Christine
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Aug 31, 1999
- Messages
- 32,697
va32h said:The jewelry thing doesn't bother me - you can't tell from a TV screen if it's real, and goodness knows you can get a pile of cheap jewelry from WalMart.
But if you want to talk about people throwing money away - let's talk about military families.
I am a military spouse. When we lived on post, our house was free, our utilities were free, our medical care is always free. But our neighbors were always hurting for money, hanging on til the 1st or the 15th.
And by the 2nd or the 16th, there would be some new toy or piece of furniture or electronic item, that would make them just as broke until the next payday.
When it was time to move to the next post, (all moving expenses also free) they'd just leave stuff on the curb. During the 2 years we were stationed at Ft. Lee, Virginia, I acquired two Little Tykes Playhouses, one Little Tykes climber, one Step 2 climber, two Step 2 slides, a pool and a sandbox - all plucked from my neighbors' trash. They didn't want to take them apart or clean them for the move. Those little playhouses run $200, just to give you an idea.
The party line is supposed to be that our military are woefully underpaid, and perhaps in the very lowest ranks they are. But a soldier who chooses to get married and have a child when he is taking home $900 per month is creating his own financial problem, IMO.
And the military wives I've met wouldn't get a job if their lives depended on it. Despite the fact that they are entitled to very low cost childcare on base.
When the value of our benefits and other allotments are factored in, my husband makes more in the Army than he would in an equivalent job in the private sector. For some military jobs, there is no equivalent in the private sector.
I am sick to death of hearing how hard it is to get by on a military salary. I am probably guilty of saying the same thing myself, in the past. But when I did the math...it's just not true.
I totally agree with you.
I used to be an Air Force wife. When I got married, my DH was an E-3. We were very poor at first but by the time he got to E-5 we were doing very well. At that point, I was able to get a civil service job on base and, with no kids, we were SO comfortable. I didn't need to work but I did so just to keep occupied. I could have easily managed having a child on an E-5 salary. You are right in that our house was free, our medical care free, we had virtually no commuting expenses as we lived where we worked. The discounts on stuff were very good also.
Sometimes I feel like I had way more financial freedom back then than I do now making "heaps" more money.
You may now resume your regularly scheduled thread
But too much is being stolen in too short of a time for people to be of using the weedeaters and wrenches in their own yards or garages. I hear meth is not THAT expensive
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