Archive for the ‘Taboo & Money (religion, sex, and politics)’ category

Not Cinderella

May 1st, 2009

I am not entirely Cinderlla material.  For one I’m a man, secondly I don’t have a step-mother.  I have a sister, but she’s not a step-sister.  I don’t own enough pets to have a fairy godmother whip into a kit to go to a dance to marry someone besides my wife.  On top of all of that the sea monkeys we do have are probably not going to turn into a flight of horses at all.  Anyway, I’ve bought inexpensive ’sports shoes’ for most of my adult life.  Shoes that have been pretty bad on my feet.  Shoes that hurt my feet when working out.

Tonight I purchased running shoes.  I purchased $100.00 running shoes.  I am going to have feet that don’t hurt when I exercise and knees and a back that don’t kill me after having attempted to get healthy.  I will spend more on shoes, but less at the doctor.  I want to go hiking and hike a 14,000 foot mountain this summer, but my knees are going to need to be able to handle that and I don’t think they will unless I have shoes that support and work with consistent exercise to get my knees back into shape.

Don’t spend crazy amounts of money on shoes unless you’re going to use them, but watch out that your not doing damage to your body by wearing shoes that don’t cut the mustard.  I’ve got to go run to the closet and see if I’ve got something to wear to the ball.

Cholestrol, Fat and the Economy

October 10th, 2008

Did you know that your body needs Cholestrol and fat? I bet that all of the negative ‘news’ you hear doesn’t lead you to believe that you do, but you do.  In fact some fats will keep your brain healthy, and some cholestrol actually helps your heart.  Crazy, huh? [disclosure: this is not medical advice - seek a doctor and all that jazz].  Here’s the kicker: some debt in the economy, as a tool to help companies get started seems to be OK.  Some debt for consumers seems to be helpful at times when major things need some attention.  I don’t recommend debt, but small levels in specific locations are safer than others.  The safe types of fat and cholestrol in appropriate quantities keep your body moving and grooving.

Here’s the deal: too much of the debt doesn’t keep things moving, it makes things stop up and causes strokes just like regular human body blockage.  Adding more debt to the economy’s ‘breathing room’ by ‘unfreezing’ the credit opportunities is just like putting a stint into an artery but them immediately going out to guzzle down the largest fast food meal you can find.

Trent of the Simple Dollar posted on twitter that he had a person asking how they should tell their children that they’re losing their home.  More credit doesn’t help this situation.  If I lose my home due to foreclosure having access to more credit doesn’t fix the problem that I’m in over my head.  The ability to infinitely borrow doesn’t help anyone.  The ability to aggressively pay back the debt and get to a positive cash flow matters a lot.

If I cheat and have a nasty, super-duper grody dripping rack of ribs all by myself but then go run a mile and then eat another sloppy rack of ribs (which is wrong, because ribs do not have to be prepared like that) I’ve not fixed the problem either.  If I got into debt, pay back most of it and then buy a bigger TV on it, but am not saving for retirement I’ve blown it.  If I go into retirement with money saved, but still have stupid amounts of debt, I’ve blown it.  Debt, much like a medical condition that needs attention, can’t be put off indefinitely.

So, watch your diet, watch your spending, take care of any debt or health issues, and don’t be fooled into thinking that we can quickly fix the economic situation with more debt.  More debt doesn’t help like more cholestrol doesn’t help.  Which is why I’m going to stop typing and go eat a carrot.  The Vitamin A will help my eyes so that I can read more of the stuff coming in over the wire on this screen;)

The Crash of ‘29 Compared to Our Current Crisis

October 6th, 2008

After reading Wikipedia’s entry on the causes of the Great Depression I was to say the least: interested in churning through the philosophical differences between varying views.  I’d love to write whole essays on the subjects, but for now I’ll delve into the first bits and then if interest shows up I’ll write more.  Here’s the first quote from Wikipedia that grabbed me:

Those who believe in a large role for governments in the economy believe it was mostly a failure of the free markets and those who believe in free markets believe it was mostly a failure of government that compounded the problem.

This is a false dichotomy.  There is a need for us to recognize the two conceptual entities, but they operate like conjoined twins with the same heart: the people that make them up.  In the United States that is the voters and the consumers, who are not one-and-the-same, but very nearly one-and-the-same.  We elect leaders and while we don’t vote on every issue ourselves, we have an impact as a corporate group.  And as consumers we impact the buying and selling trends.  Peter of Bible Money Matters tweeted earlier today, “Does it seem like a major component of the current financial crisis is fear? Maybe things wouldn’t be so bad if everyone didn’t panic.”  The problem is that emotion controls the market to a certain degree.  I’ve written before that emotions cost me a huge amount of money.  Huge.  All because of emotions.  But I am not about to make the false assessment that the consumer and the government are only related superficially and really operate separately.  Its a simple assertion that shifts blame, but the reality is that we’re in this together.

In the Wikipedia section that talks about Debt it is interesting to see how they assert that over-bearing debt leads to a downward spiral of financial catastrophe.  There has been a common mindset in the last several decades that debt lubricates the system and keeps the machine of industry going.  While I will agree that it can help facilitate in some situations, it doesn’t keep the industry going indefinitely and debt that is unchecked clearly leads to collapse or major, major turmoil.  This is true in the American household and also proves out in business and government.  Germany after World War I was so financially beaten down by war debts that their money was hyper-inflated.  The debt killed their economy.  Our current United States dollar is flailing in the water due to its being produced ‘cheaply’ and flooding the market.  Our debt is costing us.

Money Supply is next on the list at Wikipedia.  Interestingly enough the philosophy held by at least some is that the central bank controls the supply of money and that during the great depression the supply of money available on the market was trickled down to a fraction of what was available earlier in the decade.  The problem is that inflation is happening by ‘over-supplying’ the money.  So if over-supply stops the economy from slowing down, but causes inflation, which causes other economic issue you still have to answer the question of why supply of money being more liberal (by which I mean more readily available and am not talking about politics) is overall a better thing?  I imagine that like many things this comes down to moderation.  If the Federal Reserve had loosened things up back in the 30’s it might have been beneficial, but not as loose as they are now, in which case we’ve seen an extreme pendulum swing.

My Own Personal Philosophy

I had a boss at a Christian Book Store in College who made a statement that has set in my mind as an axiom of truth: Good businessmen pay their employees wages that respect the needs of the employee.  This is to say that if the employee needs $1,000.00 a month to live and provide for his family, then that’s what the business person pays the employee.  The business person knows that its better to take moral comfort in knowing that you provided for your employees, and the employees know it, than to drive an insanely expensive vehicle, to live in a mansion, or to die rich, but still be dead.  This is not anti-capitalist.  It is not anti-wealth, it is just encouraging fiscal responsibility.

Furthermore, employees should be willing to work dilligently to make the business profitable or more profitable and not just do the least amount of work possible.  This respects the business person’s leadership and provision.  I work as a contractor for a group of four men who own and operate a company with roughly 50 employees and contractors.  Their respect and care for employees is stunning.  Part of why I have chosen to continue my relationship with them for more than 8 years is because they take care of me.  I work hard to take care of them as well.  They have earned my respect and so I work hard to make sure that their needs are met or exceeded where possible.

The crash of 1929 and the following great depression have some similarities.  Government doesn’t deserve all of the blame, neither do the masses of consumers, or the big businesses.  Instead we all own this responsibility.  We all fail, or we all succeed together.  If this is a recession, a depression or any other financial scenario it is something that we work through as a global community, a nation, a state, a county, a city and a neighborhood.  We work on it together and we grow – that’s something that we need no matter the time.

Drinking and Driving in Congress

October 3rd, 2008

Congress “bailed” out on the economy. The $700,000,000,000.00 bailout bled into a disgusting amount of pork including millions and millions for foreign alcohol and auto race tracks. Drinking and driving. Pardon me while I hurl. It’s not a hang over.

I had a woman ask me if I was registered to vote tonight. I responded affirmatively and then immediately another woman asked if I was voting for Obama. I responded in the negative and then told her I was also not voting for McCain either. I told her I thought they were both scoundrels and then took off before completely losing my cool. I hate to say it but both senators have been so dishonest and pig headed in this debacle that I may very well write in my own father as my vote. He’s not going to run for office, but he’s as honest as they come – and I need some honesty right now.

Romans 12:12 Kicks Personal Finance’s Bum into Gear

July 14th, 2008

I’m preparing a lesson for tomorrow night’s Bible study that I lead, we’re going through a series on the body and the believer and we’re covering Romans chapter 12 which has been a very rich passage to say the least.  I’m looking at verse 12, which says:

rejoicing in hope, persevering in tribulation, devoted to prayer,

In personal finance we often get discouraged.  In personal finance the emergencies come up.  In personal finance you need to submit your financial walk to the Lord through prayer and meditation on biblical principles as outlined in the scripture.

Rejoicing in hope

Knowing that 100 years from now, 1,000 years from now, or 1 minute from now your identification is with Christ (Colossians 3:1-4) gives you hope.  If you’re not looking forward, then you’re not hoping.  Hope is faith in things to come – whether its the rejoicing in paying off debt and no longer having the bondage of payments to others and being able to be a fuller steward of God’s money, or thinking of the things that the money can be used for to glorify His name it is a great thing to have hope.  We’re often discouraged in life when trials come, but the trials are for our growth (James 1:1-4; I Thes. 3:3) so we can rejoice even in them.

Persevering in tribulation

Perseverance is diligant abiding in a place while pressure seems to come from all sides.  Tribulation comes, as stated above, for our growth.  The world sees pressure as a detriment, but we’re called to have a mindset that see’s God’s plan in all of these things that distract us and call us away from patience and longsuffering.  When you dip into your emergency fund (and I’ve had to do that far too often in the last few months) – persevere.  When your car gets a flat, your fridge goes out, or your kid breaks an arm: persevere.  The reliance on God that comes during times of tribulation should leave us understanding our closeness to Him rather than feeling alone.  It should show us the strength of our relationships in Christ with other believers.  It should be a great blessing to see the tribulation turn into a tool instead of a valley of toil.

Devoted to prayer

Prayer is often presented as begging God for some thing, some action or some event to take place.  But instead we should understand that it is powerfully deep and encouraging relationship.  Who you are in Christ gives you immediate access to God the Father for immediate, constant and intimate fellowship with Him. And that’s something money can’t buy.

So, you can see that I’m excited about this passage – maybe some time you can swing by the Tuesday night study and we’ll rejoice in our hope (which is in Christ), encourage one another through our trials, and pray for one another.  It’ll be great.

Dems Is Good. Dems Bring Money.

July 9th, 2008

The Democratic National Convention (DNC) is coming to my area.  This is a good thing, I’m told, because they’ll bring money to hotels, restaurants, brothels and convenience stores.  Money, in an economy that is supposed to be so bad that the wealthy keep getting wealthier and the poor keep getting poorer, will help keep the poor wealthier and the wealthy hiring.  I’m not much for politics any more, not since I figured out that politics is about man’s solution to man’s problems without ignoring man’s real problem.  However, its nice that they’re coming to the Denver metro area as well because our roadways are designed for slightly less people than currently drive them, and the new crowds of drivers will help keep the price of gas high as gas station owners have figured out that they can pretty much charge as much as they want and we’re a captive audience.  I think that’s a mixed metaphor.

There are some genuinely good reasons to have them in town and one of them is that a reader of this very blog will more than likely come into town to support her husband who will more than likely rule the world before its all said and done, and I’d like to have him in my pocket be in his pocket have the right connections.  The financial impact that is suspected to come with this national convention is roughly $160,000,000.00 in currency influx.  They’re expecting a huge crowd at the Bronco stadium (branded Invesco field) for  B. Obama’s acceptance speech.  Big money, big names, and they bring them in with enough people to populate the town I grew up in.  Which, if it were to be receiving the Democratic Nation Convention, would self implode.  Lets hope that the Dems bring money, but its not debt money, we don’t need that in Denver, Colorado or the US Government :)

Death By Taxes

June 9th, 2008

For several months now I have been slowly, slowly discussing with the IRS details of my 2006 tax filing.  Slowly because first they sent me a form and notice asking for more than twenty thousand dollars.  They had gotten some misinformation from a company about how much money I had made (by tens and tens of thousands of dollars).  That was clarified and then they responded by saying I owed much less, but still owed.  The problem with the details lied in the fact that there were errors on several filings from several different entities.  I learned an important lesson: make sure you’ve dotted your i’s, crossed your t’s and then double, triple and quadruple check your i’s and t’s.  Search out the rest of the alphabet and make sure that the details are perfect.

In looking over the data for this tax fiasco I have found a few more errors where if I re-filed I could get some money back from other tax years [too tiny of an amount to get active about].  I’m going to avoid re-filing because I don’t want to get flagged for an audit and since I’m already on the radar I want to stay clean and without fault.  I’m relatively confident an audit would not turn up any issues, but I’d rather not go through the hassle.  The IRS employees don’t want to come to my house anyway :)

The good thing about taxes is that they help us have roads, military personnel, justice, and social services, but I sure would like to pay less legally.  The bad thing about taxes is that they are often more complex than they could be (despite the congressional ‘clarifications’ and ’simplifications’).  Taxes fund things that  we as tax payers don’t like.  They fund bureaucracy that at least feels like its slow and costly.  However, we’re blessed to live in the United States and I hope that the taxes I pay will be used well for the growth and development of this country and the world at large.  May the benevolence of the U.S. stand strong and continue on… just without some of the perceptible waist.

The Paradigm Shift: Credit Cards Are Not the Problem

June 7th, 2008

As I had mentioned in an earlier post I’ve had a paradigm shift in how I look at credit cards.  My past attitude is that credit cards were evil without much in the way of exception.  I don’t have the same strong opinion any more.  Before I’m struck down with hate email or comments with great intensity let me clarify that most people who don’t like credit cards, when provoked to a good, long think, will agree with me.  The credit cards that get abused are a symptom!  Just like money isn’t evil by itself, credit cards are not evil by themselves.  If you pay off your credit card each and every month and maximize your return on the credit card’s reward program then the credit card is not a problem for you.

The symptom of debt is actually a symptom of the root problem: lack of self control.  If you understand where your finances are and you maximize your use of the card within the constraints of your budget, you might be able to pay for your family’s vacation in rewards.  James, a long time reader of my blogging (I don’t recall how James found me, but I’ve been grateful for the things I’ve learned from him and his commenting), actually left a comment stating that’s what he does some time ago.

My dad, a financially astute guy, uses his Discover card for as many expenses as he can and maximizes his rewards this way.  I have to admit to thinking this was crack smoking crazy until I realized that I was putting the blame on the wrong thing.  I’m not recommending everyone get as many credit cards as they can or that folks use credit cards if they can’t control themselves when they have access to the credit cards, but I am saying that I recognize that my previous stance was legalism.  As Romans 14:23b states: “…whatever is not from faith is sin.”  Don’t spend a dime that is not spent in reliance on the Lord.  This could be spent virtually with a credit card or literally with cash, but if you’re doing it out of compulsion and not in the abiding life of Christ, then its not the right attitude or way to be spending money in the first place!

This isn’t just a paradigm shift, this is a right-aligning with what the word of God teaches about walking by faith.  If I make a law about credit cards then I have failed to see the fullness of my relationship with Christ in the area I have created the law in.  I died to the law and the nature of the law when I was identified in Christ’s death, burial and resurrection.  I’m going to pay off my credit cards, cancel all but one, and then as I abide in Christ, I’ll focus on my heavenly relationship, knowing those earn eternal rewards, and use the Discover to maximize the earthly rewards which might just be used to help those in need (Romans 12:13).

Watch My Budget “A’splode”

May 4th, 2008

The winds around here have been insane this last week. I have Two sections of fence that need to be repaired or replaced :( This is why we have the emergency fund but its not what I want to be spending our money on. I guess that since we had planned on gaining intensity on paying off the debt that something had to come up and give us trials.

That’s OK! Trials are for our growth, James 1:13 points out that God doesn’t tempt us, but makes the point earlier in the passage that the trials are for our development. Development in Christ, being grown from glory to glory (II Cor. 3:18) is a good thing – I’ll take the wind and the fences because they’re good for me… even if they make the budget a wee bit tighter.

Personal Finance Through the Bible: Genesis 4 – Jealousy

March 30th, 2008

Genesis chapter four always scared me as a kid.  The brothers Cain & Able were at odds because of their sacrifices offered to God.  Here they were supposed to be focusing on their relationship with God, but instead of identifying opportunities for growth, Cain goes and offs his brother.  The sacrifices identify the recognition of man’s need for something to take away the penalty of sin (which could only be done through the Messiah), and yet this sacrifice brings about jealousy and then murder.

Jealousy is something that I have had on occasion.  Particularly when it comes to technological contraptions and devices.  I don’t get jealous about houses or cars, but if you whip out a Mac Book Air, I’m going to have some serious envy.  Not enough to kill you for, but it will make me question my commitment to being debt free.  I could almost justify getting into further debt because of my pure lust for the next cool thing.  Of course the problem with greed and jealousy is that they’re not satiated.  You can’t satisfy them because they are only temporarily stayed.  Instead, we just find the next thing to fixate on.

As a Christian I need to be beholding Christ.  II Corinthians 3:18 says

But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as from the Lord, the Spirit.

This passage is worthy of an entire book as we look at the amazing content it reveals, but instead of fixating on earthly things, we’re called to behold the glory of the Lord (See Also Colossians 3:1-3).  If we’re beholding the Lord we’ll not find our lusts overpowering, we’ll not find jealousy to have any substance, instead we’ll find our fulfillment in being transformed into the image of Christ from glory to glory.  That’s much better than greed, jealousy and murder any day.