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AK
ParticipantRemember the saying: The markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay sober. Or was that “solvent”?
AK
ParticipantRemember the saying: The markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay sober. Or was that “solvent”?
AK
ParticipantRemember the saying: The markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay sober. Or was that “solvent”?
AK
ParticipantRemember the saying: The markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay sober. Or was that “solvent”?
AK
ParticipantRemember the saying: The markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay sober. Or was that “solvent”?
AK
ParticipantNot a dietitian but I consider myself to be an informed glutton … IIRC white rice has a very low glycemic index, and brown rice isn’t that much of an improvement. Great for carb addicts like myself, lousy for diabetics or pre-diabetics.
White rice does have two significant advantages for subsistence farmers … it keeps for years when properly stored (much longer than brown rice) and it cooks quickly so less scarce/expensive cooking fuel is needed.
AK
ParticipantNot a dietitian but I consider myself to be an informed glutton … IIRC white rice has a very low glycemic index, and brown rice isn’t that much of an improvement. Great for carb addicts like myself, lousy for diabetics or pre-diabetics.
White rice does have two significant advantages for subsistence farmers … it keeps for years when properly stored (much longer than brown rice) and it cooks quickly so less scarce/expensive cooking fuel is needed.
AK
ParticipantNot a dietitian but I consider myself to be an informed glutton … IIRC white rice has a very low glycemic index, and brown rice isn’t that much of an improvement. Great for carb addicts like myself, lousy for diabetics or pre-diabetics.
White rice does have two significant advantages for subsistence farmers … it keeps for years when properly stored (much longer than brown rice) and it cooks quickly so less scarce/expensive cooking fuel is needed.
AK
ParticipantNot a dietitian but I consider myself to be an informed glutton … IIRC white rice has a very low glycemic index, and brown rice isn’t that much of an improvement. Great for carb addicts like myself, lousy for diabetics or pre-diabetics.
White rice does have two significant advantages for subsistence farmers … it keeps for years when properly stored (much longer than brown rice) and it cooks quickly so less scarce/expensive cooking fuel is needed.
AK
ParticipantNot a dietitian but I consider myself to be an informed glutton … IIRC white rice has a very low glycemic index, and brown rice isn’t that much of an improvement. Great for carb addicts like myself, lousy for diabetics or pre-diabetics.
White rice does have two significant advantages for subsistence farmers … it keeps for years when properly stored (much longer than brown rice) and it cooks quickly so less scarce/expensive cooking fuel is needed.
July 25, 2009 at 2:06 PM in reply to: Sign of the times: “Hey you want to buy this property?” #436682AK
ParticipantOwner-occupied makes a big difference for financing.
I think most lenders want 30% down these days for non-owner occupied.
Owner occupied, you can get away with 3.5% down FHA if it’s 1-4 units.
Huge difference in leverage!
July 25, 2009 at 2:06 PM in reply to: Sign of the times: “Hey you want to buy this property?” #436886AK
ParticipantOwner-occupied makes a big difference for financing.
I think most lenders want 30% down these days for non-owner occupied.
Owner occupied, you can get away with 3.5% down FHA if it’s 1-4 units.
Huge difference in leverage!
July 25, 2009 at 2:06 PM in reply to: Sign of the times: “Hey you want to buy this property?” #437202AK
ParticipantOwner-occupied makes a big difference for financing.
I think most lenders want 30% down these days for non-owner occupied.
Owner occupied, you can get away with 3.5% down FHA if it’s 1-4 units.
Huge difference in leverage!
July 25, 2009 at 2:06 PM in reply to: Sign of the times: “Hey you want to buy this property?” #437275AK
ParticipantOwner-occupied makes a big difference for financing.
I think most lenders want 30% down these days for non-owner occupied.
Owner occupied, you can get away with 3.5% down FHA if it’s 1-4 units.
Huge difference in leverage!
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