>>936679I'm 32 and make under 60K/year combined household income. Of course you can. You just want it now. Adults delay pleasure to make smart decisions, children do what feels good. You don't _need_ credit, you _want_ it now - big difference. To be clear, there's nothing wrong with that. I'm simply saying there's another way of doing things outside of conventional thinking.
>>936714>good debt Cash > *
That philosophy has yet to fail me.
>>936733Have fun raiding and cashing out 401Ks, CD's, mutual funds, etc if you suffer a job loss or major financial emergency. To me that money doesn't exist unless all hell is breaking loose in my life (and it has..). You can't put a price on financial stability. From emotional to physical well being, it's worth it's weight in gold.
>>936752>sad little bitchYou're projecting hardcore because what I said is dead on accurate and you know it. But again, whatever you need to tell yourself to feel better. You have no credibility based on what you've already posted. You're the one spouting BS out of both sides of your neck yet, I'm the liar? Oddly enough you didn't even refute it. Go figure.
So you invest part of your emergency savings and use credit cards to float you? Is that what you're advocating? Explain your original post because it looks like total nonsense typed out by some young 20-something with little real world experience to me.
At least I pick a position and defend it. You dance on the fence like an idiot to avoid accountability. That's why I called you out.
>BTW, I've never had a note on anything I own.I don't believe you. Your original post was SO stupid I'm certain you have a note on everything you own. Even more certain you don't have an emergency fund.
>>936896Minus the business. I'm a wageslave. Even still, we're a rare breed from the looks of it. Save for a few years and buy it cash? That makes us crazy or liars apparently.