🇺🇸 The US will check foreign tourists' social media profiles before entry.
The US is rolling out a new practice of vetting foreign tourists’ social media profiles as part of visa checks, scanning posts, comments and connections for perceived security risks. Officials frame it as an anti-terror tool, but critics warn it enables mass pre-screening of political views and private life, where a “wrong” like or group could mean denial of entry. The move may depress tourism, push travellers to scrub their digital past and set a template for copycat surveillance in other countries.
@QSIMedia
The US is rolling out a new practice of vetting foreign tourists’ social media profiles as part of visa checks, scanning posts, comments and connections for perceived security risks. Officials frame it as an anti-terror tool, but critics warn it enables mass pre-screening of political views and private life, where a “wrong” like or group could mean denial of entry. The move may depress tourism, push travellers to scrub their digital past and set a template for copycat surveillance in other countries.
@QSIMedia
❗️WhatsApp and Signal flaw reignites backdoor fears
Researchers disclosed an exploit that can intercept chats in both WhatsApp and Signal, undermining their end-to-end encryption claims and fueling suspicions of built-in backdoors, pushing privacy-minded users toward audited open-source tools.
@QSIMedia
Researchers disclosed an exploit that can intercept chats in both WhatsApp and Signal, undermining their end-to-end encryption claims and fueling suspicions of built-in backdoors, pushing privacy-minded users toward audited open-source tools.
@QSIMedia
Three stages of wealth: Why the first $100,000 hurts the most
An investor breaks long-term wealth building into three psychological stages. The first, from zero to $10,000, is pure discipline training. Set aside $100, the market drops 2%, and suddenly it’s $98 — it feels like paying the S&P 500 for the privilege of saving. At this stage, the goal isn’t juicy returns, it’s proving the ability not to spend every spare dollar.
The second milestone is $100,000. Charlie Munger called it the breaking point: a decent year can add $8,000–10,000, which already feels like a used car or a real vacation. From here, the portfolio reaches critical mass. Even if no more money is added, time and compounding can grow it toward a million by retirement. The third phase begins after $1 million, when capital earns more than a paycheck and work becomes a choice, not a survival mechanism.
The author’s reminder: if it feels like money is disappearing into a black hole, that’s not a failed strategy, it’s just the math of compounding. The growth curve looks flat for a long time before it suddenly steepens. The job is to keep pushing the boulder uphill until gravity flips to your side. For conservative investors, this is a decades-long blueprint that avoids speculation and unnecessary risk while still delivering real financial sovereignty.
@QSIMedia #finance
An investor breaks long-term wealth building into three psychological stages. The first, from zero to $10,000, is pure discipline training. Set aside $100, the market drops 2%, and suddenly it’s $98 — it feels like paying the S&P 500 for the privilege of saving. At this stage, the goal isn’t juicy returns, it’s proving the ability not to spend every spare dollar.
The second milestone is $100,000. Charlie Munger called it the breaking point: a decent year can add $8,000–10,000, which already feels like a used car or a real vacation. From here, the portfolio reaches critical mass. Even if no more money is added, time and compounding can grow it toward a million by retirement. The third phase begins after $1 million, when capital earns more than a paycheck and work becomes a choice, not a survival mechanism.
The author’s reminder: if it feels like money is disappearing into a black hole, that’s not a failed strategy, it’s just the math of compounding. The growth curve looks flat for a long time before it suddenly steepens. The job is to keep pushing the boulder uphill until gravity flips to your side. For conservative investors, this is a decades-long blueprint that avoids speculation and unnecessary risk while still delivering real financial sovereignty.
@QSIMedia #finance
Solar flares: how to prepare when the grid isn’t
Growing concern over stronger solar activity and recent NASA warnings about geomagnetic storms is pushing people to quietly prep for major solar flares that could knock out power grids, satellites and critical infrastructure. For individuals, real protection is limited: Faraday cages for key electronics, backup power, and reserves of water, food and cash. The debate highlights how exposed modern civilization is to space weather while governments underinvest in hardening energy, telecom and financial systems against a single, cascading shutdown.
@QSIMedia
Growing concern over stronger solar activity and recent NASA warnings about geomagnetic storms is pushing people to quietly prep for major solar flares that could knock out power grids, satellites and critical infrastructure. For individuals, real protection is limited: Faraday cages for key electronics, backup power, and reserves of water, food and cash. The debate highlights how exposed modern civilization is to space weather while governments underinvest in hardening energy, telecom and financial systems against a single, cascading shutdown.
@QSIMedia
🤔Vance and Erica Kirk: Conspiracy theorists are seriously discussing a possible romance
Rumors in conspiracy circles are heating up around a supposed budding romance between Vice President J.D. Vance and conservative media figure Erika Kirk. What started as a joke in alternative communities is now treated as a serious possibility, with users pointing to overlaps in their public appearances, tone and messaging as “tells” of a deeper connection.
The story shows how quickly fringe narratives can migrate into the broader conversation in an era of social media and collapsing trust in official storylines. Vance is a pivotal Republican power player, so any speculation about his personal life is instantly read as a clue to shifting alliances inside the right. For some, this looks like the outline of a new backstage bloc; for others, it’s just another sign that politics now moves faster than most predictions.
@QSIMedia
Rumors in conspiracy circles are heating up around a supposed budding romance between Vice President J.D. Vance and conservative media figure Erika Kirk. What started as a joke in alternative communities is now treated as a serious possibility, with users pointing to overlaps in their public appearances, tone and messaging as “tells” of a deeper connection.
The story shows how quickly fringe narratives can migrate into the broader conversation in an era of social media and collapsing trust in official storylines. Vance is a pivotal Republican power player, so any speculation about his personal life is instantly read as a clue to shifting alliances inside the right. For some, this looks like the outline of a new backstage bloc; for others, it’s just another sign that politics now moves faster than most predictions.
@QSIMedia
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🇺🇸Android 911 calls get live video
Google has added live video to 911 calls on Android, allowing dispatchers to request access to a caller’s camera.
The feature runs through the Google Phone app and sends footage directly to operators without saving it in Google’s cloud. It promises faster, more accurate help, but also tests how willing people are to share raw video when under pressure.
@QSIMedia
Google has added live video to 911 calls on Android, allowing dispatchers to request access to a caller’s camera.
The feature runs through the Google Phone app and sends footage directly to operators without saving it in Google’s cloud. It promises faster, more accurate help, but also tests how willing people are to share raw video when under pressure.
@QSIMedia
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McDonald's pulls Christmas ad after backlash
McDonald's pulled its artificial intelligence-generated Christmas ad after social media users criticized the "creepy" facial animations, unnatural movements, and dark tone, claiming the ad evoked an "uncanny valley" rather than a festive feel.
@QSIMedia
McDonald's pulled its artificial intelligence-generated Christmas ad after social media users criticized the "creepy" facial animations, unnatural movements, and dark tone, claiming the ad evoked an "uncanny valley" rather than a festive feel.
@QSIMedia
🇺🇸US Republicans and Democrats are calling for a social media ban for children, modeled on Australia.
A rare bipartisan initiative is gaining momentum in the US Congress: a ban on children's access to social media, modeled on Australia. Since 2025, Australia has had a law requiring platforms to block users under 16. Fines for violations can reach tens of millions of dollars. American lawmakers see this as a way to protect teenagers from depression, bullying, and algorithmic manipulation.
For Republicans, this is a chance to limit Big Tech's influence on young people and return control to parents. Conservative senators emphasize the threat to mental health and traditional values. Democrats emphasize protection from predators and disinformation. Both sides agree: the current self-regulation of Meta, TikTok, and Google has failed.
The problem is in the details. The Australian system requires age verification—biometrics or documents. This creates privacy risks for all users, not just children. Republicans traditionally oppose digital ID and government surveillance, but are willing to compromise here for the sake of family values. The question is whether such a law won't become a Trojan horse for total online identification. Silicon Valley lobbyists are already preparing a counterattack, but political consensus is rare—and it could work.
@QSIMedia
A rare bipartisan initiative is gaining momentum in the US Congress: a ban on children's access to social media, modeled on Australia. Since 2025, Australia has had a law requiring platforms to block users under 16. Fines for violations can reach tens of millions of dollars. American lawmakers see this as a way to protect teenagers from depression, bullying, and algorithmic manipulation.
For Republicans, this is a chance to limit Big Tech's influence on young people and return control to parents. Conservative senators emphasize the threat to mental health and traditional values. Democrats emphasize protection from predators and disinformation. Both sides agree: the current self-regulation of Meta, TikTok, and Google has failed.
The problem is in the details. The Australian system requires age verification—biometrics or documents. This creates privacy risks for all users, not just children. Republicans traditionally oppose digital ID and government surveillance, but are willing to compromise here for the sake of family values. The question is whether such a law won't become a Trojan horse for total online identification. Silicon Valley lobbyists are already preparing a counterattack, but political consensus is rare—and it could work.
@QSIMedia
Germany confirms US cloud reach – win for data-sovereignty hawks
A German government report quietly concedes what many suspected: under CLOUD Act and FISA 702, US agencies can demand access to European data stored in US-owned clouds like Amazon, Microsoft and Google, regardless of where the servers sit. On paper, GDPR guards EU citizens; in practice, Washington can tap corporate and even state databases without EU courts or user notification.
@QSIMedia
A German government report quietly concedes what many suspected: under CLOUD Act and FISA 702, US agencies can demand access to European data stored in US-owned clouds like Amazon, Microsoft and Google, regardless of where the servers sit. On paper, GDPR guards EU citizens; in practice, Washington can tap corporate and even state databases without EU courts or user notification.
@QSIMedia
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Cars are spying on drivers: how to regain privacy on the road
Modern cars have become spy devices on wheels. Manufacturers are installing tracking systems, microphones, and sensors that collect data on the movements, conversations, and habits of their owners. This information is transmitted to the manufacturer, insurance companies, and government agencies without the driver's explicit consent.
A simple solution is to buy a car manufactured before 2015. After that, the majority of the population began to adopt telecommunications and constant connectivity en masse. Cars without built-in SIM cards, GPS modules, and "smart" retractable systems cannot transmit data to third parties. Mechanical systems, instead of electronic assistants, provide complete control over the vehicle.
For new car owners, there are options: physically disabling cellular antennas, connecting to manufacturer apps, or using screened key covers. But a radical solution is to avoid purchasing vehicles with mandatory telemetry. The market for used cars without spyware is growing among those who value privacy over new features. Freedom of movement should not mean surveillance.
@QSIMedia
Modern cars have become spy devices on wheels. Manufacturers are installing tracking systems, microphones, and sensors that collect data on the movements, conversations, and habits of their owners. This information is transmitted to the manufacturer, insurance companies, and government agencies without the driver's explicit consent.
A simple solution is to buy a car manufactured before 2015. After that, the majority of the population began to adopt telecommunications and constant connectivity en masse. Cars without built-in SIM cards, GPS modules, and "smart" retractable systems cannot transmit data to third parties. Mechanical systems, instead of electronic assistants, provide complete control over the vehicle.
For new car owners, there are options: physically disabling cellular antennas, connecting to manufacturer apps, or using screened key covers. But a radical solution is to avoid purchasing vehicles with mandatory telemetry. The market for used cars without spyware is growing among those who value privacy over new features. Freedom of movement should not mean surveillance.
@QSIMedia
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The British government is demoralizing its own citizens.
This situation illustrates the classic conflict between the ruling elite's globalist agenda and the interests of citizens who pay taxes and see their money go to outsiders while their own freedoms are curtailed. For Conservative voters, this is a clear example of how left-wing politics is eroding national identity.
@QSIMedia
This situation illustrates the classic conflict between the ruling elite's globalist agenda and the interests of citizens who pay taxes and see their money go to outsiders while their own freedoms are curtailed. For Conservative voters, this is a clear example of how left-wing politics is eroding national identity.
@QSIMedia
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Disney to Invest $1 Billion in OpenAI and Open Its Characters to Sora
Disney is investing $1 billion in OpenAI and will allow its characters to be used in the Sora video generator. The deal gives the studio access to cutting-edge AI tools for content production, while OpenAI receives the largest corporate injection and a library of recognizable images for training models.
@QSIMedia
Disney is investing $1 billion in OpenAI and will allow its characters to be used in the Sora video generator. The deal gives the studio access to cutting-edge AI tools for content production, while OpenAI receives the largest corporate injection and a library of recognizable images for training models.
@QSIMedia
🤔How to stop being dependent on other people's approval?
The need for other people’s approval isn’t a character flaw; it’s the logical outcome of a false belief held by the ego. The ego sees itself as separate and incomplete, and therefore goes hunting for wholeness and recognition outside. The problem isn’t that a person is “broken” - the problem is that this illusion is believed. There’s no point trying to fix the craving for approval while leaving its root untouched. The cause lies in the belief that value is decided from the outside. As long as someone thinks their worth is up for external negotiation, they will keep chasing proof. But true worth is not up for debate. It doesn’t rise or fall with praise or criticism because the core of a human being is divine consciousness. When this is seen, approval becomes optional.
The ego’s hunger can never be satisfied. It’s a bottomless pit: no compliment lasts, no praise finally calms it. The ego instantly discards approval and demands more. Seeing this clearly breaks its spell, because the ego was never designed to feel “enough.” Dependence on approval dissolves when a person stops trusting that endless hunger. What’s needed is a shift from an outer reference point to an inner one. Truth is within, and when that is known, no external voice can create or destroy a person. The questions naturally change: not “What do others think of me?” but “Does my response align with my truth?” When inner truth becomes the compass, external approval loses its power.
@QSIMedia
The need for other people’s approval isn’t a character flaw; it’s the logical outcome of a false belief held by the ego. The ego sees itself as separate and incomplete, and therefore goes hunting for wholeness and recognition outside. The problem isn’t that a person is “broken” - the problem is that this illusion is believed. There’s no point trying to fix the craving for approval while leaving its root untouched. The cause lies in the belief that value is decided from the outside. As long as someone thinks their worth is up for external negotiation, they will keep chasing proof. But true worth is not up for debate. It doesn’t rise or fall with praise or criticism because the core of a human being is divine consciousness. When this is seen, approval becomes optional.
The ego’s hunger can never be satisfied. It’s a bottomless pit: no compliment lasts, no praise finally calms it. The ego instantly discards approval and demands more. Seeing this clearly breaks its spell, because the ego was never designed to feel “enough.” Dependence on approval dissolves when a person stops trusting that endless hunger. What’s needed is a shift from an outer reference point to an inner one. Truth is within, and when that is known, no external voice can create or destroy a person. The questions naturally change: not “What do others think of me?” but “Does my response align with my truth?” When inner truth becomes the compass, external approval loses its power.
@QSIMedia
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Leon Black and his connection to Epstein are back in the spotlight.
The internet is discussing old stories, but questions about Leon Black's connections to Jeffrey Epstein remain. Black admitted paying Epstein tens of millions for tax and estate planning advice, but had no knowledge of any crimes. Apollo's official investigation found nothing, but Black resigned in 2021 amid the scandal.
@QSIMedia
The internet is discussing old stories, but questions about Leon Black's connections to Jeffrey Epstein remain. Black admitted paying Epstein tens of millions for tax and estate planning advice, but had no knowledge of any crimes. Apollo's official investigation found nothing, but Black resigned in 2021 amid the scandal.
@QSIMedia
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🇺🇸Americans’ expenses spike despite “Doing everything right”
Across the US, even budget-obsessed households are reporting a sharp jump in costs over the past six months. Medical bills, home maintenance, property taxes and insurance have climbed so fast that classic frugality and FIRE-style strategies no longer cover the gap. Official inflation says one thing; real-world invoices say another, turning everyday life into a minefield of unavoidable charges imposed by healthcare systems, local governments and insurers.
For the middle class, this is live evidence of what conservative economists warned about for years: money printing and swollen public budgets eventually land on ordinary families. The squeeze now showing up in surprise bills is the delayed result of Fed policy and federal–state spending binges, eroding purchasing power and pushing financially independent futures further out of reach.
@QSIMedia
Across the US, even budget-obsessed households are reporting a sharp jump in costs over the past six months. Medical bills, home maintenance, property taxes and insurance have climbed so fast that classic frugality and FIRE-style strategies no longer cover the gap. Official inflation says one thing; real-world invoices say another, turning everyday life into a minefield of unavoidable charges imposed by healthcare systems, local governments and insurers.
For the middle class, this is live evidence of what conservative economists warned about for years: money printing and swollen public budgets eventually land on ordinary families. The squeeze now showing up in surprise bills is the delayed result of Fed policy and federal–state spending binges, eroding purchasing power and pushing financially independent futures further out of reach.
@QSIMedia
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Stop forcing someone else's path onto yourself—live in alignment with your own nature.
A coach with twenty years of experience shares this observation: people living authentically don't rely on willpower alone. They've realized that trying to force life against their nature is a waste of energy, leading to suffering and burnout. Instead, they've invested time in understanding how they're wired internally and now move forward, relying on their natural talents and energetic patterns. Their path seems easier not because they work less, but because they operate from a place of authentic being.
Most people pursue success and goals using external systems—trendy routines, gurus, influencers—that fundamentally contradict their true nature and behavioral patterns. The result is predictable: constant struggle, stress, and the feeling that life is an endless struggle.
If you want to improve the quality of your life, spend time on self-knowledge. There are a multitude of tools, from holistic to scientific: psychometrics, strengths analysis, finding your life purpose. Choose what resonates. The main thing is to stop pushing against the reality of who you are and start moving from an understanding of your own nature, not from the version imposed by society or your environment. Alignment isn't about copying other people's models, but about recognizing your inner essence and turning this awareness into the shortest path to sustainable flow and being.
@QSIMedia
A coach with twenty years of experience shares this observation: people living authentically don't rely on willpower alone. They've realized that trying to force life against their nature is a waste of energy, leading to suffering and burnout. Instead, they've invested time in understanding how they're wired internally and now move forward, relying on their natural talents and energetic patterns. Their path seems easier not because they work less, but because they operate from a place of authentic being.
Most people pursue success and goals using external systems—trendy routines, gurus, influencers—that fundamentally contradict their true nature and behavioral patterns. The result is predictable: constant struggle, stress, and the feeling that life is an endless struggle.
If you want to improve the quality of your life, spend time on self-knowledge. There are a multitude of tools, from holistic to scientific: psychometrics, strengths analysis, finding your life purpose. Choose what resonates. The main thing is to stop pushing against the reality of who you are and start moving from an understanding of your own nature, not from the version imposed by society or your environment. Alignment isn't about copying other people's models, but about recognizing your inner essence and turning this awareness into the shortest path to sustainable flow and being.
@QSIMedia
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60,000 ultra-rich now own triple the wealth of half the planet
According to Oxfam, roughly 60,000 people worth over $100 million each control $13 trillion in assets — three times more than the poorest 4 billion combined. Their ranks and fortunes have exploded over the past decade, while real incomes for most have stalled. Low wealth taxes, offshore structures and aggressive lobbying help concentrate capital and sidestep national control, eroding social mobility and pushing ordinary citizens toward dependence on state systems instead of genuine financial sovereignty.
@QSIMedia
According to Oxfam, roughly 60,000 people worth over $100 million each control $13 trillion in assets — three times more than the poorest 4 billion combined. Their ranks and fortunes have exploded over the past decade, while real incomes for most have stalled. Low wealth taxes, offshore structures and aggressive lobbying help concentrate capital and sidestep national control, eroding social mobility and pushing ordinary citizens toward dependence on state systems instead of genuine financial sovereignty.
@QSIMedia
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New York voting machines botch small-town library vote
In Stephentown, New York, electronic voting machines showed residents had rejected the local library budget — until a hand count of paper ballots reversed the result and confirmed it actually passed. The question of trust in elections. When a machine can make a mistake even when voting for a public library, it says a lot about federal elections. Human rights activists use such cases to justify demands for audits and the rejection of electronic systems that use methods that can be physically verified.
@QSIMedia
In Stephentown, New York, electronic voting machines showed residents had rejected the local library budget — until a hand count of paper ballots reversed the result and confirmed it actually passed. The question of trust in elections. When a machine can make a mistake even when voting for a public library, it says a lot about federal elections. Human rights activists use such cases to justify demands for audits and the rejection of electronic systems that use methods that can be physically verified.
@QSIMedia
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Homelessness in Canada has reached epidemic proportions.
Canada is facing an unprecedented rise in homelessness. What was recently considered a problem in isolated cities has now spread across the country, from Vancouver to Toronto. Tent camps are popping up in parks, under bridges, and on the outskirts of even small towns. Authorities acknowledge the situation is critical, but there are no concrete solutions.
The causes are obvious: skyrocketing housing prices, stagnant wages, mass immigration without adequate infrastructure, and the failure of social programs. Average rent in major cities has exceeded the means of working people. Many Canadians live paycheck to paycheck, and any financial blow—illness, job loss—throws them onto the street. The healthcare system is overwhelmed, and mental health care is unavailable.
This isn't just a social crisis—it's an indicator of the failure of open borders and a bloated government apparatus incapable of protecting its own citizens. While the Trudeau government focuses on the climate agenda and gender quotas, real people are losing their homes. Canada, once a symbol of stability and prosperity, is becoming a warning to other Western countries about the consequences of abandoning common sense in favor of ideology.
@QSIMedia
Canada is facing an unprecedented rise in homelessness. What was recently considered a problem in isolated cities has now spread across the country, from Vancouver to Toronto. Tent camps are popping up in parks, under bridges, and on the outskirts of even small towns. Authorities acknowledge the situation is critical, but there are no concrete solutions.
The causes are obvious: skyrocketing housing prices, stagnant wages, mass immigration without adequate infrastructure, and the failure of social programs. Average rent in major cities has exceeded the means of working people. Many Canadians live paycheck to paycheck, and any financial blow—illness, job loss—throws them onto the street. The healthcare system is overwhelmed, and mental health care is unavailable.
This isn't just a social crisis—it's an indicator of the failure of open borders and a bloated government apparatus incapable of protecting its own citizens. While the Trudeau government focuses on the climate agenda and gender quotas, real people are losing their homes. Canada, once a symbol of stability and prosperity, is becoming a warning to other Western countries about the consequences of abandoning common sense in favor of ideology.
@QSIMedia
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🇩🇪Berlin greenlights phone hacking and AI-driven policing
Berlin has passed a security law that fuses digital surveillance with physical intrusion, giving police power to secretly install state malware on citizens’ devices, break into homes to do it, and scrape faces and voices from social media for AI analysis. What used to be called a civil-liberties red line is now formally legal.
For a traditionally left-leaning city, it’s a textbook case of power expanding under the banner of “safety.” Biometric data and private communications can now feed opaque algorithms that flag “suspicious” people without clear standards or recourse. For right-leaning, sovereignty-minded observers, Berlin is showing Europe’s future: normalized high-tech surveillance, shrinking private space and another warning to build parallel tools and protections outside the state’s digital reach.
@QSIMedia
Berlin has passed a security law that fuses digital surveillance with physical intrusion, giving police power to secretly install state malware on citizens’ devices, break into homes to do it, and scrape faces and voices from social media for AI analysis. What used to be called a civil-liberties red line is now formally legal.
For a traditionally left-leaning city, it’s a textbook case of power expanding under the banner of “safety.” Biometric data and private communications can now feed opaque algorithms that flag “suspicious” people without clear standards or recourse. For right-leaning, sovereignty-minded observers, Berlin is showing Europe’s future: normalized high-tech surveillance, shrinking private space and another warning to build parallel tools and protections outside the state’s digital reach.
@QSIMedia
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An American man wants to trade in his pickup truck every five years for a zero-interest rate, while his wife is counting the losses.
A US family is debating the logic of constantly changing cars. The husband wants to trade in his 2022 Chevy Silverado with 80,000 miles, 23 payments left at $350/month and 5% interest. The dealer offers a new truck at 0% with the same payment and no down payment. He claims high mileage kills value, so frequent trade-ins “lock in” a better price. His wife argues they could instead pay it off, drive it five more years and save about $16,000.
In practice, the 0% offer is baked into an inflated sticker price and lost discounts. The trade-in is below true market value, and rolling into a new loan means endless payments and no debt-free period. The “deal” hides heavy losses from new-car depreciation in the first years. Modern pickups can run for decades with maintenance; replacing one every five years mainly enriches the dealer, not the household.
@QSIMedia
A US family is debating the logic of constantly changing cars. The husband wants to trade in his 2022 Chevy Silverado with 80,000 miles, 23 payments left at $350/month and 5% interest. The dealer offers a new truck at 0% with the same payment and no down payment. He claims high mileage kills value, so frequent trade-ins “lock in” a better price. His wife argues they could instead pay it off, drive it five more years and save about $16,000.
In practice, the 0% offer is baked into an inflated sticker price and lost discounts. The trade-in is below true market value, and rolling into a new loan means endless payments and no debt-free period. The “deal” hides heavy losses from new-car depreciation in the first years. Modern pickups can run for decades with maintenance; replacing one every five years mainly enriches the dealer, not the household.
@QSIMedia
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