- Best cities to retire - 2 Updates
- "How 5 of America's Richest Families Lost It All" - 1 Update
gggg gggg <ggggg9271@gmail.com>: Sep 29 06:57AM -0700 https://www.cnbc.com/2022/09/24/wallethub-top-10-cities-to-retire-2022-nearly-half-are-in-florida.html |
Leo Isenteze <LeoI@Isenteze.org>: Sep 29 08:35PM -0400 On 9/29/2022 9:57 AM, gggg gggg wrote: > https://www.cnbc.com/2022/09/24/wallethub-top-10-cities-to-retire-2022-nearly-half-are-in-florida.html That ranking is total nutty nonsense. I wouldn't live in any of the top ten cities listed. Wilmington, Delaware HA HA "With a crime rate of 60 per one thousand residents, Wilmington has one of the highest crime rates in America compared to all communities of all sizes - from the smallest towns to the very largest cities. One's chance of becoming a victim of either violent or property crime here is one in 17." San Francisco, California HA HA is nutty expensive with high taxes and many problems. No thanks to Florida and hurricanes and no thanks to hot desert cities. And no thanks to Ohio and South Carolina. |
Leo Isenteze <LeoI@Isenteze.org>: Sep 29 08:25PM -0400 On 9/26/2022 10:22 AM, gggg gggg wrote: > On Sunday, September 25, 2022 at 10:18:54 PM UTC-7, wrote: >SNIP< > While you take the time to educate yourself, depositing your savings into a high-yield savings account and earning interest in the meantime is a no-brainer. High yield savings accounts badly lag t-bills and money market funds. High yield savings accounts are barely over 2.0% while some money market funds are near 3.0% and 3 month t-bills are at 3.36% and 1 year t-bills are at 3.98%. And t-bills are free from state income tax. |
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