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Forum Thread

Would you buy your newly-licensed teen a brand new car?

22,510 8,433 December 15, 2010 at 08:37 PM in Chat
Why or why not?

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Would you buy your newly-licensed teenager a brand new car?
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Joined Sep 2006
IVIodel citizen
> bubble2 19,431 Posts
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Fallacy
12-16-2010 at 08:07 AM.
12-16-2010 at 08:07 AM.
Quote from slickJAVA :
No worries, I wasn't singling your comments out.
I've seen the hypothetical kid stuff a couple times in this thread.

For the record, I don't feel compelled to put our 16-y.o. behind the wheel of a car, so buying him a car (new or otherwise) hasn't even been considered. He refuses to even get a job. "Why do I need a job? None of my friends have a job." SMH
So you're singling me out, eh? Mad I said hypothetical kids, maybe I only have 02 or 0.7 or 1 kid now, huh huh huh huh? Don't assume
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Joined Oct 2010
L2: Beginner
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SkipMDMan
12-16-2010 at 08:25 AM.
12-16-2010 at 08:25 AM.
I'd much rather my kids be driving around in a car that's not as likely to have mechanical problems than make them drive around some old wreck to try to teach them a lesson of some kind.

I even bought my godson a brand new car as soon as he got his license.
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Joined Feb 2006
Schizophrenic Psycho
> bubble2 14,733 Posts
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Melmo
12-16-2010 at 08:26 AM.
12-16-2010 at 08:26 AM.
Quote from vec :
It's the parents fault if the kids do not respect things nod
true....because they don't teach them how it is to value something you have. If it is handed to you, you don't respect it as much as if you paid for it yourself. While my son WILL be getting handed a car, he will still be responsible for the insurance. Hopefully that way he will know how a ticket affects what he pays on the car !
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Joined Apr 2006
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annpa
12-16-2010 at 08:31 AM.
12-16-2010 at 08:31 AM.
I read a study that said parts of the brain of human beings are not finished developing until they are in their early 20s and those parts are used for judgement! So teens, no matter how responsible they are, are not capable of sound mature judgement till around 21. I have three kids and I believe it!
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Joined Mar 2009
Schrödinger's Frog
> bubble2 19,428 Posts
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Frogstar
12-16-2010 at 08:31 AM.
12-16-2010 at 08:31 AM.
Quote from SkipMDMan :
I'd much rather my kids be driving around in a car that's not as likely to have mechanical problems than make them drive around some old wreck to try to teach them a lesson of some kind.

I even bought my godson a brand new car as soon as he got his license.
If one expends a little effort, one can get a used car that will be just as reliable as a new car. New cars have problems too.
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Joined Dec 2004
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acesmuzic | Staff
12-16-2010 at 08:41 AM.
12-16-2010 at 08:41 AM.
my mom bought me a $700 14 year old Honda Accord when I was a sr in hs. I paid for insurance/gas and most of the repairs (not from accidents, just to keep it running). i only worked in the summers but that income was sufficient to cover those costs. we sold it the next year when I went to college.

if i ever have kids i might be willing to do something similar, but it would likely depend on how responsible they were, accessibility of public transportation, etc
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Joined Oct 2006
Freak On A Leash
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Princess Crunch
12-16-2010 at 08:45 AM.
12-16-2010 at 08:45 AM.
My daughter will be getting a car for 500 bucks. If she wants something new or nice...she will have to save up for it.

I can't see myself buying a brand new car as her first vehicle. Crazy
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Joined Jul 2007
W I R E D A W G
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StruggleWithin
12-16-2010 at 09:28 AM.
12-16-2010 at 09:28 AM.
Teens should start off with a clunker, I had a 1985 Crown Vic when I turned 16, in 1996. It was a great car!
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Joined Jan 2004
Here's to the future
> bubble2 25,141 Posts
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Iaaaiws
12-16-2010 at 10:16 AM.
12-16-2010 at 10:16 AM.
Quote from IVIax :
The reason 95% of the lounge is afraid of letting their teenager drive a new car is because they're afraid they'll wreck/total it?

Have you been reading the same thread I have? laugh out loud

I get the impression that most people wouldn't buy a new car for their teenager because they think it would spoil them and give them a sense of entitlement rather than learning the responsibility of buying their own.
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Joined Sep 2006
IVIodel citizen
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Fallacy
12-16-2010 at 10:19 AM.
12-16-2010 at 10:19 AM.
Quote from Iaaaiws :
Have you been reading the same thread I have? laugh out loud

I get the impression that most people wouldn't buy a new car for their teenager because they think it would spoil them and give them a sense of entitlement rather than learning the responsibility of buying their own.
I read the first few posts and then everything after I started posting. I didn't look through the middle 3 pages laugh out loud

Same logic applies, still the parents fault.
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Joined Jan 2004
Here's to the future
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Iaaaiws
12-16-2010 at 10:56 AM.
12-16-2010 at 10:56 AM.
There likely isn't a right or wrong answer to this question. If you look back through the thread it is just a display of the difference in mentalities between people who have a lot of money and people who don't.
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Joined Sep 2006
IVIodel citizen
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Fallacy
12-16-2010 at 11:03 AM.
12-16-2010 at 11:03 AM.
Quote from Iaaaiws :
There likely isn't a right or wrong answer to this question. If you look back through the thread it is just a display of the difference in mentalities between people who have a lot of money and people who don't.
This is the lounge, we deal in absolutes here. Dontknow
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Joined Apr 2010
L99: Potato
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Majide
12-16-2010 at 11:04 AM.
12-16-2010 at 11:04 AM.
When I started driving I was allowed to use my grandma's car. She got it years ago, and then when I was in high school she passed away. We still had the car. I started driving at 19 - still a teenager, though - and I got her car. It was never given to me - I was just allowed to use it.

I am thankful I was able to use that car, or I don't know what I would have done. Things would have been much more difficult.

Anyway, thank goodness it already had a few scratches on it. When I was learning how to drive, my first task was "back out of the drive way." And while doing so, I slowly scratched my dad's van (which was also cheap, old, and used - thank goodness). And then there was a time while trying to park in the garage while I was still new to driving. Got some good scratches on the front passenger side due to that, but nothing horrible. All the "accidents" I had happened when I was driving very slowly, but yes they still happened.

I would have hated to get those scratches on a brand new, nice car. Things happen - teens are learning. Not everyone can do something perfectly the first few times.



Now grandma's Geo Prizm is gone... my sister ended up with it later and didn't treat it very well. I made an upgrade and drove my parents' mini van for a few months. And then at 21 I bought my own brand new Honda Fit. I hopefully got all those mistakes out of my system and know what I'm doing. I took good care of the Prizm, and now I'm taking good care of my Fit. Smilie


:erm:
Well that was a lot of typing... Nobody's gonna read it, will they? Heck, I only read the first couple pages. At this point people are probably all off-topic now, aren't they? Oh well.
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Joined Feb 2010
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idkist
12-16-2010 at 11:08 AM.
12-16-2010 at 11:08 AM.
Quote from Iaaaiws :
There likely isn't a right or wrong answer to this question. If you look back through the thread it is just a display of the difference in mentalities between people who have a lot of money and people who don't.
I don't think the line is people with money vs those without.

I don't have any kids but make a decent amount for the area I live. In 17+ years if I have kids of driving age my earning potential will be even higher. I will still probably be opposed to buying them a car.
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Joined Jan 2008
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BayArea
12-16-2010 at 04:45 PM.
12-16-2010 at 04:45 PM.
Quote from tresanus :
A buddy of mine in college was a perfect example of this.

When he got his license in HS his dad picked him up in a brand new infinity g35 (his 16th birthday present). He drove that until sophmore year of college when it got totaled. His parents then bought him a brand new bimmer coupe. He was a good kid, he did good in school and now has a great job. However he is definitely the minority. I would say 9/10 of the kids given a brand new car were also given everything else in life and never learned to respect the hard work and effort it took their parents to get them to that comfortable of a life.

Shoot, most of them took college for granted, just like they took everything else in life for granted. A couple of them had to transfer out, or drop out, because they didn't realize the opportunity they had to make success for themselves in college.

Having your child buy their first car teaches them responsibility, you aren't throwing them out without a life preserver, you are still there to help them financially (maybe paying half, or paying for major repairs if they happen).

My mother (and the rest of my family) was very very poor until I was around 14 (family opened up a business). However I was still required to buy my own vehicle, pay for insurance, gas etc.. It teaches you to not only respect the things you have, but also respect the hard work and time it takes to reach a goal. It also teaches children that something that seems so hard to do (save up for a car) is not an impossible feat. You teach them dedication, hard work, sacrifice, but more importantly confidence. Confidence in that if you're willing to put the time and effort into something, you can have/be whatever you want.
That is a good example, and it happens more often than what you think. Not every teen or young adult is the next Paris Hilton. Many youngsters appreciate the nice things their parents buy them and do good in their responsibilities (job, school etc...)

The mentality that if you buy them something it will OMG COMPLETELY SPOIL them is ridiculous. There is always a balance and a middle ground. People dealing with absolutes might think their parenting is right, but it really isin't (however everyone is entitled to raise their children as they please, as long as its legal). This is all IMO.nod
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