He had a job in fast food. How do we know he didn't have credit? I had credit at 17.
If he truly was working towards this since he was 14, he'd have to earn an average of 43 dollars a week to reach 9000 cash. He lives with his grandparents, so no rent bills. If he was just saving for a year, he'd have to save ~173$ a week for a year. At low tax brackets, that's approximately 20 hours of work a week.
It's odd, but not impossible, especially if he was planning this, as he clearly was.
He had a job in fast food. How do we know he didn't have credit? I had credit at 17.
If he truly was working towards this since he was 14, he'd have to earn an average of 43 dollars a week to reach 9000 cash. He lives with his grandparents, so no rent bills. If he was just saving for a year, he'd have to save ~173$ a week for a year. At low tax brackets, that's approximately 20 hours of work a week.
It's odd, but not impossible, especially if he was planning this, as he clearly was.
Most kids just buy cars with that saved money.
and the $50000 truck?
Which wasn't his? Not part of this conversation. He stole that from his grandma.
A 15+ year old f250 isn't 50k either.
Yes. A 15+ year old f250 isn't 50k. But it doesn't even matter. It wasn't his.
Not a single 2007 over 20k, most around 14: https://www.carfax.com/Used-2007-Ford-F-250_z35701