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	<title>Money Blue Book&#187; Issues</title>
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	<description>Personal Finance Beyond Credit Cards and Balance Transfers</description>
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		<title>Buying A House Near PowerLines: Do Power Lines Cause Cancer?</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/buying-a-house-near-powerlines-do-power-lines-cause-cancer/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/buying-a-house-near-powerlines-do-power-lines-cause-cancer/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 29 Aug 2009 02:36:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Health]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Life]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Real Estate and Housing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.moneybluebook.com/?p=9109</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Internet is quite a mixed bag of information &#8211; a wild, wild west cornucopia of unfiltered and unadulterated questions and answers. Among the nuggets of knowledge, there&#8217;s an endless supply of trashy material and unsubstantiated half truths. For every debatable issue imaginable, there are legions of supporters and oppositions on both sides of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/power-line-up-close-tree-light-pole.jpg" alt="" width="115" height="112" />The Internet is quite a mixed bag of information &#8211; a wild, wild west cornucopia of unfiltered and unadulterated questions and answers. Among the nuggets of knowledge, there&#8217;s an endless supply of trashy material and unsubstantiated half truths. For every debatable issue imaginable, there are legions of supporters and oppositions on both sides of the divide. Search engines like Google and Bing do nothing to segregate the legitimate articles from the biased quackery and it&#8217;s often up to the readers themselves to differentiate fact from fiction. Such is the case with a very contentious and controversial issue of mine that&#8217;s literally hitting close to home &#8211; <strong>the issue of living next to power lines and whether they have any negative impact on one&#8217;s health</strong>.</p>
<p>From the various articles available online, you&#8217;ll frequently read comments and posts from individuals claiming that their personal cancers and miscarriages were the direct results of living too close to nearby power lines. Though when subjected to scientific scrutiny, this does not necessarily indicate a definitive connection between the two, it&#8217;s easy to see how the passionate and emotional voices could come to such conclusions. In my case, both of my parents are survivors of lymphoma cancer. Both of them successfully completed their chemotherapy treatments and both were able to cure themselves of the cancers that plagued their bodies for months. However, as far as I know &#8211; they and I have never lived in close proximity to power lines of any sort. However, if we hypothetically had, I&#8217;m sure I would have immediately jumped to such emotional conclusions as well and pointed to power lines as the leading cause of the cancers. As I examine this controversial issue, it&#8217;s important to bear in mind that when it comes to such ubiquitous and misunderstood issues as the effects of electromagnetic fields from power lines,<sup> </sup>people&#8217;s reactions may frequently be driven more by emotion and passion than by reason and true evidence.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/power-line-pointing-to-tower-on-photo.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="188" /></p>
<p><strong>I&#8217;m Buying A Dream House: But It&#8217;s Located Near Electrical Power Lines</strong></p>
<p>After years of renting, I&#8217;m finally in the process of <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/july-2009-net-worth-update-and-first-time-home-buyer-plans/"><strong>buying my first home</strong></a>. At the conclusion of months of tireless searching and countless weekdays and weekends of visiting open houses and housing prospects, I&#8217;ve finally found the perfect starter home in the perfect location. It&#8217;s a beautiful single family house -  a brand spanking new construction home in a very desirable location near major transportation routes with excellent accessibility to stores and close proximity to places I need to be on a regular basis. But there&#8217;s a problem, and a big problem at that depending on how you look at it. The prospective new construction lot I&#8217;m looking at is located somewhat near a string of power lines and within viewing proximity of several gigantic power line towers. To be precise, the constructed home would be located approximately 350 yards (1050 feet or 320 meters) from the nearest high voltage powerline.</p>
<p>The first time I drove through the newly minted housing development &#8211; I instantly fell in love. But after I saw the looming power lines in the distance, I began to have second doubts. Aside from the unsightly nature of the looming eye sores, I had mild qualms about the safety and health hazards of living in such relative close proximity to the gargantuan steel structures and high tension wires. After all, I was brought up by my parents and shaped by the mainstream media and social norms to naturally believe in certain things &#8211; such assorted health based beliefs like &#8211; microwave ovens emanate hazardous radiation waves, smoking causes cancer, Tylenol damages your liver, immunizing your child may lead to him or her developing autism, diet coke causes cancer, red meat is unhealthy, eating too much fish can lead to mercury poisoning, too much egg yolk will kill you, and finally &#8211; prolonged exposure to high tension powerlines can cause leukemia in children and lead to other cancers and Alzheimer type afflictions in adults.</p>
<p>But instead of taking such beliefs at face value this time around, and probably because the home and the neighborhood otherwise satisfied almost every other factor on my check list, I decided to investigate the power line health issue in greater depth. What I discovered was rather troubling &#8211; but not for the reasons you might think. After hours and days of research and pouring over numerous governmental issued reports on powerlines and research articles on the alleged connection between power line generated radiation and cancer in humans, I&#8217;ve come to the overwhelming conclusion that there is simply insufficient evidence at this time to establish a causal link between the two. Despite my own hard conclusions based on existing data, concrete facts, and actual measurements conducted by invited powerline company personnel of the suspected area, I don&#8217;t think a consensus on this controversial issue will ever fully be reached by all people. It seems that for every scientific study which appears to conclusively link power lines to various health issues, there&#8217;s another prominent health study which conclusively refutes it. Despite the fact that the &#8220;scientific research reports&#8221; that allege a real causal link between power line electro-magnetic field radiation and cancer afflictions only comprise about 10-20% of the total research, and a dominant 80% or so (based on my very rough fuzzy math estimates) refute a definitive link between the two, the &#8220;yes it causes cancer&#8221; crowd seems to win out in most debates, drowning out the rest &#8211; presumably through their ability to sway opinions through the use of emotional rhetoric and scare tactics.</p>
<p><strong>Is It Safe To Live Near Power Lines? Does EMF Radiation From PowerLines Cause Cancer?<br />
</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/electrical-power-lines-cloud-green-grass.jpg" alt="" width="125" height="110" />Power lines frequently generate intense opposition and heated protest &#8211; from homeowners to environmentalists &#8211; from power company authorities to even bloggers like yours truly. The responses are frequently conflicting and emotionally heated. The debate stems from the powerful but invisible electro-magnetic fields (EMF) generated by power lines as electricity is transmitted through them. Some say the magnetic waves corrupt DNA structures and contribute to the development of various cancers. Although these electrical magnetic fields are also generated by common house hold appliances such as TV&#8217;s, alarm clocks, cell phones, hair blow dryers, computers, can openers, and electric blankets, much of this debate tends to focus exclusively on high tension power lines and the gigantic pylon towers that support them in certain neighborhoods.</p>
<p>While it&#8217;s nearly impossible for me to discuss the entire scientific bases for the various conclusions out there, suffice it is to say &#8211; once you are able to discard the hype and hysteria, the general consensus by the most reputable sources do strongly suggest that currently, there is insufficient evidence to make the quantum leap that magnetic fields from power lines have the capacity to cause childhood leukemia, childhood brain tumors, or other cancers in children &#8211; and that presently, there is totally inadequate and inconsistent evidence to establish a relationship between power line fields and breast cancer or other forms of brain tumors in adults. This is not to suggest there is absolutely no possibility of a casual link between the two, but that the realm of verifiable data and research can not yet scientifically link the two as cause and effect.</p>
<p>Extensive research has been performed on the issue and major health organizations such as the National Cancer Institute, the National Research Council, and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) -  have all performed studies and looked at the available research &#8211; and opined that there is not conclusive evidence that EMF exposure poses a cancerous risk or that  residence near high voltage lines increases health risks. Authorities such as the NIH have noted that the available research, despite all of the inflammatory passions involved, fail to demonstrate that the levels of risk represent a real increase in cancer occurrences. Furthermore, such public health authorities have criticized the inflammatory research out there that report a causation link between powerline exposure and cancer, citing possible pervasive study biases stemming from the faulty selection of study subjects and failures to take into consideration other contributing factors such as poverty, nutrition, obesity, pure chance, and sample sizes based on volunteered opinions alone. Despite these authoritative findings, public hysteria will likely always remain &#8211; it&#8217;s just the infallibility of human nature.</p>
<p>New conflicting reports and absolutely contradicting updates by the media and various vested interests on both sides of the divide are constantly being disseminated every year on the supposed dangers of power lines, perpetually shaping the public&#8217;s emotional perception of the issue. However, if you really want to listen to the most authoritative voices on cancer research regarding EMF radiation fields, powerlines, and their effects on human children and adults, try reading the following online articles. Please let me know if there are any more <span style="text-decoration: underline;">authoritative</span> sources on the matter:</p>
<ol>
<li><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.niehs.nih.gov/health/topics/agents/emf/" target="_blank"><strong>Electric and Magnetic Fields</strong></a>: National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences</li>
<li><strong><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.hps.org/hpspublications/articles/powerlines.html" target="blank">Health Risks Associated With Living Near High Voltage Power Lines</a></strong>: Health Physics Society (July 2008)</li>
<li><strong><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.ct.gov/dph/lib/dph/environmental_health/eoha/pdf/emf_fact_sheet_-_2008.pdf" target="blank">Electric and Magnetic Fields (EMF): Health Concerns</a></strong>: Connecticut Department of Public Health (April 2008)</li>
<li><strong><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.epa.gov/radtown/power-lines.html" target="blank">Electric and Magnetic Fields (EMF) Radiation From Power Lines</a></strong>: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (May 2006)</li>
<li><strong><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs304/en/index.html" target="blank">Electromagnetic Fields and Public Health</a></strong>: World Health Organization (May 2006)</li>
<li><strong><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/factsheet/Risk/magnetic-fields" target="blank">Magnetic Fields Exposure and Cancer: Questions and Answers</a></strong>: National Cancer Institute, U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) (April 2005)</li>
<li><strong><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.aaronline.com/documents/ElectroMagFields.aspx" target="blank">Electromagnetic Fields Explained</a></strong>: Arizona Association of Realtors (2003)</li>
<li><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.aps.org/policy/statements/95_2.cfm" target="_blank"><strong>Power Line Fields and Public Health</strong></a>: American Physical Society (1995)</li>
</ol>
<p><strong><span>Effect Of Home&#8217;s Proximity To Power Lines On Future Resale Value</span></strong></p>
<p>Admittedly, regardless of the scientific research, people will always be scared of power lines. No matter what the government or health authorities tell the masses, and no matter what little concrete correlation there is with power lines and EMF induced cancers, it&#8217;s a virtual given that a vocal segment of the population will never be swayed and will forever regard power lines as instant cancer-causing implementations of electrical doom (laced with extra helpings of government cover ups). For property owners and real estate agents, this is what we call an unfortunate, but irremediable defect &#8211; something objectionable about a property that cannot be readily changed. Similar unchangeable defects would be living near railroad tracks, living near an expressway, or living within smelling distance of a waste treatment plant.</p>
<p>While it&#8217;s true that location in somewhat close proximity to power lines will diminish the overall buyer pool of individuals who would consider your home as a viable purchase (possibly turning off families with very small children perhaps), its desirably is also greatly influenced by other location factors as well. While there may not be a significant drop in property value in certain otherwise very desirable neighborhoods, there may be fewer buyers who will be willing to buy the house when you decide to resell it. Some may be paranoid of the potential health hazards, while others simply won&#8217;t be able to live with the prospect of having ugly power line towers as permanent ornaments of their neighborhood landscape. While obviously there will always remain an active market for these types of homes, some have suggested that the houses and condos located in close proximity to power lines and power line towers should expect a 1-2% price hit, while others have suggested higher discounts up to 5% or more. However, in my personal research of price comparables in various housing neighborhoods located near powerlines that I&#8217;ve sought out, I haven&#8217;t found that to be the case.</p>
<p>Remember, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">everyone has a price</span>. While off the cusp, I&#8217;m sure everyone will say that they would never purchase a home near a power line &#8211; if they were offered the opportunity to purchase a sprawling mansion for half the price of other comparable homes in the area, I&#8217;m sure they would feel differently. The fact that there are homes located near graveyards, cemeteries, nuclear power plants, prisons, and heavily trafficked highways show that everyone has a price. It just depends on how accurately a property&#8217;s price reflects all of the variables.</p>
<p><strong>Would I Personally Buy A House Located Near Power Lines?</strong></p>
<p>Yes, I would &#8211; assuming the home was properly priced, not located directly underneath the power lines, was not directly within view from the front or back of the home, and was sufficiently far enough to satisfy my own whims of prudent avoidance. In fact, I am currently faced with that decision right now, and I believe the answer is a resounding &#8211; yes. In the spirit of prudent avoidance, it also depends on how far the home is in relation to the nearest powerline pylon tower and proximately to the powerlines themselves. If my property or backyard directly touched the power line towers or if they ominously loomed over my property like hulking giants, that in of itself would probably be a deal killer for me.</p>
<p>While I personally believe the EMF health dangers of powerlines to be overblown and vastly exaggerated, I think it&#8217;s still wise to exercise a reasonable dose of paranoid caution. While I believe the direct connection between powerline EMF waves are extremely tenuous and not proven by available science, I still think it&#8217;s best to limit the distance between powerlines and one&#8217;s home &#8211; <span style="text-decoration: underline;">just in case</span>. Once again, this is simply prudent avoidance &#8211; as the possible dangers, no matter how miniscule or conceivably great, are so potentially devastating if ever found to be true. Besides, from a purely aesthetic point of view, who wants to stare at one of those ugly power line towers from either the front or back yard anyway? I think if the lines are only mere steps from you home or literally sitting in your backyard, this may be a concern. But if they are sufficiently far away in the distance, I think any potential health concerns would be greatly diminished.</p>
<p>So how close is it too close to be living near high tension power lines? Many power line researchers have pointed out that there is generally no serious cause for concern for homes located at least 300 feet away (roughly the length of a football field) from the nearest power line as EMF levels decrease rapidly and exponentially with distance from the lines. At this distance, the EMF levels from the lines are no different from the typical background levels found in most homes. If you are not certain about the EMF levels in or around your home, it&#8217;s best to contact your local power company and request an EMF reading. Many power companies will perform an EMF measurement for free, particularly if you are a prospective home buyer interested in a new housing development.<br />
<img class="aligncenter" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/power-lines-350-yards-away-photo.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="189" /></p>
<p>Just to get the opinion of readers, what do you think of the photographer&#8217;s proximity to the nearest power lines based on the photograph provided directly above? This is the approximate location of the housing lot I am currently considering as a prospective home buyer. The nearest power lines are about 350 yards away (more than 3 football lengths). In the photo provided, they perhaps appear larger than they ought to primarily because they are located on the top of a hill on a higher elevation, and there are no trees yet planted to obscure them as is usually the case in established old communities with power lines. Far enough to be objectively safe or still close enough to cause fear? What do you think?</p>
<p>
<br>

<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/buying-a-house-near-powerlines-do-power-lines-cause-cancer/">Buying A House Near PowerLines: Do Power Lines Cause Cancer?</a></b>
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Copyright Protected © 2009 <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com">Money Blue Book: Personal Finance Blog</a>. All Rights Reserved.
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		<title>How To Stop Receiving Paper Junk Mail and Save Trees</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-to-stop-receiving-paper-junk-mail-and-save-trees/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-to-stop-receiving-paper-junk-mail-and-save-trees/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2009 03:14:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Frugal Living]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Life]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organization]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.moneybluebook.com/?p=7562</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[After finally returning home from an extended three month overseas trip to spend time with my parents, I was greeted back home by an overweight mail box stuffed to the brim and absolutely overflowing with junk mail. Although I had authorized my mail to be temporarily redirected to my brother&#8217;s address while I was away, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/metal-trash-can-green-junk-mail-letters.jpg" alt="" width="115" height="114" />After finally returning home from an extended three month overseas trip to spend time with my parents, I was greeted back home by an overweight mail box stuffed to the brim and absolutely overflowing with junk mail. Although I had authorized my mail to be temporarily redirected to my brother&#8217;s address while I was away, a very great deal of unsolicited junk mailers, expired coupon booklets, and pre-approved credit card offers still mysteriously winded up in my inbox. All in all, the entire paper pile, weighing in excess of many pounds, ultimately found its way straight into my trash can in a matter of minutes &#8211; fulfilling its pointless life cycle as not only a complete waste of my personal time, but as a fruitless consumer of precious natural resources.</p>
<p><strong>Save The Environment and De-clutter Your Life By Reducing Junk Mail Trash<br />
</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/cupped-hands-with-baby-green-seed-plant-dirt.jpg" alt="" width="115" height="99" />According to online statistics from sources such as the Center for a New American Dream (CNAD), a non profit organization based in Maryland whose stated mission is to protect the environment by helping Americans develop sustainable consumption habits &#8211; simply by eliminating the amount of junk mail you receive every day can significantly reduce the amount of energy and natural resources you consume, as well as greatly reduce the landfill space usage and carbon footprint that you leave behind. For example, according to numbers provided by CNAD, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and various sources, did you know that:</p>
<ul>
<li>The average American household receives unsolicited junk mail equivalent to <strong>1.5 trees</strong> every year, which comes out to more than <strong>100 million trees</strong> for all U.S. households combined &#8211; the equivalent of deforesting the U.S. Rocky Mountain National Park every four months.</li>
<li><strong>5.4 million tons</strong> of bulk catalogs and other direct mailings wind up in the U.S. municipal solid waste stream every year &#8211; paper products which take as much energy to manufacture as 660,000 SUV&#8217;s consume in a single year, and not even including the energy needed to print and transport them all.</li>
<li>American consumers <strong>throw away 44%</strong> of bulk mail unopened, while <strong>recycling only 32%</strong> of all that bulk mail &#8211; spending the equivalent of <strong>8 months per lifetime</strong> opening junk mail letters and packages.</li>
<li>The process of manufacturing and recycling bulk paper parcels wastes more than 28 billion gallons of water every year.</li>
<li>Taxpayers spend more than <strong>$370 million every year</strong> just to collect and dispose of all the paper based junk mail that doesn’t get recycled.</li>
</ul>
<p>While I&#8217;m by no means a tree-hugging hippy, at some point the issue of junk mail just gets to become too much of a colossal waste of environmental resources, not to mention a tremendous mis-allocation of time and money that could be better spent elsewhere. It&#8217;s time for each of us to cut back on the number of postal junk mail that we receive. Together in aggregate, we can indeed make a huge positive difference in the world. Besides, reducing junk mail solicitations can also greatly help us <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/streamline-your-finances-and-make-your-life-easier-by-not-hoarding/"><strong>streamline and declutter</strong></a> our already complicated lives. Assuring that you only receive letters that are important to you, it also helps to reduce the chances that vital pieces of mail get lost in the shuffle amongst all of those weekly circulars, bulk catalogs, and credit card envelopes cramming up your mailbox.</p>
<p><strong>Protect Your Mailbox Privacy and Prevent Identity Theft By Being Pro-Active</strong></p>
<p>Because the whole concept of direct marketing is such an incredibly incentivized and lucrative business proposition for the mass mailing companies, it&#8217;s nearly impossible to stop the junk mail stream completely. Everytime you sign up for a new credit card, subscribe to a magazine, purchase an item from a catalog, donate money to a charity, fill out a product warranty card, or buy a new car &#8211; you are potentially offering up your name and address to the direct marketers. Not only do these casual exchanges have the potential to lead to more junk mail down the road if you allow your personal address to be used in that way, they are also breeding cesspools for potential identity fraud and privacy violations. To stem the flow requires a multi-pronged attack that entails that you not only take pro-active actions, but also adopt preventative measures. Remember, contrary to popular belief, there is no actual legal right to automatically opt out of all junk mail, however we do have the right to be free of unwanted solicitations once we&#8217;ve properly and duly notified the junk mail spammer.</p>
<p>For starters, I recommend that you not waste money on programs out there that purportedly offer to help you remove your name from the junk mail offers and mailing lists, as you can easily do it yourself for free and with minimal effort. But if you wish to automate the opt out process and perpetually keep yourself off such lists, you may wish to try out junk mail prevention services like <strong>Tonic Mail Stopper</strong> (formerly called Green Dimes). However, note that even with the use of online programs that automate the process, like trying to <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-to-kill-roaches-and-get-rid-of-a-home-cockroach-infestation/"><strong>get rid of roaches</strong></a>, there is just no easy way to permanently halt the unwelcome torrent of junk mail that surges into your mail box on a daily basis. The nearly unstoppable junk mail solicitations simply have an uncanny way of showing up even after you&#8217;ve seemingly snuffed them out at their source. Fortunately, there are strategies and tactful ways to combat the junk mail problem.</p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>Steps To Fight Back and Reduce The Junk Mail That You Receive</strong></p>
<p><strong>1) Remove Your Name From the Direct Marketing Association&#8217;s Mailing List</strong>: <img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/dma-direct-marketing-association-logo.jpg" alt="" width="120" height="59" />Consumers receive the vast majority of their unsolicited junk mail from just three sources: the DMA (advertising letters, flyers, and brochures), the Abacus Catalog Alliance (retail store and online catalogs), and the major credit report bureaus (credit card applications and insurance offers). If you do nothing else, I highly recommend that you at least take the time to visit the Direct Marketing Association&#8217;s <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.dmachoice.org" target="_blank"><strong>DMA Choice registration page</strong></a>, and get your name placed onto their do-not-mail list. DMA member merchants are required to update their mailing lists regularly and stop marketing to consumers that have opted out.</p>
<p>Getting onto the DMA do-no-mail list is one of the easiest things you can do to significantly reduce the junk mail that you receive. You will be able to remove your name and mailing address from the national mailing lists of a great number of direct marketing companies this way. While wiping your name and address from their roster is quick and easy, bear in mind that your online removal request is only valid for 3 years and you&#8217;ll have to re-register again after that time. There is absolutely no fee for online registration, but mail in submission requires a $1.00 check or money order processing charge.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Register Names Of Deceased: </strong>The Direct Marketing Association also gives friends, relatives, and caregivers the ability to remove the names of deceased family members and other individuals from commercial marketing lists via the association&#8217;s <strong><a rel="nofollow" href="https://preference.the-dma.org/cgi/ddnc.php" target="_blank">Deceased Do Not Contact</a></strong> (DDNC) registrar (no verification fee). I haven&#8217;t tried myself, but I wonder if it&#8217;s possible for very-much alive consumers to intentionally placed themselves onto the list and pretend to have died to rid themselves of junk mail. It&#8217;s worth a shot I suppose although I haven&#8217;t really thought out the potential consequences of such a creative approach. If you&#8217;ve placed yourself onto the Deceased Do Not Contact list before, please share your results!</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>2) Remove Your Name From the Epsilon Abacus Cooperative Mailing List</strong>: <img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/abacus-epsilon-targeting-logo.jpg" alt="" width="125" height="37" />Abacus, a division of Epsilon Data Services runs perhaps the largest database of mailing addresses out there for its members, mostly catalog and retail companies. Merchant members of the Abacus Cooperative contribute information about their customers and transactions  in exchange for information about other customers that may be interested in their products. As such, Abacus retains a pretty accurate database of consumer spending habits and personal contact information. Opting out is easy and signing up allows you to permanently halt the catalog mailers from the association&#8217;s members. Simply visit the <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.abacusoptout.com/" target="_blank"><strong>Abacus Opt Out</strong></a> page and follow the appropriate instructions, or e-mail abacusoptout@epsilon.com with your full name and current address to request permanent removal.</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/visa-american-express-mastercard-credit-cards-stacked-three.jpg" alt="" width="110" height="120" />3) Opt Out Of All Pre-Approved Credit Card Junk Mail</strong>: Visit <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.optoutprescreen.com" target="_blank"><strong>OptOutPrescreen.com</strong></a> to stem the flow of pre-approved credit card solicitations clogging up your mail box. The website is the official Consumer Credit Reporting Industry homepage to accept and process requests from consumers to opt-in or opt-out of firm offers of credit or insurance. Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), the credit reporting companies of Equifax, Experian, TransUnion, and even little known Innovis are permitted to include your name and address on marketing lists used by credit card issuers, mortgage brokers, and insurers to make offers of credit or insurance that are not necessarily initiated by you. However, they must also abide by your wish to opt out and put an end to these credit card pre-approvals if that is your wish. Simply visit the OptOutPrescreen.com website to get your name deleted from their lists for a period of 5 years or longer. If you desire permanent removal, simply select the mail-in option (I highly recommend this). To submit your request, you will need to provide your full name, mailing address, birth date, and social security number. Unfortunately, this service is not currently available for businesses or companies.</p>
<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/valpak-coupons-blue-envelope.jpg" alt="" width="120" height="108" /><strong>4) </strong><strong>Opt Out Of All Flyers, Brochures, and Coupon Packs: </strong>Some people like receiving weekly flyers and monthly coupon books filled with assorted promotional offers from local stores and companies. I on the other hand hate receiving them and regard them as junk mail. These types of bulk mail bundles generally involve envelopes containing a wide array of ads and coupons for locally based stores and services such as window replacement, carpet cleaning, air duct services, car washing, restaurants, and even promotional leaflets for various <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/the-monavie-acai-berry-super-fruit-juice-mona-vie-scam/"><strong>acai berry scams</strong></a>. I have yet to find any of these coupons useful.</p>
<p>Most of these coupon booklets are usually generically addressed to &#8220;current resident&#8221; or &#8220;current occupant&#8221; and sent out en masse with no personalization of any sort. They also frequently contain postcards with ads, often accompanied by pictures of missing children. In almost all cases, the name, phone number, and sometimes even the website address of the company that issued the junk mailer will be printed on the bulk mail package itself or on the accompanying card that contains your mailing address. Simply call or send a letter to the company directly to have your name and address taken off the bulk mailing list. For your reference, here are several of the biggest bulk coupon book marketing companies out there:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Valassis, aka. Red Plum Coupons:</strong> Get yourself removed from Valassis or Red Plum&#8217;s coupon book mailing list by filling out and submitting an opt out request at the <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.valassis.com/1024/Contact/contact_home.aspx" target="_blank"><strong>Valassis Consumer Support</strong></a> page, or by calling 1-888-241-6760. It takes about 5-6 weeks to process.</li>
<li><strong>Val Pak Savings Coupons:</strong> You can opt out of Val-Pak&#8217;s ubiquitous blue envelope packs by visiting the <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.coxtarget.com/mailsuppression/s/DisplayMailSuppressionForm" target="_blank"><strong>Cox Target Media</strong></a> mailing list removal request page. Be sure to input your address information exactly as it is printed on your ValPak envelope to ensure proper removal.</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>5) Ask Magazines and Charities Not To Sell Your Name Or Address:</strong> Tell magazines that you subscribe to and charities that you donate to the magic words &#8211; that you don&#8217;t want them to &#8220;<em>sell, rent, share, or trade your name and address</em>&#8221; with other businesses or charity organizations. <strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>6) Remove Yourself From Sweepstakes and Prize Drawings</strong>: The chances of ever winning are incredibly slim and not worth the hassle of having to deal with future junk mail solicitations. Besides, the main purpose of these contests and reward promotions is for companies to compile mailing lists of prospective customers, not to award prizes. Always avoid participating in any such offers unless you have the option, based on contest rules, to completely opt out of being placed on a mailing list. To get yourself removed from the major sweepstakes and prevent your address from being passed on to other companies for the purpose of receiving future marketing offers, contact the following:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Publishers Clearinghouse Sweepstakes: </strong>Call: 1-800-645-9242 or e-mail privacychoices@pchmail.com</li>
<li><strong>Readers Digest Sweepstakes:</strong> Call 1-800-310-6261 or send a letter request to Reader&#8217;s Digest customer service at: Reader&#8217;s Digest, PO Box 50005, Prescott, AZ 86301-5005</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>7) Avoid Filling Out Product Warranty Or Buyer Registration Cards:</strong> Contrary to popular belief, those product warranty registration cards that come with the products you buy have less to do with warranty coverage than they have to do with allowing the company to update their mailing lists. A product warranty is effective the moment you purchase the product and is almost always valid whether or not you return the product warranty card (as long as you have a proper receipt). You may have noticed that many of these registration cards frequently ask for lifestyle and personal interest hobby type information, along with details about your household makeup, your income bracket, and other seemingly irrelevant data. This is to allow the company to better categorize you into the proper demographic list for future marketing solicitations, and has little to do with the underlying warranty.</p>
<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/return-to-sender-junk-mail-label-red.jpg" alt="" width="120" height="85" /><strong>8) Refuse To Accept Junk Mail By Returning To Sender: </strong>Here&#8217;s a tip to combat against other unsolicited junk mail offers not covered by the items listed above. When junk letters arrive in envelopes that specifically indicate &#8220;change service requested&#8221; or &#8220;address service requested&#8221;, it means that you can refuse to receive the letter and have it returned to the sender on demand. Simply write &#8220;<em>Refused &#8211; Return To Sender</em>&#8221; or &#8220;<em>Return To Sender &#8211; Refused By Addressee</em>&#8221; on the envelope and drop it unopened back into the outgoing mailbox to have it sent back to the sender. In most cases, this will cause the sender to remove the address from its bulk mailing list. Additionally for such letters or bulk mailers where there is indication on the face that return postage is guaranteed, you may also wish to write &#8220;Remove me from your mailing list immediately&#8221; on the face of the envelope to punctuate your point. Remember, all such returned letters to the sender must be unopened so be certain of the nature of the contents before rejecting them.</p>
<p><strong>9) Beware Of The U.S. Postal Service&#8217;s Change of Address Cards:</strong> One of the biggest and sneakiest secret of all &#8211; is that the United States Postal Service is perhaps one of the biggest exploiters of your mailing information out there. The Post Office generates a very large amount of income from selling the mail forwarding database that it regularly updates. Every time you move and fill out one of those permanent change of address cards or mail forwarding forms at the Post Office, your new mailing address information is almost always immediately offered to prospective direct mail marketers for a price. I&#8217;ve tried contacting the post office to compel them to stop giving out my new addresses to companies &#8211; but it&#8217;s been a pretty futile gesture on my part.</p>
<p>One way to get around this is to submit a temporary change of address for a long period of time such as 6 months. Your new address information is not passed along to businesses for temporary moves, only permanent ones. If you are willing to manually contact all of the legitimate companies that you do business with or have accounts with to advise them of your new permanent address change, this is one way to prevent the Post Office from updating the junk mail marketers of your new location. Of course, make sure all of your friends, relatives, and bill collectors know of your new address.</p>
<p>For consumers who wish to forcibly stop the flood of sexually explicit mail to their residence, one way is to submit a <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.usps.com/forms/_pdf/ps1500.pdf" target="_blank"><strong>USPS Form 1500</strong></a> (Prohibitory Order Application), which notifies the senders to cease and desist their mailers to you. I have yet to hear of anyone using this powerful tool to stop an overly aggressive (but non-sexually based) bulk mailing company&#8217;s marketing attempts, but it certainly is another potential way to discourage junk mail companies from cluttering up your mailbox.</p>
<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/your-mailbox-just-got-greener-estatements.jpg" alt="" width="120" height="88" /><strong>10) Opt For Electronic Statements, and Stop Receiving Paper Bills:</strong> It&#8217;s time for everyone to join the modern era and put an end to paper statements by <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/stop-writing-checks-and-start-banking-online-to-avoid-identity-theft/"><strong>banking online</strong></a> and accessing their monthly bills and statements via the Internet. Not only do paper statements generate an inordinate amount of trash and clutter, these paper based bills are yet another opportunity for businesses to send you more junk through the mail. Contact your banks, credit card issuers, insurance companies, and utility providers &#8211; and sign up for automatic debit payments and electronic billing as soon as possible. Along with the reduction in clutter and paper usage, you&#8217;ll also save a lot of money on stamps by <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/get-organized-and-more-efficient-by-going-paperless/"><strong>going paperless</strong></a>.</p>
<p>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-to-stop-receiving-paper-junk-mail-and-save-trees/">How To Stop Receiving Paper Junk Mail and Save Trees</a></b>
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		<title>Second Stimulus Check For Obama 2009 Economic Stimulus Package?</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/second-stimulus-check-for-obama-2009-economic-stimulus-package/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/second-stimulus-check-for-obama-2009-economic-stimulus-package/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Feb 2009 09:08:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tax]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.moneybluebook.com/?p=4585</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Tax Cuts, Social Spending, and New Jobs &#8211; But What About Stimulus Checks?
A second economic stimulus package for 2009 is on the way and from the looks of things in the news, it appears newly minted President Barack H. Obama and his Democrat controlled House of Representatives and U.S. Senate are determined to ram the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Tax Cuts, Social Spending, and New Jobs &#8211; But What About <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Stimulus Checks</span>?</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/2009-obama-second-economic-stimulus-check-with-dollar-bills.jpg" alt="" width="140" height="102" />A second economic stimulus package for 2009 is on the way and from the looks of things in the news, it appears newly minted President Barack H. Obama and his Democrat controlled House of Representatives and U.S. Senate are determined to ram the lucrative spending proposals through the legislative meat grinder no matter what, much to the chagrin of skeptical and deficit-weary Congressional Republicans.</p>
<p>As Congress debates the wisdom and intricate details of the current version of the 2009 economic stimulus package, it&#8217;s clear that something needs to be done very soon to jumpstart and save our suffering economy before we spiral into a full blown economic depression. The unemployment rate is rising fast and everywhere you turn, there seems to be a never ending stream of unemployment and layoff news being announced everyday. The stock market has already shed more than half of its value since its peak in 2007, and billions to trillions of dollars worth of wealth have already been eliminated from the economy. Major banks and financial giants like Citibank, Bank of America, and JP Morgan Chase, once the financial pillars of our economy and the lifeblood of our credit industry, are now clinging onto U.S. government bailout money for dear life &#8211; hoping to still be in business at the end of every quarter.</p>
<p>With its almost limitless resources, it&#8217;s clear the federal government must intervene somehow and put this broken economy and financial system back on track to prosperity. But the question is &#8211; what should be the government&#8217;s role in all of this? More specially, <strong>what method should the government take to effectively jump start the economy to life again</strong> and ease the suffering on Main Street and Wall Street? Should the 2nd economic stimulus package continue to focus directly on sparking consumer spending by featuring a second round of free stimulus checks to consumers &#8211; perhaps for amounts much higher than the previous 2008 economic stimulus checks? Or should the plan this time around focus more on longer term indirect measures like job creation, infrastructure investment, and tax credits?</p>
<p><strong>Current 2009 Economic Stimulus Package Focuses Less On Stimulus Checks &#8211; And More On Job Creation, Infrastructure Projects, and Tax Cuts</strong></p>
<p><strong></strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/president-obama-with-mic-and-big-presidential-seal-in-background.jpg" alt="" width="130" height="98" />Before Barack Obama was elected president and during his 2008 Presidential election campaign, he supported implementing additional economic stimulus measures in 2009 &#8211; and even whispered at the rumored possibility of a second round of stimulus checks for taxpaying consumers in 2009 before tax day.</p>
<p>Whether a second stimulus check was a real possibility or not, the mere mention of a second round of stimulus payments and the prospect of getting more free government money certainly made my greedy ears perk up, but much of my optimism and enthusiasm were quickly dashed when Obama finally came into power. Almost immediately, he signaled a different stimulus proposal shift that favored a more multi-pronged approach of using tax cuts, tax credits, and pet projects, rather than relying on the <strong><a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/breaking-down-the-details-of-the-2008-economic-stimulus-plan-and-your-tax-rebate-check/">2008 economic stimulus check</a> </strong>tactics of his predecessor, George W. Bush. Instead of just distributing free bailout money to the masses and hoping the funds will naturally trigger a huge surge in consumer spending activity to put the economy back on its feet again, Obama&#8217;s stimulus package focuses more on middle class tax cuts and massive increases in government spending to fund various infrastructure investments, green energy projects, financial aid to states, and social education initiatives &#8211; designed to create jobs and put people back to work.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="aligncenter" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/obama-cnn-2009-stimulus-plan-infrastructure-state-relief-safety-net-tax-cuts.jpg" alt="" width="409" height="190" /></p>
<p>The current 2nd economic stimulus plan laid down by President Obama for 2009 is a whopping, super-sized <strong>$825 billion economic rescue package</strong> containing staggering spending initiatives and ambitious tax cuts, and sprinkled with dozens of pork-based proposals and suspect social initiatives within hundreds of pages of legislation. The current package contains $300 billion worth of aggressive construction projects designed to improve the country&#8217;s  infrastructure and create millions of new artificially generated jobs in areas like health care, renewable green energy, school upgrades and repairs, and transportation related improvements. The package also contains about $200 billion worth of state social assistance provisions designed to help keep state sponsored health and unemployment programs well funded &#8211; to offer a measure of cushion for those people who have been recently laid off due to the economic down turn. Along with the state assistance portion are other safety net type provisions to help fund and keep afloat local food stamp programs, food banks, state sponsored health care, and governmental health insurance plans for those suddenly unemployed.</p>
<p>The other primary feature of the current Obama economic stimulus plan is the series of tax cuts and tax credits offered to qualifying individuals and small businesses. Under the tax cut portion of the stimulus deal, small businesses suffering losses because of the economic downturn and recession would receive more favorable tax loss write off terms.</p>
<p>For individuals, the current 2009 economic stimulus package offers pretty generous tax cutting proposals. The plan highly favors low and middle-income working families since the idea is that these income groups are more likely to spend and invest their tax savings rather than save the money. In terms of stimulating the economy, increased consumer spending is good, and consumer saving is bad. Nicknamed the &#8220;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://money.cnn.com/2009/01/28/news/economy/deloitte_tax_savings/index.htm?postversion=2009012814" target="_blank"><strong>Make Work Pay Credit</strong></a>&#8221; by President Obama, the proposed tax credit is supposed to reach close to 95% of workers, and benefit even working tax filers without any tax liability &#8211; typically very low income workers. Here is a basic overview of the stimulus plan&#8217;s Make Work Pay Credit:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Middle Class Tax Credit</strong>: Under the plan, there would be a tax cut amounting to $500 a year for individuals, and $1,000 for couples. The economic stimulus would be issued in the form of a tax credit, and would be limited to those making $75,000 or less ($150,000 or less for married workers filing joint tax returns).</li>
<li><strong>Low Income Tax Credit:</strong> For low income taxpayers, there would be an increase and expansion of the Earned Income Tax Credit to provide a refundable tax credit for low income assistance. The expansion would affect even working tax filers without any actual net tax liability &#8211; typically very low-income workers &#8211; and allow them to potentially qualify for free stimulus tax refund credits.</li>
<li><strong>Child Tax Credit:</strong> For those who have children, a temporary increase in the child tax credit would result in larger tax refunds.</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Should The 2009 Economic Stimulus Plan Be Re-Written Or Re-Packaged To Contain Major Provisions For A Second Economic Stimulus Check?</strong></p>
<p><strong></strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/holding-onto-a-wad-full-of-green-dollar-bills-with-rubber-band.jpg" alt="" width="140" height="113" />It&#8217;s too bad the eventual 2009 stimulus plan probably won&#8217;t contain another round of hefty stimulus check payments to ordinary consumers like the ones that were dished out last year. While the 2008 stimulus tax rebate wasn&#8217;t much (only a few hundred dollars in my case), some additional government handouts in higher dollar denominations would still have been greatly appreciated by individuals like myself and put to good use. Plus, as an American consumer who embraces the virtues of capitalism, I feel I would have made a better decision for myself as to how best spend my portion of the stimulus money pursuant to what&#8217;s in my own best capitalist self interest.</p>
<p>Overall, I think President Obama&#8217;s administration is <strong>probably right</strong> in its revised efforts to <strong>focus more on job creation, offering greater tax cuts, and enhancing safety net protections</strong> to help suffering Americans survive the economic downturn for the long term. Offering greater financial assistance to struggling state unemployment programs (many on them on the verge of running out of funds), and stimulating growth with more job building projects is a proven way to stabilize the markets and improve consumer sentiment. However, I&#8217;m still a bit disappointed that the President and Congress have not explored the prospect of an enhanced second stimulus check further.</p>
<p>At least for now, President Obama&#8217;s administration seems to have given up on the idea of using government stimulus checks en masse again to jump start the economy. Instead, Obama&#8217;s advisers have indicated that they would prefer searching for viable ways to get government stimulus money into the hands of American taxpayers quickly <strong>that would not require or duplicate the tax rebate checks of last year</strong>. Apparently the $150 billion spent in 2008 in the form of stimulus payments to consumers proved to be quite an economic failure and pointless exercise of futility in terms of actually stimulating the economy to any extended degree. <span style="text-decoration: underline;">But</span> perhaps the reason it didn&#8217;t work properly the first time around was because too little money was given out to substantially change consumer spending habits to forcibly inject money back into the economy again (simply compare the $150 billion spent last year to the $800 billion-plus worth of spending being proposed for 2009).</p>
<p><strong>Perhaps The Problem With The First Stimulus Checks In 2008 Was That They Were Too Little To Make Much Of An Impact</strong></p>
<p><strong></strong></p>
<p>I have mixed feelings about the prospect of yet another around of direct stimulus checks to consumers. On one hand, I understand that there are many struggling American families getting hammered by higher living  costs, and suffering from the ills of unemployment and layoffs. However, I&#8217;m not entirely convinced that the idea of handing out free money to families will really solve all of our economic woes and jump start the economy at its core. But yet I still wonder if perhaps we gave up on the idea of stimulus checks too early and that maybe, the concept is still workable. Maybe the amounts issued in 2008 were simply to small to change anyone&#8217;s spending habits as initially intended &#8211; after all, only about $150 billion was spent in 2008, when the current 2009 economic stimulus proposal&#8217;s already ballooned to a whopping $850 billion.</p>
<p>I know when I received my tax rebate stimulus check in early 2008, the check only amounted to a few hundred paltry dollars &#8211; not really enough for me to go on a greedy spending spree. So instead of spending it and doing my part to stimulate the economy, I ended up doing what most people probably ended up doing with their tax rebate check &#8211; putting the money in a bank and depositing it into a <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/the-best-online-high-yield-savings-accounts/"><strong>high yield savings account</strong></a>. Of course, my plans for the money would likely have been very different if the amount wasn&#8217;t something low like $300, $600, or $1,200, but rather something as high as $10,000. If the stimulus check issued to me was indeed worth upwards of $10,000, I would very likely have saved a small portion of it but ended up plowing a sizable portion back into the economy by spending it on major expenditures like a new wide screen plasma TV set, new home appliances, or even a new car.</p>
<p><strong>What If The <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Entire</span> Economic Stimulus Bailout Package Went Towards 2nd Stimulus Check Payments? Would This Actually Stimulate The Economy?</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/uncle-sam-red-white-blue-top-hat-dollar-bills-falling-out-from-bottom.jpg" alt="" width="115" height="142" />Almost all polls among ordinary American consumers show overwhelming support for a second stimulus rebate check. After all, who would really oppose it? Who would be opposed to receiving free stimulus check money. Think the prospect of getting a second stimulus check worth as high as $10,000 as a consumer bailout is impossible? Well it&#8217;s probably unlikely, but it&#8217;s not out of the realm of financial or budgetary possibility, at least based on the fiscal numbers alone.</p>
<p>On <a rel="nofollow" href="http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2009/news/0901/gallery.money_summit/index.html" target="_blank"><strong>CNN Money</strong></a>, a very interesting question was proposed in regards to the bank bailout and economic stimulus packages. If instead of bailing out these credit crisis-stricken banks (who probably deserve their fates due to the risky mortgage bets they greedily placed into subprime loans), we just gave all of the bailout money to taxpayers in the form of a massive consumer cash stimulus. How much would we each get if the entire current economic stimulus proposals were issued out to consumers as a second round of stimulus check payments? The second important question to ask is &#8211; would this actually stimulate the economy for the necessary extended period of time to get it going again?</p>
<p>To arrive at the figure, CNN Money took the total amount of the bank bailout package of $700 billion and added that to the proposed 2009 economic stimulus spending estimation at the time of $819 billion &#8211; resulting in a total bailout package of $1.519 trillion (that is quite a staggering figure). Dividing that number by 156.3 million, the total number of U.S. workers who filed federal income tax returns in 2008, that number equaled $9,718.49 per U.S. taxpayer, or roughly the equivalent of a juicy $10,000 cash bailout payment for each qualified tax payer. Now that&#8217;s stimulus with oomph! With $10,000 in our pockets in the form of instant windfall economic stimulus checks, it&#8217;s very likely that the tremendously high amount would be sufficient to incite a major change in spending activity than a measly $600 check ever could.  People would probably go out and actually start stimulating the economy by buying cars, purchasing TV&#8217;s, paying for college studies, and going on vacations.</p>
<p>As a dose of devil&#8217;s advocate inspired reality though, while it&#8217;s very possible that $10,000 checks in every working taxpayer&#8217;s hands would probably send the economy skyrocketing, it&#8217;s also possible the growth could be short lived and not actually get to the true root of our current economic problems. The massive surge in consumer spending probably won&#8217;t do much to solve the lingering fundamental issues surrounding our current credit crisis, which centers around a failed banking system and a failed home mortgage lending market. But then if repairing the banks and injecting confidence back into our home mortgage and credit lending markets are our primary objectives &#8211; I&#8217;m not sure the current economic stimulus proposals by President Obama, which are focused more on tax cuts and job creation and most prominently, aggressive social spending programs &#8211; will actually accomplish those goals. At least for stimulus checks, they could be able to help alleviate some of the immediate economic suffering being felt by ordinary consumers &#8211; many of whom are fighting to stay alive, with a great deal currently resorting to desperate emergency fund measures like 0% credit card offers, <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/0-balance-transfer-credit-cards/"><strong>balance transfers</strong></a>, and risky high interest <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/the-benefits-and-dangers-of-payday-loans-and-cash-advance/"><strong>payday loans</strong></a>.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m curious as to everyone&#8217;s opinion on the wisdom of a second stimulus check (if it ever happened). <strong>What&#8217;s your take?</strong> Would substantially higher stimulus checks of $1,000, or possibly even as high as $10,000, actually encourage you to spend the money (thereby stimulating the economy) instead of merely saving the amount or using it to pay down debt? How would your decision compare to how you actually spent your previous 2008 tax rebate stimulus check?</p>
<p>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/second-stimulus-check-for-obama-2009-economic-stimulus-package/">Second Stimulus Check For Obama 2009 Economic Stimulus Package?</a></b>
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		<title>The MonaVie Acai Berry Super Fruit Juice &#8211; Mona Vie Scam?</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/the-monavie-acai-berry-super-fruit-juice-mona-vie-scam/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/the-monavie-acai-berry-super-fruit-juice-mona-vie-scam/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Dec 2008 04:13:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Health]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Make Money]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.moneybluebook.com/?p=3501</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Review of MonaVie and The Acai Berry Fruit Juice Company&#8217;s Health and Marketing Claims
MonaVie. Mona Vie. The word actually sounds like a spin off of some french phrase (mon ami), but when I hear the name, two things immediately come to mind &#8211; acai berry juice and multi level marketing pyramid scheme. The MLM business [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Review of MonaVie and The Acai Berry Fruit Juice Company&#8217;s Health and Marketing Claims</strong></p>
<p><a rel="nofollow" href="http://rover.ebay.com/rover/1/711-53200-19255-0/1?type=3&amp;campid=5335816054&amp;toolid=10001&amp;customid=&amp;ext=monavie&amp;satitle=monavie" target="_blank"><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/monavie-bottle-types-green-purple-big-small.jpg" alt="" width="100" height="150" /></a>MonaVie. Mona Vie. The word actually sounds like a spin off of some french phrase (mon ami), but when I hear the name, two things immediately come to mind &#8211; acai berry juice and multi level marketing pyramid scheme. The MLM business scheme or pyramid marketing concept usually elicits a series of red alert alarm bells in my brain&#8217;s BS scam detector, however, I&#8217;m willing to take a closer look at MonaVie before rendering my personal critique and verdict. After having tried out and actually tasted the MonaVie acai berry fruit drink, I have to admit, it&#8217;s a rather sweet and tasty beverage &#8211; sort of a crisp combination of grape juice, blue berries, black berries, and a hint of dark chocolate. There&#8217;s not much negative commentary I can sling at the MonaVie product in terms of taste alone, but the outrageously expensive price tag and the rather suspicious marketing approach of the company leave much to be desired.</p>
<p>As an ordinary American consumer and a casual observer, I&#8217;m not sure what to make of this whole MonaVie acai berry fruit juice craze that seems to be sweeping the health and fitness world. The product&#8217;s been featured on the Food Network and on daytime talk shows for women like the Rachel Ray show, and eagerly touted by popular television hosts like Oprah Winfrey as the ultimate nectar of the gods. At least several medical commentators have appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show recently to promote the acai berry as an invaluable source of super food nutrients and as a magical method to promote youth and bodily rejuvenation. While most of the on-air health commentators were on the Oprah show to promote their individual books, even Oprah herself seemed to jump on the acai berry bandwagon, endorsing the nutritional claims of the tiny purple berry in her own boisterous way.</p>
<p><a rel="nofollow" href="http://rover.ebay.com/rover/1/711-53200-19255-0/1?type=3&amp;campid=5335816054&amp;toolid=10001&amp;customid=&amp;ext=monavie&amp;satitle=monavie" target="_blank"><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/oprah-rachel-ray-boston-red-sox-owen-wilson-and-mona-vie-acai-bottles.jpg" alt="" width="105" height="371" /></a>And it&#8217;s not just celebrity women either (who in my sexist opinion tend to be very ultra health conscious). Even celebrity guys seem to be getting in on the acai super fruit craze as well. There are numerous photos floating around on the internet of well known celebrities (both male and female) photographed with  their MonaVie acai juice bottles. I&#8217;ve seen hip hop stars and motor sport athletes on MTV&#8217;s Cribs show opening up their refrigerator doors for the camera to proudly display their prized rows of ultra-expensive MonaVie branded acai juice bottles. To top it off, when the Boston Red Sox won the Major League Baseball World Series in 2007, you even had several pitchers and players publicly thanking the Mona Vie company and attributing their athletic success to the seemingly magical healing powers of the MonaVie acai berry drink. When professional athletes who have just won the most competitive pinnacle award of their profession celebrate their triumph by giving a ringing endorsement of a particular enhancement product, citing the competitive advantages it allegedly provided their bodies through the grueling eight month long baseball season, I definitely take notice. However at the same time, my curiosity is greatly tempered with a strong dose of skepticism and suspicion at the celebrity&#8217;s personal motivations for such a resounding product recommendation &#8211; and I find myself wondering if the celebrity was partly motivated by financial considerations.</p>
<p>Without a doubt, MonaVie is a popular and highly promoted superfruit juice product, frequently mentioned in popular entertainment and athletic circles among the rich and trendy. It also has a strong growing presence online and on TV, but then again, so do many of the numerous get rich quick schemes and snake oil scams out there, featuring all types of facial cleaning products and useless weight loss shakes and pills. All such popular products have their own legion of compensated celebrities ready to help make the sales pitch and enthusiastically promote the product to the audience. Just because a product is heavily marketed and seems popular does not make it legit. Thus I wanted to take a more objective look into the MonaVie product itself, its health claims, and its marketing approach to decipher for myself the legitimacy of the brand. My primary goal is to answer these series of questions &#8211; Is MonaVie a scam? Does MonaVie acai juice berry drinks actually provide the health benefits re-soundly touted by its army of rabid distributors? And finally, is MonaVie a product I would actually purchase and consume for myself as an average, everyday mildly health conscious consumer?</p>
<p><strong>The MonaVie Acai Berry Juice Product<br />
</strong></p>
<p>MonaVie is a fruit juice drink made up of a blend of 19 different fruits. In a nut shell, it&#8217;s like Odwalla or Naked branded smoothie drinks &#8211; except the drink is marketed as an acai berry product and it comes in a fancy looking wine bottle to give it allure. While the company refuses to disclose the actual numbers detailing individual juice makeup, it eagerly markets the fruit juice cocktail as some type of specially formulated super fruit juice, citing its composition of acai berries for its supposed magical ability to cure all sorts of physical and mental ailments. While the company does not expressly state that the MonaVie acai berry juice drink is capable of amazing healing properties, that is the marketing direction the company seems to strongly hint at. Obviously due to legality reasons, MonaVie can&#8217;t officially claim its juice drink to be a health elixir, but it sure seems like it unofficially wants to based on the promotional dance it&#8217;s constantly engaging in.</p>
<p>Inside of its fruit juice drinks, MonaVie lists as one of its primary ingredients &#8211; the acai berry (pronounced ah-sai-ee) &#8211; a small purple black fruit about an inch in size and produced from the acai palm tree in the Amazon of Brazil. Through its network of distributors, the MonaVie company promotes the message that its unique acai berry juice blend contains many of the antioxidant related health benefits associated with the acai berry and other special fruits. Supposedly, these super fruits are packed with powerful nutrients and antioxidant compounds that uniquely protect the body’s cells from damage and disease, boost the immune system, and slow down the otherwise inevitable process of aging. However, much of the alleged health benefits of MonaVie and the extent of the nutritional value of acai have been called into constant debate and frequently questioned by naysayers that cast suspicion at what exactly is contained in MonaVie and the extent of its alleged nutritional value if any. Certainly, the company&#8217;s reluctance to share detailed information about the specific acai berry concentration found in its bottles and its mysterious refusal to reveal detailed proportional make up of how the  fruit juices in the MonaVie blend are made up continue to fuel discussions abut the health claims made by the product&#8217;s distributors.</p>
<p><strong>Monavie Acai Is Sold Exclusively Via A Questionable Multi Level Direct Sales Approach (AKA Pyramid Scheme)</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/pyramid-green-symbol-on-the-back-of-the-dollar-bill.jpg" alt="" width="105" height="107" />Mona Vie acai juice drinks are not available in traditional supermarket chains or grocery stores like Safeway, Kroger, or Wegmans, and they&#8217;re not even available via specialty health minded retailers like Whole Foods or Trader Joe&#8217;s. You definitely won&#8217;t find the company&#8217;s products at discounters like Walmart or Costco &#8211; no, the MonaVie company shuns the traditional sales outlets in favor of a more personalized and almost cult like marketing approach.</p>
<p>MonaVie was launched in January 2005 by a long time direct sales marketing veteran and since then, the company has relied exclusively on a multi level marketing strategy to promote and sell its expensive juice drinks. For all intents and purposes, the company&#8217;s more of a powerful marketing machine than a health food provider. Certainly there may be substantially better fruit juice products out there at much cheaper prices, but frankly, and somewhat commendably, MonaVie does a pretty powerful job of hyping and cleverly convincing health fanatics that they absolutely must drink this product everyday to live their lives to the fullest.</p>
<p>By tapping into a sales stream that takes advantage of trusted personal relationships to generate sales, the company has become wildly successful &#8211; at least on the sales side. Those unfamiliar with multi level marketing (MLM) may be more familiar with its common nickname &#8211; the pyramid scheme. A MLM or pyramid scheme relies on a direct sales technique based on a relationship referral business model whereby trusted people are the engine components that drive the commission based sales. Whenever a sale is made, a lofty commission is paid out, not only to you (the person who made the sale), but also to the person who referred you into the marketing program as well as to the person who referred your direct referrer &#8211; hence the pyramid nature of the arrangement. Because these multi level marketing programs are so potentially lucrative for those at the top of the pyramid (the upline), the system strongly encourages and incentivizes participants to zealously promote the product and heavily recruit new entrants into the program (the downline) to further earn sales and commissions for those on the up line.</p>
<p>Now, the one thing that must be made clear is that <strong>not all multi level marketing programs or pyramid schemes are inherently evil or illegal</strong>. Not all pyramid schemes are blatant scams or disreputable shell games the same way that Ponzi Schemes are. In fact, there are many otherwise thinly legitimate multi level marketing programs out there such as Amway, Avon, Mary Kay, Herbalife, Tupperware, and all sorts of online affiliate programs. However, many of these MLM based companies suffer from the same stigma and questionable scrutiny that MonaVie faces as well. While not outright frauds or <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-i-got-scammed-by-a-seller-on-alibaba/"><strong>scams</strong></a> like the way <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/nigerian-419-scams-and-spam-emails-are-funny-but-they-make-me-paranoid/"><strong>Nigerian 419 scams</strong></a> are for example, the same scammy concerns arise because many of these MLM programs really only benefit those at the top of the marketing pyramid and often encourage overzealous sales techniques that frequently lead to almost predatory recruiting tactics and pitches. Oftentimes as well, many of these MLM programs demand contractually obligated sales quotas that members must satisfy every month or face having to purchase the products themselves to meet the sales quota requirement. In the case of MonaVie&#8217;s contractually obligated arrangement for wannabe new distributors into the program, new entrants are obligated to buy at least 4 bottles a month of the pricey acai berry juice. They don&#8217;t come cheap and failure to sell enough bottles every month will require that the distributor contractually purchase the required quota for personal use.</p>
<p>As noted by an investigative <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.newsweek.com/id/150499/page/1" target="_blank"><strong>news article from Newsweek</strong></a>, according to income disclosures, most of the million strong sales team of MonaVie appear to be really just drinking the juice themselves rather than selling them as originally intended. More than 90% of supposed distributors of MonaVie are actually considered wholesale customers, whose earnings were mostly discounts on sales to themselves. Remarkably according to the article, fewer than 1% of the MonaVie marketing pyramid&#8217;s sales people qualified for commissions and of those, only 10% made more than $100 a week. The Newsweek article even goes on to state that according to a top MonaVie recruiter, while obviously not disclosed by the company, the MonaVie multi level marketing program&#8217;s drop out rate&#8217;s around 70%. It&#8217;s certainly a fascinating tidbit to keep in mind as you ponder the question of whether MonaVie&#8217;s a scam. While <strong>I personally don&#8217;t think MonaVie is a scam</strong> as they do offer an otherwise legitimate fruit juice product, the acai juice company sure has rather unsavory fringe elements to it.</p>
<p>In regards to the secret world of direct sales and pyramid marketing, I had my first negative exposure to MLM programs when I was recruited by a company called Vector Marketing to sell Cutco branded knives back when I was just an 18 year old high school student. For some odd reason, many fellow high school students such as myself were targeted with elaborate marketing sales pitches by Vector Marketing recruiters to become trained in the art of tapping personal relationships to sell ridiculously and insanely overpriced Cutco steak knives to our friends and family members. Obviously, our recruiters were eager to train us into becoming their commission earning downline so that they could profit from our sales as our upline referrals. While the Cutco knives we lugged around and sold were of obvious high quality, they were no where even close to being worth the exorbitant price demanded of each individual cutlery. Quality is one thing, but they were and to this very day, are still vastly overpriced. While I was able to tap into my personal relationships and beg a few neighbors to shell out hundreds of dollars for a few knives out of pity, I remember always feeling extremely scammy and sleazy during my rehearsed sales pitches to supposed loved ones. As a mere 18 year old at the time, I wasn&#8217;t too fond of  having to take advantage of my close relationships for financial gain. There was nothing illegal or deliberately evil about the whole sales system, but the whole multi level marketing approach simply felt shady and rather manipulative to me.</p>
<p><strong>Mova Vie Is Extremely Expensive and Overpriced Despite Its Alleged Acai Berry Health Properties<br />
</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/purple-acai-berries-faded-background.jpg" alt="" width="110" height="110" />The MonaVie acai berry juice product is not cheap. In fact it&#8217;s downright expensive &#8211; ridiculously overpriced at astronomically rip off levels if you ask me. A single MonaVie juice bottle will cost you $30-$40 per bottle, for a little more than 25 fluid ounces of the fruit berry mixture. According to the promotional material, to fully appreciate the nutritional benefits of acai berry juicing, you&#8217;re supposed to drink at least 2 fluid ounces of the purple stuff in the morning, and another 1 ounce at night. At the rate suggested by the MonaVie company, a single bottle will last you about a week. At $30-40 a bottle, that comes out to $120-$160 a month, and $1,440-$1,920 a year. Unless you are swimming in money and flush with dollars like the professional athletes or financially well off  like celebrities Oprah Winfrey or Rachel Ray, chances are, you&#8217;re going to find regular consumption of this product to be well beyond your financial means. The lucrative price of each expensive bottle of Mona Vie can probably be traced back to the high cost of commission maintenance that must be paid out to the entire pyramid marketing chain upon each sale.</p>
<p>Because of the multi level marketing nature and aggressive direct sales promotional tactics of MonaVie distributors, a wide array of ridiculous health and nutritional claims seem to have blanketed the internet. Sometimes it&#8217;s a little difficult figuring out which writer is trustworthy and which one is blatantly a sales guy. I have personal gut-feeling suspicions that sizable portions of these favorable web-based health comments and supposed online testimonials were made by MonaVie distributors and financially interested sales promoters trying to hype up the appeal of their pricey cash cow via fake product reviews. A quick browse of the internet quickly reveals all sorts of outlandish testimonies and anecdotal stories by random people &#8211; claims of how MonaVie acai juice drinking cured their heart disease, healed their arthritis, alleviated stress and depression, cured their acne, reversed their aging, repaired joint damage, got rid of joint and back pain, cured their cancer, treated their diabetes, made them more energetic, and even improved their sex life. The craziest claim I&#8217;ve seen was some gentlemen who claimed that his steady diet of Mona Vie acai berry juice made his special male anatomy organ larger and more virile. I&#8217;ve even read a few ridiculous claims by anonymous female commentators on various Mona Vie related blog posts touting how acai berry juicing grew their chests and helped make their breasts larger. The myriad of outlandish and totally unsubstantiated claims are quite abundantly available online &#8211; an unfortunate side effect that distorts the truth, whenever there is a lot of sales money to be had.</p>
<p>Now it&#8217;s one thing for a product to be expensive and it&#8217;s a whole different matter altogether if the product doesn&#8217;t actually do what it says it is supposed to do. The literature and research on the amazing health benefits of drinking MonaVie and the supposed God-like healing properties of acai berry juice are still not entirely definitive. While there is little doubt that berries and fruits such as acai, blue berries, blackberries, and pomegranates common loads of nutritional vitamins and powerful compounds such as cell repairing antioxidants, the research is not yet entirely supportive that these are indeed super fruits that can cure all and heal all. There is scientific evidence that the acai fruit and other dark berries are uniquely high in Oxygen Radical Absorption Capacity (ORAC), a rating system that evaluates a food product&#8217;s ability to fight harmful free radicals in the body, but that doesn&#8217;t mean that a single fruit can potentially replace all other alternative sources of vital nutrients.</p>
<p>To be fair, the MonaVie company doesn&#8217;t actually go out of its way to blatantly promote the MonaVie product as a magical berry elixir anymore. <strong>MonaVie does not actually make the health and nutritional claims itself</strong>. Due to stricter federal scrutiny of Mona Vie&#8217;s official claims, the company has drastically cut back on its previous assertions of health benefits and healing properties. The company is now content with marketing the MonaVie drink as merely a high end fruit juice product, letting its legion of cult like Mona Vie acai berry drinkers and promoters hype the unbelievable health benefit innuendos on their own. After all, the motto of the MonaVie company is &#8211; &#8220;Drink It, Feel It, Share It&#8221; &#8211; which sounds more like a sales focused marketing directive of sorts to me.</p>
<p><strong>Acai Berries Do Contain Lots Of Nutrients &#8211; They Just Don&#8217;t Have Super Healing Powers As Suggested By Some Independent MonaVie Distributors </strong></p>
<p>As a mild defense for the key heralded component of MonaVie&#8217;s juice product &#8211; the acai berry does indeed contain abundant nutritional value. There is quite a bit of research touting the health benefits of acai berry as a good source of fiber, minerals, vitamins, polyphenols, and antioxidants for healthy bodily performance. The expensive acai fruit does indeed contain a wealth of nutritional benefits compressed into each little purple berry, but then again, much of the same health benefits can easily be found in large concentrations in other more common and cheaper fruits such as bananas, blue berries, and apples as well.</p>
<p>Despite my admitted fondness for the taste of acai, I&#8217;m extremely wary of buying into the whole MonaVie acai juice product because I simply do not know how much of acai can be found in each bottle. Because MonaVie refuses to disclose the actual composition of its juice drinks, we do not know for certain the exact breakdown of its juice cocktail and the exact amount of expensive acai berry concentrate in the blend. It&#8217;s very important to keep in mind that the MonaVie juice mixture doesn&#8217;t contain acai berries exclusively. It&#8217;s comprised of an admitted blend of 19 fruits &#8211; including many common and cheap fruits like bananas and apples, easily found in your neighborhood grocery store. If you really buy into the claimed health benefits of juicing and nutritional potency of acai berries, there are much easier and cheaper ways to get your purple berry fix. Most grocery stores sell acai berry juice variations and even certain online stores sell similar acai berry laden juice drinks, acai powders, and acai capsules for much, much less.</p>
<p>The fact of the matter is that people are always looking for the easy way out and frequently are all too eager for a magic potion that will make take away the need to put in effort. There is plenty of research touting the overwhelming health benefits of a low fat, low sugar diet comprised of lots of fish and whole grain foods. There is also overwhelming evidence that smoking and excessive alcohol drinking wrecks havoc on physical and mental health, and that daily consistent exercise is absolutely essential to healthy living. Yet, we as humans seem to ignore those simple practices and remain perpetually enamored with the possibility that there are super fruits out there that can serve as magic silver bullets to our health problems and ailments. The reality is that there is no such thing as a one size fits all super fruit. Proper health and nutrition requires a good moderated balance of fruits, vegetables, and proper exercise &#8211; not the services of a single food product &#8211; especially not one that is so expensively priced.</p>
<p><strong>How To Buy MonaVie Online And Test Out Acai Berry Juices For Yourself (<span style="text-decoration: underline;">Remember</span>, It&#8217;s Not Cheap and Its Health Claims Are Not Fully Substantiated Yet)<br />
</strong></p>
<p><a rel="nofollow" href="http://rover.ebay.com/rover/1/711-53200-19255-0/1?type=3&amp;campid=5335816054&amp;toolid=10001&amp;customid=&amp;ext=monavie&amp;satitle=monavie" target="_blank"><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/mona-vie-green-bottle-with-water-splashing.jpg" alt="" width="95" height="146" /></a>Recently, I purchased a few bottles of MonaVie online simply to test out and review the juice product for myself since I didn&#8217;t know how else to try it out for free. While I have no intention of actually signing up as a distributor or getting myself locked into some multi level marketing contract, I think it&#8217;s perfectly understandable if there are people out there who remain curious about the fruit juice blend. It&#8217;s admittedly rather tasty, albeit extremely expensive and somewhat overrated. Personally, I don&#8217;t buy the magical juice berry claims of the MonaVie supporters and chose to consume the drink on a one time limited basis as I would any new drink. If you really want to start juicing, buy a fruit juicer for yourself or buy pre-made fruit smoothies from the grocery store. Many of these pre-made blends contain acai berry and they&#8217;re a much cheaper way to get exposed to the nutritional value of acai should you so choose to partake. If you really insist on joining the MonaVie acai berry craze, there are plenty of equally good generic acai berry brands out there as well &#8211; in various just-add-water powder products and pills.</p>
<p>In the event you are determined to test out MonaVie acai berry drinks or similar acai berry products based on curiosity, here are a few ways to buy them online. Remember, it&#8217;s not an endorsement, and I&#8217;m just pointing the way for you if you insist:</p>
<ol>
<li><strong><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0018AV07S?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=monbluboo-20&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=9325&amp;creativeASIN=B0018AV07S" target="_blank">MonaVie Active Health Juice With Acai</a> (Amazon)</strong> &#8211; 1 Bottle of the dark purple stuff.</li>
<li><strong><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000YR5IQU?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=monbluboo-20&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=9325&amp;creativeASIN=B000YR5IQU" target="_blank">MonaVie Active Juice Bottles With Acai</a> (Amazon)</strong> &#8211; 4 bottles &#8211; A way to buy MonaVie online without having to agree to some recurring sales contract.</li>
<li><strong><a rel="nofollow" href="http://rover.ebay.com/rover/1/711-53200-19255-0/1?type=3&amp;campid=5335816054&amp;toolid=10001&amp;customid=&amp;ext=monavie&amp;satitle=monavie" target="_blank">MonaVie Juice Bottles With Acai</a> (eBay)</strong> &#8211; Cheapest method to buy MonaVie online without commiting to a distributorship agreement, but requires eBay auction bidding.</li>
<li> <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000UGZDOW?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=monbluboo-20&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=9325&amp;creativeASIN=B000UGZDOW" target="_blank"><strong>Natrol &#8211; Acai Berries 1000mg Per Serving 60 Capsules</strong></a><strong> (Amazon)</strong> &#8211; 60 capsules<strong><br />
</strong></li>
<li> <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000YG4QDC?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=monbluboo-20&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=9325&amp;creativeASIN=B000YG4QDC" target="_blank"><strong>Organic Acai Fruit Capsules with Camu Camu</strong></a><strong> (Amazon)</strong> &#8211; 60 capsules &#8211; The Brazilian acai berry in pill form.</li>
<li> <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000YFZVS2?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=monbluboo-20&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=9325&amp;creativeASIN=B000YFZVS2" target="_blank"><strong>100% Pure Acai Fruit Powder with Camu Camu</strong></a><strong> (Amazon)</strong> &#8211; 90 grams &#8211; Just add water to make an acai powder juice drink.</li>
</ol>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/the-monavie-acai-berry-super-fruit-juice-mona-vie-scam/">The MonaVie Acai Berry Super Fruit Juice &#8211; Mona Vie Scam?</a></b>
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		<title>My Vote Does Not Matter Because I Do Not Live In A Swing State</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/my-vote-does-not-matter-because-i-do-not-live-in-a-swing-state/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/my-vote-does-not-matter-because-i-do-not-live-in-a-swing-state/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Nov 2008 20:51:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Law and Politics]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Well I voted. No one can blame me for not making sure my voice was heard. But yet I remain somewhat jaded and cynical at the fact that when all is said and done, my vote ultimately won&#8217;t do much to affect the outcome of election results.
Every 4 years it&#8217;s the same routine. I head [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/vote-red-white-blue-circular-badge.jpg" alt="" width="120" height="119" />Well I voted. No one can blame me for not making sure my voice was heard. But yet I remain somewhat jaded and cynical at the fact that when all is said and done, my vote ultimately won&#8217;t do much to affect the outcome of election results.</p>
<p>Every 4 years it&#8217;s the same routine. I head to my designated voting station and pull the lever, poke the appropriate dot, or press the desired digital touch screen button to make my mark as a citizen of this great country. Unfortunately, any excitement or exuberance I may have in exercising my constitutional responsibility to participate in the political process is greatly tempered by the fact that I know my vote in all actuality counts for very little. It&#8217;s not because my vote is only one out millions that will ultimately be cast that makes the relative unimportance of my single vote seem so sobering. It&#8217;s the fact that I know with near definitive certainty that no matter which way I cast my vote, whether I vote for John McCain of the Republican Party, or whether I vote for Barack Obama of the Democratic Party, my home state of Maryland, a solid blue state as blue states go, will ultimately pass on all of its electoral college votes for the Democratic candidate no matter what. Such is the dilemma and troubling aspect of living in a state with such thoroughly entrenched political and social views, and in a country where Presidential elections are decided based on an electoral college system rather than through a national popular vote.</p>
<p><strong>The Current Electoral College Voting System Unfairly Empowers Small, Rural States With Substantially Less People, With Disproportionate Power Over Larger States With Significantly Larger Populations</strong></p>
<p>This ongoing sham in the electoral process is due to the fact that our founding fathers ratified a constitution that set forth a Presidential election process based on an electoral college system. Currently, instead of allowing citizens like myself the power and right to directly cast our votes for President, we instead merely submit our votes for state electors. Under the current troubled electoral college voting system, each state has a designated and apportioned number of electors based on the number of Senators and Representatives each has in the U.S. Congress. As such, the numbers of electors are generally divvied up based on population size, with more populated states like New York, Texas, and California receiving more electoral votes, and smaller states, like North Dakota and Nebraska  receiving fewer. While there are a few slight variations, the vast majority of states adopt a winner takes all popular voting approach where state voters choose between presidential candidates and the victorious candidate in that state wins all of the state&#8217;s electors and thus, electoral votes.</p>
<p>Perhaps, the old electoral college system was needed back in the late 1700&#8217;s when our country was passionately divided and individual states were understandably concerned that their individual states&#8217; rights would be usurped and engulfed by a strong, overbearing federal government. However, times have changed and our former collection of rag tag individual states have since coalesced into a unified whole &#8211; a true United States. It is time we do away with the old process and abolish the electoral college in favor of a direct voting system based on true, popular vote.</p>
<p>Throughout our nation&#8217;s history, our populations have divided themselves among regions that many of us like to call blue states and red states. Blue states are states that tend to exhibit more liberal political practices and tend to have higher minority populations with large urban centers, located mostly on the western Pacific coast and north eastern Atlantic region. Red states tend to be clustered in the mid western and southern states, usually in areas that adopt more conservative political practices and views. However, in between the blue and red state gradients are the so-called wishy-washy purple swing states &#8211; states like Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Florida that have no solid political leanings. These swing states waffle back and forth from election to election due to the moderate and balanced views of its electorate population. However, because under the current electoral college voting system, there is no advantage gained by winning the majority of the national vote as the winner-takes-all system focuses on winning individual state majorities, the system tends to unfairly offer smaller states and residents of swing states disproportionate voting power.</p>
<p>Now why should my vote in a historically solid blue state like Maryland be essentially penalized and emerge any less important than that of a citizen living in Pennsylvania or Florida? Because of the current electoral college voting system, Presidential candidates have no incentive to spend time or resources in states that they believe they are likely to win or lose by a sizable margin, thus they frequently ignore a huge majority of states with sizable populations and votes (which is just baffling in a country ruled by the concepts of popular rule and democracy). Instead, all of the attention goes to the purple swing states. This to me seems completely counter to the democratic concept of majority vote and rule. Whatever happened to the idea that each person&#8217;s vote is just as significant and important as that of any other citizen&#8217;s? Why should citizens living in rural areas where populations are nil or merely in the thousands compared to the mega urban centers of larger states with populations in the millions be given such disproportionately overwhelming power over the lives of everyone else?</p>
<p><strong>The Electoral College Voting System Should Be Abolished Via A Much Needed Constitutional Amendment</strong></p>
<p>I view the electoral college system as a form of political disenfranchisement and believe it is time we abolish it altogether. Having scenarios like in 2000 where President George W. Bush won the election by winning the electoral college but failing to actually win the national popular vote was just ridiculous, and completely flies in the face of democracy. What is wrong with an urban focused electoral system when that is where the population centers are? Isn&#8217;t that the ultimate democratic way of one man one vote? Concerns about maintaining the separation of powers or maintaining the preservation of state focused rights are unfounded as the reality is that our country has substantially changed over the years and we are much more united and interdependent as a country than during any other time during our history. If we truly want to substantially increase the numbers of Americans who vote and to encourage more to take part in the most important political process in the world, it&#8217;s time we amend the Constitution to strike out the electoral college voting system and put in its place, a more equitable and fair direct national voting process. One man/women, one vote &#8211; that is the democratic way.</p>
<p>However, despite any lingering frustration I continue to have with the current voting system, I still think it&#8217;s paramount that every U.S. citizen continue to exercise his or her civic duty to vote in all relevant local, state, and federal elections. Despite its immense flaws, it&#8217;s still the most profound tool we have today to effectuate change and make our country truly our own. But because of its current shortcomings, it&#8217;s also why I would still gladly <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/would-you-give-up-your-right-to-vote-for-a-million-dollars/"><strong>give up my right to vote for a million dollars</strong></a>.</p>
<p>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/my-vote-does-not-matter-because-i-do-not-live-in-a-swing-state/">My Vote Does Not Matter Because I Do Not Live In A Swing State</a></b>
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		<title>Outsourcing Call Center Jobs To India Leads To Bad Customer Service</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/outsourcing-call-center-jobs-to-india-leads-to-bad-customer-service/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/outsourcing-call-center-jobs-to-india-leads-to-bad-customer-service/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 Jul 2008 18:53:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shopping]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tech]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[We live in an extremely politically correct country these days, which means anyone who even mentions anything negative about someone different (like negatively pointing out a foreign accent), or criticizes someone for their inability to speak the language properly, he or she is immediately labeled as prejudiced, racist, or somehow inciting hateful views. I&#8217;m truly [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/india-call-center-green-cubicles.jpg" alt="" width="115" height="89" />We live in an extremely politically correct country these days, which means anyone who even mentions anything negative about someone different (like negatively pointing out a foreign accent), or criticizes someone for their inability to speak the language properly, he or she is immediately labeled as prejudiced, racist, or somehow inciting hateful views. I&#8217;m truly none of those things, but I feel a <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com"><strong>personal finance blog</strong></a> platform is as good as any to express my own personal views about my own experiences on the matter. While I was born overseas, I came to the U.S. when I was only 2-3 years old, so I&#8217;ve pretty much grown up as an American and learned to identify strongly with the crux of American culture and its values. While a key component of American culture is the ability to embrace diversity and appreciate differences between different types of people, both foreign and domestic, there are some circumstances when I greatly prefer the services of a fellow American.</p>
<p>This preferential situation comes up whenever I call a live customer service help line. When I pick up the phone and make that affirmative decision to seek help via a toll free telephone number, my reasonable expectation is that I will reach someone who can communicate with me in an intelligible way, and help me resolve my consumer business problem quickly and efficiently, so that I can go along my merry way. It&#8217;s bad enough that I often have to spend 30 minutes or more waiting on hold before I can talk to a live technical support representative, but these days, it seems when I finally reach that live person, he or she turns out to be completely unable to communicate with me using comprehensible and discernible English.</p>
<p><strong>I Can Deal With Difficult To Understand Accents In Real Life (By Using Hand Gestures), But When The Situations Happen Over The Phone, The Conversations Can Get Comically Tedious<br />
</strong></p>
<p>I am terrible when it comes to understanding different accents. Even British English accents trip me up on occasion &#8211; but at least it is somewhat closer to American English in terms of speech and pronunciation, albeit a bit more deliberately pronounced I suppose. While I can understand the different types of American English accents such as a southern, Boston, and even accents that distinguish different races and ethnic groups prominent in this country, I still have frequent difficulty understanding the cultural nuances and accents that aren&#8217;t considered mainstream American English. This difficulty in understanding foreign accents is most pronounced and debilitating when it comes to conversations over the phone with someone from another land, especially when I find my phone call re-routed to some outsourced call center located overseas and wind up with a customer service rep who speaks with a thick accent that I simply cannot understand despite my best efforts.</p>
<p>While in a real life conversation and business work setting, heavy accents aren&#8217;t as significant a detriment as there are other methods of communication such as using writing and through natural hand gestures to punctuate one&#8217;s point, in the world of customer service telephone calls, this type of linguistic verbal diversity is a significant detriment and handicap. When it comes to customer and technical support help lines, communication and speed are two important elements to a quick and satisfactory resolution of the problem at hand. There are plenty of jobs where having a perfect American English accent is not crucial and one can get away with not having otherwise perfect American English, but a position as a customer service call representative that caters to Americans is not one of them. The job absolutely demands that the agent be able to communicate with the language of the target country. Is that really too much to ask? Oftentimes in such scenarios, time and patience are limited luxuries. In such situations, having a thick accent is a very undesired handicap to have, particularly when the issue needs to get resolved quickly over the phone in a short period of time without the benefit of time to get to know each other. This is the biggest problem many customers such as myself are having with companies that continue to outsource their customer service call center jobs overseas to English speaking, but heavily accented countries like India.</p>
<p><strong>Facing An Indian Customer Service Representative With An Incredibly Thick Accent Is Like Talking To A Brick Wall &#8211; Nothing Gets Through, and Time Is Wasted</strong></p>
<p>When American call center customer service jobs are outsourced to other countries, I think it&#8217;s reasonable to expect the call agents that will be handling the calls to be trained to speak in proper America English. However that is not always the case. Especially when it comes to Indian call centers, the accent is often an interesting mish mash of British English, local Indian dialect, and butchered American English. What often comes out is an unintelligible murmur, resulting in humorous and frequently embarrassing exchanges between the rep and the customer.</p>
<p>A few years ago, I bought a Linksys wireless Internet router, but had major trouble setting up my wireless connection. I kept losing my wireless internet signal and so I embarked on a customer service phone call quest to solve the problem. I dialed the company&#8217;s 1-800 number and was promptly connected to an agent. Little did I know, but my call from Maryland, USA was instantly routed thousands of miles across the planet to a different time zone to a call center in India. Immediately when I heard the agent&#8217;s accent, I knew it was going to be a long day. It started as soon as my phone rep introduced herself with a thick Indian accented &#8220;Hello&#8221;&#8230;followed by a &#8230;&#8221;my name is Mary&#8221;, a presumably English name moniker chosen by the Indian customer service rep for the convenience sake of their mostly American clientele instead of compelling them to remember a more difficult Indian name. For the next 60 minutes, I struggled valiantly to understand her words and sentences. I tried to remain polite and understanding, but I kept asking her to please repeat herself, much to my continued embarrassment. Every sentence on her part would be followed by a &#8220;What?&#8221; on my end, or would be followed by a momentary pause as I scratched my head and tried to figure out what she was trying to tell me.</p>
<p>After a while, I could tell she was getting fed up with having to repeat herself after every instruction, but then what was I supposed to do? I desperately tried to understand, and I really did try &#8211; but it was a constant guessing game on my end. I simply could not comprehend the Indian customer service representative&#8217;s thick Indian English accent. At the end, I got little accomplished because she and I were simply unable to communicate. I found myself spending more than an hour repeating her own words back in my vain attempt to make some linguistic sense. Eventually I had to give up and seek help from another customer service rep. The next rep&#8217;s Indian accent was just as thick and I ultimately had to call back several times before I finally found an agent who&#8217;s accent was more bearable. But the experience left me with a very negative view of the company and their irresponsible cost cutting efforts to send customer service jobs overseas when the work could be better handled here.</p>
<p><strong>American Companies Who Cater To American Consumers Should Seriously Re-Consider Their Indian Outsourcing Strategy Or Face Consumer Backlash In The Long Run<br />
</strong></p>
<p>This is a serious problem that many major American companies who choose to outsource their call center jobs to low cost foreign countries will ultimately have to face. Customers such as myself may eventually take our customer service frustration out on the company and defect to one of their competitors. Based on some <a rel="nofollow" href="http://money.cnn.com/2006/03/01/magazines/business2/costofoutsourceing/index.htm" target="_blank"><strong>news reports</strong></a> I&#8217;ve read, many companies that have attempted to outsource their customer service functions abroad have not realized the cost savings they expected, discovering that there are hidden costs that far outweighed the potential savings in labor expenses. Oftentimes, due to significant customer complaints about difficult to understand customer service representative accents and great differences in culture, companies have had to expend significant amounts of additional money to train the agents on proper American English and terminology. Ultimately some of these outsourcers have brought those type of jobs back in-house and back into the country.</p>
<p>Faced with backlash from customers like myself who have great difficulty understanding heavily accented Indian English, some companies are actually taking the next logical alternative step by shipping the work over to other moderately English speaking countries, like the Philippines. As a former U.S. controlled territory, the Philippines at least offers a more Americanized work force with a better understanding of American culture that can potentially offer employees with lighter accents. There will still be an annoying accent to deal with, but at least the twang, so to speak, will be significantly less painful to understand than that spoken in India.</p>
<p>There are currently also signs that the trend toward outsourcing call center jobs to low-wage countries like India or even the Philippines may be slowing down. Research shows that some call centers are most effective when staffed by Americans and there is at least some growing attempt to keep jobs here. I&#8217;ve noticed that many companies are now trying to keep the bulk of their daytime customer service call center jobs in the United States where the calls can be handled by American English speaking agents. For customer service lines that provide 24 hour coverage and take on evening calls however, some still get routed overseas to places like India, but many daytime calls are now being mercifully handled by call centers in the U.S. At least that&#8217;s what I noticed recently when I called my cable internet provider&#8217;s help line several times recently. When I called during normal daytime office hours, I got a service rep that spoke perfect English, but at night, I basically played the ole accent guessing game, doubling and even tripling the length of time spent trying to resolve my problem.</p>
<p>For those of you out there who are embarrassed to admit but also have difficulty understanding accents, I recommend making your 1-800 customer service and technical support phone calls during the day. Sure that means using up your precious anytime wireless phone minutes, but you stand a much better chance of reaching someone in this country than if you called after hours.</p>
<p>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/outsourcing-call-center-jobs-to-india-leads-to-bad-customer-service/">Outsourcing Call Center Jobs To India Leads To Bad Customer Service</a></b>
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		<title>How To Create and Generate Valid Credit Card Numbers</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-to-create-and-generate-valid-credit-card-numbers/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-to-create-and-generate-valid-credit-card-numbers/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 12 Jul 2008 00:47:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Credit Cards]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[What Do the Credit Card Numbers Mean, and How Are Valid Credit Card Accounts Generated?

Have you ever wondered how credit card companies generate all those account numbers that appear on the face of the credit cards you carry around in your wallet? At first glance the numbers, while neatly arranged, appear to be completely random. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>What Do the Credit Card Numbers Mean, and How Are Valid Credit Card Accounts Generated?</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright" style="border: 0pt none; float: right;" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/bart-simpson-holding-credit-card-up.jpg" alt="" width="120" height="102" /></p>
<p>Have you ever wondered how credit card companies generate all those account numbers that appear on the face of the credit cards you carry around in your wallet? At first glance the numbers, while neatly arranged, appear to be completely random. But would it surprise you to know that there is indeed meaning and actual mathematical methodology to the way the numbers are sequenced? The process of generating real credit card numbers and validating them based on a proven mathematical formula is not only intriguing on an intellectual level and a hacker&#8217;s dream, the carefully calculated way the numbers are ordered is actually quite beautiful and elegant when you come to understand how it works.</p>
<p>Before I get down to explaining the anatomy of credit card numbers and discussing how credit card numbers are generated, I think it&#8217;s prudent to remind everyone the intent of this article. The goal of this blog post is not to encourage or get people thinking about how to go out and create fake credit card numbers on their own for improper means. The purpose is to shed some light on the science behind the mathematical sequencing technology of valid credit card numbers and offer some insight into something that many of us frequently see and use everyday, but oftentimes don&#8217;t pay much attention to.</p>
<p>Please take in the information provided for purely academic and entertainment reasons. I&#8217;m not trying to encourage anyone to create fake credit card numbers and get themselves in trouble with the law. For anyone even thinking about engaging in fake credit card number hacking, keep this in mind &#8211; using mathematically generated credit card numbers to purchase products over the Internet or in real life is not only unethical and highly illegal, it&#8217;s also not yet technologically possible (yet), based on the sheer probability of long shot odds of 1 in trillions. After reading everything I&#8217;m about to say carefully, you&#8217;ll also realize that there is no realistic way to generate actual working credit card numbers that could be used for anything but entertainment reasons. The math and science behind generating authentic credit card numbers are only good for validation purposes and not sufficient for creating workable numbers as several highly encrypted numerical components are still needed. So, with that obligatory disclaimer out of the way, here is a short guide on how anyone can generate and verify the authenticity of any credit card number.</p>
<p><strong>Basic Background About Credit Card Numbers and How They Work<br />
</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="aligncenter" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/visa-credit-card-number-arrow-identification-digits.jpg" alt="" width="450" height="132" /></p>
<p>Rather than ask you to take out a credit card out of your wallet to examine it, I&#8217;ve provided a picture of a prototypical card &#8211; in this case, it&#8217;s a Visa credit card. While different card types offer different lengths of numerical digits, most major credit card issuers popular in the United States have 16 primary numbers on the front face of the card. Visa, MasterCard, and Discover cards all have 16 digits. American Express is the only major credit card issuer in the U.S. with one less number &#8211; at 15 digits. Regardless of the length of numbers, their numerical sequencing is still guided by the same Luhn validation formula, the mathematical check sum equation that makes all valid credit card numbers error free.</p>
<p>As you can see from the picture of the Visa card above, the very first 6 credit card number sequence is known as the issuer identification number (IIN) or bank identification number (BIN). These first 6 numerical digits denote the credit card network and the banking institution the card is a member of. The issuer identifier number also incorporates the card type&#8217;s special identifying numerical prefix.</p>
<ul>
<li>All typical 16 digit Visa account credit card numbers start with a prefix of 4.</li>
<li>All 16 digit MasterCard account numbers start with a prefix of 5.</li>
<li>All 16 digit Discover account numbers start with a prefix of 6011.</li>
<li>All 15 digit American Express credit card numbers start with a prefix of 37.</li>
</ul>
<p>There is less randomization during this initial set of 6 digits as the numbers are determined purely by the card issuing source. Validation systems that want to go the extra mile in verifying authenticity oftentimes scan this first numerical sequence to match the known bank and issuing location of the card with the provided customer billing address for further validation accuracy.</p>
<p>The lone digit at the very right end of the complete 15 or 16 digit credit card number sequence is known as the &#8220;check digit&#8221;, which often is the final number that is computer generated to satisfy the mathematical formulations of the Luhn check sum process. Meanwhile, in between the first 6 digits and the last single check digit is the actual personalized account number &#8211; the 8 or 9 digit sequence given by the card issuer. For more basic background information about credit card numbers, check out this credit card features <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www125.americanexpress.com/merchant/oam/resources/POS499.pdf" target="_blank"><strong>brochure</strong></a> for more useful knowledge about the embossed and printed information found on your typical plastic credit card.</p>
<p><strong>What&#8217;s The Secret Behind The Luhn Algorithm, Also Known As The &#8220;Modulus 10&#8243; Or &#8220;Mod-10&#8243; Formula?</strong></p>
<p>The Luhn Algorithm is the check sum formula used by payment verification systems and mathematicians to verify the sequential integrity of real credit card numbers. It&#8217;s used to help bring order to seemingly random numbers and used to prevent erroneous credit card numbers from being cleared for use. The Luhn Algorithm is not used for straight credit card number generation from scratch, but rather utilized as a simple computational way to distinguish valid credit card numbers from random collections of numbers put together. The validation formula also works with most debit cards as well.</p>
<p>The Luhn formula was created and filed as a patent (now freely in the public domain) in 1954 by Hans Peter Luhn of IBM to detect numerical errors found in pre-existing and newly generated identification numbers. Since then, it&#8217;s primary use has been in the area of check sum validation, made popular with its use to verify the validity of important sequences such as credit card numbers. Currently, almost all credit card numbers issued today are generated and verified using the Luhn Algorithm or Modulus, Mod-10 Formula. Needless to say, if you come upon some existing credit card numbers that fail the Luhn algorithm when put to the test, it is safe to assume that they are not valid or genuine numbers.</p>
<p>The one thing to keep in mind is that validity in terms of passing the Luhn test only means that it is mathematically valid for computational compliance purposes. It does not guarantee that the credit card number sequence is indeed a working number that is backed up with a valid credit card account on the card issuer&#8217;s end. It is not unremarkable for one to artificially generate a mathematically valid credit card number that passes the Luhn validation check, but still ultimately fails as a fake credit card number with no actual substance. The Luhn algorithm only validates the 15-16 digit credit card number and not the other critical components of a genuine working credit card account such as the expiration date and the commonly used Card Verification Value (<a rel="nofollow" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Card_Security_Code" target="_blank"><strong>CVV</strong></a>) and Card Verification Code (CVC) numbers (used to prove physical possession of the debit or credit card).</p>
<p><strong>The Nerdy Process Of Applying The Luhn Algorithm To The Creation and Validation Of Credit Card Number Sequences</strong></p>
<p>For those who hate math or get scared when they encounter a bunch of scary looking mathematical formulas and numerically inspired descriptions, you are not alone. I personally hate math as an academic subject and was rather terrible at it back in high school and college, but if you like visual, thinking puzzles like Sudoku, you&#8217;ll like working with the Luhn Algorithm. It&#8217;s pretty clever and remarkably well put together. It&#8217;s also pretty easy to explain.</p>
<ol>
<li>First, you&#8217;ll need to lay out all 15 or 16 numerical digits of the credit or debit card number. The Luhn Algorithm always starts from right to left, beginning with the rightmost digit on the credit card face (the check digit). Starting with the check digit and moving left, double the value of every alternate digit. Non-doubled digits will remain the same. Remember that the check digit is never doubled. For example, if the credit card is a 16 digit Visa card, the check digit would be the rightmost 16th digit. Thus you would double the value of the 15th, 13th, 11th, 9th digits, and so on until all odd digits have been doubled. The even digits would be left the same.</li>
<li> For any digit that becomes a two digit number of 10 or more when doubled, add the two digits together. For example, the digit 5 when doubled will become 10, which turns into a 1 (when 1 and 0 are added together). Likewise, the digit 9 when doubled will become 18, which becomes 9 (as 1 and 8 are added together). Obviously, 0 when doubled will remain 0.</li>
<li>Now, lay out the new sequence of numbers. The new doubled digits will replace the old digits. Non-doubled digits will remain the same. Thus, you should be able to come up with a new sequence of 15 or 16 numerical digits depending on card type.</li>
<li>Add up the new sequence of numbers together to get a sum total. If the combined tally is perfectly divisible by ten (ends in 0, like 60 for example), then the account number is mathematically valid according to the Luhn formula. If not, the credit card number provided is not valid and thus fake or improperly generated.</li>
</ol>
<p><strong>An Example Of the Luhn Validation Technique In Action &#8211; Using Homemade Graphics<br />
</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright" style="border: 0pt none; float: right;" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/amex-card-luhn-test-case.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="94" /><br />
For the visual types like myself, let&#8217;s use the American Express credit card on the right to better demonstrate the doubling and addition mathematics of the Luhn Algorithm. Follow the numbers and you&#8217;ll realize that it&#8217;s not as difficult as it may first appear. It&#8217;s actually very easy once you get the hang of it. You won&#8217;t look at credit card numbers the same way ever again after you get a good grip of it &#8211; I assure you. You&#8217;ll find yourself testing credit card numbers for fun!</p>
<p>Ignoring the obvious Amex logo on the card, right of the bat it&#8217;s clear the account number is that of an American Express number &#8211; denoted by the numerical prefix &#8211; &#8220;37&#8243;. Now let&#8217;s crunch the numbers through the Luhn Algorithm using the following displayed Amex credit card number: 3759-876543-21001. It doesn&#8217;t matter if the credit card number sequence has 15 numbers like the American Express or 16 numbers like Visa, MasterCard, or Discover, the Luhn validation check should be able to verify whether this card number is a mathematically authentic credit card number regardless. Follow the Luhn steps from #1 to #4 below, starting with the rightmost check digit.<br />
<img class="aligncenter" style="border: 0pt none;" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/luhn-amex-calculation.jpg" alt="" width="464" height="229" /></p>
<p>In this case, the total calculated sum was 57, which is not divisible by 10 (the added up sum does not end with zero). Thus the number fails the Luhn Algorithm validation check. According to the Luhn test, this particular Amex credit card number is completely bogus and fake. The numbers were likely randomly slapped together. To make this particular set of numbers Luhn compliant and error free, all we would have to do is change the all important &#8220;check digit&#8221; number from 1 to a 4, which would result in a total sum of 60, thereby becoming Luhn compliant.</p>
<p>If you want to test this mathematical theory out in real life, I recommend pulling out your own credit cards and spending a few seconds to run a quick Luhn screening on them just for your own amusement and education. Pretty neat isn&#8217;t it? If you want another credit card number to test on, try using the credit card number that is displayed on the cartoon &#8220;VIZA Card&#8221; [sic] that Bart Simpson is holding up in the graphic at the top right of this article &#8211; the card is in the name of &#8220;Rod Flanders&#8221;, and the credit card number is: 8525-4941-2525-4158. Tip: Just by looking at the prefix numbers you probably should already be able to tell that the account number&#8217;s completely random and fake.</p>
<p><strong>Use The Luhn Formula To Validate Existing Accounts But Don&#8217;t Attempt To Create and Use Fake Credit Card Numbers<br />
</strong><br />
<img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/homer-simpson-holding-credit-card-number-up.jpg" alt="" width="115" height="80" />Now with this new found knowledge, keep in mind you still won&#8217;t be able to randomly generate genuine workable credit card numbers. The Luhn theory only allows you to generate mathematically compliant credit card test numbers, not hack workable ones. Besides, without valid expiration dates, and valid CVV2, CVC2, or CID numbers (the special security codes printed on the back or front of credit cards as additional authentication measures), you still wouldn&#8217;t be able to legitimately use your self generated numbers to run credit transactions anyway.</p>
<p>Cracking and hacking the security codes found on credit cards is currently impossible. To calculate a workable 3 digit CVV2 security code, the algorithm requires a primary account number (PAN), the 4 digit expiration date, a special 3 digit service code, and a pair of DES keys. With such heavy encryption and billions to trillions of numerical possibilities, unless you have God-like mental processing power and a fleet of super computers at your disposal, you won&#8217;t be able to use brute force guessing attempts to crack the codes.</p>
<p>While it&#8217;s good to use this type of information to education yourself on the inner workings of credit cards and mathematical validation theory, it&#8217;s best to stay away from trying to further crack the secret of credit card codes to come up with free workable account numbers. Don&#8217;t use the Luhn Algorithm for anything else but personal entertainment and amusement.  Please don&#8217;t go around trying to generate a list of fake credit card numbers on your own and trying to buy stuff with them. I know some of you out there may be tempted to try, but you&#8217;ll just get yourself in trouble.</p>
<p>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-to-create-and-generate-valid-credit-card-numbers/">How To Create and Generate Valid Credit Card Numbers</a></b>
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		<title>My List Of The Top 5 Most Overrated Careers and Jobs</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/my-list-of-the-top-5-most-overrated-careers-and-jobs/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/my-list-of-the-top-5-most-overrated-careers-and-jobs/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Jun 2008 03:50:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Life]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Work]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.moneybluebook.com/?p=520</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It’s not easy finding the right career path in life. Many of our own perceptions on what makes a good profession is shaped and sometimes even warped by the views of our family, friends, and perhaps most significantly, by the media&#8217;s relentless spin. There are many jobs out there that may look attractive and rewarding [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright" style="border: 0pt none; float: right;" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/girl-pink-shirt-blue-skirt-sitting-bored-unhappy-at-desk.jpg" alt="" width="120" height="107" />It’s not easy finding the right career path in life. Many of our own perceptions on what makes a good profession is shaped and sometimes even warped by the views of our family, friends, and perhaps most significantly, by the media&#8217;s relentless spin. There are many jobs out there that may look attractive and rewarding on TV, but reality often pours cold water over hyped up expectations.</p>
<p>It’s interesting to me how if you asked any little kid what they wanted to be when they grew up, almost all would respond with answers like doctor, lawyer, hip hop rapper, or even President of the United States. Unfortunately for those little kids, the great majority of them will never fulfill their childhood dreams or live up to the great but unrealistic expectations they envisioned due to their personal circumstances. People pick jobs and careers for many reasons, but their choices are often shaped by their own hyped views regarding what is hot and what is not, and frequently fraught with inaccuracies. Unfortunately, during the high school and college years, the media greatly reinforces the naive and misguided mystique that surrounds certain professions to the detriment of future entrants into the work force. Oftentimes the hype of certain careers tend to greatly exceed the lucrativeness and fulfillment potential of reality.</p>
<p>The job market and popular careers choices have changed greatly over the years and what was once perhaps lucrative no longer is. Here’s my list of what I believe are the top 5 most overrated careers and professions. I’m sure there are many people who are happy and content in the following careers and perhaps enjoy professional and personal success, but I think there are also many of those in the following fields that feel they have been misled down the primrose path to frustration and work dissatisfaction. These conclusions are based on my own personal views, and gleaned from views expressed in books, online articles, websites, blogs, and through my interactions with friends from all walks of life and professions. For more relevant input and insight, take a look at <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.usnews.com/articles/business/best-careers/2007/12/19/the-most-overrated-careers.html" target="_blank"><strong>U.S. News and World Report</strong></a>&#8217;s own list of the most overrated careers. While their list is more comprehensive and generally applicable, mine is more focused on my own personal and unique experiences.</p>
<p><strong>The Five Most Overrated Careers, Jobs, and Professions In My Opinion:</strong></p>
<p><strong>1) Attorney</strong> &#8211; Don&#8217;t get me started about lawyers, law school, and the legal profession. I don&#8217;t have too many good things to say about the whole business of becoming a lawyer and the realities of working as one. I&#8217;m an attorney myself, but I&#8217;m currently trying to get out of the profession completely and enter the <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/working-at-home-to-build-passive-blog-income-and-giving-up-full-time-job-pay/"><strong>work from home</strong></a> online business for myself. I find the whole legal career path to be an unforgiving and personally unfulfilling line of work.</p>
<p>Unfortunately for new legal field entrants, they don&#8217;t usually realize the market for lawyers is extremely saturated until it is too late, and are already in too deep. Currently, there are already too many lawyers everywhere and even more on the way. These days it is very, very, very easy to become an attorney. Saddled with poor grades or terrible LSAT standardized test scores? No problem. There are more than 4 whopping tiers of law schools that continue to expand in size every year. There&#8217;s a guaranteed spot on the student roster for every wannabe or lackluster student who wants to play the lawyer card. These days, anyone can apply to law school to become a lawyer because there are no strict educational prerequisites involved. As an insider, I can assure you &#8211; there is absolutely nothing special about lawyers and the skills and training they allegedly possess &#8211; they are a dime a dozen. Unless you graduated from a top ten ranking law school or entered a difficult legal niche field such as tax or patent law, you better get used to a meager and unrewarding professional life. My advice is to stay away from law school and to do anything else but that.</p>
<p>Like many who decided to enter law school, I originally applied out of mere default and lack of educational options at the time. After all, I wasn&#8217;t much of a math or science person, and studying business seemed to be too general and broad of a choice at the time. Why not attend law school and become a high priced lawyer and make millions of dollars a year by taking on high profile and exciting celebrity cases, I thought? Why not invest myself into a career that will allow me to not only become rich, but utilize my skills to help uphold justice and assist people who need legal representation? After all, lawyers spend their days honorably debating before judges in prestigious court room settings before trial juries and television crews right? Wrong!</p>
<p>The legal profession is the most grossly distorted career choice in the history of careers. Thanks to the overzealous and over-hyped glory and glitz of Hollywood media productions, most of the public&#8217;s view of the legal profession is framed and distorted by entertainment inspired sources such as TV shows of past and present like <em>Ally McBeal</em>, <em>JAG</em>, <em>The Practice</em>, and <em>Law and Order</em>, and popular court room drama filled movies like <em>A Few Good Men</em>. The truth and reality is that the vast majority of lawyers rarely ever see the inside of a court room, working as paper pushing transactional attorneys instead. The ones that do apply their craft in the court room, known as litigation work, still spend the vast bulk of their time and efforts stuffed in their offices before a computer screen, typing away and performing grueling and monotonous research and writing. The work is tedious, stressful, time consuming, and frequently unrewarding.</p>
<p>In the working arena, lawyers often have to deal with the frustrating aspects of working with ungrateful and belligerent clients who refuse to pay or ignore the advice and suggestions of their own counsel. For small law firm attorneys, the average salary almost always falls well short of media inspired dramatization. Most of my friends who graduated from top 50 law schools ended up with massive student loans of more than $100,000 and winded up in mere $50,000 a year lawyer jobs for many years. For those who find themselves working at higher paying big firm positions, the hours are insanely taxing and terribly destructive for those trying to balance a family and social life as well. Being forced to work 80-100 or more hours a week as a big firm associate is not unusual as many are pressed into strict billable hour requirements. The need to pay off massive student loans often force many new attorney recruits into lifelong professional servitude, whereby they are compelled to sacrifice their lives, their health, and their own happiness for an unattainable dream of work and play balance in the legal profession. For every Johnny Cochran, Mark Geragos, or Gloria Allred personalities on cable TV, there are thousands of struggling attorneys out there saddled with massive student loans, wondering why they chose to enter such a saturated and unhappy field to begin with. My advice &#8211; go be a dentist or something. There&#8217;s a lot of money in that racket and the barriers to entry are much higher, making the health care field a much more prestigious and balanced choice.</p>
<p><strong>2) Real Estate Agent</strong> &#8211; Thanks to the array of <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/a-review-of-popular-house-flipping-and-home-hunting-television-shows/"><strong>house flipping shows</strong></a> on television that suddenly sprouted in the last few years, everyone and their uncle now thinks they can and should become a real estate agent. During the last few years, I&#8217;ve seen nearly all of my friends in some fashion or another try to dabble in the real estate market and try their luck in helping others buy and sell homes. Many went on to take the easy breezy real estate exam and obtain their real estate license.</p>
<p>Unfortunately the ease and simplicity of entering the real estate field is one of the key causes of the real estate profession&#8217;s current decline (that, and the <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/current-glut-of-homes-will-drive-housing-prices-lower/"><strong>real estate housing bubble</strong></a>). Because it&#8217;s so easy to become a certified real estate agent, the barriers to entry are very low. As a result, real estate agents are everywhere and there is not enough real estate business to go around. Especially in this real estate downturn, agents are finding themselves faced with dwindling business opportunities and diminishing commission fees. Furthermore, with the growth of online housing listing sites like Zillow and Yahoo Real Estate, and the surging popularity of do it yourself resources, the importance of having a real estate agent will continue to decline and gradually phase out. With the growth of online real estate blogs and finance sites, it&#8217;s getting much easier for ordinary people to buy and sell their own house or property without the assistance of a professional real estate agent.</p>
<p><strong>3) Chef</strong> &#8211; Here&#8217;s another overrated career field that has fallen prey to the reckless glamorization committed by television media. Thanks to foreign import culinary shows like Iron Chef, American cooking related programs on the Food Network like Rachel Ray, and the popularity of reality competition shows like Bravo channel&#8217;s America&#8217;s Top Chef, every aspiring amateur chef out there thinks he or she can strike it big as a future professional chef to the rich and famous.</p>
<p>I used to date this girl who was a pharmacy student. She had a passion for food and was on the verge of dumping her pharmacy school studies to pursue her lofty dream of becoming a famous television cooking personality or working as a future top chef at a five star restaurant somewhere. Fortunately for her, she discovered early on how little entry level chefs really made and abandoned her unrealistic pursuits for a more stable career as a pharmacist. The reality is that most chefs are mere assembly line cooks, churning out the same concoctions over and over, chopping and dicing away in a hot and sweaty kitchen in the back of some restaurant for hours and hours. Frequently, the work hours extend into the weekends and late evenings, depriving them of much of their extracurricular quality of life.</p>
<p><strong>4) Full Time Blogger Or Online Entrepreneur</strong> &#8211; This is one hits close to home for me, but I have mixed feelings on those that choose to blog as a full time profession. While I personally receive a decent amount of passive income from my <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/"><strong>finance blog</strong></a> and do pretty well for myself through my efforts to <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-i-started-blogging-to-make-money-online/"><strong>make money online blogging</strong></a>, the vast majority of bloggers out there will probably never fulfill their full time blogging income aspirations. While it&#8217;s good to pursue one&#8217;s dream of working from home and never having to put on that suit and tie and &#8220;work for the man&#8221; any longer, the reality is that blogging full time is difficult, time consuming and requires substantial discipline, especially in the early stages when online advertisement and affiliate income motivation are hard to come by. The lack of commentary participation and the lack of traffic and feedback by readers can quickly cause the average aspiring blogger to lose hope early on. It takes a certain focused and dedicated individual to successfully develop his or her web based pipe dream into a full fledged online Internet marketing empire.</p>
<p>The path to future passive income riches definitely crosses through the Internet and through search engines like Google, but the path is fraught with competition and lonely times. It is possible to make some decent side income on the web, but the vast majority will never reach the online income needed to sustain a full time blogging position. That&#8217;s just reality. For the masses who think it&#8217;s easy to slap up a simple make money online Wordpress blog and generate millions of hits instantly, resulting in substantial Google Adsense revenue, they are wrong. It easy to start out as a part time blogger as the barriers to entry are very low, but it&#8217;s hard to make a true full time living out of it.</p>
<p><strong>5) Teacher</strong> &#8211; Working as a teacher is one of the noblest and most honorable jobs out there, but in terms of financial and perhaps even personal rewards, it is sorely lacking. Like stay at home moms, teachers are grossly underpaid for their efforts and the invaluable influence and steerage they have on the next generation of children and students. The thought of being allowed to take entire summers off as a teacher may be tempting, but the reality is that most teachers work during the off season as well &#8211; performing summer school work, tutoring, or volunteering their time for education related endeavors. For those that wind up teaching toddlers or grade school students, working as a teacher is akin to working as a full time babysitter. Not only do you have to teach the students something productive, but you also have to deal with their crazy behaviors, emotional outbursts, rebellious attitudes, and sometimes even violent propensities.</p>
<p>I have quite a few female friends who work as junior high and public high school teachers and they frequently seem worn out and utterly exhausted due to their jobs. While most enjoy their work somewhat, many are frustrated at the bureaucracy and the governmental policies that hinder their ability to truly make a difference in the lives of students as a whole. Many of my female teacher friends frequently gripe and complain about the inefficient aftermath of the No Child Left Behind Act and how the governmental policy has forced many of them to waste their time and limited efforts and resources on so-called &#8220;hopeless students&#8221;. These teachers want to make a difference and help promising students grow to their full potentials, but many of them find their hands hopelessly bound by standardized guideline requirements and expectations. Instead of being able to help gifted and talented students grow to the best of their abilities by giving them the educational attention they need to advance, much of the No Child Left Behind Act efforts are spent trying to discipline and reform issue prone students who refuse to learn at the same speed and pace as classmates in the same age group. Clearly, it&#8217;s a broken policy that demands major reform.</p>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/my-list-of-the-top-5-most-overrated-careers-and-jobs/">My List Of The Top 5 Most Overrated Careers and Jobs</a></b>
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		<title>Memorial Day 2008 &#8211; Support Our Military Troops and Veterans</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/memorial-day-2008-support-our-military-troops-and-veterans/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/memorial-day-2008-support-our-military-troops-and-veterans/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 May 2008 05:32:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Law and Politics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.moneybluebook.com/?p=516</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Well it&#8217;s the long Memorial Day weekend again. Not only is this annual occasion significant to me because it always occurs around the same time as my birthday, it&#8217;s also one of the important federal holidays set aside by our United States government to honor those men and women of past and present who laid [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright" style="border: 0pt none; float: right;" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/bald-eagle-wings-spread-out-holding-american-flag-yellow-light.jpg" alt="" width="100" height="146" />Well it&#8217;s the long Memorial Day weekend again. Not only is this annual occasion significant to me because it always occurs around the same time as my birthday, it&#8217;s also one of the important federal holidays set aside by our United States government to honor those men and women of past and present who laid down their lives during the course of their great service to our country. As the grand puba of all knowledge, the great Wikipedia notes that Memorial Day was originally enacted to honor the northern Union soldiers after the American Civil War but has been enlarged to cover all American military casualties of any war or military action.</p>
<p>This post today is not meant to be a political statement. In fact, I hold rather neutral opinions about the U.S. government&#8217;s positions and the U.S. military&#8217;s actions in the ongoing war in the Middle East. I&#8217;m neither supportive, nor am I really against it. I&#8217;m not a military strategist, nor am I a foreign policy buff. While I watch and follow CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News, and have developed my own viewpoints like any other guy, I don&#8217;t claim to know the answers. So I leave the big foreign policy and homeland defense decisions to the elected bigwigs in Washington D.C. While my foreign policy views are both non committal and neutral, when it comes to supporting our patriotic troops, I&#8217;m in it 100%. I think they deserve our full support and admiration, and that includes past veterans, present troops coming back home, and future military personnel who have yet to enter the line of duty.</p>
<p><strong>Our Military Soldiers Are Real People With Real Stories &#8211; And Not Just Faceless Statistics</strong></p>
<p>Shortly after law school and my judicial clerkship with a trial court judge, I obtained a job to work as an appellate attorney at the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs in Washington D.C. While I was there I was exposed to the countless stories and lives of the many men and women who fought and sacrificed for our country during her times of need. Because I handled appeals stemming from military service connection and disability rating claims for veterans, I spent my working days reading and becoming intimately aware of war time realities and shared tragedies of our past veterans. While not all injuries or medical ailments sustained by military disability claimants were during the course of an armed conflict overseas, many were. For those who think the current soldiers fighting in the Iraqi and Afghanistan conflict today are sustaining significant casualties or massive injuries, the numbers pale in comparison to the devastating number of lives and limbs lost during past major wars &#8211; most notably during the Vietnam War.</p>
<p>The Vietnam War era was a terrible time in our history. Many of the soldiers came back with not only physical bodily damage from lost limbs, impaired sensory organs, or Agent Orange herbicide related diseases, a large number developed post traumatic stress syndrome after having witnessed all sorts of psychologically disturbing wartime brutality overseas. Much of today&#8217;s neighborhood to neighborhood close quarters combat experiences in the troubled areas of the Middle East are censored and filtered out by our sanitized television, print, and governmental media so that much of the information never reaches the American public. But as someone who has worked closely with such personal stories and accounts of battles and military engagements during my time of processing veteran disability claims, I&#8217;ve learned to greatly appreciate the sacrifices our fighting forces have made for our great nation.</p>
<p>While due to the backlogged and procedural nature of veteran disability cases, and due to the way past injuries and diseases tend to deteriorate over time, many of the appeals cases I handled arose from veterans who served honorably in wars as far back as the Vietnam War and World War II. At the time I was working at the Department of Veteran Affairs in Washington D.C., the war against terrorist forces in Afghanistan and later the invasion and occupation/liberation of Iraq (depending on how you look at it) had not resulted in a significant influx of wartime injuries or casualties yet. But since I&#8217;ve left the agency, I know the federal department is now facing a huge rush of returning soldiers from this new war our country is fighting. I can only hope we all continue to throw our admiration and support for our American military men and women as they dutifully do their part in helping to keep this country safe and protect our interests worldwide.</p>
<p><strong>Supporting Our Troops and Veterans Is Not A Political Statement, But A Show Of Respect For The Honorable Sacrifices Made By Those Who Came and Served Before Us<br />
</strong></p>
<p>I think many people and anti-war supporters seem to adopt the suggestive notion that somehow acknowledging verbal or written support for our fighting troops and veterans equates to an agreement or condonement of the current George W. Bush foreign policy or political decisions made regarding the nation&#8217;s fight against terrorism in the Middle East. Far from it. I support our troops and want to honor their actions because they are putting their lives in harms way for citizens and even non citizens living in the United States like you and I. While some of the soldiers had a choice, others had their choices made for them. I doubt most of the Army, Navy, Air Force, and soldiers from the Marines really wanted to fight abroad, but they made a noble commitment to serve their country should they be called upon to do so. They are simply doing their job and trying to do it the best they can, amidst the political maneuverings in Congress and the White House, the election season wrangling between the Democrats and Republicans, and amidst the dangerous sectarian violence that still plagues the Middle East.</p>
<p>So as we all sit within the comforts, shelter, and protection of our own nation&#8217;s borders, let&#8217;s not forget the fighting men and women who are still out there doing their jobs, putting their futures and lives on stake for you and I. While we all worry about less life threatening and comparatively petty matters closer to home such as <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-to-beat-high-gas-prices-and-save-money-at-the-gas-pump/" target="_blank"><strong>rising gas prices</strong></a>, <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/the-best-online-high-yield-savings-accounts/" target="_blank"><strong>savings accounts</strong></a>, <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-to-open-a-roth-ira-account-and-which-broker-to-use/" target="_blank"><strong>Roth IRA</strong></a>&#8217;s, <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-to-get-your-free-fico-credit-score-and-avoid-fake-credit-offers/"><strong>credit scores</strong></a>, and <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/the-best-gas-credit-card-rewards-and-offers/" target="_blank"><strong>credit card</strong></a> bills, there are young and old committed military families out there who just want their fathers, sons, and even moms and daughters to come back home in one piece. You don&#8217;t have to support the war to support our troops. You don&#8217;t even have to wave an American flag high or wear an American flag pin on your suit collar to support our troops. All you have to do is honor the sacrifices made by our past and present veterans in your hearts, and give them all the courtesy, admiration, and respect deserved by those who have served their country dutifully in a time of need. So while we all take this three day Memorial Day weekend to go on a road trip to visit the beach, or see our friends and family, remember, someone out there needs your thoughts and prayers.</p>
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		<title>Explaining Why Financially Independent Men Rarely Call Their Mothers</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/explaining-why-financially-independent-men-rarely-call-their-mothers/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/explaining-why-financially-independent-men-rarely-call-their-mothers/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 May 2008 03:42:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Life]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.moneybluebook.com/?p=511</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
I recently read a very interesting online article from an English (United Kingdom) website today called the Times Online (I know it&#8217;s a well known site for British people, but I&#8217;ve never heard of it before). While the views expressed seem to come from a European perspective, with some interesting but different English terminology used [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><img style="border: 0pt none;" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/mothers-day-funny-comic-strip-whats-for-dinner.jpg" alt="" width="476" height="155" /></p>
<p>I recently read a very interesting online article from an English (United Kingdom) website today called the <a rel="nofollow" href="http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/families/article3778942.ece" target="_blank"><strong>Times Online</strong></a> (I know it&#8217;s a well known site for British people, but I&#8217;ve never heard of it before). While the views expressed seem to come from a European perspective, with some interesting but different English terminology used in the comments section such as &#8220;blokes&#8221; and &#8220;birds&#8221; (translation: &#8220;guys&#8221; and &#8220;gals&#8221;), much of the opinion  piece is also applicable to the American experience. The article addressed the familiar but sometimes complicated question of why today&#8217;s modern men seem reluctant, burdened, or feel socially awkward when it comes to talking about their moms or when it comes to actually calling them on a regular basis.</p>
<p>Today was Mother&#8217;s Day<strong> </strong>so I did manage to contact my mother who lives overseas with my dad to wish her a <strong>Happy Mother&#8217;s Day</strong>. Of course she was quite surprised but happy to hear my message (she is my mom after all), but I think she mostly enjoyed the rarity of it all. I can&#8217;t remember the last time I ever gave her a present or anything on Mother&#8217;s day (during elementary school maybe), but I think on some level she understands that grown up sons at some point in their lives must exercise that desired financial and social independence from their parents, particularly from their moms. While I do love my mom to death, it is true &#8211; there is also something very unattractive and rather unhealthy for a man who is too clingy with his mother and refuses to cut the proverbial umbilical cord.</p>
<p><strong>In General, Boys, Men, and Sons Have A Primitive But Instinctively Driven Desire To Seek Social and Financial Independence From Their Parental Guardians</strong></p>
<p>This common practice and social phenomenon of sons never calling their mothers and only doing so when they actually need something from them seems to be quite prevalent. Haven&#8217;t you seen the recent Comcast Digital Voice mother&#8217;s day commercial? The commercial was advertising the company&#8217;s new digital phone service and was encouraging all viewers, but men in particular, to sign up with Comcast phone access this mother&#8217;s day so they could give their mothers a call and wish them well. The funny commercial had scenes of mothers of all countries and languages clutching phones to their ears and systemically fainting to the ground in disbelief as the voices of their sons sounded through the ear pieces. The humorous punch line is that sons never call, thus when they do, it creates such a monumental shock to the mothers that it leaves them dumbfounded.</p>
<p>But the truth of the matter is that most of the male friends I know, myself included rarely call or contact our moms. The more financially and socially independent men tend to be more self reliant and don&#8217;t feel the need to call their moms on a daily, weekly or even semi regular basis to  talk about nothing in particular. If you asked me when was the last time that I actually called my mom or either parent over the phone, and not counting the times they called me first, I would have to offer you an embarrassed guilty look and say over 6 months to a 1 year ago. Ever since I <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/i-remember-breaking-past-the-10000-savings-mark/"><strong>became financially independent</strong></a> after graduate school and no longer needed to beg my parents for money, I&#8217;ve relied on my own abilities to eek out a living. Since then I&#8217;ve learned to take care of myself, gotten used to setting my own schedule, arranging my own meals, and keeping myself out of trouble. Everytime my parents call (especially when it&#8217;s my mom), I innately feel like I just reverted back to a childlike state in which I am still nagged and coddled by my guardians. Every time my dad calls he always wants to chat about my job or where I&#8217;m going with my life professionally and occupationally. But everytime the phone gets handed off to my mom, she starts chatting incessantly and repetitively about my diet, what I eat, what I shouldn&#8217;t eat, the importance of needing to cook for myself, and my sleeping habits. The nagging about my living lifestyle could seriously go on and on for hours if I didn&#8217;t conclude it at some point. Everytime I talk to them I feel like I&#8217;m in elementary school again, but the fact of the matter is I&#8217;m not. I&#8217;m a grown adult, with a full time job, who is paying the rent, taking care of the bills, and fending for myself as a man should.</p>
<p><strong>The Social Difference Between How Grown Up Sons and Daughters Treat Their Parents</strong></p>
<p>Sexist, stereotypical or not, I think most girls and women are closer to their mothers than boys and men are. Daughters simply are more driven to call their mothers on a regular basis and chat about random things like their eating habits, living habits, who they are seeing, or whether they are happy or not. It&#8217;s probably the inherent differences in male and female nature that explain why they treat their parents so differently once they&#8217;ve left the family nest. Perhaps women are simply more inclined to pick up the phone and call their moms or anyone else for that matter due to the lifetime motherly bond between them that&#8217;s never broken or altered. Maybe it&#8217;s how we are molded when we are young &#8211; daughters are generally raised to become nurturers, gatherers, and future mothers, while men are usually raised to become grown up hunters, and caretakers of their future brood. When I pick up the phone, I call a person for a specific purpose and not just to shoot the breeze. I always find it strange when some people call for no reason at all then just to chat.</p>
<p>When I was young, I always saw emotional reliance and financial dependence on my parents as a tremendous weakness. My view was that I would never become my own man until I could break away from them and financially fend for myself. I still hold that view today and see single friends in their early and mid 30&#8217;s who are still living at home with their moms and dads as pretty strange. I understand there are key differences in certain European, Asian, and Indian cultures whereby sons are expected to live at home with the parents until they marry, but I&#8217;m viewing all of this mostly through the classic American perspective that encourages independence, especially when it comes to males. I love my mom very much and she&#8217;s done a wonderful job of letting her two sons go off into the world on their own, but I know many other moms out there have trouble letting their little boys become men. It&#8217;s important to keep your little solider safe when he is young, but at some point you have to kick him out of the nest for his own good. The best thing my mom ever did for me was to let me be, and let me make mistakes and learn on my own.</p>
<p>Personally, I think it&#8217;s natural for men to want to break away from their mom&#8217;s embrace at some point. It&#8217;s all part of the growing up and rite of passage experience for males. How is he expected to one day take care of his own family if he cannot assert his own independence and take care of himself before letting others help take care of him. Besides, what woman would want a man who incessantly clings onto his mother? I know some women out there claim that they desire a man who loves his mom and treats her well, but obviously what women wouldn&#8217;t? Being kind and treating one&#8217;s mom well is one thing, but being a mama&#8217;s boy and always calling the mom to get her advice and approval is a little strange when the guy starts to reach his 30&#8217;s, 40&#8217;s or even 50&#8217;s. Living at home as a single male and having your mom still cook your food, do your laundry, and pick up after you just seems extremely childish. I have no problem with a girl or daughter calling her mom regularly after marriage, but when I hear about men who constantly feel the need to call their moms to get approvals or give updates, I simply find them to be very wimpy, for a lack of a better word. My mom will always be my mom and she will always have a special place in my personal hierarchy of women, but at some point, sons have to grow up and join the world of men and inevitably leave their moms behind to a certain degree. However, I will always treat my mom with love and respect &#8211; but not as a little boy, but as a grown up, financially independent man.</p>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/explaining-why-financially-independent-men-rarely-call-their-mothers/">Explaining Why Financially Independent Men Rarely Call Their Mothers</a></b>
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		<title>&#8220;Parking Wars&#8221; Reinforces Why I Dislike Tow Truck Drivers</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/parking-wars-reinforces-why-i-dislike-tow-truck-drivers/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/parking-wars-reinforces-why-i-dislike-tow-truck-drivers/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 03 May 2008 09:14:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Whenever I see a predatory tow truck driver or a parking meter maid strolling by, I just want to roll down my window quickly and yell out &#8211; &#8220;Hey you! Go (*bleep*) yourself you (*bleep bleep*)!&#8221;
As you can tell, I am not too fond of tow truck drivers. My disdain also carries over to others [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright" style="border: 0pt none; float: right;" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/parking-wars-meter-logo.jpg" alt="" width="124" height="96" />Whenever I see a predatory tow truck driver or a parking meter maid strolling by, I just want to roll down my window quickly and yell out &#8211; &#8220;Hey you! Go (*bleep*) yourself you (*bleep bleep*)!&#8221;</p>
<p>As you can tell, I am not too fond of tow truck drivers. My disdain also carries over to others in the parking profession, including but not limited to opportunistic car booters and sneaky meter maids who dart from car to car with their little hand held tri-corder gadgets, tucking tickets under windshield wipers and escaping before the driver comes back and catches them in the act. While these parking ticketers bug me somewhat, they don&#8217;t irritate me as much as tow truck drivers. Perhaps it&#8217;s because parking ticket fines are usually not as financially hefty or as personally offensive as getting your car manhandled and forcibly hauled away by a stranger. Most of the time, I see tow truck drivers as nothing but conniving, predatory, and opportunistic vultures who feast on the vulnerable and distracted plight of unsuspecting drivers.</p>
<p><strong>Just Watching Others Get Their Cars Towed In Their Absence Irritates Me</strong></p>
<p>A few years ago I lived near a shopping center located next to a major Metro subway station. Every morning as I walked to the station to take the train to work, I witnessed the daily spectacle of tow truck sharks preying on those who failed to notice the no parking warning signs for non patrons. At the start of every morning rush, like clockwork precision, several red tow trucks would park themselves in partially hidden locations throughout the shopping center parking lot, embed themselves among the other cars, and lie in wait for subway commuters to improperly park their cars and walk away. Oftentimes as I walked by their tow trucks, I could see the drivers eating their breakfast sandwiches behind the steering wheel as they waited. As soon as the commuters had walked out of sight and demonstrated that they weren&#8217;t parking their cars so they could shop at a plaza store, the tow trucks would take turns swooping in, jacking up each vehicle one by one, and speeding away with their precious cargo like a thief in the night &#8211; racking up an instant $150 towing fee for each car, plus an extra $25 per day service charge for the cost of daily impounding. What a lucrative but conniving racket.</p>
<p>The livelihood of tow truck drivers is based on their ability to successfully hide in the bushes with their getaway vehicles and lie in wait for hapless drivers to make a parking mistake or slip up. In their eyes, a breach is a breach &#8211; if you park past a certain white line, that means you&#8217;re going to get towed &#8211; there&#8217;s little mercy. When that happens, it&#8217;s almost a given that at least one tow truck vulture will pop out from the shadows and holler &#8220;Gotcha!&#8221; as he gleefully impounds your vehicle with cranes and hauls it away to the junkyard. I don&#8217;t really care much for their self righteous claims that they are simply doing their jobs. They purport to follow the law and abide by no parking signs, but the reality is that oftentimes these warnings signs are not always sufficiently clear, evident, or easily understandable. The whole towing business is absolutely ripe for unchecked, unaccountable, and abusive practices.</p>
<p><strong>A&amp;E&#8217;s Parking Wars Reality Television Show Tries To Humanize The Entertaining Lives Of Tow Truck Drivers, Car Booters, and Meter Maids &#8211; But They Still Come Off As Jerks, Albeit Funny Jerks<br />
</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright" style="border: 0pt none; float: right;" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/white-vehicle-orange-car-boot.jpg" alt="" width="124" height="93" />I guess the world of reality TV shows has finally come down to this &#8211; an entire show devoted to the people we all love to hate.  Yes, they get yelled at, cursed at, bird flipped, and harassed, but apparently they have feelings too as well as stories to tell. The A&amp;E Channel has released a not-so-new anymore show called <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.aetv.com/parking-wars/" target="_blank"><strong>Parking Wars</strong></a> that follows the daily working lives of parking meter maids, tow truck drivers, and grunts who make a living from slapping indestructible boots onto vehicle wheels. For those who&#8217;ve always wanted to know what it&#8217;s like to work on the seedy side of the parking business, this show does a good job of telling it like it is &#8211; through the daily lenses of the ticketers and the towers.</p>
<p>While the show infuses the parking meter maids and tow truck drivers with some personality and offers a glimpse into their gritty service with a smile lifestyle, they still come off as predatory and opportunistic hounds who howl with delight when they successfully snag and trap a potential victim &#8211; a person who probably was simply at the wrong spot at the wrong time. It&#8217;s clear these vultures get a kick from handing out tickets and I&#8217;m sure they feel a rush of superior adrenaline when they get to flex their powerful authority by taking away some one&#8217;s valuable vehicular possession. Street signs confusing or yellow no parking lines not easily apparent? Tough luck! Ticket and tow, and ask questions later &#8211; for they are the law. After all, what is the ordinary layperson going to do &#8211; spend thousands of hopeless dollars and file a lawsuit over a $200 towing charge or a $300 booted car fee?</p>
<p>In an episode of Parking Wars, the camera trailed one particular meter maid as she ducked behind a building corner and waited for the right opportunity to pounce &#8211; taking a few moments to bask in the inquisitive glory of the A&amp;E camera crew. It was 3:55 p.m. on a weekday and she was waiting near a downtown city street that was close to rush hour time. According to warning signs, street parking was prohibited at the start of rush hour, designated at 4:00 p.m. The parking girl chatted away about how much of a rush she got from ticketing people and the excitement of giving them out. As soon as her watch ticked 4:00 p.m., she eagerly dashed out to begin her ticketing raid, working her way from one side of the street and down the row of parked cars that were now illegally parked on the street. In the distance the camera crew could see a few worried drivers run towards their vehicles, trying to beat the parking violation clock. Some successfully ducked into their vehicles and drove off before their cars were ticketed while others beat it only by a few minutes. One driver who received a ticket only a few seconds before he arrived back protested. However, the parking meter maid was unrelenting and refused to rescind tickets already written.</p>
<p>In one case we had two individuals who verbally protested their ticket concerns to the meter maid over a broken and easily missed no parking sign that was literally dangling upside down. However, their complaints fell on deaf ears as the quota driven ticketing attendant offered no sympathy. Those drivers who parked in the spot guarded by the upside down, broken sign perhaps had a very legitimate lack of proper notice defense. A reasonable driver would not have been able to read the signs as they may not have been readily apparent to a reasonable person. I recently experienced a similar parking ticket scenario. I received a small parking ticket in a neighborhood where there were no visible signs denoting the side street I was parked on as restricted parking. While there were signs elsewhere, there were none readily apparent where I had parked. Luckily I had my digital camera on me at the time, which I used to take photographs of my parked vehicle and the surrounding signs and street shots to prove my case. However, other people are not always as fortunate and most are at the authoritative whims and mercy of parking ticketers.</p>
<p><strong>It&#8217;s A Rude And Dirty Job But Somebody Has To Do It&#8230; I Suppose</strong></p>
<p>Yes they are financial predators that profit from the absent-mindedness of hapless drivers but I suppose they do serve a legitimate societal purpose. None of them are ever going to win a popularity contest but on some level I suppose they are just dutifully doing their job. After all, some do come to our rescue and save drivers who are stuck in a ditch or have a flat tire on the side of the road, and I&#8217;m sure some do a great job of clearing away road blockages and making our highways and local streets more passable. A tow truck did come to my rescue when I spun off the icy highway and into a ditch in upstate New York during one particularly bad winter storm last year.  Occasionally, commendable credit is due.</p>
<p>But my biggest concern with the parking authority is that oftentimes, drivers are powerless to protect themselves against improper tows, unfair tickets, or even against scrape and scratch damages to our vehicles caused by improper and negligent towing techniques. Oftentimes it&#8217;s simply your word against theirs. I suppose the only real solution is to just stay out of their way if possible. Follow street signs to the letter, timely feed the meters, and don&#8217;t park in a spot if you have any doubts. That way, none of us will ever have to learn our parking lessons the hard way and find ourselves as entertaining sideshow victims on Parking Wars.</p>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/parking-wars-reinforces-why-i-dislike-tow-truck-drivers/">&#8220;Parking Wars&#8221; Reinforces Why I Dislike Tow Truck Drivers</a></b>
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		<title>Easter Sunday Musings About The Rich Man, The Camel, And The Needle</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/easter-sunday-musings-about-the-rich-man-the-camel-and-the-needle/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Mar 2008 02:00:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[This is not really a blog about my religious beliefs but what is Easter Sunday without writing a post about money and God?
Many Christians may have spent the morning waking up early to attend Easter Sunday service. Although I did not attend this year, my church chose to celebrate the early morning occasion by holding [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/camelseeminglysmiling.jpg" class="alignright" align="right" border="0" height="91" width="115" />This is not really a blog about my religious beliefs but what is Easter Sunday without writing a post about money and God?</p>
<p>Many Christians may have spent the morning waking up early to attend Easter Sunday service. Although I did not attend this year, my church chose to celebrate the early morning occasion by holding special holiday services in the great outdoors at a lakeside location in Columbia, Maryland where the whole congregation could worship together with the tranquility of nature.</p>
<p>For non Christians and those unfamiliar with the religious concept of Easter, allow me to explain why the holiday is so important to Christians. Well for starters, it doesn&#8217;t revolve around the Easter bunny and her basket of Easter eggs. I have no idea how a cuddly rabbit and her loot became the commercialized focus of the Easter holiday, in the same way I am unclear as to how Santa Claus became the figurehead of Christmas, the other major Christian holiday. But the reason why Easter is important to Christian church goers is because it commemorates and observes the third day that Jesus Christ rose from the dead and became resurrected after His crucifixion by the masses. While the day is not filled with presents and celebrated with as much shopping related hype as Christmas, Easter is actually the most important Christian holiday because it remembers the day in history that Christ fulfilled His destiny to become the living sacrifice for the sins of all mankind.</p>
<p>Many ordinary folks tend to overlook the significance of this holiday. I don&#8217;t blame them. It&#8217;s not a particularly exciting holiday in the secular world. But it&#8217;s an incredibly important day because it goes to the very heart of the Christian belief. Easter is the day that we pray to God to thank Him for the goodness He has bestowed on our lives, and to thank him for the continual love that inspired Him originally to send His only son to suffer and die on the cross for us. To non-Christians it may not make much sense, but for myself as a Christian and a believer, it is a very personal day. Through Christ I feel relieved and forgiven for much of the ethical and moral dilemmas of day to day life.</p>
<p><strong>The Eternal Struggle Between Mankind&#8217;s Love of Material Wealth and The Love Of God </strong></p>
<p>One of the biggest struggles of all believers has always been the inevitable tension between the love for wealth and the love for God. It might sound strange and funny to be in love with money, but the fact of the matter is that many of us worship wealth. We love to make it, grow it, dream about it, invest it, save it, protect it, and find ways to spend it. Part time finance bloggers such as myself might know more about this than anyone else. We make it our part time duty to write and blog regularly about the topic of money. It&#8217;s almost natural for us to become obsessed with the subject of growing our financial wealth. But for those of us who are also Christian, sometimes this fascination can eclipse our humble obligation and duty to put God before everything else.</p>
<p>In fact, this very tension was addressed in the Bible&#8217;s New Testament Book of Matthew, Chapter 19, when Jesus Christ was approached by a wealthy man looking for guidance on what he could do to secure his entrance to heaven after his passing. Christ immediately instructed the young man to sell all of his possessions and give them to the poor before attempting to pursue God. Christ knew very well that as feeble minded, obsessed, and greedy individuals, it was in our fallible and sinful nature to pursue material wealth and possessions above all else. In fact, upon hearing that he would need to give up all of his wealth to follow Christ, the wealthy young man walked away sad, because he knew giving up his riches would not be easy &#8211; his vast wealth meant he had more to lose.</p>
<p>Thus it rings true &#8211; it is much easier to seek God when we are poor and downtrodden because we have less to sacrifice. But as our financial wealth grows, it&#8217;s the natural tendency to become misguided and blinded with the comforts that material possessions bring. Christ knew this was the case when He later preached to His disciple students:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;I tell you the truth, it is hard for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.&#8221; Matthew 19:23 NIV.</p></blockquote>
<p>The statement wouldn&#8217;t be so sad if it weren&#8217;t so true. I have met very few Christians in my life who I believed could truly give up all of their material possessions, fancy home electronics, and wealthy lifestyle for the promise of ephemeral treasures in the afterlife. In this ultra consumerism culture, we have grown so materially self indulgent with our trinkets and treasures that many of us don&#8217;t seem to heed the promises that God has laid before us anymore. We are all too easily corrupted by the pursuit of financial riches and worldly things that we have become blind and deaf to God&#8217;s words and admonishments. The more our personal wealth grows, the more we seem to to rely on our own abilities and our own financial means to carry us through life&#8217;s difficulties, and we stop seeking God&#8217;s guidance and blessings.</p>
<p><strong>My Confession  &#8211; The More Success I Have, The More I Seem To Stray From Church </strong></p>
<p>I am by no means rich or even close to it, but I do believe it would be very difficult for a wealthy individual to genuinely and faithfully follow Christ&#8217;s teachings.</p>
<p>A few years ago, I was just out of school and struggled financially so during that time I attended church more regularly. I was active in the church, participated in bible studies, attended church fellowship events, and even joined the church praise worship band as the drummer. Now that I am beginning to thrive again financially and professionally, I find myself drifting away and attending church less and less. I am starting to spend more time tending to my job, my side businesses and my money making ventures, rather than attending Sunday church services or even praying. Even blogging has taken away much of the time I used to have for church fellowship events and I find myself more and more cut off from the church body of Christ. I truly am more fallible than I had imagined.</p>
<p>My pursuit for the meaning of wealth has seemed to blind me to what God has provided for me. I know God has a purpose and a plan for me, but my human ways seem to have blinded me yet again. Deep down inside I know that my money filled world will ultimately be empty without Him, but that doesn&#8217;t seem to have stopped me from wandering away from Him like a rebellious sheep. I do hope and pray that I will find my way back. This Easter Day, I hope I can refocus back on God and manage to put Him in first place in my life again. I know that God will never stop dishing out the blessings, but I do hope He&#8217;ll help me find a way to re-prioritize my life for the better.</p>
<p>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/easter-sunday-musings-about-the-rich-man-the-camel-and-the-needle/">Easter Sunday Musings About The Rich Man, The Camel, And The Needle</a></b>
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		<title>My Super Sweet 16 &#8211; Messing Up and Spoiling Kids For The Next Generation</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/my-super-sweet-16-messing-up-and-spoiling-kids-for-the-next-generation/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 06 Jan 2008 20:00:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[For those who haven&#8217;t seen it before, MTV&#8217;s &#8220;My Super Sweet 16&#8221; is one of the many things in television pop culture today that is seriously messing up the minds of kids today, leading them down the path of excessive consumerism and obsession with wealth and entitlement.  The MTV reality TV show follows and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/mysupersweet16logo.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="150" height="112" align="right" />For those who haven&#8217;t seen it before, <strong>MTV&#8217;s </strong>&#8220;<strong><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.mtv.com/ontv/dyn/sweet_16/series.jhtml" target="_blank">My Super Sweet 16</a></strong>&#8221; is one of the many things in television pop culture today that is seriously messing up the minds of kids today, leading them down the path of <strong>excessive consumerism</strong> and obsession with wealth and entitlement.  The MTV reality TV show follows and documents the 16th birthday celebrations of upper class teenagers. Now these are no ordinary birthday parties. We&#8217;re not talking about a day at Dave and Busters or the bowling alley. On this program we have stretch Hummers, horses, live dancers, famous rap stars, decked out ballrooms, and budget rolls in excess of $300,000. Everything is paid for in cash or with quick obligatory swipes of the parents&#8217; trusty <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-to-apply-for-an-american-express-black-centurion-card/"><strong>Amex Black Cards</strong></a> or <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/the-visa-black-card-cash-back-rewards-with-concierge-service/"><strong>Visa Black Cards</strong></a>, indispensable and exclusive tools of the trade. You won&#8217;t see any &#8220;paltry presents&#8221; like Apple iPods or Gap clothing here. Instead, the doting parents of these spoiled rotten kids prefer to give them top of the line BMW&#8217;s and Land Rover&#8217;s, capped with red bows on top to quench their material thirst. The show, although quite entertaining, proclaims the non-stop need to spend, spend, and spend to the utter collective delight of all luxury car dealerships and luxury boutiques everywhere.</p>
<p><strong>Spoiled Bratty Kids Come In All Sizes </strong></p>
<p>The show features spoiled teens of all race, nationality, and even sex &#8211; black, white, Persian, and even shockingly, a few teenage boys among the mostly teenage girls. The show follows the same template, tracing the excitement and expectation of throwing a &#8220;sky&#8217;s the limit&#8221; 16th birthday bash. We get to know the teen as she brags about her wonderful lifestyle and how much she owns in the way of material possessions. The majority of these &#8220;daddy&#8217;s little girls&#8221; stomp their feet and pout until their rich dads buy them the dream party that they want. The mothers that usually accompany these prissy little girls are no different &#8211; encouraging and stoking their behavior. In one episode, one mother even ended up trying on the same expensive dress that her daughter was trying out, sending the daughter into an angry and competitive tail spin tizzy of materialistic proportions.</p>
<p><strong>The Excessive Lavishness Knows No Bounds </strong></p>
<p>The show always starts with an elaborate ceremony usually complete with stretch limos and servants to hand out the official decorative invitations to chosen members of the teen&#8217;s high school in a manner befitting a royal coronation. The party usually takes up an entire decked out ballroom, with servers, dancers, and show-stopping celebrity singers. $75,000 jewelry and dresses line their wardrobes, adding to the excessive opulence. Throughout each episode, the birthday girl&#8217;s teenage guests scream and &#8220;woohoo&#8221; about the historical nature of the event and how it will go down in history as the best party ever and how everyone will always remember this &#8211; to the collective eye rolling of every single television viewer in the United States, myself included.</p>
<p>The end of each episode is never complete without the mandatory birthday girl walking outside with her guests in faux both-hands-to-the-cheek amazement at the ridiculously expensive luxury car awaiting her. While the girl drives away in her birthday present, her throng of friends and guests are left hollering and cheering her on with lavish love, admiration, and envy at her fortune.</p>
<p><strong>It&#8217;s Really Entertaining But Also Really Sad </strong></p>
<p>The alarming thing is not that these teeny boppers expect to be thrown lavish over-the-top birthday parties, but it&#8217;s that their wealthy parents are so boastful and encouraging of such a superficial lifestyle. The show proudly shows off the birthday teen&#8217;s opulence and extravagance, seemingly suggesting that such actions are perfectly normal. There are never glimpses of the ordinary masses, as the birthday teen&#8217;s friends and guests are almost always all filthy rich as well, with material throngs and possessions of their own. We never see any bitterness or ridicule by the guests or outside observers as the critics have all been effectively filtered out.</p>
<p>The show is admittedly quite entertaining, but not for necessarily the right reasons. It instills the wrong values in children and younger viewers today, particularly those approaching their 16th birthdays. Rather than preaching hard work and dedication, the show encourages feelings of material entitlement in the nature of &#8220;if you loved me you&#8217;d buy this for me&#8221;.</p>
<p>However I must admit, <strong>My Super Sweet 16</strong> is terribly funny and interesting to watch. But when I laugh at the foot stomping, pouty girls in the show, I am doing so in the same manner that I would while watching a celebrity train wreck such as the salacious paparazzi antics of Britney Spears or Paris Hilton. I laugh because it&#8217;s so stupidly funny, but at the same time I feel sad for them &#8211; for the type of persons their own parents have groomed them into one day becoming.</p>
<p>As for my own 16th birthday way back when, I got an ice cream cake custom baked by my mom. I rented a few Nintendo games from Blockbuster, invited 4 close friends over for a video game sleepover party, and partied like a rock star at home. I grew up just fine, although getting a luxury sports car as a present would have been nice.  <img src='http://www.moneybluebook.com/wordpress/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/my-super-sweet-16-messing-up-and-spoiling-kids-for-the-next-generation/">My Super Sweet 16 &#8211; Messing Up and Spoiling Kids For The Next Generation</a></b>
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		<title>Gift Card Purchase Fees Are A Waste Of Money &#8211; We Need To Start Using Chinese Red Envelopes</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/gift-card-purchase-fees-are-a-waste-of-money-we-need-to-start-using-chinese-red-envelopes/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/gift-card-purchase-fees-are-a-waste-of-money-we-need-to-start-using-chinese-red-envelopes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 04 Jan 2008 05:30:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Frugal Living]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shopping]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.moneybluebook.com/gift-card-purchase-fees-are-a-waste-of-money-we-need-to-start-using-chinese-red-envelopes/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Is it just me or is there something very wrong when you have to spend money to buy what is essentially the some denomination as money? Because that&#8217;s basically what people are doing when they buy gift cards and are required to pay a purchase fee.
Personally, I have no problem with buying or giving gift [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright" src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/chinesefourredenvelopes.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="150" height="105" align="right" />Is it just me or is there something very wrong when you have to spend money to buy what is essentially the some denomination as money? Because that&#8217;s basically what people are doing when they buy gift cards and are required to pay a purchase fee.</p>
<p>Personally, I have no problem with <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/gift-cards-are-not-particularly-thoughtful-but-they-are-convenient-and-great-presents-for-some/"><strong>buying or giving gift cards as a presents</strong></a>. Gift cards are more flexible than the usual pre-chosen gift since the recipient theoretically has the option to determine how best to spend it. But therein lies the limitation and fallacy of the flexibility of gift cards. They&#8217;re actually not as versatile and unrestricted as people may think they are.  Since most gift cards are only good towards the particular store they were purchased for, they are limited to that one location.</p>
<p><strong>Gift Cards Impose Limits and Purchase Fees </strong></p>
<p>If I receive a Starbucks gift card for example, I am limited to using it at a Starbucks store, even if I prefer the coffee drinks served at the Caribou coffee shop next door. What if I&#8217;m not even a coffee drinker? Then what am I supposed to do with this extra card? End up selling it on eBay for a price less than face value like so many gift card holders end up doing? Truthfully, having the gift card actually limits my options.</p>
<p>One of the most frustrating aspects of gift cards is the upfront purchase expense required. If you want to buy a $25 gift card for your friend, think you&#8217;re paying $25 for it? Think again! You&#8217;ll likely be paying $25 along with an extra processing fee on top of that. Even with a universally accepted American Express gift card, you&#8217;ll be required to pay a $3.95 charge just to purchase it, along with an extra $2.00 monthly fee that drains the card after the first 12 months.</p>
<p><strong>Retailers Love Profiting From Gift Card Overspending and Lack Of Use</strong></p>
<p>Retailers giggle like little school girls when customers buy gift cards. Since gift card sales are made at the point of purchase and not when they are actually redeemed for merchandise, retailers profit immediately from the card&#8217;s face value and the purchase fees when the cards are bought. Retailers are well aware that recipients of gift cards frequently end up spending more than the value of the cards and that any remaining amount can be chalked up as extra profit.</p>
<p><strong><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.consumersunion.org/pub/core_financial_services/005188.html" target="_blank">Consumer statistics</a></strong> indicate that after one year, nearly 27% of gift card recipients haven&#8217;t used their cards, with 7% of consumers never redeeming their cards. Common reasons why gift cards go unused include: not having the time to go out to use them, not finding anything worthy of purchasing, forgetting that you even had it (I&#8217;m guilty of this one), and losing the card and having it ultimately expire. My advice is, if you&#8217;re going to give someone a gift card, you should also hand them the gift receipt for the card. While many retailers won&#8217;t allow the gift card to be returned, at the very least they can replace it if it gets lost, damaged, or stolen. While many states now outlaw gift card expiration dates, not all consumers are protected from such diabolically hidden practices.</p>
<p><strong>Best Solution &#8211;  Adopt The Chinese Practice Of Giving Out Red Envelopes Stuffed With Cash</strong></p>
<p>The most versatile gift is really just plain old cash, which gives you a perfect 1:1 exchange rate without the extra and unnecessary charges. The Chinese really have the concept of cash gifting all figured out and ingrained in their culture. For special events like birthdays, New Years, and graduations &#8211; red envelopes containing hard cash are offered as gifts. What a liberating gifting practice!</p>
<p>In Chinese culture, it&#8217;s tradition for the older generation to give children and the younger folks red envelopes for special events as a sign of encouragement and love. For kids, getting cash is the best type of present to receive. Cash gifts can even be immediately deposited into high yield saving accounts, thereby serving another important teaching tool of the importance of saving for the future.</p>
<p>I wish we can adopt this type of stigma-free cash gifting in this country. With the diversification and permeation of different cultures, perhaps one day such a  custom will be more universally accepted here.</p>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/gift-card-purchase-fees-are-a-waste-of-money-we-need-to-start-using-chinese-red-envelopes/">Gift Card Purchase Fees Are A Waste Of Money &#8211; We Need To Start Using Chinese Red Envelopes</a></b>
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		<title>Would You Live a Happier and More Financially Rewarding Life If You Never Have Kids?</title>
		<link>http://www.moneybluebook.com/would-you-live-a-happier-and-more-financially-rewarding-life-if-you-never-have-kids/</link>
		<comments>http://www.moneybluebook.com/would-you-live-a-happier-and-more-financially-rewarding-life-if-you-never-have-kids/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Dec 2007 02:00:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Raymond</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Frugal Living]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The subject of whether having children is a financially smart decision is a sensitive one that touches many brainy issues, including the meaning and purpose of life. Frequently this discussion is moot since not all births were carefully planned and many were simply unexpected accidents. I&#8217;m sure parents have secretly pondered this question before but [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.moneybluebook.com/images/carebearstar.jpg" class=alignright align="right" border="0" height="96" width="122" />The subject of whether having children is a financially smart decision is a sensitive one that touches many brainy issues, including the meaning and purpose of life. Frequently this discussion is moot since not all births were carefully planned and many were simply unexpected accidents. I&#8217;m sure parents have secretly pondered this question before but were afraid to speak too loudly on the subject. No one wants to doubt their decision to have children and everyone instinctively wants to convey the impression that children have brought them nothing but pure joy and lifetime fulfillment.</p>
<p>Since I am not yet married and don&#8217;t have children of my own, perhaps I can comment on the issue from the perspective of someone who has not chucked the dice and thrown himself into this path of eternity, so to speak.</p>
<p><strong>Having Children Is Extremely Expensive and Will Deprive You Of Some Of Life&#8217;s Financial Enjoyments</strong></p>
<p>Raising a life from scratch into full adulthood is a lengthy and expensive journey. No one can deny that it requires a substantial and personal willingness to sacrifice one&#8217;s own personal wants for the betterment of another. Medical and educational costs bear the greatest financial brunt and some parents frequently have to work multiple jobs to provide financially.</p>
<p>I know couples who made the conscientious decision not to have children, but sometimes I wonder if they are happier as a result. I have an uncle and aunt who decided a long time that they were not going to have children. They never caved to family pressure and didn&#8217;t succumb to &#8220;accidents&#8221; (*hint hint, wink wink*) and now they live a financially admirable life. They have a beautiful massive house, big screen TV, and they take frequent vacations to lavish destinations &#8211; things that they would not have been able to enjoy if they had children in their midst.</p>
<p><strong>But Children Bring Intangible Happiness That Cannot Possibly Be Duplicated By Anything Else<br />
</strong></p>
<p>Now whether they are truly happy with only their material possessions to show for their efforts is a different matter. I&#8217;m sure that their material possessions have brought them a certain level of financial happiness. They get to enjoy all of the newest and coolest technological gadgets, and get to visit places that others can only dream and hope to save up for. But as they eventually approach old age, I wonder if they will find a void missing. Having children provides a type of life purpose and joy that money and material possessions can never full replace. I know it is a tremendous financial and social sacrifice, but I personally think the potential fulfillment is so great that is hard for me to understand why any couple would choose to give up this very humanistic desire to create a reflection of yourself and to instill it with love.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s interesting that this type of lament and reflective thinking usually occurs closer to old age, but I can see myself pondering this question down the road already. I enjoy making and planning a financial fruitful life, but when the time comes to make the financial sacrifice for my family and children, to give up my expensive hobbies, my computer, my big screen TV, and to be willing to forsake my own material wants, I think I&#8217;ll be ready to make the right choice.</p>
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<b>Source URL: <a href="http://www.moneybluebook.com/would-you-live-a-happier-and-more-financially-rewarding-life-if-you-never-have-kids/">Would You Live a Happier and More Financially Rewarding Life If You Never Have Kids?</a></b>
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