...1966 or 2014?
Paying out the nose at the pump. Beef, chicken, eggs, bread, all rising in price. Utility prices jumping. The value of our dollars shrinking. Is it 2014? No it's 1966 and Paul Poirot is commenting on rising costs of living in October of 1966. His comments are found in The Cost of Living that I stumbled upon recently on the FEE website. The first FOUR paragraph's sound like something that could have been written - YESTERDAY.
Poirot's thoughts easily translate to today's public sentiment that it simply seems like the cost to live just keeps rising, and rising with no end in sight. So, in this economy of rising costs and a constant barrage of federal government "solutions" streaming at us in the form of new retirement safe guards/strategies like MyRA and so on, how can we step back and rethink what is going on around us and come up with a viable solution to face our American feelings of dissolution about being able to retire comfortably? (Employee Benefit Research Institute 2013 Retirement Confidence Survey)
I would point you to Exhibit A: The infinite Banking Concept and Nelson Nash's book, Becoming Your Own Banker and Exhibit B: Emailing me to get YOUR link of how YOUR financial situation might improve by using an IBC plan for retirement funding and cost of living funding now and in the future.
The cost of living is rising, but you can do something about returning more dollars back into your pocket. I'd enjoy hearing from you soon or to fulfill your order to receive Nelson's book for more insight.
Poirot's thoughts easily translate to today's public sentiment that it simply seems like the cost to live just keeps rising, and rising with no end in sight. So, in this economy of rising costs and a constant barrage of federal government "solutions" streaming at us in the form of new retirement safe guards/strategies like MyRA and so on, how can we step back and rethink what is going on around us and come up with a viable solution to face our American feelings of dissolution about being able to retire comfortably? (Employee Benefit Research Institute 2013 Retirement Confidence Survey)
I would point you to Exhibit A: The infinite Banking Concept and Nelson Nash's book, Becoming Your Own Banker and Exhibit B: Emailing me to get YOUR link of how YOUR financial situation might improve by using an IBC plan for retirement funding and cost of living funding now and in the future.
The cost of living is rising, but you can do something about returning more dollars back into your pocket. I'd enjoy hearing from you soon or to fulfill your order to receive Nelson's book for more insight.
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