Financial Advisers, Future Predictions, and Three-Breasted Mars Women

“Baldrick, I have a very, very, very cunning plan.” – Blackadder

ike

I wonder if she inspired the military-industrial complex speech?

Financial advisers have a pretty standard set of advice:

  • Get a job. Opening your own business is risky, so it’s best if you work for someone else.
  • Max out contributions to your 401k. Put your money in stock index funds.
  • Work forty (or more) hours per year for forty (or more) years, depending on how much you lost in the divorce settlement(s).
  • When you are of no further use to the corporation* anymore financially ready, retire. Fortunately, by the time you retire you’ll be so exhausted from all of the hours working that you’ll (ideally) just sit on your porch in a daze staring off and wondering where your life went and why Bob Barker isn’t hosting the Price is Right® anymore.
  • If you’re lucky, your kids will put you into a retirement home that doesn’t require that you manufacture basketball shoes for Nike® on a quota in exchange for individually wrappedhard candies.

That’s pretty much what a financial advisor will tell you, if you strip out the cynicism.  But why would you strip out the cynicism?  That would take all the fun out of it – we ain’t getting out of here alive, so might as well smile on the way, like Socrates did after his trial.  “I drank what???”

The problem with financial advisors, however, is that they give great advice based on what worked in the past.  Any weather forecaster can tell you that the best possible weather forecast is that “tomorrow will be just like today,” since it’s 85% certain that’s going to be correct, or at least my statistics professor in college said so.  The past really does predict the future pretty well.

Except when it doesn’t.

The thing the past doesn’t predict well is tornados, hurricanes, floods, volcanos and pollen.  I strongly support just calling them all torhurflovolpols just so I can see television broadcasters talking about the Torhurflovolpol index.  “Well, Brian, there’s a 45% chance of something on the Torhurflovolpol index.  So get out your floating waterproof asbestos crash armor with built in respirator.”  I think they sell those at Eddie Bauer®.

It is certain, however, that we will be really surprised by the events that lead to the future world we’ll be living in 30 years from now.  Let’s jump back into the time machine and go thirty years in the past and look at some of the ludicrous predictions that would have been laughed at, but were nevertheless correct.

In 1989, if I told you that:

  • The Soviet Union would collapse in two years,
  • Donald Trump would be president,
  • China would be transformed from a communist totalitarian basketcase to an economic powerhouse and growing military power,
  • The United States would produce more oil per day in 2019 than the previous peak in output in 1973 and OPEC would be irrelevant,
  • People would willingly give all of their personal details to large corporations,
  • Music and long distance phone calls would be essentially free,
  • People would pay hundreds of dollars for “in-game” purchases on video games that seem more like a job than a game,
  • Keith Richards would still be alive with his original liver,
  • You could watch nearly any movie ever made, at any time, from nearly anywhere, and
  • People in Britain would be called fascist for rejecting rule by Germany.

Richards.jpg

If you have a really long term question, just ask yourself, What Would Keith Richards Do?

You would have laughed if I would have predicted those things, or called me a dreamer, insane, or just shook your head.  The general consensus was all of the “predictions” above were absurdly unrealistic.  The Soviets, for instance, looked nearly invincible.  We were worried that they were masters of technology, producing better Olympians®, military tech, and Robotic Opponent Overlord Movie Boxing Antagonists (ROOMBA).  From the outside, especially listening to certain journalists, people were worried that communism would be the ism that finally took down the country, although they looked a bit too happy when describing our glorious communist future.

The Soviets looked invulnerable, until it was obvious that they were so pathetic that they couldn’t even field a decent hair metal band.

rocky.jpg

Dolph Lundgren, the actor who played Drago in the Rocky movies has a master’s degree in Chemical Engineering, which means that he’s way more qualified in science than Bill Nye® and could also break Nye like a twig.  I would pay $200 to see a boxing match between the two of them.

But these improbable things did happen.

This allows me to state, categorically, that the future we will have in 30 years isn’t the one you’re expecting.  It will surprise you in ways that you can’t even imagine now.  In hindsight, we all make up excuses in our minds to explain that we anticipated even the unanticipated.  After the Soviet Union fell, all of the broadcasters and talking heads on television made the point that, unlike other people, they were the ones that had really seen this coming.  “It was obvious to me, Brian, that the Soviet empire was just a house of cards.”

We can guess about the future in broad brush strokes, but the general wisdom just over a decade ago was that oil was going to be gone and that we’d be close to pumping dry holes right now and wearing football shoulder pads and studded leather jockstraps and living in the post-apocalyptic wasteland, sort of like walking into a Sears® or JCPenny’s™ in 2018.  This explains G.W. Bush’s energy policy, and, let’s be real, probably the invasion of Iraq.  Of major trends to miss, underestimating the amount of energy available for society was a doozy, even though he had the CIA, NSA, and every military intelligence agency working on that question.

And, I’ll admit, I never saw the amazing increase in oil production as a thing that could happen, either.  My best excuse for not getting it right even though I thought about it quite a bit was that I didn’t have a billion dollar budget and dozens of flunkies to do research on it, though I bet they would have just done a lot of internet searches on studded leather jockstraps.

But Qwest® had a pretty accurate vision of the future.  Qwest© was a communications company before it got bought out, but it had this commercial which means the future it predicted outlasted the company itself.  Guess Qwest™ didn’t have a crystal ball that could predict everything . . .

We can look to the past and paint in broad brush strokes some things that are more probable than others.  One thing that got me was a rainy Saturday re-watching of Total Recall, the 80’s Arnold Schwarzenegger movie.  One of the things I was surprised by was the amount of technology they got absolutely right, from big screen flat televisions to communications to real-time airport weapon detection.  In many ways, the “gee-whiz” feel of the original movie was just gone.  Technology had made the miraculous (back then) “so what” today.  And, again, this is the span of only thirty years.  We still don’t either a Mars colony or three-breasted women, but I hear Elon Musk is working on both.

boo.jpg

Duh.  Three boobs exist only on Mars, silly.

Just like the collapse of the Soviet Union, unexpected things will happen.  Huge things.  And, if my guesses are right, the weather is ripe for big change in the next decade.  The changes, thankfully, will be good, bad, or just plain amusing.

So where does that leave you and I?  General Dwight D. Eisenhower said:  “In preparing for battle, I have always found the plans are useless, but planning is indispensable.”  As a direct descendent of one of his teachers (this is actually true and not made up), I always wonder if Great-Grandma Von Wilder might have said that to a very young Eisenhower first, and then Ike re-used it after planning D-Day when it was actually Great-Grandma Von Wilder who did the heavy lifting on the logistics after he pulled her out of retirement and into a tent in London.

But if I’m right, the next twenty years will be the most momentous in human history, even more than when the police chased O.J. Simpson in his white Ford® Bronco™.  I’m not sure if having a 401K or a 5.56mm is the number/letter combination that will be the most useful in a decade.  I’m willing to bet that living far away from large urban population centers is wise, even if we end up living in the world with the best possible outcome.  But I do know that planning is important, even if your plans are wrong.  Hint:  They will be.

yogi.jpg

Okay, I know someone is going to get this joke.

When you plan, you expand your mind, you think about future possibilities that you’ve never considered.  A mind not stuck on business as normal is crucial.  Yesterday’s weather be a good predictor of today’s weather, but it won’t predict volcanos very well.  The future is unknown.  The future will surprise you.  If you’ve prepared for the volcano, the tornado isn’t the same threat, but you’ll be ready to adapt.  Assuming you have your floating waterproof asbestos crash armor with built in respirator.  I think they sell that at Wal-Mart®.

When it comes to being prepared for the future, remember this:  It’s better to look silly having prepared for a disaster that never comes, than not having prepared for the disaster and having to explain to your children why you didn’t.

Bet you never hear that from a financial adviser.

*For the record, my view of corporations is that they’re a tool, a convenient legal fiction to allow Very Large Things to get done.  The very name “corporation” comes from the Latin root word “corpus” which means a “place to have spring break”, or a “body” – corpus is also where the word corpse comes from.  Regardless of the definition, either of those can get you put into jail.  However, “incorporation” means, “giving a body to.”  A corporation is legally a person.

And, just like people, some are naughty, even if they once had as their motto, “Don’t be evil.”  I guess being evil pays pretty well.

I am not a financial adviser, paid or otherwise, so there’s that.  But I have seen Better Call Saul™, and that’s at least some sort of qualification.

Author: John

Nobel-Prize Winning, MacArthur Genius Grant Near Recipient writing to you regularly about Fitness, Wealth, and Wisdom - How to be happy and how to be healthy. Oh, and rich.

14 thoughts on “Financial Advisers, Future Predictions, and Three-Breasted Mars Women”

  1. As far as I can tell, the best advice is:
    – keep your debts low
    – under-house yourself (don’t buy the most expensive house you can)
    – keep nimble – take a short-term part-time job to reduce debt, if necessary
    – don’t stay unemployed for an extended period of time – take a low-level part-time job while looking for something better
    – marry a frugal spouse – and STAY married – divorce is expensive
    – invest in yourself – acquire skills that might translate into paid work if needed
    – do save, but diversify – have other resources than a 401(k)
    – keep your body tuned up – no amount of money is worth a broken down body

    And, embrace change. There WILL be change.

    1. That’s great advice for any time, Linda. If you don’t owe, they don’t own you. I had a conversation with The Boy last night, he’s 18 and getting ready to go to college. I told him: “You are as free as you ever will be in your life. Choose what you want to do with it.”

  2. Yogi Berra.

    I think he also said: “The future ain’t what it used to be.”

    The trouble with preparing for the future is there are so many possibilities to prepare for. Which future do you choose? The answer: The future in which you learn to be flexible and good at improvisation.

    With that in mind, I’m stretching a lot and watching repeat episodes of “Who’s Line Is It?” so I should be good.

  3. Was the joke Yogi Berra? I’m wracking my brain on the working for wrapped candy. I could swear that was a movie. Foster kids in the basement?

    1. Yup! You were the first player, and the first winner! The wrapped candy reference was really my great-grandparents. They always had that stuff around. Then I did an internet search for it . . . and this post showed up as a top three result. So, everyone searching for “wrapped candy foster kids basement movie” will now come see our conversation!!!!

  4. Basic financial advice hasn’t changed in a long time, everyone knows the basics and no one follows it anyway. I worked for many years in the 401k business and it is amazing how little even corporate cubicle drones were saving for retirement. I gave up on placing my hopes for the future on make believe money invested in make believe mutual funds and hoping that the government wasn’t going to loot it before I retire (and believe me, they are going to go after 401k/IRA plans).

    Also, you don’t have to go back to 1989. If you told me in 2009 that transvestites would be the most cherished and protected interest group in America in ten years, I would have laughed in your face. Now? Nothing you predict would shock me.

    1. Yes, 401k money is in “the system” – the change in the coffee cup in my bedroom is not. If it’s in the system, they’ll go after it at some point.

      Yeah, it reminds me of the Alice Cooper song Generation Landslide – “stuck at full speed at 100 miles per hour, the Colgate invisible shield finally got ’em” – we are in a loop where change is coming faster than ever. Eventually we won’t take it.

  5. Of major trends to miss, underestimating the amount of energy available for society was a doozy, even though he had the CIA, NSA, and every military intelligence agency working on that question.

    Looking at a prediction success rate of the above that makes weather men and stock market analysts seem like Nostradamus, if anyone can’t take that data point and extrapolate the predominant maximal stupidity and mental powers of the above-referenced groups, I cannot help you any further.

    (For Reference:
    Major missed calls –
    Iron Curtain
    fall of China
    Korean War
    Cuba
    Berlin Wall
    Sputnik
    Missiles In Cuba
    Vietnam debacle
    at least three Mideast wars
    Rise of OPEC
    Berlin Wall coming down
    Fall of Soviet Union
    Invasion of Kuwait
    9/11
    And that’s just the major cluelessness since 1945, not even getting into the everyday weeds where they’re less informed than most)

    Most major life emergencies can best be solved with a passport, a credit card, and $20K worth of small bills in cash, in your hand.
    (Concealed pistol optional.)
    Everything else is second best.

    But it’s still only most emergencies, not all.
    For the rest, canned goods (both #10, and the olive drab kind) take rather more precedence.

    A prudent person who prepares for not only the worst case imaginable, but also for the unimaginably bad case (what Mr. Sec. Rumsfeld referred to perspicaciously as unknown unknowns), will always do the best, overall. Because the main preps for SMOD versus looting at the local Food King versus an F5 tornado coming up the road are remarkably similar.

    This is why your great-great-great-grand-relative and mine all still trace their ultimate ancestry to Noah & Sons Cruise Lines, LLC.

    1. When we went through Hurricane Ike, it was . . . a non-issue. We ate great. We were (mostly) comfortable.

      Never plan on government “help” – at one point in the middle of Ike recovery the radio people asked for ordinary citizens to come help the first responders.

      Umm, excuse me?

  6. Starting with the easy stuff: What is the meaning of life?

    Why does the chicken cross the road? To get to the other side…

    There are some certanties: you are going to die…though some research is saying otherwise at this point. If you want to live longer…reduced stress is likely the key…so continuing to work your *ss of won’t get it. Food and diet and some supplements will help.

    Look for stuff….food/supplements that will boost your brain and reduce cognitive decline…you will need your brain the the future. Keep your muscles…you will need to get around. Focus on the essentials….avoid the retrograde.

    I won’t likely be here is 30 years…so I don’t care what happens at this point. You need to be able to let go?

    We are being held hostage by dummies…the younger dummies will suffer the most…they will watch their own suffering on their smart phones.

    1. Yes – I’ve heard the phrase “the revolution will not be televised,” but wonder now if it will be on Snapchat, Twitter, and Facebook?

      Good comments – agree 100%

  7. Pingback: My Homepage

Comments are closed.