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August 25, 2010 at 7:27 PM #597472August 25, 2010 at 7:49 PM #596426
davelj
Participant[quote=sdrealtor] I graduated from a public school with 800 kids and 100 went ivy league. [/quote]
This is nitpicking but… are you sure about that? That seems implausibly high. Particularly for a public high school.
August 25, 2010 at 7:49 PM #596519davelj
Participant[quote=sdrealtor] I graduated from a public school with 800 kids and 100 went ivy league. [/quote]
This is nitpicking but… are you sure about that? That seems implausibly high. Particularly for a public high school.
August 25, 2010 at 7:49 PM #597058davelj
Participant[quote=sdrealtor] I graduated from a public school with 800 kids and 100 went ivy league. [/quote]
This is nitpicking but… are you sure about that? That seems implausibly high. Particularly for a public high school.
August 25, 2010 at 7:49 PM #597167davelj
Participant[quote=sdrealtor] I graduated from a public school with 800 kids and 100 went ivy league. [/quote]
This is nitpicking but… are you sure about that? That seems implausibly high. Particularly for a public high school.
August 25, 2010 at 7:49 PM #597488davelj
Participant[quote=sdrealtor] I graduated from a public school with 800 kids and 100 went ivy league. [/quote]
This is nitpicking but… are you sure about that? That seems implausibly high. Particularly for a public high school.
August 25, 2010 at 8:05 PM #596441CA renter
Participant[quote=KSMountain]
DZ, let’s take Del Mar, west of the 5.
There are a lot of homes there. A lot of expensive homes. Who do you think lives in them?
In general they are not the least responsible and least accomplished among us. They are not the “typical” folks in today’s culture you seem to be focused on.
They are the more responsible, the more clever, the harder working, the more charismatic in some cases, the more ambitious, the better savers, the more “greedy” perhaps. They may have had the benefit of educated parents and a good upbringing that set a good example and set them off in a good direction, even though they haven’t inherited yet.
They are people who like nice things and are willing to work hard for them. I am excluding here crooks and inheritance. Some are professionals, some are executives. Some are business owners.
Do you think the supply of folks like that is now somehow depleted? For all time? Baloney.
[/quote]
Weren’t these same types of people buying/owning in 1998, 1999, 2000? What’s changed between then and now that prices should be 2-3X what they were in 1999?
August 25, 2010 at 8:05 PM #596534CA renter
Participant[quote=KSMountain]
DZ, let’s take Del Mar, west of the 5.
There are a lot of homes there. A lot of expensive homes. Who do you think lives in them?
In general they are not the least responsible and least accomplished among us. They are not the “typical” folks in today’s culture you seem to be focused on.
They are the more responsible, the more clever, the harder working, the more charismatic in some cases, the more ambitious, the better savers, the more “greedy” perhaps. They may have had the benefit of educated parents and a good upbringing that set a good example and set them off in a good direction, even though they haven’t inherited yet.
They are people who like nice things and are willing to work hard for them. I am excluding here crooks and inheritance. Some are professionals, some are executives. Some are business owners.
Do you think the supply of folks like that is now somehow depleted? For all time? Baloney.
[/quote]
Weren’t these same types of people buying/owning in 1998, 1999, 2000? What’s changed between then and now that prices should be 2-3X what they were in 1999?
August 25, 2010 at 8:05 PM #597073CA renter
Participant[quote=KSMountain]
DZ, let’s take Del Mar, west of the 5.
There are a lot of homes there. A lot of expensive homes. Who do you think lives in them?
In general they are not the least responsible and least accomplished among us. They are not the “typical” folks in today’s culture you seem to be focused on.
They are the more responsible, the more clever, the harder working, the more charismatic in some cases, the more ambitious, the better savers, the more “greedy” perhaps. They may have had the benefit of educated parents and a good upbringing that set a good example and set them off in a good direction, even though they haven’t inherited yet.
They are people who like nice things and are willing to work hard for them. I am excluding here crooks and inheritance. Some are professionals, some are executives. Some are business owners.
Do you think the supply of folks like that is now somehow depleted? For all time? Baloney.
[/quote]
Weren’t these same types of people buying/owning in 1998, 1999, 2000? What’s changed between then and now that prices should be 2-3X what they were in 1999?
August 25, 2010 at 8:05 PM #597182CA renter
Participant[quote=KSMountain]
DZ, let’s take Del Mar, west of the 5.
There are a lot of homes there. A lot of expensive homes. Who do you think lives in them?
In general they are not the least responsible and least accomplished among us. They are not the “typical” folks in today’s culture you seem to be focused on.
They are the more responsible, the more clever, the harder working, the more charismatic in some cases, the more ambitious, the better savers, the more “greedy” perhaps. They may have had the benefit of educated parents and a good upbringing that set a good example and set them off in a good direction, even though they haven’t inherited yet.
They are people who like nice things and are willing to work hard for them. I am excluding here crooks and inheritance. Some are professionals, some are executives. Some are business owners.
Do you think the supply of folks like that is now somehow depleted? For all time? Baloney.
[/quote]
Weren’t these same types of people buying/owning in 1998, 1999, 2000? What’s changed between then and now that prices should be 2-3X what they were in 1999?
August 25, 2010 at 8:05 PM #597503CA renter
Participant[quote=KSMountain]
DZ, let’s take Del Mar, west of the 5.
There are a lot of homes there. A lot of expensive homes. Who do you think lives in them?
In general they are not the least responsible and least accomplished among us. They are not the “typical” folks in today’s culture you seem to be focused on.
They are the more responsible, the more clever, the harder working, the more charismatic in some cases, the more ambitious, the better savers, the more “greedy” perhaps. They may have had the benefit of educated parents and a good upbringing that set a good example and set them off in a good direction, even though they haven’t inherited yet.
They are people who like nice things and are willing to work hard for them. I am excluding here crooks and inheritance. Some are professionals, some are executives. Some are business owners.
Do you think the supply of folks like that is now somehow depleted? For all time? Baloney.
[/quote]
Weren’t these same types of people buying/owning in 1998, 1999, 2000? What’s changed between then and now that prices should be 2-3X what they were in 1999?
August 25, 2010 at 8:16 PM #596456sdrealtor
ParticipantCAR
Much better than Jimbos which is an overpriced health food store. I call it the home of the $10 organic tomato. Whole Foods is more reasonable and has great prepared foods. For a single person or someone who likes great food but has kids who eat simply, you can walk in and get yourself a healthy gourmet meal for alot less than at a restaurant. You will love it.August 25, 2010 at 8:16 PM #596549sdrealtor
ParticipantCAR
Much better than Jimbos which is an overpriced health food store. I call it the home of the $10 organic tomato. Whole Foods is more reasonable and has great prepared foods. For a single person or someone who likes great food but has kids who eat simply, you can walk in and get yourself a healthy gourmet meal for alot less than at a restaurant. You will love it.August 25, 2010 at 8:16 PM #597088sdrealtor
ParticipantCAR
Much better than Jimbos which is an overpriced health food store. I call it the home of the $10 organic tomato. Whole Foods is more reasonable and has great prepared foods. For a single person or someone who likes great food but has kids who eat simply, you can walk in and get yourself a healthy gourmet meal for alot less than at a restaurant. You will love it.August 25, 2010 at 8:16 PM #597197sdrealtor
ParticipantCAR
Much better than Jimbos which is an overpriced health food store. I call it the home of the $10 organic tomato. Whole Foods is more reasonable and has great prepared foods. For a single person or someone who likes great food but has kids who eat simply, you can walk in and get yourself a healthy gourmet meal for alot less than at a restaurant. You will love it. -
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