<<It's actually quite simple Tee, though I understand why you, Js, and Xo are trying to muddy it up as much as posible. Where is this laundry list of folks who have left their money in the Stock Market (the U.S.) for 30+ years, and had less at the end of that time, than when they started?? >>
If you're looking for a laundry list from me, forget about it. I already told you I don't have one. There are such things as privacy laws and unless an investor wants to publicize his own stupidity, you won't hear about it from him. As I said, if anyone has a different life experience than mine, I'd love to hear about it. Anyone out there have friends who admit "I left $300,000 in the market for 30 years and when I went to take it out there was only $20,000 left?" Anyone? Anyone?
You managed to demonstrate with that one question both your naivete and your lack of imagination. If one piece of information (the laundry list) is not available, you want to abandon all attempts to solve the problem. Other more resourceful people than you, will look at the problem and think, what other relevant information IS available, that might shed some light on this? Granted a laundry list would be ideal, but in the absence of the ideal, is there any information which might shed some light on the problem? I found some and plane found some. If plane's information holds up, it's obviously stronger evidence than mine. I make no apologies for that - - I went with the best data I had, plane had better data. That's what this club is all about, exchange of information and views.
However even if plane's theories are correct and any 30-year period shows all representative indexes staying even or rising, you have another HUGE bump in the road to get around: where is the evidence that all or even a majority of American investors are going to go with the market average? Common sense and experience say that some will meet the average, some will exceed it by big or small margins and some will undershoot it by big or small margins.
<<Something to validate the continued egregious demagoguging of the notion of allowing the OPTION of some folks to invest a mere FRACTION of their OWN SS $$$ . . . >>
And what would that "mere fraction" be?
<< . . . into a system that has yet to be demonstrated by anyone on the left, that leaving it there for similar amount of time that SS is kept, will be some sort of economic catastrophe>>
Well it's sure as hell a catastrophe for someone who can't pay his bills after retirement because the stock market beat him. Although of course that won't be YOUR problem and it won't be Bush's either.
<<In other words, you have nothing, but your preconceived notions of how bad capitalism & the U.S., are supposed to be.>>
No, what I have is my knowledge based on personal experience that the number of investors who do well in the stock market seems to be much lower than the number who did well in real estate, and that whereas many uneducated and unsophisticated people seem to have done well in real estate, only a small number of exceptionally street-smart and savvy people seem to have done well in the stock markets.
Something else that just occurred to me: a majority of good stock market investment decisions can be wiped out by one bad one. True, if plane's theory holds true, thirty years will wipe out the effects of the bad one (if you don't factor in possible disasters like the 1929 crash, the very reason for SS in the first place.) But a guy who's cashing in at retirement doesn't HAVE thirty years. He needs the money when he retires, not thirty years down the road.
Your plan is a big fucking rip-off in the making and it should be obvious to every thinking person. Even if it's only a "fraction" of retirement savings. If Wall Street can get its hands on 30% of the nation's retirement savings instead of 100%, so that's OK, they'll just rip off the 30% if they can. It's a bonanza for them any way you slice it. Bush, Cheney and the people who back them don't give a shit about anyone. Not about Amerikkkan soldiers, whose lives they throw away for oil (or "Iraqi democracy" as they like to call it.) Not about Hurricane Katrina victims. Bush is a guy who openly laughed at and mocked the pleas of Karla Faye Tucker for her life. Can you imagine it? He's making fun of a condemned woman pleading for her life? But these guys also have a soft spot in their hearts, and it's reserved for YOU, the American worker. They want you to have a better retirement. Isn't that touching? And you can have that better retirement, just by investing your SS money, not with the big, bad U.S. government, but with their friends on Wall Street, those wonderful, good people who have so vigilantly guarded their investors' money lo these many years, sparing no effort to see that it would be protected against frauds, and con artists. Oh and don't worry, you don't have to give them ALL of your retirement money, 30% will be just dandy. See how we look after you? See how we care?
The level of stupidity required for this kind of thinking is just plain mind-boggling. But I can't say that I'm surprised in any way. Wish that I could. I say, if the Amerikkkan sheeple are so fucking stupid as to go along with this obvious rip-off from an administration which lies to them on a routine basis, then go ahead and just do it. You (the sheeple, sirs, not you personally) will deserve anything and everything that happens to you as a result.