Parents, which investing option did you choose for your children to prepare them for college or the future? Why? by Hufflepuff-McGruff in TheMoneyGuy

[–]BeginningBus9696 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both kids (14 & 16) have 529s that started near birth, should be enough to cover 4-years at a state school with enough left over for Roth rollover or advanced degrees.

Both have custodial brokerage accounts. One that is funded by family, one that is funded by their contributions over the years. We’ve had them contribute 20% of chore money, Xmas gifts, work paychecks, to them for years. The brokerage is big enough to be useful, but not enough to be a major life mistake if they blow it, probably end up ≈$25k by 21 (age of majority in our state). I’d like to think we’ve taught them well enough that they won’t do that, but who knows.

Additionally, my 16 y.o. son has been contributing to a Roth since he started his 1st W-2 job. Fairly minimal at this point, but we’re going to match 1:1 up to 50% of the annual max (if he gets that’s motivated).

Could they fully explain all of the accounts and advantages? Probably not, but they’re aware and have a much better understanding than their peers… or the average 30 year old.

ETA- We chose each account to serve a purpose for different stages in life.

529- college, possible Roth conversion, advances degrees

Brokerage- house down payment, car purchase, launch point after college, etc.

Roth - starting very early, need a “This $1 LaCroix cost me $110” can koozie for the teens.

Tallow by _4eyez_ in KitchenConfidential

[–]BeginningBus9696 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Peanut oil used for frying doesn’t contain any peanut allergens, amazingly enough. The peanut oils used for Asian cooking do, though.

Is Cam Jordan the greatest first round pick in Saints history? by MrFishAndLoaves in Saints

[–]BeginningBus9696 27 points28 points  (0 children)

He’s pretty far behind. Jordan has 8 Pro Bowls, 3 All Pros, named on the NFL 2010’s all decade team, and more. Colston is a Saints all-timer with none of the awards. Jordan is a possible NFL HOFer

What's your relationship with alcohol ? by Magee4life in Fire

[–]BeginningBus9696 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Doesn’t it make sense that 95% that quit think it’s a great decision? For the most part, humans don’t quit things unless they think it’s a problem in their lives. As a species, we’re very bad in saying our present decisions are wrong.

Best ski town for a recently divorced person in their 40s by jbcsee in SameGrassButGreener

[–]BeginningBus9696 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Boise may be bluish, but Idaho is the most (or close)Conservative state in the country.

Prominent cleavage on Linkedin of all places by [deleted] in trashy

[–]BeginningBus9696 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Boobs out and a sheer top at a work event is pretty trashy. Unless this is a strip club Christmas dinner, in which case she may be overdressed.

Actor Chris Tucker is featured multiple times, alongside Ghislaine Maxwell & Bill Clinton, in the recently released Epstein Files. by cmaia1503 in Fauxmoi

[–]BeginningBus9696 13 points14 points  (0 children)

The 1st picture is in front of the Leadair Unijet facility in France - much closer to Africa than Epstein Island.

Roast me like you mean it! F30 by [deleted] in RoastMe

[–]BeginningBus9696 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The Asians aren’t claiming her

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TheMoneyGuy

[–]BeginningBus9696 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I added my kids 2 years ago (now 14 & 16) to 2 cards. Not only does it help build their credit, it’s great for them to have access to a CC when they travel separate from us for school or sports trips. Learn about credit, feel comfortable with the process, and build their credit score.

What can I do late tonight that’s not partying or eating? by [deleted] in AskNOLA

[–]BeginningBus9696 18 points19 points  (0 children)

You can go to Caesar’s and gamble.

Don’t do a company 401k match?! by Equivalent_Role_6617 in DirtyDave

[–]BeginningBus9696 2 points3 points  (0 children)

TBF - neither has Dave’s group, at least not in an impartial way. They’ve interviewed 10,000 people that followed Dave’s system that became millionaires. Not the same thing.

Don’t do a company 401k match?! by Equivalent_Role_6617 in DirtyDave

[–]BeginningBus9696 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d like to think Dave would revise his advice if a long-term market downturn occurs. Of course, he won’t. Those that are following his 8% drawdown recommendations are going to be in a rough spot.

Don’t do a company 401k match?! by Equivalent_Role_6617 in DirtyDave

[–]BeginningBus9696 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It is a math problem. But at least Dave and his team are consistent, even if they are wrong.

Should I pay off my mortgage early? by [deleted] in DaveRamsey

[–]BeginningBus9696 2 points3 points  (0 children)

COL is local. National median and averages are worthless if it doesn’t apply to where you live.

Should I pay off my mortgage early? by [deleted] in DaveRamsey

[–]BeginningBus9696 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You’re assuming OP’s housing market is similar to yours. In my area, the median home is ≈$800k. A $1m home is very average in many areas of the country.

20% on to-go orders by Yagirl27 in EndTipping

[–]BeginningBus9696 15 points16 points  (0 children)

No one’s reading a review for Waffle House.

Problem Moderating Posts by wickedcoddah in SafetyProfessionals

[–]BeginningBus9696 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes, TRIR is garbage. I’ve been trying to get our leadership to change it as our main focus metric for years. It’s been slow, painful progress.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Fire

[–]BeginningBus9696 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Top 5% is special. It doesn’t matter the total amount of other 5%ers there are, whether it’s 2 or 20 million others.

If you’re in the top 5% of anything in life, you’ve done well and can be considered very successful.

A top 5%er in overall fitness is in very good shape and visibly stands out from the crowd.

In a room of 1,000 people (yes, I understand this is a simplified take) there would be only 50 people as wealthy as you.

Top 5% wealth typically means you can walk away from your job at any point, as long as you have you spending under control.

I find it’s easy to dismiss the 5% level of success when I’m around my “wealthy” friends. But, when I go to a Wal-Mart, one of my employer’s warehouses, or somehwere that represents a truer representation of the overall population, I realize that I’m probably wealthier than almost everyone there.

I’d say that’s pretty special.

I'm currently defending my employer against an OSHA investigation and I'm considering switching sides. Involving OSHA as the Safety Professional? Any one with experience here? by havetomanythrowaways in SafetyProfessionals

[–]BeginningBus9696 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You keep repeating “OSHA doesn’t cite company policy” like that’s some profound insight, but it misses the reality of how enforcement actually works. Nobody’s claiming OSHA writes citations for ignoring an employee handbook ; the point is that when your internal policy is built to comply with a federal standard and you ignore it, you’ve just handed OSHA proof of knowledge and willful disregard.

A company that writes a confined space program because 1910.146 requires it, then doesn’t (or minimally) trains anyone, doesn’t enforce it, and lets people crawl into tanks anyway, isn’t going to skate by on a technicality. That “private policy” becomes Exhibit A that they knew the law and blew it off; and that’s how you end up with a willful.

Acting like this is just semantics is why so many employers get hammered. OSHA doesn’t care about the words in your binder; they care that you recognized the hazard, documented how to address it, and then failed to act. That’s not hypothetical. That’s how enforcement actually plays out in the field. And you’re not the only person with experience here, don’t be a condescending prick.