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Aecetia
ParticipantI agree with you flu and when you catch them and call them on the fees, they usually back down. I also think that they did not used to be so petty and money grubbing (is that possible?), but I think the complexity of billing statements from telephone bills, cable bills, etc. has allowed them to pad their bills and get away with it much of the time because most people are so busy they do not have the time to scrutinize bills, item by item. This includes the government and its enumerable fees that are really taxes.
Aecetia
ParticipantI agree with you flu and when you catch them and call them on the fees, they usually back down. I also think that they did not used to be so petty and money grubbing (is that possible?), but I think the complexity of billing statements from telephone bills, cable bills, etc. has allowed them to pad their bills and get away with it much of the time because most people are so busy they do not have the time to scrutinize bills, item by item. This includes the government and its enumerable fees that are really taxes.
Aecetia
ParticipantI agree with you flu and when you catch them and call them on the fees, they usually back down. I also think that they did not used to be so petty and money grubbing (is that possible?), but I think the complexity of billing statements from telephone bills, cable bills, etc. has allowed them to pad their bills and get away with it much of the time because most people are so busy they do not have the time to scrutinize bills, item by item. This includes the government and its enumerable fees that are really taxes.
Aecetia
ParticipantI agree with you flu and when you catch them and call them on the fees, they usually back down. I also think that they did not used to be so petty and money grubbing (is that possible?), but I think the complexity of billing statements from telephone bills, cable bills, etc. has allowed them to pad their bills and get away with it much of the time because most people are so busy they do not have the time to scrutinize bills, item by item. This includes the government and its enumerable fees that are really taxes.
Aecetia
ParticipantI agree with you flu and when you catch them and call them on the fees, they usually back down. I also think that they did not used to be so petty and money grubbing (is that possible?), but I think the complexity of billing statements from telephone bills, cable bills, etc. has allowed them to pad their bills and get away with it much of the time because most people are so busy they do not have the time to scrutinize bills, item by item. This includes the government and its enumerable fees that are really taxes.
March 14, 2009 at 10:43 PM in reply to: Slow decline or is a big chunk about to be ripped out? #366225Aecetia
ParticipantPrice declines in real estate:
I saved this quote from early 2008, because I thought it sounded plausible.
“Tue 2/19/2008 10:34 AM
Price declines in real estate
We will see 20% decline in 2008, 14% decline in 2009, 8% decline in 2010. This bust will bleed itself out and then by then credit markets will have stabilized and we can reinject life into the carcass known as “residential housing.”The automotive market is a slaughter as well. This is not because housing is going down but that banks can’t make the lending profitable given prior criteria.
Best of luck to all of you ๐
SDhousehunter”
March 14, 2009 at 10:43 PM in reply to: Slow decline or is a big chunk about to be ripped out? #366512Aecetia
ParticipantPrice declines in real estate:
I saved this quote from early 2008, because I thought it sounded plausible.
“Tue 2/19/2008 10:34 AM
Price declines in real estate
We will see 20% decline in 2008, 14% decline in 2009, 8% decline in 2010. This bust will bleed itself out and then by then credit markets will have stabilized and we can reinject life into the carcass known as “residential housing.”The automotive market is a slaughter as well. This is not because housing is going down but that banks can’t make the lending profitable given prior criteria.
Best of luck to all of you ๐
SDhousehunter”
March 14, 2009 at 10:43 PM in reply to: Slow decline or is a big chunk about to be ripped out? #366678Aecetia
ParticipantPrice declines in real estate:
I saved this quote from early 2008, because I thought it sounded plausible.
“Tue 2/19/2008 10:34 AM
Price declines in real estate
We will see 20% decline in 2008, 14% decline in 2009, 8% decline in 2010. This bust will bleed itself out and then by then credit markets will have stabilized and we can reinject life into the carcass known as “residential housing.”The automotive market is a slaughter as well. This is not because housing is going down but that banks can’t make the lending profitable given prior criteria.
Best of luck to all of you ๐
SDhousehunter”
March 14, 2009 at 10:43 PM in reply to: Slow decline or is a big chunk about to be ripped out? #366715Aecetia
ParticipantPrice declines in real estate:
I saved this quote from early 2008, because I thought it sounded plausible.
“Tue 2/19/2008 10:34 AM
Price declines in real estate
We will see 20% decline in 2008, 14% decline in 2009, 8% decline in 2010. This bust will bleed itself out and then by then credit markets will have stabilized and we can reinject life into the carcass known as “residential housing.”The automotive market is a slaughter as well. This is not because housing is going down but that banks can’t make the lending profitable given prior criteria.
Best of luck to all of you ๐
SDhousehunter”
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