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- This topic has 715 replies, 25 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 5 months ago by jimmyle.
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May 21, 2010 at 10:12 AM #553627May 21, 2010 at 10:13 AM #552647sdcellarParticipant
Oh, and by the way, your actual “point” was that it’s easy to amass $1,500,000 in cash. I’m pretty sure it’s not easy.
Your actual lead-in stated “assets”, but since you used a cash example, I have to run with that. No doubt your arguments could be constructed more cohesively.
May 21, 2010 at 10:13 AM #552753sdcellarParticipantOh, and by the way, your actual “point” was that it’s easy to amass $1,500,000 in cash. I’m pretty sure it’s not easy.
Your actual lead-in stated “assets”, but since you used a cash example, I have to run with that. No doubt your arguments could be constructed more cohesively.
May 21, 2010 at 10:13 AM #553241sdcellarParticipantOh, and by the way, your actual “point” was that it’s easy to amass $1,500,000 in cash. I’m pretty sure it’s not easy.
Your actual lead-in stated “assets”, but since you used a cash example, I have to run with that. No doubt your arguments could be constructed more cohesively.
May 21, 2010 at 10:13 AM #553339sdcellarParticipantOh, and by the way, your actual “point” was that it’s easy to amass $1,500,000 in cash. I’m pretty sure it’s not easy.
Your actual lead-in stated “assets”, but since you used a cash example, I have to run with that. No doubt your arguments could be constructed more cohesively.
May 21, 2010 at 10:13 AM #553617sdcellarParticipantOh, and by the way, your actual “point” was that it’s easy to amass $1,500,000 in cash. I’m pretty sure it’s not easy.
Your actual lead-in stated “assets”, but since you used a cash example, I have to run with that. No doubt your arguments could be constructed more cohesively.
May 21, 2010 at 10:14 AM #552662sdcellarParticipantPrecisely, flu.
May 21, 2010 at 10:14 AM #552768sdcellarParticipantPrecisely, flu.
May 21, 2010 at 10:14 AM #553256sdcellarParticipantPrecisely, flu.
May 21, 2010 at 10:14 AM #553354sdcellarParticipantPrecisely, flu.
May 21, 2010 at 10:14 AM #553632sdcellarParticipantPrecisely, flu.
May 21, 2010 at 10:16 AM #552667anParticipantsdcellar, I can’t speak for everyone, but you obviously have no qualm doing it. So you know what, you can take it. It might be atypical but it’s not meaningless. It’s doable if one put their mind to it. I’m doing it everyday and I make less than $150k. So I guess I’m atypical by your definition. So be it.
Regarding the 8% return, you might want to Google the long term average of the DOW and S&P. Once you do, please come back here and tell us what that number is.
What’s realistic to you is not realistic to me or other people. I know people who are more frugal than I and I know people who can’t get out of credit card debt. So to those who are in constant credit card debt, saving $1k/month is also atypical. But you obviously not going to point that out, would you? If I use US average saving rate, then it’s typical to save nothing.
If you can’t read between the lines and look that the numbers as an example, then that’s your problem. Not mine. To me, the example is to prove the power of compound interest. But you obviously fail to see that and look only at the literal number. Once again, your problem, not mine.
May 21, 2010 at 10:16 AM #552773anParticipantsdcellar, I can’t speak for everyone, but you obviously have no qualm doing it. So you know what, you can take it. It might be atypical but it’s not meaningless. It’s doable if one put their mind to it. I’m doing it everyday and I make less than $150k. So I guess I’m atypical by your definition. So be it.
Regarding the 8% return, you might want to Google the long term average of the DOW and S&P. Once you do, please come back here and tell us what that number is.
What’s realistic to you is not realistic to me or other people. I know people who are more frugal than I and I know people who can’t get out of credit card debt. So to those who are in constant credit card debt, saving $1k/month is also atypical. But you obviously not going to point that out, would you? If I use US average saving rate, then it’s typical to save nothing.
If you can’t read between the lines and look that the numbers as an example, then that’s your problem. Not mine. To me, the example is to prove the power of compound interest. But you obviously fail to see that and look only at the literal number. Once again, your problem, not mine.
May 21, 2010 at 10:16 AM #553261anParticipantsdcellar, I can’t speak for everyone, but you obviously have no qualm doing it. So you know what, you can take it. It might be atypical but it’s not meaningless. It’s doable if one put their mind to it. I’m doing it everyday and I make less than $150k. So I guess I’m atypical by your definition. So be it.
Regarding the 8% return, you might want to Google the long term average of the DOW and S&P. Once you do, please come back here and tell us what that number is.
What’s realistic to you is not realistic to me or other people. I know people who are more frugal than I and I know people who can’t get out of credit card debt. So to those who are in constant credit card debt, saving $1k/month is also atypical. But you obviously not going to point that out, would you? If I use US average saving rate, then it’s typical to save nothing.
If you can’t read between the lines and look that the numbers as an example, then that’s your problem. Not mine. To me, the example is to prove the power of compound interest. But you obviously fail to see that and look only at the literal number. Once again, your problem, not mine.
May 21, 2010 at 10:16 AM #553359anParticipantsdcellar, I can’t speak for everyone, but you obviously have no qualm doing it. So you know what, you can take it. It might be atypical but it’s not meaningless. It’s doable if one put their mind to it. I’m doing it everyday and I make less than $150k. So I guess I’m atypical by your definition. So be it.
Regarding the 8% return, you might want to Google the long term average of the DOW and S&P. Once you do, please come back here and tell us what that number is.
What’s realistic to you is not realistic to me or other people. I know people who are more frugal than I and I know people who can’t get out of credit card debt. So to those who are in constant credit card debt, saving $1k/month is also atypical. But you obviously not going to point that out, would you? If I use US average saving rate, then it’s typical to save nothing.
If you can’t read between the lines and look that the numbers as an example, then that’s your problem. Not mine. To me, the example is to prove the power of compound interest. But you obviously fail to see that and look only at the literal number. Once again, your problem, not mine.
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