Entries Tagged as 'economy'

goals in 2010: a re-assessment

from the editor.

one of my four goals for 2010 is to pay off $8,000 of my school loan (about half of my remaining total).  this hasn’t been working.  i need to re-examine what’s been going on and come up with an alternative solution.

the state of things.  i set out initially to pay $750 per month against my school loan, delivering payments via credit card to the loan company.  last month’s payment was a paltry $350, and this month’s payment totalled $450.  what the hell happened?

essentially, there were numerous expenses i’d not factored into my initial budget.  these include:

  • emergency repairs (looks like my car’s electrical system is on the blink…if it cares to blink at all)
  • car insurance (currently over $900 per year, which isn’t much but the quarterly payments are significant enough)
  • travel (yeah, i do want to take vacations and breaks…this costs money)
  • other 2010 goals (these cost money too)

i have dipped into my savings account (via my automatic overdraft protection) a couple times since april: basically once every month i’m paying out of my savings account, even if it’s something less than $50.  though it’s not much, i feel it’s a horrible habit to begin, and definitely not a sustainable behaviour in any case.

how do i solve this?  i see several options.

  1. extend the goal into 2011. this will delay the goal about 6 months.  by default this is do-able.
  2. re-assess the goal to be $6,000 instead of $8,000 by year’s end. again, this is an approachable goal, and it would be done soon enough anyway.
  3. pay off whatever i’m short the $8,000 at the end of they year with my savings account. this is also doable, but i feel it’s undesirable (too close to “admitting failure” than i prefer).  in all honesty, i see myself doing this anyway.
  4. improve my income stream in some way. this is possible, but at the present time it doesn’t seem a very realistic possibility.  one of my other goals for this year is to publish a board game of my own, and i will be acquiring a construction certification in late july as a possibility for side jobs.  but there are a number of other commitments i would have to sacrifice in order to make a side job viable, and the board game has no financial guarantee.  i am not ready for this step just yet, i reckon.
  5. stay on a $750 payment schedule, but pay these every 1.5 months. so i would keep the $750 payment structure, just not on the same timetable.  although it satisfies one of the criteria, putting a wrinkle into my solid monthly payment schedule doesn’t seem like a good idea.  furthermore, it doesn’t help me meet the goal any quicker.

out of all the options i’ve listed above, a combination of the first two seems the friendliest option.  however, as i mentioned above, i’m more concerned about accomplishing the goal i’ve set.  i think my course of action will be to pay what i can per month (which seems to be about $450 per month at the moment) and then make up the difference at the end of the year with payments from my savings account.  although this takes away some of my financial cushion, it’s likely to afford me greater peace of mind than stretching the goal out along a lengthier time table.

this is, of course, dependent on whether or not i still have savings left; unforseen emergencies may come up that cause some additional dwindling of my savings.  that’s not worth even speculating at this point.  my “plan b” (which combines options 1 and 2 above) can compensate for a significant loss of savings assets, so i’ll defer to that if necessary.

as this is a personal goal, and no one else really has any stake in it, i’m merely thinking out loud with this.  but i had made a promise to myself to do it in 2010, and i want to find a way to achieve that goal.  i’m not too pleased about this at the moment, to be honest, but i have a feeling i will be much more satisfied once i can finally write off that debt.

for real

shout-out to arthur silber.  i just rediscovered this guy.

it’s not the sex.  it’s never the sex.

it’s not the drugs.  it’s never the drugs.

it’s not the terrorists.  it’s never the terrorists.

…but where can we go?  when will it be a place where it really is the sex?  where it really is the drugs?  where it really is all about the terrorists?!?!

i don’t think that place exists. so where do we go?

willful stagnation vs. gentrification

the following are notes i have taken after observing a conversation at a local coffee shop/bookstore run by a radical/activist element.

to sum up: a discussion arose between the cafe staff-person and a table of conversing guests.  they were discussing some of the issues related to them living in the city, but longitudinally all signs point to them being eventually priced out of their own artist enclaves.  whether they were concerned about the welfare of the city itself or themselves and their own personal condition wasn’t clear; i was unable to stick around long enough to find out all the details.  but it did stick with me, and i wrote down the following phrase:

“wherever you go, gentrification follows.”

the rest of these notes is not a true essay, but more a stream of consciousness regarding white flight/black flight, gentrification of Western urban centers,  planned shortages, my personal role in city life and gentrification, planned communities, and so on. [Read more →]

housing & child support dilemma

this post is related to the day job.

here’s the situation. suppose you know a guy who…

–is physically disabled, and cannot work a ‘normal’ job;
–resides in subsidized housing (”section 8″);
–receives a disability payment through the city government where he lives;
–has his wages garnished by child support.

the guy is not making enough money to pay rent, and is feeling threatened with eviction.  he has not received an eviction notice yet.

apart from the 12+ agency referrals that he’s received from us, i’ve repeatedly told him that solid, simple ways to ease his financial burden are to reduce his expenses, or increase his income.  to this, he replied:

–he has cut back on as many expenses as possible;
–after stating his case to the office of child support enforcement, they reduced his payment to just over $150 per month
–he is unable to take on a full-time job because, if he does, his disability payments will be cut;
–he’s disabled in the first place, or else he would be working a steady job already;
–any job he has seen to work in does not pay enough for the time he would work, which would result in the net income to his household reducing to a lower amount
–city or state public assistance is active only after he receives an eviction notice…but he wants assistance before the eviction notice arrives

a serious question is: how serious is an eviction notice?  how badly will this reflect on him at this point?  also, as the client is receiving disability benefits, why isn’t DSS delivering the benefit directly to the child, as opposed to reducing the client’s funds after payment is issued?

apart from this being a strange and convoluted system, it appears that something isn’t right with how child support is being garnished.

the vasectomy experience, part 2

this is a companion piece to the first installment of my vasectomy experience writing. if you are bored reading philisophical/psychosocial editorials, then you may want to move on from this installment.  it turns out not to be very cheerful, either.

while the first piece focused on the experience of the physical vasectomy procedure itself,  i also wanted to dedicate space to describing the intangible, mental/psychological aspects involved in such a procedure.  dividing them into distinct writings prevents the muddying of either aspect, in my opinion offering more clarity for each.  so here we go. [Read more →]

happy anniversary, obama

read an article on the campaign for liberty website this morning about “bush’s ninth year.”  not the best way to start the day.

The answer to the Obama problem is the same as it was to the Bush problem, the Clinton problem, and the problem with every president who overstepped his bounds, waged unconstitutional wars, denied due process to suspects, violated the Fourth Amendment and spent so much as to make his predecessor look like a piker — philosophical revolution. Until the American people are swayed by the arguments for sound money, free markets, constrained government, the rule of law and peace in international affairs, they will continue to elect presidents whose distinctions are greatly overshadowed by their similarities with the men they replace. The hope for real change will be dashed, just as it was when Bush embarked on a presidency of unconstitutional terror policies, stimulus, bailouts, and huge expansions of Medicare and other domestic programs. Just as it is now for so many Obama supporters, who have seen their agent of hope and change continue on the path laid out by his predecessor, except with some window dressing and more rhetorical emphasis on social programs and economic regulation.

i can’t help but imagine moving through a swiftly-spinning revolving door in front of a gargantuan new york office building.  anyone who dares try and stop the door will only have their fingers cut off.  so no one dares.

editor interviewed

in september ‘09, let-off studios’ editor was interviewed during the baltimore book festival. in a chance meeting, steve was taking a break from staffing the radical book fair tent and was asked a few questions about the election and subsequent presidency of obama. here’s his response.

as it turns out, the interview is part of a much larger project (thank goodness!) carried out by a staff member of towson university and their students. find out more regarding the obaltimore project and see more interviews.

frugality, banality, insanity

many people go off the deep end when it comes to money.

up until today, mere moments ago as i type this, i had thought of trent at www.thesimpledollar.com as a rational human being who had a knack for personal finance and goal-setting.  however, a post he made earlier today–taken in consideration with a handful of other more seemingly benign posts in recent weeks–makes me think that he’s slipping over the edge into financial obsession. [Read more →]

happy anniversary, u.s.a.!

here’s a staggeringly bleak–yet brilliant–case for reinvestigating the causes and perpetrators of the bombings of the world trade center towers back in ‘01.

happy anniversary to us: a nation of shiftless, easily-led automatons; the avaricious slime that exploits them; and the despair-addled, cautious ones who don’t know where to turn.

never forget

i read an article this morning about a FEMA documentarian currently living in exile in south america; apparently, he was too good at finding evidence about foul play related to the u.s. government’s collusion with and involvement in the 9/11 attacks in new york city.  here’s a fantastic response the documentarian has to an initially benign question, emphasis in bold is mine: [Read more →]