James Woosley’s Blog

FPU@FBNM 2006

December 15th, 2006

Last Sunday night, I had the honor and privilege of speaking to our church about Dave Ramsey’s Financial Peace University. Our pastor, Dr. Ed Litton, asked me to join him for a discussion on giving, and it was a great opportunity to discuss the impact FPU has had on our church this year.

We started classes in January of 2006, and next weekend, we’ll complete our third class. The numbers thus far are impressive:

  • 63 FPU Graduates (118 Attendees)
  • $162,732.71 in Debt Paid
  • $75,654.08 in Savings Created
  • >$18M in Debt Offers Collected
  • 98 Credit Cards Destroyed!!!

Those numbers are even more impressive because not everyone who participated in the course submitted their debt and savings data.

I’ve also been able to lead two classes at my workplace.

The discussion was well received, and several people asked for more information afterwards. In fact, we may do a similar discussion for our Sunday morning services prior to our next classes starting in February. I had a great time and really enjoyed sharing this life-changing information with such a large group (200+).

Our next class starts February 18th. If you’re in the Mobile, AL area, please consider joining us. If you’re not, find another class at DaveRamsey.com/fpu. There are thousands of classes each year, and people really are getting out of debt and building wealth. You can too!

For more information about FPU and the class schedule for FBNM, visit GazelleIntensity.com.

– 10 of 40 –

Merry Christmas, Dale Earnhardt Jr.

December 15th, 2006

Initial reports this morning state that the new race track in south Alabama will be in Mobile County. As previously posted, that’s about a mile from my house.

Mixed emotions…more on this later.

– 9 of 40 –

PS — Link to official announcement at AlabamaMotorsportsPark.com.

The Ten Pillars of Economic Wisdom

December 3rd, 2006

I used to spend a few weeks every summer when I was a teenager with my grandparents in Missouri. My grandmother and I were always close, and though she graduated high school the same year as my mother (she dropped out the first time around), she and I shared a love for books and learning.

We often listened to Rush Limbaugh and discussed politics, economics and other topics that most find boring. One year she found a photocopy of a small pamphlet she’d gotten from a credit union decades before. It took years for me to discover its origins (thanks Google!), but now I know and I’m sharing it with you.

Read it. Chew on it. Digest it. It may just change the way you see your job, your money, your work, your Social Security payments…

THE TEN PILLARS OF ECONOMIC WISDOM
from The American Economic Foundation,
as displayed during the 1964 World’s Fair in New York City

1) Nothing in our material world can come from nowhere or go nowhere, nor can it be free; everything in our economic life has a source, a destination and a cost that must be paid.

2) Government is never a source of goods. Everything produced is produced by the people, and everything that government gives to the people, it must first take from the people.

3) The only valuable money that government has to spend is the money taxed or borrowed out of the people’s earnings. When government decides to spend more than it has thus received, that extra unearned money is created out of thin air, through the banks, and, when spent, takes on value only by reducing the value of all money, savings and insurance.

4) In our modern exchange economy, all payroll and employment come from customers, and the only worth-while job security is customer security; if there are no customers, there can be no payroll and no jobs.

5) Customer security can be achieved by the worker only when he cooperates with management in doing the things that win and hold customers. Job security, therefore, is a partnership problem that can be solved only in a spirit of understanding and cooperation.

6) Because wages are the principal cost of everything, widespread wage increases, without corresponding increases in production, simply increase the cost of every-body’s living.

7) The greatest good for the greatest number means, in its material sense, the greatest goods for the greatest number which, in turn, means the greatest productivity per worker.

8) All productivity is based on three factors: 1) natural resources, whose form, place and condition are changed by the expenditure of 2) human energy (both muscular and mental), with the aid of 3) tools.

9) Tools are the only one of these three factors that man can increase without limit, and tools come into being in a free society only when there is a reward for the temporary self-denial that people must practice in order to channel part of their earnings away from purchases that produce immediate comfort and pleasure, and into new tools of production. Proper payment for the use of tools is essential to their creation.

10) The productivity of the tools–that is, the efficiency of the human energy applied in connection with their use–has always been highest in a competitive society in which the economic decisions are made by millions of progress-seeking individuals, rather than a state-planned society in which those decisions are made by a handful of all-powerful people, regardless of how well-meaning, unselfish, sincere and intelligent those people may be.

Note: Click here for a related ad placed in MIT’s newspaper, The Tech in 1970.

I also passed a copy of it to Dave Ramsey when I first met him at a live event in Atlanta in Nov 2005, but if he read it and had an opinion on it, I’ll never know. (He didn’t mention it on the air.)

– 8 of 40 –

Password Safe

December 3rd, 2006

I’m behind on my promised 40 posts, so I’m going to start doing two or three a day to catch up…hold on!

If you’re like me, you have a million different passwords. The web is a great tool, but you’ve got to have passwords for a lot of sites, email addresses, pin numbers and so on. You could write them down or keep them all the same, but that isn’t very secure.

Password Safe is a free (open source) piece of software that allows you to use one master password to encrypt/decrypt you account and password listing. I’ve used it for six or seven years and it works great!

There’s even a version for the Pocket PC OS, so you can sync the data file and use it on your PC or PDA.

There are other programs like this out there, but Password Safe is my pick.

Note: A password is only as good as you make it, and anything that has an entry point, can be broken into given enough time and effort. So while this is a handy program for encrypting passwords, be careful! If you give someone access to the file, they may eventually get into it. And be aware of your company’s policies regarding this kind of thing…it could get you fired if you use it at work!

– 7 of 40 –

Goodbye Max

November 25th, 2006

Warning: Sad content below:

I don’t even really know what to write, so I’ll just tell the story and be done with it.

Around 3:30 am this morning our Golden Retriever George was barking outside, so my wife Heather got up to let him and Max, our Pug, in for the night. A few minutes later she came back to the bedroom and told me that something was wrong with Max.

He didn’t come in with George. At first she thought he had gotten outside the fence, but then she found him. He was curled up and not moving, and his breathing was shallow.

We brought him in and laid him on a blanket on the couch. Then we noticed the blood around his rear end. Something very bad had happened.

She rushed him to an emergency vet, but the odds of helping him were slim. She made the decision to put him to sleep.

We still don’t know exactly what happened. The vet initially thought it was some kind of anemia or rat poison, but we just don’t know. They are sending some tissue and blood samples to be analyzed. George is fine so far, but a bit lonely now.

I wasn’t very close with Max. He was just three years old, and I’ve been on the road since we got him. We never really bonded. But Heather did. He was her little dog. He helped ease some of the pain when we lost a child due to a tubal pregnancy in 2002.

Max had a sweet personality, and he was George’s best friend. He was the little dog always dancing around his feet and nipping at his tail.

Max will be missed.

« Previous PageNext Page »