[Debt] Videos

Is debt killing your dreams? Learn how to kill your debt and live your dream through minimalism. Learn what minimalism is, and is not, as it pertains to stuff, social calendars, and maximizing your potential. Meant as an overview and a tutorial, in Minimize: Kill your debt. Live your dream., you will find helpful hints about bringing your physical environment and agenda under control so that you can pursue what really interests you. Are you ready? Read on!

In reality, your money problems may not be money problems at all. As Dr. Bernard E. Poduska points out in Till Debt Do Us Part, most financial problems are actually behavior problems. If you can identify the behavior problems – and the emotions behind the behavior – you will be well on your way to solving your financial woes. Unlike books that emphasize balance sheets and budgets, Till Debt Do Us Part explains the interaction among finances, feelings, and family relationships. Only by examining that interaction can family members establish a successful financial management program.

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College students are facing many issues today and the main one being student loan debt! Student loan debt is at $1.2 trillion and growing! Debt Sucks! is for the college student who is looking to win with money so they can pursue their dreams! Ja’Net Adams shows the reader step by step how she paid off nearly $50,000 of debt in 2 1/2 years! In Debt Sucks! there are tips on how pay off student loans and other debt quickly while in college and after. The book also encourages college students to stand out from the crowd so that they can land internships while they are in school and valuable careers once they graduate.

Neoliberalism as a wealth redistribution imperative has made property ownership impossible or unprofitable for much of society. Whether in the form of mortgages or rent, we are consigned to living in conditions of perpetual debt.

Real Estates: Life Without Debt explores the moral, political and economic ramifications of property and ownership in neoliberal debt economies, and asks what role the architect might play in addressing widening social and spatial inequality in the built environment.

Essays by:
Pier Vittorio Aureli, Neil Brenner, Mark Campbell, Mario Carpo, Keller Easterling, Ross Exo Adams, Peer Illner, Sam Jacob, Roberta Marcaccio, Jack Self, Brett Steele, Urban-Think Tank, Wouter Vanstiphout, Eyal Weizman, Finn Williams

Book by MacEwan, Arthur

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Dana Mackenzie lands a job with a faceless financial institution—it’s either this or piercing ears at the mall—and while she’s grateful for a job, she has no intentions of following the corporate offices’ heartless orders. She’s sent to the home of an elderly couple with instruction to repossess their television, but instead finds sweet old Mr. Sullivan murdered. Investigating the case is homicide detective Nick Travis, Dana’s high school crush, who’s still harboring a dark secret from their past. Dana agrees to help Mr. Sullivan’s grieving family locate his grandson, a guy with a surprising new lifestyle. Her good intentions put her in the thick of the murder investigation and on a collision course with the killer.

Many families want to adopt, but do not have the large amount of money it takes to complete a private domestic or international adoption. Some quickly give up the idea of adopting and are left feeling frustrated, overwhelmed, and discouraged. Those who choose to proceed often take out large loans or borrow from family and friends which adds to the financial pressure on the family. Author Julie Gumm shares proven strategies from her own experience as well as from others that include applying for grants, creative budgeting, and fundraising that prospective adoptive parents can use to prepare for and avoid those high costs associated with adoption.

For decades, politicians and business leaders alike told the American public that our most important challenge was growing the economy, and that environmental protection could be left to future generations. Now, in the wake of billions of dollars in costs associated with coastal devastation from Hurricane Sandy, rampant wildfires across the West, and groundwater contamination from reckless drilling, it’s increasingly clear that yesterday’s carefree attitude about the environment has morphed into a fiscal crisis of epic proportions. Environmental Debt argues that the costs of global warming, extreme weather, pollution, and other forms of “environmental debt” are wreaking havoc on the economy. To combat these trends, author Amy Larkin proposes a new framework for twenty-first century commerce, based on three principles: 1) Pollution can no longer be free; 2) All business decision making and accounting must incorporate the long view; and 3) Government must play a vital role in catalyzing clean technology and growth while preventing environmental destruction. Profiling the multinational corporations that are transforming their operations with downright radical initiatives, Larkin presents smart policy choices that would actually unleash these business solutions to many global financial and environmental problems.

“I own you. I have the piece of paper to prove it. It’s undeniable and unbreakable. You belong to me until you’ve paid off your debts.”  Nila Weaver’s family is indebted. Being the first born daughter, her life is forfeit to the first born son of the Hawks to pay for sins of ancestors past. The dark ages might have come and gone, but debts never leave. She has no choice in the matter.  She is no longer free. Jethro Hawk receives Nila as an inheritance present on his twenty-ninth birthday. Her life is his until she’s paid off a debt that’s centuries old. He can do what he likes with her—nothing is out of bounds—she has to obey.  There are no rules. Only payments.

Ben Emons explains why government debt is no longer “risk free”–and how you can seek alternatives in order to invest your money accordingly
A timely alert to the fundamental changes taking place in today’s global economic and financial systems. The book discusses why there is no longer a true risk free rate, how this will impact risk premiums, financial and real asset valuations, what could be the future alternatives to the risk free rate and what to look for when investing.

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