Oh, I just feel like reaching through the radio and slapping these people every time the ad comes on.
I'm sure you've all heard them, where the poor lady comes on "they don't care if you are sick or out of work, they only care about getting you to pay" waah-waah-waah.
Now, I understand some people really do have legitimate reasons for the trouble they are in, but the voice over is talking about if you have more than $10,000 in credit card debt. Unless you were stupid and paid for medical bills on a credit card (rather than on account with the hospital, which every hospital I've ever dealt with is willing to do) and you have failed to take advantage of the housing and utility assistance available to those who are out of work (I know it's there, I relay for people who are getting those programs all the time), then you have not just suddenly gotten $10,000 in credit card debt, that has been growing since long before the recession started.
When you borrowed the money, you did so with the understanding that *gasp* you'd have to pay it back, it is not the bank's fault that you didn't plan far enough ahead to have a safety net for if things went bad. I admit that my safety net will be completely depleted by the end of the year and I will start having to carry a balance on credit cards, but that safety net has lasted me for over a year and still paid for me to go to school, if I could have gotten that built up while working at jobs that have paid only $9-10 an hour, then there is no reason why these poor middle class people couldn't do it also.
I don't know about the rest of y'alls, but I was raised that if you can't afford it, don't buy it, and if you do end up buying it, expect to face the consequences. So while I can understand that these people are in trouble, please don't expect any sympathy from me when you come whining and crying about how mean that bank is that they actually expect you to pay them back their money just as you had agreed to, even though you probably knew that you couldn't afford it.
I'm sure you've all heard them, where the poor lady comes on "they don't care if you are sick or out of work, they only care about getting you to pay" waah-waah-waah.
Now, I understand some people really do have legitimate reasons for the trouble they are in, but the voice over is talking about if you have more than $10,000 in credit card debt. Unless you were stupid and paid for medical bills on a credit card (rather than on account with the hospital, which every hospital I've ever dealt with is willing to do) and you have failed to take advantage of the housing and utility assistance available to those who are out of work (I know it's there, I relay for people who are getting those programs all the time), then you have not just suddenly gotten $10,000 in credit card debt, that has been growing since long before the recession started.
When you borrowed the money, you did so with the understanding that *gasp* you'd have to pay it back, it is not the bank's fault that you didn't plan far enough ahead to have a safety net for if things went bad. I admit that my safety net will be completely depleted by the end of the year and I will start having to carry a balance on credit cards, but that safety net has lasted me for over a year and still paid for me to go to school, if I could have gotten that built up while working at jobs that have paid only $9-10 an hour, then there is no reason why these poor middle class people couldn't do it also.
I don't know about the rest of y'alls, but I was raised that if you can't afford it, don't buy it, and if you do end up buying it, expect to face the consequences. So while I can understand that these people are in trouble, please don't expect any sympathy from me when you come whining and crying about how mean that bank is that they actually expect you to pay them back their money just as you had agreed to, even though you probably knew that you couldn't afford it.
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