Yea youâre right. Of course Iâve never risked anybody elseâs life with my endeavors, thatâs why Iâm certainly not giving this guy a free pass. He should have reduced his monthly expenses to a level that he would have been able to survive on for a few years.Quote from trendlover:
Sandybestdog, your experience is not the same as this man. You tried and took some risk, but you live with your parents you said. Do you risk your parents home to make your business work? No. You know if you fail at first with your business, you have not lost a place to sleep and eat. So your risk was not like this man. No, you are not a loser like you think. Would you take all the equity of your parents house to place your bet if they said ok?
And Jim Cramer had a risk of losing his hedge fund with redemptions, and margin calls...but, if it blow up, is Jim Cramers life savings and home equity in that fund? No. He can pick up himself and go again.
But this hedgefund/pizza man man has no risk management, then goes on the tv to say he has food stamps and a pizza job. Hmm, but he still lives in that house, and he still has many more connections to friends in the hedge fund world. But he trys to pretend he understands poverty and neediness, and he is insulting to anyone who was poor and built their life. He is using the poverty to make his story, but he never lived that life.
Quote from mynd66:
Hindsight is 20/20.
"It is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantlyâ¦who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat." -Theodore Roosevelt
Quote from mynd66:
Everyone keeps saying he foolishly risked too much. What if he was a doctor and went back to being a doctor? He was skilled in a field with a lot of demand at that point in time. So what if you lose X amount of dollars, risk is not so OBVIOUS when at that time there were companies everywhere willing to pay for skilled labor.
I say it wasn't very risky when because At The Time there would have been NO problem at all in finding a job that suits your education and skills in a thriving economy.
If a skilled plumber gets fired from a particular company, all else equal, he can go work for another company and still maintain his plumber lifestyle. But all else changed. The fact that the whole financial industry went bust meant that most who were (or were not) educated, skilled, honest, hard working that happend to be employed in that field lost their jobs and had to change their lifestyle. How well do you deal with change?
When the market comes crashing down it trys to take as many people out along the way. Suffering is the outcome. The only obvious thing here is that no one new what was going to happen to the economy.
I'd rather be the lesser person who can mentally and emotionally handle hardship than pulling my hair out cause something happend that I wasn't ready for. Shit happens to everyone no matter who you are deserving or not. How do you carry yourself when the world comes crashing down?
Quote from Anaconda:
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All he did was waste money and even if he succeeding, he would produce NOTHING. Why should he be respected?
He had an easy cushy job that a monkey can do and thought he was hot shit. Then reality hit. What is so respectable about that? Why would you respect a fool who was lucky enough to get with money in the first place?
Quote from misterno:
After all this publicity, I am sure he will get a job offer
Now that was a smart decision to get all this publicity for free
Don't you agree?
Quote from trendlover:
To risk all the cash savings AND equity to his home leave that man with no security to start again. If he found another hedgefund to work for, he still has lost all his assets. Maybe he live in that big house, but he does not own of much of it anymore because he lost it to the hedgefund, he has no cash because he lost it to the hedgefund. So he starts at 0, and not built any wealth. For someone to make $750,000 a year and go to 0 is not bravo. If he used risk management, ok, and blew up the hedgefund, then he still starts again with some assets/wealth still in his hand when he goes back to another hedgefund job. But he now has no job with hedgefund, no assets, but is living in the house because he is lucky in time when banks are a mess, and they let him stay for now. And he has friends who pay for the private school for now. And his wife is not working either. So he is a big joke to me to go to tv and pretend he feels poverty with food stamps and pizza delivery job, when he still has a priviledge of a beautiful home and private school and his wife not working.
Quote from mynd66:
There in lies many things to be assumed. Without knowing what other desperate measures were taken during the decline of his hedge fund we will never be able to say, with much merit, how carelessly he behaved. Why not this: consider before he lost even a tenth of his wealth in this hedge fund (sometime in early '08) he was ready to bail and tried to re-apply at his old job OR a similar job with around the same pay. Which may have been the "stop loss" "back-up plan" "plan B" etc. But of course there wasn't a market for him (gap down). That is just as plausible as saying he recklessly gambled his money away. Both scenarios are derived through imagination. The article doesn't provide evidence to support either one.