โNov-17-2019 08:58 AM
โNov-18-2019 11:47 AM
โNov-18-2019 10:41 AM
covered wagon wrote:time2roll wrote:
SS was never intended to provide a living pension. Just a supplement to personal resources.
Going to get much worse before it improves.
Free food and free living makes for lazy folks with idle time for doing things they should not be doing. Be good if they required regular community service in order to earn the right for those benefits.
โNov-18-2019 09:45 AM
Matt_Colie wrote:
Well, if that is the case, then why did the prior administration use the abrogation of the bankruptcy laws to take away 28 years of crimping, saving with no big toys and no real vacations? In short, they destroyed those personal resources and I was not alone. But as a guy that got a lot of education and worked up to a nice position, I guess I was "RICH" and due to be fleeced.
โNov-18-2019 09:14 AM
โNov-18-2019 08:38 AM
Papa Steve wrote:The Seattle Is Dying professional video Click is informative and worth watching. It gives a lot of insight into the problem and a significant solution by one state. Itโs long and makes the case that the root problem is drugs followed by lack of solutions.
Near us, there was a huge homeless encampment of 700 people in a 3 mile stretch. Only 11% of those people said they wanted help. 58% were drug users, and the rest were mentally ill. Most didn't want shelters because of the rules: wake up, eat, go to bed, all at specific times. And of course, no drugs.
I live in Southern California, so I know how expensive big cities can be. I don't think we should be building shelters in places where real estate costs so much.
Maybe we should build a tent city in the desert and provide free food, water, porta-potties, showers, and even drugs. Bus the people there that don't want to do anything except get high. Has to be cheaper than building new shelters, or even cleaning up encampments. BTW, Los Angeles spent $36,000,000 this year just cleaning up places only to have the homeless move back within an hour.
Comments?
โNov-18-2019 08:25 AM
Matt_Colie wrote:Matt where I live is next to my name. While my home has increased in value with the improvements I've made I would break even, if you add in the Banks interest rate would probably be upside down. I have lived her for 33 years so if I paid rent I think It would have been a lot more in housing cost. Sorry you got a raw deal.colliehauler wrote:
Prices have always increased on homes in the long run. Supply and demand. A lot of homes in small towns with lack of jobs can be bought dirt cheap. For a retired person who does not depend on employment this can be a good deal. There are several list of states and towns that are the best places to retire along with the most expensive places to retire. Illegal immigrants compound the housing issue but certain people choose not to address the issue. Until these people are voted out I don't see things changing.
I don't know where you live, but we have been buying this house from the bank for 28 years. We bought when the market was pretty stable, but then came the depression that the prior administration built a fire under. (Anybody that has looked at the county's history would know that the same things that were done by FDR that extended that depression for an additional three (maybe more) years is what was done again.)
Today, I could sell out home and not get back what we paid for it in cash value (not even thinking about the interest over near 30 years). Everybody wants a piece of the rich old people that only worked hard for years to live so "easily" now.
If you perchance think I may be a little bitter, that just means that you are observant.
โNov-18-2019 08:25 AM
CA Traveler wrote:
Watch the uTube video Seattle is Dying for a larger perspective of the problem which includes RVs.
โNov-18-2019 08:23 AM
โNov-18-2019 08:08 AM
โNov-18-2019 07:37 AM
โNov-18-2019 07:35 AM
JRscooby wrote:When my Dad passed away I bought a small house in my town for her. By this time most of her friends had passed away. Our town has quality medical care. They also have a senior bus that is subsidized to take seniors to and from appointments at very little cost. They also have a senior center where they can enjoy a quality meal Monday thru Friday. The senior center also provides camaraderie of people in the same age bracket to visit with. The senior center utilize the same bus to pick up people for lunch and back home. They also have trips to Walmart and Kroger along with field trips to surrounding small towns. Even without a car Mom had quality of life until she passed. Forgot she attended a church less then a block away from her house and they picked her up and dropped her off.colliehauler wrote:
Prices have always increased on homes in the long run. Supply and demand. A lot of homes in small towns with lack of jobs can be bought dirt cheap. For a retired person who does not depend on employment this can be a good deal. There are several list of states and towns that are the best places to retire along with the most expensive places to retire. Illegal immigrants compound the housing issue but certain people choose not to address the issue. Until these people are voted out I don't see things changing.
Yes, a retired person can sell their house, buy one dirt cheap in a small town in say Kansas. But what is the cost, that can not be expressed in dollars, to move away from the friends, church, entertainment? Then there is the fact older people need accesses to medical care, and small town hospitals are closing. As we age, driving becomes a issue. If it is a 10 mile round trip to get groceries, even if you need to change buses a couple of times. But what if the trip is 100 miles, and there are no buses?
I agree the politicians will not solve the immigration, but if the ones in power wanted to it would take no change in laws, just a change in how/which laws are enforced. It could be done before the next election.
โNov-18-2019 07:33 AM
colliehauler wrote:
Prices have always increased on homes in the long run. Supply and demand. A lot of homes in small towns with lack of jobs can be bought dirt cheap. For a retired person who does not depend on employment this can be a good deal. There are several list of states and towns that are the best places to retire along with the most expensive places to retire. Illegal immigrants compound the housing issue but certain people choose not to address the issue. Until these people are voted out I don't see things changing.
โNov-18-2019 07:32 AM
โNov-18-2019 07:30 AM
CA Traveler wrote:
Watch the uTube video Seattle is Dying for a larger perspective of the problem which includes RVs.
โNov-18-2019 07:28 AM
Matt_Colie wrote:Did you lose your pension due to your company you worked for 28 years went BK? Sorry to hear that. Been happening to a lot of people and more to come.time2roll wrote:
SS was never intended to provide a living pension. Just a supplement to personal resources.
Going to get much worse before it improves.
Well, if that is the case, then why did the prior administration use the abrogation of the bankruptcy laws to take away 28 years of crimping, saving with no big toys and no real vacations? In short, they destroyed those personal resources and I was not alone. But as a guy that got a lot of education and worked up to a nice position, I guess I was "RICH" and due to be fleeced.