A new master only meant more abuse as Tommy paid off his debt. Master John Boles was different. Even as Tommy’s past came back, full of torture and fear, Boles kept Tommy safe. Better still, he wasn’t alone anymore. With Jay at his side, Tommy finally had a chance at revenge and freedom. But only if his past didn’t steal him away and kill him first.
Master The Property Game will teach you how to easily and effortlessly secure financial independence through investing in property. Read this book and you will discover how to: 1. Buy properties without using any of your own money 2. Find property bargains 3. Replace your income with 2-3 properties 4. Achieve financial freedom in a year time 5. Train your mindset to succeed in business 6. Systemise your property business so it runs on auto pilot
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • Set between the events of Return of the Jedi and The Force Awakens, the never-before-told story that began with Star Wars: Aftermath continues in this thrilling novel, the second book of Chuck Wendig’s bestselling trilogy.
It is a dark time for the Empire. . . .
The Emperor is dead, and the remnants of his former Empire are in retreat. As the New Republic fights to restore a lasting peace to the galaxy, some dare to imagine new beginnings and new destinies. For Han Solo, that means settling his last outstanding debt, by helping Chewbacca liberate the Wookiee’s homeworld of Kashyyyk.
Meanwhile, Norra Wexley and her band of Imperial hunters pursue Grand Admiral Rae Sloane and the Empire’s remaining leadership across the galaxy. Even as more and more officers are brought to justice, Sloane continues to elude the New Republic, and Norra fears Sloane may be searching for a means to save the crumbling Empire from oblivion. But the hunt for Sloane is cut short when Norra receives an urgent request from Princess Leia Organa. The attempt to liberate Kashyyyk has carried Han Solo, Chewbacca, and a band of smugglers into an ambush—resulting in Chewie’s capture and Han’s disappearance.
Breaking away from their official mission and racing toward the Millennium Falcon’s last known location, Norra and her crew prepare for any challenge that stands between them and their missing comrades. But they can’t anticipate the true depth of the danger that awaits them—or the ruthlessness of the enemy drawing them into his crosshairs.
Praise for Aftermath: Life Debt
“Star Wars: Aftermath: Life Debt has found its place at the top of all the new canon works. Simply, outstandingly great Star Wars.”—Star Wars Post
“[Chuck] Wendig once again strikes gold, offering a sweeping narrative with plenty of insight into both the state of the galaxy at large and beloved characters both new and old.”—Alternative Nation
“With an intense plot, political intrigue and great characterization, Wendig’s Aftermath: Life Debt is an excellent read.”—Flickering Myth
Praise for Chuck Wendig’s Aftermath
“Star Wars: Aftermath [reveals] what happened after the events of 1983’s Return of the Jedi. It turns out, there’s more than just the Empire for the good guys to worry about.”—The Hollywood Reporter
“The Force is strong with Star Wars: Aftermath.”—Alternative Nation
“The Star Wars universe is fresh and new again, and just as rich and mysterious as it always was.”—Den of Geek
From the Hardcover edition.
Imagine…
Having hundreds of people sending you all the money you need to pay off ALL your debts – including your mortgage.Having them continue to send you money AFTER your debts are all paid.The money you receive is NOT a loan. Once it’s in your bank account, it’s yours to keep and spend any way you like.Being able to pay off your ENTIRE DEBT – with one single check.Having so much money accumulating in your bank account that you would never need to take on debt ever again. You could live DEBT-FREE for the rest of your life.Never needing a credit card again. All you’ll ever need is a debit card because you’ll be able to pay cash for EVERYTHING – including cars and homes – for the rest of your life.In the process of paying off your debts with this method, you automatically became wealthy.After all your debts are paid off, you continue to have an income equal to your entire debt coming in every year or every month.
This solution exists because of one of the largest, most respected and recognized companies in the world.
There’s a high probability you already do business with this company. Most people just never knew they offered a feature that could help them pay off all their debts. The goal of this book is to change that.
As Sullivan sees it, here are the problems with the current “get-out-of-debt” options:
Debt Consolidation Loans – More debt just paid out over a longer period, giving you relief with smaller payments, but years more of them.Re-Financing – Not a good idea to add new debt to old debt or extend existing debt.Scrimping, Saving and Budgeting – No Fun! And an excruciatingly slow process.Bankruptcy – Can have devastating, lingering effects.Cutting Up Your Credit Cards – Might not be a bad idea for you at this point, but you don’t have to.
Within this book, Sullivan also includes another of his bestselling books for FREE!
It’s that book that inspired this book, and holds the key to the method that makes this debt-elimination plan “The Ultimate Get Out of Debt Plan.”
Sullivan challenges you to find ANY other method that comes even remotely close to his “Get Out of Debt Plan’.
It’s all revealed in this book.
Can you really afford NOT to get this book TODAY?
Related Topics: Credit Ratings & Repair, Personal Finance, Budgeting & Money Management, Debt, How to Get Out of Debt, Debt Consolidation, Credit Card Debt, Debt Consolidation Loans, Bankruptcy
Now in paperback: David Graeber’s “fresh .?.?. fascinating .?.?. thought-provoking .?.?. and exceedingly timely” (Financial Times) history of debt
Here anthropologist David Graeber presents a stunning reversal of conventional wisdom: he shows that before there was money, there was debt. For more than 5,000 years, since the beginnings of the first agrarian empires, humans have used elaborate credit systems to buy and sell goods—that is, long before the invention of coins or cash. It is in this era, Graeber argues, that we also first encounter a society divided into debtors and creditors.
Graeber shows that arguments about debt and debt forgiveness have been at the center of political debates from Italy to China, as well as sparking innumerable insurrections. He also brilliantly demonstrates that the language of the ancient works of law and religion (words like “guilt,” “sin,” and “redemption”) derive in large part from ancient debates about debt, and shape even our most basic ideas of right and wrong. We are still fighting these battles today without knowing it.
Anyone suffering under the crushing weight of debt knows how impossible it can seem to find a way out. It’s overwhelming – and the more complicated the proposed solution, the harder it is to stick with it. That’s why “The Debt-Free Spending Plan” is simple. It doesn’t require sifting through chapters of high-minded financial advice or digging up your past spending history. It assumes you need help right now, and gives it to you. You will learn to: downsize expenses without feeling deprived; allocate money as it comes in and put together an easy-to-manage bill-paying plan; adjust for inevitable overspending; and, pay off debt without gouging expenses and (believe it or not) start saving. The plan is clear, easy, and takes just five minutes a day-and it doesn’t matter if you make $14,000 or $14 million. With straightforward daily spending strategies and effortless expense tracking tools, you will soon find yourself on the road to financial freedom-all before the next billing cycle.
A practical business cookbook on how to creatively collect debts from overdue customers using Asian and Western collection strategies. The author is an American living in Asia since 1995. Accounts receivables are most firms largest asset, and often it’s most unmanageable. This book shares ideas to improve your firm’s processes, people, and systems to reduce bad debts and increase sales and profits. A humorous, ‘how to’ book to put more money in your firm’s pocket while keeping you up-to-date in the field.
Greece isn’t the only country drowning in debt. The Debt Supercycle—when the easily managed, decades-long growth of debt results in a massive sovereign debt and credit crisis—is affecting developed countries around the world, including the United States. For these countries, there are only two options, and neither is good—restructure the debt or reduce it through austerity measures. Endgame details the Debt Supercycle and the sovereign debt crisis, and shows that, while there are no good choices, the worst choice would be to ignore the deleveraging resulting from the credit crisis. The book:Reveals why the world economy is in for an extended period of sluggish growth, high unemployment, and volatile markets punctuated by persistent recessionsReviews global markets, trends in population, government policies, and currencies
Around the world, countries are faced with difficult choices. Endgame provides a framework for making those choices.
Author John Mauldin What is the debt supercycle? Over a period of about sixty years, debt levels grew faster than incomes. This increase in debt became particularly pronounced in the 1980s, 90s and finally went parabolic after the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates to 1% after the Nasdaq crash. The increase in debt was not just a US phenomenon. As interest rates fell structurally with the fall in inflation from 1982 onwards, people took on more debt because it became more manageable. However, by 2008 the burden of debt became too much to bear and the debt supercycle came to an end. People started deleveraging and banks started collapsing due to low levels of capital and large losses from loans people couldn’t pay back. How does the sovereign debt crisis play into this? The rapid contraction in debt levels due to default and deleveraging lead to a fall in economic activity as people started saving and cutting spending. Governments immediately stepped in and backed bank debt with explicit guarantees. Governments also started borrowing and spending to transfer money to the private sector, for example via unemployment insurance. So in a very real sense, private borrowing was replaced with public borrowing. Debt was added onto more debt. Rather than free itself of debt, the system now has more debt. The sovereign debt crisis is the recognition that most of this debt will not be paid back, and governments are making promises to pay debt and other obligations, for example general spending and pensions, that they simply lack the ability to fulfill. Author Jonathan Tepper The end of the debt supercycle and the beginning of the sovereign debt crisis present problems and challenges for investors and governments. Governments will need to either 1) inflate, 2) default or 3) devalue, which is similar to inflate. That is the way governments have historically dealt with too much debt. Some countries will experience deflation and others inflation, depending on what choices governments make. Currently governments have only bad and worse choices. Let’s hope they can choose wisely. What do you predict for the next ten years? Central banks globally have shown a predisposition to print money to solve problems. We forsee rising inflation in many parts of the world, reductions in real income as people lose purchasing power due to higher food and fuel prices and more macroeconomic volatility. Some countries that do not control their own money supply or are running pegs may experience deflation as they are forced to delever and cannot increase the money supply to counteract the weight of deleveraging. You cite the events in Greece as an example of a country continuing to run massive deficits. Is there an example of a country making a better choice? The UK is making some of the right steps to control spending, but even the UK could be more draconian. In nominal and real terms, government spending in aggregate will not be cut in the UK. Also, Iceland has made positive steps by defaulting on its debt effectively. Default is a good way to cure too much debt.
In this survey of international economic thought, Michael Hudson rewrites the history of trade, development and debt theorizing. He shows that mainstream free-trade surveys are censorial in excluding the protectionist logic that has guided the trade policy of Europe and the United States, especially by leaving out discussion of the transfer problem and payment of international debts. He points out that most economists throughout history have focused as much on war financing as on trade and development. Free-trade ideology and IMF-style financial austerity under today’s rules, rather than benefiting all parties and maximizing welfare, leave “client” nations severely indebted. By excluding dynamics that used to be central to trade theory such as emigration and technology transfer, today’s global production and financial policies tend to concentrate economic and political power in the hands of dominant nations. Prof. Michael Hudson (Economics Department, University of Missouri, Kansas City) is a frequent contributor to The Financial Times, Counterpunch, and Global Research.
Learning how to handle Money Too many people do not know how to handle their money. From budgeting to savings to investing people just do not know what to do. They let their money control them instead of them controlling their money. Do you see yourself living from paycheck to paycheck? Have you let investment opportunities pass you by? Why has this happened to you? It has happened and will continue to happen until you learn how to handle money. If you are ready to take control of your financial life and take charge of your money, then now is the time to read this book and change your financial life forever. Welcome to the road of financial freedom and independence.