Both the finances of organizations and the finances of the people in our community, especially those who are involved in activism, individually matter to the success of progressive and leftist movements. Better financial security serves the goal of helping uplift the working class, and also makes for more effective activism.
The Economic Police State episode that is frequently referenced in this episode:
https://podcast.greysonpeltier.com/wp/2023/07/01/the-economic-police-state-is-coming-for-the-working-class-in-little-and-big-ways/Show notes (always rough, may contain errors):
Discussion on the drought in political donations on both sides of the aisle, and layoffs in Progressive organizations specifically
Politico article:
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/07/21/candidates-grassroots-money-00107510It is important to have wealth so you can use it to create change
Conservative media stays alive because random business people buy ads and people buy from advertisers on the shows and donate year round.
Toxic victim-blaming attitude pervades finance
Get a job, get another job, get a better job. The real cause of most financial problems is bad jobs, worse bosses, and rampant financial exploitation. Not personal responsibility.
Some criticism of Dave Ramsey, the biggest offender, but also Caleb Hammer is growing in popularity and also sometimes falls into this trap of pushing people into bad jobs.
You do need personal responsibility but I think most people do fairly well with this.
People even do it to each other - DoorDash subreddit is the latest.
Meme/Tweet - You want a hamburger but you don't want the person who makes it to have a place to live.
Personal finance experts and people who blame victims are pushing people to the crappy job market rather than fighting for better conditions with flexible work for those who need it.
A progressive/leftist (sort of) approach to personal finance - Steps to improving your finances:
Analyze the way they do
The Caleb Hammer style “financial audit” approach of nit-picking/shaming random things isn’t necessary.
Look at big things like Assets, Cash Flow, Income as main metrics
Credit score is important - borrowing money in the right way is how most businesses make investments
Being able to become a homeowner, financed by a loan, is essential to wealth building
Almost no successful companies are living by the Dave Ramsey method
No need to necessarily pay down all your debt immediately, if it is not a large impediment to cash flow and you have enough savings. The guilt-trip about paying off debt feeds into the low-wage trap.
Things like bankruptcy and debt settlement are good if you need them. Don't try to pay off debts in full that are long overdue and your credit is already ruined without considering other options. This episode does not cover this issue. It’s very complex and requires professional advice.
Don't overstress yourself with little things
Be flexible as long as you are getting to your goals
Who cares if you bought some fast food?
Who cares if you bought the proverbial gas station taquitos?
Keep away from major debt that ties you down to a job though. Have a plan and be able to leave a bad situation. What happens if you need to quit or strike?
Think about the big things first - housing, cars, large purchases, student loans, etc.
Eliminate the ways they take from you
Bank fees, insurance costs, subscriptions, overcharged on cable or phone bill, excessive interest (refinance and use 0% cards)
Choose local banks and credit unions for banking. See Claim Your Chan