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Re: Gambling

Posted: Fri Feb 27, 2015 4:15 am
by Hildegard
Anyway as a Coc'er I was told no gambling on horses, Poker etc. But from what I remember stock market was acceptable. Never really understood why the Stock Market was treated differently. Don't have the numbers but I think I have lost more money on the stock market then horseracing.
My parents did not believe in the stock market, and neither did anyone at our country church. No gambling, no card playing, no stock portfolios, no lottery tickets, no horse or dog racing, no casinos (except for the $5 steak dinner specials), no raffle tickets, no kidding. To start a stock portfolio was taking away from other people's money. Where they got that notion I couldn't say for sure, but that's how it was explained to me. My parents were bootstrap Republicans and very strict.

When I was a kid my dad was out of work for a time. When he landed a job, it was an employee-owned company, like Wal-mart way back when, and it came with a stock portfolio. My parents went to the elders to see what they should do, and everybody left having decided that investing in my dad's employing company was okay because it was investing in his job, but my parents were strongly urged not to diversify.

Re: Gambling

Posted: Fri Feb 27, 2015 8:30 am
by Lev
Hildegard wrote:...everybody left having decided that investing in my dad's employing company was okay because it was investing in his job, but my parents were strongly urged not to diversify.
So the takeaway message was that you can do stocks, you just can't do them well?

Lev

Re: Gambling

Posted: Fri Feb 27, 2015 10:24 am
by agricola
Lev wrote:
Hildegard wrote:...everybody left having decided that investing in my dad's employing company was okay because it was investing in his job, but my parents were strongly urged not to diversify.
So the takeaway message was that you can do stocks, you just can't do them well?

Lev

*snicker*
:lol:

Re: Gambling

Posted: Thu Mar 12, 2015 4:00 am
by Hildegard
Echoing agricola's snicker. ;)

Of course it later came out that one of those same elders had a stock portfolio, which was a total scandal... and he had given my dad advice on the sly. My mom found out, but the portfolio was doing very well, and they just decided to keep it a secret and pretend they had inherited money. (Oh, ethics and morals....)