Contrefaire
Superstar
Yes it is. You gotta use the money not pay down on something unless the $100 will pay it in full.
Well then I'll go with my plan b, cause I could spend the majority of that money a lot faster/better on others than I could for myself.
Seems like some of yall overthinking this. If you need to spend money on any given day just use the $100 first. The money you're making from your actual income you can then match the $100 and invest if you want to.
How the fukk could anyone say no to this.
Yeah but OP made it complicated with all his parameters, plus a lot of us just don't spend $100/day on anything. But I guess yes we could go by your strategy which is to pay for daily expenses out of that $100 which is fine, but ultimately leaves a lot of $$ on the table at the literal end of the day.
Most places will let you pay everyday
my mortgage company will, my cable/internet company will, my utility company will, my water company will, my car insurance will, my cellphone company will, my city taxes will and then grocery days in between along with other expenses like clothes and eating out.
And it’s not just $100; you could reduce your expenses by $2,800-$3,100 a month. But that’s too complicated for you?
It's not that it's complicated, it's that based on OP's own criteria paying down a mortgage/large bills daily isn't allowed within the framework of this hypothetical. That's the main issue.