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June 6, 2008 at 12:30 PM #218400June 6, 2008 at 1:06 PM #218595zzzParticipant
I have noticed that whether it be 11am or 3pm on any given day of the week, there are LONG lines at Costco to get gas. Friday’s and Monday’s seem to be the worst where lines run out to the street. There are a lot of people filling up who are not dressed as professionals, so I have to wonder how long they can continue to fill up their Escalades, Expeditions, etc if they are either not working, stay at home mom’s, or working in blue collar jobs that are more likely to suffer from a consumer depressed outlook.
I know of a cleaning lady who barely speaks any English who’s husband works construction. They have 2 small children. How is it she can afford to drive a Toyota Sequoia which I believe is a 50k car and gets 13/18mpg?
June 6, 2008 at 1:06 PM #218543zzzParticipantI have noticed that whether it be 11am or 3pm on any given day of the week, there are LONG lines at Costco to get gas. Friday’s and Monday’s seem to be the worst where lines run out to the street. There are a lot of people filling up who are not dressed as professionals, so I have to wonder how long they can continue to fill up their Escalades, Expeditions, etc if they are either not working, stay at home mom’s, or working in blue collar jobs that are more likely to suffer from a consumer depressed outlook.
I know of a cleaning lady who barely speaks any English who’s husband works construction. They have 2 small children. How is it she can afford to drive a Toyota Sequoia which I believe is a 50k car and gets 13/18mpg?
June 6, 2008 at 1:06 PM #218561zzzParticipantI have noticed that whether it be 11am or 3pm on any given day of the week, there are LONG lines at Costco to get gas. Friday’s and Monday’s seem to be the worst where lines run out to the street. There are a lot of people filling up who are not dressed as professionals, so I have to wonder how long they can continue to fill up their Escalades, Expeditions, etc if they are either not working, stay at home mom’s, or working in blue collar jobs that are more likely to suffer from a consumer depressed outlook.
I know of a cleaning lady who barely speaks any English who’s husband works construction. They have 2 small children. How is it she can afford to drive a Toyota Sequoia which I believe is a 50k car and gets 13/18mpg?
June 6, 2008 at 1:06 PM #218613zzzParticipantI have noticed that whether it be 11am or 3pm on any given day of the week, there are LONG lines at Costco to get gas. Friday’s and Monday’s seem to be the worst where lines run out to the street. There are a lot of people filling up who are not dressed as professionals, so I have to wonder how long they can continue to fill up their Escalades, Expeditions, etc if they are either not working, stay at home mom’s, or working in blue collar jobs that are more likely to suffer from a consumer depressed outlook.
I know of a cleaning lady who barely speaks any English who’s husband works construction. They have 2 small children. How is it she can afford to drive a Toyota Sequoia which I believe is a 50k car and gets 13/18mpg?
June 6, 2008 at 1:06 PM #218451zzzParticipantI have noticed that whether it be 11am or 3pm on any given day of the week, there are LONG lines at Costco to get gas. Friday’s and Monday’s seem to be the worst where lines run out to the street. There are a lot of people filling up who are not dressed as professionals, so I have to wonder how long they can continue to fill up their Escalades, Expeditions, etc if they are either not working, stay at home mom’s, or working in blue collar jobs that are more likely to suffer from a consumer depressed outlook.
I know of a cleaning lady who barely speaks any English who’s husband works construction. They have 2 small children. How is it she can afford to drive a Toyota Sequoia which I believe is a 50k car and gets 13/18mpg?
June 6, 2008 at 1:22 PM #218629vagabondoParticipantFLU, did you check the immigration papers on your lawn care professional? I am assuming he’s cutting once a week. $40 a month – does that cover his gas? Is he pushing the old fashion reel mower around your yard? You know the one that requires a running start before hitting the grass.
June 6, 2008 at 1:22 PM #218557vagabondoParticipantFLU, did you check the immigration papers on your lawn care professional? I am assuming he’s cutting once a week. $40 a month – does that cover his gas? Is he pushing the old fashion reel mower around your yard? You know the one that requires a running start before hitting the grass.
June 6, 2008 at 1:22 PM #218466vagabondoParticipantFLU, did you check the immigration papers on your lawn care professional? I am assuming he’s cutting once a week. $40 a month – does that cover his gas? Is he pushing the old fashion reel mower around your yard? You know the one that requires a running start before hitting the grass.
June 6, 2008 at 1:22 PM #218577vagabondoParticipantFLU, did you check the immigration papers on your lawn care professional? I am assuming he’s cutting once a week. $40 a month – does that cover his gas? Is he pushing the old fashion reel mower around your yard? You know the one that requires a running start before hitting the grass.
June 6, 2008 at 1:22 PM #218608vagabondoParticipantFLU, did you check the immigration papers on your lawn care professional? I am assuming he’s cutting once a week. $40 a month – does that cover his gas? Is he pushing the old fashion reel mower around your yard? You know the one that requires a running start before hitting the grass.
June 6, 2008 at 1:51 PM #218630HarryBoschParticipantgolfgal, it depends on whose house the cleaning lady is cleaning π If she’s the cleaning lady for one of my brother-in-laws in OC who owns his own law firm and services only corporate clients (meaning he makes a lot of money) then she’s probably making about $600 month just taking care of his house. If she has ten other clients like him who are paying her similar wages then she’s making about $6000/mo = $72000/yr. I know that his cleaning lady has at least one of her kids at either UCLA or USC. Not bad for a cleaning lady π
And if the cleaning lady is using her Toyota Sequoia for work then she’s writing off the vehicle usage as a business expense as well: gas, insurance, maintenance, payments.
June 6, 2008 at 1:51 PM #218647HarryBoschParticipantgolfgal, it depends on whose house the cleaning lady is cleaning π If she’s the cleaning lady for one of my brother-in-laws in OC who owns his own law firm and services only corporate clients (meaning he makes a lot of money) then she’s probably making about $600 month just taking care of his house. If she has ten other clients like him who are paying her similar wages then she’s making about $6000/mo = $72000/yr. I know that his cleaning lady has at least one of her kids at either UCLA or USC. Not bad for a cleaning lady π
And if the cleaning lady is using her Toyota Sequoia for work then she’s writing off the vehicle usage as a business expense as well: gas, insurance, maintenance, payments.
June 6, 2008 at 1:51 PM #218598HarryBoschParticipantgolfgal, it depends on whose house the cleaning lady is cleaning π If she’s the cleaning lady for one of my brother-in-laws in OC who owns his own law firm and services only corporate clients (meaning he makes a lot of money) then she’s probably making about $600 month just taking care of his house. If she has ten other clients like him who are paying her similar wages then she’s making about $6000/mo = $72000/yr. I know that his cleaning lady has at least one of her kids at either UCLA or USC. Not bad for a cleaning lady π
And if the cleaning lady is using her Toyota Sequoia for work then she’s writing off the vehicle usage as a business expense as well: gas, insurance, maintenance, payments.
June 6, 2008 at 1:51 PM #218488HarryBoschParticipantgolfgal, it depends on whose house the cleaning lady is cleaning π If she’s the cleaning lady for one of my brother-in-laws in OC who owns his own law firm and services only corporate clients (meaning he makes a lot of money) then she’s probably making about $600 month just taking care of his house. If she has ten other clients like him who are paying her similar wages then she’s making about $6000/mo = $72000/yr. I know that his cleaning lady has at least one of her kids at either UCLA or USC. Not bad for a cleaning lady π
And if the cleaning lady is using her Toyota Sequoia for work then she’s writing off the vehicle usage as a business expense as well: gas, insurance, maintenance, payments.
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