But people who drive junkers or older cars arent always poor either.
I think most people in USA buy cars to give the appearance of wealth, but I've met a lot of people who got wealthy, in part, by not making that choice.
But people who drive junkers or older cars arent always poor either.
I think most people in USA buy cars to give the appearance of wealth, but I've met a lot of people who got wealthy, in part, by not making that choice.
But people who drive junkers or older cars arent always poor either.
I think most people in USA buy cars to give the appearance of wealth, but I've met a lot of people who got wealthy, in part, by not making that choice.
What’s a “nice car”
I assure you that you’re not leaving the ferrari dealership with a 488 on your TGI Fridays bartending salary. I don’t care how often you tell them you’ll wax it.
But people who drive junkers or older cars arent always poor either.
I think most people in USA buy cars to give the appearance of wealth, but I've met a lot of people who got wealthy, in part, by not making that choice.
But people who drive junkers or older cars arent always poor either.
I think most people in USA buy cars to give the appearance of wealth, but I've met a lot of people who got wealthy, in part, by not making that choice.
Wealthy people are less likely to be sucked in by marketing trends because they use their own brains to think with. They tend to see the long term picture better and care less about what others think about them.
BMWs and Mercedes are for insecure middle class. Nothing like being car poor.
Every one of them? How do you determine if their pressing insecurity involuntarily dragged them to the dealership and made them pull their wallet out or if they could comfortably afford it and just liked to drive that car?
BMWs and Mercedes are for insecure middle class. Nothing like being car poor.
The projection. These cars will get you compliments from peers and interest from women as a man. It is primarily "upper" class with these vehicles and that's because they're nice and actually have great quality parts.
Warren Buffet is worth about $120 billion and drives the same klunker he has been driving for years.
You could also argue the super rich person driving a clunker is doing it for attention too. Everyone already knows this guy is rich. He wants people to think he's humble, but that doesn't necessarily mean he actually is.
Don't call it yours until you've paid it off. That goes for a car, a house, etc. STOP THE CAP. 95%+ of vehicles on the road are not paid off. It's laughable. That's due to the institutional system and how it's designed--to keep people barely getting by. I always play the full amount. Everything paid off. No cap here. I don't allow the institutional schemes to grab me by the balls and become another insufferable sheep who blindly think they're better than their neighbor because they have a car and their neighbor doesn't or they have a nicer car than their neighbor.
This post was edited 5 minutes after it was posted.