This week’s Carnival of Personal Finance is up at Funny about Money. My post on the Efficient Market Theory Hoax is there along with a lot of other interesting stuff and some pictures of lovely places I will probably never visit.
This week’s Carnival of Personal Finance is up at Greener Pastures. It includes my post on Credit Cards and Our Nation of Children. There’s lots of other interesting stuff there. One link that caught my eye was Why Inspiration has no Place in Investing at Invest Wisdom. Click and enjoy!
This week’s edition of the Carnival of Personal Finance is up at Wise Bread.
My post on Millionaires as Role Models is there, along with other interesting stuff, including Lies, Dammed Lies, and Personal Finance from The Dough Roller and Why I Increasingly Distrust Financial Reporting from Modern Gal.
My post on Fuzzy Retirement Math made it into this week’s editor’s picks in the Carnival of Personal Finance. There’s lots of other readable stuff there, so have a click at it.
The carnival is hosted this week by Earn What You Spend, a blog I have to admit I haven’t visited before. Shame on me. It looks like a good one.
This week’s Carnival of Personal Finance carries my post on Why Market Timing is Hard. As usual, there is a lot of other stuff there, much of it worth reading.
There were only two editor’s picks this week, a post from Bargaineering with career advice, and our friend Pinyo at Moolanomy’s post I’m Just a Blogger, Damn it!
And so he is.
Being the tremendously self-centered guy that I am, I assumed that Pinyo’s post was in response to my post the previous day that discussed his mortgage refinance post. Since he didn’t mention this blog, I didn’t feel I needed to comment further. (Note to my future victims: not acknowledging Bad Money Advice at all is your best strategy to let the whole thing blow over.) But now that Pinyo’s explanation that he is just a blogger has been highlighted as one of the two best personal finance posts of the week, it is hard for me not to say something. (Another note: submitting your non-response to the Carnival of Personal Finance lessens the chances of it going away.)
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