whatmeworry
Established Member
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2007
- Posts
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IIRC if you had bought shares when CSL went public, you would have made a pretty penny.My take from that is to buy CSL shares.
IIRC if you had bought shares when CSL went public, you would have made a pretty penny.My take from that is to buy CSL shares.
If I had bought $10,000 CBA shares in 1994 and $10,000 Woolworths shares not long after my share portfolio would be doing quite well. This is not hindsight. I had just paid off my first loan and had some spare cash and was seriously considering investing but I was talked out of it.IIRC if you had bought shares when CSL went public, you would have made a pretty penny.
I hear you there. And timing is important when to sell. There’s nothing like a company making an announcement out of the blue to completely unhinge everything. I’m talking to you Telstra!I bought shares when I was 17 and each year I spend more time on dealing with duds than winners. Fifty years later I accept that getting every purchase correct is not possible.
Today the 13 shares and bonds in our Superfund are all in green so I have to be careful not to think I am a guru. A time machine would have been helpful.
I bought shares when I was 17 and each year I spend more time on dealing with duds than winners. Fifty years later I accept that getting every purchase correct is not possible.
Today the 13 shares and bonds in our Superfund are all in green so I have to be careful not to think I am a guru. A time machine would have been helpful.
I am pretty sure Bill Cosby would have chastised young black men for using the N word. I guess he is sort of irrelevant now.Reading news reports and Im very confused over the use of the N word.
Its a horrible word, Im not going to say it, I never ever think to say it but there is a culture with black youngins that do say it. Its in songs, on social media, movies ect.
I understand that apparently its ok for black people to say it but not white (and I dont want to say it!) but is it a matter of they protest too much when a white person is caught saying it? Is the outrage misplaced when the youth culture has made the word socially acceptable?
I do not believe that the people back in the 50s & 60s, those that fought segregation, those that were spat on, had dogs set on them and bashed, chased out of restaurants are OK with their grandchildren walking around calling themselves the N word.
The mixed message does my head in.
Any thoughts?
Edit: I would prefer that no one uses the word at all. Its not acceptable.
Any thoughts?
I plan on MrP doing the same. Can’t imagine having someone hanging around and getting into my space. Going to the supermarket. Inspecting everything I do. Nup.Not necessarily John.I am very happy still working at the age of 70.
But would you have held your nerve & retained the magical 2 companies during the down times since 1994. It is a bit like people lamenting they did not change their investment options just prior to a crash. I am also sure we have all read stories of people reacting to a crash, change what was supposed to be their investment profile & then further lament they were not in the market when the recovery has taken place. Bit like trying to pick the exact date of the top or bottom of a marketIf I had bought $10,000 CBA shares in 1994 and $10,000 Woolworths shares not long after my share portfolio would be doing quite well. This is not hindsight. I had just paid off my first loan and had some spare cash and was seriously considering investing but I was talked out of it.
Just wish I had access to a time machine so I can go back to 1994 and kick my butt into buying these shares.
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Aren't you also retired?Not necessarily John.I am very happy still working at the age of 70.
I get no enjoyment from working other than the exact moment the fortnightly pay hits the account.
I get tremendous enjoyment from my job. The job I have been doing for over 30 years now. And I know it's hard to believe but I'm actually quite good at what I do.I assume (or hope) that this is said in jest or to get a reaction.
The principal at a school where I taught gave me some great advice. She said that when it was not fun any more it was time to go. I followed her advice (and should say that she did the same thing) and left teaching then spent 7 years in the PS and again when it became 'not fun', off I went. Life's too short to be miserable.I assume (or hope) that this is said in jest or to get a reaction. In over 30 years of working there was only a couple of brief times I didn't enjoy my job (a couple of rough times in investment banking) but otherwise I've had a great time, and when I was on a salary I usually put in far more hours each week than I was strictly paid for, because, yes, I was enjoying myself.
I have days when the only thing keeping me going is knowing every second week I get paid.I assume (or hope) that this is said in jest or to get a reaction. In over 30 years of working there was only a couple of brief times I didn't enjoy my job (a couple of rough times in investment banking) but otherwise I've had a great time, and when I was on a salary I usually put in far more hours each week than I was strictly paid for, because, yes, I was enjoying myself.
I have some gay friends that I will call 'poof' and they call me 'cough'. It is a way of taking back the word from a derogatory term to one of endearment. But I would be quite offended if a straight person used it as they would never have been the object of such language.Reading news reports and Im very confused over the use of the N word.
Its a horrible word, Im not going to say it, I never ever think to say it but there is a culture with black youngins that do say it. Its in songs, on social media, movies ect.
I understand that apparently its ok for black people to say it but not white (and I dont want to say it!) but is it a matter of people protest too much when a white person is caught saying it? Is the outrage misplaced when the youth culture has made the word socially acceptable?
I do not believe that the people back in the 50s & 60s, those that fought segregation, those that were spat on, had dogs set on them and bashed, chased out of restaurants are OK with their grandchildren walking around calling themselves the N word.
The mixed message does my head in.
Any thoughts?
Edit: I would prefer that no one uses the word at all. Its not acceptable.