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June 10, 2009 at 10:07 AM in reply to: Predictions on when it will become easier/cheaper to buy a house? #413678June 10, 2009 at 10:07 AM in reply to: Predictions on when it will become easier/cheaper to buy a house? #413830
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ParticipantAgreed SDR.
One thing to watch for is when the manipulators of markets have moved on to the next big thing and abandoned housing. That should help values return to a more stable level (which will still be very expensive here in San Diego relative to other parts of the country). Currently the masses still have a lot of wool that needs fleecing with regards to real estate. When the sheep have all been shorn clean the movers of markets will then switch to green energy stocks or commodities or Nevada municipal bonds or some other such nonsense to begin inflating the next bubble.
June 10, 2009 at 7:35 AM in reply to: Governor of the State of California EXECUTIVE ORDER S-09-09 #413067blahblahblah
ParticipantWhat you are seeing is the reality of who runs this country. It’s not the government, who are in reality only the administrators, it’s the financier class. These ghouls have remained mostly hidden in the shadows but now they have done so much damage to the country that the cracks are clearly visible. What was previously done behind the scenes is now done in broad daylight. The TARP $700B essentially created a new branch of government with no oversight or checks&balances whatsoever. Imagine what they can do with nearly a trillion dollars!
Of course the federal government (who only does what they’re told) won’t help California. The financier class wants to see states like California go bankrupt. When this happens the public property (paid for with our tax $ and hard work) goes on the auction block and they get to buy it for pennies on the dollar. It’s always the same playbook, from Chile to the USSR and now they’re gonna do it here in the USA. They want to transfer our public property into their private hands.
June 10, 2009 at 7:35 AM in reply to: Governor of the State of California EXECUTIVE ORDER S-09-09 #413303blahblahblah
ParticipantWhat you are seeing is the reality of who runs this country. It’s not the government, who are in reality only the administrators, it’s the financier class. These ghouls have remained mostly hidden in the shadows but now they have done so much damage to the country that the cracks are clearly visible. What was previously done behind the scenes is now done in broad daylight. The TARP $700B essentially created a new branch of government with no oversight or checks&balances whatsoever. Imagine what they can do with nearly a trillion dollars!
Of course the federal government (who only does what they’re told) won’t help California. The financier class wants to see states like California go bankrupt. When this happens the public property (paid for with our tax $ and hard work) goes on the auction block and they get to buy it for pennies on the dollar. It’s always the same playbook, from Chile to the USSR and now they’re gonna do it here in the USA. They want to transfer our public property into their private hands.
June 10, 2009 at 7:35 AM in reply to: Governor of the State of California EXECUTIVE ORDER S-09-09 #413545blahblahblah
ParticipantWhat you are seeing is the reality of who runs this country. It’s not the government, who are in reality only the administrators, it’s the financier class. These ghouls have remained mostly hidden in the shadows but now they have done so much damage to the country that the cracks are clearly visible. What was previously done behind the scenes is now done in broad daylight. The TARP $700B essentially created a new branch of government with no oversight or checks&balances whatsoever. Imagine what they can do with nearly a trillion dollars!
Of course the federal government (who only does what they’re told) won’t help California. The financier class wants to see states like California go bankrupt. When this happens the public property (paid for with our tax $ and hard work) goes on the auction block and they get to buy it for pennies on the dollar. It’s always the same playbook, from Chile to the USSR and now they’re gonna do it here in the USA. They want to transfer our public property into their private hands.
June 10, 2009 at 7:35 AM in reply to: Governor of the State of California EXECUTIVE ORDER S-09-09 #413613blahblahblah
ParticipantWhat you are seeing is the reality of who runs this country. It’s not the government, who are in reality only the administrators, it’s the financier class. These ghouls have remained mostly hidden in the shadows but now they have done so much damage to the country that the cracks are clearly visible. What was previously done behind the scenes is now done in broad daylight. The TARP $700B essentially created a new branch of government with no oversight or checks&balances whatsoever. Imagine what they can do with nearly a trillion dollars!
Of course the federal government (who only does what they’re told) won’t help California. The financier class wants to see states like California go bankrupt. When this happens the public property (paid for with our tax $ and hard work) goes on the auction block and they get to buy it for pennies on the dollar. It’s always the same playbook, from Chile to the USSR and now they’re gonna do it here in the USA. They want to transfer our public property into their private hands.
June 10, 2009 at 7:35 AM in reply to: Governor of the State of California EXECUTIVE ORDER S-09-09 #413765blahblahblah
ParticipantWhat you are seeing is the reality of who runs this country. It’s not the government, who are in reality only the administrators, it’s the financier class. These ghouls have remained mostly hidden in the shadows but now they have done so much damage to the country that the cracks are clearly visible. What was previously done behind the scenes is now done in broad daylight. The TARP $700B essentially created a new branch of government with no oversight or checks&balances whatsoever. Imagine what they can do with nearly a trillion dollars!
Of course the federal government (who only does what they’re told) won’t help California. The financier class wants to see states like California go bankrupt. When this happens the public property (paid for with our tax $ and hard work) goes on the auction block and they get to buy it for pennies on the dollar. It’s always the same playbook, from Chile to the USSR and now they’re gonna do it here in the USA. They want to transfer our public property into their private hands.
June 9, 2009 at 3:34 PM in reply to: Predictions on when it will become easier/cheaper to buy a house? #412898blahblahblah
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June 9, 2009 at 3:34 PM in reply to: Predictions on when it will become easier/cheaper to buy a house? #413133blahblahblah
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June 9, 2009 at 3:34 PM in reply to: Predictions on when it will become easier/cheaper to buy a house? #413375blahblahblah
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June 9, 2009 at 3:34 PM in reply to: Predictions on when it will become easier/cheaper to buy a house? #413442blahblahblah
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June 9, 2009 at 3:34 PM in reply to: Predictions on when it will become easier/cheaper to buy a house? #413591blahblahblah
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ParticipantSunstone purchased the W San Diego in June 2006 for $96 million from developers including Starwood Hotels, Gatehouse Capital and Multi-Employer Development Partners. The hotel carries a $65 million, fixed-rate commercial mortgage-backed securities loan with a 6.14 percent interest rate, which comes due Jan. 1, 2018. The mortgage principal translates to more than $250,000 in debt per room.
Sounds from that quote like Starwood at least owned a piece of it.
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ParticipantSunstone purchased the W San Diego in June 2006 for $96 million from developers including Starwood Hotels, Gatehouse Capital and Multi-Employer Development Partners. The hotel carries a $65 million, fixed-rate commercial mortgage-backed securities loan with a 6.14 percent interest rate, which comes due Jan. 1, 2018. The mortgage principal translates to more than $250,000 in debt per room.
Sounds from that quote like Starwood at least owned a piece of it.
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ParticipantSunstone purchased the W San Diego in June 2006 for $96 million from developers including Starwood Hotels, Gatehouse Capital and Multi-Employer Development Partners. The hotel carries a $65 million, fixed-rate commercial mortgage-backed securities loan with a 6.14 percent interest rate, which comes due Jan. 1, 2018. The mortgage principal translates to more than $250,000 in debt per room.
Sounds from that quote like Starwood at least owned a piece of it.
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