Don't get me wrong, I am certainly NOT laughing about this situation. Hitch is the one chuckling - and with good reason.
My 401K has taken a beating, but being that I am only 36 years old, I have all the faith in the world that the situation will right itself before I am able to access that money.
I'm wierd, though. The only debt I have is on my house -- that happens to be a VERY modest home. Before all of this meltdown & slowdown, I had planned on having it paid off in 2 years. Now, it looks like it will be 3 or 4 years. After that, no debt for me. No cars, no boats, no credit cards, no student loans, nothing. Well, unless I take advantage of the current housing situation and buy a different house.
I realize that the results of all this have far reaching implications that will impact all of us, but I still have a hard time feeling bad for the companies that did this to themselves and now are crying for help. In a perfect world, they would go down in flames and everyone that did not try to profit on the upswing would go on about their business without being touched in the downfall. Much the same way I feel about all the people that got caught up in the house flipping craze a couple of years ago. They gambled on making a fortune by buying more house than they could not afford. Some profited greatly and good for 'em. Others got stuck in a $500,000 house that they paid $750,000 for (hoping to sell it for $1,000,000 in a few months) but now are stuck with it and can't sell it for $400,000 and now they are bankrupting. They got burned by the system that they were trying to manipulate.
Something is really, really wrong when a family making $80,000 a year is driving 2 new cars and living in $500,000 + homes (numbers based on my local observations).
My 401K has taken a beating, but being that I am only 36 years old, I have all the faith in the world that the situation will right itself before I am able to access that money.
I'm wierd, though. The only debt I have is on my house -- that happens to be a VERY modest home. Before all of this meltdown & slowdown, I had planned on having it paid off in 2 years. Now, it looks like it will be 3 or 4 years. After that, no debt for me. No cars, no boats, no credit cards, no student loans, nothing. Well, unless I take advantage of the current housing situation and buy a different house.
I realize that the results of all this have far reaching implications that will impact all of us, but I still have a hard time feeling bad for the companies that did this to themselves and now are crying for help. In a perfect world, they would go down in flames and everyone that did not try to profit on the upswing would go on about their business without being touched in the downfall. Much the same way I feel about all the people that got caught up in the house flipping craze a couple of years ago. They gambled on making a fortune by buying more house than they could not afford. Some profited greatly and good for 'em. Others got stuck in a $500,000 house that they paid $750,000 for (hoping to sell it for $1,000,000 in a few months) but now are stuck with it and can't sell it for $400,000 and now they are bankrupting. They got burned by the system that they were trying to manipulate.
Something is really, really wrong when a family making $80,000 a year is driving 2 new cars and living in $500,000 + homes (numbers based on my local observations).