Banana Man wrote:
Yes, many American DO live out of there means. And It's not totally all their fault. They were given credit by stores and major credit card companies. These poeple could request the plastic, BUT why was it given.
Sure I could have 12 credit cards with the potential of $5,000 dollar max. I in theory could MAX out at 60K. If I was in the market for property and I had that potential "plastic" in my hands, I should NOT be granted the line of credit for the property.
Ok, I agree with most of what you said, and you had me up until this point quoted above, but this is where we part ways. I couldn't disagree more. This is like saying McDonalds shouldn't sell the Big Mac to the fat guy. McDonald's clearly sees the man is fat, and this is harming/killing him, so they shouldn't sell to him?
It's the corporate world's job to try to sell us as much as possible, and it's the consumer's job to decide what to buy, and how much.
The only "fault" the corporate world bears is the risk they take by giving a high risk person a l0an, and if they lose money then too bad. But it's still not the bank's "fault", the borrower signed a contract promising to pay back the money, and they didn't. It's the borrower's fault.
Since when is it (or should it be) illegal or wrong to part a fool and his money? Of course the car salesman is going to do everything he can to get your application to look like you can afford the car whether you can or not. It's not "his job" to decide what you can and can't afford. It's the consumer's job to decide what to buy and how much. Or in the McDonald's example, how much to eat.
It's a free country!