kumicho
Kumicho
kumicho

Don’t believe me, then ask liberals why they won’t drive an American car and you will hear things like “American cars are made by drunks and N-words”.

Uh, when did the Democrats gain a “super majority” again?  Are you somehow claiming that 50%+1 somehow equates to a “super majority” of some sort?

Spoiler: It’ll suck

This all sort of depends on the length of stay, though. Stay two nights and pay $113 cleaning fee. Stay 7 nights and pay $113 cleaning fee. And you’re going to pay the occupancy taxes and fees regardless as to where you stay, including hotels.

It’s actually worked multiple times, but hey, maybe I just got lucky? Dealers make up the difference between what they can borrow money at and what they lend the car to you at. And yes, they will kick back some of that to you, especially when they get financial incentives for doing so (hitting certain lending targets

Lol, where do you think Ford gets the money? From banks that charge them ~3%+, which means that they’re just padding the cost of the vehicle. And if you didn’t see an alternative offer, it just means you didn’t ask for it or negotiate for it. When we went car shopping, the wife and I asked about how to get the

Because money isn’t free. Someone has to pay for it, and chances are.... it’s you. Look, where do you think that Ford gets the money to lend out to you? They can’t create money out of thin air, and if they’re paying investors ~3% for it, they’re obviously making it up somewhere else.

The problem is that there’s (almost) always an option if you don’t take the 0% APR. In my experience it’s always been “0% APR or $5k (or $10k, or whatever) off the total purchase price of the vehicle. Money isn’t free, and Ford Credit has to pay for the money that they’re lending you.

Do you really think that Ford is going to be offering 84 month 0% financing on a brand new truck that's only $20k and probably going to be in really, really high demand? I highly doubt it. It's going to be used to entice poor people that they really can afford that $60k F150 with the leather interior. 

There is no reason for an 84 month loan on a new car.  None.  If you can’t afford a reasonable 60 month loan, you shouldn’t be buying a new car and should be looking at a use one instead, or something cheaper so you can actually afford the monthly payments.

There really is no such thing as “free money”, because it has to come from somewhere.  If Ford Credit is borrowing money at 3%, and turning around and lending it out to you at 0%, they’re making it up somewhere.  Sometimes it’s on the overall purchase price and you can negotiate a better deal without going for their

When you say “totaled it” I keep envisioning a 5mph slow-speed nudge and the whole thing just folding up like a piece of paper.

Nope, the specific use of a snorkel is for water. Since it's a diesel it can pretty much go through water as deep as the intake, and this raises it above just about any issue you might have. 

Yup, this is exactly my plan as well. Since we have marginal tax rates, once you cross various thresholds your tax liability goes *way* up. Right now if you can keep your taxable income under $80k for joint filers (so whatever 401k distribution, taxable SS, etc), you’ll only pay a 12% marginal tax rate. Then if you

I approve of everything about this post.

Honestly, it depends on the pizza.  Any type of NYC style pizza tastes as good or even better if it’s reheated in the oven or in a cast-iron pan.  The rest though is utter garbage when reheated.

Depending on cost that could have been the perfect farm truck.  The S10 was also available with NiMH batteries that had more capacity and were hundreds of pounds lighter.

You *can* do that, but it’s certainly not comfortable cruising, and not something I’d want to do on a regular basis.

Oil (just like money) is fungible.  If the Middle East blows up and turns off the tap, the price of oil is going to skyrocket.  And yes, that would be for us as well, since North American oil companies will happily send it to Europe or Asia if they’re willing to pay more.

The federal tax credit was 100% fully refundable, which means that even if you didn’t pay anything in federal taxes you’d still get the entire $7,500 back.  I’m not sure about state credits, but I’m pretty sure that most of them were fully refundable as well.