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Liz Smith | 05/12/2008 3:51 pm

On My Tiny Mind: Tax Rebates, Gasoline and a Great New Book

Liz Smith

Are you one of those lucky ones who will get a tax rebate check? You are already being wooed by Sears and other companies, but I think the best advice came from the Wall Street Journal’s Emily Green. She says that better than paying off debts or saving for the future would be to pay off your credit card balance.

“A $600 balance on a credit card with an 18 percent interest rate costs you $108 a year!” Better still, if you can’t pay your credit cards in full by each month’s end, then force yourself to stop using them. These interest rates just keep you under for all time.

Think about saving then. This is from the Chicago Tribune’s Gail MarksJarvis: “A 23-year-old who puts $600 into a Roth IRA that earns 8 percent a year could walk out with $20,000 when he retires.”

The Bush administration wants you to plow the tax rebate right back into the economy, to buy something, to rejuvenate U.S. business. I want you to sock it where it will do you the most good.

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Riding the subway now costs Londoners $8 a trip. But, hey, I discovered last weekend that to fill the really empty tank of a Mercedes S-Class sedan, which requires high-test gasoline, costs $77.

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There’s a book coming in June titled Smart Women Don’t Retire — They Break Free. This is from The Transition Network and Gail Rentsch. The subtitle is From Working Full-Time to Living Full-Time.

2008_0512_smart_women.jpg

This one is for boomers who continue to pioneer each stage of life and it’s being recommended by AARP, by Suzanne Braun Levine, who was the first editor of Ms. Magazine, by Dr. Eileen Hoffman, who is a specialist in women’s health, by Jeri Sedlar, author of Don’t Retire, REWIRE!

Lynn Sherr of ABC, who wrote the foreword, says: “Now that we, the groundbreakers, are at an age when we considered our mothers old but know that we are not … now that we are, or are about to be, in transit, some removed from those careers by choice and some by fiat … what exactly are we supposed to do – with our energy, our connections, our experience, our ideas? We’re scared, we’re excited, we’re eager, we’re reluctant. And most of all, we are bewildered …

“This book compiles concrete evidence that the angst of friends and colleagues is, in fact, part of a flood of concern across the nation. The good news is, we are not alone. The better news is, there are some answers here, or at least signposts that point the way to new possibilities.”

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I am told privately that the Transition Network members are big fans of the wowOwow site. So this book is right up our alley and I hope you’ll look for it. I am sorry to be so serious, talking about money which I know nothing about, today. Tomorrow I’ll go back to posting all that young and foolish stuff.


Note: Click here on this text to read my nationally syndicated daily column.

36 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

bean
How many would have died without this war? Saddam was killing them by the thousands. I guess that is okay with you. Ther are Iraqis who support us and want us to stay and get things under control. If you are watching CNN and reading the liberal blogs/newpapers you only get the terrorists side to anti Americanism (of course THE TERRORISTS want us to leave). Sad.
By bean on 05/16/2008 7:17 am
T S
I am curious, if you care to answer. What do you personally hold to be true as the reasons that we carried out a pre-emptive strike on Iraq? What news source do you consider a “non-liberal” viewpoint that does not serve as a mouthpiece for terrorists? As published in the New England Journal of Medicine, (which I don’t believe to be a liberal source), over 150,000 Iraqi deaths have occurred related to this war from March 2003-June 2006 alone. It has also been noted that the numbers are likely much higher but the accurate tracking is inconsistent. From what source do you derive the information that the Iraqi’s support us? There is a controversy over whether this war is an aggressive one and in fact illegal as it has violated international law. What are your thoughts on that? It is not ok with me that people in any part of the world are “being killed by the thousands.” I guess my question is why Iraq was selected for our military action to stop that particular dictator (though I do not believe that was the rationale for war). More than 450,000 people have died as a result of the genocide in Darfur. We have not intervened there. What do you think the “decision tree” is as to who within the world gets our intervention/protection? So here are some inquiries to respond to, if you choose, that I hope are phrased in such a way you can state your point of view and share your knowledge without bashing anyone (“liberals” or otherwise). :)
By T S on 05/16/2008 8:33 am
Maggi D
TS - I love your command of the English language. Agree with everything you are saying - just not able to articulate as well. Keep up the good work :)
By Maggi D on 05/16/2008 2:57 pm
T S
Maggi, Thank you for the compliment. (*blush*) You are sweet to take the time and give me the feedback. :)
By T S on 05/16/2008 9:34 pm
bean
Either we control the world’s most valuable resource or the criminals do, really pretty simple. If the criminals control the worlds most valuable resource they can afford to build weapons and this spells the west’s demise. If Darfur was a threat to our existence we might be more inclined to take action. We are not the world’s keeper. MAYBE it would be nice if these rich oil regimes helped out in Darfur, Myanmar etc. If the war was *for cheap oil* why is ours now so expensive? We are willing to pay, but need it to flow freely. An imperialist regime would have added Iraq as a *state* and put another star on the flag. A strong America is a GOOD thing-not what liberals believe but I do. Which country do you think would step up to feed the hungry ($62 billion last year from the United States) if we are not strong. Yes we need to free up oil, if you think that is not a valid concern, try living without it. BTW, illegal war? 17 UN resolutions against Saddam Hussien’s regime and EVERY country and the UN afraid to take action . Hmmm, 100’s of thousands in mass graves and genocide of the Kurds, his own people. How soon everyone forgets, when it is so easy to jump on the hate Bush bandwagon.
By bean on 05/17/2008 7:14 am
T S
Bean, I hate no one. Including George W. Bush. Read what some Iraq veterans have to say about the war. http://ivaw.org/faq.
By T S on 05/22/2008 9:51 pm