A list of puns related to "List of Indian people by net worth"
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And I can give you a long list of people on the left who have murdered and been violent. Antifa literally assaulted a gay man and have no problem with it. Yeh rest of your dribble isnβt worth the read. If you support and condone antifa violence, then youβre no better than the far right. Youβre cut from the same cloth and donβt belong in civilized society.
βSoy boy Pussey commieβ
I mean are the right militant nationalists, or are they brain dead hicks? Quit flip flopping my dude.
This country will be a better place when the violent left and the violent right are gone for good.
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Author: /u/A_Tame_Sketch
Correct my math if Iβm wrong but according to google searches at the end of February 2020 Scottβs net worth was. $550,000 and at the beginning of January 2021 his net worth was $709,000 thatβs an increase of around 15.9k per month. That means by the end of 2021 his net worth. Will be around $899,800. If u divide the remaining amount you get 6.2 which would be the beginning of July 2022 . Because the end of June would be 6 months. Again this is at the rate he is going know anything can happen and I doubt the search is the most accurate thing and I donβt know if it calculates his expenses but this is an estimate and thatβs crazy.
I have been following this sub for a very long time (this is not my main reddit account), and since then I have learnt a lot from it. Since I graduated from university, my goal was to hit $1M by the time I was 30.
My biggest learning from this journey so far has been to relax and not worry about where every single dollar is going. I know it sounds sort of counter intuitive, but for me it was causing some stress when an unexpected expense would come. Not because I did not have the money, but because I was not going to hit my savings target for that month. I know everyone is not like me, but I am quite disciplined, so I decided not to track my net worth for ~2.5 years.
Here is a snippet of my journey.
My family moved to Canada from south asia when I was in my early teens (I think my family came over with less than $15k), and we didn't have much growing up. So I understood what it took to live frugally. Fast forward to when I graduated from highschool, my family was a middle class family in Canada and it was all because of my parents tight handed approach to disposable income.
I graduated at age 23, and I was lucky enough to not have any debt. I had scholarships and worked throughout University and saved up enough from my work terms that I did not need student loans after 2nd year. And I paid the first 2 years off by the time I graduated with money left over.
Year 1 - I graduated from a STEM discipline and I was lucky enough to get a very good paying job right off the bat. My salary was a hair over six figures when I started. Towards the middle of my first year after graduating, I was able to buy a house (property #1) in the small town I was living in. I started to rent out the basement and a room up top so it would cover my mortgage and I paid for the utilities, repairs and taxes.
Year 2 - I had saved up enough to buy make a down payment for a condo in the city I grew up in, at this time I was living extra frugally, and the same old car I bought at the end of university. I ended up buying this condo in one of the hot markets in Canada (property #2). I also got a raise this year, and every subsequent year until Year 7. I also had a side hustle going which was paying for 75% of my living expenses at the time.
Year 3 - I got a promotion and my company decided to move me, they promised to pay my housing expenses in this new city, so I ended up renting the entire house I had bought and started making a bit of money on it. I continued living f
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