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| BASEBALL Post your Baseball Cards Hobby Talk |
| View Poll Results: Are you too scared to even think about your hobby wallet? | |||
| Yes |
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12 | 10.08% |
| No |
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107 | 89.92% |
| Voters: 119. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
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#526 |
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Join Date: Jan 2017
Posts: 13,844
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It's not being pessimistic to expect a dramatic change in the current system. Even guys like Elon Musk talk about universal income. The American dream is slowly dying. Wealth in the US is continuing to be concentrated more and more in a smaller segment of the population, and average people are being forced to work paycheck to paycheck to pay for basic necessities, with no future prospects of owning a home or having significant savings. When a system stops working for most people in a democracy, things will inevitably change.
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#527 | |
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Join Date: Jan 2019
Posts: 2,322
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#529 | |
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__________________
I have found that flicking through a few threads on my smartphone is a great way to pass some time while "stocking the pond."Hairy 6/7/12 “ I feel you, brother. Welcome to East Berlin, circa 1963.” Hairy 5/9/20 "No one said I was smart." BoSux 12/18/25 |
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#530 |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2017
Posts: 41,742
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My God you are a special one.
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I love PSA! |
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#531 |
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Member
Join Date: May 2020
Location: Southern California
Posts: 3,083
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is everyone gonna load up on GME before they buy eBay
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#532 | |
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The American dream is dying because people are too stubborn to redefine it. When I was in high school 25 years ago, the American dream required college. Only the "losers" went to trade school and skipped college. Now, the skilled trades are piping hot and so desperate for help that they'll pay a six-figure salary. We need our educators to stop pumping college and start pumping trades. We need kids to feel pride in wearing jeans to work instead of feeling embarrassed because their dad wore suits. The student loan crisis exists because there aren't enough well-paying jobs available for kids coming out of college. They've been misled into paying 100K for an education that will lead them to table scrap jobs and indefinite debt while the honey hole of well-paying trade jobs just sits there, waiting to be tapped into. If you want the American dream back, this is the way. Just like it was in the 30's when men with dirty hands were the ones creating that dream. There is REAL money there. Life-changing money for someone coming out of high school. Wealth can be built and the gap narrowed by simply pointing kids in the right direction. |
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#533 | |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Seattle, WA
Posts: 18,295
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A lot of that, IMHO, is due to a lack of personal finance education, both among their parents, and the students themselves. Every HS in the United States should offer (and mandate) a personal finance class in order to graduate. Most people simply do not understand how crippling debt can be, especially in an era where you are unlikely to have the steady income necessary to consistently service it. |
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#534 | |
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Member
Join Date: May 2020
Location: OH->MI->MD->VA
Posts: 7,312
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__________________
Collecting foci: E98 master set, HOF rookie autos, Reds HOF autos, All-time top southpaws (Waddell, Plank, Grove, Hubbell, Spahn, Ford, Koufax, Carlton, Glavine, Johnson, Kershaw), Ohtani |
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#535 |
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I thought that was an Onion article when I first saw it.
Gamestop:
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Always looking for more George Brett stuff. Need more rookies, low numbered inserts/parallels and on-card autos (no Panini). |
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#536 | |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: East coast
Posts: 3,825
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That is above scale pay, full.health benefits, 401k, profit sharing, travel pay, perdiem, all fuel paid for, 3 weeks paid vacation, vehicle allowances, cellphone allowance, and paid holidays. By the time they can graduate with loan debt they could be making well north of 100k a year with full benefits. Its wild the victim mentality that exists and permeates from people. People dont need UBI, unless that means "Up off your Butt heading In to work". We already have too many lazy people looking for a quick buck. Whether thats flipping cards, wax, collectibles, other goods, youtubing, or god forbid ""influencing". We live in a world of "EFF U! I got mine". Hard work and perseverance dont exist for the masses. A small portion is truly motivated to bust hump daily. IMHO a little more foot to azz in today's youth would go along way in establishing better work ethic. But I just want everyone off my lawn like a boomer.. A funny story to back this up. At tge store yesterday ans walked by the toy section. A mother was screaming at the young lady stocking about a toy or something sold out. She was going full on Karen about how since the store didnt limit the item to one per person her child was going to lose its mind and be unberable....... I nearly laughed out loud. If that child wasn't being being raised in an environment where everyone gets a trophy and everyone gets equal we wpuldnt have to listen to the constant drivel the UBI is the solution. News flash... it isnt! Earn it before you deserve it. Annnnd.... Im off my Boomer box and we can get back to discussing water is wet. Sent from my SM-S928U using Tapatalk |
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#537 | |
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It just goes to show, the solution to the problem is already there. We don't need to debate how to close the wealth gap and restore the American dream. We already know the answer. We just need more people to take that route. |
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#538 |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2018
Posts: 27,242
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For the folks discussing the future of work in the face of AI, I’d agree with the “working with hands” has a nice near future. But for those looking for “knowledge work”, I also appreciate some of the thinking like:
https://sequoiacap.com/article/servi...-new-software/ https://bjorn.now/link/2026-01-28-re...y-chad-fowler/ The first points out that LLMs may replace intelligence, but not judgement. I think critical analytical thinking remains valuable. Kids going to college should focus on that, in my opinion. The second focuses this on software itself. Feels like an area with no future? It disagrees. Points out there is a difference between software development and software engineering. Development is for people who want to just do what they are told. That is what LLMs do, so not a great future for a job. Engineering is what brings the rigor to a project. Rigor will remain highly valuable. Perhaps even more valuable given all the leverage engineers will get from LLMs and Agents built on them. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Last edited by pewe; 05-02-2026 at 09:47 AM. |
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#539 | |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: East coast
Posts: 3,825
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Hard work and effort are the name of the game. Trades are exploding and blue collar work is paying like white collar work. Sent from my SM-S928U using Tapatalk Last edited by weatherwarrior; 05-02-2026 at 10:15 AM. |
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#540 | |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: East coast
Posts: 3,825
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I think critical think inherently exist in many. People being able to hone that skill is hard. Many can do this without college, many can not. There will be plenty of white collar positions going forward. But when everyone(most) wants a 250k+ job out of school with a 4 year poly sci, or a 4 year computer sci degree it creates a bottleneck. Only the best of the best should make it through that choke point. That way the best of best of us all are positions to exceed and excel. We too often have folks wanting equality in the workforce without equal effort being out forth. Great Points about the AI revolution and future of the workforce could look! Sent from my SM-S928U using Tapatalk |
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#541 |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2017
Posts: 41,742
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$5k a year invested earning 8% gets you $2M+ over 45 years. It’s that easy to earn a comfortable amount of wealth.
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I love PSA! |
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#542 | |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2018
Posts: 27,242
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I think I heard an analysis that says the “target” for most folks to retire comfortably is like $1.8MM. So you nailed it: they hit that and then some ![]() Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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#543 |
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And even that is subjective and quite aggressive for most. If you can live off 50K/year when you are young, 1.8 mil would be a windfall when you are old. Barring the collapse of social security (which I don't believe will ever happen), it really doesn't take much to retire and be OK if you are already in that pocket of people who are making it work with less. The "system" is working just fine. It's the people who need to change before the system. One decision at 18 can change the entire course of life for many. It all comes back to going where the work is and rejecting these outdated norms that college is the only way to prosperity.
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#544 | |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 24,489
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The other 90% will always try to pursue the easy way out and fail to achieve that goal. Hence, our K-shaped economy, where the top 10% has 90% of the wealth. |
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#545 | |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Seattle, WA
Posts: 18,295
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But the problem today is that most young people are not taught the benefit of saving money to invest in the stock market. They spend, spend, spend instead. Probably 80-90% of my net worth is owed to three investment deicisions I made when I was younger: - my decision to invest in Apple stock in 1986 when I was in HS because I thought my girlfriend's Mac was the coolest thing since sliced bread - my decision to investment in Microsoft while in grad school in the mid-90's when I realized that everything was running on their software. - my deicision to invest in SOXX at the end of the 2000-02 market crash once I realized that the world was going to run on semiconductors. Meanwhile, everyone else my age was wasting money on beer, drugs, Starbucks, and overpriced cars...... |
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#546 | |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: East coast
Posts: 3,825
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That and home depot have helped me be where I am today. Sent from my SM-S928U using Tapatalk |
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#547 | |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2018
Posts: 27,242
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Quote:
I worry one of the challenges with the higher education choice for many kids is not knowing why they are there. That they may just be showing up. Or focused on checking the box. Or studying something for the fun of it without any perspective that the degree leads to a limited demand skill set. I’m not going to poop on any specific degrees… but when I see the news articles detailing complaints about “why can’t I get my dream job” they do seem to cluster in some areas with little commercial value add and get their budget more out of not for profit or government support. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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#548 | |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: East coast
Posts: 3,825
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Quote:
Sent from my SM-S928U using Tapatalk |
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#549 |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 24,489
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#550 | |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: East coast
Posts: 3,825
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Quote:
The American dream should be to live in a world where you have stabilized your self enough that you dont owe anyone anything, and you let your money make money. It takes surprisingly little if you start young. Sent from my SM-S928U using Tapatalk Last edited by weatherwarrior; 05-02-2026 at 02:47 PM. |
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