Home › Forums › Closed Forums › Properties or Areas › 11063 Alonda Ct, Mira Mesa
- This topic has 125 replies, 9 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 4 months ago by Coronita.
-
AuthorPosts
-
July 10, 2009 at 2:24 PM #428991July 10, 2009 at 2:29 PM #428249briansd1Guest
[quote=flu]
BTW: i hope you or anyone else isn’t taking me seriously. I’m just giving you shit because it’s Friday.[/quote]We should all have a good sense of humor. Makes watching the slow moving ship of real estate a lot more fun.
BTW, I’m going to watch Bruno this weekend. I’m already LMAO.
July 10, 2009 at 2:29 PM #428475briansd1Guest[quote=flu]
BTW: i hope you or anyone else isn’t taking me seriously. I’m just giving you shit because it’s Friday.[/quote]We should all have a good sense of humor. Makes watching the slow moving ship of real estate a lot more fun.
BTW, I’m going to watch Bruno this weekend. I’m already LMAO.
July 10, 2009 at 2:29 PM #428764briansd1Guest[quote=flu]
BTW: i hope you or anyone else isn’t taking me seriously. I’m just giving you shit because it’s Friday.[/quote]We should all have a good sense of humor. Makes watching the slow moving ship of real estate a lot more fun.
BTW, I’m going to watch Bruno this weekend. I’m already LMAO.
July 10, 2009 at 2:29 PM #428835briansd1Guest[quote=flu]
BTW: i hope you or anyone else isn’t taking me seriously. I’m just giving you shit because it’s Friday.[/quote]We should all have a good sense of humor. Makes watching the slow moving ship of real estate a lot more fun.
BTW, I’m going to watch Bruno this weekend. I’m already LMAO.
July 10, 2009 at 2:29 PM #428996briansd1Guest[quote=flu]
BTW: i hope you or anyone else isn’t taking me seriously. I’m just giving you shit because it’s Friday.[/quote]We should all have a good sense of humor. Makes watching the slow moving ship of real estate a lot more fun.
BTW, I’m going to watch Bruno this weekend. I’m already LMAO.
July 10, 2009 at 3:21 PM #428269briansd1Guest[quote=flu]
Frankly, my theory is this has very little to do with ethnicity and very much so has to do with social/economical backgrounds, regardless of ethnicity….Coincidently, it just so happens that in certain in some cases, some of “them” that fit the stereotype happen to be in the U.S. because they came for educational/professional reasons are in those enginerd, techie positions. Also inherently culturally, some tend to value the dollar more. Credit/being in debt is foreign (pun intended). On the other hand, you have some who aren’t from the same social/economic background…Yes, I know it’s shitty for me to say this.[/quote]No, it’s not shitty. It’s the truth. And the truth hurts sometimes.
People who came to America by choice for professional or education reasons would have more wherewithal, education and upbringing than those who came as refugees, or cooks on ships, or across the border.
Similarly, the peasants (and their descendants) who lived in the jungle with Mao would not have the same upbringing and manners than the bourgeois who fled to Taiwan or Hong Kong or the United States. After all, it will only be 60 years this October.
About your “rhymes with Yamamoto” statement, that population is either executives at corporations or have had many generations of wealth building through hard work.
FLU, I would however caution to not always trust the stereotypes. If you go to Flushing, NY, you may want to reassess you “first/last names with 1 syllable” theory.
I’m a student of history and it was the same with the Irish, Italians, Poles, etc… who came to America before.
The world changes yet it remains the same.
If you haven’t read it yet, I recommend
The Good Earth for summer reading. The book was banned in China but it’s now being studied in China as representative of life at the end of the Qin dynasty.It’s a story about love, work, family and, of course, REAL ESTATE (what we are most concerned with here).
Change the settings, the time and the names, and the story could have been in Italy.
July 10, 2009 at 3:21 PM #428494briansd1Guest[quote=flu]
Frankly, my theory is this has very little to do with ethnicity and very much so has to do with social/economical backgrounds, regardless of ethnicity….Coincidently, it just so happens that in certain in some cases, some of “them” that fit the stereotype happen to be in the U.S. because they came for educational/professional reasons are in those enginerd, techie positions. Also inherently culturally, some tend to value the dollar more. Credit/being in debt is foreign (pun intended). On the other hand, you have some who aren’t from the same social/economic background…Yes, I know it’s shitty for me to say this.[/quote]No, it’s not shitty. It’s the truth. And the truth hurts sometimes.
People who came to America by choice for professional or education reasons would have more wherewithal, education and upbringing than those who came as refugees, or cooks on ships, or across the border.
Similarly, the peasants (and their descendants) who lived in the jungle with Mao would not have the same upbringing and manners than the bourgeois who fled to Taiwan or Hong Kong or the United States. After all, it will only be 60 years this October.
About your “rhymes with Yamamoto” statement, that population is either executives at corporations or have had many generations of wealth building through hard work.
FLU, I would however caution to not always trust the stereotypes. If you go to Flushing, NY, you may want to reassess you “first/last names with 1 syllable” theory.
I’m a student of history and it was the same with the Irish, Italians, Poles, etc… who came to America before.
The world changes yet it remains the same.
If you haven’t read it yet, I recommend
The Good Earth for summer reading. The book was banned in China but it’s now being studied in China as representative of life at the end of the Qin dynasty.It’s a story about love, work, family and, of course, REAL ESTATE (what we are most concerned with here).
Change the settings, the time and the names, and the story could have been in Italy.
July 10, 2009 at 3:21 PM #428782briansd1Guest[quote=flu]
Frankly, my theory is this has very little to do with ethnicity and very much so has to do with social/economical backgrounds, regardless of ethnicity….Coincidently, it just so happens that in certain in some cases, some of “them” that fit the stereotype happen to be in the U.S. because they came for educational/professional reasons are in those enginerd, techie positions. Also inherently culturally, some tend to value the dollar more. Credit/being in debt is foreign (pun intended). On the other hand, you have some who aren’t from the same social/economic background…Yes, I know it’s shitty for me to say this.[/quote]No, it’s not shitty. It’s the truth. And the truth hurts sometimes.
People who came to America by choice for professional or education reasons would have more wherewithal, education and upbringing than those who came as refugees, or cooks on ships, or across the border.
Similarly, the peasants (and their descendants) who lived in the jungle with Mao would not have the same upbringing and manners than the bourgeois who fled to Taiwan or Hong Kong or the United States. After all, it will only be 60 years this October.
About your “rhymes with Yamamoto” statement, that population is either executives at corporations or have had many generations of wealth building through hard work.
FLU, I would however caution to not always trust the stereotypes. If you go to Flushing, NY, you may want to reassess you “first/last names with 1 syllable” theory.
I’m a student of history and it was the same with the Irish, Italians, Poles, etc… who came to America before.
The world changes yet it remains the same.
If you haven’t read it yet, I recommend
The Good Earth for summer reading. The book was banned in China but it’s now being studied in China as representative of life at the end of the Qin dynasty.It’s a story about love, work, family and, of course, REAL ESTATE (what we are most concerned with here).
Change the settings, the time and the names, and the story could have been in Italy.
July 10, 2009 at 3:21 PM #428855briansd1Guest[quote=flu]
Frankly, my theory is this has very little to do with ethnicity and very much so has to do with social/economical backgrounds, regardless of ethnicity….Coincidently, it just so happens that in certain in some cases, some of “them” that fit the stereotype happen to be in the U.S. because they came for educational/professional reasons are in those enginerd, techie positions. Also inherently culturally, some tend to value the dollar more. Credit/being in debt is foreign (pun intended). On the other hand, you have some who aren’t from the same social/economic background…Yes, I know it’s shitty for me to say this.[/quote]No, it’s not shitty. It’s the truth. And the truth hurts sometimes.
People who came to America by choice for professional or education reasons would have more wherewithal, education and upbringing than those who came as refugees, or cooks on ships, or across the border.
Similarly, the peasants (and their descendants) who lived in the jungle with Mao would not have the same upbringing and manners than the bourgeois who fled to Taiwan or Hong Kong or the United States. After all, it will only be 60 years this October.
About your “rhymes with Yamamoto” statement, that population is either executives at corporations or have had many generations of wealth building through hard work.
FLU, I would however caution to not always trust the stereotypes. If you go to Flushing, NY, you may want to reassess you “first/last names with 1 syllable” theory.
I’m a student of history and it was the same with the Irish, Italians, Poles, etc… who came to America before.
The world changes yet it remains the same.
If you haven’t read it yet, I recommend
The Good Earth for summer reading. The book was banned in China but it’s now being studied in China as representative of life at the end of the Qin dynasty.It’s a story about love, work, family and, of course, REAL ESTATE (what we are most concerned with here).
Change the settings, the time and the names, and the story could have been in Italy.
July 10, 2009 at 3:21 PM #429016briansd1Guest[quote=flu]
Frankly, my theory is this has very little to do with ethnicity and very much so has to do with social/economical backgrounds, regardless of ethnicity….Coincidently, it just so happens that in certain in some cases, some of “them” that fit the stereotype happen to be in the U.S. because they came for educational/professional reasons are in those enginerd, techie positions. Also inherently culturally, some tend to value the dollar more. Credit/being in debt is foreign (pun intended). On the other hand, you have some who aren’t from the same social/economic background…Yes, I know it’s shitty for me to say this.[/quote]No, it’s not shitty. It’s the truth. And the truth hurts sometimes.
People who came to America by choice for professional or education reasons would have more wherewithal, education and upbringing than those who came as refugees, or cooks on ships, or across the border.
Similarly, the peasants (and their descendants) who lived in the jungle with Mao would not have the same upbringing and manners than the bourgeois who fled to Taiwan or Hong Kong or the United States. After all, it will only be 60 years this October.
About your “rhymes with Yamamoto” statement, that population is either executives at corporations or have had many generations of wealth building through hard work.
FLU, I would however caution to not always trust the stereotypes. If you go to Flushing, NY, you may want to reassess you “first/last names with 1 syllable” theory.
I’m a student of history and it was the same with the Irish, Italians, Poles, etc… who came to America before.
The world changes yet it remains the same.
If you haven’t read it yet, I recommend
The Good Earth for summer reading. The book was banned in China but it’s now being studied in China as representative of life at the end of the Qin dynasty.It’s a story about love, work, family and, of course, REAL ESTATE (what we are most concerned with here).
Change the settings, the time and the names, and the story could have been in Italy.
July 13, 2009 at 1:38 PM #428959briansd1GuestI’ve been looking at Mira Mesa just for heck of it.
FLU, here’s one for you. All in good fun, of course. π
When I saw the piano, I immediately thought Chinese.
I took one semester of Chinese but I forgot my Pin Yin.
Is the last name
transliteration Taiwan/Hong Kong, otherwise overseas Chinese transliteration, or current Mainland China Pin Yin standard?I know you can tell about a Chinese person by the way the Chinese characters are transliterated to Latin script.
CHENG YU D&QUN
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090025220-11113_Caminito_Inocenta_San_Diego_CA_92126Assumed to be primary residence because $7,000 HO Exemption.
I bet you’d say that it’s also about neighborhood. But wouldn’t that apply to all ethnicities?
Now, I need to find you one that rhymes with Yamamoto. π
July 13, 2009 at 1:38 PM #429180briansd1GuestI’ve been looking at Mira Mesa just for heck of it.
FLU, here’s one for you. All in good fun, of course. π
When I saw the piano, I immediately thought Chinese.
I took one semester of Chinese but I forgot my Pin Yin.
Is the last name
transliteration Taiwan/Hong Kong, otherwise overseas Chinese transliteration, or current Mainland China Pin Yin standard?I know you can tell about a Chinese person by the way the Chinese characters are transliterated to Latin script.
CHENG YU D&QUN
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090025220-11113_Caminito_Inocenta_San_Diego_CA_92126Assumed to be primary residence because $7,000 HO Exemption.
I bet you’d say that it’s also about neighborhood. But wouldn’t that apply to all ethnicities?
Now, I need to find you one that rhymes with Yamamoto. π
July 13, 2009 at 1:38 PM #429465briansd1GuestI’ve been looking at Mira Mesa just for heck of it.
FLU, here’s one for you. All in good fun, of course. π
When I saw the piano, I immediately thought Chinese.
I took one semester of Chinese but I forgot my Pin Yin.
Is the last name
transliteration Taiwan/Hong Kong, otherwise overseas Chinese transliteration, or current Mainland China Pin Yin standard?I know you can tell about a Chinese person by the way the Chinese characters are transliterated to Latin script.
CHENG YU D&QUN
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090025220-11113_Caminito_Inocenta_San_Diego_CA_92126Assumed to be primary residence because $7,000 HO Exemption.
I bet you’d say that it’s also about neighborhood. But wouldn’t that apply to all ethnicities?
Now, I need to find you one that rhymes with Yamamoto. π
July 13, 2009 at 1:38 PM #429535briansd1GuestI’ve been looking at Mira Mesa just for heck of it.
FLU, here’s one for you. All in good fun, of course. π
When I saw the piano, I immediately thought Chinese.
I took one semester of Chinese but I forgot my Pin Yin.
Is the last name
transliteration Taiwan/Hong Kong, otherwise overseas Chinese transliteration, or current Mainland China Pin Yin standard?I know you can tell about a Chinese person by the way the Chinese characters are transliterated to Latin script.
CHENG YU D&QUN
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090025220-11113_Caminito_Inocenta_San_Diego_CA_92126Assumed to be primary residence because $7,000 HO Exemption.
I bet you’d say that it’s also about neighborhood. But wouldn’t that apply to all ethnicities?
Now, I need to find you one that rhymes with Yamamoto. π
-
AuthorPosts
- The forum ‘Properties or Areas’ is closed to new topics and replies.