- This topic has 130 replies, 23 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 7 months ago by Deal Hunter.
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March 31, 2008 at 9:25 PM #179450March 31, 2008 at 9:30 PM #178995bubble_contagionParticipant
They will save with the trade in. The Corvette is an 8 MPG car, the Suburban is an 11 MPG truck. Some people never learn.
March 31, 2008 at 9:30 PM #179362bubble_contagionParticipantThey will save with the trade in. The Corvette is an 8 MPG car, the Suburban is an 11 MPG truck. Some people never learn.
March 31, 2008 at 9:30 PM #179369bubble_contagionParticipantThey will save with the trade in. The Corvette is an 8 MPG car, the Suburban is an 11 MPG truck. Some people never learn.
March 31, 2008 at 9:30 PM #179380bubble_contagionParticipantThey will save with the trade in. The Corvette is an 8 MPG car, the Suburban is an 11 MPG truck. Some people never learn.
March 31, 2008 at 9:30 PM #179455bubble_contagionParticipantThey will save with the trade in. The Corvette is an 8 MPG car, the Suburban is an 11 MPG truck. Some people never learn.
March 31, 2008 at 9:50 PM #179015Dougie944ParticipantA Corvette actually gets better gas mileage and the costs of the 2 vehicles is fairly close….depending on the models. I don’t understand how that is a sacrifice at all.
How can people earning what they were earning not have saved and paid off the things they were buying? That is so irresponsible. Nobody could possibly feel sorry for this couple.
March 31, 2008 at 9:50 PM #179383Dougie944ParticipantA Corvette actually gets better gas mileage and the costs of the 2 vehicles is fairly close….depending on the models. I don’t understand how that is a sacrifice at all.
How can people earning what they were earning not have saved and paid off the things they were buying? That is so irresponsible. Nobody could possibly feel sorry for this couple.
March 31, 2008 at 9:50 PM #179389Dougie944ParticipantA Corvette actually gets better gas mileage and the costs of the 2 vehicles is fairly close….depending on the models. I don’t understand how that is a sacrifice at all.
How can people earning what they were earning not have saved and paid off the things they were buying? That is so irresponsible. Nobody could possibly feel sorry for this couple.
March 31, 2008 at 9:50 PM #179400Dougie944ParticipantA Corvette actually gets better gas mileage and the costs of the 2 vehicles is fairly close….depending on the models. I don’t understand how that is a sacrifice at all.
How can people earning what they were earning not have saved and paid off the things they were buying? That is so irresponsible. Nobody could possibly feel sorry for this couple.
March 31, 2008 at 9:50 PM #179476Dougie944ParticipantA Corvette actually gets better gas mileage and the costs of the 2 vehicles is fairly close….depending on the models. I don’t understand how that is a sacrifice at all.
How can people earning what they were earning not have saved and paid off the things they were buying? That is so irresponsible. Nobody could possibly feel sorry for this couple.
March 31, 2008 at 10:06 PM #179020hipmattParticipant“It’s very expensive to live in Orange County, and you pay a lot for your home and you can’t get what it’s worth now.”
.. NO, you paid a lot more for your home than it’s worth… it’s just now starting to get closer to what it should be.
“We’re still both in shock that it could go from something so good to so bad so quick,” said Kent, 59. “New Century in 60 days went from top of the heap to out of business.”
.. it’s funny how many “educated and trained” people in the business, on wall street, and in the media couldn’t see this coming. You never hear a responsible person quoted in the media, like a piggie… saying that prices are insane, and loaning money to people with bad credit, no savings, no documentation makes no sense and is HIGHLY risky and could most likely end badly. To say this (housing crash/subprime defaults) was a “shock” has to be the most over-used line of BS this decade.
March 31, 2008 at 10:06 PM #179388hipmattParticipant“It’s very expensive to live in Orange County, and you pay a lot for your home and you can’t get what it’s worth now.”
.. NO, you paid a lot more for your home than it’s worth… it’s just now starting to get closer to what it should be.
“We’re still both in shock that it could go from something so good to so bad so quick,” said Kent, 59. “New Century in 60 days went from top of the heap to out of business.”
.. it’s funny how many “educated and trained” people in the business, on wall street, and in the media couldn’t see this coming. You never hear a responsible person quoted in the media, like a piggie… saying that prices are insane, and loaning money to people with bad credit, no savings, no documentation makes no sense and is HIGHLY risky and could most likely end badly. To say this (housing crash/subprime defaults) was a “shock” has to be the most over-used line of BS this decade.
March 31, 2008 at 10:06 PM #179394hipmattParticipant“It’s very expensive to live in Orange County, and you pay a lot for your home and you can’t get what it’s worth now.”
.. NO, you paid a lot more for your home than it’s worth… it’s just now starting to get closer to what it should be.
“We’re still both in shock that it could go from something so good to so bad so quick,” said Kent, 59. “New Century in 60 days went from top of the heap to out of business.”
.. it’s funny how many “educated and trained” people in the business, on wall street, and in the media couldn’t see this coming. You never hear a responsible person quoted in the media, like a piggie… saying that prices are insane, and loaning money to people with bad credit, no savings, no documentation makes no sense and is HIGHLY risky and could most likely end badly. To say this (housing crash/subprime defaults) was a “shock” has to be the most over-used line of BS this decade.
March 31, 2008 at 10:06 PM #179405hipmattParticipant“It’s very expensive to live in Orange County, and you pay a lot for your home and you can’t get what it’s worth now.”
.. NO, you paid a lot more for your home than it’s worth… it’s just now starting to get closer to what it should be.
“We’re still both in shock that it could go from something so good to so bad so quick,” said Kent, 59. “New Century in 60 days went from top of the heap to out of business.”
.. it’s funny how many “educated and trained” people in the business, on wall street, and in the media couldn’t see this coming. You never hear a responsible person quoted in the media, like a piggie… saying that prices are insane, and loaning money to people with bad credit, no savings, no documentation makes no sense and is HIGHLY risky and could most likely end badly. To say this (housing crash/subprime defaults) was a “shock” has to be the most over-used line of BS this decade.
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