🔸 AMERICANS SAY MONEY ISN'T BUYING HAPPINESS, EVEN AS SAVINGS SHRINK, FINDS KEYBANK SURVEY
66% OF AMERICANS WOULD RATHER WORK A JOB THEY LOVE WITH A LOWER PAYING SALARY THAN WORK A JOB THEY HATE WITH A HIGHER PAYING SALARY (34%). SIMULTANEOUSLY, A QUARTER OF AMERICANS SAY THEY'RE SPENDING MORE AND SAVING LESS, UP FROM YEARS PRIOR (15% IN 2022 AND 13% IN 2021), AND 60% BELIEVE WE ARE IN OR WILL SOON BE IN A RECESSION—POINTING TO AN ENVIRONMENT IN WHICH AMERICANS ARE PRIORITIZING HAPPINESS WHILE BRACING FOR ECONOMIC CHALLENGES. KEY.COM/CONTENT/DAM/KCO/DOCU… ...
British man attacked for entering a ‘no-go zone’ in London.
A horde of Islamists surrounded him and questioned why he was in ‘their’ neighborhood.
They threatened him and began chanting ‘Allahu Akbar’ as they kicked him out.
A 65-year-old couple retiring in 2025 with average earnings will receive an estimated $1.34 million in lifetime benefits, while contributing only $720,000 in today’s dollars.
That shortfall—more than $600,000 per couple—is being made up by younger workers.
“Most of the growth in spending has gone to retirement and healthcare, while programs that promote upward mobility... have been left behind”
https://www.newsweek.com/social-security-medicare-young-workers-cost-10477619