- This topic has 220 replies, 23 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 4 months ago by davelj.
-
AuthorPosts
-
August 25, 2010 at 7:23 AM #596931August 25, 2010 at 7:28 AM #595881desmondParticipant
“I’m concerned that these people like these are hurting the luxury brands image. I paid good money for my 7 series BMW. I don’t want some trash dissing the image of my car”
Thanks Newto, although I am not a big luxury car fan, I do like the cars, that statement keeps me driving my 2005 Tahoe and saves me the money and the embarrassment of being labeled a……. I better not finish to many car guys on this board.
August 25, 2010 at 7:28 AM #595974desmondParticipant“I’m concerned that these people like these are hurting the luxury brands image. I paid good money for my 7 series BMW. I don’t want some trash dissing the image of my car”
Thanks Newto, although I am not a big luxury car fan, I do like the cars, that statement keeps me driving my 2005 Tahoe and saves me the money and the embarrassment of being labeled a……. I better not finish to many car guys on this board.
August 25, 2010 at 7:28 AM #596513desmondParticipant“I’m concerned that these people like these are hurting the luxury brands image. I paid good money for my 7 series BMW. I don’t want some trash dissing the image of my car”
Thanks Newto, although I am not a big luxury car fan, I do like the cars, that statement keeps me driving my 2005 Tahoe and saves me the money and the embarrassment of being labeled a……. I better not finish to many car guys on this board.
August 25, 2010 at 7:28 AM #596622desmondParticipant“I’m concerned that these people like these are hurting the luxury brands image. I paid good money for my 7 series BMW. I don’t want some trash dissing the image of my car”
Thanks Newto, although I am not a big luxury car fan, I do like the cars, that statement keeps me driving my 2005 Tahoe and saves me the money and the embarrassment of being labeled a……. I better not finish to many car guys on this board.
August 25, 2010 at 7:28 AM #596936desmondParticipant“I’m concerned that these people like these are hurting the luxury brands image. I paid good money for my 7 series BMW. I don’t want some trash dissing the image of my car”
Thanks Newto, although I am not a big luxury car fan, I do like the cars, that statement keeps me driving my 2005 Tahoe and saves me the money and the embarrassment of being labeled a……. I better not finish to many car guys on this board.
August 25, 2010 at 7:33 AM #595886CoronitaParticipant[quote=plasticfantastic]This is hardly a new phenomenon. I noticed it 20 yrs ago when I moved here…
As stated above, it’s likely a function of people deciding that while they cannot afford to buy a home, they choose to have a nice car.
Not entirely illogical. Most people do not think in terms of long term financial wealth… they want to get by and enjoy life now. They realize they will never be ‘rich,’ but want a taste of what they perceive as ‘the good life.’ Is that really so terrible? I think not. Perhaps they are happier than the miser who amasses wealth and drives a POS[/quote]
It depends…Usually, the lack of respect for the dollar extends well beyond a large car payment. It’s usually symptom of a bigger issue. It appears to general view on credit. It might be different IF folks actually make the financial tradeoff and prioritize a large car payment over everything else. But quite often what happens that’s not the case. No tradeoff is made…as soon as the large car payments are made, then something else comes along, and that next thing is purchased on credit, minimum payment, and then the next, with no margin of safety in case the unexpected happens. And next thing you know, these folks are the same people screaming for financial help and a bailout. If Americans want to indulge in excess, that’s a personal choice. But then don’t ask for the nanny bailouts when the shit hits the fan and no plan B exists.
August 25, 2010 at 7:33 AM #595979CoronitaParticipant[quote=plasticfantastic]This is hardly a new phenomenon. I noticed it 20 yrs ago when I moved here…
As stated above, it’s likely a function of people deciding that while they cannot afford to buy a home, they choose to have a nice car.
Not entirely illogical. Most people do not think in terms of long term financial wealth… they want to get by and enjoy life now. They realize they will never be ‘rich,’ but want a taste of what they perceive as ‘the good life.’ Is that really so terrible? I think not. Perhaps they are happier than the miser who amasses wealth and drives a POS[/quote]
It depends…Usually, the lack of respect for the dollar extends well beyond a large car payment. It’s usually symptom of a bigger issue. It appears to general view on credit. It might be different IF folks actually make the financial tradeoff and prioritize a large car payment over everything else. But quite often what happens that’s not the case. No tradeoff is made…as soon as the large car payments are made, then something else comes along, and that next thing is purchased on credit, minimum payment, and then the next, with no margin of safety in case the unexpected happens. And next thing you know, these folks are the same people screaming for financial help and a bailout. If Americans want to indulge in excess, that’s a personal choice. But then don’t ask for the nanny bailouts when the shit hits the fan and no plan B exists.
August 25, 2010 at 7:33 AM #596518CoronitaParticipant[quote=plasticfantastic]This is hardly a new phenomenon. I noticed it 20 yrs ago when I moved here…
As stated above, it’s likely a function of people deciding that while they cannot afford to buy a home, they choose to have a nice car.
Not entirely illogical. Most people do not think in terms of long term financial wealth… they want to get by and enjoy life now. They realize they will never be ‘rich,’ but want a taste of what they perceive as ‘the good life.’ Is that really so terrible? I think not. Perhaps they are happier than the miser who amasses wealth and drives a POS[/quote]
It depends…Usually, the lack of respect for the dollar extends well beyond a large car payment. It’s usually symptom of a bigger issue. It appears to general view on credit. It might be different IF folks actually make the financial tradeoff and prioritize a large car payment over everything else. But quite often what happens that’s not the case. No tradeoff is made…as soon as the large car payments are made, then something else comes along, and that next thing is purchased on credit, minimum payment, and then the next, with no margin of safety in case the unexpected happens. And next thing you know, these folks are the same people screaming for financial help and a bailout. If Americans want to indulge in excess, that’s a personal choice. But then don’t ask for the nanny bailouts when the shit hits the fan and no plan B exists.
August 25, 2010 at 7:33 AM #596627CoronitaParticipant[quote=plasticfantastic]This is hardly a new phenomenon. I noticed it 20 yrs ago when I moved here…
As stated above, it’s likely a function of people deciding that while they cannot afford to buy a home, they choose to have a nice car.
Not entirely illogical. Most people do not think in terms of long term financial wealth… they want to get by and enjoy life now. They realize they will never be ‘rich,’ but want a taste of what they perceive as ‘the good life.’ Is that really so terrible? I think not. Perhaps they are happier than the miser who amasses wealth and drives a POS[/quote]
It depends…Usually, the lack of respect for the dollar extends well beyond a large car payment. It’s usually symptom of a bigger issue. It appears to general view on credit. It might be different IF folks actually make the financial tradeoff and prioritize a large car payment over everything else. But quite often what happens that’s not the case. No tradeoff is made…as soon as the large car payments are made, then something else comes along, and that next thing is purchased on credit, minimum payment, and then the next, with no margin of safety in case the unexpected happens. And next thing you know, these folks are the same people screaming for financial help and a bailout. If Americans want to indulge in excess, that’s a personal choice. But then don’t ask for the nanny bailouts when the shit hits the fan and no plan B exists.
August 25, 2010 at 7:33 AM #596941CoronitaParticipant[quote=plasticfantastic]This is hardly a new phenomenon. I noticed it 20 yrs ago when I moved here…
As stated above, it’s likely a function of people deciding that while they cannot afford to buy a home, they choose to have a nice car.
Not entirely illogical. Most people do not think in terms of long term financial wealth… they want to get by and enjoy life now. They realize they will never be ‘rich,’ but want a taste of what they perceive as ‘the good life.’ Is that really so terrible? I think not. Perhaps they are happier than the miser who amasses wealth and drives a POS[/quote]
It depends…Usually, the lack of respect for the dollar extends well beyond a large car payment. It’s usually symptom of a bigger issue. It appears to general view on credit. It might be different IF folks actually make the financial tradeoff and prioritize a large car payment over everything else. But quite often what happens that’s not the case. No tradeoff is made…as soon as the large car payments are made, then something else comes along, and that next thing is purchased on credit, minimum payment, and then the next, with no margin of safety in case the unexpected happens. And next thing you know, these folks are the same people screaming for financial help and a bailout. If Americans want to indulge in excess, that’s a personal choice. But then don’t ask for the nanny bailouts when the shit hits the fan and no plan B exists.
August 25, 2010 at 7:39 AM #595891CoronitaParticipant[quote=meadandale]It was bad enough paying $500/month for my F150. I just can’t see paying $1000-1500/month for a car payment. These same people probably have iphones with a $100/month phone bill and yet “can’t afford” health insurance.[/quote]
Hijack….Note to self. If I need someone to haul something, ping meadandale π
August 25, 2010 at 7:39 AM #595984CoronitaParticipant[quote=meadandale]It was bad enough paying $500/month for my F150. I just can’t see paying $1000-1500/month for a car payment. These same people probably have iphones with a $100/month phone bill and yet “can’t afford” health insurance.[/quote]
Hijack….Note to self. If I need someone to haul something, ping meadandale π
August 25, 2010 at 7:39 AM #596523CoronitaParticipant[quote=meadandale]It was bad enough paying $500/month for my F150. I just can’t see paying $1000-1500/month for a car payment. These same people probably have iphones with a $100/month phone bill and yet “can’t afford” health insurance.[/quote]
Hijack….Note to self. If I need someone to haul something, ping meadandale π
August 25, 2010 at 7:39 AM #596632CoronitaParticipant[quote=meadandale]It was bad enough paying $500/month for my F150. I just can’t see paying $1000-1500/month for a car payment. These same people probably have iphones with a $100/month phone bill and yet “can’t afford” health insurance.[/quote]
Hijack….Note to self. If I need someone to haul something, ping meadandale π
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.