the-guy-they-warned-you-about
The-Guy-They-Warned-You-About
the-guy-they-warned-you-about

Nah, even he would not have wanted it. Drunk pretty much nailed the driver’s side front wheel. The axle was pushed back into the firewall ripping the spring shackles off the frame and compressing the floorpan up to almost where the dash was. Nearly pinned my legs. The front driveshaft was driven through the transfer

0.9% over 60 months for our loan only adds about $700 total. Keeping the money in our brokerage account instead of paying cash earns roughly 8% a year. Or, we’ll pay about $700 to make at least $20k.

Yes, you are paying more for the car. However, ultimately you have more money.

Its all in the priorities.

I’ll spend on whatever I want. Ain’t freedom wonderful?

Virtually nobody would be able to buy a home if that was the case.

The cash I would have paid is currently making 8% in the brokerage account. Yes, there is a chance of a correction or crash which might impact that growth, but even in 2008, that account only lost 2%, all other years it was well over 0.9%. So, I’m making more than I’m paying. Net gain is positive.

The cash I would have paid is currently making 8% in the brokerage account. Yes, there is a chance of a correction or crash which might impact that growth, but even in 2008, that account only lost 2%, all other years it was well over 0.9%. So, I’m making more than I’m paying. Net gain is positive.

The cash I would have paid is currently making 8% in the brokerage account. Yes, there is a chance of a correction or crash which might impact that growth, but even in 2008, that account only lost 2%, all other years it was well over 0.9%. So, I’m making more than I’m paying. Net gain is positive.

The cash I would have paid is currently making 8% in the brokerage account. Yes, there is a chance of a correction or crash which might impact that growth, but even in 2008, that account only lost 2%, all other years it was well over 0.9%. So, I’m making more than I’m paying. Net gain is positive.

The cash I would have paid is currently making 8% in the brokerage account. Yes, there is a chance of a correction or crash which might impact that growth, but even in 2008, that account only lost 2%, all other years it was well over 0.9%. So, I’m making more than I’m paying. Net gain is positive.

1989 Jeep Wrangler. Bought it my senior year of College about 4 months after I landed my paid internship. Back then, I worked my tail off and did not have any education loans, so when I had $10k in the bank, I decided to treat myself.

Damn Chinese leather....

Yup. The wife’s Pilot was purchased at a 60 month 0.9% Honda loan.

My dad’s first house was $12,600

She looks so “Not Gulity” to me.

Please do not start to recite your poetry.

Chicago’s political climate is pretty much a national disaster.

Its a VW. Nothing is easily accessible.

I’ll bet his next purchase was going to be many 2-liter diet cokes. The perp would then drop the Mentos into the Diet Coke and use the resulting chemical explosion to cause mass havoc!