[quote=deadzone]I don’t have time to go through your entire dissertation on this subject, but once again it looks like you are drunk and typing random keys on your computer.
Just look at yourself in the mirror, how much of your net worth (i.e. Wealth) is tied up in RE and Stocks? Almost all of it I will go out on a limb? That would explain why you are so defensive whenever anyone brings up the topic of RE or stock market crashing.[/quote]
I understand because reading comprehension can be difficult at times.
But to your question. I’m not at all defensive, you’re the one overly defensive and trying to prove how right and smart you are. Bluntly put, this recession and inflation will not nearly affect me as much as you so i understand why you are hell bent on proving how right you are
Bluntly put, it sounds like you are so far behind building your financial house from being so pessimistic the past 20+years, it totally backfired, and now you need a miracle catch up to others that have been just inching forward slowly over the past twenty years.
It’s like the story of the tortoise and the hare, in which you thought you could outsmart the tortoise by picking some select one hit wonders, and didn’t bother to run the slow, tiny incremental race over the past 20 years that others have done to move their financial pillar forward step by step, slowly.. And now, due to poor planning on your part 20 years later, you’re seeing that the tortoise has crossed the finish line, and you haven’t even left the starting gate… So now you’re hoping for a miracle earthquake that will make the tortoise roll back to the start line, even though he already finished the race…Because even though the race has already been decided, by seeing the tortoise at the starting gate from an earthquake, somehow makes you feel like you can still win the race, in theory, despite the race is already over.
Why do you think I’m defensive about things again? I don’t need a miracle to be made whole and catch up 20 years of doing not much…. Sounds like you do…
Yes, the hard truth is: sometimes trying to be an outlier and outsmart everyone else, one ends up being dead wrong and end up in a financial dead zone for a long time.