The title of this thread is very clearly asking about people who are anti-debit card and anti-credit card.No. It says anti-debt. Not anti debit. They are not the same thing.
The title of this thread is very clearly asking about people who are anti-debit card and anti-credit card.No. It says anti-debt. Not anti debit. They are not the same thing.
Try reading it again...The title of this thread is very clearly asking about people who are anti-debit card and anti-credit card.
It is nice that your bank did that, but I would bet that is not in line with their written policy and know that banks are not legally required to fully reimburse consumers under certain situations.I have had my debit card be compromised a few times over the years. A quick call to the bank and my money was back in an hour. That is why I choose to bank where I do and am not afraid of using my debit card.
That actually worked. Touché.Try reading it again...
Wasn’t a conventional retirement?
I am a bit immune to the conversation, I'm a loan officer that deals with different philosophies every day. Customers worth $10M are more concerned about interest debt than those worth $500k sometimes. Keeps me chuckling on a weekly basis.Yeah I should have seen that coming.
True, but a lot of that comes down to choices. We could have had a much more extravagant lifestyle which consumed a much greater portion of our take-home pay. Many of my colleagues did just that. We had a goal of retiring at 55 and knew full well we had to find a way to fund the years between when we ended working and when we could start drawing on 401-K’s and SS.You have another source to "retirement" benefits. Most people don't get that until they reach a certain age, aka, mid 60's.
You also had a way to stockpile money above and beyond what many people can.
Not all corporate jobs pay you $250,000 a year when all you need to live on is $75,000.
Someone who makes the national average in a corporate job cannot throw more than 30% into investments that have high payout/high risk.
Not in Joe Biden’s America does 100 dollars stay 100 dollars.Cash. Because 100 dollars in paper form stays 100 dollars. I do use a debit card here and there. No clue about this Ramsey guy.
I have had customers borrow $2k, put the money in a CD in the same bank, and get credit history that way. You end up with some fees, that really suck, but ~2 % over the CD rate is better than most credit card experiences. Pay a couple months, pay off early with the CD, do it again. Just playing the game.I was forced into a credit card a couple years ago. I couldn't even open a basic savings account at a new bank because my credit score didn't exist. Rejected multiple times trying to get a credit card to get a credit score too. I finally had to get a garbage secured card to play their little games.
I have never needed to borrow any money and have a decent chunk saved but without a credit score I would never be able to borrow money for a house even with 50% down.
I use cash when possible and only use credit/debit for online purchases. I see plenty of places where there is added fees to use a credit card, as there should be.
True, but a lot of that comes down to choices. We could have had a much more extravagant lifestyle which consumed a much greater portion of our take-home pay. Many of my colleagues did just that. We had a goal of retiring at 55 and knew full well we had to find a way to fund the years between when we ended working and when we could start drawing on 401-K’s and SS.
Ironically given the topic at hand, much of what we were able to do in life was made possible by the levering up to buy income-producing real estate when we’re in our 30’s.
I saw a post about the "best credit cards", credit cards make me want to vomit so I thought I would make a thread seeing who else has an aversion to debt and specifically credit cards?
Edited to add I have a debit card because many of you think I meant actual cash all the time. I’m not a total caveman.
Do not comment about your credit card rewards, debt arbitrage, or whatever. This is for my cash slinging friends only.
Oh and yes, I am a pretty big Dave Ramsey fan.
That's my goal. Just took advantage of the shift in labor power and took a job with a new firm. A heckuva lot more money. Hopefully, I can get it done before 59 1/2, but that's cool too. I'll definitely be working after I "retire," but it will be more on my terms, probably building custom furniture and selling what I can to pay the basics.You're retired from corporate, but not from having to have a source of income
Who of you cash kings paid for their first home fully in cash?
There would be a lot of people better off if financial literacy was actually taught in public schools. I not going to let my kids learn it all on the fly like I had to.