conlawhero
ConLawHero
conlawhero

No, I promise you, rent will always go up. In states where property taxes are levied (which is all of them), property taxes will go up. Do you think that landlords are going to eat that cost? Moreover, inflation will always continue to go up (unless we go into deflation, which hasn’t happened since 1933). Do you

Pretty sure you just described alcoholism. So... you’re defending people’s ability to be alcoholics. Odd cause to champion, but whatever floats your boat. I just hope one of those alcoholics you’re defending doesn’t end up giving birth to a kid who will require lifetime care, or more realistic, end up killing someone

Well... this is illegal in certain states. In NY, a notary cannot charge more than a nominal fee (I think it’s $1 or $2) to notarize a document.

That’s actually not what the CDC said, but ok.

Then you take the risk. No one’s forcing a woman to consume or not consume alcohol. I think the CDC would admit a single drink every few months would, even if it does cause some damage, cause negligible damage.

Neither my wife or I drink, I don’t think we’re “losing a form of fun.” We just do something else instead.

There seems to be a lot of anecdotal evidence being thrown around like “my wife drank like a fish right before we found out she was pregnant and my kid’s fine.”

It’s clear you have no idea what you’re talking about. Go to school, take some classes, then try again.

Oh, so you have a financial degree? Yeah, that does boggle my mind.

Really? A hard pull is attempting to use someone else’s credit? You should probably notify FICO that they’re doing it wrong, since, you know... banks and other lending institutions use hard pulls to determine MY creditworthiness.

Yes, I understand that. But, I still don’t think it’s logical to penalize someone for having credit checks. That’s penalizing someone who is trying to use their credit. If your score is over 750, it should be assumed that, if you’re getting multiple checks, you’re probably doing something productive with your credit.

Really? So, when my wife and I bought a car and a house, and opened a credit card to get a discount on some furniture, all within a month, we were stupid? Even though every one of those expenses composed no more than 25% of our total income?

If my income easily covers my debt, why should my score drop? That’s literally being punished for using credit. That doesn’t sound stupid to you?

Oh, I’m aware. Guess which one they do when you’re applying for anything substantial (house, car, student loans, refinancing, credit cards, etc...).

I think this aspect of credit is stupid. It’s basically saying “we’re going to punish you for using your credit.”

My house is absolutely not an investment. My house is where I live. I make improvements to my house because they’re things I want, not things I think will make my house more valuable. I expect to get at least what I paid for my house, and if I get more than that, good for me.

I agree. As a lawyer, I used to work for a giant douchebag who was so bad at his job that the only thing he could critique on my assignments was grammar (not that I had/have poor grammar, he just liked things his way).

This is why I say that, instead of gym class, personal finance should be mandatory for high school graduation.

Then get a giant tax bill at the end of the year, fuck it.

That’s my exact philosophy. Right now, my wife and I claim ourselves and 0 for everything else. We end up getting a tax refund and it goes right towards her medical school loans. Well... the refund goes into a brokerage account that we’re using to save up to pay off the loans. Since our loan is around 3.5% and hypothet