NassauBlue
UltrasonicBlueMica
NassauBlue

Meh. The jag looks better. At least for now, hopefully they won't butcher it in production form.

I was going to buy a used aston in a few years, but I may need this instead. Beautiful.

Not to mention what appear to be wet roads.

Shouldn't it be AWD? However I like where your head is at

Yikes. I hadn't seen the interior yet. Not a fan. I love the exterior look though.

You forgot the "almighty" nsx

I do still love these though

I see generic 150k+ mileage e30s for 6-10k all the time. I would say that's gotten crazy too.

Unfortunately finding a running e30 for under 2-3k is basically impossible down here. (I've been looking for months to buy a cheap daily. Finally gave up now that I no longer have an extra parking spot.) Also, are older Cherokees one of the most stolen vehicles ever?

And who wins in this: The People. The people win.

That actually looks pretty good

Also I would think that some of the blame rests on the dealers and distributors themselves. Don't they normally order highly optioned cars so they can sell with an upcharge? Or maybe I'm just thinking about higher end vehicles.

Fair enough. My point in bringing up the vette was to assert a comparison to what I already consider a bare bones car. (Which I do love the car: thankfully the performance and aftermarket additions counteract the lack of gadgetry)

The sad part is that the interest rates are rocketing up too. I graduated 3 years ago with an interest rate of just under 7% for all federal loans, while I have friends in their thirties with less than 3%. They are going to keep going up...

Props to you for staying close to home and saving rent costs. That's a huge saving. Unfortunately the average age for living at home has been increasing

Love the old volvos. Had a 960 wagon as my first car. May have to look at picking up one for a daily... Kind of surprised at how cheap they are.

They are out there. And they suck. I've driven a base 2011/2012ish impala with work. My 15 year old corvette (which granted was around 41k new but didn't have an option box checked) has more features. I find that lack of progress unacceptable.

Wasn't the yaris like 5k new a few years ago?

I guess it depends on the person. I had the same car all the way through college. Since then I have been averaging about one per year. I'm planning on switching every two years or so. That said, I would agree overall. Most of my friends tend to keep cars at least 3-5 years, if not longer. That number goes up for

Well written. It's about time common sense was used in describing the "millennial problem." I have among the smallest amount of student loan debt from those that I know. Was between 20 and 30k when I graduated 3 years ago. That equates to over a 300$ payment in itself. With the rising costs of cars, there is