burn on, big river, burn on
      Burn on, big river, burn on

      Surprisingly that was just 50 years ago, but it was shocking then, not expected as it was 120 years ago.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    42. Re:Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 1

      Most people don't earn enough money to actually provide for retirement on their own.

      That's simply not true. It may well be true of the bottom quintile, but not "most people" by a long shot. Most people don't make the needed sacrifices. I don't think that's a matter mostly of some weakness, though most of us struggle with deferred gratification, but of lack of cultural awareness. How to invest? When to Start? We don't learn these things growing up.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    43. Re:Responsibility != Blame by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Household expenses don't scale linearly. This is why "households" are a thing: it's advantageous for a family to pool its resources.

      Which is why it was a bad idea for you to try to cut the median household in half.

      E.g., it's easy to dismiss "status symbols" as unneeded, but that can be a big deal for your kid in high school.

      Status symbols are easy and relatively cheap to get. There's someone selling a used or knock-off version of everything.

      But at $30k for adult + child, we're not at the "status symbols" level. We're at the "needs food and clothes" level. Where an extravagance is having a car that can actually get you to work reliably.

    44. Re:Responsibility != Blame by lgw · · Score: 1

      So, while waiting for the glorious socialist revolution, your plan is to not save? That's stupid plan.

      And FWIW, the Stock Market is not safe, just ask any of the victims of various supposedly secure investment companies./quote>

      You can also lose all the money you were going to buy a house with due to wire fraud (which is a serious problem in the US right now). That doesn't make "buying your house" an unsafe investment.

      Investing in a single company is not safe. Investing in the US economy as a whole is. It's always comes down to "ownership of the means of production". You can wait for the glorious socialist revolution, or you can actually start buying your share of the means of production today.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  11. It degenerates into liberal v conservative by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
    It is an unstable system. Once upon a time you needed to fake sincerity. Then you got it made.

    Now you just need to sling mud and make it impossible to tell sincerity from hypocrisy.

    We are going back to Middle Ages and serfdom. Glad I will not live long enough to suffer in that era.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  12. Everyone is completely exempt from personal respon by Shotgun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    FTA: with retirement dependent almost entirely on how well they manage savings. Two-thirds of millennials have nothing saved for retirement..... Social security, when it was established, was meant to be one leg of a stool," says Gerald Friedman, an economist at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. "One leg would be the private pension through employment, a second leg personal savings, and a third leg social security. Social security is now the only source of income of a lot elderly have."

    Everyone is completely bereft of personal responsibility? In the richest country in the history of the world, people can not be held responsible for their own future? They can be excused because they have to have the latest big-screen LED and Iphone? Fun fact: A high school student working less that 20 hours a week at minimum wage makes more than 90% of the rest of humanity.

    As someone who has not been responsible with 401k savings, I can attest that it is not the rest of the country that is responsible for my retirement, and I do not care to hand more power over to clueless politicians and bureaucrats, which they will just use to garner more power. History has clearly shown they will badly mishandle any money that are given. Thank you, but no. Keep your so-called social security. I'll worry about me and mine.

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  13. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is interesting to watch people that are one minor accident or treatable chronic disease away from having to face reality.

  14. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We'll be done by Christmas I sware on me mum. Just like WW1.

    captcha: imperial

  15. You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What do people do when they don't have the money they need?

    They turn to crime. Then they get arrested and put in jail, where tax money pays for all of their needs. Also, higher crime rates creates a whole hosts of costs that ultimately come out of your pocket, including more tax money for law enforcement and higher insurance premiums in the impacted industries.

    They aren't going to conveniently just lay down and die, so, you, as the tax payer, will pay for their needs one way or the other.

    We are in a situation where the jobs that pay are in short supply, and the jobs that are available do not pay enough for people to both live on and save for retirement. This is great for the people at the top, who get way more money than they would have if they had to cover the costs of pensions and livable wages...but it is a nightmare for everyone else (and no, it is NOT POSSIBLE for everyone to be at the top).

    So, your dismissive attitude will only allow the problem to get worse, and you will be impacted by the consequences, one way or another.

    1. Re:You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You make no point that will help his dismissive attitude. If you pointed out that laws are structured to help the few entrenched players and we need to change those that may have been helpful. Your response sounds as if you have no idea what money is.

    2. Re:You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why then was the crime rate so low during the great depression?

      Poverty does not cause crime.

      Now, an entitlement mentality, that's something to consider.

    3. Re:You forgot one thing. by magarity · · Score: 1, Funny

      What do people do when they don't have the money they need?

      They turn to crime.

      TFA is about retirement funds. How many granny gangs have mugged you lately?

    4. Re:You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure there is a massive income inequality problem, but if you compare GDP per capita to income per capita then full redistribution won't carry everyone from today to their deathbed... There isn't enough wealth in the US economy to cover our "basic human rights." We've either hit a productivity decline that doesn't show up in productivity data or we need a massive adjustment to what we desire/consume.

    5. Re:You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who says prisons have to be non-profit?

      Problem solved.

    6. Re:You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >We are in a situation where the jobs that pay are in short supply, and the jobs that are available do not pay enough for people to both live on and save for retirement.

      So the current situation is that we allow the offshoring of jobs that would generate demand and higher pay, without imposing any taxes or tariffs (until just the last few months) on the imported products. We allow access to our high profit market without any associated cost that domestic manufacturers pay to support the nation. We say the cost reductions are a benefit while ignoring the wage stagnation, and we validate this with math by saying we show a net GDP gain. What we fail to say (when this argument is made) is that the GDP gains are unequally distributed, and go primarily to the existing asset holders (company owners). Or at least, we don't connect these 2 things when we say them.

      Further, we tie workers into situational wage stagnation by tying their healthcare deduction to their employment. We then further burden workers with complex tax deduction schemes that pit them against each other in voting blocks by deduction type. All this while the majority of the corporations they work for could simply have paid 1 equitable rate for the overall wages paid, and vastly simplified a beaurocratic system allowing the workers the freedom to think about how to invest their capital instead of protecting it from taxation.

      Then we make the argument that all this is not the problem, and we just need more rules to protect this set of people or that set of people. It's clear what the purpose is. Keep the people following 10,000 rules in a rat race maze so they can't pick up their heads and make change. The change we need is the original US taxation mechanism: primary taxation on businesses, and no income taxes on workers. Businesses themselves will then lobby for the appropriate tariff protections, with the push/pull of lowering cost vs protecting profits. Individuals have near zero lobbying power to change these things, and this is the way the current GDP "winners" like it.

    7. Re:You forgot one thing. by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      There is more than enough wealth in the US economy for basic human rights for every woman man and child! You are just lacking in enough people who want to share it.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    8. Re:You forgot one thing. by edtice1559 · · Score: 1

      I hate to reply to an AC offering a simplistic world view, but this was interesting enough to Google. https://www.history.com/topics... I don't think we can say anything definitive though as there were too many moving parts. Honest people who are out of a job and desperate don't usually turn to violent crime right away. The first beg and borrow and then do petty crimes like stealing or falsely claiming disability. It usually takes a stint in prison to turn them into what we normally think of as hardened criminals.

    9. Re: You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, commiting suicide also solves the problem.

      It's nice to meet people who think like that.

    10. Re:You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do people do when they don't have the money they need?

      They turn to crime.

      TFA is about retirement funds. How many granny gangs have mugged you lately?

      You think Trump being elected isn't a related consequence?

    11. Re: You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The ones who fought a civil war against slavery.

    12. Re:You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do people do when they don't have the money they need?

      They turn to crime.

      TFA is about retirement funds. How many granny gangs have mugged you lately?

      "Looky here, another unsuspecting ponce!"

    13. Re:You forgot one thing. by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

      He says A, you say B. Give us some stats to prove B. Because from where I sit, he's right: providing everyone with a current standard of living is undoable.

    14. Re:You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do people do when they don't have the money they need?

      They turn to crime. Then they get arrested and put in jail, where tax money pays for all of their needs. Also, higher crime rates creates a whole hosts of costs that ultimately come out of your pocket, including more tax money for law enforcement and higher insurance premiums in the impacted industries.

      They aren't going to conveniently just lay down and die, so, you, as the tax payer, will pay for their needs one way or the other.

      We are in a situation where the jobs that pay are in short supply, and the jobs that are available do not pay enough for people to both live on and save for retirement. This is great for the people at the top, who get way more money than they would have if they had to cover the costs of pensions and livable wages...but it is a nightmare for everyone else (and no, it is NOT POSSIBLE for everyone to be at the top).

      So, your dismissive attitude will only allow the problem to get worse, and you will be impacted by the consequences, one way or another.

      Right now there are over five million trade jobs that remain unfilled. These are paying jobs that entitled little snowflakes refuse to take because they are "above" that kind of work. According to them, an undergrad in lesbian dance theory should be paying six figures because the institution that labeled that bullshit an education said so.

      And the "gig" workforce describes what people do when they don't have the money they need. They find a way to earn more, even if that means a second and third job. They turn to families, churches, and charities for help. They join the military. Not everyone turns to crime. In fact, the overwhelming majority of people don't become criminals regardless of how bad their situation is, because that usually makes shit worse.

      Your ignorant attitude in not understanding human behavior is the only thing that should be dismissed here.

    15. Re:You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TFA is about retirement funds. How many granny gangs have mugged you lately?

      All of them. Every last one. But of course since there aren't any, all of them is 0.

    16. Re:You forgot one thing. by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      So, your dismissive attitude will only allow the problem to get worse, and you will be impacted by the consequences, one way or another.

      Yes, but when that poster ends up in the same place, his attitude will change. He will say, "Those other people were awful, but my situation is different because reasons."

    17. Re:You forgot one thing. by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      It's interesting you weren't at all interested in any stats to prove A. Or any evidence that GDP per capita is a relevant metric, and unable to be changed over the ~30 years from "today" to "deathbed".

    18. Re: You forgot one thing. by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      Most prisons already are for profit. That's why they are all overcrowded, spend $1per prisoner per meal, and we lock people up for more and more minor crimes for longer.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    19. Re:You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like a cultural issue and not a government issue.

    20. Re:You forgot one thing. by TheFakeTimCook · · Score: 1

      Who says prisons have to be non-profit?

      Problem solved.

      You apparently have never heard of THESE guys:

      http://www.correctionscorp.com...

      https://www.motherjones.com/po...

    21. Re:You forgot one thing. by Junta · · Score: 1

      It's a challenge because you are right, there is enough wealth for basic human rights for every person, as it stands.

      However if you take away the need to work, much of that 'wealth' evaporates.

      We have a conundrum, we *can* take care of everyone even if some people are unwilling or unable to have a job. The day will come when we can't even come up with anything for all the capable and willing people to work to have a job. As far as being decently human, we should take care of folks even if they don't have a job. However, some people must carry on working in order for those few to be taken care of. So how do we fairly decide who is stuck having to work to take care of those who don't have to work if everyone is well compensated? Going the other way, how can we stand to withhold surplus resources from the needy when we know full well it can be spared?

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    22. Re: You forgot one thing. by mapkinase · · Score: 1

      jail should be for rich people who should pay for jail. Poor people crimes need to be dealt harshly by selling them to slavery, executing them or providing physical punishment.

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    23. Re:You forgot one thing. by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      To me the UBI model is fairly straight forward and solves these problems. If you don't work you get UBI only and can buy basic things. If you do work you get UBI + a smaller salary and can afford luxuries. As withholding surplus resources from the needy, countries with government medical systems work out those kinds of issues all the time.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    24. Re:You forgot one thing. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Mean (not median) household income in the US in 2014 was $72,641. It depends what you mean by "current standard of living" of course, but 72k sounds okay. Mean income was above median income, and median would be a reasonable way of defining "current standard of living."

    25. Re:You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why then was the crime rate so low during the great depression?

      Poverty does not cause crime.

      Actually, crime in the Great Depression was a very serious problem, especially after Prohibition. Lots of people became associated with criminal gangs that engaged in bootlegging, robbing banks, loan-sharking, and murder. There were also major problems with kidnapping. Back then, Chicago alone was estimated by the FBI to have over 1300 gangs - far more than today where there are only an estimated 59 gangs in the city.

      Of course, then - as now - the most successful criminals were found in the ranks of politicians, lawyers, corporate executives, and other members of the super-wealthy. Then, as now, most of these people never had to worry about their actions catching up to them. The biggest exceptions to that happened to people that were on the "wrong" side. FDR was very quick to go after his political opponents when the opportunity presented itself (such as Carnegie - FDR's own advisors told him the guy was innocent but he still went after him), but protected his friends to the extent that it was politically feasible to do so. Similar corruption marked many of the New Deal programs.

      After Prohibition ended, and as the government increased military spending starting in 1933 (but probably only taking visible effect in 1934), the economy improved. The naval spending in particular led to a lot of jobs for ordinary people, since building ships (and their components, a task could be done anywhere, not just next to the ocean) was very manpower-intensive. The spending also required lots of inspectors, accountants, and so forth - so it created white collar jobs as well as blue.

      As the economy improved the crime rate among ordinary folks went down substantially (for example, homicide went down 20%). The suicide rate went down too (and there were a lot fewer people being killed by being hit by trains, i.e. suicides that didn't get counted in the official suicide statistics).

      The ending of Prohibition probably helped as well, as it gave people a legitimate way to reduce the pain (and created a lot more jobs, growing grapes and hops and brewing and transporting and selling and so forth).

      As you might expect, while the crime rate among ordinary people went down, the politicians, lawyers, and so forth kept on with business-as-usual, meaning corrupt government, unethical practice of law, and other criminal activities.

      Unfortunately, that continues today, and over the long term this has become a major contributing factor in today's crime rate. People in poor areas - deprived of equal opportunity as a result of property tax law, and further hammered with regressive sales and/or property taxes - the laws are FAR more regressive today then they were in the 1930's - keep seeing the 1% getting away with all kinds of stuff that is wrong. You can hardly turn on or read the news without seeing this.

      A lot of this stuff is not just wrong, but is actually criminal, since the infringement of fundamental rights "under the colour of law" is a federal crime, though seldom enforced - especially since government is often the biggest violator of fundamental rights.

      Hence, the poor for a long time have been getting the idea hammered into their head that for the rich and for special interest groups like the lawyers, crime DOES pay. The poor in turn have little incentive to respect the law (or - more importantly, given the corruption and massive ethics problems in the US legal system, and where there are many illegal laws - to do the right thing whatever the law says, think about the Nuremberg Precedent).

      How do you expect to teach children to respect the law when many of the most successful people in society are routinely breaking it, and profiting by doing harm to society?

      So the poor decide to get their own from the system that has systematically deprived them of legitimate opportunities. Some of them become Robin Hood figures, but many others tu

    26. Re: You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about the US, but in Australia most trades take a 4 year apprenticeship to become qualified. Unless you can get an apprenticeship it is impossible to get those jobs and most adults can't afford to live on apprenticeship wages

    27. Re:You forgot one thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do people do when they don't have the money they need?

      They turn to crime. Then they get arrested and put in jail, where tax money pays for all of their needs. Also, higher crime rates creates a whole hosts of costs that ultimately come out of your pocket, including more tax money for law enforcement and higher insurance premiums in the impacted industries.

      They aren't going to conveniently just lay down and die, so, you, as the tax payer, will pay for their needs must deal with them one way or the other.

      fTFY. so, capitol punishment for all crimes.

    28. Re:You forgot one thing. by sydbarrett74 · · Score: 1

      most of today's military spending doesn't create many blue collar jobs.

      Indeed. The lion's share of military spending these days goes not to service members, but to the CEO's and shareholders of General Dynamics and other large defence contractors.

      --
      'He who has to break a thing to find out what it is, has left the path of wisdom.' -- Gandalf to Saruman
  16. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bootstraps! It's the American way you cuck!

    Boil and eat your bootstraps!

  17. As I lay in bed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I could use a little UBI today...

  18. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The companies may blame this on trade wars, but lets be real here:

    Toys-R-US was going under, regardless of what the political climate did. They needed to change with the times, because people buy cool stuff from Kickstarters, OK stuff from Amazon, and cheap stuff from Wally World. They needed to morph into a Sharper Image like store rather than compete with the wholesalers.

    GM... well, the Buick Envision is a Chinese import, so are a number of their Cadillac models. Their cars have been anemic and lackluster for a while, and they have tossed technologies which could have been useful, such as hybrid pickup trucks and SUVs. They were losing money because their sedans were lackluster compared to the competition, and they didn't really innovate. So, they used the trade stuff as an excuse to shutter plants to focus on gas guzzling SUVs, which means come the next gas crunch, they will be back in Congress begging for another cash infusion, when the public is buying plug in hybrids or all electric cars from Toyota.

    Both of those companies would be on the ropes no matter who is POTUS.

  19. Re:Paying people to not work by SirMasterboy · · Score: 1

    Social Security pays out less than you paid in until you reach around age 81. The average person lives until 78.

    But doesn't that figure factor in people dying very young too?

    Shouldn't we really be looking at the average lifespan only of people who are actually able to start taking social security?

    Then we would see if the average person who takes social security actually gets more or less than they pay in. Obviously everyone else gets nothing out of it since they died before they could even start taking it.

  20. Generous Pension Plans by sycodon · · Score: 0

    These are pretty much what drives the outrageous costs these companies face.

    Public pension plans are a huge driver of the cost of government.

    Repeat this kind of largess at the state, local level, and union shops and there you go.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    1. Re:Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what you're saying is that it costs too much to allow old people to retire, so the very idea should be abandoned.

    2. Re: Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yeah, pension is the problem. Right. But we can allocate three quarters of a trillion dollars to the military, no problem. Right.

    3. Re:Generous Pension Plans by sycodon · · Score: 0

      You didn't even read the link, you useless piece of shit.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    4. Re: Generous Pension Plans by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Half a million Federal Employees with a pension of over 100k a year is $50 billion.

      Ya...Pensions are a problem for the people who have to pay for them.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    5. Re:Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup, old age pension is hugely expensive. In some places of the world, we think it is worth it though. I don't' need to take care of my parents - because they have their pensions. In a way, that pension is deducted from my high taxes. But it is nice to know they will get their pension even if my workplace fail in some way.

      Another way of seeing it: the pension money may be a lot - but at least it isn't going into "big government". Just a handout to the old.

    6. Re: Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please put the idiot tag at the beginning of your posts, not just the end.

    7. Re:Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a toxic blockhead. Have fun with that. No one around you will.

    8. Re: Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the pensions are the problem. But not for the reasons you think. The pensions have been borrowed against instead of leaving them to collect interest in order to pay the retirees. Now that we have people retiring, the money needs to be put back. Since the borrowed money was spent, that money comes from the current budget. But that's not a problem right? You can just raise prices or make more widgets?

    9. Re:Generous Pension Plans by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      It's too much to let people retire after 25 years of work and live for 40 more after that, yep. Especially when they're contributing 10% or less of earnings.

      If you want to retire at 55, you probably need to be saving 40% of more of earnings.

    10. Re:Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You didn't even read the link, you useless piece of shit.

      The link said nothing about the cost of pension plans, so I conclude that you didn't read it.

      The link did tell me that IT workers for the government make over $100K per year. With the cost of living in DC, I'm not sure that this is high (you'd have to pay me more than that to work in DC). It also told me that this is significantly more than the minimum wage paid to most of the workers in the U.S. Yes, I believe that.

    11. Re:Generous Pension Plans by ahodgson · · Score: 3, Insightful

      To put this in perspective:

      Every current resident of Chicago, Illinois, is on the hook for $125,000 in unfunded pension liabilities between the city, county and state. If those pensions are actually going to get paid, every resident needs to cough up an extra $125,000 over the next 30 years. And that number goes up every year, because current commitments are still not being funded. Given the income and wealth distribution in Chicago, practically that means every complete household with decent earners will need to cough up an additional $400,000 or more towards public pensions. All while not saving for their own retirement.

      Now, Chicago is by far the biggest basket case, but this is not unique.

      New York City is only short about $11,000 per household for pensions. But they're also short $23,000 per household for retiree health care.

      Look into your own city, county, and state, and do the math. You can practically subtract the underfunded amount from the value of your home, because that's where the leeches will be looking to extract all that money from when it comes down to it.

    12. Re: Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fortunately, money for the military just materializes and is not paid with anybody's taxes.

      Have you read what you wrote?

    13. Re: Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The pensions are not $100k a year, the current salaries are. The pensions are either 1% or 1.1% of salary per year worked, depending on age/time in service and a few other details. So estimate somewhere between 20% and 30% of the salary numbers overall. Still a big scary number, but not $50B.

    14. Re: Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Half a million Federal Employees with a pension of over 100k a year is $50 billion.

      Ya...Pensions are a problem for the people who have to pay for them.

      Where do you get your figures from? The average federal employee retires at around the GS-11 or GS12 grade. A GS12 step 10 (as in maxed out in the grade), in the San Jose/San Francisco/Oakland makes $115,157 gross salary. Out of that, they have taxes, and retirement taken out. When they retire (those in the current system FERS) have their pension calculated at Years of service X 1 or 1.1% (depending on if they retire before or after age 62) X average high 3 salary. With a 50 year career (not common, though I have seen a few 30 and 40 year folks) only in the civil service the best they can get is a little over $63k gross.

      A large percentage of those a military vets...who simply liked serving their country. Granted they can buy back their military time, but they do buy it back.

      Even if you go to the older CSRS retirement system, the same maxed out GS12 would only get about 75-80% of their salary in retirement...and no social security (they didn't pay into social security in that retirement system. The current FERS systems do).

    15. Re: Generous Pension Plans by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

      in California, it's 2%, and 3% for firemen/police, which is what's killing everyone.

    16. Re: Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ooh.... call me names, daddy. Call me names.

    17. Re:Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what you're saying is that it costs too much to allow old people to retire, so the very idea should be abandoned.

      (You are a poor reader and may benefit from returning to grade school, even if only for one year.)

      He may believe what you just said, but he definitely did not say that. Look harder at his post, and what words he said vs which ones you merely imagined.

      What he actually said, is that it costs a lot, and that was all. He did not say or imply that it costs "too much" and should therefore be abandoned. It was merely the voice inside your head that said that. Or you believe that, and his explanation that it costs a lot, happened to be a match made in heaven.

    18. Re: Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Half a million Federal Employees with a pension of over 100k a year is $50 billion.

      Ya...Pensions are a problem for the people who have to pay for them.

      BS, half a million federal employees don't have a pension of over 100k.

      More like half a million federal employees have a pension that range 15k to 100k, with 90% being below 50,

    19. Re: Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't live in a city. I guess the county sheriff's staff has to retire, but that's about it.

    20. Re:Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To put this in perspective:

      Every current resident of Chicago, Illinois, is on the hook for $125,000 in unfunded pension liabilities between the city, county and state. If those pensions are actually going to get paid, every resident needs to cough up an extra $125,000 over the next 30 years. And that number goes up every year, because current commitments are still not being funded. Given the income and wealth distribution in Chicago, practically that means every complete household with decent earners will need to cough up an additional $400,000 or more towards public pensions. All while not saving for their own retirement.

      Now, Chicago is by far the biggest basket case, but this is not unique.

      New York City is only short about $11,000 per household for pensions. But they're also short $23,000 per household for retiree health care.

      Look into your own city, county, and state, and do the math. You can practically subtract the underfunded amount from the value of your home, because that's where the leeches will be looking to extract all that money from when it comes down to it.

      Or the other option. 20 people with more than 100 million need to be hung and their money will pay for the problem. My state has a perfectly balanced pension system that makes profits due to returns on investments.

    21. Re:Generous Pension Plans by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Explains why Chicago will ass-tax you when you sell your home. They will get their pound of flesh on the way out. Guaranteed.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    22. Re:Generous Pension Plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget about the massive subsidies that go to red states from the much more productive blue states. If over half of the income of blue states didn't go to red states, all those pensions would be paid for twice over.

  21. more uncomfortable truths of late stage capitalism by nimbius · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The US plays a slight-of-hand trick with its unemployment figures, cherrypicking whom it considers homeless in order to improve its image. for example The U-3 is the rate most often reported in the media. In the U-3 rate, the Bureau of Labor Statistics only counts people without jobs who are in the labor force. To remain in the labor force, they must have looked for a job in the last four weeks.
    The U-6, or real unemployment rate, includes the underemployed, the marginally attached, and discouraged workers.

    Actual unemployment in the US is 7.4%.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  22. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Most Americans don't earn enough to pay for food, housing, medical care, and save for retirement. Maybe we should pay our workforce better, then we could talk about personal responsibility.

  23. Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remove all the 15 million illegals from the country. Congrats, you just opened up a ton of jobs, got rid of a ton of crime, and removed the welfare /medical strain.

    1. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      Only problem is with the birthrate dropping fairly significantly in the US, stopping immigration puts us in the same position China and Japan are finding themselves in - way too many older folks and way to few workers. Here, however, we don't have the social structure in most families where the kids take care of the parents. So be careful what you wish for - you might just get it.

    2. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL

      I've got news for you: if an illegal is doing your job, you have a shit job

      15 million worthless low skill low pay jobs

    3. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of these 15 million undocumented workers pay taxes and never collect government benefits, fearing that ICE will use the information to deport them. Also, the percentage of these workers who commit crimes is lower than the national average, again because they are afraid of being deported.

      If you want to shut down the undocumented workers coming into this country, go after the people who are paying them cash under the table and not paying the payroll taxes. Go after the employers who receive falsified documentation and look the other way just to get a worker who will put in 100 hour work weeks for less than any American could live on because they are willing to live 6 guys to a room. But no one wants to do that because it would expose that nasty truth that we are all wanting to avoid...businesses are addicted to cheap undocumented labor. It makes these guys sweat buckets at the Trump rallies when he goes on about the tsunami of undocumented criminals crossing the border. These guys are up shit creek if that tsunami dies down.

      I'm talking about fast food restaurants, construction contractors (the primary skill qualification for a crew lead is to know Spanish and English), landscaping companies, food processing plants...even agriculture, though they have a legal migrant worker program, but a lot resort to undocumented workers because they can pay a lot less. Go to any horse barn, for instance, and as soon as you find the guys mucking the stalls, Spanish is the predominant language. Because they will work hard for less than anyone else.

    4. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by superdave80 · · Score: 1

      way too many older folks and way to few workers.

      I hate this idea that we need to keep cramming more people into this world because older people want to have someone to take care of them. We have enough people already, housing prices are going through the roof, water supplies are getting scarcer by the day. Let's not create more of a population problem so that grandma and grampa will have a nice retirement.

    5. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by Terwin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Only problem is with the birthrate dropping fairly significantly in the US, stopping immigration puts us in the same position China and Japan are finding themselves in - way too many older folks and way to few workers. Here, however, we don't have the social structure in most families where the kids take care of the parents. So be careful what you wish for - you might just get it.

      The US leads the world in legal immigration(More than #2-5 combined), plenty to make up for the less than replacement birth rate.

      Illegal immigrants are, by definition criminals, and can easily be coerced into worse crimes, assuming they are not already stealing identities and other crimes which may be necessary to support their illegal presence in this country.

      I'm all for legal immigration(Wife is Canadian, and we went through the entire process), but illegal immigration is bad for both the person and the country(great for lots of criminal organizations though).

      Ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    6. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      Didn't say we needed more kids. My point is that immigration isn't nearly as bad a thing as some make it out to be.

    7. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree with your point that people should take the proper steps and do it legally. I do think we put too many roadblocks in the way though.

    8. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      because older people want to have someone to take care of them

      Grandma and grandpa are also going to reach a point where they can no longer care for themselves, even with a massive retirement savings. Or no savings, for that matter.

      It's not a matter of want. It's a matter of physically being unable to do it. Unless you want to start embedding crystals in everyone's palm, we're going to need younger generations to care for the older.

    9. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by jeff4747 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Illegal immigrants are, by definition criminals, and can easily be coerced into worse crimes

      [Citation Required]

      Mostly because the rate at which all immigrants commit crime, legal immigrant or not, is lower than the native population. If they could be so easily coerced, that couldn't be true.

      assuming they are not already stealing identities and other crimes which may be necessary to support their illegal presence in this country.

      It's generally not required. Employers will happily pay in cash. Saves on payroll taxes. 'Cause we don't dare prosecute employers for tax evasion.

      but illegal immigration is bad for both the person and the country

      [Citation Required]

      The US has been using undocumented farm labor for about a century. Including the times most MAGA folks consider our "golden age". The Bracero program was an attempt to reform this, but it didn't play very well politically.

      We're pretending this is a new and troubling problem because one party sees political gain in fear-mongering on the subject, and another party sees political gain in supporting undocumented workers.

      The fact is we need a large pool of migrant workers for unskilled farm labor. Because we need a large workforce for a relatively short window of time in a particular area, which gradually moves North with the various harvests. So you can't be one of these workers and just live in your particular location, you have to migrate....or starve. And it works pretty well when the workers can go back to their home country for the winter, since it's a cheaper place to live.

      Farmers will not pay enough for native USA'ians to be those migrant workers. Poor people currently from Central America will do the work for the wages the farmers will pay, so that's what happens. Other times it was workers from other countries. And we refuse to prosecute these farmers for employing undocumented workers, largely because it would mean prosecuting virtually all of them.

      So, we play games about "cracking down" on immigrants to show just how tough we are, while ignoring all the people currently working the fields or the guy paying those workers.

      And then you go vote, based on this game, feeling good about how tough we're being. Those children definitely needed to be in cages, and ooh! Apples are on sale!

    10. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Right, but illegal immigrants (specifically Latino) are the perfect "gimme free shit" voter.

      Mark my words - the Democrat Party will be the new CCP of America. And there's a whole lot of ignorant indigent moochers all willing to give them power via future votes.

      Me? I'm waiting for the entire shit-show to end not with a bang, but a pathetic whimper. "viva socialism!!!". Yeah, fuck that.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    11. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm assuming that your information about immigrants is coming from some place like Fox News and its ilk, because it's clearly not rooted in reality.

      First of all, illegal immigrants clearly aren't voters, at least not until they get legal status and then become naturalized, which can take decades for those few that can manage it.

      Second, nobody works hard than illegal immigrants for so little money. And since so little is available to them in terms of government assistance due to their status, they're pretty unlikely to have a "gimme free shit" attitude.

      Third, it's not clear what you think is wrong with socialism. When you look at failed states that claimed to be socialist (like Venezuela or Soviet Union), it's pretty obvious that they failed not due to socialism but due to having incompetent dictators. Places like Canada and Norway have plenty of socialism and none of the nightmares you're imagining.

    12. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by superdave80 · · Score: 1

      Then what happens to the next generation when they get old? Who takes care of them? We'll need even MORE workers at that point.

    13. Re:Trump is trying to stop illegals, for one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for admitting that every single American who is not 100% Native is here illegally and is a criminal by default. We already knew white people were predisposed to crime, I like to hear people admit it out loud though.

  24. Re:Paying people to not work by Tablizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The only financial safety net you need is competence.

    This "just be good" philosophy doesn't scale. If everyone had a PhD and A-plus GPA, there would not be enough positions for their talent. PhD's would end up mopping restrooms, with many unemployed.

    Or are you a social Darwinist who believes the unproductive/lazy should be allowed to just wither & die so that we breed more productive humans?

    Even if you hold this view, many would turn to a life of crime and/or riots out of desperation, making for a nasty society.

    We currently have move openings than people looking for work.

    We are on the crest of a typical economic cycle. A recession is almost certain within a few years.

  25. Re:The solution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    What? And have Pence take over? Sheesh.

  26. Re:Paying people to not work by layabout · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you want to retire comfortably, you need to make the most of your productive years. Not hope for a last minute bail out.

    to your advice I would add, live a solo life, never have kids, never suffer a major illness and never trust the finance industry. any one of those mistakes and all your hard won savings vanishes.

  27. Some Rules of Finance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here are some incontrovertible rules about finance in a Keynesian financial system like we have in the US:

    1) Wealth is neither created nor destroyed - it only changes hands
    2) Defined benefit plans are always unsustainable, as the eventual cost of a defined benefit plan is infinity
    3) The eventual price of all equities is zero (all companies will eventually go out of business)
    4) Government will eventually destroy all wealth through inflation

    And last and most important:

    5) The only person looking out for you is you

    Guys, there are no promises in life. Pensions, safety nets, social security... it's all bullshit. Every last bit of it. Nobody owes you anything, and nobody is going to make good on lofty promises. It is up to you to prepare yourself for all things in life, from starting a family to retirement to your own burial.

    1. Re:Some Rules of Finance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Wealth is neither created nor destroyed - it only changes hands

      You are SO wrong. banks CREATE money from thin air. see : fractional reserve banking

    2. Re:Some Rules of Finance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They create money not wealth from thin air. Wealth is found in assets not money.

    3. Re:Some Rules of Finance by MrLogic17 · · Score: 1

      >1) Wealth is neither created nor destroyed - it only changes hands

      Pray tell, where was the wealth of Silicon Valley during the Dark Ages?

      Also pray tell, how do you account for a gold miner who finds a large gold nugget in a river. His personal wealth has undeniably & vastly increased. Who did he rob to get that new wealth?

      You keep your mindset on fighting over your tiny slice of a tiny pie. I'll keep making newer, bigger pies.

    4. Re:Some Rules of Finance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not an economics professor, I see. The gold prospector has not created wealth, he has created money. The creation of money negates the creation of wealth, as the creation of new money devalues all existing money, except in the presence of the creation of new wealth (i.e. new value).

      When he tries to spend that money in the absence of the creation of new value, the purchasing power is immediately diminished. You're looking at the OP microscopically and not macroscopically.

      Problem with Keynesian econ is that the rule says you create money faster than society creates value, thereby negating the value. You inflate the money supply so that created value is not accretive to wealth. You essentially rob the people of the fruits of their labor by devaluing their existing money faster than they create new value. This is called inflation.

      Inflation is designed to do this - to rob the people - and to disincentivize saving, as anything saved automatically loses its purchasing power. This is why the left LOVES Keynesian economics coupled with pseudo-capitalism. You allow just enough capitalism to make people think they can get ahead (keeps them trying) but then you rig the game so that it's impossible to actually do that.

      You're a moron if you think you're actually creating a larger pie. Your larger pie has no more value than the size of the pie you had before. It will just take a couple of economic time constants for you to realize the loss.

    5. Re:Some Rules of Finance by Agent0013 · · Score: 1

      But that gold nugget is only worth money if someone will pay him for it. If nobody wanted it, he would be just as poor as he was before he found it. So who's money did he get when he sold his nugget? I don't know, it is your story, you tell me who's money it is.

      --

      -- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
    6. Re:Some Rules of Finance by k6mfw · · Score: 1

      It is up to you to prepare yourself for all things in life, from starting a family to retirement to your own burial.

      Considering half of children live in poverty and start the school day hungry (it wasn't up to them to choose where they were born), maybe that's the way things are. Alan Greenspan talked about the growing wealth inequality commenting something like the human intellect really doesn't know how to address this issue. https://www.c-span.org/video/?...

      Overall comments on this thread by just about everyone are depressing and example why people vote for politicians that make policy against people's best interests.

      --
      mfwright@batnet.com
  28. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Delusional. No matter how competent you are (or think that you are), you are still at great risk for the vicissitudes of life, large-scale economic trends, and agism (although this is part of 'vicissitudes of life').

  29. Death of pensions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is really a HUGE problem in Trump speak. With a pension system you "save" for the average life span. When everyone has their own pension, everyone has to save for the max life span. If you die early the kids get it. If you die late, well, I guess it will be quick as you will be 85 living on the street homeless. That won't last long. Maybe you will be lucky and have dementia so you think you are skiing out there on the cold snowy streets.

  30. Ha! Good one there, have another? by damn_registrars · · Score: 2

    This is a huge problem, and one that liberals in particular should have capitalized on this election cycle.

    Indeed, they should have capitalized on it. But we're talking about the party that lost the white house to the man who is arguably the least qualified politician since the dawn of our democracy. The democrats are practically synonymous with "pulling failure from the jaws of victory". Being as truth doesn't get votes any more, they ended up pretty much where we expected - they now control one half of one third of the government.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  31. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by DigressivePoser · · Score: 1

    As someone who has not been responsible with 401k savings, I can attest that it is not the rest of the country that is responsible for my retirement, and I do not care to hand more power over to clueless politicians and bureaucrats, which they will just use to garner more power. History has clearly shown they will badly mishandle any money that are given. Thank you, but no. Keep your so-called social security. I'll worry about me and mine.

    Yup. And the facts prove it. The Social Security "trust fund" contains nothing but IOUs because politicians spent it all on other things. When I retire I fully expect SS to be gone or drastically reduced. I've planned accordingly by maxing out my 401K and investing it in safer instruments.

  32. Re: Everyone is completely exempt from personal re by houghi · · Score: 2

    So what if some kid in the US rearns mote than most in the world. I could move and earn twice as mych. Cost of living would double or tripple. So I would be worse off with more money.

    I also know people who took a pay cut and have a better life, because where they now live it is dirt cheap.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  33. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by hey! · · Score: 4, Informative

    GM is highly dependent on sales in China, which imports 13 billion dollars of cars from the US. GM also operates plants and joint ventures in China too. So to the degree that sanctions inflict economic pain on China, US companies and their workers will suffer along with the Chinese. This can affect even workers who are working on products sold in the US. As a company's resources contract, they direct those resources away from projects that are less profitable in the short term.

    Now you could argue that we'd have been better off never getting into a trade relationship with China. That would be non-orthodox from an economic point of view, but you could make the case. But even if that were true, that doesn't mean you're better off disrupting that relationship. In business what you can accomplish from where you are is what matters, not where you could have been if things had been different.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  34. pensions by hdyoung · · Score: 1

    Private pensions can't die fast enough. They should be flat-out illegal. No private company has the discipline to put the needs of long-term employees first for the decades necessary to operate a pension plan. The temptation to raid the funds is too great. After the funds are depleted, the companies declare a short, clean bankruptcy and get a judge to reduce their pension obligations by some huge fraction. The companies emerge from the bankruptcy even stronger, without those pesky obligations to pay their pensioners. I know several people on private pension plans that had their benefits deeply cut by corporate legal maneuvers.

    State pension plans are better, but in the US there's probably going to be a large wave of benefits-reduction as deficits get too large to sustain, and a smaller wave of straight-up state defaults.

    Social security is probably the only pension system that I would trust at this point.

    1. Re:pensions by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

      State pension plans are better, but in the US there's probably going to be a large wave of benefits-reduction as deficits get too large to sustain, and a smaller wave of straight-up state defaults.

      Most states are required by their constitutions to run balanced budgets, meaning they can't run deficits. That does not eliminate the possibility of defaults, of course.

      When it comes to employee retirement, the solution my state (Washington) came up with about 20 years ago was to split the classified staff pension - half goes to a traditional government pension where you'll eventually get some fraction of your max salary for each year worked, and the other half is put into into a stock-driven fund which doesn't have a guaranteed benefit. Positions considered "professional staff" have a pension more like a traditional 401K - the money is split between stocks and bonds, with the employee having some control over the split if he/she wants it. These individual funds are managed by a private firm, Fidelity, not the state. With professional staff, the state matches the employees contributions into their fund each month. So for me, being over 50, 10% of my pre-tax salary goes into that pension, twice a month, with the state paying in that same amount.

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    2. Re:pensions by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't be such a problem with proper federal regulation. Companies are supposed to keep pension funds funded at a level high enough so that they won't run into these issues. You can blame Congress and the courts for failing and letting companies off the hook.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    3. Re:pensions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Private pensions
      I completely disagree. Maybe you mean company pensions.
      I have a private pension and it's great. I get to choose which pension provider I use, and thereby manage my risks.
      The money is kept separate and the government has oversight to insure that they only use the money for investing on my behalf.
      They cannot touch it for anything else. Even if they go bankrupt the money will not be able to be used to pay off debtors.
      Government pensions on the other hand are subject to the whims of politicians deciding to cut funding to it, or using the fund however they want the same way company pensions are.
      For a private pension plan like I have the government and pension plan would have to cooperate to screw me over.

    4. Re:pensions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that these defined benefit pension plans are incredibly expensive in a low interest rate environment. The underlying assumption on most of them is that they can get an 8% risk-free annual return. Not viable in today's low interest rate environment so smart private companies have bailed on them, instead going to a defined contribution model. Essentially you can't get blood out of a stone. If you legislate, and they simply don't have the profits to keep the defined benefit pension fully funded, then what do you do? Today we allow them to kick the can down the road.

    5. Re:pensions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most states are required by their constitutions to run balanced budgets, meaning they can't run deficits.

      Sure, that's year-to-year budgeting. It has nothing to do with underfunding or mismanaging public pension plans.

      After all, if I spend $2 million more on road construction and $2 million less on funding public pensions I have a balanced budget, but that doesn't mean I'm fully-funding the pension plan.

      It will be interesting to see whether the federal government bails out New Jersey or Illinois in the coming decade. Personally, I'm hoping that they don't bail them out.

    6. Re:pensions by superdave80 · · Score: 1

      State pension plans are better, but in the US there's probably going to be a large wave of benefits-reduction as deficits get too large to sustain, and a smaller wave of straight-up state defaults.

      So, how are they better if they have to slash benefits as well? Plus, good luck slashing them once they are in place. Can you say tax increase and service decrease? That is the only LEGAL way to fulfill the pension obligations in many states.

      My favorite quote about Oregon public pensions was an economist that declared decades ago, "The only way Oregon is getting out of this mess is if they are hit by a giant gold asteroid from the planet Tiffanys."

    7. Re:pensions by hdyoung · · Score: 1

      Yup, that's a good idea, but it also creates problems that people aren't willing to solve at the moment.

      Actually, I'm in exactly that retirement situation. I'm exempt from social security because I qualified for a state pension, and I'm exempt from a state pension because I was given a 403B plan plus a healthy match from the employer. My retirement is completely dependent on a private investment portfolio. The good news: that portfolio is projected to be fairly large by the time I need it. The bad news: if it fails, the only thing between me and homelessness at retirement is welfare.

      I wonder how much of the pension shortfall is because of exactly people like me. Not that I had a say in it. Most old people, conservatives and hardcore free-market types absolutely hate the idea of pensions. Fox news says that pensions are filthy socialism so they have to be evil, right? They've done their best to kill benefits for young people. Of course, they protect their own pensions, but that's fake news. They've engineered the compensation system in the US so that younger professionals are pushed into investment options. Fine, but guess what? That means young people's money isn't going in to support the pension fund. Lots of retirees drawing money out, and young people actively discouraged from opting in. Strangely, the pension funds seem to be badly underfunded. Probably more fake news.

    8. Re:pensions by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      No private company has the discipline to put the needs of long-term employees first for the decades necessary to operate a pension plan.

      They did for a very long time.

      Then we got to the 1980s, and "greed is good" became the only motto.

    9. Re:pensions by hdyoung · · Score: 1

      Ah. Gotcha. Born in the 70s here. So, I don't remember a time when companies had any responsibility other than to profit.

  35. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They can be excused because they have to have the latest big-screen LED and Iphone?

    So their retirement was killed by the TV and phone? That's your solution? This completely misses the point that so many Americans are living paycheck to paycheck, not because of bad budgeting but because of low paying jobs. And despite the booming economy, that hasn't changed. And with the wage pressures that come with increasing automation across the landscape, the pay is likely to get worse.

    A high school student working less that 20 hours a week at minimum wage makes more than 90% of the rest of humanity.

    Unless he's living in squalor and the accompanying low cost of living of that 90% of humanity, this is irrelevant and a non-sequiteur

    Or are you really saying a high schooler working 20 hours a week should be able to live on his own and save for retirement? Get real.

     

  36. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    As I understand it; Bain Capital came in and loaded ToysR Us down with debt, paid themselves, and sold off the husk.

  37. This isn't really true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some workers took buyouts and most are eligible to relocate to other GM plants. It is just a restructuring and GM is stopping production of unprofitable vehicles.

  38. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Moof123 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A colleague from Germany was visiting our office recently. He was quite perplexed as to why on a lunch walk we all were discussing the stock market. Basically everyone has to be both investor and worker here. Over there there is a reasonable pension system and people focus on their jobs.

    It is also clear from various lunch walks with well educated co-workers that steady investing is beyond the grasp of many otherwise smart and rational people. Some want to have "my guy" handle their stuff (cue Berny Madoff flashbacks), others have been on the sidelines waiting for prices to be "right" while insisting they are not timing the market (they are). It is saddening that this is where we expect most folks to draw their retirement from.

    So while I don't suggest there should not be a system with zero responsibility, the current system is akin tossing baby seals into a shark tank and wishing them the best. I would like to see an expansion of social security to help fill the gap that has widened into a chasm between what people need and what they have to retire at a reasonable age.

  39. Re:I hate slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    bye !

  40. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by pgmrdlm · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The vehicles being phased out were LOW SELLERS. People are buying SUV's and Cross Overs. But hey, I guess YOU missed that in the article. I live in freaken Ohio, and close to the plant that is being closed. But, UNLIKE YOU. I can actually comprehend what is in the article. That plant makes the Cruse. THE CRUSE SUCKS. Christ, even a fucking KIA is better than the Cruse.

    --
    Anonymous comments are as pathetic as the anonymous "sources" that contaminate gutless journalism from the New York Time
  41. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's China's fault that GM killed Pontiac and not fricking Buick.

  42. Re:Paying people to not work by ninjabus · · Score: 2

    What is your plan for these laid off GM workers? Where can they go when the largest employer in their city shuts down? Even if their skills are transferable, the plant next door does not have a use for thousands of extra employees. What if they need to move to find work? Is their home worth as much as they paid for it before a major employer skips town? Hell no it isn't, hopefully they're not underwater on the mortgage. There is no reasonable amount foresight, planning or training that can prepare someone working in manufacturing for their plant to close. They are absolutely, completely fucked.

  43. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by dcw3 · · Score: 2

    Let's see, where is Toys and Sears work going...oh yeah, Amazon.

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
  44. Re:Paying people to not work by Berkyjay · · Score: 1

    Yes correct. Everything you said is nonsense.

  45. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope you get hit by a drunk driver and wind up paralyzed from the neck down. The you can use your mouth-stick to type comments on Slashdot to tell us just how competent you are and how wells you're doing.

  46. GM Delayed Announcement by Comboman · · Score: 1

    I wonder what Trump had to promise GM for them to delay the announcement until after the election?

    --
    Support Right To Repair Legislation.
    1. Re:GM Delayed Announcement by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 2

      I wonder what Trump had to promise GM for them to delay the announcement until after the election?

      What's hilarious about this is the fact that Obama actually bailed them out and threw a huge bone to the union in the process. But I guess since a Democrat did it it's cool.

      Just to make your head explode if it hasn't already, Donald Trump was on the record as being pro-gay-marriage. Obama ran on a platform against gay marriage.

    2. Re:GM Delayed Announcement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obama ACTUALLY stole GM from the legal shareholders and gave it to the Unions.

      Its the unions doing this. Funny how when they got put in charge suddenly they think shutting down plants and firing tens of thousands of people is ok.

    3. Re:GM Delayed Announcement by DarkOx · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Right that is really what is going on here.

      Obama bailed out GM enabling them to keep making cars that nobody wanted to buy...

      The Fed bailed out everyone else with mad money printing so they bought cars they otherwise would not have

      Those supports are being taken away now and GMs noncompetitive products surprise surprise are not selling to Americans who can't really afford them anyway.

      Ford on the other hand building only light trucks - which people either buy because the *need* them for some sort of business or because they have money to burn and can pay the higher margin on those products. Either way its a better market to be in (until there is another oil shock).

      In any case GM was done - no money to retool to build stuff people wanted. Obama gave them a pile of money but insisted basically they pay Union workers to do something. It was either sit on their hand and do nothing or build products that might not sell in the existing plants. Bascially it was failing business before and its failing business now.

      Ironically Trump's tariffs are probably the only thing that can save GM. But the half measures won't do it. They will make it worse as the stuff GM imports will cost more and they won't be able to deliver cheaper than anyone else. Now if Trump really turned up the dial to the point where you CAN'T build a car anyone can afford to buy unless its all domestic sourced GM would probably be one of the only manufactures that could produce anything at all.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    4. Re:GM Delayed Announcement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Donald Trump was on the record as being pro-gay-marriage. Obama ran on a platform against gay marriage.

      Yes... and...?

      Hillary was against gay marriage during the original "Clinton era." Views change, people change. As much as I dislike Hillary and the democrats (currently, for the latter), it's dumb to defend Trump when GM was leaving with or without the Obama bailout.

    5. Re:GM Delayed Announcement by farble1670 · · Score: 3, Informative

      In any case GM was done - no money to retool to build stuff people wanted. Obama gave them a pile of money but insisted basically they pay Union workers to do something. It was either sit on their hand and do nothing or build products that might not sell in the existing plants. Bascially it was failing business before and its failing business now.

      No factual documentation backs up anything you've said.

      On December 19, 2008, President Bush agreed to a $24.9 billion bailout using TARP: $13.4 billion for GM, $5.5 billion for Chrysler, and $5 billion for GMAC.

      In response, the companies promised to fast-track development of energy-efficient vehicles and consolidate operations. GM and Ford agreed to streamline the number of brands they produced. The United Automobile Workers union agreed to accept delayed contributions to a health trust fund for retirees. It also agreed to reduce payments to laid-off workers. The three CEOs agreed to work for $1 a year and sell their corporate jets.

      and

      The Obama administration used the take-over to set new auto efficiency standards. That improved air quality and forced U.S. automakers to be more competitive against Japanese and German firms.

      In other words, the plan was set in motion by Bush, not Obama. And Obama added terms to the deal that required the automakers to up their game, not "pay union workers to do something".

      https://www.thebalance.com/aut...

    6. Re:GM Delayed Announcement by DarkOx · · Score: 0

      Good point it was Bush, and that parasite Hank P. Obama just doubled down, on the stupid and made them build cars people would want even less.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    7. Re:GM Delayed Announcement by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Those supports are being taken away now

      What supports were still in place after Obama left office? Which act of Congress or the Trump administration removed them?

      Ironically Trump's tariffs are probably the only thing that can save GM

      According to GM, Trump's tariffs have cost them $1 billion.

      Now if Trump really turned up the dial to the point where you CAN'T build a car anyone can afford to buy unless its all domestic sourced

      BMWs and Toyotas are built in South Carolina. Almost every "foreign" car in the US market is built in the US or Mexico. By corporations that are based in the US (ie. Toyota of America is a US corporation, and a wholly-owned subsidiary of Toyota). Tariffs won't apply.

      But the retaliatory tariffs do apply when GM tries to export to China, which was a good chunk of GM's business. Which is also why GM just announced they are closing US plants and expanding factories in Mexico.

    8. Re:GM Delayed Announcement by farble1670 · · Score: 2

      Good point it was Bush, and that parasite Hank P. Obama just doubled down, on the stupid and made them build cars people would want even less.

      No, it was primarily Bush.

      The only problem with Biden’s history lesson is that the “man with steel in his spine” he referred to should have been George W. Bush, not Barack Obama. Lest we forget, it was Bush rather than Obama who initiated the government rescue of the auto companies.

      https://www.newyorker.com/news...

      The only thing Obama didn't do is step and and completely quash the bailout. Obama publicly supported the plan before he was elected, but the plan itself was the brainchild of the previous administration. An incoming president isn't going to kill a plan that's saving tens of thousands of American jobs. If you really blame Obama for that you aren't being honest with yourself.

      Note the perspective of that article is that Biden is trying to give Obama undeserved credit for the bailout. It's actually an anti-Biden/Obama article.

      Also, the bailout was a loan.
      https://www.thebalance.com/aut...

      You can see the fed invested ~$80B, and got back ~$70B... they lost ~$10B. Sure they lost, but it's not like this was some massive handout to GM with no strings attached. Honestly it seems like a pretty good gamble at the time considering what would be the impact to the US economy.

    9. Re:GM Delayed Announcement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love how the leftist media in the US rails against Trump for being a bigot, despite the fact that he has stated that there's so many things (like gay marriage) that he really doesn't have a problem with. But that doesn't fit "The Narrative" so it's ignored.

    10. Re:GM Delayed Announcement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll give you another fact-oid:
      When GM gives golden parachutes to bad management, they do it in the form of cashing out what would have been their retirement. That came out of the same "pile" as line workers and everyone else. The union FINALLY got control of their own retirement fund AND their medical benefits.

      How did GM handle this transition?
      They sent letters to people like my grandmother stating that they no longer had health insurance. No hint that it was available elsewhere, or that it was a union deal. No "contact your union for further benefits information".

      This SHOWS what bad behavior companies do when unregulated. Unfortunately for the USPS, certain people felt it was necessary to fund out all pensions IN ADVANCE and even for potential future employees. This allows them to look unprofitable.

  47. Depending on others for your future? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pensions died in the1980's. Bemoaning their loss now is silly.
    Silly also is bemoaning being responsible for your own savings for retirement.
    At every level, from personal to business and government, irresponsible savings and spending have real consequences. Everyone has to live with their own choices. That's life.

  48. Re:Paying people to not work by dcw3 · · Score: 1

    "Social Security pays out less than you paid in until you reach around age 81. The average person lives until 78."

    Huh? SS almost never pays out what you paid in. How are you figuring this?

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
  49. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Crash+Dummy+Redux · · Score: 1

    This has nothing to do with trade wars. It's all about unlocking value for shareholders and enriching Wall Street at Main Street's expense. Don't be a commie!

  50. GWB Tried to Fix It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    George W. Bush tried like hell to fix the problem by giving people more control and ownership over their social security accounts. But, democrats of course didn't want people to have control, because empowering people is not the democrats' thing.

    What the 'safety net' needs to be is the complete abolition of social security, replacing it with mandatory savings of 10% of your gross income (no limit) into an account that you control, but cannot withdraw from for any reason, before retirement. This money is also off limits to seizure by anyone (civil liability, IRS, etc). For the poor and low income, I think the rest of us can tolerate a small annual contribution.

    The other side of the safety net is that we have to let people learn from failure. Having been homeless myself, being cold and hungry was very motivating. That first winter in Atlanta without a home was just awful. If you're always there to bail people out, they won't try to be successful. We absolutely do too much to 'help' people who are on the down and out, and I say this not as a general blanket, but as something more specific. We also absolutely do too much to HURT them.

    For example, there are programs that cost thousands of dollars to run, that get homeless people into free apartments, with free utilities, and free weekly grocery deliveries... and there are no strings attached. There is absolutely NO incentive to do any better. Then we turn around and say 'no no no, see, if you work, for every dollar you make we have to reduce your assistance by a dollar, so you'd not gain anything from work except to spend your time working.'

    Helping and hurting. Of course, none of these programs has the goal of getting people out of poverty. The goal is to have a reliable base of voters for the political dynasties. I don't care if it's a D or an R, they will all try to scare the disadvantaged with losing their bennies...

    Anyhoo... that's all I have to say about that. Take care of yourselves. Nobody else is going to.

  51. Fuck off. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Toys R Us? Sears? GM?

    Good fucking riddance.

    The only thing "Too Big to Fail" is your mom's vibrator.

  52. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Comrade+Ogilvy · · Score: 1

    Everyone is completely bereft of personal responsibility? In the richest country in the history of the world, people can not be held responsible for their own future? They can be excused because they have to have the latest big-screen LED and Iphone? Fun fact: A high school student working less that 20 hours a week at minimum wage makes more than 90% of the rest of humanity.

    Making wide sweeping assumptions about prolific consumer spending correlating with failure to save undermines your argument.

    Every generation in all times and all places has had conspicuous spenders. They do so in order to, among other things, get attention. That that sliver of the population is going to be in money trouble at the end of their life is both unsurprising and unimportant.

    The 20 year-old in the cafe with the fancy phone may well be more frugal than you, because that phone is a birthday gift from grandma and selling the phone for cash is not going to be viewed favorably. Or perhaps that young person can afford that phone because their family is made of money? How would you know?

  53. Re: Everyone is completely exempt from personal re by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah while nowadays and forever before our economy is rigged and we are raped of our potential to grow. We're at an epitome of this. Guy above can be all set because of his own foundational circumstances but what about all the rest of us? Just like my father, who has always done well enough, he "got his" and he doesn't see why it can't be just like that for everyone else.

    Love my dad to death and all the compassion for the guy above who "got his," but to the both of you, your opinion is fluff, it's shit. It ignores reality and whether or not you want to accept that reality, it's coming crashing down. And plenty of us who had all the chances in the world to "get ours" have worked our asses into the ground and still got fucked. Lots of people have been fucked. So fuck your shitty hot-air opinion.

  54. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Says the guy investing in Funko stocks...

  55. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know 4 people who want to work but are unemployed, and don't show up on those silly numbers. One lives with me, I help support 2 a bit, and the fourth has become a hermit while watching his cash reserves slowly vanish. Jobs are actually hard to get, and you'll quickly be told that you're overqualified and turned down if you have education and experience but want to work at a simpler job.

    I think our actual unemployment is over 10% myself.

    Meanwhile around here the builders just keep on building new apartments that cost more than my mortgage, while the jobs are leaving, and I really don't know what anybody is planning anymore.

  56. Arrogance by sjbe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The only financial safety net you need is competence.

    Oh bullshit. I'm a highly competent person and I've had to rely on unemployment payments in the past to get by. My mother suffered from and eventually died from ALS. She was a high level director at one of the big accounting firm but guess what? The fact that she was highly competent didn't mean shit to ALS. Eventually she needed to rely on the social safety net including social security disability before she passed. Many people find themselves in difficult circumstances for reasons beyond their control and they need help. To say the reason for their status is that they lack competence is beyond insulting.

    You have to be a special breed of idiot to think that you are so "competent" that you will never need help. Maybe you'll be lucky. Many others aren't.

    We currently have move openings than people looking for work.

    You think people are magically qualified for any available job? Just because my company needs a skilled machinist doesn't mean one is available. There ALWAYS are jobs that go unfilled because the skillsets of people looking for work never perfectly matches the skillsets needed by people doing the hiring.

    1. Re:Arrogance by sconeu · · Score: 4, Informative

      Bullshit. My wife also died from ALS. We *HAD* both LTC and LTD insurance. Certainly didn't make up ANYWHERE near what her salary was.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    2. Re:Arrogance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We currently have move openings than people looking for work.

      You think people are magically qualified for any available job? Just because my company needs a skilled machinist doesn't mean one is available. There ALWAYS are jobs that go unfilled because the skillsets of people looking for work never perfectly matches the skillsets needed by people doing the hiring.

      And that is because the companies are looking for a perfect match, which means that they can then go for the lowest cost person that is close, normally an overseas person or an H1B visa holder

    3. Re:Arrogance by fluffernutter · · Score: 2

      I don't think insurance plans pay out as much as you think they do. There are enormous costs when you are sick, but you get paid less.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    4. Re:Arrogance by rogoshen1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Arguing with people like this is pointless. they are firmly in the "i've got mine, fuck you" mindset. Completely failing to see that the things they like about society (working infrastructure, security, etc) are very much related to how well off their neighbor is.

      The end game is sort of like Haiti or parts of or Mexico City; gated, guarded estates -- surrounded by shanty towns. But hey, the poor are poor because they deserve it.

    5. Re:Arrogance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There have been times in my life when I've been doubly covered by two insurance plans that both failed to pay out on claims that they were contractually obligated to. It wasn't worth my limited time and energy to sue, and I was not exactly at death's door with medical problems at the time. There's no amount of insurance or planning that you can do that will cover every eventuality. I have aging relatives who were sharp enough to manage their finances their whole lives and leave a comfortable nest egg for retirement. As soon as the cognitive delays and nascent dementia start they get _endless_ scam calls and letters. There's a long tough time period between when someone is fully competent and when their relatives who care about them can take control of their finances to protect them from scammers. Most people's assets take a hit in that period. Some people cash out their retirement accounts. About the only thing they can't touch is social security.

    6. Re:Arrogance by kaatochacha · · Score: 2

      plus, LTC is often time limited. For my mom, it's 5 years.

    7. Re:Arrogance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you should buy one of those policies to find out how much they actually cover. They cover nothing even close to a high level salary.

    8. Re:Arrogance by barc0001 · · Score: 1

      > To say the reason for their status is that they lack competence is beyond insulting.

      Don't let it get to you. That sort of logic is what people in their idiot teen years acquire when they read Ayn Rand. Most grow out of it once they hit the real world. Most.

    9. Re:Arrogance by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      You've never seriously dealt with insurance companies.

      You've also never read the fine print on just how long they pay, and just how much they pay.

    10. Re:Arrogance by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      Funny enough I HAVE dealt with it; quite a bit actually. Caring for my elderly parents. We took at long term care policies when they were in their early 60s and sure enough as they have entered their 80's in assisted living and now healthcare in their 90s a care (gosh I am getting old too) I have watched those polices cover about 85-90% of their costs - as expected. I am intimately familiar with all of it because I manage it all for them now.

      Now the nasty reality is that *I* can't get affordable coverage like that for myself. See good long term care polices are no longer on offer because well about 25 years ago people started living to long and clustering about the mean has also occurred. That is we have fewer people dying relatively young.

      So I honestly don't know what to do other than keep throwing all the savings I can onto the pile (diversified into mutual funds, bond funds, and cash) and hope some how it will be enough. It may be; thankful because my parents and I worked so diligently to protect their assets I can inherit enough to fill in the hole. I have run the numbers too; the insurers unless they significantly beat the market investing those premiums for 30 years, are taking a bath on those policies; probably to tune of 6-digits.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    11. Re:Arrogance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That special breed of idiot believes in the Prosperity Gospel. You are prosperous if you are smart, kind, and live a good Christian life. If not, well that is to blame for disease and poverty. This is the only way to explain people voting for conservative policies. Faith is huge

    12. Re: Arrogance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your paying youself back because unemployment was deducted from your past paychecks.

  57. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anubis+IV · · Score: 0

    The fact that I was able to do all of those quite easily with a salary below the median income would disprove your claim that most Americans aren't earning enough. I'd be willing to believe that most Americans don't do those things, but suggesting that they don't earn enough to do those things is patently false. Alternatively, I'd believe that many Americans don't earn enough to do those things, but that isn't what you said.

  58. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Nonsense" eh? I have two ex-wives who have extensively raided my 401K and one stills sucks generously from my paycheck.

  59. Savings Should Never Be Retirement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Money supply is ever increasing and demand does not keep up with the increased supply. This is generally referred to as inflation. One should never hold on to assets that are subject to massive inflation as a long term investment let alone retirement plan. Invest in appreciating assets that keep pace with or beat inflation for retirement. Real estate, businesses, hell even gold and copper are better than savings for retirement. Savings should only be used for unexpected emergency situations and should never exceed what you reasonably expect those situations to cost.

    1. Re:Savings Should Never Be Retirement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I too wondered about this. Unless people have millions in high-interest savings and investment accounts for those few years they are out of employment force before dying, savings is not a realistic option. Simple heart decease-cancer-care facility combo takes of those millions at no time at all, for the patient will not be eligible for aid and social security.

        Also what's with the dead private sector pension plans? All the people have to do is call their insurance company and get one if they eligible and can pay the premiums long enough. I guess the US could be filled with monasteries to cover the missing social security system like in some poorer Asian countries, but monastic traditions are lacking in the West these days.

  60. The silver lining here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tax payers are not being forced to give loans out to GM like they were during the last administration.

    The funds came back at a loss, and I don't think anyone (including GM employees) felt good about it.

    1. Re:The silver lining here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      citation? My understanding that when GM paid back the loan, the treasury got almost 125% of the money it spent back.

    2. Re:The silver lining here by Frederic54 · · Score: 1

      Tell that to Canada... we lost billions here because of GM, they never paid back all the loan.

      --
      "Science will win because it works." - Stephen Hawking
  61. Re:Paying people to not work by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or are you a social Darwinist who believes the unproductive/lazy should be allowed to just wither & die so that we breed more productive humans?

    Trust fund babies disprove that approach. If you want to ensure that the next generation is productive then greatly limit inheritance and eliminate trust funds.

  62. UMASS by Orrin+Bloquy · · Score: 1

    "University of Massachusetts at Amherst" JSYK the other 2 campuses are effectively community colleges without housing, when you say University of Massachusetts no one's even remotely confused as to what you're talking about.

    --
    "Made up/misattributed quote that makes me look smart. I am on /. and I must look smart."
    1. Re:UMASS by hey! · · Score: 1

      Not even remotely true. First of all, the UMass system operates four university campuses in total so there are three other campuses:

      * UMass Lowell is an engineering powerhouse. They offer highly regarded (and lucrative) degrees in plastic engineering and are one of the 25 colleges in the US that operate their own nuclear reactor.

      * UMass Dartmouth is a residential university that operates a law school and grants advanced degrees in education, physical sciences, nursing, and a variety of engineering disciplines.

      * UMass Boston is a commuter school, but it offers over twenty PhD programs. It's particularly known for business, health, social sciences and environmental sciences.

      None of these universities are on a level with, say Cornell, but they are all bona fide research universities with graduate programs and faculty performing research. Each one of them draws students mainly from the upper half their high school graduating class. The focus is on providing high quality, no frills higher education at a reasonable price; you won't find lavish dorms or athletic facilities, but you will find labs and research programs and a majority full-time faculty mostly with terminal degrees.

      In any case you shouldn't disparage community colleges. They do important work.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    2. Re:UMASS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A bunch of my dipshit stoner friends from high school went to UMass Amherst. It ain't all that, dude. Don't think just because it's in Amherst that some magical academic fairy dust from Amherst College floats over to the other side of town...

    3. Re:UMASS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "University of Massachusetts at Amherst" JSYK the other 2 campuses are effectively community colleges without housing, when you say University of Massachusetts no one's even remotely confused as to what you're talking about.

      JSYK, there are five UMASS campuses and UMASS Lowell is just as much of a real university as UMASS Amherst by any metric, so you don't even remotely know what you're talking about.

    4. Re:UMASS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      JSYK, the only reason anyone has ever heard of UMASS is because they were continuing to pay Bill "Quaaludes" Cosby to be their spokesman well after it became clear that he had drugged and raped a number of women that went well into the double digits.

    5. Re:UMASS by hey! · · Score: 1

      People have heard of UMass because they can afford to send their kids there.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  63. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by SirMasterboy · · Score: 2

    Why is steady investing beyond the grasp of smart and rational people?

    My friends often say I am too rational in all the things I do and decisions I make, but when I graduated from college 8 years ago I simply saw the benefit of cheap index funds and started funneling my money into my 401k, Roth IRA, and HSA, maxing them out every year. Now it's 8 years later and I am 30 and I have about 400K in my accounts.

    To me it couldn't have been simpler and I rarely look at or talk about the stock market.

  64. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or are you a social Darwinist who believes the unproductive/lazy should be allowed to just wither & die so that we breed more productive humans?

    Even if you hold this view, many would turn to a life of crime and/or riots out of desperation, making for a nasty society.

    Or they might vote socialist, and end the social Darwinism that way.

  65. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's a little too complicated for the MAGAers

  66. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

    Most Americans don't earn enough to pay for food, housing, medical care, and save for retirement. Maybe we should pay our workforce better, then we could talk about personal responsibility.

    No, most Americans earn more than enough for those things. They don't earn enough to eat out multiple times each week, live in a larger house than they can really afford, have the latest big screen TV, nice cars where they can barely afford the payment, the latest iPhone, and save for retirement.

    In other words, they need to learn how to delay gratification and live a lower lifestyle.

    I used to listen to Dave Ramsey for 20 minutes every day when I went to get my kids from school. The folks who called him with the worst problems always made around $125,000/year, over twice the average in the US. Why? They had enough money to buy anything they wanted. And they did.

    Anyone making that much should retire a millionaire.

  67. Re:Paying people to not work by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

    Social Security isn't designed like a pension system - what you put in is only loosely correlated with what you should expect to get back out.

    What you're putting in right now is to support the people who are drawing Social Security checks right now plus (at least originally) some additional amount that was supposed to allow the program to better accommodate changing demographics.

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  68. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no are/could have been. It is all just fanciful numbers floating

  69. The equation is simple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a finite amount of wealth on Earth because there are a finite number of resources on this planet. Sure technology can open new doors, but that's a trickle. The population, however, keeps increasing. More people, same amount of stuff they want means less stuff to go around.

    Even first world countries like the US can't live in the lap of luxury when we are rocketing towards 8 billion humans. If you think this will stop at finances, it won't. Eventually other resources (electricity, food, water, etc) will become scarcer too.

  70. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 1

    FTA: with retirement dependent almost entirely on how well they manage savings.

    The people who seem to have the happiest retirements never managed their savings. They just managed to work for the government until they retire. Double points if you are in the "life and safety" group like police and fire and retire at 55 with full everything.

  71. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by hey! · · Score: 1

    Low sellers in the short term; with low gasoline prices people are favoring larger cars, trucks and SUVs. Light truck sales respond pretty dramatically to fluctuations in gasoline. It's like a see-saw: gasoline prices go up, SUV sales go down; gasoline prices go down, SUV sales go up.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  72. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Social Security "trust fund" contains nothing but IOUs because politicians spent it all on other things.

    To be fair, those IOUs are pretty much in the form or Treasury Bonds, which is why it was spent by our government/politicians. I guess they could have stuffed it under someone's mattress for all of those years and earned nothing on it, but I wouldn't have voted for that given the option.

    So just like your plan of "maxing out my 401K and investing it in safer instruments," the government has taken a page out of your book and invested in safe instruments as well. Congratulations, you're both on the same page.

    https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/110614/how-social-security-trust-fund-invested.asp

  73. Waive by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You wanna help retirees? Waive the damned property taxes.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    1. Re:Waive by Virtucon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      All taxes are the bain of humanity. States and local govt's have run amok in terms of establishing revenue sources to pay for pension benefits for retirees.

      --
      Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
    2. Re:Waive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's each establish an independent peoples republic 1ft in all directions from our person. Freedom.

    3. Re:Waive by edtice1559 · · Score: 1

      Which retirees does this help? I believe the answer is lower-middle class. Truly poor retirees don't own property so it doesn't really help them. For most middle-class retirees, property taxes are a relatively small portion of their income. Certainly a much smaller portion than the time when they were making mortgage payments. But it sure helps rich retirees who own very expensive houses. And in the US since we fund schools with property taxes, it basically decimates the public education system. This works if the taxes are waived on a means-tested basis but it's a terrible idea if applied universally.

    4. Re:Waive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And spelling is the bane of modern America, but that's Great. MAGA!

    5. Re:Waive by MooseTick · · Score: 2

      "You wanna help retirees? Waive the damned property taxes."

      Sounds good until all property is owned by "retirees" and schools are not funded. The money has to come from somewhere if you want schools, roads, military, police, etc.

    6. Re:Waive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or they can move somewhere with lower property taxes. This has the benefit of freeing up housing for productive people as well!

    7. Re:Waive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's a thing on taxes and retirement...
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XebGuqD5R0

      PS: If you weren't forced to waste it all on useless wars and their own fat pensions and complete healthcare, you'd have that much more for yourself, and for local charity in your area given by your directly to those who need it most.

    8. Re:Waive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      illinois does have a freeze. I would like a property tax policy that set it according to the purchase price for residential who live in their homes with no rental income. Taxes would still go up but the assessed value would be more competitive to people living long term where they buy.

  74. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Sleight" of hand, Mr Hyphens.

  75. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only problem with using the other statistics is when comparing them to the past. ie. if you compare the current administration's U-6 to the previous administrations U-3 is misleading.

  76. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nonsense.

    And you are full of it.

  77. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is one of those topics where Occamâ(TM)s razor comes in real handy

  78. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 1

    Everyone is completely bereft of personal responsibility? In the richest country in the history of the world, people can not be held responsible for their own future? They can be excused because they have to have the latest big-screen LED and Iphone?

    How about because their wife got very sick, they needed to pay for child care for all their kids for years, and of course all the other many expenses involved in losing the other parent's help, plus they tried to actually be responsible and pay all the bills, including the medical bills?

    Asking for friend ...

  79. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    But the subject of this message tree is explaining your argument.
    These companies were on a downward spiral, but it wasn't necessarily an unrecoverable problem. GM, Sears, and Toys R Us have a lot of brand recognition they may had been able to last such a spiral before these Trade Wars just cut off a customer base, made their products more expensive, disrupted the full supply chain.

    A company restructure is hard and in the short term they take a hit and puts them in risk, if the government decides to change things around while they are in this process it will often be enough to push them over the edge.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  80. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like you are easy to get along with. /s

  81. Re:Ha! Good one there, have another? by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 0

    This is a huge problem, and one that liberals in particular should have capitalized on this election cycle.

    Indeed, they should have capitalized on it. But we're talking about the party that lost the white house to the man who is arguably the least qualified politician since the dawn of our democracy. The democrats are practically synonymous with "pulling failure from the jaws of victory". Being as truth doesn't get votes any more, they ended up pretty much where we expected - they now control one half of one third of the government.

    When Democrats abandoned the working class (ie most people) for ever more niche groups, like transgenders, that gave them a loss. Turns out that hating white males, which is a larger group than all the gays + trans + blacks combined, won't win you elections. If you went back to a Democratic party that focused on all working people and not just the favored oppressed group of the month they would have won easily. Obvious yet overlooked point - focusing on improving the economics for the 99% would help minorities too.

  82. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You win the horrible human being award but your point is taken. Life is tough.

  83. Re:Paying people to not work by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

    Social Security pays out less than you paid in until you reach around age 81. The average person lives until 78.

    Hmm, quickly checks some actuarial tables provided by SSA...

    If you live to 69 (when you should start collecting SSA - yes, you can collect sooner, but shouldn't unless you must), then your life expectancy is another 17.2 years (if a woman), or 15.0 (if a man).

    My father is 85. He's expected to live another 5.9 years. My mother is 80, now expecting another 9.6 years....

    Note that those numbers were good as of 2015. They're probably higher now.

    That average lifespan of 78 is AT BIRTH. Yeah, it's actually a pretty good estimate well past 40, but it I expect that the average /.'er has a life expectancy well past 78 and change....

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  84. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, Sharper Image did so well. Oh wait, they closed down too because I don't want to pay $499 for something I can buy elsewhere for $14. Or better yet, I've learned in my old age that I don't need much stuff. Better yet: Don't buy things you don't need. As a plus I have retirement savings while many of my friends don't since they constantly buy things they don't need - that most often end up in the landfill or sent to me to fix them (since I'm an EE). Because everybody needs a Bluetooth panini press with an app and a cheap, made in China, triac that blows up after 4 uses.

    I spend money at Publix and Target and little money elsewhere.

  85. Re:Paying people to not work by WorBlux · · Score: 1

    Social security was designed to pay out more than you paid in. A sort of long-term pyradmid scheme that would have worked just fine had for birth-rates well above 3. Benifits were always paid out of the current years budget and the trust fund was simply a fiction. There was always going to be a point where there wasn't enough working people paying in to offset the benifits.

  86. Nonsense arguments by sjbe · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In the past, a single house hold earner could provide for a family. Now it takes two.

    Median household income in the US is around $44K per year. Given that most people manage to get by just fine obviously that is more than enough to provide for a family. No it won't by you a house in Beverly Hills but it's plenty enough to put food on the table and take care of necessities.

    Government regulations and their impact on manufacturers.

    I work in manufacturing and have made my career there. Your argument that government regulations have much to do with the problems in manufacturing highlights the fact that you don't know much about the economics of manufacturing. Manufacturing is doing just fine in the US. The US manufacturing sector is worth about $3 TRILLION annually which by itself would be among the 6 largest economies in the world. What has changed in the US is that wages have risen to among the highest in the world so all the labor intensive manufacturing left for places with low labor costs. Capital intensive manufacturing has remained because the US has the lowest cost of capital in the world. Government regulations are if anything helping by keeping cost of capital low.

    The only major problem US manufacturing has right now is we have an idiot president (and cronies) who think that raising the cost of everything we buy is somehow going to magically going to benefit us. Tariffs will solve no problem that currently exists in manufacturing. They will not bring manufacturing jobs to the US (actually the opposite is what will happen) and they will not force China to play nice.

    1. Re:Nonsense arguments by lgw · · Score: 1

      Median household income in the US is around $44K per year.

      FYI: In 2016 it was $59,039, exceeding any previous year, per the US Census. I don't think we have the 2017 numbers yet.

      Tariffs will solve no problem that currently exists in manufacturing. They will not bring manufacturing jobs to the US (actually the opposite is what will happen) and they will not force China to play nice.

      Tariffs are not the end goal. Elimination of unbalanced tariffs is the goal - China has some draconian tariffs on import of US goods. Maybe this play will work, maybe it won't but it's a valid attempt.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    2. Re:Nonsense arguments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The major problem is that we have socialists that think suppressing economic activity is the way to keep costs low. While it
      certainly does that, it keeps wages and productivity even lower. (Interest rate spreads). There is such a thing as
      deflation and a zero rate of return in credit markets can only help monopolies and cornered markets which is where you see
      the high wages. Why is it that I can't earn a 4 or 5% rate of return on 1 year paper? You're only looking at one side of the
      trade. To restrict access to our markets by people that use slave labor to compete is a bad thing exactly how?

    3. Re:Nonsense arguments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Median household income in the US is around $44K per year. Given that most people manage to get by just fine obviously that is more than enough to provide for a family. No it won't by you a house in Beverly Hills but it's plenty enough to put food on the table and take care of necessities.

      "Getting by" is a far different cry from "saving for the future - at least for me.
      "Getting by" in my book means you have paid the bils, but you have no money. Typically this also means that I am down to buying the cheapest food possible and skipping meals already, do not go out as to spend nothing on social activities, and still cannot save any money. Getting by is only sustainable until you need to stop or miss work for any reason.
      Getting by is not surviving, and definately not building security for the future.

    4. Re:Nonsense arguments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, if you live in SW Connecticut, $44k is just scraping by, assuming you have no debt, a small car payment, and a VERY reliable car.

      That being said, retail has no problem paying $20k to someone working 40 hours . . .

  87. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Crash+Dummy+Redux · · Score: 1, Troll

    Sorry, I don't own any Vietnamese cattle. Maybe you're thinking fo someone else?

  88. Re:I hate slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There aren't any anymore.
    They've all be converted to politics.

  89. Communism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong, we are advancing towards communism.

  90. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by dcw3 · · Score: 1

    Anyone planning on relying on Social Security is an idiot. This includes my own mother, who spent her adult years as a real estate agent, and put nothing away. Now, she gets a monthly check for about $900, and since she recently had to go into a nursing home on Medicaid, they're taking 90% of that to pay her expenses since she can't afford the ~$40k/year it normally costs.

    There's no excuse for not maxing out what your company will match in your 401k unless you're living well below the poverty line. And, many of you should be putting in more than that.

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
  91. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What really gets me, was around 2004-2006 Ford, Chrysler and GM cut development in their smaller car lines, and went into Trucks and SUV's. Then Gas Prices Skyrocketed and a Recession hit. So companies like Toyota and Honda were doing much better because they had small fuel efficient cars ready in their pipeline. It took years for the big 3 to get a good car lineup. However once again Americans want the big ones again. So they are not making small cars.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  92. Court Case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In an earlier court case, SS isnt guaranteed. States and the feds are drowning in over expensive pensions. They have the best interest in dumping them. The public needs more incentive and opportunities to manage their own retirement and healthcare. Wont ever happen because the government always thinks they manage your money better. Which of you would give your life savings to ANY politician?

  93. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

    Which has nothing to do with the point of the article about retirement. Nicely done ass-hole.

  94. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by AlanObject · · Score: 1

    This. Even the deity Obama would not have any positive effect. Company's come and go. One day Amazon will file for bankruptcy. Its just how it is and always has been.

    Japan seems to be able to have corporations that live longer. The oldest dates back to 705. In spite of world wars and stuff.

  95. Horses left the barn decades ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The private sector pension as we once knew it is all but dead.

    I haven't heard of any companies offering pensions to new employees in over 25 years. Even back then people were saying pensions are "all but dead". I think it's pretty safe to say that it's dead, Jim.

    Two-thirds of millennials have nothing saved for retirement.

    This is because 2/3rds of millenials can't even get a high enough wage to pay basic living expenses like food, shelter, and clothing. Let alone all the other expenses such as vehicles, healthcare, etc.

    Pensions/retirement was a problem looming for a couple decades now, and largely because wages have plummeted vs. GDP consistently for several decades. At this point we are almost past the point where this problem can be solved without massive wealth reclamation from the trillionaires who robbed us for so many years.

  96. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by dcw3 · · Score: 2

    You do realize that BLS doesn't utilize any homeless figures, and it does produce the U-6 figure you mentioned. What it does do is attempt to figure out who is no longer looking for work, so they set up a well published explanation of their methodology. So how is the US playing slight of hand?...or did you mean the media, who's doing the reporting of unemployment?

    To be fair from one year to the next, you need to compare apples to apples. BLS also supplies that information https://www.bls.gov/ no "slight-of-hand" involved.

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
  97. Intro to Socialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Meanwhile, in France, they are pretty excited that the unemployment rate has fallen to 9.1%. A 7% unemployment rate in France would be an astonishing feat.

  98. Yeah let's pretend to care about this now by bistromath007 · · Score: 2

    These systems were destroyed before Boomers started retiring. They cheered on that destruction because they were making enough money that they didn't need any of it. Now they can't retire because there's nothing under them as a direct result of their own actions. They'll doubtlessly find a way to blame their kids for it.

  99. Liberals capitalizing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "liberals in particular should have capitalized on this election cycle" -- aren't these the guys who started the tradition of raiding the Social Security "Trust" Fund? See also, LBJ's carpet bombing of Vietnam. Somebody had to pay for that ... um ... how about the electorate?

  100. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't worry, his bootstraps will ensure he's lifted-up alright.

  101. Re:Paying people to not work by DarkOx · · Score: 1

    If you live to 69 (when you should start collecting SSA - yes, you can collect sooner, but shouldn't unless you must),

    Not true! There are a lot of situations where taking SS before you can claim your full retirement make sense.

    A common example is married couples. One spouse will frequently have taken time out of their career to raise children etc. The result is their SS benefit will be much lower. Quite often lower even than their spousal benefit would be. So what you do in this situation is the lower SS recipient activates SS as early as possible and collects their benefit until the higher earner reaches full retirement age. At which point the higher earner actives their SS, and their spouse switches from their SS claim to claiming the spousal benefit.

    TL:DR SS is a complicated mess like our tax code and if you take the time understand it just as with tax avoidance there are a lot legal opportunities to improve how it nets out for you. Just as with taxes people who can affort to pay professionals to maximally game the system for them benefit disproportionately as compared with those taking a more naive approach.

    --
    Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
  102. Re:Paying people to not work by dcw3 · · Score: 1

    You're not disagreeing with me. I know full well how SS works, I've been paying into it since the 70s. The GP doesn't seem to...getting to 81 won't make you whole.

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
  103. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  104. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe you forgot that GM had to be bailed out by the taxpayers. Maybe if they can't be fucking profitable, they shouldn't be in business.

  105. Who did this to us? by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

    It's worth taking some time out to do some thinking. At one time America was the best. Our people ruled the world, we made all our own products. They might have been more expensive than imported goods, but the trade-off that our own people were employed and could afford to purchase said goods was held to be more important. What happened that we decided that cost of goods suddenly took not just first place, but only place? Why did we destroy our own people for the promise of cheap goods from hostile countries? Why was this the only possible way forward? Who told us this? What else are the same people wrong about today?

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    1. Re:Who did this to us? by Gilgaron · · Score: 2

      Are you describing the post-WWII boom as if it was a steady state? We made the best things because we still had factories, now we're regressing to the mean.

    2. Re:Who did this to us? by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      Negative. Our working class is suffering because of deliberate, malignant decisions made by our elites. It's not something that just 'happened'. We could still be producing goods for domestic consumption were it not for NAFTA and other deliberately malign trade agreements.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    3. Re:Who did this to us? by guruevi · · Score: 1

      The problem with having facilities in the US is burgeoning regulation and taxation. You didn't like a factory in your town, tax it out of existence. You want to pay for "model city" Detroit, let's unionize and have GM and their employees pay for everyone's housing.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    4. Re:Who did this to us? by m00sh · · Score: 1

      It's worth taking some time out to do some thinking. At one time America was the best. Our people ruled the world, we made all our own products. They might have been more expensive than imported goods, but the trade-off that our own people were employed and could afford to purchase said goods was held to be more important. What happened that we decided that cost of goods suddenly took not just first place, but only place? Why did we destroy our own people for the promise of cheap goods from hostile countries? Why was this the only possible way forward? Who told us this? What else are the same people wrong about today?

      Cheap goods from other countries are the only thing keeping us going right now.

      We as a country have made decisions to slowly reduce our social programs and benefits, and made the worker more fragile by accepting more risk for health, retirement etc.

    5. Re:Who did this to us? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, we want to blame "unions" for the pension problems the few remaining companies that offer them have. Not, of course, the management who handed out excess profit dividends to shareholders rather than invest enough to cover the promises the company made to the workers.

      It's hilarious- every time I hear it, I want to say, so, by the same logic, it'll be my employer's fault when I'm poor after retirement. After all, it can't possibly be that I mismanaged the money they paid me. What do you mean, $500/yr into my 401K isn't enough to cover my retirement expenses?

    6. Re:Who did this to us? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, bullshit. I'm in a small city in the midwest, and I could hit the (former) offices of several hundred-million-dollar startups with a well-thrown rock. Yep, we sure do regulate and tax around here, mostly to keep our city livable and make sure the public schools are great. You know what the actual problem those companies, and the entrepreneurs and inventors that line up to get advice from my boss, face? Lack of skilled employees.

      Nice example, by the way. It's not a stretch of the imagination to say that Detroit would look far, far worse absent a history of unionization. Yes, it's sad that so much housing stock is rotting away, but at least they were generally houses instead of handmade shacks without electricity or plumbing.

  106. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by MrLogic17 · · Score: 1

    Now talk to someone from Greece or Venezuela. Ask them how that government pension is going.
    What's the ROI for your lifetime Social Security contributions? (I'd wager dollars to donuts that it's a negative percentage.)

    I'll manage my own resources, thank you very much.

    Pro tip: take Warren Buffet's advice, be lazy, and invest in Index funds. The S&P500 has a 20 year average of over 9%. There is no 30 year period, including these spanning the great depression, where the index didn't make a profit.

  107. What's your complaint here ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You guys keep electing governments that screw you the workers .. republicans are just that a bold face lie , they dont give you a thing .. they give it all to the rich , screw you to the last penny and tell you to go f yourself .. that's the republicans .. but you keep voting for them believing their lies. Well f(*& you for being imbeciles that keep electing those who desipse them. fuck the revolution , go for the apocfalypse. :)
       

  108. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its nice how you can completely ignore all of the societal changes that have happened in the last 50 years that have fed into this problem - businesses taking profit over contributing to their employee's pensions or retirement, moving employees from full to part time again to take profit and not have to pay benefits - its basically been a race to the bottom. And yet you want to put it all on individual personal responsibility and poor choices, even when you admittedly will suffer from it. You've been sold it hard and you believe it. I'll bet you support lower taxes on the rich because you think that when you're rich you'll be happy not to be paying them. Hope that copy of Atlas Shrugged keeps you warm in your retirement.

  109. Re:Paying people to not work by WorBlux · · Score: 1

    At one time agriculture was 90% of the labor force in the country. The market is a process of creative destruction. And if everyone were that smart and capable, it would drive the price of labor way up as they could find and market new sorts of labor. The market is neither centrally planned nor static.

    If we want the movie Idiocracy to be remain a satire rather than a documentary, you either need a way to let smart people have more kids survive than the below average, or an intervention to boost intelligence.

    And most people aren't going to turn to crime or straight out riot, as you can eat the rich today but what are you going to do tommorow? There are options between a job in the formal economy and stright up crime. Most will look to make up the difference in mutual aid, self-sufficiency, and the informal economy.

  110. Funny by Virtucon · · Score: 1

    The only ones who seem remotely secure are the wealthy, top execs and government employees. For the rest of us, we get to pay for those who have already set themselves up.

    --
    Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
  111. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I don't own any Vietnamese cattle. Maybe you're thinking fo someone else?

    "Sorry, I don't own any Vietnamese cattle."

    You probably eat them alive down to the hooves, as you heel their blood down the drain. Your neighbors ignore the terrible animal screams, unable to tell which is cow and which is creimer. That terrible gnawing hunger that never lets up, even making you smack your lips during your videos, unable to stop thinking about food.

    " Maybe you're thinking fo someone else"

    No, I'm thinking of a 500 pound ogre-fingered toothless oaf. Ring any bells, Chris? Maybe they'll do a Dorbz of you... Get some of that copyright money you dream about constantly...

  112. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The beginning of the end of Toys R Us was the leveraged buyout (because the company was sitting on assets, had very little debt, but had hit on a couple slow quarters in sales). Bain Capital took the company, realigned the board with their players and reshuffled the executive team. They then sold off the assets, leased them back, borrowed money to the hilt and paid off the loans they took to make the leveraged buyout. And paid themselves a lot of money because they were so brilliant. What was left was a company that might have been able to change with the market and find some way to compete with Amazon, who is cleaning house in the toy bizz right now. Instead, with sales dropping every quarter as people are buying online because they don't have time to go shopping anymore, and the company already hocked to the gills and borrowing the limit of what it can, there was nothing left with which to change strategy and compete. In the end, the Bain-led board and executives took the company into bankruptcy, closed out the last of the assets and paid themselves yet again for doing such a good job destroying the company. Maybe they can make even more selling off the brand name...

  113. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by edtice1559 · · Score: 1

    In business what you can accomplish from where you are is what matters, not where you could have been if things had been different.

    And in life!

  114. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Eh, I'm a pretty easy going guy but I also find watching TV endlessly (Gilmore Girls; blah!) to be particularly uninteresting. :)

  115. Re:Paying people to not work by WorBlux · · Score: 1

    You can look at historical house prices before you decide to rent or buy. Banks can look at employer risk when determine down payments. Millions of people move every year to find a better job. You can form a co-op buy the now unused equipment and start manufacturing another product or under another brand. Even a small amount of foresight and planning can but you in a better position for such an occurrence.

  116. Re:Paying people to not work by DalM · · Score: 1

    Not necessarily. If you die and you leave behind a wife and kids, they can collect your SS.

  117. not the only factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even without the trade "war", it is going to happen, and maybe delayed by a quarter, or a year. The general economy is slowing down (we are at peak employment, and there is no where to go ... and US is the biggest consumer) Sure, the "war" doesn't help, and so is the union salary/benefit package. Most of all, GM is not innovate enough.

    Many of the failed companies in the past year are, in general, failing already. Target, and Walmart are probably the exception. Circuit City failed because they can't compete with Amazon, Best Buy, and not because of Obama. Walmart Canada failed because of cultural shock (yes, there is big difference between Canada and US workers), not because of whoever prime minister. Stop believing whatever the news said, they are mostly info-entertainment, especially the financial news.

    1. Re:not the only factor by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 1

      USA and Canada are as different from each other as are the USA and the UK.

      --
      #DeleteFacebook
  118. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by bazorg · · Score: 1

    Fun fact: A high school student working less that 20 hours a week at minimum wage makes more than 90% of the rest of humanity.

    Do you have other fun facts about housing costs or the cost of living in general?

    My understanding is that in the USA land is much cheaper than over here in the UK, but the overall situation is similar: if you want to be employable, you have to live in the right places. The alternatives all can have very serious drawbacks:
    - relocating across regions can be very expensive
    - moving to where the jobs are involves seriously expensive rent
    - living where the jobs are can mean forever be someone's housemate, instead of enjoying a more conventional family life.

    Where I'm getting at is that the first mover advantage and real estate costs trump everything, and the high nominal salaries mean very little. IMHO, this is especially true when comparing to back in the day when cities were being built; or comparing to non-western world places where the quality of life is way inferior to what we know was available to our family 40 or 50 years ago.

    It's annoying we don't all have flying cars, but the real disappointment is to look at the 21st century and having to settle for "at least we get smartphones instead of polio".

  119. Because No Way Will Crime Rise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get ready for a TON of old white Anericans with guns robbing and shooting people. It's gonna be hilarious to see your gun culture shoot your freedoms right in the face!

    1. Re:Because No Way Will Crime Rise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post has the whiff of pseudo masturbatory fantasy that you probably enjoy attributing to gun culture.

  120. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another fun one. If you divorce, your SS payout raises until it equals the higher of the two. The higher doesn't get lower but the lower goes higher. With two ex's, they'll both get more than they put into the system. I don't know if that's true for married spouses but I had to know for my two ex's.

  121. You were lucky by lamer01 · · Score: 2

    8 years ago was the beginning of this latest bull market. 8 years * 15,000 contributions per year does not make $400K otherwise.

    1. Re:You were lucky by SirMasterboy · · Score: 2

      But it's not about how much I have now. This is retirement savings that I can't really touch. It's about how much I'll have in another 32 years or so when I retire.

      It's about long term investing over a 40 year time period. Even I let you pick any 2 dates 40 years apart as a starting and ending date to be investing into retirement type accounts what's the worst that someone could have done if they maxed out their accounts for 40 years? Sure some date ranges would do worse than others, but if you pick any 2 dates 40 years apart in mutual funds, it's always much higher after 40 years. The only thing you need to consider is moving the investments from stocks to bonds as you get close to retirement age so that you don't risk losing a large portion right before retiring. Fortunately Vanguard target retirement date funds handle this for you automatically.

      Also if the last 8 years were a bull market, then why do I keep reading about how millennials such as myself have no retirement savings. According to you it's been a bull market for the majority of the average millennial's prime working years. So I am lucky, bust most other millennials somehow aren't?

      Also, who said anything about $15,000 a year. I said 401k, Roth IRA and HSA. 8 years ago in 2010 the max was $16,500 (401k), $5,000 (roth ira), and $3,050 (HSA) meaning in 2010 I put in $24,550, and this year I put in $27,450. The limits have increased somewhere along the years. At an average of say $26K a year times 8 years, I've contributed about $208K, plus some employer 401K match and the rest has been my lucky interest.

      But even If I had made nothing in the stock market (as you said, my luck), I'd have about 208K in retirement savings at 30 years old. How does that compare to the average 30 year old?

      I also started in 2010 with a salary around 40K a year and have grown that to around 70K now so I would hardly say I am making the big bucks, yet I still find ways to save money for my retirement due to personal choices and personal responsibility on how I allocate and spend my income.

    2. Re:You were lucky by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      8 years ago was the beginning of this latest bull market.
      8 years * 15,000 contributions per year does not make $400K otherwise.

      Slightly lucky in that small time span, but not atypical across a career. If you take nearly any slice of 30-40 years over the past 100, matching SirMasterboy's approach will give you a fantastic nest egg for retirement. Googling "how to invest for retirement" and spending 15 minutes reading articles will give you this exact blueprint. It's simple, but apparently not easy for far too many people these days.

      My sister is a prime example of the consumerist mindset. Her mortgage is higher than mine, she buys a new car every five years while I keep mine ten or more, and she has owned three boats in twenty years. She also emptied her 401(k) to buy new furniture when she moved because she didn't like the way her old furniture looked in her new house. And yet I'm the asshole when I go on vacation or talk about retirement while she's living paycheck to paycheck.

    3. Re:You were lucky by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      What you're missing is "shit happens".

      Let's say you continue through your life and you have a wife and children. And then you find out your child has cancer. There goes that retirement savings. Because it turns out private health insurance isn't actually all that great when very expensive diseases pop up. There's lots of ways to forbid someone from renewing their policy.

      Almost everyone's life will have some major "shit happens" moment that severely derails their financial life. If you're lucky, this moment will happen when you're young enough to recover. Most people get severe illnesses after they're older, so most people do not have this luck.

      I also started in 2010 with a salary around 40K a year

      Congratulations, you started on 2nd base. Lots of people do not make 1) a salary, or 2) wages that equal $40k. They also have far higher expenses than a young single person in what appears to be a relatively low-to-moderate cost-of-living area.

    4. Re:You were lucky by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was smart first and lucky second. In another 10 years he will have more than a million and in 20 probably close to 4. Good for him.

  122. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by hey! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The big advantage of representative democracy isn't that it consistently elects good governments. It's that it eventually gets rid of unusually bad ones. The main problem with this is cynicism and apathy -- people getting so used to bad government that they can't even entertain the thought of one being a little bit better.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  123. Reasons against multi-generational homes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    people who are not ashamed of living at home to leverage this is approaching impossible. Which is too bad because there are many ways Americans could re-empower themselves and their loved ones if they would just stop caring about societies expectations (and if their parents would be a bit less judgey of assholes)

    I think you may live on a different planet than I do. The main reason for not living with parents, for the "ideal" home to be a single person or a couple within a single generation, has jack shit to do with society and "expectations" and a lot more to do with comfort and luxury. I like that my wife and I can openly smoke pot, walk around naked, have our music playing on the big stereo, etc without having to worry about other people who wouldn't like it.

    People live in smaller groups than you suggest, for basically the same reason they buy sportscars, smoke/drink drugs/booze, fuck, listen to rock'n'roll, and watch "grown up" shows on TV instead of whatever the kids want to watch: because it's fun! Not because of what other people think. It's about what the person doing it wants.

    The downside is simply that it's less efficient and therefore costs more (possibly to the point where a rational person might say they're living beyond their means since they aren't helping to fund the old people and aren't getting funded by the younger people). So it's for the "rich" but it's a way of being "rich" that is much more accessible than buying Corvettes.

    Getting away from parents is simply more enjoyable, and that's not a slam on parents or anything. It's the nature of life, and the enjoyment is caused by the evolutionary strategies that succeeded rather than failed. A bobcat or an apple tree would tell you the same thing: they wanna live away from their parents.

    You love your parents? Nothing wrong with that! You want to increase efficiencies by sharing a home with a greater number of people? Nothing wrong with that, either! But don't misattribute those who choose to live in smaller groups, or even totally alone. Society and other peoples' judgement isn't making people think they need to do that; they're doing it because they like it.

    But I do like that you call attention to the efficiency question. If you're living in a small group but also complaining about the cost, well, that does suggest one needs to rethink their strategy and goals. How much is breathing room really worth? Everyone has to answer that for themselves.

    1. Re:Reasons against multi-generational homes by Falos · · Score: 1

      If "buy new home" was simply a matter of [luxury-tagged] dollars the behavior would be uniform across cultures within income tiers.

      People also buy diamonds "because I wanna" and it's an entirely cultural construct. If you're worth these keystrokes you already know that it was an entirely orchestrated phenomenon, and we're as much to blame as De Beers.

      We're quite sensitive to the goals penciled in around us. We even convince ourselves they were ours all along, and it had nooooothing to do with media and observing the world around us, this is what I want for meeeee, I'm giving Morty an A in math. It wasn't because of the world insisting your life is incomplete, you're not a fully actualized person if you haven't hit the bullet points we set for you on careers, relationships, property, appearance. If you look closely you'll notice the phrase "I don't own a TV" is being spoken *at* this. It's real and it drives people's wishes.

  124. Bollix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They get unemployment like everyone else. Too stupid to leave a sinking ship if you ask me.

  125. Cant solve problems with mentality which created by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pensions are basically rat poison and are the wrong way of thinking about problems, which is that if there is a problem, the only way to fix it is to look at the government for the solution or large corporations for a solution. When you think about it, a large corporation in the business selling say lawnmowers is now acting as a retirement pension provider is just an absurd idea. Many corporations have been driven to bankruptcy because of pensions. Pensions have also harmful social effects because evidence shows that they remove incentives for people to have children, while people need to have children for these very programs to be able to function (either they will be the ones shopping at sears or paying into social security). This is called a Moral Hazard, which is that the incentivizations created by the program are misaligned with the behaviours (having children) that are necessary for the solvency of the program.

    The arguments for pension programs are actually the weakest than for any welfare program because you have some 45 years to plan for retirement and to implement a retirement strategy. Whereas, for young people, the need for jobs is much more of an urgent and pressing need. If we can help young people *without college* get well paying jobs, and as well create incentives for them to form families and have large families at a young age, it will solve many of problems, as I will explain and allow us to have a sustainable retirement model, as I will explain. . There are solutions to these dillemas that will work if you bear with me.

    Also consider the fact there is no free lunch, the pension program has to be paid for one way or another either through lower wages to offset the cost or through high prices to the consumer. In effect there is no pension fairy that gives people a free lunch for these kinds of things, just like there is no welfare fairy for free welfare and no health care fairy for free health care.

    The best thing we could do if we wanted to actually have secure retirement is to simply create a requirement that adult children just contribute 14% directly into their parents retirement savings and health savings accounts. This lockboxes the savings in a private account which can be an insured account so the government is no longer in charge of the funds and can raid the funds for other things like they did with the IOUs with the SSTF. A nice thing about this is that money keeps on flowing into the RSA and HSA after the parent retires so it has some level of natural inflation protection because fresh money is always flowing into the accounts.

    It also avoids moral hazards because it creates an incentive, kind of an imperative, for people to have children, which is what has to happen anyway for retirement schemes to work. The more children people have the bigger their retirement account becomes. It would promote family values which would be good for society .

    The state and corporations should not be involved with pensions. Taking care of the elderly is the job of parents. I am not antipathetic to programs which help all of the population afford children, such as a day care program or putting children up to age 20 on Medicare Part C (although I oppose single payer for adults). I can support these things for children if it is available to all income levels as a way for us to reduce the disincentives to have children so we can increase the fertility rate and encourage population growth through larger family values culture and help insure solvency of the financial system. Medicare would be cheap for children, for older people it makes more sense to transition to HSAs funded from contributions from their own children.

    As for the other problems mentioned, brick and mortar retail may be becoming the buggy whip. Unions often maintain inefficiencies as well because of the way that they keep unnecessary workers, anyone with an understanding of economics can actually see that this does not actually create more prosperity because a first world economy is created on high productiv

  126. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

    Anyone who mentions "late stage capitalism" is a joke of a poster who cannot be taken seriously.

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  127. Re:Ha! Good one there, have another? by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    When Democrats abandoned the working class (ie most people) for ever more niche groups, like transgenders, that gave them a loss

    I'm curious to know how you figure they did this. Their economic policies didn't change; the democrats are still the party that aims to reduce taxes on the 99% while the republicans still aim to reduce taxes for the top 1%. Their education policies didn't change; they still favor funding public education while the republicans still favor various "market based solutions" and other such tactics that are shown to reduce accessibility to education. What exactly do you think they did that favored "niche groups" over the working class?

    Turns out that hating white males

    Where did you see them doing this? What policies or proposals did you see that could be said to be aiming for that to happen?

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  128. The answer is to expand govt :) by lamer01 · · Score: 1

    Everyone should work for it. As an example, see Greece.

  129. Re:Paying people to not work by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

    We are on the crest of a typical economic cycle. A recession is almost certain within a few years.

    Not years. Months, and it's not a crest, we're on the downward side. The market is already showing the downturn, we're in a "dead cat bounce" at the moment. Usually this time of year there is a bounce or level off between T-day and Christmas as a lot of people stop paying attention to the market including the traders due to the holidays, but come January expect a blood bath. The automakers are usually the first to layoff because auto sales are the first to stall and they stalled 6 months ago, Boeing and the other biggies will follow and then on down the line ending with the small businesses. The economy is slow to respond, it's like a great big ship, even though the captain yanked the wheel to starboard it will be a long time before the ship is actually turning.

    Conversely a new president will have no effect on the economy for at least a year, typically two unless they do something drastic. Trump made his drastic moves in Oct-Dec of last year, we'll feel the ship turning in less than 6 months, I'm betting it's already turning but won't be apparent to the public until June. The market is indicating this is the course, all the consumer product companies saw a 10% bump about a month ago as the institutional investors moved their money into recession safe stocks, gold is even up.

    The bear market should be apparent in the next month or two as the layoffs set in. The official recession tag will be applied around June.

  130. MAGA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All those children working off their parents debts will be GREAT.

  131. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by ahodgson · · Score: 1

    Social Security is fine, with maybe a few tweaks. Medicare is what you should be worried about. It'll be out of IOUs in 6 years and nothing can fix it.

  132. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    But for all we know, you live in a box and put all your money into retirement. Everyone has their own idea of the sacrifices they want to make now versus later. The problem with saving for retirement is you never know if you are even going to live that long. Live meager now and die before you can enjoy it and you've lost.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  133. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they have feet? Can they not walk?

  134. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Wages haven't kept up with inflation in decades. Most employers don't have a retirement fund. HTH, HAND!

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  135. Re: Wow Youre A Cunt!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope your Mother knows she should have had an abortion... but Im sure not having one is her greatest regret.. youre utter garbage.

  136. MAGA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cockblocked by Obama and Hillary again!?

    Why won't they let Trump Make America Great Again?

  137. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    My wife has had cancer twice.. Don't talk like "delayed gratification" is a weakness of character. If you are responsible and working hard, you should be able to enjoy your current personal life to a certain extent. The illness has opened my eyes to living for the day and enjoying it.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  138. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    Er, don't talk like a failure to "delay gratification" is a weakness of character.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  139. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another way to look at it is the labor force participation rate (the number of people age 16-64 working or looking for a job).

    Currently 62.90%, the high was 67.30% in January 2000.

    And just because there are jobs and people are working doesn't mean there are good jobs. It sucks to work in fast food, grocery stores, and big box stores. Factory work might pay better but your body pays the price.

  140. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by ahodgson · · Score: 1

    Your colleague from Germany should be aware that his government has no idea how to fund pensions past 2025. Their pay-as-you-go system could result in effective tax rates of over 80% for anyone still working by 2030. Good luck collecting that.

  141. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by ahodgson · · Score: 2

    So she should have saved all her money and then paid it to the nursing home instead of enjoying it? I don't think this example is an argument for saving more.

  142. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by fluffernutter · · Score: 0

    If I wanted to be a financial expert, I would have taken finance. As it turns out, I didn't want to be a financial expert so I took something else.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  143. Re:Cars, Stuff, and Toys by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Sears - First we though Walmart was going to ruin brick and mortor. Now we know it is an online book seller that has literally transformed the online buying experience for all house hold goods. You might of heard of them. Sears just failed to adapt and the executives cashed out.

    They only existed for so long because they owned real estate and trucks. Then they sold the real estate.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  144. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by dj245 · · Score: 2

    What really gets me, was around 2004-2006 Ford, Chrysler and GM cut development in their smaller car lines, and went into Trucks and SUV's. Then Gas Prices Skyrocketed and a Recession hit. So companies like Toyota and Honda were doing much better because they had small fuel efficient cars ready in their pipeline. It took years for the big 3 to get a good car lineup. However once again Americans want the big ones again. So they are not making small cars.

    Do you mean to say that by shifting away from small cars, they are setting themselves up for problems later? My opinion is that oil prices will remain "low" for at least the next 3 years. The oil industry is in a steady "boom" time, oil prices don't usually go up dramatically until halfway through the "bust". And fuel economy of large vehicles is much better than it used to be. My 1/2 ton truck gets 19MPG, which is bad compared to a car but is much better than the 13MPG that the same truck got in 2008.

    --
    Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
  145. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by dj245 · · Score: 1

    So, they used the trade stuff as an excuse to shutter plants to focus on gas guzzling SUVs, which means come the next gas crunch, they will be back in Congress begging for another cash infusion, when the public is buying plug in hybrids or all electric cars from Toyota.

    Both of those companies would be on the ropes no matter who is POTUS.

    Their official company line is that they are going to take the savings of shuttered plants and invest in electric and other advanced vehicles. Other people have said that they are preparing for the next recession.

    I'm sure they will enjoy the profits of SUVs and trucks but small cars are neither profitable or in demand. The few small cars I see on the road are usually older and in disrepair. It's not unreasonable to think that the low-budget market will become more and more used larger vehicles rather than new small cars. Making cars that are barely profitable and not in great demand is not a winning business strategy. GM's decision appears to be a smart one. Time will tell.

    --
    Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
  146. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by smoot123 · · Score: 1

    Two-thirds of millennials have nothing saved for retirement.....

    They're also not going to retire for another 40 or so years. They don't have forever to start saving but it's also not a crisis yet.

    Social security, when it was established, was meant to be one leg of a stool," says Gerald Friedman, an economist at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. "One leg would be the private pension through employment, a second leg personal savings, and a third leg social security. Social security is now the only source of income of a lot elderly have."

    Well, people can still save if they want. Or at least try to accumulate assets (a house, investments, something like that). It doesn't have to be cash in a bank account. But if people choose not to do this, well, I can't control that.

    Pension plans definitely were a passing trend. I think they only really got started in the first half of the 20th century and became widespread starting in the 40s. So for around 20 to 40 years, companies offered private pension plans then stopped. I classify that as an anomaly, not an established tradition. And we've since replaced them with 401k programs, which have substantial benefits for both employers and employees.

    Bottom line, I think we still have three legs. Social Security still exists and still has the actuarial issues it's had for decades. Savings exists or doesn't as much as it's ever existed. Government-encouraged long term retirement savings, either pensions or 401ks are still out there. I don't see much structural change.

  147. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only financial safety net you need is competence.

    This "just be good" philosophy doesn't scale. If everyone had a PhD and A-plus GPA, there would not be enough positions for their talent. PhD's would end up mopping restrooms, with many unemployed.

    Having a PhD and A+ GPA has nothing to do with having competence. Competence would involve knowing how/when/where to market your skills, and how to develop skills that are in demand, as opposed to simply assuming "just be good" was a good plan....

    Or are you a social Darwinist who believes the unproductive/lazy should be allowed to just wither & die so that we breed more productive humans?

    Even if you hold this view, many would turn to a life of crime and/or riots out of desperation, making for a nasty society.

    There's a rather obvious social Darwinist answer to that as well. If the unproductive are allowed to die, then the counterproductive are helped along...

    We currently have move openings than people looking for work.

    We are on the crest of a typical economic cycle. A recession is almost certain within a few years.

    Which means, until that "almost certain" recession, there's amazing opportunities for folks to earn and save money, right? Wouldn't that plan be... competent?

  148. Re:I hate slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone who isn't a grumpy boomer or pc hobbyist left for "that orange site" a while ago.

  149. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by tavo3 · · Score: 0

    This... ^^^

    Americans need to learn how to live within their means and don't buy shit they don't need just because it's the last trendy thing out there. Who needs an overpriced iPhone X for around $1000 ?, or the latest Nike shoes for over $100 ? The list is long...

    And there you have people ramping up credit card debt just to buy this stuff, renting money left and right just to keep up with their spending habits.

    Most people need to learn basic money management strategy meaning you don't spend more than your income is unless you're in a emergency, and for that people need to save some money for the rainy days. Long time ago I decided to save money and have a f...ck you fund to cover ALL my expenses for a year in case I get laid off or something else. Unfortunately this won't cover medical emergency if you don't have health insurance since the health system is so screwed up that an couple of days of an ER visit with put you back in the 10s of thousand of $$.

    Some are millennials doing all this unnecessary buying, but they also have something going for them. From what I've read many millennials have decided not fall for the fantasy of the "american dream" on some stuff, like for example buying a house they're not even financially prepared to buy. Many people have fallen for the fallacy that buying a house is always better than renting a place to live. Many just compare the mortgage payment directly against rent payment, but they don't consider ALL the other owners expenses like regular and additional insurance (eg: earthquake for CA, flooding), property taxes, HOAs, maintenance, etc, etc. The buy houses with just 5% down and then have to pay PMI. Then they think the interest tax deduction will be huge, but many don't realize the deduction is tied to their tax bracket. Then they'll move to another place between 4 - 6 years which I think is the average, so money going to the mortgage principal will be minimum.

    Again, people need to learn to live within their means...

  150. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know. Three companies weaker than a suspension bridge made of Jell-O have been failing for a decade or more. THE SKY IS FALLING!

  151. Great arguments there! Very convincing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well done, drone! Keep on parroting compensating justifications for your asshole being dilated, during the short time you are allowed to not slave away on top of the cock of late stage capitalism.

  152. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by superdave80 · · Score: 1

    He was quite perplexed as to why on a lunch walk we all were discussing the stock market. Basically everyone has to be both investor and worker here.

    That's absolutely not true. Stick your 401k into some index funds and be done with it. Why your co-workers constantly talk about the stock market IS perplexing, but not for the reasons you think.

  153. Stop social security by guruevi · · Score: 1

    Social security was intended as a safety net of sorts but in the end it stripped private pension funding completely. The same happened with mental health facilities, once the federal government funded them, private and state funding disappeared.

    I'm paying three times as much in social security than I do in pension funding and I'll get three times less out than I do from my pension fund. There is something seriously wrong with the system.

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
  154. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by superdave80 · · Score: 1

    I know 4 people who want to work but are unemployed, and don't show up on those silly numbers.

    So, how do they not show up as unemployed?

  155. Americans never had all three legs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Upper class Americans had fortunes to depend on.

    Middle class Americans bought houses, saved money, established pensions.

    The rest of Americans had what little the government would give them. It has always been this way.

    What has changed is that instead of most people kicking the bucket within 10 years of retirement, we live 20-35 years past retirement now. No one saves that much money to outpace inflation for that many years. People only work half their lives. Their parents cover the first part, they cover the next. Finally, you retire in your mid sixties and unless you paid everything off and only needed food and utilities, you will have to find a way to sustain yourself for 30 more years.

    The answer is, fine a way to work into your eighties or live like a poor person for 10-15 years. Retirement is not a reward, it was meant because you are useless after a certain age. So either admit you are a waste of skin, air and food or get a job.

    The economy will have to change to three day work weeks for everyone soon. This is the only way to ensure there are enough jobs. That means we have to deflate all currencies so that all people can work half as much for the same pay. How else can you expect wrinkle monsters to share jobs with career McDonalds burger flippers?

  156. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by dcw3 · · Score: 1

    So, you're idea is to spend everything and become a ward of the state? And not that I need it, but as her sole heir, I'll get nothing. In fact, I have to pay a lot of bills for her.

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
  157. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Japan seems to be able to have corporations that live longer. The oldest dates back to 705. In spite of world wars and stuff.

    Are they still making paper armor for the bushi?

  158. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They needed to morph into a Sharper Image like store rather than compete with the wholesalers.

    You mean the same Sharper Image that no longer operates retail stores and was near death when Toys R Us was still making a profit? Doesn't sound like a good fit. What Toys R Us needed to do was embrace the qualities that set it apart from the competition. Toys R Us was once a destination shopping environment that kids would be excited to visit. They carried everything and could showcase products in ways that no online store or department store could dream of.

    That started to change about 15 years ago when they remodeled their stores into warehouses. Open spaces with clear sight lines and display areas were replaced with narrow, dark aisles crammed full of as much as possible. Even if you knew what you were looking for and what aisle it was in, you could walk right past it without seeing it. They merged Babies R Us stores into many locations, further compressing their ever-growing stock backlog. Events became less common and the one remaining showcase area in most stores crammed in as many different products as would fit in the space, making it even harder to find anything.

    Eventually, the economic downturn hurt the industry enough to kill the company's profitability. They could have adapted to the new retail environment. Beef up the web site, clear out old stock, thin out the sales floor and move specialty items into the warehouse as online-only items (leveraging their network of stores to speed fulfillment). Expand the product line to cover areas best served by each of the three distribution methods - shop in store, mail to home, and pick up in store. Bring in staff that understands how to engage with the target audience (taking advantage of the unemployment of the time) and executives that can see beyond the next line of video game tie-in figurines to find emerging trends in children's entertainment (particularly things that emphasize outdoor activity and human interaction, where parents may see more value). Use analytics to drive sales and clearances to keep stock fresh and drive foot traffic. Be the change that drives the market back into profitability.

    To their credit, they did clear out a lot of old stock in 2014. As for the rest, the leveraged buyout put them so deep in debt that there wasn't any money to put toward the improvements they would have needed to be competitive in the current environment. In fact, they couldn't even maintain what they had. Staffing suffered, store cleanliness suffered, etc. The stores were reduced to dark and dingy toy cesspools. By the time the final clearance came, the stores were filled to the brim with absolute junk that you were better off donating to charity; nobody wants to risk sending new products to a company treading water until its ultimate demise.

    It is true that politics didn't doom Toys R Us. But their path to success needed to be built around retail foot traffic, not boutique catalog sales.

  159. Re:Paying people to not work by Dan667 · · Score: 4, Informative

    my mom is one of these people. She is a hardcore trump fan and my parents both worked for 40+ years each and thought they had saved for a comfortably for retirement. Well my mom has gotten a serious medical condition and it is a real possibility that all they saved over the course of their lives could be wiped out and they will go bankrupt having to pay the medical bills that the greedy private health insurance is fighting paying at every turn. Helping your neighbor is very American, but I have no idea how conservatives with this "I got mine" attitude is benefiting my mom now that they did everything right and are about thrown out on the street for being medically bankrupt.

  160. More Nonsense arguments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Median household income in the US is around $44K per year. Given that most people manage to get by just fine obviously that is more than enough to provide for a family. No it won't by you a house in Beverly Hills but it's plenty enough to put food on the table and take care of necessities.

    Bullshit it's not plenty enough, it's barely enough. Better hope there aren't major medical expenses at that income level, there are more than half a million bankruptcies every year due to medical expenses alone, then there's ongoing medical expenses like insulin which keeps getting more expensive. And inflation keeps going up, but income isn't keeping up with that; it's been stagnant for more than 15 years.

  161. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

    Buying a house used to be affordable to all. And buying is almost always better than renting. My TOTAL expenditures on mortgage/insurance/taxes for my condo is still 1000 less per month than the guy living next to me renting the same place. And I bought it in 2013. Yes, I might have moved. IN which case I"d have sold this place and made roughly 150 K.

  162. Re:Ha! Good one there, have another? by superdave80 · · Score: 0

    Turns out that hating white males, which is a larger group than all the gays + trans + blacks combined, won't win you elections.

    If you want to see a clear example of how much the democrats hate white men, all you had to do was go to Hillary's campaign website. If you looked near the bottom, you saw links for:

    Women for Hillary

    African Americans for Hillary

    Latinos for Hillary

    Asian Americans for Hillary

    Millennials for Hillary

    I have no idea what the links went to, or what they were for. But the intent was clear. White men and whatever problems they have weren't worth the time or effort to even put a link on a website up for.

  163. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So if the problem is simply a shift in what consumers are driving, the demand for the other product should increase and most the positions should still be needed to meet demand at the other plants.

    I don't know much about the car manufacturing process, but I do know often components are reused across many vehicles. Obviously body components will be different but it seems to me if that shift happened, it would be cheaper to alter existing plants to manufacture the hire demanded vehicle. At the very least, those positions should for the most part shift to other plants and those other plants would likely need to expand to meet demand.

  164. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are not, but they must be win or it will get worse. Country that produces nothing cannot afford any safety net.

  165. Re:Ha! Good one there, have another? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not a SINGLE democrat in House or Senate voted yes on Trump tax cuts that went to the middle class. You can pretend they didn't go to the middle class, but fake news is fake. We saw these tax cuts in our paychecks and you lost credibility saying we didn't.

    Given a chance to change their vote, not a single one said they would. They don't care about workers, end of story.

  166. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is true, but I'm of the opinion of letting it all burn. Why? To teach people a valuable lesson: Loyalty to a corporation is pointless, feel free to sell out your employer at the drop of a hat for a slightly better deal elsewhere. They'll sell you out the moment they think it's even slightly better for them, workers might as well learn to return the favor. Also it might help teach cities/states that companies will f--k everyone over no matter the deals in place.

    I'm not going to expect that it will work, but what else can be done? Nobody wants to reign them in right now, so we might as well let it all burn.

  167. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trade wars and China sales don't have a whole lot to do with spinning down factories in Ohio when you have factories in China that make the vehicles for Chinese sales.

    This is more about GM realizing that people don't like any of the passenger cars GM makes, about 5 years too late.

  168. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And a complete non-starter for the rest.

  169. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 2

    My opinion is that oil prices will remain "low" for at least the next 3 years. The oil industry is in a steady "boom" time, oil prices don't usually go up dramatically until halfway through the "bust". And fuel economy of large vehicles is much better than it used to be. My 1/2 ton truck gets 19MPG, which is bad compared to a car but is much better than the 13MPG that the same truck got in 2008.

    Moreover electric cars are reducing demand for oil. Oil output could decline and yet still there's enough supply if demand shrinks fast enough. Also as you note fuel efficiency is up overall. Demographics world wide are aging so there's less driving due to that as well. The peak oil doomsday scenarios were increased demand and dwindling supply. At this point lower supply but also lower demand looks more likely.

  170. So much winning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm so glad our glorious leader President Trump has been able to keep jobs here in the U.S.

  171. Breeding Humans [Re:Paying people to not work] by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    And if everyone were that smart and capable, it would drive the price of labor way up as they could find and market new sorts of labor.

    Please elaborate.

    If we want the movie Idiocracy to be remain a satire rather than a documentary, you either need a way to let smart people have more kids survive...

    Society has been changing too fast to try to breed better humans, because "better" changes. The "in" skills today may not be the "in" skills tomorrow. "Metabolically efficient" may help one survive a famine but is "lazy" in another era.

    as you can eat the rich today but what are you going to do tomorrow?

    That's mostly moot because even a short-term period of mass chaos is not good in my book, and in most people's books.

  172. Canonyero! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All my life, I have searched for a car that feels a certain way.
    Powerful like a gorilla, yet soft and yielding like a Nerf ball.

  173. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 1

    Buying a house used to be affordable to all. And buying is almost always better than renting. My TOTAL expenditures on mortgage/insurance/taxes for my condo is still 1000 less per month than the guy living next to me renting the same place. And I bought it in 2013. Yes, I might have moved. IN which case I"d have sold this place and made roughly 150 K.

    You're obviously correct however rather than face the wrath of locked out millennials they instead convinced them that renting while living downtown was trendy and only stodgy old folks actually had a home. It worked for a decade or so. I can't speak to other states but in CA the fees have made new construction *very* expensive. Yes the land is expensive but if you drill down the fees are often >$50k.

  174. remove healthcare from jobs by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    remove healthcare from jobs!

  175. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by MachineShedFred · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or, GM passenger cars are terrible and buyers go a different way.

    Yes, there are more SUVs being sold. "Crossovers" are just tall station wagons on bigger tires. However, Toyota and Honda still sell a metric fuckload of Camrys, Corollas and Civics to the point of them being in the top 10 vehicles sold including SUVs and light-duty trucks like the Ford F-Series, Chevy Silverado, and Dodge Ram.

    Clearly Toyota and Honda know something that eludes GM - like how to build a car that isn't a pile of shit after 40,000 miles.

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  176. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    In the case of Toys R Us specifically their problem was about pure greed and capitalism. This indepth piece argues the leverage buyout in 2005 was really the demise of the company. While Toys R Us was threatened by online giant Amazon, the fact that most of Toys R Us' profit had to go back to paying their LBO debt was the main reason they could never compete. There was no money for capital investment like updated intrastructure. There was no money for hiring talent, etc. All money went to private equity debt.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  177. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I ate your mother once. Now that was one soured muffin.

  178. Re:Paying people to not work by Sique · · Score: 1

    Social Security pays out less than you paid in until you reach around age 81. The average person lives until 78.

    The only financial safety net you need is competence. Competent people who are laid off find work elsewhere.

    Granted, you are not part of the competence group in this case.

    First: You start paying into Social Security when you start working, that means around age 21. So all the risks of dying as a child are already avoided, increasing your life expectancy. So your calculation is off anyway.

    Second: Whatever system to superficially calculate your retirement money is in place, it doesn't change a simple fact: All social payment, may it come out of pension funds, from tax based systems, from private savings or whatever, has to be earned in the period you get the payment. When you don't earn your own money, someone else is earning it and sharing his earnings with you. Any retirement payments are pure wealth distribution systems. Even if you live completely from your savings, just the fact that your savings are worth anything (and not for instance eaten up by inflation) is a sign, that other people are productive and generating products and services equivalent to your buying power. The U.S. luckily has never experienced a big inflation like many South American or European countries have, where all savings became worth essentially nil after the money got devalued. But the value of savings is solely depending on the amount of goods and services you can buy with the money, which have to be produced by someone else. The same with pension funds: Those have value because they are invested in company shares or bonds, and the value of company shares depends on the ability of the company to stay afloat, e.g. earning enough money to pay the shareholders, and the value of bonds on the ability of the debitor to repay the debts, which means the debitor has to earn money to pay. Interest payments on investments depend on debitors earning enough to pay interest on their debts, and tax based systems (including state bonds) on the ability of the country to raise enough taxes to pay out retirement money.

    So wherever the money comes from you get as retirement money, someone else has earned it. Calculating if you will ever get enough out of Social Security compared with your payments is a funny, but totally meaningless game. The money you pay now gets paid out now to someone else. The money you get in the future will be paid by someone in the future.

    --
    .sig: Sique *sigh*
  179. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by istartedi · · Score: 1

    One way to look at it is that we sold our manufacturing base to foreigners, in exchange for cheaper goods and better corporate profits. The hollowed out, decaying core of the "rust belt", ravaged by heroin addicts is the price paid for affordable cars and a rising stock market.

    It stands to reason that if we attempt to "buy back" the old lifestyle, or buy a new lifestyle based on a greater self-sufficiency that there will be a cost. That cost will be born by those who benefited from the prior sale. Goods will be more expensive, corporate profits will be weaker. Wall Street will fall.

    OTOH, people might have something to do again. We might even find a way to bring back 30 years jobs. Not for this generation though. This generation is screwed. We spent that last 40 years selling out to dictators. The buy back is going to hurt. Your grandchildren might appreciate it, if we manage to pull it off..

    As far as economic orthodoxy is concerned, screw it. I've been saying for decades now that "comparative advantage doesn't scale". I started to realize econ was bunk when the "right" answer on a test was "loan money to a foreigner". I was being taught this dreck at UVa--Mr. Jefferson's University, you know that revolutionary dude who probably didn't want us depending on foreigners to fix our problems?

    I'm not a great fan of Trump, but I get why he's there. His administration is the chickens coming home to roost. There is no refined, academic proponent of populist ideas, or that addresses the real needs of workers, because they are ruthlessly excluded from academia. Thus, we could not have the needs of the masses addressed properly by anybody other than a boor.

    Elites, gaze upon your creation and marvel: you put Trump in office.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  180. Paranoia is due. by Qbertino · · Score: 1

    I've been kinda-sorta fatalistic ever since my teen ages but I have to say that in recent years, with a global irreversible ecological disaster closing in fast and all the other shit going down recently around the globe I suspect that we needn't prepare for a post scarcity economy rather than an all-out cyberpunk / post-growth / post-industrial age society.

    Either way, wether we're headed towards some post-work utopia or a cyberpunk dystopia, for myself I've decided to carefully balance career moves and a sort of minimalist modern euro-style "prepping". I don't want to be the one standing with his pants down should society as we know it tank and everything we rely on including working computers and the internet become a quasi-luxury and cease to be the norm.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  181. Re:Paying people to not work by barc0001 · · Score: 2

    > You can form a co-op buy the now unused equipment and start manufacturing another product or under another brand.

    Are you delusional? Name the last successful car company to get started as a "coop" shoestring operation by a bunch of laid off workers. Go on, I'll wait...

    Hell, look at the shit Tesla gets from everyone and they've got billions behind them.

  182. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by UnknowingFool · · Score: 3, Informative

    The same scenario happened to Sears. In addition to the huge debt from their LBO, Sear experienced increased costs as their store rent rose tremendously after the LBO. Why? Because the new CEO and major private equity holder sold practically all of Sears land holdings (which included store properties) to a shell company he owned then raised the rent on the same properties. He was making a great deal of money gutting the company.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  183. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it is actually 3.92 to 6.79 percent annual return depending on your income bracket.

  184. The obvious fix by nehumanuscrede · · Score: 1

    sarcasm

    They obviously need to quit selling cars and go to a subscription model where nothing new gets developed, no bugs get fixed and the money comes in by the truckload every month. /sarcasm

  185. Re:Paying people to not work by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

    fix healthcare, and I'm totally onboard.

  186. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by ranton · · Score: 1

    buying is almost always better than renting. My TOTAL expenditures on mortgage/insurance/taxes for my condo is still 1000 less per month than the guy living next to me renting the same place. And I bought it in 2013. Yes, I might have moved. IN which case I"d have sold this place and made roughly 150 K.

    While buying is often better than renting, that has more to do with forced savings than it actually being a good investment. Your own figures leave out a huge number of factors, such as how much your down payment was and the cost of repairs. A $150k down payment invested in the stock market instead should be expected to make $1000 per month in returns over the long run, and over a few decades you are probably spending a few hundred dollars per month more on repairs, updates, etc. that the renter isn't. And considering real estate on average only increases at the speed of inflation, it isn't a great long term investment compared to the stock market.

    Your case could be different, as the "averages" don't hold up for everyone. But it still doesn't make your situation common.

    --
    -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
  187. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Anyone who mentions "late stage capitalism" is a joke of a poster who cannot be taken seriously.

    Anyone who fails to recognize that Capitalism isn't achieving what it claims it does, and that it has reached a point where only a small number of people benefit from it is a fool.

    Everything from "a rising tide lifts all boats" to "trickle down economics" is complete bullshit. It's really just getting the wealthy richer, and it's getting worse at an accelerating rate.

    What is really happening is economic serfdom as the corporations and the wealthy game the system for their own benefit, and at the expense of everyone else. See, those 'rules' of how the market works are all lies when companies can change the playing field.

    In its current form, Capitalism is simply not sustainable, and its collapse is pretty much inevitable.

    And it certainly behaving how people claim it does.

    When everyone else realizes just how much of a fucking ponzi scheme Capitalism is, it won't be pretty.

  188. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by desdinova+216 · · Score: 1

    and the former head of Bain was Mitt "47%" Romney, 2012 Presidential candidate

  189. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just wait damn it.

    When Trump has his propaganda TV and Radio up and running he will set up re-education camps that will explain how, just like North Korea, you are winning.

    So please be patient.

  190. Layoffs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Liberal/progressives have nothing to offer except SOCIALISM, which is a complete and utter failure.

  191. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If you want to reduce my incentive to work hard, produce a lot, earn a lot, pay a lot of taxes, and still have something to leave to my heirs, then eliminate trust funds.

    The law of unintended consequences...

  192. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone is completely bereft of personal responsibility? In the richest country in the history of the world, people can not be held responsible for their own future? They can be excused because they have to have the latest big-screen LED and Iphone? Fun fact: A high school student working less that 20 hours a week at minimum wage makes more than 90% of the rest of humanity.

    Making wide sweeping assumptions about prolific consumer spending correlating with failure to save undermines your argument.

    Every generation in all times and all places has had conspicuous spenders. They do so in order to, among other things, get attention. That that sliver of the population is going to be in money trouble at the end of their life is both unsurprising and unimportant.

    The 20 year-old in the cafe with the fancy phone may well be more frugal than you, because that phone is a birthday gift from grandma and selling the phone for cash is not going to be viewed favorably. Or perhaps that young person can afford that phone because their family is made of money? How would you know?

    I'm sorry, but your blatant ignorance and pathetic attempt to dismiss the parents point about materialism has utterly failed. Two-thirds of Millennials do not have anything saved for retirement, and yet damn near every one of them has a smartphone. Doesn't matter if the hardware was free, the smartphone plan sure as hell isn't, especially when it must be the "unlimited" plan bolted to a binge-watching Netflix/social media addict. Even one generation prior, who also was NOT afforded jobs with pensions, knew the importance of saving for retirement.

    Materialism is certainly a significant problem for Millennials. Their flavor of keeping up with the Jonses is further exacerbated by bullshit like YOLO and FOMO. They are some of the most self-serving narcissistic humans I've ever seen, and have zero common sense when it comes to budgeting. And to diffuse your generalizations are unfair excuse, am I talking about every single one of them? No. But I'm sure as hell talking accurately about the majority of them. There's a difference between ignoring the elephant in the room, and pretending it doesn't exist while its shitting all over your shoes.

    These facts will become painfully obvious when you find the "sliver" of Millennials who are going to be fucked due to living a YOLO/FOMO lifestyle represent the overwhelming majority of them. And no, I'm sure as hell not going to be surprised.

  193. Re:Ha! Good one there, have another? by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    You can pretend they didn't go to the middle class, but fake news is fake. We saw these tax cuts in our paychecks and you lost credibility saying we didn't.

    Bull. Shit. My paycheck didn't change by a dime. Neither did my wife's paycheck. We are very much middle class.

    Given a chance to change their vote, not a single one said they would.

    Because the tax cuts were a bad deal. It passes debt on to future generations of workers and does not benefit current workers.

    They don't care about workers, end of story.

    How many times did you have to tell that to yourself before you believed it?

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  194. Re: Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where does this myth come from? The spouse can collect the higher rate if the decreased spouse got a higher payment, but you don't get both.

    My mom's SS was 1100 and my dad's was 1200. When he died she gets 1200.

  195. Re:Paying people to not work by tsa · · Score: 1

    Very insightful indeed. You wonder why all Western countries except the USA have social security. Such dumbasses! Can't they see the USA is the best country in the world?

    --

    -- Cheers!

  196. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You need Triacs? Good brand name ones? I have a whole bunch of NOS in the original carton.

  197. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

    And fuel economy of large vehicles is much better than it used to be. My 1/2 ton truck gets 19MPG, which is bad compared to a car but is much better than the 13MPG that the same truck got in 2008.

    Is that city or highway mileage, and 2WD or 4WD? If it's city, those are awesome numbers, but highway, not as much - my old carbureted '86 2WD C10 got about 18 highway (per experience) and 14 city (per EPA). My current 2002 half-ton extended-cab Sierra (4.8L V8) with 165,000 miles gets a little better than 20 highway now, and it got about 14 mpg on average when towing a 4,000 pound trailer from Wisconsin to Florida last year, but the mountains in TN/GA had a bit to do with the poor mileage, and being a 2WD truck helps too. Not bad for an old, beat-up truck.

    --
    Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
  198. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The closest you got to a vagina is when you were born, Chris...

  199. It's time to exterminate the socialists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's the socialists who have put us into this situation (ie democrats and republicans). We need to eliminate the bull shit laws and regulations that we knew didn't work during the communist era. What we should have done is left the free market to reward those who used creative and intellectual talents to move us forward. We needed to empower the individual rather than prop up the corporations via stealing from the masses (ie taxes).

    What the socialists have done instead is redistributed your money into programs that have largely benefited private enterprise and an elite. These programs have been argued as being for the people when in fact the ones who benefited most are almost always an elite.

    The socialists argued these laws would do things like make us "safer". But at what cost?? If the safety features are unaffordable or remove the funds to reduce real or greater risks elsewhere than what good has it done us? I'd have no problem driving a vehicle without seat belts and airbags if that had a low risk high cost for the benefit of being able to afford health care later on that would extend my life another 20 years. There might be a risk here- but it doesn't mean its necessarily worth the price to be paid to reduce that risk. When government decides and the consumer doesn't you end up with the worst possible situation. This isn't to say that I would not pay for seat belts or airbags- but without the option I have no means of gauging and I certainly know it will reduce my investment capital and dollars going into old age.

    My state steals less from me than most, but I still see at least $10,000 / year mostly being wasted on services / programs / etc I don't even utilize. I spend another $12,000 annually on health insurance that has been inflated substantially because of private interests that want to sell you on "health care for everyone" which is really just a misleading way to argue for forced redistribution of wealth into the private coffers of enterprise. Which just so happens to disproportionately impact those at the bottom as employers are forced to redistribute part of your paycheck into the hands of a health insurance company. That has forced many people onto the street. I know one person who even got sick as a result and then got refused service because the government insurance is such crap they stopped accepting it. The 2nd attempt was "successful". Not that the check up was anything more than a front to extract money from the poorest in our society. The doctor only briefly saw my boyfriend and then refused to actually see him. "good enough" to secure the government funds I suppose.

  200. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Great for you, but it could have easily went the other way. Index funds did really well in the past 8 years. They might not do so well in the next. Are you in position to delay retirement by +/- 10 years?

  201. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where are these low gas prices?

    I just spent $3.89/gal filling up yesterday.

  202. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

    I could be getting 40 mpg in a Civic or north of 50 in a Prius. Why would I want a land-barge that gets under 20 mpg if I can do a lot better?

    Oil companies aren't charities, and I don't want to send 2x the money to them that I'd otherwise send.

  203. One Air Ambulance Flight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  204. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by barc0001 · · Score: 1

    > Social security, when it was established, was meant to be one leg of a stool,

    What's the stool look like to those millions of people who are working "full time" jobs of 32 hours on minimum wage and rotating schedules so they can't even go get a second job? Those same people on food stamps to eat?

    And back when Social Security was first established, a person with a full time job was paid a living wage. Not any more.

  205. Supply and demand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the past, a single house hold earner could provide for a family. Now it takes two.

    Maybe the fact that more people want to work has held down the cost of labor which makes dual incomes necessary?

  206. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by farble1670 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Both of those companies would be on the ropes no matter who is POTUS.

    That's not what the POTUS says. He is happy to take credit, personally, for anything positive that happens in our economy.

  207. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

    Two-thirds of millennials have nothing saved for retirement.

    Did you even read what you posted and everyone marked up? 3 Legs of a stool, one of those legs was a private pension. Hows your private pension going because mine went away twenty years ago.

    I don't know many stools that work with only 2 legs. I'd also like to point out that you single out millennials, but the generation retiring right now, the boomers, have even worse numbers, 95% of boomers have less than $50k saved. More than half have nothing,

    In almost every regard the boomers are worse off than the millennials, and I'll tell you one thing, they cut SS and Medicare and it's going to be the boomers that take the brunt because the millenials will have the votes to make sure they do. Millennials outnumber both Boomers and GenX combined and they VOTE!

  208. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by farble1670 · · Score: 1

    My TOTAL expenditures on mortgage/insurance/taxes for my condo is still 1000 less per month than the guy living next to me renting the same place.

    Yet, that guy is supposed to save $140k (in CA, $700k for a starter home, required 20% down) paying out whatever you do plus $1,000 a month. You have to be in a position to save that money in the first place, or get a payout in some other way (inheritance, options, loan from parents, etc).

  209. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    You must be in California. We get to pay extra special taxes and costs that the rest of the USA doesn't pay...

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  210. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    I had a truck for years, that got terrible mileage, but it was a great truck. My daily driver, however, was an assortment of motorcycles over 15 years,most getting 50+ MPG, an absolute blast to ride, and could park just about anywhere. Plus never got stuck in traffic in California thanks to the CHP's sensible attitude towards lane splitting (like the rest of the World - outside of Canada).

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  211. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Kyr+Arvin · · Score: 1

    Low sellers in the short term; with low gasoline prices people are favoring larger cars, trucks and SUVs. Light truck sales respond pretty dramatically to fluctuations in gasoline. It's like a see-saw: gasoline prices go up, SUV sales go down; gasoline prices go down, SUV sales go up.

    But SUV and truck sales don't go down enough enough during the downward trends to wipe out the gains made during the high-gas-price eras.

    LMC Automotive, an automotive industry tracker, estimates by 2022 that GM's fleet will be 84% SUVs and trucks, Ford will be at 90%, Chrysler at 97%. What's changed? SUV technology, they're more fuel-efficient than they used to be, more advanced than they used to be. A new SUV has about the same amount of mpg (or pretty close) as an old, old sedan that someone might be willing to look to trade in. And SUV and truck sales are an arms race. My mom doesn't ever need to haul a lot of stuff, but she got an SUV rather than a car because she just feels "safer" in it. She felt that driving around in a small car was actually dangerous with all these trucks, light trucks, and other large vehicles on the road. So she got one from a safety standpoint to keep up.

    Since 2013, SUV sales are up 87%, with car sales down 8%. Back then, there were only four SUVs in the top 20 sales models, now there are seven, and it's a trend that's just picking up the pace.

  212. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

    I ride too, but that's not feasible as a daily driver in all climates.

  213. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by ahodgson · · Score: 1

    No, not at all. I think everyone should try to take care of themselves. I'm just not sure you're making a good argument for that to have happened in this case.

  214. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    Not just new construction, but remodeling fees. I'm redoing my kitchen right now, and moving an interior shear wall as well. Fees, permits, inspections, etc. are coming to about 12% of the entire cost. That's in addition to engineering costs for the rework itself. And with materials making up about 60% of the budget, and sales tax in CA, I'll pay close to 20% to the State for the privilege of remodeling my kitchen and opening it up to the dining room...

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  215. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

    Everyone is completely bereft of personal responsibility? In the richest country in the history of the world, people can not be held responsible for their own future?

    You know what? Shit happens. I'm glad you've managed to be lucky so far. Not everyone has. And hopefully, it won't take your own bad luck for you to realize this.

    A high school student working less that 20 hours a week at minimum wage makes more than 90% of the rest of humanity.

    People do not retire from a first-world country to an impoverished third-world country. So this comment is particularly stupid.

    History has clearly shown they will badly mishandle any money that are given.

    Let's compare track records: Social Security Trust fund - still exists. Still profitable. Sure, there's conspiracy theorists claiming it's all gone or stupidly thinking the general fund's debt is relevant to the trust fund. And yes, it's going to be exhausted after the Boomers, but that was the plan all along. It was only created to shore up the Boomer's retirement because GenX was too small. GenX will probably be fine, as long as the generation after the Millennials don't do another baby-bust. So far, so good on that front.

    401k's, banks, etc: So, remember 2008? When we had to save all of private savings from oblivion via bailing out the banking industry? Oh, you were planning to invest in Real Estate? So, remember 2007?....

    History does not back up your claims about the proficiency of private investment versus public investment.

  216. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    Yep, understood. So I moved to where it was. A man has to have his priorities straight! :)

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  217. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > so they set up a well published explanation of their methodology.

    When the legislature and president (really any political candidate above state level) uses the U-3 rate, "the US playing slight of hand".
    Don't act ignorant, just because you like to be snarky.

  218. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Junta · · Score: 1

    you are probably spending a few hundred dollars per month more on repairs, updates, etc. that the renter isn't

    A renter is paying for every cost incurred by the owner of the house, through their monthly rent.

    Essentially any argument that can be made for rent being 'cheaper' is going to fall into the trap that your landlord is not doing things out of the kindness of their heart and taking a loss, they are passing on costs to you.

    If you stay still, it becomes worse over time, as rent goes up with market pressures. My insurance and tax may fluctuate, but when I had a mortgage payment, it would only change in ways I wanted it to. Also, I paid it off so there's actually a light at the end of the tunnel with mortgage.

    In general there is a huge movement to say 'renting is better for everything!' which benefits people who actually own stuff and not so much the people stuck with no equity and held hostage by property value changes moving rent on a whim.

    Renting can make sense for certain things where your use is so infrequent or there is some way economies of scale work to make it make sense, rarely is it the case that one's home is in that realm.

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
  219. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes correct. Everything you said is nonsense.

  220. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please tell us more about your imaginary friend.

  221. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let’s clarify: the Chinese government makes more money on the sale of GM cars in China than GM makes. This is because China tacks on large import tax fees.

    When the numbers get out of whack it doesn’t matter how big the number is, the deal needs to be renegotiated.

    Per car, would you like to guess how much GM makes in profit and how much China makes in profit?

  222. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Honda and Nissan automatic transmissions suck balls. Just FYI. Everyone seems to be outsourcing the transmissions development these days. Apparently the 10 speed in the Ford Mustang is pretty damn reliable. Perhaps Big Auto could learn a thing from the silicon industry and start cross-licensing technology to each-other.

  223. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by DigiShaman · · Score: 3, Informative

    Demographics world wide are aging so there's less driving due to that as well.

    China in India are just now growing a middle-class. Driving will increase world-wide. FACT!.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  224. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by bad-badtz-maru · · Score: 1

    Move even closer to the plant and you might see that the vehicle is the "Cruze", not "Cruse".

  225. Re:Paying people to not work by MooseTick · · Score: 1

    Does anyone actually "work hard, produce a lot, earn a lot, [and] pay a lot of taxes" so they can "have something to leave to [their] heirs"?

    I don't think so.

    I have an heir, and I'd like to leave him something when I'm gone. If that weren't an option though, I still wouldn't try to earn less money.

  226. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

    Haha, I moved to where I don't have to own a damn car at all, and if I buy one, it can be something impractical and fun like a Miata or motorbike.

  227. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My uncle was a millionaire. Health issues wiped out his wealth.

  228. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "Actual" unemployment includes 5 year olds and 85 year olds. And the disabled. And wards of the state. And criminals behind bars. It's closer to 40-50% last I looked. But of course we don't expect those people to work. We really shouldn't.

    When talking about sociology, boiling it down to a single number is usually bollocks. Graphs with multiple variables and comparisons to other nations is almost a must. But that doesn't fit our sound-bite and protest-sign culture.

  229. Re:Paying people to not work by wed128 · · Score: 1

    But if the USA doesn't have social security....what have they been taking out of my paychecks? hmmm....

  230. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by gtall · · Score: 1

    Most of academia is left-wing, there goes your argument.

  231. Germany should pay up for NATO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Germany spends only 1.25 pct of its GDP on defense. The USA could do more stuff if it spent less on defense.

  232. Re:Paying people to not work by gtall · · Score: 1

    Says someone not yet on the receiving end of age discrimination. Age discrimination doesn't discriminate between competent and incompetent.

  233. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

    Paying $40k of her own money to be taken care of by low-skilled and -paid staff would be better? Your mom couldn't have played it much smarter, people with money usually make arrangements to hide it so they can get Medicaid nursing care, but that benefits their heirs more than them

  234. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Anyone who decries "late stage capitalism" is a joke of a poster who cannot be taken seriously.

    FTFY. History is available for review and denial is not compelling.

  235. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >grocery stores

    in the seventies THAT PAID enough for a family. what happened ? hint : https://www.epi.org/productivi...

  236. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by wed128 · · Score: 1

    I think our actual unemployment is over 10% myself.

    Well I think it's 0%! see what happens when we make up numbers?

  237. Bravo to you, sir by Weaselmancer · · Score: 1

    And thank you.

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
  238. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The US plays a slight-of-hand trick with its unemployment figures, cherrypicking whom it considers homeless in order to improve its image. for example The U-3 is the rate most often reported in the media. In the U-3 rate, the Bureau of Labor Statistics only counts people without jobs who are in the labor force. To remain in the labor force, they must have looked for a job in the last four weeks.
    The U-6, or real unemployment rate, includes the underemployed, the marginally attached, and discouraged workers.

    Actual unemployment in the US is 7.4%.

    In an attempt to clarify, unemployed people receiving some kind of unemployment benefits are counted as 'unemployed'. Unemployed people not receiving unemployment benefits don't exist, as far as the state is concerned. They've been unpersoned.

  239. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it were a real pyramid scheme, benefits wouldn't be tied to lifetime earnings, there wouldn't be a cap on wages subject to FICA taxes, and we wouldn't cut checks to multimillionaires. It would, does, and did work just fine with birth rates how they are/were- we just need to make some simple and obvious changes.

  240. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Headw1nd · · Score: 2

    The buyout of Toys'R'Us was in 2005, Deval Patrick joined Bain Capital in 2015. Not to say he's an angel, but it is disingenuous to say he was part of this.

  241. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

    Yep both sides are corporate shills and the whole left right thing is a meaningless circus albeit with an actual clown in charge now

  242. You call it socialised medicine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Australians call it Medicare, Brits call it NHS, Canadians call it the Canadian Health Act, Germans call it Krankenversicherung, French call it national insurance. Americans genuinely hate poor people and want them to suffer painful medical consequences for it.

  243. Re:Paying people to not work by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

    All social payment, may it come out of pension funds, from tax based systems, from private savings or whatever, has to be earned in the period you get the payment. When you don't earn your own money, someone else is earning it and sharing his earnings with you. Any retirement payments are pure wealth distribution systems.

    A better word for what you're describing would be "produced" rather than "earned"—though that isn't quite accurate either since it is entirely possible to produce a durable consumer good now and set it aside for a few decades to be consumed later. Not everything has to be consumed the moment it's produced. Even if we disregard durable goods, however, the mere fact that a good won't be produced until far into the future does not imply that it hasn't already been earned, by producing goods while deferring consumption—a process known colloquially as "saving".

    What you're referring to as a "wealth distribution system" is more commonly known as simply "the economy". However, in conflating private saving and investment with tax-funded retirement schemes you're ignoring the basic economic principles of debt and contractual obligation. That's the difference between normal economic function and political wealth redistribution . When you buy or sell a share in a voluntary investment (a retirement fund, for example) there is no change in the distribution of wealth, because wealth includes both what one owes and what one is owed. You're only exchanging one type of asset (a claim on an investment) for another similarly-valued asset (cash or other goods). The same is not true when you receive a payout from a tax-funded program; the government does not consider itself indebted toward you, no matter how much it's taxed you in the past, and considers itself free to revise the terms of the arrangement at any time. Far from an equitable and voluntary exchange of goods and obligations, this is a forced transfer of wealth from one group (net tax-payers) to another (net tax-receivers). Tax-funded programs are inherently zero- or negative-sum; every cent they pay out must first be taken from someone else. Investments are positive-sum: everyone who participates shares a reasonable expectation of deriving some benefit from the arrangement.

    --
    "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
  244. Political bias alert in summary! by King_TJ · · Score: 2

    The conclusion that this problem is one "that liberals in particular should have capitalized on this election cycle" tells me all I need to know about the political views of the original poster.

    That said? Yeah, we have some looming problems for future retirees when it comes to finances. But the people who are already nearly 30 years old and "have nothing saved for retirement" still need to look in the mirror to find who to blame. I can guarantee you (because I work with a lot of these people myself), a lot of younger people were never taught much of anything about finances and investing. Many have no idea how to balance a checkbook, and rely on regularly logging in to their bank's web site to determine how much money they've got in their account(s). They couldn't challenge their bank about an error if they had to. They just blindly trust and accept that the bank is keeping a proper record of their transactions. They've been offered 401Ks but opted out, saying they "didn't trust that the money would really be there by the time they retire anyway" or other such excuses.

    The fact that many people are struggling to find and keep good paying jobs obviously doesn't help either. But the fact is, it's a lot easier to have money taken out of your paycheck, pre-tax, before you ever see it. The bellyaching about not being able to afford to let them take even 3% or 4% out for a retirement account is just FUD. If you're living SO close to the edge that 3% of your income, pre-tax, will make the difference between you surviving and not? You have bigger problems and need to re-evaluate your life choices and needs.

    Personally, as a libertarian who leans financially conservative on most issues? I think it's the liberal Democrats who I'm most afraid to see trying to "fix retirement problems". They're notorious for the persistent belief that any problem can be addressed by pointing the finger at someone else with more resources, and demanding they give some of theirs up towards the goal.

    When you look at how the existing Social Security system is set up? It's not even really a designated "pot" that funds go into. That's why so many other political plans involve dipping into money that was supposedly earmarked for people's retirement. Even SSI comes out of Social Security. That's a potential problem because disability payments are doled out to a lot of people who never worked long enough to contribute anything meaningful IN to the system first. And our legislation allows for practically anything imaginable to count as a disability, if you can get the right doctor to sign off on it. I once dated a girl, briefly, who was in her 20's and I discovered was collecting disability payments. I couldn't imagine why, until I found out she claimed she had "back problems" that prevented her from ever being able to hold a job. It turns out, it was some kind of issue where occasionally (maybe once a month at most?) she'd find she couldn't get up out of bed in the morning ... basically paralyzed for a while. A few hours later, it would get better and she could get up and move around again. A legitimate medical problem? Yeah, but IMO, hardly one that would keep you from being a productive member of society. Especially with all the teleworking opportunities around today, it's a better time than ever in history to find employment despite a limitation like that! A tenant in my father's apartment, a while back, was collecting disability payments because he claimed his previous cocaine addiction qualified him. You could even collect it for being too overweight, if you wanted to go that route .... How much more money would be there to ensure Social Security could pay people fairly in their retirement if it wasn't drained off by these other things?

    1. Re:Political bias alert in summary! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ive had a 401k since I was 18. Im 40 now. Last year I had to stop contributions because my insurance doubled so I had to take the hit on the savings side. Why did my premiums double? Obamacare.

      On top of that, taxes eat us alive. And for what? So some lazy bastard at the county/state office can retire after 20 years.

      On top of that, lets let all these low wage earners come in across the border so people like me can continue to pay for their healthcare and education.

      It has nothing to do with personal responsibility. It has everything to do with crap politicians creating a welfare class that they can rule over. They want to kill the middle class. Look at what they've done to the black community! That's the blueprint for all of us.

    2. Re:Political bias alert in summary! by strikethree · · Score: 1

      Only responding to this despite much more discussable material.

      But the people who are already nearly 30 years old and "have nothing saved for retirement" still need to look in the mirror to find who to blame. I can guarantee you (because I work with a lot of these people myself), a lot of younger people were never taught much of anything about finances and investing. Many have no idea how to balance a checkbook, and rely on regularly logging in to their bank's web site to determine how much money they've got in their account(s). They couldn't challenge their bank about an error if they had to.

      If this issue is caused by society, then society should do something to where this is not an issue. Namely, perhaps this type of thing should be taught at a school? Society causes us to "need" to know about money, language, math, etc. There are other reasons to know these things, but living in a modern society _requires_ these things; therefore, it is up to society to provide training in these things. Blaming the parents is only useful if the parent actively avoided their children learning these things. If the parents don't know these things, how can they teach their children? How is blaming them for their "uneducated" children their fault when they don't even know that they are uneducated themselves? You can't know what you don't know, despite what Rumsfeld said.

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
    3. Re:Political bias alert in summary! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Problem is people who take out 3 or 4 % are competing with people who do not take out 3 or 4 % for things like housing. This is why even just enforced private savings can help as a half a loaf solution (much like our kato institute healthcare). It helps because now people save without be penalized in the "free" market which will reward the short term folk. Yeah sure at some point the short termers wil default on their mortgage or what not but by that time it is too late for the fiscall conservative long termers who where at the life stage to get housing when the short termers out bid them.

  245. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by ewibble · · Score: 1

    What I think the grandparent said, Trump is the rebellion against academia, they are proponents of free trade, welfare system, women's rights, and immigration. People just want to be able to work support themselves and have job security.

    While I think academia principles are good in moderation, they don't allow seem to debate, they just scream racist, sexist, protectionist.

    Free trade good, but not to the point that all production is shipped of overseas, and only people making any money are the people that own the intellectual property.

    Welfare system good, but not to the point that working people can barley make a better living than unemployed, it should be hard being on a benefit. Women's rights good, they should be equal, but not superior, saying you look nice, to someone can loose your job, or you don't get hired over a woman just because you are male or white.

    Immigration good, but don't let every body in, they need to be in real need, or prove they will benefit society.

    This is not just a left thing though, the right also go way too far.

    Some of these problems may just be perceived ones, but when you ignore people, or just tell them they are wrong they don't just turn around and agree with you they just get more extreme in the opposite direction because they think you are being unreasonable.

    The world is not binary or even linear, there is a whole spectrum of solutions that we can be discussing without name calling or assuming the other person is somehow evil.

  246. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

    But for all we know, you live in a box and put all your money into retirement. Everyone has their own idea of the sacrifices they want to make now versus later.

    I want to address the point you're raising in just a sec, but the AC was making a simple statement of fact: that most Americans can't pay for all of those things. All we need is one counterexample from an American in the bottom half of income to disprove that claim, so the fact that I was easily able to afford those things on less than the median income is sufficient to disprove what the AC is asserting. That's all I was getting at.

    But the point you're raising is also worth addressing.

    I've been fortunate in life, in that I had a semester as an undergrad and then another period of several years as a grad student that compelled me to understand how far a dollar could be stretched. Those experiences continue to shape my financial outlook today, years later, but that doesn't mean I live a life of austerity. If anything, I think that I get to enjoy the here and now more than ever.

    I'm the sole source of income in our home, yet we're easily able to afford a 3 bed/2 bath 1800 sqft. house on a third of an acre in a nice neighborhood, have two vehicles that we own outright, eat out regularly and have no shortage of food in the home, max out my HSA every year and have health/dental/vision insurance covered for everyone, set aside enough for our eventual retirement, have never accepted any form of welfare, have no debt other than the mortgage, and have always had so much left over that we've been able to be generous with our charitable giving as well (enough so that I've needed to itemize my deductions every year). By all accounts, I'm rich in all ways. These days I admittedly make a decent bit more than the median income, which has allowed us to add a number of things on top of the list I just said, but all of what I said was equally as true when I was below the median income just a handful of years ago.

    As such, I utterly reject the false dichotomy that I see many Americans assume: that you must live for today or tomorrow. I've had no trouble doing both.

    My wife had that assumption when we got married. I insisted she could have her cake and eat it too: that we could enjoy today fully and set aside enough for tomorrow, provided we were able to let our priorities actually take priority in our budget, rather than hemorrhaging funds on items that commanded an outsized share of our budget for the value (e.g. shelter, amusement, whatever) they brought. It took six months for her to come around, but she's gung-ho now. She was finally, for the first time, able to have a guilt-free enjoyment of today without anxiety about tomorrow hanging over her head, and she's also getting to enjoy her favorite things more often than she did before, now that we've been able to reduce the spending on items that were over-budgeted for what they were. Most of the less important stuff is still around, of course, but it now gets budgeted an amount that's commensurate with the value it brings.

    All of which is to say, you don't need to be austere to afford necessities and nice things. The only reason there's any pushback about this is because we've become culturally conditioned to treat gluttonous spending as the norm, which has led to people looking at you like you're crazy when you suggest obvious steps like living within your means, sticking to a budget, or reconsidering the value of your expenses. The fact is, this isn't complicated stuff that requires big sacrifices. I was able to make it work—both as a poor grad student just barely above the poverty line and as a rich professional with a good income—so I know others can do it too.

  247. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by baegucb · · Score: 1

    I will undo a mod. I drive a new SUV due to frequent snow storms, length of my commute, stuff I put in the back every week, and supervisors who say that my job requires me to be at work due to public safety sorta stuff. (correct but rules don't apply to management)
    Yes, I'd love a Tesla or somesuch, but I don't think a Tesla will work with my commute in the winter.

    oh yeah, probably my last car at my age, just got rid of a 10 year old car, and gave another to charity, an aged luxury car.

    mpg 32 mpg at first, down to 25 now. I don't care about that. I just have to keep my foot off the gas (hard to do when doing my commute) sorta.

  248. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by dcw3 · · Score: 1

    Okay well I think you're earlier comment made a lot of assumptions. She did fairly well for herself in real estate, and was able to take extravagant vacations several times a year. So now, the taxpayers (through Medicaid) and primarily me are left holding the bag for her basic needs. I didn't suggest that she should save "all her money". I would have been content if she put anything away.

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
  249. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by dcw3 · · Score: 1

    I'm not talking about anyone trying to cheat the system. And I guess if you thing playing it smart is screwing over your heirs then I guess you're right.

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
  250. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It always become religious and delusional. Balance, even when overdone and even wrong, is both part of democracy, civil society and sobriety. Everyone don't fit through University or ad PhD's.

  251. Women in the workforce by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since the 1950's more women started working, causing general inflation in the money supply and thus the cost of everything increased. Only the important stuff mind you, healthcare, education, energy, housing... the consumerism stuff like TV's and music has plummeted... Inflation in the things you need, deflation in the things you want.

  252. Re:Paying people to not work by Quirkz · · Score: 1

    I just learned about the spousal switch this past month, while talking to family members who are navigating that maze. It's complicated, for sure.

  253. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Representative democracies' biggest advantage is distributed decisionmaking. It will be interesting to see if AI will outstrip that.

    The risk is not just apathy and cynicism, but ratfu*%ery of the electoral and judicial processes. Compromise the rule of law, and representative democracy doesn't stand a chance.

  254. Liberals should have capitalized on? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What social issue has been solved by liberals? For all their talk of helping the poor the poor are still poor and more so than ever before. Welfare keeps poor minorities in their place and dependent on the government, big business keeps raising their profits for shareholders while everyone else can go suck an egg consumers and employees alike. There's ever increasing pressure to drive wages down until AI can replace the worker all together. What do you think the plan is then? UBI? Good luck. If you're not one of the beautiful people you can bet your backside they'll find a way to get rid of you. Poverty kind of takes care of that problem for them. It's happening right in front of our eyes and most people can't even see it. Let's bicker about left and right while both sides of the same bird sell us down the river.

  255. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

    My wife has had cancer twice.. Don't talk like "delayed gratification" is a weakness of character.

    An inability to delay gratification is a weakness of character. But so is a miserly attitude that prevents one's enjoyment of today. Your wife's illness clearly taught you the latter, but the former is just as important. There's a balance to be had.

    We actually had a similar (though less severe) experience to yours, but it was the former lesson that my wife learned instead. She came down with a mystery illness on the last day of our honeymoon. There wasn't a day that went by that she wasn't doubled over in pain for the next six months. We were passed from specialist to specialist until an infectious diseases doctor was finally able to identify the one-in-a-million root cause and tell us how it could be treated.

    But before the treatments could start, we needed to write a check (in the second week of the year) that would max out our deductible (for a HDHP, no less). I wrote the check on the spot without a second thought; my wife freaked out, asking where the money would come from, how we could afford it, what sort of things we'd need to cut from our budget, etc.. When I told her that the money was already set aside, that it was there for exactly this sort of purpose, and that it wouldn't impact anything in our budget, she finally understood the importance in thinking beyond today. Small changes made years prior were all that had been necessary to prevent an unexpected major expense from becoming a catastrophic financial situation.

    Of course, learning that former lesson hasn't stopped us from practicing the latter one by traveling Italy, building a gaming computer, renovating much of our home, taking a cruise, and doing a huge number of other things for our own enjoyment since the treatment wrapped up. It just means that we've also made sure we have the money ready in case we need it again.

  256. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    Kudos to you, sir!

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  257. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by istartedi · · Score: 1

    I think you get it. It's not about "left vs. right", it's about "top-down vs. grass roots". The leadership ignored the masses until it got so bad that people were willing to latch on to anything that wasn't just more of the same.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  258. Re:Paying people to not work by Junta · · Score: 2

    I doubt there would be a single example of a person who would forsake their ambition simply because they couldn't pass it on as highly liquid value.

    Those that are interested in using their wealth for a legacy would find other more concrete ways to confer an advantage to their heirs. Those heirs would be advantaged, but would have no choice but to actually work to get benefit out of it, versus a trust fund which *may* have useless entitled benefits.

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
  259. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by dryeo · · Score: 2

    Actually any government seems to go bad after 8-10 years. They get complacent at the minimum. As the saying goes, government is like diapers, need to be changed regularly due to being full of shit.

    --
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
  260. Re:Ha! Good one there, have another? by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 1

    When Democrats abandoned the working class (ie most people) for ever more niche groups, like transgenders, that gave them a loss

    I'm curious to know how you figure they did this. Their economic policies didn't change; the democrats are still the party that aims to reduce taxes on the 99% while the republicans still aim to reduce taxes for the top 1%. Their education policies didn't change; they still favor funding public education while the republicans still favor various "market based solutions" and other such tactics that are shown to reduce accessibility to education. What exactly do you think they did that favored "niche groups" over the working class?

    Their economic policies most certainly did change. Supply and demand is a basic thing. By increasing how many H1B and other visas you increase supply. By favoring free trade you decrease job demand. You realize that Bill Clinton let China in the WTO and signed NAFTA into law. Thus we have less in real wages than in the 70s. I'll provide links, but despite all the talk about increasing productivity the reality is that most of the gains have gone to the top 1%. To be fair to the Democrats, this trend is consistent across both D and R administrations. Still, they have done exactly *nothing* to try and turn it around other than lip service about training for the new economy. Want to see Democrats that really pushed for the little guy (ie the 99%)? Think Teddy Roosevelt and breaking up trusts, which today would be more like huge corporations. Think FDR who despite his *many* faults was at least trying to do something. Think Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson. The Democrats were at one time the party of the little guy. No more.

    Turns out that hating white males

    Where did you see them doing this? What policies or proposals did you see that could be said to be aiming for that to happen?

    If I say that preference will be given to women and minorities then what I have really said is that everyone other than white males will be given an advantage. That could be restated as everyone is equal but white males get penalized. Can it be more clear? In case that isn't clear enough they have run job descriptions that specifically asked for no white straight males.

    Citations:

    https://www.epi.org/productivi... https://www.theatlantic.com/bu... https://www.spiked-online.com/... https://www.inc.com/suzanne-lu...

  261. Re: Everyone is completely exempt from personal re by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This comment says that of the adult population, FIFTY ONE percent need to be living paycheck to paycheck. That they are spending all of their $ on BASIC: food, clothing, shelter and transportation, such that they've nothing left to save. Or if you said, they've a decent house, cars, food, vacations, and kids activities, and no $ left over for savings, now THAT I'd believe.

    Call me super skeptical. If you'd said 10 or 20%, that'd pass my sniff test.

    Tldr? Get us some references that describe income and expenses in enough detail to make the 'over half' claim.

  262. What are our politicians doing about this? by manu0601 · · Score: 1

    This is a huge problem, and one that liberals in particular should have capitalized on this election cycle.

    Indeed they should have, but unfortunately, they seems to still think they lose because of Russians.

  263. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by tavo3 · · Score: 0

    I agree with you that housing used to be more affordable, but I don't agree that buying is "almost always" better than renting. On average is actually worst. It might have worked for you, and it actually worked for me too, but we might be the exception, not the rule. It barely works for me now even though I bought my place in 2010. Only in the last 2 or 3 years my total expenditures have been below renting the same kind of place nearby.

    If I sell today I can probably make around $160k after realtor commissions, mortgage balance and the $55k I put down (around 15%) back then.

    On average and specially since the last 3 - 4 years renting is a better option in most areas, but as usual, there are always exceptions...

  264. No it isn't. Debt debt debt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Median household income in the US is around $44K per year. Given that most people manage to get by just fine obviously that is more than enough to provide for a family.

    No - maybe if one is living in their parent's basement with their family in Buttfuck, Potatohoe. Have a look at the consumer debt figures,rates and trends sometime. People are financing their way of life with debt.

    Where I live (Metro-Atlanta), a one room cheap apartment is $1,200/mo. Then there are car payments - one USED reliable car (5-10 years old/~$15,000) is going to be about $400/mo financed over 5 years. Then there is insurance: $100-$150/mo or more of you're a shitty driver.
    AND I'm assuming that the job has health and dental and vision insurance so I won't count that (Add $300+/mo for that)

    Take home pay after tax: 1,692.31/mo; less above: -57.69.(-$359.69/mo with insurance)

    So, food clothing and other things would have to purchased with a credit card.

    Now, add kids to that.

    1. Re:No it isn't. Debt debt debt. by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Median household income in the US is around $44K per year. Given that most people manage to get by just fine obviously that is more than enough to provide for a family.

      No - maybe if one is living in their parent's basement with their family in Buttfuck, Potatohoe. Have a look at the consumer debt figures,rates and trends sometime. People are financing their way of life with debt.

      Where I live (Metro-Atlanta), a one room cheap apartment is $1,200/mo. Then there are car payments - one USED reliable car (5-10 years old/~$15,000) is going to be about $400/mo financed over 5 years. Then there is insurance: $100-$150/mo or more of you're a shitty driver. AND I'm assuming that the job has health and dental and vision insurance so I won't count that (Add $300+/mo for that)

      Take home pay after tax: 1,692.31/mo; less above: -57.69.(-$359.69/mo with insurance)

      So, food clothing and other things would have to purchased with a credit card.

      Now, add kids to that.

      You're out of your mind. You can get a brand spanking new Toyota under $16K. You can get an apartment for under $700 a month in Atlanta Georgia, but it won't be a premium nice place to reside. Then again, if money is a constraint, you won't be living in the Hamptons nor driving a Rolls. And I think that's where most people go wrong. At less than $700/month, you can save $6K / year for a downpayment on a condo or house as compared to that $1200/month apartment, so in 5 years, you can move out of that apartment and into your own place. No matter what your income, you need to live below it to get ahead. That may mean no tv, no phone, etc for a while until you get to where you want to be.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
  265. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm a volt owner. That thing is rock solid and well built. I dare say it is the best car GM has ever built. They're perfectly capable of building good cars. They got a bad reputation in the 80s and 90s and it was well earned. Planned obsolescence was the name of the game back then while the Japanese cars were figuring out better quality GM was figuring out how to make parts last as long as warranties and not much longer.

  266. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's talk *responsibility*... your responsibility to wake up and act...

    Government STEALS from you by FORCE... upon actual and threat of your death via murder, prison, forfeiture, bad record... to pay for...

    - their MURDERous UNending Global Wars and Skirmishes that Governments, NOT the People of any Region, create in order to steal more money and power... FROM the People
    - Lining THEIR OWN FAT POCKETS (by the way they get SPECTACULAR Retirement and Healthcare)
    - Lining the pockets of all their crony friends... Military Industrial Complex that keep them IN POWER real nice and safe from you peasants

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h0-cgs51zEA -- Must Watch
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6C1M_7BzZ0 -- Must Watch

    BTW, they also engage in the MASSIVE central pump and dump scheme that is called PRINTING MONEY and CHARGING INTEREST... this DEVALUES the power of the money you do have, and STEALS all the wealth you try to accumulate.

    If you want to retire securely, you need to adopt Global Decentralized Distributed P2P Privacy Cryptocurrencies real fucking soon.

    That way you can slowly through adoption begin to ROUTE AROUND, STARVE OUT and ELIMINATE the VERY SOURCE of why you can't retire today... Governments.

    youtube: Larken Rose Voting
    youtube: Hidden Secrets of Money Mike Maloney

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n7x-XHo5-no
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2B2HccqAtY
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFDe5kUUyT0 --- Must Watch
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fd4A5qfQgRI

    It is YOUR responsibility to WAKE THE FUCK UP and LEARN what is really going on, before it's too late.

    And to do the only thing left to save yourselves, adopt Cryptocurrency and Voluntaryism, end Governments, and live freely, together, Voluntarily.

    Seriously, spend a month researching these topics.
    Set aside the programming you've been stuffed full of since Kindergarten.
    Start thinking FREELY for YOURSELF.
    You are smart.
    RESEARCH and LEARN the TRUTH.
    Then do something about it.
    There is only one way out.
    Now you know what it is.
    The RESPONSIBILITY is YOURS.

  267. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You pay taxes in hopes to affect behavioral changes that reflect the majority party ideology. This is what voting in California gets you. Those arent real costs. A real cost is transporting fuel from production to market.

  268. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you a Vegan? If so, watch this...

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qygc7gCNu9o

  269. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    Ya, I hate finances. And I hate having a financial adviser that tells me to dump a plan and move to another plan, which several times in the past leaves me with a tax bill and no actual growth. There's a lot of dice being rolled and it's not hard to lose money while actually doing what seems like the right thing. No one should be required to be a day trader just to stay ahead.

  270. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why you are drowning...
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XebGuqD5R0

    There is a solution.

  271. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    I didn't start saving until my 30s, primarily because I went to grad school and paid for a bunch of it myself. So that automatically put me behind people who started funding 401Ks in their early twenties. Also I wish I had the simple index fund and just stuck with it, and not listened to financial advisers who want to do something more risky, or they made changes at bad times.

  272. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry to hear....why is everything so crazy expensive over in Cali?!

    It's currently $2.129 a gallon at the Costco in Sterling, VA. It was around $3 in NYC last weekend.

    On the plus side...be happy with your access to the best Asian and Mexican food in the United States!

  273. I think you're misunderstanding something by rsilvergun · · Score: 2

    those aren't the things we want. It's what's being offered. The things we want (a good, meaningful life with friends and family) aren't really on the table for a lot of folks. All it takes is one family illness, picking the wrong career path or just plain being born in the rust belt and you're basically done.

    You're actions don't take place in a vacuum. The Phrase "Pulling up by your bootstraps" used to be an ironic jab at wealth inequality and the general unfairness of the world. It describes a literal impossibility. Someone spent a lot of time and money to make that joke into a badge of pride for the lower class being trickled down on.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  274. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    My mother was originally going to rely on my father's pension, and so she had not been paying into social security. Late in the game they realized that meant no medicare so she started contributing. So the Social Security check today is ridiculously small, something like $40 or so. But she has other investments so is doing ok.

  275. You're arguing from authority by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    which is a logical fallacy. TFA isn't a definitive source, and forums like this exist to point that out.

    Let me know how well you and yours are doing in 40-50 years when one of them needs a heart bypass. Or a hip replacement. Maybe you'll get lucky, pick a career that isn't outsource and not be lied to by recruiters. I left a small town that was booming in the 90s with IT jobs before they all got shipped to India. Lots of folks got trapped in that town. Went from $70k/yr to $12/hr if they were lucky. Couldn't get away.

    TL;DR; No man is an island.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  276. Actually crime rates are way down by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    they die. That's what they do. They die. About 1 every 11 minutes.

    The left needs more fearmongering. But can you really call it fearmongering when there's something real and legitimate to be frightened of? I don't know, but we lean to heavy on hope and change. That doesn't get the votes. Fear does.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  277. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, sorry, in actuality, it *never* elects good ones, and *never* gets rid of bad ones, nor are *any* of them better than the other.

    On the plus side, the cynicism and apathy you mention are the result of your subconcious having learned the TRUTH. Now all you need to do is bring it to your attention, into your ife, so that you can begin doing something about it.

    These videos have been very enlightening and should help you on your journey...

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wclLGlSWwYI
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h0-cgs51zEA
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tUU67FDsWuE
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XebGuqD5R0
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFDe5kUUyT0
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n7x-XHo5-no

  278. Hey it works for Dark Souls by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    not doing so hot financially? You just need to "git gud".

    I really think that too many video games is partly why the nerd community is so receptive to this bootstrappy nonsense. You get used to being able to practice something until you're good at it. Gives you a bit of en ego...

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  279. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Had an acquaintance who bought a condo in silicon valley in the late 80s. Lucky guy I think, probably has it all paid off and is doing fine. But no, he has financial issues and is deep in debt (mostly his fault). Eventually gets it somewhat sorted out, consolidates some loans, promises to be more frugal. Then... ups and sells the condo, pays off the debt, and then starts renting again in a new apartment complex (against all advice)... So he goes from being able to have mostly what he needs to retire to being in a precarious position; but he sees all that money in his account and thinks he's doing fine and starts up his old bad spending habits... Maybe he thinks he'll buy a place somewhere cheap later, but in the meantime that nest egg keeps shrinking.

  280. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad the Volt is ugly, cramped, uncomfortable, and stupid. Why does the dash have 3 clocks!?!!?? Why is one not settable!!???

  281. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    late stage capitalism

    Has any country surpassed "late stage capitalism"?

    If not, how is it known this is "late stage"?

  282. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    $125,000 puts you well within the top 10% of earners in the country. Not exactly poverty level. Can you even comprehend people living in actual poverty?

  283. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Low sellers because the average American auto buyer deserves a crowbar to the teeth.

    no u

  284. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This. Anyone that says "late stage capitalism" needs to do a shred of thinking on what "late stage marxism" looks like. Here's a hint: Lots of very full mass graves!!

  285. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have these things in California that generally suck in the rest of the country.

    They are called Roads.

  286. Re:Paying people to not work by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    US male life expectancy at 65 has been holding fairly steady at 17.9 years. So if that 81 figure is correct, the average male takes out more than he put in. Women get almost an extra three years.

  287. I know what they should by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    More stock buybacks!

  288. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by alcmena · · Score: 1

    The added weight and the all wheel drive of Tesla's make the great choices for snow.

    Just remember, they are heavy for their size. Great for traction, but may have a longer stopping distance vs a more regular car.

    I have 2. One Model S that's two years old and all wheel drive and a few month old Model 3 that is rear only.

  289. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    No, we have things of poor quality in California that are called roads. The things that suck are members of the corporate group in Sacramento Government who prefer to dump tax dollars into high speed trains between Bakersfield and Modesto.

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  290. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A Miata is where these who've given up on life buy. Unless it's a pure track car.

  291. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by toddestan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Actually, a big part of the problem with the Honda transmissions isn't outsourcing the development, but rather that they insisted on designing and building their own transmissions rather than using someone else's design (or even just buying someone else's transmission). Like a lot of NIH syndrome, this resulted in a crappier product for no real good reason. Note this really is only a problem for their automatics - their manuals are fine.

    Nissan's problems are mostly related to their CVT's. They've gotten better as the technology has matured, though the other option they've used is also dumping the CVT option on some models and going back to a conventional automatic which they've usually done a decent job with.

    The biggest problem is "bigger is better" attitude when it comes to the number of gears, part of which is driven by MPG requirements. After about 6 gears you really hit the point of diminishing returns for a regular car and after that you're just making the transmission more complex and fragile for only a very modest improvement to mileage and bragging rights.

  292. Re:I hate slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try SoylentNews.

  293. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exactly, I'm dirt poor, but have a respectable gaming PC and a 65" 1080p TV, they cost me almost nothing because I dumpster dive for almost all the parts and fixing what I can, I funded buyng a newer GPU off ebay selling excess ram and CPUs and scrapping out low capacity HDDs.

  294. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Real cost does not include disposal of the said product? Good job trashing the planet for your kids, no need to clean up after yourself. Throw that empty can on the side of the highway...

  295. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Cederic · · Score: 1

    Where you filled up yesteday. Costs me $6.94/gallon (more if I use proper UK gallons).

  296. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by bongey · · Score: 1

    BULLSHIT every single company you mentioned LOST millions actually it was 800 million. Reality Toy 'R Us could not compete with Walmart in the brick and mortar and couldn't compete with Amazon online. It was over before the PE firms ever came around.

  297. Re: Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "We are on the crest of a typical economic cycle. A recession is almost certain within a few years."

    So isn't it better for GM to do this now, to improve chances of those laid off to obtain work? Isn't this the ideal time to do this and improve the sustainability of their company long term? Or should they just wait until times are bad and then react to the problem?

  298. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    $4 a gallon is not expensive. It's really cheap. Here it's over â1.50 a litter, which is about $6.50 a gallon. It's part of the reason Americans buy these huge inefficient trucks and SUVs, and part of the climate change problem.

  299. Re: Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apples to cherries. You equate
    81 years = time to recover payments when surviving to that age and working full time before
    with
    78 years = average life expectancy, factoring in all mortality.

    You would have to equate with the average life expectancy *once you reach retirement age*.
    For the US that is about 65 years, and the life expectancy of people in the us at age 67 is probably around age 81 (male) and age 87 (female).
    "Probably", because I extrapolated this handy Social Security table, which ends in 1990:
    https://www.ssa.gov/history/lifeexpect.html

    So the hypothetical average you and his spouse get about 4 years more than "what you paid for".

    On the individual level this will vary greatly, but that is exactly the point of solidarity/insurance.

  300. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm doing the opposite - profiting of historically low prices for goods to buy tools and what seems to be decent but not overpriced stuff that should last to prepare for retirement and have sonething on my hands and mind. All while keeping a very decent retirement fund pool, for which my biggest fear is pillage by the government and/or finance industry.

  301. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People are buying American trucks and SUVs. If you want to buy a car, you're buying a Japanese car. You'd have to be stupid to buy an overpriced unreliable piece or GM crap.

  302. Re: Drowning? Here have an anvil. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The biggest advantage has nothing to do with decision-making.

    It's purely pragmatic. In a monarchy or dictatorship, an unpopular leader must be deposed by military coup, causing huge damage and hurting people. In a democratic republic, an unpopular leader is deposed with a bunch of pieces of paper, allowing the nation to prosper even in the midst of regime change.

  303. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you weren't such a cowardly fucking pedophile you'd know that it is a pop-culture reference dumb-ass. Now, stop diddling children and go fucking kill yourself moron.

    gerald butler's impersonator

  304. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    So you want us all to go poor paying her medical bills so that she can keep her nest egg? Got it.

  305. Re:more uncomfortable truths of late stage capital by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

    To be perfectly honest, the "unemployment" numbers are all bullshit. What you really should look at are employment numbers. Those tell a different tale. One that shows declining participation in the workforce since the 70s, IIRC, which means fewer people working over time. That number is also more meaningful in other ways, because it indicates productivity and tax base. You can slice that data in a number of ways to see who is getting jobs, who is working at what level, and then correlate it to the population numbers at large to see patterns of inclusion, wealth, etc.

    --
    The cesspool just got a check and balance.
  306. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

    SS should be considered as a monthly bonus that might pay your medicare insurance, maybe. I basically don't consider it at all, nor the tiny pension I have coming, and basically work off the basis that everything will be paid for out of my own funds. This allows me to plan appropriately and drives my current budget to a sustainable level. BTW, if you want any sort of lifestyle in retirement at all, you should definitely be aware that you're going to be paying for additional health insurance, otherwise any incident at all will drive you to 0 wealth in a hurry.

    --
    The cesspool just got a check and balance.
  307. Re:Drowning? Here have an anvil. by anegg · · Score: 1

    Most people need to learn basic money management strategy meaning you don't spend more than your income is unless you're in a emergency, and for that people need to save some money for the rainy days. Long time ago I decided to save money and have a f...ck you fund to cover ALL my expenses for a year in case I get laid off or something else. Unfortunately this won't cover medical emergency if you don't have health insurance since the health system is so screwed up that an couple of days of an ER visit with put you back in the 10s of thousand of $$.

    I'm not sure why your post is at "0" when you hit the nail on the head for a big part of American society, the so-called "middle class." Sure, there are extremes on both ends (lower and upper class), and every decade there are new challenges to be met, but the idea that somehow the majority of the US population is to be pitied or needs a handout is ridiculous. For many, the person in the mirror is the one that they need to look to.

    I have spent decades living within my means, having climbed out of the "lower class" on the coattails of the computer revolution and not wanting to slip back down by being stupid. I watched "defined benefit" (pension) plans sunset as "defined contribution" (401(k) or CODA) plans rose up and I acted accordingly. I vastly preferred trading the uncertainty of a future pension (if the company stayed in business, if I stayed working for the company long enough, and if the pension's funding/investment choices held out long term) for my own portable retirement nest egg. Social Security as a "retirement fund" was known to be inadequate when I entered the workforce in the 1980s. For the middle class, the problem with planning for retirement is that people (in the US anyway) tend to be more grasshoppers than ants https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ant_and_the_Grasshopper. My wife and I have friends/relatives who are still putting their noses to the grindstone as we slip into semi-retirement despite the same (if not more) opportunity than us, the difference being that we were more ant-like, and they were more grasshopper-like.

    The big company failures (GM, Sears, and Toys-R-Us) that are cited in the article as failures were struggling for years (Toys-R-Us) if not decades (GM, Sears). Adverse economic circumstances are one of the risks that a company has to be prepared to deal with, the same as individuals. GM has struggled since the 1980s, with big ups and downs as they (and other automobile manufacturers) try to figure out how to stay product-agile in an industry with multi-year development cycles [Japanese industry seems to have adapted more quickly and successfully than domestic auto production]. Sears was a big empire that apparently failed from within, totally missing the boat in on-line sales despite their heritage as a tele-sales company in addition to brick-and-mortar stores. Toys-R-Us was saddled with unbearable debt due to the leveraged buyout in 2005.

    Ups and downs in the marketplace and supply chains are normal, but expose and exacerbate weaknesses in businesses. Ups and downs in the economy are natural, but expose weaknesses in personal financial planning. Expectations that the government will somehow provide a risk-free business or individual economic foundation are misguided at best. Companies and households that fail to anticipate and plan for risk and that aren't adaptable to circumstances will have hard times when risks turn into problems and circumstances change.

  308. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by strikethree · · Score: 1

    While your attitude towards personal responsibility is correct and admirable, your understanding of what people have any control over is... weird.

    Everyone is completely bereft of personal responsibility? In the richest country in the history of the world, people can not be held responsible for their own future? They can be excused because they have to have the latest big-screen LED and Iphone?

    So you are saying that buying an iPhone and TV can leave you without enough money to retire? Seriously? iPhones and TVs are dirt cheap. They are the cost of one whole paycheck. In order for what you say to be true, then $2,000 has to have some weird properties that are not directly related to its obvious value. I get it though, you are trying to say they are fiscally irresponsible. I would argue that it costs too much to live in Society. But we can agree to disagree on this one.

    Fun fact: A high school student working less that 20 hours a week at minimum wage makes more than 90% of the rest of humanity.

    Well, sure... but 90% of humanity doesn't incur the same costs to live in society that the high school student does. Want to eat? In America, that will be $5 please. In 90% of the rest of the world, if you had to pay money instead of growing it/catching it yourself, you would pay the local equivalent of 2 cents. Don't fool yourself here. Would you rather have $10 or $100? Wait a sec, let me give you some more information first... for the $10, you can buy a shelter forever, food for a month, and buy a pack of playing cards. For the $100, you can buy a nice dinner. Now, which amount of money would you want?

    As someone who has not been responsible with 401k savings, I can attest that it is not the rest of the country that is responsible for my retirement

    Agree. But what if your money was worth less than you thought it was? As I have demonstrated, $100 is not $100. What if you thought you had saved enough, but when the time comes, you find out interest has hollowed our your nest egg? Back in 1970, retiring with a million dollars would have been legendary. Now, retiring with a million dollars ensure that your doctor and health insurer gets paid for a few years.

    --
    "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
  309. Really? by UsuallyReasonable · · Score: 1

    "Retirement dependent almost entirely on how well they manage savings" Shocking. Imagine that.

  310. Re:Paying people to not work by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    Having a PhD and A+ GPA has nothing to do with having competence.

    If you substitute your idea of a top-ranked performer, my point still stands. How about make 3 million clones of Bill Gates, Linus Torvalds, Warren Buffett, and Oprah for the thought experiment.

    until that "almost certain" recession

    During the top of the business cycle, yes there are more opportunities for the displaced, but one cannot say that's the typical state of things because we are not always near the top of the cycle, per definition of "cycle".

  311. Re:Ha! Good one there, have another? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's really jarring is how many Americans are totally oblivious to the house of lies our entire society is based on. Save for retirement, and you're fucked when the dollar devalues into nothing. Try and live off of social security, and the government will drain it for wars and murdering brown people before you can ever use it.

    It's no wonder the smartest folks in the US are rapidly expatriating to EU countries. We don't want to be around when everything goes tits up and roving gangs of criminals are in charge of everything, much like private armies.

  312. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by ravenscar · · Score: 1

    I don't disagree with your comment, but I want to add that the whole idea of a long, old age retirement is new, unnecessary, and (IMO) detrimental to the human condition.

    One must wonder, why do people want to live so long? Certainly, most people have an innate desire to "not die" at any given moment, but it seems quite obvious that, at a certain point, death is really the best option - especially when one can think on it a bit and plan it out on their own terms. Of course, the Abrahamic religions have classified ending one's life on their own terms as forbidden. This has translated into societal norms that classify suicide as weak, selfish, "insane," etc. These norms have also made it impossible for a healthy person to easily source humane, on-demand life termination services. Instead, the options with which we're presented are mostly horrifying and, quite frankly unfair to those who must deal with the aftermath. As such, people are pretty much programmed to sit in pain, rotting away until they rattle their last undignified breath.

    But, with the religion (thankfully) on the decline, why do we not see movements such as "live life to the fullest while you're healthy?" I mean, we see this to some extent, but it's largely marginalized. Why could that be? I'd venture that it's because two of the largest, most profitable industries in the Western World have the most to gain by drawing out your life as long as possible - your own enjoyment of that life be damned. Those are the investment industry and the health care industry. The investment industry makes truly MASSIVE amounts of money convincing you to "delay your gratification" so you can live well later on. The commissions and management fees in this industry are enormous (financial services vet here) and frequently supported by fear mongering statements like "you don't want to be eating cat food when you're 90." I could go into how this is necessary to support an economy largely built on "imaginary" stock value, but that would make this already long post much longer. Once the financial services firms have milked you of all income earning years it's time for the healthcare and elder care industries to take over. Now you're on 10 medications, are regularly seen by physicians, undergo routine testing, and, eventually, full time care. During that last phase you get all the fun things like $5 pudding cups, and $.10 per minute phone calls. The ideal for everyone in these industries is for you to die once you're completely destitute - not a moment before and certainly not after (unless they can milk your family in some way). Dying on your own terms when you realize your body isn't going to allow you to maintain the quality of life you expect - hell no! Where's the profit in that?

    Funny thing is, this whole thing is so new. People only recently adopted this idea that they should work a while and then live, unemployed, for 30 years after. Heck, if they did live well past their working years it was typically with the help and support of their children or other family members.

    Fuck all of that. Many of the things I enjoy (such as skiing, hiking, and motorcycle racing) come with a limited window of enjoyment. I'm not going to avoid these now so I can do them when I'm 70. Similarly, I'm not going to wait until my daughter is 30 to take her to Disney World. Sure, I save. I save so I can set my daughter up for success in life. I save so unexpected expenses don't become crises. I save so that I can eventually leave work and have some grand adventures while my body is still willing to cooperate. I don't save so big medicine can hook me up to tubes and suck out all the money I "earned" by not enjoying life while I could. Hopefully the world will someday offer me the chance to decide when physical limitations prevent me from wanting to stick around any longer. Hopefully it will offer a humane way to leave my family and friends with dignity and a bit of extra money to take their own wild rides while they can. Ask yourself: How in the world is this not already an option?

  313. Re:Paying people to not work by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    Correction, 300 million clones to mirror the population of the USA.

  314. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People mistakenly think of SS as an investment but it's really an insurance policy.

  315. Political bias alert in post! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fact your oh-so-original "conclusion" was what you led off with tells me all I need to know about your post. Didn't read a single word further. You're as biased as the article if not more. Hypocrite elsewhere.

  316. It's the internet's fault by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Delusional, but possibly not his fault. He saw that Vice News story about people in some eastern european country I forgot existed, just show up and "squat" in an old factory, which they eventually started back up. They sure as fuck aren't rich though, and certainly not successful. The workers survive, barely. All 10 of em. So not even a remotely possible solution. He should have just typed some shit about bootstraps...

  317. Fuck off Natsie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh no fucker. Just fucking no. You don't get to be a Grammar Nazi over a word that was an intentional misspelling. You need to go bitch at GM for needing to copyright their fucking car names. It's CRUISE and always will be.

    1. Re:Fuck off Natsie by bad-badtz-maru · · Score: 1

      Why was it intentionally misspelled as "Cruse"? That's neither an ironic nor humorous variant. And literally every product in the US has its name trademarked, nothing unique there.

  318. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    THIS is why I work on the Death Star, baby. I know the risks . . .

    While I'm alive, I've got medical, dental and vision. The food's not bad, and even IF someone finds out about a tiny flaw in the system? Triple Payout for my widow for dying on the job.

    "We're here to help"

  319. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your colleague from Germany is mistaken. One of the nice things is that in the USA you're not expected to be anything, but you can choose to do a lot of different things. If you want to be a worker and an investor for your future, you're totally allowed to do so ... no need to entrust your retirement to someone else. Even if you want a comfortable retirement, you're not expected to be an investor but in that case you're expected to play an active role. I have significantly more than most people my age saved for retirement. It has nothing to do with being an investor and everything to do with thinking about the future.

    What is a pension system? It's handing money to someone else who then invests it such that they can pay their teams and also provide a steady income to people when they retire. It's largely the same thing you appear to be arguing against, with significantly less control. Not to mention a pension typically defines your benefit regardless of their upside, helping them to remain solvent while limiting what you can get from them.

    What you seem to be saying is that people, though they are smart and rational, cannot be trusted to plan for their future. Even though they have a 401k, have a match, are told how much they should save, are automatically enrolled in a 401k if they do nothing and are generally driven towards doing more than relying on social security. That seems to say they aren't rational. And they therefore must be forced to contribute to something more reliable. Which them implies we should just increase social security to the point of being similar to a pension ...?

  320. Re:Paying people to not work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you'd stop sucking your own dick you might be able to say something worthwhile.

  321. Re:Everyone is completely exempt from personal res by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I take this further. I feel as a US citizen I am expected to be a doctor, a lawyer, an accountant, a stock broker, a handyman, and just everything. I have no problem saving but man it would be nice for taxes to be simplified by having an IRS native tool and for universal healthcare to take those burdens off. Then maybe I could concentrate on being just the other half dozen things I need to be.

  322. Re:Paying people to not work by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

    The government is only as free to do as the voters allow, unlike private pensions that can be wiped out by simple bankruptcy proceedings.

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”