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« Blog of the Week | Main | Carnival of Personal Finance – Week 11 »

Sunday Morning Comments

By JLP | August 28, 2005

I still haven’t totally figured out how to move all my posts from the old blog to this blog. I hope to get that done later today. The directions for doing so are pretty confusing and I sure don’t want to mess it up and lose 10 months worth of work.

I did change my Feedburner settings so those who subscribed to the old blog will now be directed to this blog. I don’t know if I can change my Bloglines feeds. I’ll have to look into it. I’m ready to get all this stuff behind me so that I can actually post about personal finance again. Right now I feel like a fish out of water.

I’ll be hosting the Carnival of Personal Finance on this blog tomorrow.

Gotta run. I’ll post more later.

Topics: Miscellaneous | 8 Comments »


8 Responses to “Sunday Morning Comments”

  1. AllFinancialMatters » Blog Archive » Migration Finished! (I Think) Says:
    November 27th, 2006 at 11:50 am

    [...] First off, I want to say a great big thanks to my brother Chris, Flexo, and Nickel for helping me work my way through the migration from AllThingsFinancialBlog.com to AllFinancialMatters.com. The reason for all of this is that earlier this year I received a lovely letter from an attorney claiming that my blog’s name was infringing on a copyright. Apparantly a bank owns the trademark to the phrase “All Things Financial.” [...]

  2. AllFinancialMatters » Blog Archive » Comment From a Reader Regarding My Dave Ramsey Post Says:
    February 27th, 2007 at 4:28 pm

    [...] Remember the Dave Ramsey: Give up the 401(k) Match in Order to Pay Off Debt post from a couple of weeks ago? [...]

  3. No Credit Needed » Blog Archive » Carnivals, Network Updates, and Articles To Read Says:
    April 16th, 2007 at 1:01 pm

    [...] No Credit Needed participated in this week’s Carnival of Personal Finance, hosted by All Financial Matters. [...]

  4. Personal Finance and Investing Blog » Blog Archive » Carnivals, Network Updates, and Articles To Read Says:
    April 16th, 2007 at 3:13 pm

    [...] No Credit Needed participated in this week’s Carnival of Personal Finance, hosted by All Financial Matters. [...]

  5. AllFinancialMatters » Blog Archive » Sometimes It Pays to Wait Says:
    April 30th, 2007 at 10:44 am

    [...] Regular readers of this blog know that I balked at renewing my Wall Street Journal subscription this year because they raised their price from $215 per year to $249 per year. I let my subscription lapse but they kept sending me papers for about three weeks. They also kept sending me renewal notices but the renewal price stayed at $249 so I just kept throwing them away. [...]

  6. AllFinancialMatters » Blog Archive » The Winner of the “Get Organized Giveaway” is… Says:
    May 12th, 2007 at 5:49 pm

    [...] Commenter #18, CleverDude was the randomly-selected winner of the Get Yourself Organized Giveaway. Congrats! [...]

  7. Cash Money Life - A Personal Finance Blog with a Salute to the Military » Is Increasing Gasoline Taxes a Good Idea? Says:
    May 22nd, 2007 at 6:08 am

    [...] Is Increasing Gasoline Taxes a Good Idea? By Patrick Gas prices are rising, and a lot of people are talking about how high they will go and what the impact will be to Americans. Yesterday, JLP from All Financial Matters wrote about rising gas prices and how people are reacting. The post stems from a response to one of his previous posts “How Much Does it Cost to Drive One Mile?” There are a lot of good points raised in both articles and their comments. [...]

  8. This Could Be the Silliest Comment I Ever Received!—AllFinancialMatters Says:
    February 4th, 2008 at 10:59 am

    [...] Over the weekend, I recieved the following comment from an old post I did last year that compared Bill Gates’ Net Worth to John D. Rockefeller’s. I have to wonder what people are thinking when they write this kind of stuff: If Bill Gates is the riches man in the U.S. with a net worth of 82 billion and that is only one person. My question is, what would happen if he and other multi-billioners got together and gave back to the people that made them that rich? What I am getting at is if the U.S population is only 301,139,947 and they gave 1 million to each person they wouldn’t even spend half of a billion dollars. That brings me to my next question, why are there so many people loosing their homes and living in poverty here in the U.S? It doesn’t sound fair to me. [...]

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