I have 30+k in the bank and I am able to save an extra 2000+ a month from my income. What is the best way for me to handle my money to make/save more? (CAN)

Get your shit together and start investing in yourself. Your job is paying you well and your expenses are currently low. Set your goals higher because you're settling for less right now. Don't think about saving your piddly $24k/year like its gong to help you survive the next episode of hyper inflation that could strike at any moment. Think about that.

Whether the hyperinflation strikes the US Dollar or not do you want to put your children into the same shoes you were born in or do you want to birth them into a time and place where they have real opportunity to make a difference because they aren't jus tworried about their own hide? Think about this. My family is relatively "rich" but they didn't share anything with me except food and shelter. So I'm stuck fending for every dollar jus tlike any fucking 1st generation immigrant. Get rich and get ethic and pass it onto yourkids or you are nothing but an average nobody. Think about this.

You have a great opportunity to become something and to effect real things, even if your opinion of what ought to be and what not ought to be is different from me in terms of what the Government's Law books need to have written in them, I say this.

Consider that money is power and relationships with other people is power, what do you have and what are you prepared to pass on?

Invest in yourself and your own UNCERTAINTY and "high risk options", everything else you do with YOUR cash will be according to nothing more than another person's impulse and dreams -- make your investments into yourself.

Index funds are for retarded cunts. Get real.

Retirement is an idiot's chore. Believe me, I have experience on the next generation after "retirees dreams come true" and its bullshit. A retiree is too poor to help anyone meaningfully and a retiree only destroys the next generation's actualization. Get on your purpose.

METATERREN

/r/personalfinance Thread