> The lease IS NOT with a dealership. Dealerships DO NOT sell money or
> hold leases. They sell cars. They may act as a selling agent for a
> leasing company, but they sell the car--PERIOD.
Well excuse me for living! Not everyone is knowledgable about leases. A
person that leases cars most likely because they like a new one every
few years and like up to date luxury. I am one of those people.
> And yes, the OP is in la-la-land if he doesn't review the terms of his
> lease contract but instead goes to a f.cking newsgroup to ask random
> strangers from around the world to tell him what he can and can't do.
News groups are for debating and for getting and sharing information. I
am sure you looked at my profile and saw that I go to the herpes
newsgroup because I have genital herpes. When you have a common
interest whether Honda's or Herpes, you can go and talk to strangers
about your situation. BTW you don't have to use vulgar language.
> You recall incorrectly. It's throwing money away, for a number of
> reasons.
Depends how you look at something. Heres something to think about: You
could buy the civic lx for 17500.00 or the civic hybrid for 21500.00.
The 4000 dollar difference would take 10 years to recoup based on the
mpg difference and cost, and after 8 years you'd still need new hybrid
batteries, which would cost somewhere around 5000 dollars from what I
was told, so its not really a good deal.
Some people would rather spend slightly more and have a new car than
not.
Al :)
Ps. Elle, thanks for the information, I'll think it over more as far as
what I'm going to do. Good to find a civil person in this group!
Elmo P. Shagnasty - 16 Jul 2006 13:05 GMT
> > The lease IS NOT with a dealership. Dealerships DO NOT sell money or
> > hold leases. They sell cars. They may act as a selling agent for a
> > leasing company, but they sell the car--PERIOD.
>
> Well excuse me for living! Not everyone is knowledgable about leases.
And yet you entered into one.
To think that you can vote.
By the way, this isn't a lease issue. This is a CONTRACT issue. You
don't have to be knowledgeable about leases; you have to know what a
contract is, and what a contract means. Then you read the contract, and
suddenly you're knowledgeable about what you held yourself responsible
for.
Only you can know, because it's YOUR contract.
Do you own a house? Did you take out a mortgage? That's a contract,
you know. Did you have a lawyer with you, or did you just blindly sign
all those documents that held you responsible for $500K?
> > And yes, the OP is in la-la-land if he doesn't review the terms of his
> > lease contract but instead goes to a f.cking newsgroup to ask random
> > strangers from around the world to tell him what he can and can't do.
>
> News groups are for debating and for getting and sharing information.
OK, you want information? Here's some information: nobody can help you.
Read the lease CONTRACT which you're obligated to fulfill.
> I
> am sure you looked at my profile and saw that I go to the herpes
> newsgroup because I have genital herpes.
ummmm.....no....why the hell would I look you up? Oh, I get it--that's
something YOU do with people in newsgroups, so you assume everyone else
does it.
> When you have a common
> interest whether Honda's or Herpes, you can go and talk to strangers
> about your situation.
Yeah, but this isn't about Hondas or herpes or any other common
situation. This is about the lease contract that YOU signed--something
no one else can know anything about.
Elle - 16 Jul 2006 13:47 GMT
>BTW you don't have to use vulgar language.
Going to that level is a sure tip-off that someone is angry
about things other than the previous post.
snip
> Some people would rather spend slightly more and have a
> new car than
> not.
Right. It's a matter of taste. I'm sure Shag guy or whoever
does things that others would call throwing money away but
which he feels is not.
> Ps. Elle, thanks for the information, I'll think it over
> more as far as
> what I'm going to do. Good to find a civil person in this
> group!
Don't let the guys/gals having a bad day keep you from
asking questions. In these days when so many people are
making financial decisions of dubious wisdom, ISTM the only
explanation can be they did not ask enough questions in
advance.
I hang at a financial planning newsgroup, and yesterday some
guy over there was touting how U.S. real estate appreciates
on average around 10% a year. Not; it's closer to 2% a year,
as several of us pointed out. A closer examination of his
email addie revealed that he works for a company that will
provide anyone a loan ("no credit checks"), at the princely
rate of 15%(!) a year and for 5(!) points down.
If anyone is considering any financial deal and wants to
make sure s/he is not missing anything, then like you say,
online fora can be a great starting place.
Elmo P. Shagnasty - 16 Jul 2006 14:23 GMT
> > Ps. Elle, thanks for the information, I'll think it over
> > more as far as
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> Don't let the guys/gals having a bad day keep you from
> asking questions.
Even if no one here can answer those questions, because the answers are
contained wholly and solely within his lease contract.
Yeah, that's good advice, Elle. Tell the guy to go get random crap from
random anonymous people, and then act on it. Yeah, superb advice.
Elmo P. Shagnasty - 16 Jul 2006 14:24 GMT
> If anyone is considering any financial deal and wants to
> make sure s/he is not missing anything, then like you say,
> online fora can be a great starting place.
Does that include "what happens if I break my lease early"? Is that the
kind of "financial advice" for which an online forum is a "great
starting place"?
You are so full of sh.t. Maybe when he takes this online advice and
gets royally screwed, he can come back to you for compensation?