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Time for New Year’s Dissolution of Debt
December 26, 2003
Groton, VT (PRWEB) -- For some the turning of another year is faced with
trepidation of what the future holds. Some others watch the waning moments
leading up to the New Year with a sense of dread and regret for the now
unchangeable past. Still, midst the clamor and bustle of a competitive
world, are those whose misfortunes are not marred by the failures of the
past. They look to the future with a hope of renewal. For them, the New Year
is a time for resolution. Gene Jolley, President of Kingdom Financial
Principles (KFP) and creator of the Rapid Debt Reducer software, is excited
about the coming year. That’s because Jolley has seen the power of positive
change in people’s lives. There is a sense of determination and optimism in
the lives of those who’ve triumphed over their negative financial
circumstances. This is, what Jolley knows, the power that drives the engine
of the Rapid Debt Reducer software.
For years families have struggled under a tide of debt that never seemed to
budge. For years those same families have asked why? The answer has been
hidden from them by those institutions that compete for the American dollar.
And now, as thousands who’ve attended the debt-free seminars know, the why
has been answered. We have been misled with handshakes and smiles. This
epiphany has been met with either amazement or anger or a combination of
both. But for all, the application of this knowledge has served as the
catalyst to propel them into a future embraced by financial freedom. Jolley
says it’s time for New Year’s resolutions and what better than to “Eliminate
debt?” It’s no wonder there is excitement about not only reducing debt, but
of debt elimination—the software works.
Too many are finding it easy to get into credit card debt. The system is not
user friendly—it is predacious, preying on consumer wants and the “got to
have it now” mentality. The system is also a betting institution and like
the house the odds are always stacked. Credit card companies are betting you
will, not only max out your cards on merchandise, but that you will become
dependent on them for survival paying utility bills and buying groceries.
Just one statistic demonstrates just how materialistic the American society
has become. That statistic, recently released in Readers Digest, speaks of
super-sizing homes by 11% over homes in 1995 to accommodate all the
merchandise being bought.
Families are finding out bigger houses are not better, not when financial
stresses consume families in an attempt to survive from one paycheck to the
next. That is what Kingdom Financial Principles is all about—helping people
help themselves to a control their own financial future.
There is a need for liberation from debt and the call to financial freedom
is being heralded in debt-free seminars across the nation. Make that
resolution—be debt free.
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