In my defence, in the first game, I was playing as the gatekeeper, which was much less stressful. In the second game, I played as an AI, but I was offered $20 to play plus $40 if I won, and money is a better motivator than I initially assumed.
Your revealed preferences suggest you may wish to apply for the MIRI credit card and make a purchase with it (which causes $50 to be donated to be MIRI). (I estimated that applying for the card nets me a much higher per-hour wage than working at my job, which is conventionally considered to be high-paying. So it seemed like a no brainer to me, at least.)
If I was planning on applying for my first credit card anyway, is the MIRI one a competitive choice?
I donate a substantial amount of money to MIRI anyway, so it probably wouldn’t change my overall donation level, but might allow me to do so more efficiently.
I’ve heard that 1% of spending is the standard credit card offer (it’s what I have on my current card), and the MIRI card offer is somewhat better than that. In several years of using my credit card, I only managed to accumulate $100 in rewards, so I suspect the $50 first-use donation is pretty significant. It also saves you the time of calling up the credit card company to get them to send you your rewards check and cashing the check, and apparently I can only redeem amounts in multiples of $50, which just makes it a bit more of a hassle. Also, I’m not sure whether I have to pay taxes on rewards program income (donating the money would probably allow me to deduct it from my taxes, but would probably count for the up to 50% of my income that I can donate and deduct, so the MIRI card would in theory allow me to donate slightly over 50% of my income without it getting taxed?)
(Edit: credit cards recommended by Mr. Money Moustache. One has a $400 signing bonus. “Travel hacking report” on how to take advantage of credit card offers for free plane tickets. “Credit card arbitrage”: take advantage of low introductory APRs and invest the money in interest-bearing accounts. Hm, these are unexpected ways in which having a high credit rating could be useful...)
On a somewhat related note, my understanding is that every year, you effectively have the opportunity to donate up to half your income from that year and deduct it from your taxes to charitable organizations like MIRI, and this is why you tend to see people donate a ton to charity in late December at the end of the year. This seems really significant for anyone interested in altruistic giving, as deducting income from your taxes could easily make, say, a ~$14K donation in to a ~$20K one (depending on your tax bracket). (Though, under standard employee tax arrangements, you’ll have to donate ~$20K during the actual fiscal year and then wait for a ~$6K tax rebate from the IRS after tax day next year. Also, I don’t know too much about tax laws, so I might be wrong about some of this.)
Good to hear. I recommend applying for a credit card and using it responsibly as soon as it’s an option for you. I’m 22 now, and my credit rating is somehow comparable to that of a 27-year-old Less Wronger friend of mine as a result of doing this a few years ago.
(Of course, don’t apply if you aren’t going to use it responsibly...)
Your revealed preferences suggest you may wish to apply for the MIRI credit card and make a purchase with it (which causes $50 to be donated to be MIRI). (I estimated that applying for the card nets me a much higher per-hour wage than working at my job, which is conventionally considered to be high-paying. So it seemed like a no brainer to me, at least.)
If I was planning on applying for my first credit card anyway, is the MIRI one a competitive choice?
I donate a substantial amount of money to MIRI anyway, so it probably wouldn’t change my overall donation level, but might allow me to do so more efficiently.
I’ve heard that 1% of spending is the standard credit card offer (it’s what I have on my current card), and the MIRI card offer is somewhat better than that. In several years of using my credit card, I only managed to accumulate $100 in rewards, so I suspect the $50 first-use donation is pretty significant. It also saves you the time of calling up the credit card company to get them to send you your rewards check and cashing the check, and apparently I can only redeem amounts in multiples of $50, which just makes it a bit more of a hassle. Also, I’m not sure whether I have to pay taxes on rewards program income (donating the money would probably allow me to deduct it from my taxes, but would probably count for the up to 50% of my income that I can donate and deduct, so the MIRI card would in theory allow me to donate slightly over 50% of my income without it getting taxed?)
(Edit: credit cards recommended by Mr. Money Moustache. One has a $400 signing bonus. “Travel hacking report” on how to take advantage of credit card offers for free plane tickets. “Credit card arbitrage”: take advantage of low introductory APRs and invest the money in interest-bearing accounts. Hm, these are unexpected ways in which having a high credit rating could be useful...)
On a somewhat related note, my understanding is that every year, you effectively have the opportunity to donate up to half your income from that year and deduct it from your taxes to charitable organizations like MIRI, and this is why you tend to see people donate a ton to charity in late December at the end of the year. This seems really significant for anyone interested in altruistic giving, as deducting income from your taxes could easily make, say, a ~$14K donation in to a ~$20K one (depending on your tax bracket). (Though, under standard employee tax arrangements, you’ll have to donate ~$20K during the actual fiscal year and then wait for a ~$6K tax rebate from the IRS after tax day next year. Also, I don’t know too much about tax laws, so I might be wrong about some of this.)
FYI, they might deny you if it’s your first card. I tried to do that a few years ago, but I needed an actual credit score for them to give me one.
Thanks. I’m not currently in a position where that would be available/useful, but once I get there, I will.
Good to hear. I recommend applying for a credit card and using it responsibly as soon as it’s an option for you. I’m 22 now, and my credit rating is somehow comparable to that of a 27-year-old Less Wronger friend of mine as a result of doing this a few years ago.
(Of course, don’t apply if you aren’t going to use it responsibly...)