Financial Feminist - 201. Protecting Your Money (and Sanity) During Trump's Presidency
Episode Date: December 2, 2024If you've been feeling a mix of anxiety and uncertainty about your future finances due to Trump's presidency, you're not alone — and this episode is for you. Today I’m diving deep into practical s...teps to protect your money and sanity over the next four years, with actionable advice to help you navigate these challenging times. Trust me, now more than ever, your financial education is your best form of protest. Mentioned in this episode: A Post-Election Pep Talk Free Investing Workshop HYSA Recommendation We’re dropping something special soon! Join our secret waitlist Read transcripts, learn more about our guests and sponsors, and get more resources at https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/201-protecting-your-money-and-sanity-during-trumps-presidency/ Not sure where to start on your financial journey? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://herfirst100k.com/quiz Special thanks to our sponsors: Squarespace Go to www.squarespace.com/FFPOD to save 10% off your first website or domain purchase. Masterclass Get up to 50% off MasterClass this holiday at masterclass.com/FFPOD. Rocket Money Stop wasting money on things you don’t use. Cancel your unwanted subscriptions by going to RocketMoney.com/FFPOD. Quince Get cozy in Quince's high-quality wardrobe essentials. Go to Quince.com/FFPOD for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns. Mint Mobile Cut your wireless bill to $15 a month at Mintmobile.com/ffpod.
Transcript
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That's gusto.com slash ffpod. We're gonna start off with something fun because this rest of the episode is gonna be pretty
serious.
A controversial opinion, Dick in a Box is the best Christmas song ever written. It is. I am the biggest Lonely Island fan. I have loved them for so long. And fun
fact is I performed Dick in a Box at like my college coffee house. You know, they do
that they like in the basement of one of the dorms, they get a
bunch of people together and you could, you know, perform songs or poetry or whatever.
And I did a three song set. And my last song I said, in all seriousness, because it was kind
of like a comedy set mixed with music. And I was like, in all seriousness, because it was right
before the holiday break, Christmas is about bringing people together. So I want to sing my best Christmas song to remind you what's important
in life. And then I did an acoustic version. It was my shining peak crowning moment. If
you have no idea what I'm talking about and you're like, that sounds offensive, welcome
to the lonely Island. You should go watch it. If you forgot that lonely Island exists,
now might be a great time to revisit because we're
going to need comedy for these next four years.
That's my segue, my transition.
Hello, if you're new to the show, my name is Tori.
I run her first 100K, which is a money and career platform for women.
I believe I was put on this earth to fight for your financial rights.
I've helped over 5 million women save money, pay off debt, start investing, start businesses
and feel financially confident. And if you're an oldie, but a goodie, you
knew that already. I have a cold today. I have for about a week. So if I'm a little
stuffed up, that's what's going on. And it's not going to stop me from getting some good
information across.
You knew this episode was coming. It's the most requested episode we got post-election, which is basically
what to do. What's going to happen in my bank account? How do I both financially and emotionally
prepare for four more years of Orange? Maybe four plus more years if he gets his way. So
we're going to talk about everything in all things how to prepare. So this will probably be a longer
episode. Before we even get started, this is really a part two to our election content.
We did a post-election episode that, if I do say so myself, was, I think, one of the most powerful
episodes we've ever done. If you have not listened to that, that is required
listening before you come and listen to this episode. So if you are still feeling pretty
emotionally raw, and I know we all are, I need you to pause on this episode. I need
you to go back. It's called post-election pep talk. You can find it. Please listen to
that episode. It's about a half hour and then I'll see you back here. This is required
listening before you come and listen to this episode. It's about a half hour and then I'll see you back here. This is required listening before you come and listen to this episode. Okay, so quick lay of the land and what we're going to
talk about today. We are going to talk about a quick TLDR on some of Trump's policies. Now,
we know that just because politicians say they're going to do something doesn't actually mean they're going to. And also, we should take it
seriously. We discussed this when we had an expert on to talk about Project 2025. A lot of this stuff
sounds insane and sounds like it could never happen. And God, we hope it never happens, but
it might. So I am going to review his policies to remind you what he set out to do and to give you
the quagmire dirty
on some of the ways that you can navigate those policies. We're going to talk about
step by step, really actionable guidance around how you can prepare your finances for a Trump
presidency. And then we're going to talk about more of the emotional stuff at the end of
how do we protect our peace? How do we keep showing up and doing this work? And again, that pairs really, really well with the first episode, the post-election
pep talk episode we did.
Okay. Let's talk about it. And also, all of these things are shitty. I'm just going to
say that right off the bat. You know I'm not happy about this. I know I'm not happy about
this, but I'm going to put my journalist
hat on and try to give you this information in a way that's just giving you the information
rather than commentating on how bad it is the entire time. Please know that I am not in approval
of these things. I'm just giving you the information. So I'm not going to couch every
single bullet point by being like, this sucks, right? And then going on a whole rant about it because we got shit to do. Okay, first, let's talk about Trump tax cuts. He has
promised tax cuts for the wealthy households with incomes in the top 1% will receive an average tax
cut of more than $60,000 in 2025 compared to an average tax cut of less than $500 for households in the bottom 60%. We're seeing
major tax cuts for the rich, but we're seeing no tax cuts basically for lower income households.
So the economic stimulus from tax cuts would partially be offset. However, because Trump
has proposed tariffs, they're going to raise the cost for US businesses and consumers,
and then likely invite some retaliation from US trading partners.
I was dreading this episode because I knew I was going to have to say the word tariff for the first time ever.
To remind you what a tariff is, is basically a tax on imported goods that is not paid for by the country importing them, even though
that's what Trump says. Trump says, we're going to make China pay for them. That's not
what's going to happen. Tariffs instead are going to, if passed and if implemented, make
the cost of these goods for us, the American consumer, a lot higher.
So we'll talk about some ways later of actionable steps around preparing for that.
We're seeing forecasters at Pantheon Macroeconomics project that a 10% tariff would increase inflation
by about 0.8 percentage points next year, and then impose an additional drag on US manufacturers.
So we're going to see if he gets his way, tax cuts for the wealthy, plus tariffs that
the country's importing goods are not going to pay, but that we all are going to pay.
Let's talk about some social program impacts.
Changes that the Trump administration budgets proposed include the following. They
want to cut SNAP, which is like food stamps. They want to reduce SNAP by roughly 200 billion
over the next 10 years or about 25 to 30%. This is proposed in all four Trump administration
budgets. For lower income folks, for people who need food
assistance the most, it's going to be a lot harder. It's going to be a lot harder to get
food assistance and going to affect lower income people in their access to the things that they
need. Medicaid slash the Affordable Care Act. There's going to be substantial cuts to Medicaid
beyond eliminating the ACA's Medicaid expansion. In the first Trump administration
budget, they talked about some scaling back of the Children's Health Insurance Program,
which is known as CHIP. So the proposed reductions, including repealing the ACA,
the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare, right, totaled about $750 billion to $1 trillion or more
over the next 10 years under the various Trump budgets. So we're
going to see a huge slash in Medicaid benefits. Trump's talked about eliminating the Affordable
Care Act for, you know, since he was in office the first time. Housing, rental assistance. There's
going to be a large reductions in rental assistance and other related housing programs in all four
Trump administration budgets. They're talking about including
rent increases that would average to more than 40% for about 4 million low income households
that rent their units with some sort of like rental voucher or folks who live in public
housing. The four budgets that the Trump administration has laid out also call for eliminating various housing related
programs. Yeah. I promise we're going to get to the actionable stuff. I know this all feels
doom and gloom. Just give me a second. Okay. They're also looking to reduce benefits for
low income children with disabilities through supplemental security income, which is SSI,
when more than one child or both an adult and a child in the same
family receive SSI. So this is a large reduction in cash assistance. We're also looking at a
reduction of a bunch of billions of dollars in federal temporary assistance for needy families,
funding to states, and a reduction in additional social security disability benefits for some beneficiaries. We're also already seeing an impact on DEI. We are already seeing companies either slash
DEI efforts or completely cut them. We talked about in the Project 2025 episode, this desire
to cut any and all DEI programs. This affects more than just people like getting jobs or access to things like school and the ability for Black, Brown, any other minority group
in the workplace to feel celebrated and to feel included. It also affects data collection.
It affects how data is consumed and collected in order to make informed choices at the policy level
and in these larger corporations about diversity initiatives.
We're looking at some increases in the stock market, which seems like the only good thing,
but we could be in for a really interesting roller coaster.
We're going to talk later about how to ride that.
And finally, let's talk about student loans really quick. Let's listen to a
voicemail from our community. This is from Anna. Hi Tori, my name is Anna. I'm a
social worker in North Carolina. I'm wondering for those of us who took out
student loans if we should consider moving those student loans to private loan providers.
For example, I know that my bank always offers that I can refinance my student debt with them.
The reason I haven't ever done this is because my intention with taking out student loans was to
utilize public service loan forgiveness. When I was in college, that was the trade-off I made in
my mind was that if I take out student loans,
I'm gonna work in the nonprofit sector or government sector for X amount of years so that I can take advantage of that program.
But with the incoming administration promising to
get rid of the Department of Education, I wonder if you would recommend
going ahead and moving those loans now to a provider of our choice,
or if you think the incoming administration will require us to move our loans after they
take action with the Department of Education, or if you think maybe there's no meat to that
claim. Just curious what you are recommending or what you foresee
happening as a financial expert. Thank you.
The voice smells over. I just I have to laugh. I just I forgot to be honest with you, Anna, that
he is quote unquote going to eliminate the Department of Education.
There's just been so much and I think I've blocked a lot of it out.
OK. OK, great question.
I don't know.
That's that's not me copying out. That's I don't know. None of us really know.
I like to think that him eliminating the Department
of Education is not going to happen, but he has potentially the full support of Congress.
He's got the Senate, the Republicans have the Senate and the House, and although they're
supposed to be unbiased, he has the Supreme Court too. So I don't know. I truly don't know. The last thing I want to recommend to you is
moving your federal loans to private loans because that eliminates any likelihood that you're going
to get student loan forgiveness, right? Just for student loan forgiveness to happen under a Democrat,
maybe after Trump, right? Or for Biden to throw a Hail Mary in the last couple months here and
try to pass student loan forgiveness. So I don't want you making any sort of decision in this case
that is preemptive because we just don't know. It's going to depend on what happens or what
doesn't happen. I think that this is part of what we're going to talk about in a second where
you need to make sure you're well-informed,
you need to make sure you know what's going on
so that you can make that kind of decision.
Refinancing is not a bad thing,
I've said it many, many times.
Refinancing your loans to get a lower interest rate
can mean you help pay them off sooner,
but if you take federal loans and you refinance them
to private loans, right,
you eliminate any chance of student loan forgiveness. Now I get where you're saying, is there going to be student loan forgiveness
at all? Under Trump, I can almost with 100% certainty say no. But we might have an administration
that comes in after. And I don't know how long your loans are. I could see a case that
if you think you can pay your loans off before Trump gets out of office, it might be, I could see a case that if you think you can pay your loans off before Trump gets out
of office, it might be, I just don't want to give you, I don't know you, I don't know
your life, I don't know what he's going to do, I don't want to give you a resounding
yes or no.
But this is where we start learning more about and paying attention to what's going to happen
and understanding
for everybody listening the difference between those federal loans and those private loans
and when you refinance what actually happens, right?
So yeah, there's no there's no for sure answer here because I don't exactly know what he's
going to be able to get done.
I don't exactly know if he does get it done, how it's going to directly affect everybody.
We don't know this yet.
This goes hand in hand with our next section, which is, let's talk about some
practical steps you can take.
There is nothing that makes my heart hurt more as a financial expert than seeing
you spend your hard earned money on things that you don't even use. And we talk about it on the show all the time, right?
I always say you don't need to stop spending money, but you do need to stop spending money
on shit you don't care about.
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You're going to hear this and you've already heard this if you've been listening to our
recent episodes, you're going to hear this as a resounding theme over the next four plus years, but really I've been saying it forever.
The number one thing I need you to do is take your personal finance education seriously.
I know I joke a lot on the show and even in this episode, I'm like trying to make light of all of these things that he's promised.
But like, it's not looking good. It's not looking good. And really the best thing that you can do,
if you are feeling this sense of, you know, I don't have any control, I don't know what to do,
sense of, you know, I don't have any control. I don't know what to do. I feel hopeless or I just feel so fearful. I need you to lock in and I need you to take your financial education seriously.
If you have been a casual listener to this show or to other financial podcasts,
or to other financial podcasts, I need you to listen every episode. I need you to read books and actually take steps that we've been talking about forever, but maybe you haven't done. Maybe
you haven't opened that high yield savings account. Now is the time to do that. Maybe you haven't
started investing. Now's the time to do that. Maybe you feel like you're underpaid and overworked, but you're like, this job is fine.
No, it's not.
It's not.
We're going to ask for a raise.
We're going to find a new job.
Take this fucking seriously because this is fucking serious.
Take this fucking seriously because it's fucking serious.
I need you to lock in. I need you to learn
everything you possibly can about money and then take action. Take your own financial
education seriously.
If you haven't learned how to invest, we have a free workshop that'll teach you how to invest.
We've linked it down below, herfirsthundredk.com slash invest. If you haven't opened up that
high yield savings account yet, and yeah, this is going to be
a shameless plug for all our resources, but we create these resources for you.
Herfirsthundredk.com slash tools, we have it linked down below.
If you need to know the basics of personal finance and you want me to guide you step
by step, guess what?
We have something very exciting coming in January.
You can go to herfirsthundredk.com slash secret-waitlist to be the first to know about that. We have all these links down below too. Just take
it seriously. Take it seriously. If financial education is your best form of protest, take
it seriously. Okay. Number two, I need you to shore up your emergency fund. If you don't
already have one, that is your number one step on any day, regardless of who's president. But especially with a Trump presidency, we don't know the full scope of these tariffs yet. We don't know the full scope of potential mass deportation. We don't know the full scope of all of these cuts that he wants to do to social services. We don't know what's going to happen. But on any day, we can make sure that we're financially protected by having that emergency fund.
Three to six months of living expenses in that high-yield savings account.
And again, high-yield savings account is crucial here because I need your money to work harder for you.
Now, if you are someone with uterus, I would love for you, either as part of this emergency
fund or elsewhere, and like a separate emergency fund, to also save what I'm
calling a reproductive emergency fund. Make sure that you can get the health
care that you need, abortion services, birth control, etc. Even if you have to
cross state lines to do it. Even if you have to cross state lines to do it.
Even if you have to pay money to go somewhere else. If you have to pay money to take time
off work to get on a flight, to get a hotel room for the night, I need you to have some
money saved for that.
If you already have three months of living expenses, I would do
what you can to increase it a little bit. Try to get up to six. And if you already have six,
and you still don't feel super comfortable, might be a good time to get up to nine.
The easiest way to do this, we talked about on the show before, is set up an automatic transfer
from your checking account to your savings account. So make sure that your money is going to your
high yield savings account for your emergency fund on autopilot.
On that note, while we're talking about savings accounts, a couple of you have asked me, Trump
wants to get rid of the FDIC, should I stop putting my money in a bank account? I don't
think at least when we've done our research that Trump wants to eliminate the FDIC. He, just like most Republicans, wants to cut a lot of the
regulations. We're not sure what that means yet.
While we have FDIC regulations, which are the regulations meant to keep your money protected
so that if a bank fails, you get your money back. Those aren't going anywhere
for the foreseeable future. So keep saving your money in a high yield savings account.
The one we recommend is FDIC insured. Any good bank will be FDIC insured. So don't worry
too much about that.
Number three, I need you to cut down for a little while on the things that you don't
need. Quote unquote, like trim the fat, right? Please still make sure that you're not depriving yourself. I know that
life is hard. We're not cutting the things that bring you joy. You need that more than
ever. But we are cutting the things that don't bring us joy. We're doing an audit of our
budget, right? We do this in any sort of emergency situation, right? We would look at our budget, we would figure out what we can cut, what doesn't make sense
so that we can either save that money in an emergency fund or better prioritize what we
are spending our money on.
This is a great time to pay down your debt, especially these next couple months before
Trump takes office.
Do everything you can to pay down your debt
if it is on the larger side or if you can eliminate it. Lovely, beautiful. But please
do that after your emergency fund, after beefing up your emergency fund.
Start or keep investing. Yes, there's a lot of volatility right now. There's always a
lot of volatility. You're going to see,
and it's already happening. People tell you that now is a great time to invest or now is a bad
time to invest. There is never a bad time to invest because I need you to just get into the
stock market and allow it to do its thing. Again, we have a free workshop down below.
If you're wondering about how to invest and you want to start taking your financial education seriously.
Amazing.
We'll see you there.
There's a lot of large companies who are taking advantage of tax cuts by Republicans and they
see this optimistic future for their bottom lines.
So the stock market is actually performing pretty decently, at least as of this recording.
We know that trickle down economics does not
really work. So you need to make sure you get a piece of that pie too, because they're
not going to willingly give it to you. So you're going to go, you're going to invest
in the stock market, you're going to build your wealth, you're going to take that seriously.
You're going to allow your money to work harder for you. You're also not going to panic sell
if you are investing because the stock market has
a bad day or because Jim Cramer on fucking CNBC told you that you need to sell.
You're not going to do that.
You're going to stay the course.
You are not going to allow the emotions that you feel to get the best of you.
You are not going to be driven by scarcity, by fear, by anxiety, and allow your fear to make your financial decisions for you.
You're not going to do that. You're going to understand that investing is a long-term
strategy, a long-term game. We've been saying this forever. It's not a day to day. It's not
week to week. It's not even month to month. It is a years if not decades long strategy.
And when Trump does something super shitty and the stock market plummets, you're
going to stay the course. This is why we created something like Stock Market School, which
is our investing education platform, because we're giving you the education that you need,
both literally the financial education, but also the emotional reassurance that what you're
doing is the right thing. When it comes to everything personal finance, we want to start small. We want to
focus on one actionable step at a time. So I'm giving you a lot of options here, right?
But in my book on this show, we've talked about the emergency fund being your top priority.
You do not get to pass go, you do not get to collect $200, right? You do not get to
progress along the personal finance monopoly
board until you have that emergency fund.
And until you set up those automatic transfers
to your savings, to your retirement fund,
this helps you remove that decision fatigue.
With all of this, we want to prioritize
what we can control ourselves.
You can control how you react. You can control your savings.
You can control your investment choices.
You can even control what sort of information you're getting
from what source.
You can control your own financial learning.
You can control being absolutely obsessed in a healthy way
with personal finance. And we want to hone in on
what really matters to you. We get so many messages about where you're supposed to be,
what you're supposed to have. This person has this amount saved and I feel like I'm behind.
I don't have this thing and all of my friends do. And so I'm wondering if I'm
doing something wrong, right? It's a huge distraction to focus on all of the things
that don't really matter to you, but feel like markers of success. So what I need you to do is hone in on the things that truly
matter. The ways you want to use money as a tool to build a life
that you want, that you love. Prioritize yourself, your needs.
Know that is not selfish. It is really important all days, but today especially,
that you prioritize your own rest, your own self-care, your own personal finances because
– and we'll talk about this in the next section – you cannot rise up as part of
the resistance if you are tired, if you are broke, if you are burned out, if you are overwhelmed,
if you have allowed the MAGA riptide to continue depleting you of all of your energy and hope and joy.
Take this shit seriously.
Become obsessed in a healthy way with personal finance, with learning everything you possibly can about money.
Because, as we've said so many times as our literal tagline, a financial education is your best form of protest.
It is your greatest form of protest against unjust systems.
Money gives you options, it gives you choices, it gives you flexibility.
And how you wield that financial power matters.
It matters every day, but it especially fucking matters today.
That's why we're talking about this.
There will likely be an all out attack on women, on queer folks, on minority groups, black and brown people, disabled
people. Your money and your attention is what fuels those movements to cut important social
services, to leave you depressed and anxious and scared, to eliminate protections. Don't give that group of people the power that they need to
enact those things. Take care of yourself. Prioritize your financial education. It is
your best form of protest. When you have money, you have options, you have choices, you have
freedom, you have flexibility. Take that fucking seriously because it is fucking serious.
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details. There is nothing that makes my heart hurt more as a financial expert
than seeing you spend your hard earned money on things that you don't even use.
And we talk about it on the show all the time, right?
I always say you don't need to stop spending money,
but you do need to stop spending money on shit you don't care about.
And the best thing about rockin' money is that they help you find
and cancel your unwanted subscriptions so that you can spend your money on things that you actually
like as opposed to just wasting your hard-earned money on things that you don't. They help
you lower your bills so you can grow your savings. You can also track your spending
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If you ignored my warning up top and you didn't listen to the post-election pep talk episode,
you're going to go back right now and you're going to listen to that episode.
Because that's basically all that episode is, is how do we maintain our sanity?
because that's basically all that episode is, is how do we maintain our sanity? We're going to disengage from the MAGA riptide.
We're going to stay informed, but with a huge asterisk on it.
We're not going to allow that information to panic us, to deplete us of hope.
And if you do find that the information diet you are consuming leads you to feel that way,
get a new diet.
I've done this.
I'm three weeks sober on election podcasts.
I have not listened to an election or news podcast
since the election happened.
And I still know what's going on.
It gets to me.
I still know that Matt Gaetz was,
fucking took himself out of the running great.
Like I still know these things, but
I'm going to be honest with you. I'm doing way better than I thought I was going to do
in terms of my emotional stability because I'm not engaging with it all the time. Like,
I'm doing really well. I'm really focused. I know what I need to do. I am channeling all of this energy into hope and joy and education for you all.
I'm going to be honest, I'm doing a lot better than I thought.
And it's because I'm not consuming this diet of constant information, of constantly, quote
unquote, being informed, but really just like drowning in that riptide.
So think about the diet you're feeding yourself.
Think about the information you're getting.
We talked about this in the previous episode.
I need you to build community.
This is the time to support businesses that you want to see more of.
This is the time to put your money where your mouth is.
This is your time to vote with your dollars.
Support women-owned, black-owned, queer-owned businesses.
Invest in mutual aid.
Set up a donation to an organization you believe in.
Go out of your way for your friends.
We need each other now more than ever.
And it's going to be a really rough four years if you are alone and you are siloed.
Build in-person community.
Do not bury your head in the sand, but keep your peace, right?
And please focus on your community, on your relationships, because that is all we've ever had.
I am thinking about how I can start volunteering in the next four years.
How can I just spend, even if it's one hour a month, if I'm traveling and I'm out of town
and that's all I've got, what is one hour that I could contribute a month?
What is one hour I can contribute a month?
We need to become a menace to our reps, especially if they're not working
for you. But also show support to the reps who are doing good work, right? Because they're
going to need a lot of support. They're scared too. So call them, text them, write them letters.
If they're not doing the shit that you need as a constituent, Emily Tiss-Sussman said
it on the show, they work for you. They work for us.
Tell them. Tell them they're not working for us. Demand the kind of policies and the kind of
information that we want to see. We also just need to get comfortable with being uncomfortable.
White women, hello. I'm one of you. I'm talking to you too. We need to reckon with our fear of discomfort
and our attachment to proximity of power, especially as DEI is under attack right now
and under threat. Anti-racism work is very important to understand that even well-meaning things can ultimately not be beneficial. A lot of the efforts that
white women take to self-soothe, to seek comfort in unknown situations actually just cause
harm to black and brown people. I've been there. I've done it. I will probably do it
again. Anti-racism work, especially right now, is going to be really important. And if you are a white woman or a man listening
to this show right now, I need you to think about actionable places that you can show
up for your friends of color and your colleagues of color. Invite them into meetings that they
are not in. Talk them up in spaces they're not in.
Your black coworker who's doing a great job, bring that up.
Promote her.
Your female coworker who's doing amazing things, call her into the meeting.
Say, hey, I would love to hear your thoughts.
Tell me what you think.
Give her a voice in the meeting or allow her voice really to be amplified.
My final point. This has been going all over social media, Give her a voice in the meeting or allow her voice really to be amplified.
My final point, this has been going all over social media and I think it's really important to say, do not comply in advance.
What we mean by that, there's already backlash happening
against Trump's policies.
That's fantastic.
We already have seen pressure work.
Matt Gaetz is the perfect example of this. This is already working. You must stay engaged
in a healthy way, but you cannot resign to complying before things even happen. I'm already
seeing this in our comment section, right? Since the election happened, the amount of
comments we've gotten of, what if this happens? What if this happens? I'm going to do this crazy thing because somebody
told me that this might happen. With all the love in the world to the people in the comments,
you panic decision-making is not helpful. Well-informed, calm decision-making
that preps for the potential of these things
is what is helpful.
But we are not complying in advance.
We are not saying these things are gonna happen.
He's promised them, so fuck it.
We are not doing that.
Apathy is not what's happening. We cannot be apathetic. We cannot be, I was
going to say Calvinist. This is where my religious upbringing comes in, but where it's just resigned,
where it's just like, okay, he's elected, it's fucked, he's going to be able to do all
these things. No, absolutely not.
We're not doing that.
At the end of the day, you do not need my permission, but I'm going to give it to you.
If the only thing you do, and I put only in the biggest quotes possible, if the only thing
you do these next four years is just take really good care of yourself and take really good care of your community
and prioritize your financial education and prioritize your joy and prioritize your rest
and do everything you can to make sure your community is prioritizing their personal
finances and their joy and their rest after you've prioritized your own.
prioritizing their personal finances and their joy and their rest, after you've prioritized your own, you've done more than enough.
Personal finance is your best form of protest.
Joy, rest are all forms of resistance.
They want you tired.
They want you broke.
They want you so exhausted and burned out so that you don't protest,
so that you don't pour into your community, so that you don't make
money, so that you have money to fight back. If the quote unquote only thing you do for these next
four years is take fucking good care of yourself and your community, that is your best form of
protest. You've done more than enough. Said this before, I'll continue saying it. We're
going to be here with you every step of the way. I don't know what's going to happen.
I know a lot as a personal finance expert. There's also a lot I do not know. I'm going
to be learning a lot as you are learning it too about how these potential policies, if
enacted, are going to affect us, about what is going to happen. Please know that the promise I kept to you in the post-election episode is still true.
We're not going to participate in the MAGA riptide.
We're going to keep our heads down.
We're going to do the work.
We're going to continue to keep you as informed as you need to be while doing the things that
actually matter.
Community, education, camaraderie, those are the things that actually matter. Community, education, camaraderie, those are the things that actually matter.
I appreciate you being here as always. Thank you. Thank you. Always, but especially again today for your support of this kind of work.
It is going to be an interesting four years as a publicly feminist company. And your support, your dollars, your listenership means the absolute world to us.
And we really, really appreciate you being here.
Just joy.
Just, just find the joy where you can find the community where you can.
That's it.
Bye. Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First 100k podcast.
Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristin Fields and Tamesha Grant,
researched by Sarah Shortino, audio and video engineering by Alyssa Medcalf, marketing and
operations by Karina Patel and Amanda LeFeu.
Special thanks to our team at Her First 100K. Kaylyn Sprinkle, Masha Bakhmakeva, Taylor Chil, Sasha Bonar, Rae
Wong, Elizabeth McCumber, Claire Karonen, Darrell Ann Ingman, and Megan Walker. Promotional
graphics by Mary Stratton, photography by Sarah Wolf, and theme music by Jonah Cohen
Sound. A huge thanks to the entire Her First 100K community for supporting the show. For
more information about Financial Feminist, Her First 100k, our guests, and episode show
notes, visit financialfeministpodcast.com.
If you're confused about your personal finances and you're wondering where to start, go to
herfirst100k.com slash quiz for a free personalized money plan. you