You know very little of how insurance works if you think Iâm padding my agentâs pockets. Agents donât set the prices. They have no control over the insurance or prices. Checks are not written to them. They are paid by the company. Didnât you see the 2 bills I posted? The insurance started 6 years ago at $145 and now it has nearly doubled. Thatâs the company raising the price, not the agent. Iâll look into those quotes a little more and weâll see if theyâre real.Quote from volente_00: Happens all the time to those that don't shop around. The health insurance I currently have was purchased from that exact website and I pay the stated premium that it shows. My uncle got insurance from the same website a little over 2 months ago and his premium is the same that is listed on the site. How about you inquire from that website for that same plan and report back what they tell you the premium is since I am so wrong. If you are paying $262 monthly on health insurance for a 24 year old male you are just foolish. Keep padding your agent's pockets.
Why donât you just answer my question? Pointing out that I am 24 doesnât negate anything I say, in fact it shows you canât answer a simple question. So Iâll ask it again. How are people supposed to stay ahead when theyâre incomes are continuously dropping, and theyâre cost of living keeps going up? Also, donât you realize that to work 60 hours, somebody has to be willing to pay you for that. When there are more people willing to work than people willing to pay them, thatâs called unemployment. All your hard work and attitude ainât gonna fix that. Your theoryâs seem to be big on logic and less so on practical application.Quote from QQQBALL: Wow, 24 and sooo smart & condescending too. I'm guessing you are not married?
I have a 1992 Camry with 238k miles. I donât know much about cars, but I know when Iâm getting ripped off. I took my car to a different mechanic because it was on a Sunday and they were open. I know they charged me about $200 more and in hindsight I should have just towed the car to my original mechanic the next day, but I wanted to get it fixed so I could get back to work. There is no way this was a $300 job. Itâs not bad luck, itâs how life goes. Things like this happen. Cars are a scam. They make them to break down. Iâd rather concentrate my time on making a decent living, that way when stuff like this happens I can better deal with it.Quote from volente_00: You must have some bad luck. What year and model toyota ? What engine and how many miles ? When I was poor I bought a Chilton book for whatever car I had and learned how to do the work myself. Brakes are easy to change if you have some basic handtools. I bought used tires for 10 to 15 a piece. A timing belt swap at a Toyota dealership here in Texas does not exceed $300. On most toyota's, the water pump has to come off to in order to access the belt so your mechanic got over you if he charged you labor to put the new pump on. What seals were leaking ? The timing cover gasket or front main or camshaft seal ?
Quote from Scataphagos:
The Democrats [apparently] want illegal immigrants to stay in America... and want them so badly that politicians are willing to "give away the farm" [somebody else's farm, of course] to keep illegals here.
The only benefit(?) I can see in that is the hope they will become devoted Democrats and keep the incumbents in power.
With job losses and a likely high level of STRUCTURAL unemployment, how can having 20 million illegal immigrants draining the social resources of America and competing for limited jobs be a benefit to the country as a whole?
Quote from Sandybestdog:
Why donât you just answer my question? Pointing out that I am 24 doesnât negate anything I say, in fact it shows you canât answer a simple question. So Iâll ask it again. How are people supposed to stay ahead when theyâre incomes are continuously dropping, and theyâre cost of living keeps going up? Also, donât you realize that to work 60 hours, somebody has to be willing to pay you for that. When there are more people willing to work than people willing to pay them, thatâs called unemployment. All your hard work and attitude ainât gonna fix that. Your theoryâs seem to be big on logic and less so on practical application.