beauanderos wrote:read the handwriting on the wall. This is why I withdrew all my IRA's and 401k's last year
silverflake wrote:So I have an IRA made up mostly of monies rolled over from when I left jobs. Over the years, I have grown it pretty nicely and have struggled with the thought of cashing out of it mostly in fear of future government confiscation or at least government governing it. Thing is, If I cash out, I have to pay taxes (federal and state I think which I will round off here to 30%) and a 10% penalty as I am only 45 years old. Thus, they end up getting 40% of it anyway. Is it worth it? I just don't know. Some days I am ready to pull the trigger, others...I just can't stomach the 40% loss. Thoughts guys? Any thoughts?
Keep stacking anyway.
By the way, yes I have a 401-k with a match at current job. Also have Roths for my wife and I though I no longer contribute to mine - I put the money I would have put into my Roth toward my mortgage. Will have it paid in about 4 years.
wheeler_dealer wrote:G O T S
Get out of the system - Now
Better to lose some to taxes then all of it to government confiscati
silverflake wrote:So I have an IRA made up mostly of monies rolled over from when I left jobs. Over the years, I have grown it pretty nicely and have struggled with the thought of cashing out of it mostly in fear of future government confiscation or at least government governing it. Thing is, If I cash out, I have to pay taxes (federal and state I think which I will round off here to 30%) and a 10% penalty as I am only 45 years old. Thus, they end up getting 40% of it anyway. Is it worth it? I just don't know. Some days I am ready to pull the trigger, others...I just can't stomach the 40% loss. Thoughts guys? Any thoughts?
Keep stacking anyway.
By the way, yes I have a 401-k with a match at current job. Also have Roths for my wife and I though I no longer contribute to mine - I put the money I would have put into my Roth toward my mortgage. Will have it paid in about 4 years.
currencydebasement wrote:If they had set up a self-funding retirement system instead of social security we'd all be better off today.
currencydebasement wrote:This may be the first step in "privatizing" social security <gasp>. The Australians dumped their national pension program for a sort of mandatory IRA system where employer's are forced to contribute as well. Whatever your fears are of the government confiscating your wealth, a system where your retirement is actually "your" money is better than what we got now. Maybe this is the unintentional first step in getting people used to the idea.
.currencydebasement wrote:this is your property and I hardly consider some extreme measures to be a slam dunk for the government in the courts
thedrifter wrote:And I thought that buying a product or service (like health insurance) was a personal choice but the Supremes thought something different and called it a tax. I thought that according to the United States Constitution all tax legislation must start in the House of Reps and the so called Affordable Health Care Act started in the Senate. I guess the constitution is wrong.
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