@newstart_2024 It feels like cultural decay. I can't see how it is productive for society as a whole. I have my own faults that are not productive either. Trying to improve. Key word = trying.
@Gubloinvestor Considering the listed items, I'd go with middle to borderline upper, but it seems like you missed a few significant categories; like mortgage and entertainment. $5K per month in total spending is not upper for sure; especially if you are talking Canadian.
@TheLongInvest Curious if you'd be willing to share your hedging strategy. I've owned many high flyers since the early waves, but keep selling to preserve wealth. I've left a fortune on the table. Finally, I bought puts, but they were expensive; even with strike prices at 30% below market.
@FlorinTatulea@ZoomInfo The ZoomInfo logo is very sad for a somewhat "marketing" company. I highly suggest it be updated. Here is a one prompt idea from AI. Get on it!
@JTTheBrick Holding back kids as well as having them transfer schools is out of hand. I doubt there is a high correlation to NIL, but it does cost kids that don't do it the opportunity to play in many cases.
@cperruna Agree with all but #4. Every company seems to have 20 - 50% declines at some point with great companies gaining 10x+ afterwards. My inability to ignore negative media and suck it up with respect to price declines cost me significantly as an early investor in AMZN and NVDA.
@porterstansb@realrepayne@Buffawoes Hi Porter, Is it possible for a wealthy taxpayer to invest, spend, donate & manage his wealth in a manner such that - on paper - they show no income and thus pay no tax? If so and it is a common practice, then I'd argue "unfair share." Could flat wealth tax be the answer?
@SenTomCotton Hi Tom. What is so awful about starting school in the dark? There are a lot of benefits for kids having daylight after school and dont believe your concern outweighs them; right?