Buy Cars and Trucks in Newport, Kentucky

Oldsmobile : Cutlass 1969 Cutlass Sedan 350 2 brl
Oldsmobile : Cutlass 1969 Cutlass Sedan 350 2 brl
$1,000.00
$7,000.00
Time Left: 12h 43m
Ford : Mustang 1969 Ford Mustang Fastback
Ford : Mustang 1969 Ford Mustang Fastback
$29,900.00
Time Left: 21h 42m
Fiat : Other 1800 1977 fiat spider convertable
Fiat : Other 1800 1977 fiat spider convertable
$4,500.00 (11 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 8h 41m
Ford : Mustang Ford Mustang Cobra SVT
Ford : Mustang Ford Mustang Cobra SVT
$19,500.00
Time Left: 1d 10h 58m
AM General : Hummer h1 1994 hummer h1 wagon
AM General : Hummer h1 1994 hummer h1 wagon
$26,500.00
Time Left: 1d 18h 46m
Porsche : 928S 1983 Porsche 928S  5 speed trans. No Reserve
Porsche : 928S 1983 Porsche 928S 5 speed trans. No Reserve
$6,600.00 (15 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 19h 22m
Chevrolet : Corvette 1995 Chevrolet Corvette Coupe - 6 speed
Chevrolet : Corvette 1995 Chevrolet Corvette Coupe - 6 speed
$6,805.00 (11 Bids)
Time Left: 4d 20h 22m
Dodge : Charger 2 Door 1968 Dodge Charger Mopar B-Body
Dodge : Charger 2 Door 1968 Dodge Charger Mopar B-Body
$2,125.00 (7 Bids)
Time Left: 4d 21h 18m
Pontiac : Firebird 1971 fierbird with  t a shaker hood
Pontiac : Firebird 1971 fierbird with t a shaker hood
$5,000.00 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 4d 21h 28m

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Questions Related to newport, kentucky cars

Provided By Y! Answers

Do you know of any Car Rental places that rent to 21 year olds??
Question:
My friends and I are going to Gatlinburg in about 8 weeks, and we're trying to possibly rent an SUV instead of taking someones car... We'll be leaving from the Newport Kentucky/Cincinnati area if that helps any... Most places are sooo expensive, i just checked Alamo and they want to charge an extra $25 a day for being under 25!! uggh. So! If you have any suggestions they would be greatly appriciated... :) Thanks!


Answer:
Try Herz. I think you will always find a surcharge if you are under 25/26 but if you can produce a current insurance of your own, you may be lucky. I rented from Herz for a week's trip in CA. I needed them to cover insurance - not, apparently, usual in the States as it is here in the UK ... most people use their own insurance. I got a very good deal - but then I am older. You can expect restrictions if you are crossing State boundaries. It could well be worth your while sourcing your own insurance. Provided they can see a valid insurance policy that covers you while you are renting their car, most renters will be very happy to take your money!

Why does America need to use currency and dollars?
Question:
Instead, what if we just barter and trade possessions for other possessions? So like if you work hard for XYZ corporation, you will receive 6 loaves of bread per hour. You can then trade 7 bread slices for a clock radio and bargain with the merchant. You would then go to a car manufacturer and say "hey, I traded all my company carrots for 7 deposits of gold from a jeweler in Newport, Kentucky. Now I will offer you 17 ounches of this gold for 3-months use of the car, and every month I'll give you 741 strawberries. Then if you need paper, you go to the paper mill and ask the wholesaler if he needs fruit, metal, a computer, whatever it may be, for X amount of paper. NOW there would be no inflation ever! And people would produce and manufacture things when they need other things because paper dollars would not be needed anymore. And there wouldn't be fixed prices, you have to make FRIENDS in the community and around you and NEGOTIATE with people regarding what possessions you need and the other person desires. And in the country you would trade goats and horses for a front porch lamp. Also you'd have things like "Will you slaughter my cow because I want a steak dinner, you can eat 10% of it or trade it to someone else for something else you want/need" I guess there could be inflation. The government would have to have a secret grapevine that spits out trillions of grapes


Answer:
The key is to allow exchange to be *voluntary*. If you allow for voluntary exchange, before long you'll see a medium of exchange arise. Money would naturally arise out of the need to facilitate complex market interactions. Consider the mundane construction of a pencil as related in the famous essay "I, Pencil" [1] by Leonard Reed. Can we imagine that even such a mundane item could have been created without the medium of money to facilitate the innumerable required steps? That's a pencil. Advanced coursework might dwell upon the steps required to build the computers and all of the infrastructure with which we effortlessly communicate. Yes, we need money. And just as pencils and even computers have been created out of the spontaneous cooperation enabled by money, so too could and should (!) the provision of money. The great threat to our society in our day is the push to centralize human activity. Read's essay speaks to this, and I will leave the main point to him. I will only say this. Rather than abolishing money, we need to free it. Abolishing legal tender laws and leaving the provision of money to voluntary market institutions will go a long way toward solving the problems that some people believe come from money itself. I can well imagine that your question is intent upon being satirical [2]. Yet there are people who would, in all sincerity, believe that money is our problem. We need, they say, to wipe away all materialism. Of course, to do that usually requires some kind of strong central force to initiate the change. I don't begrudge people who wish to attach less value to materialism. We all might do with some simpler comforts. But people who wish to absolutely wipe away all materialism along with a medium of exchange must relegate themselves to the barest level of subsistence. I wish such people well if they will do this while leaving the rest of us alone.