“I can pay you when I get paid eventually” does not put food on the table and pay the mortgage now.
“Don’t tell mama I work for the government, she thinks I’m a piano player in cathouse.”

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
You hit the nail on the head. There's a reason that level of fiscal irresponsibility is a red flag for fraud audits.JALLEN wrote:If someone files bankruptcy over missing a few weeks of work that they will soon be paid for anyway, they have worse problems than the government shutdown.
JALLEN wrote:If someone files bankruptcy over missing a few weeks of work that they will soon be paid for anyway, they have worse problems than the government shutdown.
My family makes it a point to have three to six months of living expenses in the bank at all times. We do that because we have one income and we know it's not guaranteed. I'm sympathetic to not being paid, but it shouldn't be an end-of-the-world issue if you use some common sense in your financial planning. It's not like the government shutdown came as a surprise, either.VoiceofReason wrote:I don't know about the recent shutdown but during the previous furloughs, employees were not allowed to withdraw from their Thrift Savings Plan. I suppose if they had enough other savings to last a month, they would be OK. Some people were required to work but would not be paid until the shutdown ended.