~3500x10=50,000=100,000and I wonder why tww is all republicans
12/14/2009 9:24:04 PM
your after tax income is ~$3,500/mo as a teacher? ]]
12/14/2009 9:26:39 PM
not exactly, my rental condo brings in some of that. I don't know why you guys would be surprised by that though. I make PENNIES relative to most science teachers.
12/14/2009 9:30:29 PM
oh i missed where a 21yr old teacher had a rental property
12/14/2009 9:34:44 PM
12/14/2009 9:35:11 PM
This thread proved to me that you are full of shit. I was on the fence. Now it's confirmed.
12/14/2009 9:35:26 PM
12/14/2009 9:37:26 PM
Lets just get back to the topic. I used to analyze dti ratios for a living, pretty sure I can handle a budget.
12/14/2009 9:41:33 PM
What, are you 22? You've only been registered for 199.2 days.[Edited on December 14, 2009 at 9:44 PM. Reason : n/m]
12/14/2009 9:43:11 PM
...22 is a HUGE difference
12/14/2009 9:44:08 PM
Haha, when you refer to it as "analyzing dti ratios" it sounds enormously more impressive than it is...Especially since most of it is...*enter number**enter number**click**click**number**click*Would you like fries with that?
12/14/2009 9:50:59 PM
^was just going to post that. Anyone with common sense can "analyzing dti ratios" by hand, yet alone be aided by the calculators out there. Anywho I'll just be a lurker from now on here.
12/14/2009 9:58:16 PM
lets get back to op
12/14/2009 9:59:47 PM
[Edited on December 14, 2009 at 10:18 PM. Reason : ]
12/14/2009 10:16:38 PM
there are many instances when leasing is a much better option than buying new or used. I'm fairly certain you won't fit into any of those situations and will end up in more car than you can afford.[Edited on December 14, 2009 at 11:29 PM. Reason : .]
12/14/2009 11:27:41 PM
12/15/2009 12:44:50 AM
12/15/2009 1:01:20 AM
12/15/2009 9:36:17 AM
leasing a car is a bad idea/thread
12/15/2009 9:42:14 AM
I said I was done with the thread, but I decided I would post again to actually agree with mambagrl on something. With several close friends as teachers (I really don't know why so many of my friends turned out to be teachers ) as well my wife being a teacher (unemployed atm because she moved to where I am for my job) I can say first hand that they are always ridiculously busy if not consistently the friends least likely to have time to hang out on the weekends. If you count the time spent on nights and weekends preparing stuff for the time spent in the classroom my wife easily averaged 60-70 hours a week of work+in class time even for elementary school. My friends who are HS teachers seem to be busier than that. She enjoyed it for the most part, so she wasn't complaining about it, but the teachers who are actually doing more than scraping by on the absolute bare minimum effort are usually pretty darn busy with work. [Edited on December 15, 2009 at 10:02 AM. Reason : ]
12/15/2009 9:47:15 AM
12/15/2009 1:06:47 PM
Out of curiosity, if you're not going to want whatever car you have in 2 years anyway and you're planning on getting rid of it, why do you care if you buy a cheap beat up used POS for 2k as long as it serves your needs? And if you are going to want to keep your car for a long time, why the hell would you consider leasing?
12/15/2009 1:35:53 PM
I think leasing really only makes sense if you are dead set on getting a new car every few years. If you look at the numbers here:http://www.edmunds.com/advice/buying/articles/47079/article.htmlThey use 5 years as the interval and it turns out financing a new car and leasing a new car end up being the same out-of-pocket cost after 5 years but the true cost differs by the value of the car that you now own. If you stopped at the 3 year mark, leasing would be about $11k cheaper out-of-pocket, meaning you'd need to trade-in or sell your (financed, now owned) car for at least that much to break even total cost (not a stretch but you have to remember the lease payment in this example are almost half per month than the loan payment and the lease downpayment was 1/3).Getting (leasing or financing) a new car every 3 years is excessive to me but so are many things that people do. It's just a threshold based on preference/point-of-view. The fact that somebody wants to buy or lease a new car every 3 years doesn't surprise me considering everything else people do to keep up with the Joneses. It's about like credit card debt in that most people understand that it costs more over time to accumulate cc debt but they still do it so they can have it (whatever it is) now.
12/15/2009 3:24:04 PM
The thing is, with that sort of stuff, is that if you'll just be patient once and break the cycle, you can finally get ahead and surpass the joneses.If you'll dig through my posts, you'll also see me criticize the Dave Ramsey types, but they aren't half as dumb as their opposites.
12/15/2009 4:02:00 PM
12/15/2009 5:52:26 PM
12/15/2009 6:22:14 PM
12/15/2009 9:28:42 PM
^great postso nobodys going to actually attempt to answer the op and its all gonna be "omg leasing is the debil"?
12/15/2009 10:22:17 PM
I'm no expert on this matter...but I believe the reason nobody is answering your questions is b/c its obvious you're an alias/troll and the answers to your questions are readily available on the interwebs. I mean, do you really expect us to buy that you worked in banking but have no clue how a car lease works?But here, I'll humor you...the answers to your questions can be found in the articles located here...http://www.howstuffworks.com/search.php?terms=leases[Edited on December 15, 2009 at 10:37 PM. Reason : .]
12/15/2009 10:36:58 PM
I'll answer your question if you raise $1000 for me. If I'm wrong I'll give it back.
12/15/2009 10:37:16 PM
What does mortgage banking have to do with car leases?"You really want us to believe you're a goldsmith if you don't know how criminal appeals work?"
12/15/2009 10:42:45 PM
No body is answering the question because if this is true
12/16/2009 9:52:34 AM