"This is sobering news," said study director Jack Farness. "For the first time, we have statistical evidence of what we've suspected for the past 40 years: Life really isn't worth living."
"Since 1965, the cost-benefit ratio of American life has been approaching parity," Farness said. "While figures prior to that date show that life was worth living, there is some suspicion that the benefits cited were superficial and misreported."
Analyzed separately and as one, both the tangible and intangible factors suggest that life is a losing investment.
Wednesday, April 13, 2005
The Real Underlying Cause of the Social Security Crisis
It's simple. The cost of living now outweighs the benefits.
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1 comment:
Thats a funny article. I think I can beat that budget and choose to stay in the market, after all who needs inner-peace at that price.
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