This post is part of a series:
Part I Part II Part III Part IV Part V Part VI Part VII Part VIII Part IX
When we left off yesterday, I had just been burned by my first investment strategy – buy the stocks Merrill Lynch says to buy.
In fact, one of those stocks went bankrupt not long after Merrill touted it. That was my wake up call.
After reflecting upon this, I pivoted to a “hard assets only” strategy. This entailed making some big changes I had been wanting to make anyway.
First, I bought a five acre property way up in the mountains. And then I bought a bunch of gold, tools, provisions, and stored food. The idea was to become as self-sufficient as possible.
This one was hard to explain at the time. But it sure came in handy when the Covid regime launched its attack on us in 2020.
And our provisions remain an asset today. They will come in handy with supply chain disruptions and the manufactured food shortage potentially heading our way in the coming months.
But the problem with the hard assets only approach is that it only goes so far. You only need so many tools and provisions. Then what?
For me, the answer was Bitcoin.
Continue reading “How I Came to Love Debt and Taxes: Part II”



