"These are tough economic times, and you may need therapy more than ever. But whom do you choose?" Evelyn Lundberg, of course.
"But how am I going to make ends meet, mmmkay?"
The Accountants' Revenge . . . .
"You like money? I like money too. We should hang out."
Is there room for improvement in the way we teach Economics? Mmmmmmmm . . . ya think? Anyone? Anyone?
"It comes in pretty handy down here, Bub."
Got ADD? Get help finishing your budget!
More ADD humor . . . . "Every minute is a brand new day . . . ."
Make a new plan, Stan:
"The problem is all inside your head, she said to me; The answer is easy, if you take it logically. I'd like to help you in your struggle to be free . . . ."
(Gotta love Steve Gadd's dragadiddles)
If this little guy can attain his goals, then we can surely attain ours . . . .
Witty slide show presentation by Randy Dorn, Washington State Superintendent of Public Instruction May 2009. (Click on the cartoon to download.)
"Oh, that darn paperwork: wouldn't it be easier if it all just . . . BLEW AWAY?"
Pidgin Economics . . . .
"You can't make the scene if you don't have the green . . . I guess I'd better make a little stop . . . ."
"No Money, No Honey."
"The Man Song" reminds me of discussions I hear sometimes while helping husbands and wives work out their budgets . . . .
. . . and here's something that's not so funny, usdebtclock.org . . . .
Q: How does a man show he's planning for the future?
A: He buys two cases of beer instead of one.
Q: (asked early March 2009) What's the difference between a stock broker and a pigeon? A: The pigeon can still put a deposit on a Ferrari. "Annual
income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen six, result
happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty
pounds ought and six, result misery." - Mr. Micawber, in Charles Dickens' David Copperfield. "Give me a one-handed economist!" - President Harry Truman, lamenting equivocating economists