Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never. Travel with that money. Donate it. Cars are not worth that much, plain and simple.
Travel is not worth it. Plain and simple. Cars are so much more fun. I am a girl. I will take cars over any travel.
Working class or lower middle class.
You would hate it too if your parents dragged you around the world all the time, when I all I wanted is to hang out with friends by the beach. Noooo, I had to see museums and ruins.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never.
I'm sorry to be that guy, but it just seems wrong to me.
+1, and not sorry.
http://www.directrelief.org
Do something good instead with that money.
Heart to Heart International is another great one.
http://www.hearttoheart.org/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can say the same thing about any non-essential purchase. Did you buy any new clothes? New shoes? You bought a car other than a retired Crown Vic police car? Shame on you for wasting money instead of using that money to change other people's lives.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is full of envious people. If you can afford it, what's the big deal?
I don't know how to drive around in a $200k car knowing all the lives I could change with the, I dunno, $175k I could have saved if I just bought a normal car?
Start a scholarship fund, fund a dog shelter, I dunno. But spending $200k on a car is a perfect example of what's wrong with people.
You may find it incomprehensible to drive around in a $200k car, but other people can. Your value system isn't superior on an objective basis.
Yes, you can say the same thing about any non-essential purchase, but the comparisons only go so far. OP's DH can buy a different luxury car for $100k, which is still way, way more expensive than any car most people could ever afford to buy AND still feed a hundred people for an entire year with the leftovers. I am upper middle-class in one of the richest countries in the world and the biggest splurges in my entire life are still many orders of magnitude smaller than $200k.
Anonymous wrote:You can say the same thing about any non-essential purchase. Did you buy any new clothes? New shoes? You bought a car other than a retired Crown Vic police car? Shame on you for wasting money instead of using that money to change other people's lives.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is full of envious people. If you can afford it, what's the big deal?
I don't know how to drive around in a $200k car knowing all the lives I could change with the, I dunno, $175k I could have saved if I just bought a normal car?
Start a scholarship fund, fund a dog shelter, I dunno. But spending $200k on a car is a perfect example of what's wrong with people.
You may find it incomprehensible to drive around in a $200k car, but other people can. Your value system isn't superior on an objective basis.
Anonymous wrote:All these holier-than-thou posts and OP has still not mentioned the make/model![]()
 
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never. Travel with that money. Donate it. Cars are not worth that much, plain and simple.
Travel is not worth it. Plain and simple. Cars are so much more fun. I am a girl. I will take cars over any travel.
Working class or lower middle class.
You would hate it too if your parents dragged you around the world all the time, when I all I wanted is to hang out with friends by the beach. Noooo, I had to see museums and ruins.
You can say the same thing about any non-essential purchase. Did you buy any new clothes? New shoes? You bought a car other than a retired Crown Vic police car? Shame on you for wasting money instead of using that money to change other people's lives.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is full of envious people. If you can afford it, what's the big deal?
I don't know how to drive around in a $200k car knowing all the lives I could change with the, I dunno, $175k I could have saved if I just bought a normal car?
Start a scholarship fund, fund a dog shelter, I dunno. But spending $200k on a car is a perfect example of what's wrong with people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never.
I'm sorry to be that guy, but it just seems wrong to me.
+1, and not sorry.
http://www.directrelief.org
Do something good instead with that money.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is full of envious people. If you can afford it, what's the big deal?
Anonymous wrote:I'd be afraid of getting robbed, OP. Seriously in this environment we are just a small step away from civil unrest.
I think you can afford the car but as a pp said, I would be sure that you have trusts set up for your kids and are adding to them annually.