Kelloshot,
I am not advocating bankruptcy as the only tool as the only solution to your overwhelming debt. I only offered advice on two fronts: don't cash in your retirement accounts, and that perhaps bankruptcy might be an option. And, whatever you do, don't do anything without professional advice.
For most people, debt is not a moral failure. People get into debt for whatever reason-job loss, illness, overestimating the ability to pay it off,. foolish purchases, the cetera. If someone makes a legal mistake and gets into legal trouble, he pays his debt with fines, jail time, probation and whatever else. When he's served his time and/or reparations, he's done. But, if people are not able to get relief from debt, they will remain in debt slavery for years, and sometimes, never have hope of seeing a clear future.
There are those in our society who advocate treating debtors worse than criminals, and that is wrong. Bankruptcy is meant for someone to make a clean slate. The United States outlawed debtor's prison in the mid nineteenth century, yet, without the possibility of legal debt relief, those who are not able to make headway against debt are now sentenced to voluntary inservitude. When debt service is a sisyphean effort, the debtor is sentenced to a life without liberty or the pursuit of happiness. The debt industry in America is very profitable, what business wants to give up an unending source of income? God forbid that the little guy is able to climb out from under a dung pile of debt, while the rich can get away with anything at all, screw the average person, on whose shoulders they are making their futures.
I mentioned my situation in my previous post as personal examples to exemplify a typical situation where someone who is overwhelming with debt is a "regular" person. And, no, I didn't get child support either and yes, I was working full time at $6.50 an hour AND going to nursing school full time, and a mom with three young children. I was working hard to regain my financial footing. I was eager to become a tax-paying member of society again. I wasn't sitting around, waiting for handouts. And neither are millions of people who have undergone and are currently undergoing bankruptcy as a form of debt relief.
Painting with a broad brush that debtors seeking bankruptcy as dishonorable "welshers" is harmful to those who are earnestly trying to improve their lives. Sure, there are those who abuse the bankruptcy system, just like there are those who abuse many other institutions , like liability law, or Medicare, or debt collection laws (another huge issue in which consumers are abused) or so many other institutions in this country. Bankruptcy laws were reformed in 2005 in order to reduce fraud. But let's not throw the baby out with the baby water, just because there are some who may be manipulating the laws. Also, unless you are privy to all the circumstances when some one declares that he is insolvent, denouncing his or her actions is cruel to those who are already knocked down to the knees with debt.
'Nuff said,
Ted
I found this little tidbit below.
"Although the decision to file Although the decision to file bankruptcy should not be taken lightly, it is nothing to be ashamed about. It can be the first step towards your future persoanl and financial success. Below is a list of some great and other famous Americans who found it necessary to file bankruptcy. All-in-all, not a bad group of people to be associated with:
Abraham Lincoln - 16th president of the Unites States- twice filed bankruptcy
Ulysses S. Grant - 18th president of the United States
Thomas Jefferson - founding father, author of the Declaration of Independence, 3rd president of the United States
William McKinley - 25th president of the United States
Dave Ramsey - self-professed “get out of debt” guru
Walt Disney - as in Mickey Mouse and Disneyland
Rembrandt Haremenszoon Van Rijn - Dutch painter
P.T. Barnum - filed for bankruptcy in 1871
Mark Twain - American author
Oscar Wilde - playwright
Henry John Heinz - condiment manufacturer famous for Heinz ketchup (my personal favorite)
Milton Hershey - founder of Hershey's chocolate
Henry Ford - automobile manufacturer
J.C. Penney - founder of the department store chain
Mickey Rooney - actor
Debbie Reynolds - movie actress and hotel/casino owner
Johnny Unitas - NFL Hall of Fame quarterback
Dorothy Hamill - figure skater, Olympian
Bjorn Borg - tennis star
Jerry Lee Lewis - rock and roll star
Burt Reynolds - shortly after his divorce from Loni Anderson
Sherman Hemsley - aka George Jefferson of “The Jefferson’s” sitcom
Gary Busey - actor
Nicholas Cage - actor
Gary Busey - actor
Nicholas Cage - actor
“Octomom” Nadya Suleman - famous procreator
Kim Basinger - actress, former wife of Alec Baldwin
MC Hammer - entertainer, musician, dancer (Hammer Time)
Willie Nelson - country music legend
Larry King - talk show host
Donald Trump - filed two separate Chapter 11 for his hotels/casinos
Mike Tyson - boxer, filed Chapter 11
Joe Lewis - boxer
Warren Sap - NFL football player
Terrell Owens - NFL football player
Leon Spinks - boxer
Stephen Baldwin - actor
Jose Conseco - MLB baseball player
Janice Dickinson, self proclaimed "first supermodel"
Vince Neil - lead singer of “Motley Crue”
Donna D'Errico, former Baywatch babe and ex-wife of Nikki Sixx of "Motley Crue"
George McGovern - former presidential candidate
John Conally - Texas governor who was injured while riding with President John F. Kennedy at the time of his assignation should not be taken lightly, it is nothing to be ashamed about. It can be the first step towards your future persoanl and financial success. Below is a list of some great and other famous Americans who found it necessary to file bankruptcy. All-in-all, not a bad group of people to be associated with: