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This morning, I woke up. I am still "jobless". I could go work for 20% of the salary I used to make in software, but I am done with software. Let the pajeets and chinks kill each other over the rotting carcass of that once amazing industry.

Since I tended my animals last night, I don't need to go early in the morning. I'll go in the afternoon, when the heat is the hottest, and enjoy the summer warmth. I might spend two or three hours putting around the farm playing with things. Speaking of which, I need to wean my pups and start training them as livestock guardian dogs with the sheep.

I checked my investment portfolio because I needed to transfer some money down for living expenses. It's been months since I've had to do this, since the last sale of my lambs put a few dollars in the bank account. But I like to keep my bank account over $10k just in case something comes up. (I am not going to mention any cash on hand, of course.) It turns out stocks are up a bit, so I can tell my wife that I made money just watching YouTube videos.

My goal was to get out of stock and into real estate, agriculture, and the restaurant business. I failed in that goal. Yes, I have real estate, a farm, and we're building a restaurant, but I still have too much stock for my liking. I have no need for cash, and it keeps going up, almost like a hedge against inflation. Plus capital gains tax makes it a bad idea to sell too much stock in a year.

Yes, I am leasing for the restaurant, not buying. I don't want to own land in the city. I don't want to build a building. I am not a professional restaurant owner so I am trying to keep the initial investment as small as possible, and leasing is as cheap as you can possibly get. If the restaurant works, then I'll use the profits to buy and build a location, maybe two.

Meanwhile my biggest source of income is my animals. I have some calves I need to get ready for sale this fall. I expect to get something like $50k-$60k in revenue from that. That should make this the first profitable year. 3 years of drought back-to-back meant I was pouring thousands of dollars into the operation, or roughly breaking even.

But here's the thing:

* No credit card debt
* No house payment
* I do pay for insurance (home, car, business)
* I pay for utilities. (Oh no! My water bill went up $20, and the electric bill in summer is a few hundred dollars!)
* Any other expenses -- I pay my kids to do it.

Now that we have a reliable source of meat, we are looking at cutting our grocery budget even further. We have already been only buying staples and vegetables and fruits. Inflation was bad, but when your grocery budget is a small fraction of what you spend each month because you're only buying staples, it really doesn't matter. "Oh no! The 50 lb bag of flour that we buy every 3 months has increased by $5! And now we are paying $2 additional each week for milk!" Inflation is terrible if you are living hand-to-mouth. If you have a habit of saving and storing, it doesn't really mean much. I have a pantry full of food, maybe 3 month's worth, plus 4 chest freezers of meat we are eating through.

Folks, this isn't hard to obtain. I spent my whole life saving. I carefully invested those savings. Yes, I made bad investments. One time when I was 25 years old I lost $15k because I trusted a friend who was a financial advisor. It was an expensive lesson to learn. When I got jobs in the software industry, I traded salary for stock options. I maxed out 401ks. None of the stocks ever paid off -- except ONE. That was one of 8 different companies I worked for, and that one paid off big.

Because I was living well below my means, I was able to comfortably raise a family on my salary alone. My wife never had to make money. My kids didn't get fancy toys at Christmas, and when they were old enough, they started working to earn money to buy their own things. Now that I have a farm, they can work as much as they want and get paid to do that work, so there's no reason why I even have to buy them clothing anymore.

One of the wisest decisions I ever made was when my parents kicked me out of the house and told me to buy a house. I was out of work for a year or two around the dot-bomb era. I had one kid living in my parent's basement. I got a semi-decent job, the housing market was down, and my dad and mom told me I had to buy a house RIGHT NOW. So I bought a house. I scraped together the $20k (I was saving even when I was out of work -- imagine that!) and I got a bad loan at high interest rates. A few years later, I refinanced to a low-rate fixed loan. I lived there for 8 years I think, then we had to get a bigger house for our growing family, so in 2008(!) I sold my house and bought another one. Then I watched as I went "underwater" on that house, but I stuck through and soon enough the market bounced back, and I had a ridiculous loan at a very low rate. We put some extra money into that loan, and it wasn't long before we could count the number of years left on the loan on two hands. Moving down to Texas as a no-brainer because I had real assets in the form of my home (I made $250k in 5 years with the home value increase). Now I don't have a home loan as I was able to buy a good house for a much lower price.

In a few years, my youngest kid will graduate from high school and likely end up out of the house. We don't need a big house anymore. I joke with my wife that we can buy a double-wide and live like kings until we die. She wants rooms for the kids to visit. We'll see what we do, but there is no way we're spending $200k above the value of the home in construction costs to build another big house.

The older kids have figured out what it takes to survive outside the house. One of them is coming back to help with the restaurant (it turns out renting in the city and trying to start as an electrician just doesn't add up -- who knew? (I did)), and the other is going back to a church college to study music and math. They are going to tell their younger siblings what the real world is like (I guess no one believes their parents when they are young?) and remind them that work is super important.

SPEND LESS THAN YOU EARN. INVEST WISELY. Transfer your wealth to your future self, so your life gets easier and easier.

DO NOT GET INTO DEBT!

Escape from ZOG is possible. Be smart about it. Remember the lessons your ancestors learned!
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MartinRigggs on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
I’m happy for you and your family, sounds like you are doing a great job being a father and a provider. There’s some solid advice here for the readers, no doubt about it, and hopefully some of us absorb it fully. With that said, most people never find a job where they’re living beyond a paycheck to paycheck lifestyle, and for White men especially, finding a decent salary job becomes more difficult with each passing year. You made good money in the software industry, enough to take some substantial risks in the stock market, the kind that pay off huge when it works out. Those kinds of wins open up a lot of doors that otherwise wouldn’t be available. The average White dude doesn’t have that kind of money to gamble with even if he’s living frugally, so life turns into a slow grind that may have some gains here and there, but those gains can be lost the moment they have a problem with their car or an issue with their house (if they own one). I’m not trying to be negative here, but something has to give, this system is fucked and it’s just going to keep getting worse. I think any parent who is financially stable better be doing all they can to give their own kid an advantage in this environment, whether it’s being welcomed back in the parent’s home, or helping in any other way, preferably in a way that pays dividends eventually. Obviously proper guidance is the biggest help you can give your child, and I have no doubts you’ve given your own kids exactly what they needed there. God Bless, I hope your kids are as successful as you’ve been in life.
yudsfpbc on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
I started off working a paper route. I worked minimum wage jobs in high school and my first year of college. I saved and saved. I delivered pizzas during college. I got married young. If I couldn't pay for college I wouldn't have gone!

I CHOSE to not indulge in spending my whole life, and I CHOSE to find work wherever I could.

My first major purchase was $10 leather belt. I kept that belt for over 2 decades before it finally broke. My wife never understood why that belt was so important to me.

The best thing that happened in my life was when my parents, who were not thrifty, sat me down and explained that they had no money to give me in inheritance or anything, that since I was a middle child they couldn't even afford to buy me clothes. I realized then and there that they screwed up, and swore that I would never act like they did.

People who are complaining about not having enough money, and trust me, I work with a lot of them through charity work in my church, are never willing to sacrifice the simple pleasures in life to save for the future. They are stuck in the mindset that it's "impossible" and that universal forces beyond their control manipulate their lives.

if you want to live that way, go ahead, but don't think that I was born with a silver spoon in my mouth.

Oh -- and the software job and stocks -- I CHOSE to work in software. At the time (the late 90s) it turned out to be a great bet -- aside from 2000. I CHOSE to invest my labor and my money in stock options. I CHOSE to maximize my 401k. I CHOSE not to buy health insurance and instead live healthy.
MartinRigggs on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
lol why are you taking this as a critique of your behaviors, I literally praised you several times and you’re all butthurt 😂…stop behaving like a boomer….the point is that the economy is way worse off than it was in the 90’s and early 2000’s, even the early tens weren’t terrible despite the housing bubble pop. Right now there is a concerted effort to lock the White man out of his own economy, at least in regards to jobs that have a high paying salary, you should know that after applying to however many places you applied to before making a different career choice. My own brother sounds a lot like you, our family came from nothing and he did pull himself up by his bootstraps as most boomers say. My bro was a regional manager at 2 different large corporations over the last 12 years, and then when they laid him off from the second corporation he moved to, like they did to several other regional’s as they downsized, he spent the next year on unemployment, applying to 150 some odd corporations before finally getting an interview. He was forced to take a lesser position in the corporate hierarchy that pays quite a bit less than he used to make, and the situation he went through isn’t unique. Here’s a headline from last year: “Corporate America Pledged to Hire More People of Color.
It Actually Did.
 Since 2020, the S&P 100 added more than 300,000 jobs, 94% of those jobs went to people of color”.
If you can work for yourself, there’s still a good chance that a White man can do quite well in this economy, so I certainly won’t say it’s impossible for Whites to succeed nowadays, but I’d have to be stupid to ignore how bad shit has gotten. Honestly though, that’s not a bad thing, there’s just less hope in the world which means people will be willing to take bigger chances to change things, and that’s the exact recipe we need to remove the kosher parasite.
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