- This topic has 55 replies, 11 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 11 months ago by trex.
-
AuthorPosts
-
December 27, 2007 at 3:17 PM #11337December 27, 2007 at 3:25 PM #125088XBoxBoyParticipant
I used to think this was going to speed things up. That was in late 2004 when I first became aware of what was going on. I thought for sure, with the internet, others would be quickly informed, and within 6 months all the crashing would be done. Guess I was wrong about that. Now I’m pretty much convinced that most people pay little if any attention to housing and financials, except what they hear from their friends. And since finance is not a popular topic, I’d have to say the internet will make little difference.
December 27, 2007 at 3:25 PM #125239XBoxBoyParticipantI used to think this was going to speed things up. That was in late 2004 when I first became aware of what was going on. I thought for sure, with the internet, others would be quickly informed, and within 6 months all the crashing would be done. Guess I was wrong about that. Now I’m pretty much convinced that most people pay little if any attention to housing and financials, except what they hear from their friends. And since finance is not a popular topic, I’d have to say the internet will make little difference.
December 27, 2007 at 3:25 PM #125256XBoxBoyParticipantI used to think this was going to speed things up. That was in late 2004 when I first became aware of what was going on. I thought for sure, with the internet, others would be quickly informed, and within 6 months all the crashing would be done. Guess I was wrong about that. Now I’m pretty much convinced that most people pay little if any attention to housing and financials, except what they hear from their friends. And since finance is not a popular topic, I’d have to say the internet will make little difference.
December 27, 2007 at 3:25 PM #125342XBoxBoyParticipantI used to think this was going to speed things up. That was in late 2004 when I first became aware of what was going on. I thought for sure, with the internet, others would be quickly informed, and within 6 months all the crashing would be done. Guess I was wrong about that. Now I’m pretty much convinced that most people pay little if any attention to housing and financials, except what they hear from their friends. And since finance is not a popular topic, I’d have to say the internet will make little difference.
December 27, 2007 at 3:25 PM #125317XBoxBoyParticipantI used to think this was going to speed things up. That was in late 2004 when I first became aware of what was going on. I thought for sure, with the internet, others would be quickly informed, and within 6 months all the crashing would be done. Guess I was wrong about that. Now I’m pretty much convinced that most people pay little if any attention to housing and financials, except what they hear from their friends. And since finance is not a popular topic, I’d have to say the internet will make little difference.
December 27, 2007 at 3:55 PM #125113scaredyclassicParticipanti think i disagree in this sense; i don’t think it will generally be effective in spreading information, as people don’t really want to get actual information. but it may be effective in spreading panic. I think there’s a case to be made that it will accentuate the downturn and make people more fearful to jump in.
Drink Heavily.
December 27, 2007 at 3:55 PM #125367scaredyclassicParticipanti think i disagree in this sense; i don’t think it will generally be effective in spreading information, as people don’t really want to get actual information. but it may be effective in spreading panic. I think there’s a case to be made that it will accentuate the downturn and make people more fearful to jump in.
Drink Heavily.
December 27, 2007 at 3:55 PM #125264scaredyclassicParticipanti think i disagree in this sense; i don’t think it will generally be effective in spreading information, as people don’t really want to get actual information. but it may be effective in spreading panic. I think there’s a case to be made that it will accentuate the downturn and make people more fearful to jump in.
Drink Heavily.
December 27, 2007 at 3:55 PM #125341scaredyclassicParticipanti think i disagree in this sense; i don’t think it will generally be effective in spreading information, as people don’t really want to get actual information. but it may be effective in spreading panic. I think there’s a case to be made that it will accentuate the downturn and make people more fearful to jump in.
Drink Heavily.
December 27, 2007 at 3:55 PM #125283scaredyclassicParticipanti think i disagree in this sense; i don’t think it will generally be effective in spreading information, as people don’t really want to get actual information. but it may be effective in spreading panic. I think there’s a case to be made that it will accentuate the downturn and make people more fearful to jump in.
Drink Heavily.
December 27, 2007 at 3:57 PM #125373NeetaTParticipantI don’t think the Internet will make a difference nor do I think hearing bad or good news from any source will make a difference. The truth is, people in the U.S. are addicted to spending and will go to any extreme including borrowing money at high interest rates to feed the addiction. If they have bad credit, they will take on high interest rate debt to buy as much house as they can take on even if it means barley getting by month to month. The reason, in my lay opinion for the slow decrease in prices is because people are still willing to buy as much house as they can afford. This addiction has evolved into an innate response over the past few years. This attitude in spending is what feeds the inflation machine.
December 27, 2007 at 3:57 PM #125347NeetaTParticipantI don’t think the Internet will make a difference nor do I think hearing bad or good news from any source will make a difference. The truth is, people in the U.S. are addicted to spending and will go to any extreme including borrowing money at high interest rates to feed the addiction. If they have bad credit, they will take on high interest rate debt to buy as much house as they can take on even if it means barley getting by month to month. The reason, in my lay opinion for the slow decrease in prices is because people are still willing to buy as much house as they can afford. This addiction has evolved into an innate response over the past few years. This attitude in spending is what feeds the inflation machine.
December 27, 2007 at 3:57 PM #125118NeetaTParticipantI don’t think the Internet will make a difference nor do I think hearing bad or good news from any source will make a difference. The truth is, people in the U.S. are addicted to spending and will go to any extreme including borrowing money at high interest rates to feed the addiction. If they have bad credit, they will take on high interest rate debt to buy as much house as they can take on even if it means barley getting by month to month. The reason, in my lay opinion for the slow decrease in prices is because people are still willing to buy as much house as they can afford. This addiction has evolved into an innate response over the past few years. This attitude in spending is what feeds the inflation machine.
December 27, 2007 at 3:57 PM #125288NeetaTParticipantI don’t think the Internet will make a difference nor do I think hearing bad or good news from any source will make a difference. The truth is, people in the U.S. are addicted to spending and will go to any extreme including borrowing money at high interest rates to feed the addiction. If they have bad credit, they will take on high interest rate debt to buy as much house as they can take on even if it means barley getting by month to month. The reason, in my lay opinion for the slow decrease in prices is because people are still willing to buy as much house as they can afford. This addiction has evolved into an innate response over the past few years. This attitude in spending is what feeds the inflation machine.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.