by kpeavey » Sat 01 Nov 2008, 09:13:51
My general guideline in investing is to cover my arse first. What good is investing in gold or stocks when there is no food in the house? All too often I've seen tenants buy a new TV or fancy car, and then be late on the rent.
Stocking goods to a comfortable level needs to be first on a priority list. Members of a consumer economy have been taught to get what is needed for a week, with no worry about the future, even a future a couple of weeks away.
Increasing your comfort level from a weeks supply of goods to several weeks, to several months offers a fine return n your investment in terms of peace of mind. What are we talking, a few grand? With food, tools, clothing, and supplies on hand to carry you for a while, you can look at investing in from a different viewpoint.
This is not how most people think, as they have not experienced crisis. Food is as close as the nearest supermarket. Get a cold, head for the corner pharmacy. Leaky pipes is a phone call to a plumber. Flip a switch, the lights are on because you paid the bill, a couple days late, but its paid.
Leadership is nearsighted, focusing on the problems of the day. Today it's the economy and the election, nothing else is newsworthy.
Around here we tend towards farsightedness...what's coming down the road. Supermarkets with out of stock products, blackouts, fuel shortages, an economy in a shambles, global militarism, social collapse and dieoff.
If you think these problems do not need some preparations on your behalf for your own good, then by all means, invest in Chrysler, I hear the shares are low right now. If you think a few thousand bucks invested in supplies you use every day makes a sound investment, then good for you. You are moving in a direction that will help you maintain your lifestyle in a time of change. That small investment will ease your suffering.
How far you are willing to go is up to you. If an apartment with a weeks worth of food in the cupboards is comfortable, more power to you. If a couple of acres with chickens and an apple tree works, that's fine. If dozens of acres with fields, barns, woods, orchards, running streams, a pond, a root cellar and neighbors with every form of livestock available works for you, who am I to criticize.
Get your ducks in a row before you start investing your hard earned assets in something you don't know everything about. I understand potatoes, tomatoes, apples, and chickens. I know little about Mutual T Bill Interest Funds or Sub Par Derivative Call Contracts. Why would I invest in them?
If I have shoes to last me 5 years, the ability to grow enough food to last me all year, and a heat source that will get me through the winter, then maybe I'll take the time to study Paramutual Foreign Credit Stock Trades.
If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face--for ever."
-George Orwell, 1984
_____
twenty centuries of stony sleep were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle, and what rough beast, its hour come round at last, slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?
-George Yeats