First of all this is no bubble. Second they weren’t greedy or over leveraged they just bought homes for their families. Third they could afford and we’re not recklessly investing. Last they are responsible hard working folks that saved, worked hard and won’t just walk away. Your bitterness and jealousy has no bounds. They are the majority[/quote]
LOL, yes no bubble here! Just keep the blinders on, you probably said the same think in 2007 too.
When you say “They” are you referring to Blackrock, Zillow, Redfin, Open Door, or similar speculator? Actually the ibuyers have and will be the first to walk away, already started with Zillow. Just look at the stock prices for these companies is all you need to see.[/quote]
You’re delusional and bitter and jealous. I was here in 2005 calling this a bubble and you know that to be true. That is well documented as well as my nailing just about every prediction ive ever made while you have missed on them for a decade.
They are the vast majority of hardworking, regular folks that bought homes for the families not the one failure at that here.
The companies you named are not the housing market. The vast majority are regular hardworking folks you envy and wish bad things upon. You just arent a person to be looked up to in any regard.[/quote]
Bullshit, show me one post from you in 2005 (or 2006) where you called a bubble and predicted a crash.
Again, cheering for housing prices to go down is not wishing bad things on people. It is a good thing for society as a whole, and particularly for the younger generations. Should people who invest recklessly lose money, yes of course. You are probably in support of all the bailouts in 2009. If you invest in risky overpriced assets and you take the risk of getting burned.[/quote]
Well, that’s a matter of opinion, Larry. Good luck to you moving forward.