I doubt people are doing that, tho. They are more likely taking out 84 month loans on something large and overpriced.
I doubt people are doing that, tho. They are more likely taking out 84 month loans on something large and overpriced.
The way I see it, this plays out one of three ways.
“there’s still a lot of appeal here”
Hope the link below works. TLDR: An Arkansas hospital wrote up a thing that stated the religious exception would apply to all medications under that religion. Basically, the employees wouldn’t be allowed to take the top 20 most commonly used meds (Tylenol, tums, etc) while at work. Doubt it made a difference, but it…
far-left propaganda machines.
Every single religious exemption is utter bullshit.
So you’re saying you ignore all stoplights and stop signs then? Because not all stoplights and stop signs are 100% effective 100% of the time at stopping wrecks, I’m therefore assuming you believe its your right to ignore them completely as being useless.
Everyone that asked. My sister in law got a “religious exemption” for her workplace. She hasn’t been to any church in the 5 years I’ve known her.
If people had actually gotten vaccinated when the shot was made available, the variants may never have happened at all.
1st Gear: Stellantis: White collar workers are 97% vaxed while the UAW self reports 50% vaxed?
Well there’s the rub, yeah? What percentage got these exemptions?
Other than keep countless people out of the hospital / 6 feet under the ground.
I would imagine someone looking to buy/finance close to $100k worth of cars has enough disposable income to be able to live close enough to the city for it to not be soul sucking. Presumably he also has enough equity in a current house that would roll in to a new purchase. At the end of the day it won’t matter one bit…
I’d suggest taking a breath and considering whether in the short term they can ride it out (and finding something better to do with the hopefully large balance of that $100k budget than blow it on cars — especially at a moment in history when cars are brutally overpriced).
I found it very hard to justify driving around my 9-year-old shit box chevy sonic after I had a big step up in my career.
The dude writing in can afford $100,000 in auto loans. I’m fairly certain they can afford more than $400,000 for a house.
Sienna AWD Hybrid for the win. Then get whatever strikes your fancy for the commuter. I’d still suggest an EV or PHEV for that one, too.
Honda Accord Touring and Honda Passport. Save the rest for a nice family vacation.
First, let’s be clear, he wants two cars, he may actually need one car. Second, sounds like his career is on track. Congratulations. Now is the time to decide if he wants to look rich or actually be rich at some point. Barring hitting the lottery, or some other windfall, you can typically have one, but not both. Save…
Torch wins this round just for throwing Tracy under a parade of his own doing.