You are very wise and of course I agree with you completely! When you see how the information about last week, or last month or last year gets manipulated it's easier to understand how the information from 100 or 500 years ago has been altered.
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It takes a person with a weak, insecure mind to think that altering historical events to fit the political environment of today is a good thing to do. Facts are facts, and they should not be erased and replaced with "what they really meant was..."
If you look at the language used by educates people in the mid-1800's, their vocabulary was very large and their phrasing far more sophisticated than the short sentences filled with little words we see now. I f people paid that much attention to their writing, I'm certain they wrote exactly what they meant to write, so why not believe that they knew what they were doing?
Too many groups of people think Old = IGNORANT. Old ideas, old books, old writings, old stories: none can be relied on because...what could they know we sophisticates of today do not know?
A lot, probably.
A lot, indeed! We have become such an ignorant society. I would worry that we are a lost cause, except that I know too many brilliant young people who are overflowing with ideas. I think they will save the world!
I wish I shared your optimism. Most young people with ideas are not running businesses that are making the bad decisions or have a grasp of how complicated the mess we have created is, or how much it will cost economically and socially to correct the accumulated mistakes of the past.
In any case, I don't think we have the time left to correct things. Things are reaching peak "bad"day-by-day.
I believe the future will look far different than any of us old folks can even imagine. I'm still clinging to hope.
I hope and I wish, but I keep thinking about Hell and handbaskets and wonder how much time we have left with the financial system ready to collapse. There has been far more credit created than there is money and there is no solution for that, no matter how hard one wishes. Just not at all optimistic here.
Iam sure you are right, but I tend to bury my head in the sand because I am not comfortable dealing with finances. Jim took care of all of that before he died and I have been happy to leave it the way he left it. I probably do need some good financial advice so that I am better prepared.. The bulk of my money is in an IRA and my home.
I understand your reluctance to get into it. Melinda, especially in the aftermath of such a loss.
Take some time and google Venezuela inflation and imagine that Boulivars are the Dollar in a few years. We have borrowed 22 trillion dollars and our annual interest payments will be a trillion dollars a year by next year! Just paying the interest is a major burden and we can never repay the borrowed money, and inflation will happen to us just as it is to Venezuela today.
IRAs are valued in dollars and inflation will decrease their purchasing power because the number of dollars will not change while the number of dollars needed for purchasing a gallon of gas (and everything else) will skyrocket.
At least look at what happens in a hyperinflationary period.