Imagine yourself shopping for car insurance. Would you allow yourself to enter a risk pool where the other members could forgo premium until they had a severe accident and then secure covereage to retroactively cover the damage while you and others paid your premium continuously? Seems a bit unfair, eh? Not too mention that no one would bother paying premium regularly if that was not necessary to secure coverage. And just think what the premium increases would be like in such a risk pool. Brutal. Now imagine Life insurance which can be purchased for someone after they had died or fire insurance after the house was smoldering in ashes. Think those policies would be cheap? Would responsible individuals who wanted to insure against future loss sign on to be part of this risk pool? Insurance is designed to protect against an unforseen future loss. Forcing an insurer to cover a loss which has already taken place is welfare as John Stossell points out in this article. We have a very imperfect health insurance …
Related Websites - Is Narcissism In Your Business? So I was listening to the John Tesh Radio Show on 102.3 the River last night and he said something that struck a chord with me...he said the reason most people don't find a healthy relationship or job is because they might be a narcissist. I thought about this for......
- 22 Tips for Weight Loss pt 3 Here is a quick no nonsense guide to what you can to in order to get healthy and lose weight. This is part 3 in a 5 part series. 9 - Identify the right exercise for your needs. No two exercises are created equally. If you enjoy running and it......
- Optimizing Risk: A Pillar of Financial Success If youâre a savvy investor, you are naturally going to seek out the best interest rate on your money. If we were looking at interest rates and nothing else, we would head down to Vegas and put all of our money on double zeros, because after all it pays......
- Tax the Unhealthy - Lazy Man's Thoughts [This is my response to a two-part guest post by Adfecto of Aspire 2 Wealth. You might want to read both part 1 and part 2 before continuing. The topic is controversial and as I imagined it drew many strong feelings from commenters] I'd like to address a few of......
- Prenuptials: What's wrong with them? Brett writes: I've dated Cheryl (not her real name) for a year and a half and we're recently engaged. After the engagement, I told her I wanted her to sign a prenuptial. And, that's when the trouble started. She says I don't love her. That's definitely not true. Love has......





