• Okay, so two years ago. Currently the cheapest two used cars in my local market are a Civic with 348,000 miles on it for $2000, and a 2010 VW with a blown engine for $3000. Even a clapped out 90’s Blazer is $5000 if it runs. That’s what’s out there on Craigslist and Facebook marketplace. Maybe I can go hang around every shady parking lot in town looking to see who’s got a lower number soaped on a window someplace, but people in the real world tend to have to work during daylight hours.

        And then: Okay, so you found one 80’s Chevy Nova that might run. You got extremely lucky. If, as the other poster suggested, you’ll treat it as disposable and plan to ditch it after a few months and “buy another,” can you do it again? That’s even less likely.

        Used car prices are still too insane for poor people to be able to count on reliably finding and scraping by with a beater.

        • trash80@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 year ago

          And then: Okay, so you found one 80’s Chevy Nova that might run. You got extremely lucky. If, as the other poster suggested, you’ll treat it as disposable and plan to ditch it after a few months and “buy another,” can you do it again? That’s even less likely.
          Used car prices are still too insane for poor people to be able to count on reliably finding and scraping by with a beater.

          You’re right. My experiences aren’t universal. I am aware that cheap cars have become much more scarce than they used to be.

          Maybe I can go hang around every shady parking lot in town looking to see who’s got a lower number soaped on a window someplace, but people in the real world tend to have to work during daylight hours.

          I inherited the cheapskate gene from my dad, and I like cars, so I do that sort of thing for fun.