PDA

View Full Version : Jackpot! That's a Good Thing, Right?


McTucket
02-20-2006, 08:31 PM
Organization Says Lottery Winners Often Squander Their Millions
By NEAL KARLINSKY, ABCNews.com

LINCOLN, Neb. (Feb. 20) - Here's a statistic for the people of Lincoln as they await news of the $365 million lottery winner: Seventy percent of those who become suddenly wealthy squander it within a few short years, according to the National Endowment for Financial Education.

About one-third of lottery winners eventually declare bankruptcy, according to the Certified Financial Planners Board of Standards.

In this college town of 230,000 people, there is plenty of conversation about who may have won the lucky ticket purchased at a Lincoln convenience store. And there are plenty of suggestions for the lucky winner.

"If I know them, I'm going to hit them up for a loan," laughs Carl Jansen over a cup of coffee.

But at the next table over, Michelle Darcy hits on the very problem that has plagued lottery winners since big jackpots were first awarded.

"I think it'd be scary to be that person," she says. "Because you've got all your friends and family coming out of the woodwork and wanting a little piece of that lottery themselves."

In fact, state lottery officials here are blunt in their advice for the state's newly minted millionaire.

"Sign the ticket, put it in a safe place, take the phone off the hook, tell as few people as possible, talk to financial person, and come tell us," says Tom Johnson of the Nebraska Lottery.



''I truly won the lottery of death, I think.''

-- William ''Bud'' Post III, whose life turned sour after he won a $16.2 million jackpot

Riches to Rags
It is advice that comes from experience. The record books are filled with previous lottery winners who've squandered their millions.

One of the saddest stories of a former winner is that of William "Bud" Post III, who died last month of respiratory failure at the age of 66.

The former Pennsylvania lottery winner called it the "lottery of death" despite his $16.2 million winnings. He used the money to start businesses with siblings -- but they all failed. His own brother was convicted of trying to kill him. His sixth wife moved out, and an on-again, off-again girlfriend successfully sued for a third of Post's winnings. At one point, Post was convicted of assault for firing a shotgun over a bill collector's head.

John Lacher, a bankruptcy lawyer who assisted Post, said he was like "The Beverly Hillbillies."

"He did everything you would expect of a guy who became a millionaire overnight," Lacher says.

A similar case comes out of New Jersey, where in the mid-'80s a woman won more than $5 million. Today, the money is gone and the former millionaire lives in a trailer.

"I won the American dream but I lost it, too," the former winner has been quoted as saying. "It was a very hard fall. It's called rock bottom."

She says some of the money was gambled away, but millions more were lost by simply never saying "no" to friends and relatives who seemed to always "have a hand out."

3043
02-20-2006, 09:28 PM
I'd take that challenge any day. Fuck, I know I wouldn't squander it but there is only one way to find out...

McTucket
02-20-2006, 09:39 PM
haha werd. i second that shit, you ugly liberal freak.

JimbobSS
02-20-2006, 09:48 PM
psshh the only reason they couldn't hold onto that money is because they started out as trailer trash, and I'm sorry but you can take the trash out of the trailer but you can't take the trailer out of the trash.

McTucket
02-20-2006, 10:17 PM
are you calling me trailer trash?


i grew up exactly like that.


i think im doing well for myself, thank you very much.


people just dont know how to control themselves.

JimbobSS
02-20-2006, 10:29 PM
its just a handy catch phrase dude. I think if it applied to you I would be getting hate mail already :lol:

McTucket
02-20-2006, 11:19 PM
harhar.

Sammie
02-20-2006, 11:51 PM
squander 16 million, easy
squander 365 million....now that's a challenge

Thunder
02-21-2006, 02:56 AM
Give me 1 million and I will live on it the rest of my life, put my kids through college and buy them houses for wedding/graduation gifts. Easy.

Sammie
02-21-2006, 02:59 AM
checks in the mail

Thunder
02-21-2006, 03:06 AM
Woooooooooooooooo!

Maull
02-21-2006, 12:02 PM
no shit man. 365 mil. more than half of that would be given away before i even got started. theres a ton of ppl and organizations who need the money for good purposes. 25 mil is enough for me. shit 10 mil is enough to live a lavish lifestyle.

McTucket
02-21-2006, 04:03 PM
1 million is fine.


i believe that people need to work in order to better themselves.


so id take my income... plus a mil.. and il be dopishly fine.

sylverarrow
02-21-2006, 04:18 PM
1 million is fine.


i believe that people need to work in order to better themselves.


so id take my income... plus a mil.. and il be dopishly fine.
Touche! :cool:

Sammie
02-21-2006, 06:10 PM
screw work

i would never work again unless it was volunteer work

there is no honor in being a wage slave

3043
02-22-2006, 05:09 PM
screw work

i would never work again unless it was volunteer work

there is no honor in being a wage slave


Here here!! Fuck work.

Work can run off and play hide and go fuck itself.

While I agree work does better people, 3043 is now good enough and needs no more improvement from "work". Plus I work two jobs that require as little work as possible I would have to go out of my way to work less for an actual salary.

Speaking of work - I have to leave for my teaching job ten minutes ago.

McTucket
02-22-2006, 05:25 PM
dudes im serious. without work, we'd be some lazy pieces of arse.


i know it sucks at times, but id be an insane person if i didnt work.


granted, id rather own (pwn) my..... own business...

3043
02-22-2006, 10:58 PM
One reason I chose to be an RN was the little amount of work it required. Don't get me wrong it can be ass busting work sometimes. I am no stranger to hard work, in fact, I am familiar enough with it to know I never want to do it again.

Then how can be nursing be less work? Easy. I work 12 hour shifts - three days a week. That works out to 156 days a year. Or, if you like, 209 days off a year NOT including vacation days. Plus many many hours saved "getting ready" for work or commuting to and from work. The savings is ENORMOUS.

Me 156 days of work/year.

Average wage-slave 260 work days/year.

Not including vacations, of course. Factor in 2 hours getting ready and commuting each day and more time is saved since the average person works five days a week but I only do three days. Granted the days are longer but the free time becomes really apparent after only a short time.

Time is what life is comprised of. I teach on the side because I have so much free time. But even teaching is only 8 hours a week in two days.

To make anyone still reading more jealous sometimes I stack my 12 hour shifts close together so I can get five six or sometimes even 8 days off in a row. Unless I'm earning a huge income it wouldn't be worth it, to me, to spend all that "life" just to ge money.

I'm not bragging...well maybe a bit.

Sammie
02-23-2006, 12:05 AM
dudes im serious. without work, we'd be some lazy pieces of arse.


i know it sucks at times, but id be an insane person if i didnt work.


granted, id rather own (pwn) my..... own business...

lack of "work" doesnt make you lazy. wtf??
doing nothing makes you lazy.
I can think of plenty of other things I could bide my time with besides trying to earn a buck
You don't need a W2 form to prove your worth or merit

I'm defining work as selling your time for money. To me that is "work".

McTucket
02-23-2006, 12:05 AM
how much u makin, and how much schoolin did u go through?


sign me up.

McTucket
02-23-2006, 12:06 AM
lack of "work" doesnt make you lazy. wtf??
doing nothing makes you lazy.
I can think of plenty of other things I could bide my time with besides trying to earn a buck
You don't need a W2 form to prove your worth or merit

I'm defining work as selling your time for money. To me that is "work".


if ur not working, wtf are u doing stupid head?

playing cs, smokin weed....yea. thats what i thought.

Sammie
02-23-2006, 12:11 AM
RN's are in high demand. Serious job security.

I met a client the other day who was an RN for several years and decided to become a nurse anesthetists. She took a 28 month program and started out day one making over $150,000. That's not bad money.
Granted its a very difficult program and its hard to get accepted to but to nearly triple your salary for 28 months worth of extra schooling seems worth it.
She wasnt even having to pay her own malpractice insurance

Sammie
02-23-2006, 12:14 AM
if ur not working, wtf are u doing stupid head?

playing cs, smokin weed....yea. thats what i thought.

I do plenty of other things besides sit at home playing cs and smoking

However if I wasn't constrained by a lack of fundage I would do a hell of a lot more.

I love you guys but if I won the Lotto, it would be doubtful that I would be here hanging out. Too much to do.

But since I'm a broke bitch, yes I sit here with you guys for free

ha! :p