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Can you live well on Social Security alone?

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billbonnersdiary.com

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bill@billbonnersdiary.com

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Mon, Dec 4, 2017 10:33 PM

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Editor’s Note: Bill’s regular beat at the Diary is money. Where it goes… How it moves

[Bill Bonner's Diary]( Editor’s Note: Bill’s regular beat at the Diary is money. Where it goes… How it moves… And why. But in today’s evening edition of the Diary, Bill confronts an equally important question. Can you live well without much money? Can You Live Well on Social Security Alone? By Bill Bonner, Chairman, Bonner & Partners [bill bonner] Can you live well on Social Security alone? Recently, we told an old friend it was possible. But is it? It depends on what you mean by “living well.” Recommended Link [Marijuana Is the Fastest-Growing Industry in the World]( The cannabis industry is growing faster than high-tech companies during the dot-com boom. The best marijuana stocks averaged 29,000% peak gains. But when California legalizes recreational pot on January 1, it's expected to unleash the biggest marijuana boom in history. Fortunes will be made. [Click here to find out more]( -- Rich and Poor This evening, we lift anchor and unfurl the sails. We’re going to explore a faraway land. We catch a breeze to go have a look not at money, but at the lack of it. We’re headed off to find out if money contributes much to the “good life.” A subtext: We’d like to find an island somewhere where we could live happily without it. As long-time readers of this Diary know, your editor has been rich and poor. Growing up, he was the poorest white man he knew. Later, he was a beneficiary of forces beyond his control – the information revolution and the fake-money system. The internet came along in the 1990s and allowed him to eliminate the biggest expenses of his newsletter business: paper and postage. Then the fake-money system pushed baby boomers to invest their money. They wanted advice; many turned in your editor’s direction. Although he merits no praise for accidentally being in the right place at the right time, nor does he deserve to get any grief for it. But now he finds himself getting both. As one of the rich, hated, and greedy “One Percent,” the liberal press rails against him. Simultaneously, the Republicans hail him as a “job creator”… and want to make him richer! And he wonders: What’s the diff? Recommended Link [Silicon Valley Rocket Scientist's Prediction Could Lead to 35,000% Growth]( [image]( [Watch him lay out his bold prediction in full detail.]( -- Not Worth the Nickel There are two things money can do for you: It can buy comfort and/or status. To make a long story short: Neither is worth the nickel, so to speak. As for comfort, it is easily attained. And cheaply. In the wintertime, we sit before an open fire. It costs almost nothing. But it warms our hands and our heart. On the bed is an electric blanket for cold nights. What more do we need? In the summer, it’s hard to beat sitting on the porch… or under the beech tree. Yes, we have air conditioning in the house and the office. But it is not expensive if used in moderation. What else do you need? Clothes can be simple and almost absurdly cheap… especially if they are “pre-owned.” And good food? A well-tended garden can provide much of what you need. We had an uncle who was such a good gardener, he got almost all his fruits and vegetables from his own plot. The rest of our comforts don’t have to be expensive, either. We have an old Ford pickup truck that runs fine. It is an antique, but not valuable, so insurance and licenses are remarkably cheap. Thought and Feeling So let us turn to the other thing money can buy: status. We need little for survival: food, clothing, shelter from the cold wind. But our want of status is infinite. Fortunately, it is also remarkably flexible. One man gains status by buying a new Jaguar; another finds it in keeping his old Honda on the road. One looks for status by going to fancy restaurants; another moves up a notch by growing his own asparagus. One joins President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club; another joins a church. The trick to enjoying poverty is to flip the status symbols in your direction. It is not enough to do without; you have to feel superior about it. Wear your Kmart duds as a badge of honor. And to help you, we dig into Clive Bell’s classic essay, Civilization. Bell, an English art critic associated with the Bloomsbury Group, maintained that civilized people care little for comfort or money. They aim for a higher form of status, one you can’t measure in dollars: The life of an Athenian, so rich and complex in thought and feeling, was in most material blessings indecently deficient. […] The richest citizens seem often to have slept on the dining-room chairs – to be sure they were more like benches almost – wrapping themselves up in their ulsters like so many third-class passengers. The houses of the Athenians were small, unpretentious, and devoid of labor-saving devices… The furniture and utensils… would have provoked the patronizing pity of moral indignation of a class-conscious dustman. In the days of the ancient Greeks, for example, some of the greatest thinkers of all time got drunk and simply laid their cloaks down on the stone floor and went to sleep. (See Plato’s Symposium.) It is not that ancient Greeks were indifferent to status; they were as prey to vanity and snobbism as anyone. But they gained it, as Bell points out, not by money, but by “thought and feeling.” Artists, poets, philosophers – all were revered if they were good. That they had money or not was entirely inconsequential. A great sculptor gained status… and then, as rich people coveted his work, he gained money, too. But the status came from the art, not the money. Recommended Link [Kansas farm boy generates millions from his California "bunker"]( He's just an ordinary guy born on a farm in Kansas. He didn't graduate from a fancy college. He doesn't have an MBA. Yet he stumbled upon a ["secret key" technique]( that allowed him to retire at 42… and still make more money in 8 hours… than most people make in a month. But Monday through Friday you'll find him up by 4 am, in front of his computer… using his "secret key" to generate thousands of dollars per week… without touching stocks or bonds. He calls it his retirement hobby. [Click here to see his “secret key” in action]( -- Shortcut to Status In America, no one is sure where the money comes from, especially in this Fin de Bubble Epoch. So it tends to be taken – in itself – as a status symbol. The boor… the numbskull… the jackass – all are held in high regard if they bought bitcoin early. Money is a shortcut to status… and a cheap substitute for thought and feeling. The rich man can’t be bothered to find a house with real grace or charm; instead, he buys an expensive one. He may not know the difference between a Barolo or a Beaujolais on the left side of the menu; but he can read the numbers on the right. He hasn’t the time to think or feel; he is too busy earning money. The trouble with money for measuring status is the same as having money as a foundation for an economy. You can add it up. Numbers give you the quantity of beer bottles consumed or sleeping pills manufactured. But numbers do not tell you anything about the quality of the beer or the peacefulness of the sleep. The rich man ends up living in a ghastly monstrosity… talking nonsense… and acting like a brute. His money raises him up above the rest of his countrymen. But he is put on a pedestal only to be laughed at by people of real taste or judgement. “Thought and feeling” can’t be calibrated in money. They are qualitative, not quantitative. Sometimes, money can help provoke thoughts and cultivate feelings. Sometimes, it just gets in the way. Regards, [Signature] Bill Editor’s Note: Bill has made it his life's work to understand the world of money. Recently, the Trump team reached out to Bill’s network for advice on the economy. In response, Bill’s team sent the White House a field memo on a coming financial crisis… We’re now releasing it to the general public… (It’s not what you expect.) [Click here to read more.]( [Bonner and Partners]( © Bonner & Partners 55 NE 5th Avenue, Suite 100, Delray Beach, FL 33483 [www.bonnerandpartners.com]( This e-mail was sent to {EMAIL} because you subscribed to this service. To stop receiving these emails, click [here](. Customer Service Bonner & Partners welcomes your feedback and questions. But please note: The law prohibits us from giving personalized advice. To contact us, call Toll Free: (800) 681-1765, International: (443) 353-4462, Mon-Fri: 9am-7pm or email us [here](mailto:feedback@bonnerandpartners.com). Having trouble getting your e-mails? Add us to your address book. Get Instructions [here](… © 2017 Bonner & Partners, 55 NE 5th Avenue Suite 100, Delray Beach, FL 33483, USA. All rights reserved. Any reproduction, copying, or redistribution, in whole or in part, is prohibited without written permission from the publisher. Information contained herein is obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but its accuracy cannot be guaranteed. It is not designed to meet your personal situation – we are not financial advisors nor do we give personalized advice. The opinions expressed herein are those of the publisher and are subject to change without notice. It may become outdated and there is no obligation to update any such information. Recommendations in Bonner & Partners publications should be made only after consulting with your advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company in question. You shouldn't make any decision based solely on what you read here. Bonner & Partners writers and publications do not take compensation in any form for covering those securities or commodities. Bonner & Partners expressly forbids its writers from owning or having an interest in any security that they recommend to their readers. Furthermore, all other employees and agents of Bonner & Partners and its affiliate companies must wait 24 hours before following an initial recommendation published on the Internet, or 72 hours after a printed publication is mailed.

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