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'She's A Parasite,' Says Ramsey To A Caller Who Bought Their Mom The Family Home—Then She Took Out Credit Cards In His Name
'She's A Parasite,' Says Ramsey To A Caller Who Bought Their Mom The Family Home—Then She Took Out Credit Cards In His Name

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time2 days ago

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'She's A Parasite,' Says Ramsey To A Caller Who Bought Their Mom The Family Home—Then She Took Out Credit Cards In His Name

A recent episode of 'The Ramsey Show' took a sharp turn when a caller shared how his mother took out credit cards in his name after he and his brother bought her a home. The caller, 27, explained that after his divorce, he was emotionally vulnerable and agreed to co-sign loans so his mom could buy the home she was living in. He and his brother put the mortgage in their names because his mom had poor credit. 'She sucks blood off of her sons,' said Dave Ramsey after hearing the details. 'She's a parasite. It's a horrible thing to say about your mother. I'm so sorry. Just an observation.' Don't Miss: Maximize saving for your retirement and cut down on taxes: . Invest where it hurts — and help millions heal:. The caller added that his mom makes minimal income and hasn't disclosed how much she earns. Meanwhile, she continues to make minimum payments on roughly $20,000 in credit card debt, all taken out under her son's name. "She's paying the mortgage," the caller said, but added that he constantly worries she'll stop. "I'm just waiting for the day that I get a call that, 'Hey, your payment's due.'" Ramsey warned the caller that if he didn't take action quickly, this financial arrangement would result in deeper personal losses. His advice? Sell the house. Pay off all the credit cards. Then, give his mom half of whatever equity remains. 'You can go set yourself up a life with that,' he suggested. Trending: Ramsey even gave him the script for the difficult conversation: 'Mom, I love you, and I've done more for you than I should have, and I put myself and my future family in jeopardy because of you, and you continue to misbehave with this. My bills are not being paid, you're destroying my credit and my future. We're selling the house. Little brother, if you don't want to sell it, you can buy me out.' Ramsey also made it clear that the brother, who co-owns the home, should either buy him out or step aside. 'If he doesn't want to sell the house, then it's going to be a civil court action and the judge is going to demand that the partnership be dissolved by the selling of the house,' Ramsey said. 'We're selling the house. I'm not asking—we're telling you. This is what we're doing,' Ramsey added. 'This is saving your marriage, by the way,' Ramsey's co-host, Jade Warshaw, said. The caller had just gotten married a month earlier, and this situation could become a major wedge. 'Your wife is not going to sit around and let your mom be the reason that she's not in her new house,' Warshaw added. Read Next: The average American couple has saved this much money for retirement —? Up Next: Transform your trading with Benzinga Edge's one-of-a-kind market trade ideas and tools. Click now to access unique insights that can set you ahead in today's competitive market. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? APPLE (AAPL): Free Stock Analysis Report TESLA (TSLA): Free Stock Analysis Report This article 'She's A Parasite,' Says Ramsey To A Caller Who Bought Their Mom The Family Home—Then She Took Out Credit Cards In His Name originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

Warren Buffett's Daughter Says He Wasn't the Dad Tossing Footballs — But He Was Always at the Dinner Table And Singing Her 'Over the Rainbow'
Warren Buffett's Daughter Says He Wasn't the Dad Tossing Footballs — But He Was Always at the Dinner Table And Singing Her 'Over the Rainbow'

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time3 days ago

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Warren Buffett's Daughter Says He Wasn't the Dad Tossing Footballs — But He Was Always at the Dinner Table And Singing Her 'Over the Rainbow'

Some dads throw footballs. Some grill burgers. Warren Buffett? He read the paper—a lot. But according to his daughter, Susie Buffett, that didn't make him any less of a father. "I always had a very strong sense of how much it mattered to him to be... in the house and there," she said in a 2015 interview for the HBO documentary "Becoming Warren Buffett." "He was at the dinner table every night. Very present at the dinner table." It wasn't the typical hands-on, TV-dad kind of parenting. "He wasn't the dad out in the backyard throwing the football," she added. "And he wasn't really the dad, you know, sitting in the bedroom at night reading the stories with us." But that didn't mean he wasn't around. Quite the opposite. Don't Miss: Maximize saving for your retirement and cut down on taxes: . Invest where it hurts — and help millions heal:. Buffett, known for being one of the busiest minds in finance, still made time to rock Susie to sleep and sing "Over the Rainbow"—a memory she holds especially close. "I have this insanely sentimental attachment to that song," she said, recalling how he even made a karaoke recording of it as a gift. While he may have been immersed in reading or mentally juggling investments, he wasn't off on business trips or inaccessible. "A lot of my friends had dads that traveled a lot. My dad was in the house and there," she said. "I never felt like... he wouldn't have time for us. That didn't happen." Susie recalled moments that were both simple and deeply thoughtful. "I remember one day coming home from school and there was a big box on the dining room table and there was a new dress in it and there was a Slo Poke sucker. I was about 8 years old and my dad took me to the ballet." Trending: Did he want to go? "Now that I'm older, I'm sure my mother forced him to do it," she said, laughing. "But I never knew that at the time." And yes, even homework help was on the table—kind of. "It was sort of hopeless to get math help from him because he could get the answer and then he couldn't explain how he got it," she said. The image Susie paints is less about traditional fatherhood and more about presence, consistency, and quiet reliability. "He was always there whenever we needed him, 'cause he was physically present." So while Warren Buffett may not have been a bedtime-story dad or a backyard athlete, his daughter never questioned where he stood in her life. He was there. In the house. At the table. Rocking her to sleep. And, when it really mattered, just a room away. Read Next: Here's what Americans think you need to be considered Shutterstock Up Next: Transform your trading with Benzinga Edge's one-of-a-kind market trade ideas and tools. Click now to access unique insights that can set you ahead in today's competitive market. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? APPLE (AAPL): Free Stock Analysis Report TESLA (TSLA): Free Stock Analysis Report This article Warren Buffett's Daughter Says He Wasn't the Dad Tossing Footballs — But He Was Always at the Dinner Table And Singing Her 'Over the Rainbow' originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Sign in to access your portfolio

I'm Afraid How My Wife Will React If I Tell Her We're Secretly Wealthy, Says A Dave Ramsey Caller. The Response? That's 'Pretty Whacked'
I'm Afraid How My Wife Will React If I Tell Her We're Secretly Wealthy, Says A Dave Ramsey Caller. The Response? That's 'Pretty Whacked'

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time3 days ago

  • Business
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I'm Afraid How My Wife Will React If I Tell Her We're Secretly Wealthy, Says A Dave Ramsey Caller. The Response? That's 'Pretty Whacked'

A man called into 'The Ramsey Show' with a confession: he's been married for five years, and his wife has no idea that they're secretly worth millions of dollars. 'I'm the saver and she's the spender,' the caller explained. 'I have been working very hard, working my job and my business just to grow to where we are. And I am not sure whether I should ever disclose our net worth to her because I do not know how she's going to react.'Don't Miss: Maximize saving for your retirement and cut down on taxes: . Invest where it hurts — and help millions heal:. Dave Ramsey, a personal finance expert and radio host known for his no-nonsense advice, was stunned and immediately asked, 'Are you from another culture?' After the caller explained he was born in South Korea but raised in San Jose, California, by immigrant parents, Ramsey replied, 'Because in Anglo-America, what you just described, as you probably realize, is pretty whacked.' The caller insisted that he handles all the finances, and that keeping their wealth a secret is tied to his wife's spending habits. Ramsey wasn't buying it. 'You've been married to her for five years and sleeping with her for five years. She didn't know you got any money. That's deception,' Ramsey said bluntly. Trending: Even as the caller tried to frame the issue around different money personalities—he's a minimalist, she's a free spirit—Ramsey brought it back to what he saw as the real problem: lying. 'Honey, you're not listening. You keep deflecting every time I bring this at you. You have deceived your wife actively. She's not going to be cool with that. You hear that?' The caller admitted he feared his wife would be upset and possibly scared by the news. Ramsey said that fear is probably why he kept the secret in the first place. 'You're scared she's going to go spend all your money, which is the reason you lied to her in the first place,' he said. Ramsey emphasized that a strong marriage is worth more than money. 'I value a quality marriage and relationship going into my old age because we've now been married almost 43 years. I value that more than money. You don't. So I'm having trouble connecting with you on this.'Toward the end of the call, Ramsey acknowledged the cultural influence but didn't let the caller off the hook. 'I'm just the older guy sitting over here going, okay, you brought some culture into this where the guy's in charge and the lady doesn't have any say or any vote, especially if she's the spender. And so all of that combined with your nerd-like paranoia has led you to this deception.' Ramsey's final warning was that this is not going to end well. The longer he puts this off, the worse this is going to get. 'This is a weird thing you've done and you need to own that.' Read Next:Can you guess how many retire with a $5,000,000 nest egg? .Up Next: Transform your trading with Benzinga Edge's one-of-a-kind market trade ideas and tools. Click now to access unique insights that can set you ahead in today's competitive market. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? APPLE (AAPL): Free Stock Analysis Report TESLA (TSLA): Free Stock Analysis Report This article I'm Afraid How My Wife Will React If I Tell Her We're Secretly Wealthy, Says A Dave Ramsey Caller. The Response? That's 'Pretty Whacked' originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

A Couple Followed Dave Ramsey And Got Out Of Debt. Then They Took A Hard Turn And Ended Up $46,000 In The Red On 13 Credit Cards
A Couple Followed Dave Ramsey And Got Out Of Debt. Then They Took A Hard Turn And Ended Up $46,000 In The Red On 13 Credit Cards

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time4 days ago

  • Business
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A Couple Followed Dave Ramsey And Got Out Of Debt. Then They Took A Hard Turn And Ended Up $46,000 In The Red On 13 Credit Cards

In a recent episode of 'The Ramsey Show,' a couple in their 70s shared how they went from being completely debt-free to falling back into financial chaos. After completing Dave Ramsey's Financial Peace University in 2016, they had paid off all their debt by 2017 and even bought their mobile home in cash. But today, they owe $46,000. 'We were debt-free completely,' the wife, who called in, said. But since 2017, they opened 13 credit cards and took out three personal loans. Their current income is limited to Social Security: $1,600 a month from her, $1,500 from her husband. Her husband picks up odd handyman jobs, but it's not enough to cover their expenses. Don't Miss: Maximize saving for your retirement and cut down on taxes: .Recently, they applied for a $29,000 debt consolidation loan and wanted Dave's advice before accepting it. 'That will put us into a debt relief loan,' she said. 'We haven't bought it yet, but we were able to obtain a loan.' Jade Warshaw, Ramsey's co-host, wasn't having it. 'You're still looking to debt as the solution for this,' she told her. 'You haven't learned your lesson that debt is the issue.' The couple insisted they were always '100% paying the bills on time.' I don't know how we've done it,' she said. 'That's not a miracle,' Ramsey replied. 'You paid the stinking credit cards before you did anything else. Then you barely ate, and your husband swung a hammer enough to get it done.' Trending: Invest where it hurts — and help millions heal:. The couple lives in Riverside County, California, about 100 miles from their family in Los Angeles. Their mobile home and the land it's on are worth around $135,000. But even owning their home outright hasn't kept them afloat. 'You can't even pay the payments on what you've got,' Ramsey said, noting their $3,100 monthly income doesn't stretch far in such a high-cost area. 'You're telling yourself a lie,' Warshaw added. Ramsey pointed out the underlying issue: 'We don't have math that is sustainable here. The pattern keeps you spending more than you have coming in.'He emphasized that debt consolidation is not the way out. 'You cannot borrow your way out of debt,' he said. 'So no, do not take the $29,000 loan.' Instead, he urged them to increase their income, stick to a strict zero-based budget and pay off their debt aggressively. 'If you did $2,000 a month, you would be done in 23 months. If you did twice that, you'd be done in 10 months.' 'You have to stop it,' he said bluntly. 'You're going to wake up at 81 in the same situation. And the 91.' Read Next:Many are using retirement income calculators to check if they're on pace —Up Next: Transform your trading with Benzinga Edge's one-of-a-kind market trade ideas and tools. Click now to access unique insights that can set you ahead in today's competitive market. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? APPLE (AAPL): Free Stock Analysis Report TESLA (TSLA): Free Stock Analysis Report This article A Couple Followed Dave Ramsey And Got Out Of Debt. Then They Took A Hard Turn And Ended Up $46,000 In The Red On 13 Credit Cards originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Elon Musk's Ex-Girlfriend Grimes Questions Mark Zuckerberg's Aptitude For Metaverse Leadership, Says Zuckerberg Is 'Wildly Under Qualified'
Elon Musk's Ex-Girlfriend Grimes Questions Mark Zuckerberg's Aptitude For Metaverse Leadership, Says Zuckerberg Is 'Wildly Under Qualified'

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time20-05-2025

  • Business
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Elon Musk's Ex-Girlfriend Grimes Questions Mark Zuckerberg's Aptitude For Metaverse Leadership, Says Zuckerberg Is 'Wildly Under Qualified'

In a recent public statement, Grimes, a renowned Canadian musician and former partner of Elon Musk, has expressed skepticism about the ability of Meta Platforms Inc's CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, to effectively lead the metaverse. What Happened: Grimes, whose legal name is Claire Boucher, took to X in 2022, to voice her doubts about Zuckerberg's capability to manage the virtual world. She further mocked Zuckerberg's metaverse avatar, referring to it as 'bad art.' Her remarks came in the wake of Zuckerberg's conversation with Joe Rogan. Zuckerberg, a strong proponent of the metaverse, has characterized it as a 'massive opportunity' with the potential to 'unlock hundreds of billions of dollars.' Don't Miss: Maker of the $60,000 foldable home has 3 factory buildings, 600+ houses built, and big plans to solve housing — this is your last chance to become an investor for $0.80 per share. The team behind $6B+ in licensing deals is now building the next billion-dollar IP empire — invest early at $2.25/ To MSN: Send to MSN Up Next: Transform your trading with Benzinga Edge's one-of-a-kind market trade ideas and tools. Click now to access unique insights that can set you ahead in today's competitive market. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? This article Elon Musk's Ex-Girlfriend Grimes Questions Mark Zuckerberg's Aptitude For Metaverse Leadership, Says Zuckerberg Is 'Wildly Under Qualified' originally appeared on Sign in to access your portfolio

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