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Reply to "WaPo -- New cars out of reach for many"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I'm a little aggravated by this article (or at least the headline). Yes, a new car was part of the American "dream" -- but by definition that meant it was always out of reach for many. I remember the first time my parents bought a new car (in the 1970s) and how thrilled they were -- they were almost 50 and had decent jobs. People in the 1960s, and 70s bought used cars and fixed them up or made do. Then everything got exported to cheaper countries, and financing became ridiculously cheap, and all of a sudden you had new cars become the norm for teenagers and 20-somethings. Unfortunately, during that time period, people became really snotty about cars, so now it's considered failing not to have a nice new car. I recall in the 70s, it was not uncommon for someone to have a car up on blocks in their driveway, even in a middle class neighborhood. Now that's the kind of thing that would have you on the HOA list. I'm 50, so I guess that's old to some people, but I have a recurring pet peeve that people seem to not realize that the consumer opulence of the past several decades was an anomaly and probably due for a course correction. (And none of this takes away from the fact that the depression of American wages for the working and middle class over the past several decades is an awful thing for our country. But the two are rather connected -- we exported good manufacturing jobs to cheaper countries in order to get cheap consumer goods, but in the process hollowed out our working/middle class.)[/quote] You're ignoring regional influence. One of my siblings lived in the rust belt for decades and when spouse and I moved to this area my sibling was stunned by the number of new shiny expensive cars here. It looks very different if you drive around different areas of the country. Where my mom lives, you still see mostly American modest cars. [/quote] It always amazes me the sheer ignorance of the typical affluent urban poster on this site. We have a house in the mountains and NOBDODY and I mean NOBODY buys new cars. This “travesty” of shiny new cars that is unaffordable is a symptom of affluenza. My in-laws live in South Carolina in a fixed income and my FIL still drives the same car he bought the year DH and I got married in 2004. He simply works on it himself. He’s kept that running for minimal amounts of money. The average DCUM poster is a caricature you’d expect read for fun about in the Onion. [/quote]
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