I find it interesting in theory like off gridding so I'm interested in hearing more. It's kind of like composting toilets in my mind. They're groovy and all till the work comes due and you gotta empty those turds. In an ideal world I'd only buy new and lightly used vehicles in cash. In reality if I only used cash on hand I'd have myself a money pit with cars I needed to repair weekly. Better planning could prevent this I guess but we're all imperfect beings.
Except that money that even tells you it is debt and no store of value will be essentially worthless before the decade is over. If it isn't, you'll panic and not know what to do with it within half that window. That's what my advice could help you with, although this isn't about me helping you make money, but more like not losing money.
Well that was kinda my point. Diversification. There will always be things I don't wanna do but am prepared to do. I've got lots of ammo and hunting rifles but rely on neither to eat. Trying not to lose money almost feels like a losing game in the modern economy. Like no one pays you to clip coupons but you could be doing more profitable stuff w/ the time spent doing it. It is crazytown and idk wtf I'm doing half the time.
Well, my advice would be to diversify to precious metals. That buy is obvious. Anons have been popularly proving for maybe two or three years now (I'm sure others have noticed long before that) that CEOs, bit time politicians/contractors, employees of certain companies and other notable people have been moving funds from things like shares in whatever stocks to precious metals (PMs). That enough should perk your ears up. You don't even need to be told that gold and silver's true prices are being obscured or that PMs have always skyrocketed during recessions.
Then there's crypto - Bitcoin will be halving in less than a year from now. When this same thing happened in 2016, coins/tokens that weren't Bitcoin flew off the charts (some, not all). There's plenty of reasons that it will be much more significant this time and pretty much all bitcoin maximalists agree that we'll never see current prices ever again.
But this all means nothing if the current "Everything Bubble" isn't explained to you. Remember the 2008 "housing crisis" and subsequent bubble burst and bank bailout? Well, what did you expect to happen ten years later?
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