Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
This commit is contained in:
153
hpr_transcripts/hpr2589.txt
Normal file
153
hpr_transcripts/hpr2589.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,153 @@
|
||||
Episode: 2589
|
||||
Title: HPR2589: Saving Money: a response to Klaatu's Personal Finance Series
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2589/hpr2589.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-10-19 06:15:16
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
This is HPR Episode 2589 titled, Saving Money, A Response to Clotus Personal Finance Series.
|
||||
It is hosted by John Culp and is about 14 minutes long and carries a clean flag.
|
||||
The summary is, A Response to Clotus Verenized Series about Personal Finance.
|
||||
This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
|
||||
Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
|
||||
Hey everybody, this is John Culp and Lafayette Louisiana.
|
||||
You might be asking yourself, who is this?
|
||||
I've never heard of this guy, John Culp.
|
||||
It has been a very long time since I recorded an episode.
|
||||
My apologies for that.
|
||||
I've been very busy at work and have not been able to keep up the frantic pace at which I used to contribute episodes.
|
||||
But I was listening to a couple of episodes recently done by Clotus about Personal Finance,
|
||||
sorry the air conditioner, just cut on as soon as I was starting to record and it's going to
|
||||
make noise in the recording here.
|
||||
I wanted to respond a little bit to a couple of things that Clotus said in there about saving.
|
||||
He's right on point that it's very difficult to save money early on in your career when
|
||||
you're not making very much money because it can be hard just to meet your financial obligations
|
||||
every month. But there are some ways and I can share with you a couple of the ways that I use
|
||||
to save when I was in graduate school. That was when I was earning a little bit of money but
|
||||
really not very much. One thing that I did that was offered through the University of Texas,
|
||||
as I was a state of Texas employee while I was a graduate assistant at the University of Texas.
|
||||
So I had some teaching duties and I also worked for a while at the humanities research center
|
||||
on campus, just getting paid by the hour and whatnot. But they offered a pretty easy way to buy
|
||||
United States savings bonds. And bonds are, I'm still not sure whether that was a good idea for
|
||||
me to do it or not, but my parents used to buy them and I think they thought it was a pretty good
|
||||
idea. My dad's pretty savvy financially. He's a guy who grew up poor and now is living a very
|
||||
good retirement because he had a plan. Having a plan is half the battle I think. He grew up in a
|
||||
family that didn't have enough money to send any of the kids to college and so he had to figure out a
|
||||
way to make that happen. And the way that he chose was to join the military which paid for his
|
||||
schooling. So he joined the Air Force. They paid for his way through college at Florida State.
|
||||
And then he served in the Air Force for 20 years and along the way they paid for him also to get a
|
||||
PhD in mathematics which prepared him for a second career that he started right. I think he retired
|
||||
on 20 years to the day after starting in the Air Force because if you serve 20 years in the Air Force
|
||||
or any of the other branches of the US military you get a lifetime pension after that of $25,000 a year.
|
||||
And that was part of his plan all along. And so then he had a since he had a PhD in mathematics he
|
||||
had credentials for a career in academia after that. And so he became a college professor and then
|
||||
he worked his way up in that from rank and file faculty to department chair to vice president
|
||||
at a little school in Nashville, Tennessee and was able to retire at a fairly early age I think
|
||||
around 60 or so. And now he's enjoying a comfortable retirement. But he's always been a big fan
|
||||
of saving money. I mean he talks about all the ways that he used to scrimp and save back in a day.
|
||||
And one of them was he learned how to fix his own car because he couldn't afford to pay mechanics
|
||||
to fix it. But the Air Force base where he was stationed had a really good workshop where you
|
||||
bring your car in and work on it yourself. They had all the tools, they had jacks and lifts and
|
||||
things like that and even had some people that might be able to give you pointers on how to do
|
||||
things. And he learned quite a lot and was able to fix his own car by just buying the parts and
|
||||
installing them himself. He and my mom also habitually bought houses that were less expensive and
|
||||
smaller than what the realtors told them they could afford because they didn't want to have too
|
||||
high of a mortgage payment. They wanted to be able to stock some of the money away for savings
|
||||
every month, pretty much their whole lives. And so he and this falls into the the category of
|
||||
what Clotu mentioned also which is you know the basic principle is to spend less money than you earn.
|
||||
And my parents were always great models for that behavior. So and I know that one of the
|
||||
instruments they used for savings was US savings bond. And the idea behind those is that there's
|
||||
a certain face value to the bond say $100. But when you buy the bond you only pay $50 and then
|
||||
you have to let it mature. And after I don't know 20 or 25 years after you pay $50 for it it will
|
||||
be worth $100 and you can redeem it for that amount. And I still have those things around here
|
||||
somewhere they actually might be ready to redeem by now. I've kind of forgotten about them.
|
||||
And that's part of the strategy of saving also is just put the money away and don't think about it
|
||||
anymore. The more effective saving strategy that I came up with was during the time when I was
|
||||
trying to figure out how I was going to pay for a new guitar. My dad had purchased a guitar for
|
||||
me that got me through college. It was a nice guitar but a very nice 1969 Ramirez got a great deal
|
||||
on it for I think $2,000 and my dad financed that because it was essential to my studies in college
|
||||
and he had the means that decided to support me. And I'm very grateful to him for that.
|
||||
Around 1993 I think it was I got on the waiting list for a guitar builder in I think at the time he
|
||||
was in Washington state. He moved out to Hawaii for a while and then I think he moved back to
|
||||
Washington. But his name is Robert Ruck. If you look up Robert Ruck classical guitars on eBay you'll see
|
||||
his guitars there. They're very very nice guitars and he builds them in batches of maybe I think he
|
||||
builds maybe 25 guitars a year and they're not the kinds of things you can just go to the store and buy.
|
||||
But I got on his waiting list and when I got on the waiting list he estimated that it would be
|
||||
eight years before my name came up and my guitar would be ready. And so I thought well now is the
|
||||
time I need to start figuring out how I'm going to pay for this thing because the price was going to
|
||||
be in the neighborhood of $5,000 and I didn't have any money. So I started looking into investments
|
||||
but like Klausu said when you don't have much money to start out with it can be difficult to gain
|
||||
entry into the investment world but somebody gave me the advice to buy a copy of either money
|
||||
magazine or something like that and just look through it for mutual funds and so I found
|
||||
an advertisement for Trans-America funds just based in San Francisco I believe
|
||||
and almost all of the mutual fund advertisements in the magazine required something like $2,500
|
||||
of initial buy-in if you wanted to just buy in some mutual funds but a couple of them said well
|
||||
if you don't want if you don't have that much money there's still a way to start investing and I
|
||||
think the the campaign slogan for Trans-America was and I quote be an investor so they they were
|
||||
aiming this particular ad at people who wanted to invest but just didn't have much money
|
||||
and the way they would let you into the mutual fund market was if you committed to have a monthly
|
||||
deduction from your banking account of at least $50 and so I started doing that I didn't have any
|
||||
money to open the account at all I just pledged $50 a month that would be automatically withdrawn from
|
||||
my banking account and invested into this mutual fund and so I started doing that and pretty much
|
||||
forgot about it I think I drew some out when I needed to buy the the rock when my name came up
|
||||
actually the first time my name came up I elected to defer for another year
|
||||
because I still didn't have the money and then when my name came up again I actually decided
|
||||
to sell my Ramirez which I was able to sell for $4,000 so I got twice the amount that my dad paid
|
||||
for it and I still needed to come up with about I don't know $600 or something so I think I
|
||||
cashed out part of my mutual fund which by then had grown a little bit and after that I never
|
||||
did stop contributing to it I still contribute to it at some point when I actually got a real job
|
||||
with a salary I bounced my monthly contribution up to $100 and I think that's where it is now it's
|
||||
possible that I put it up to $200 at some point but I just don't remember I mean at this point
|
||||
I'm making enough in my job as a professor and director of the school of music where I can do
|
||||
other kinds of investments as well but that mutual fund we actually just drew quite a large
|
||||
sum of money out of that to pay for renovations on a new house that we bought and it illustrates
|
||||
the point that if you just get in the habit of saving this money even if it's not that much $50
|
||||
a month or $100 a month and just let it go and forget about it years later you'll find out man
|
||||
there's a lot of money there I think before I took out this latest bid there was something like
|
||||
$24,000 in that account and that all built up by contributing $50 a month over a number of years
|
||||
and any of the dividends that were earned on that were just reinvested and so it just builds up
|
||||
and builds up the main principle with investing is if you can take a long long-term approach to it
|
||||
that's your best bet now in my current position I have something similar to what Klaatu talked
|
||||
about which is the 401k in nonprofit organizations there's a similar instrument called the 503c
|
||||
I think it's 503 or maybe 503b 403b I forget what it's called anyway I use an outfit called TIA
|
||||
CREF and they are known for catering to educators higher education and stuff like that but it's
|
||||
it's a similar kind of retirement account and you can actually we actually have a mutual fund
|
||||
through them as well but they've got different retirement kinds of accounts you can do and what
|
||||
we do my wife and I both is we have the maximum amount allowed deducted from our salaries before taxes
|
||||
and put into this retirement account it's called a tax deferred annuity the idea is that you can
|
||||
suck money away without paying taxes on it and then when you start drawing that money out at retirement
|
||||
that's when you pay the taxes on it and so this is what they call this when you sign up for it is a
|
||||
voluntary salary reduction and so my take home pay each month is much less than it would be if I
|
||||
didn't say for retirement but also when it comes tax time I don't have to pay taxes on that amount
|
||||
of my salary that was put into the retirement account I will be paying taxes on that when I'm in my
|
||||
retirement years and that was that was difficult to get started as well at first we couldn't do it
|
||||
because I wasn't making enough money and I was the only salary but then when my wife also got a
|
||||
job and we started making more and then the best thing was when we got our kids out of the private
|
||||
schools where we were paying tuition every month and into the gifted program in the public schools
|
||||
not only were they getting a better education but also we did not have to pay anymore tuition and so
|
||||
all that money that we used to pay in tuition we started investing on our retirement accounts
|
||||
so it can take a while to get there in your career but getting into the habit of saving
|
||||
is possible even when you're not making much money and that's something I would definitely
|
||||
encourage people to try to do I guess that's all the advice I would have anyway also just
|
||||
getting the habit of not spending as much on stuff if you don't have to I mean even with the
|
||||
decent salary I make I still do about I don't know 70% of my clothing shopping at Goodwill because
|
||||
I can get a shirt there for four and a half dollars and let somebody else pay the original price
|
||||
of 40 or 50 dollars for it you know well I mean why should I pay that when I can buy it used
|
||||
for just a few dollars and so my wife and I both even though we could probably technically afford
|
||||
to buy all of our clothing new we don't usually just because we're in the habit ever since
|
||||
graduate school that was how we did it and we're just still in that habit so and then you might
|
||||
call it being a cheap skate but we call it not spending money that we don't have to all right well
|
||||
I'm glad to be back on HPR and I hope it won't be too much longer before I do another episode I've
|
||||
got a couple more things I want to talk about including I'll be a little teaser here I bought a
|
||||
1948 console radio that's powered by tubes and it's really really cool so I want to talk about that
|
||||
and then let you hear it and stuff but that will be a separate episode I know Ken Fallon would be
|
||||
very upset with me if I jammed that different topic into this episode okay great being back I
|
||||
will talk to you guys again hopefully very soon okay bye
|
||||
you've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org we are a community
|
||||
podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today show like all our
|
||||
shows was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a
|
||||
podcast then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is Hacker Public Radio was
|
||||
founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club and it's part of the binary revolution
|
||||
at binwreff.com if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment
|
||||
on the website or record a follow up episode yourself unless otherwise stated today's show is
|
||||
released on the creative comments attribution share a life 3.0 license
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user