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July 19, 2009 at 8:51 AM in reply to: Reasons to manipulate the California real estate markets #433714July 19, 2009 at 8:51 AM in reply to: Reasons to manipulate the California real estate markets #433918
BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantYou bring up some valid points. But I see one flaw in your reasoning.
Wouldn’t you also agree that future growth and prosperity lies with the next generation? If the fraudulent high real estate prices are allowed (manipulated as you say) to remain, then the entire next generation will never be able to participate. During the RE craze, the next generation was “priced out forever” remember? The children and grandchildren must find affordable housing, and they will. Hence, any and all efforts to manipulate the high housing prices are doomed to failure.
July 19, 2009 at 8:51 AM in reply to: Reasons to manipulate the California real estate markets #434230BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantYou bring up some valid points. But I see one flaw in your reasoning.
Wouldn’t you also agree that future growth and prosperity lies with the next generation? If the fraudulent high real estate prices are allowed (manipulated as you say) to remain, then the entire next generation will never be able to participate. During the RE craze, the next generation was “priced out forever” remember? The children and grandchildren must find affordable housing, and they will. Hence, any and all efforts to manipulate the high housing prices are doomed to failure.
July 19, 2009 at 8:51 AM in reply to: Reasons to manipulate the California real estate markets #434301BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantYou bring up some valid points. But I see one flaw in your reasoning.
Wouldn’t you also agree that future growth and prosperity lies with the next generation? If the fraudulent high real estate prices are allowed (manipulated as you say) to remain, then the entire next generation will never be able to participate. During the RE craze, the next generation was “priced out forever” remember? The children and grandchildren must find affordable housing, and they will. Hence, any and all efforts to manipulate the high housing prices are doomed to failure.
July 19, 2009 at 8:51 AM in reply to: Reasons to manipulate the California real estate markets #434468BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantYou bring up some valid points. But I see one flaw in your reasoning.
Wouldn’t you also agree that future growth and prosperity lies with the next generation? If the fraudulent high real estate prices are allowed (manipulated as you say) to remain, then the entire next generation will never be able to participate. During the RE craze, the next generation was “priced out forever” remember? The children and grandchildren must find affordable housing, and they will. Hence, any and all efforts to manipulate the high housing prices are doomed to failure.
BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantMilitary service sent me over much of the globe, and one thing I learned is that every place has some things that are great, and some things that are bad. For my situation, moving out of CA was the best financial decision we could have made. There is simply no way we could have such a nice standard of living in SD with only myself working and the wife staying home with the new baby. The funny thing I’ve witnessed is how in California many people say, “Man, I wouldn’t live anywhere but California.” And then here many people say, “There’s no way I would Ever live in California.” Too funny.
As for this part –
“We are on our way to become irrelevant as a world power and we are watching the collapse of our civilization come about before our eyes.”
In my opinion our civilization will not collapse, but yes we will become much more irrelevant. We will follow much the same path as Great Britain did from the 1850’s to present. They were the super power from the early-mid 1800’s until WWII. After all that expensive colonization and the devastating wars they still exist, but can no longer leverage even a fraction of the old world influence. BTW – our country becoming irrelevant as a world power is a Good thing in my opinion. We need to worry about ourselves, not the rest of the world.
BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantMilitary service sent me over much of the globe, and one thing I learned is that every place has some things that are great, and some things that are bad. For my situation, moving out of CA was the best financial decision we could have made. There is simply no way we could have such a nice standard of living in SD with only myself working and the wife staying home with the new baby. The funny thing I’ve witnessed is how in California many people say, “Man, I wouldn’t live anywhere but California.” And then here many people say, “There’s no way I would Ever live in California.” Too funny.
As for this part –
“We are on our way to become irrelevant as a world power and we are watching the collapse of our civilization come about before our eyes.”
In my opinion our civilization will not collapse, but yes we will become much more irrelevant. We will follow much the same path as Great Britain did from the 1850’s to present. They were the super power from the early-mid 1800’s until WWII. After all that expensive colonization and the devastating wars they still exist, but can no longer leverage even a fraction of the old world influence. BTW – our country becoming irrelevant as a world power is a Good thing in my opinion. We need to worry about ourselves, not the rest of the world.
BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantMilitary service sent me over much of the globe, and one thing I learned is that every place has some things that are great, and some things that are bad. For my situation, moving out of CA was the best financial decision we could have made. There is simply no way we could have such a nice standard of living in SD with only myself working and the wife staying home with the new baby. The funny thing I’ve witnessed is how in California many people say, “Man, I wouldn’t live anywhere but California.” And then here many people say, “There’s no way I would Ever live in California.” Too funny.
As for this part –
“We are on our way to become irrelevant as a world power and we are watching the collapse of our civilization come about before our eyes.”
In my opinion our civilization will not collapse, but yes we will become much more irrelevant. We will follow much the same path as Great Britain did from the 1850’s to present. They were the super power from the early-mid 1800’s until WWII. After all that expensive colonization and the devastating wars they still exist, but can no longer leverage even a fraction of the old world influence. BTW – our country becoming irrelevant as a world power is a Good thing in my opinion. We need to worry about ourselves, not the rest of the world.
BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantMilitary service sent me over much of the globe, and one thing I learned is that every place has some things that are great, and some things that are bad. For my situation, moving out of CA was the best financial decision we could have made. There is simply no way we could have such a nice standard of living in SD with only myself working and the wife staying home with the new baby. The funny thing I’ve witnessed is how in California many people say, “Man, I wouldn’t live anywhere but California.” And then here many people say, “There’s no way I would Ever live in California.” Too funny.
As for this part –
“We are on our way to become irrelevant as a world power and we are watching the collapse of our civilization come about before our eyes.”
In my opinion our civilization will not collapse, but yes we will become much more irrelevant. We will follow much the same path as Great Britain did from the 1850’s to present. They were the super power from the early-mid 1800’s until WWII. After all that expensive colonization and the devastating wars they still exist, but can no longer leverage even a fraction of the old world influence. BTW – our country becoming irrelevant as a world power is a Good thing in my opinion. We need to worry about ourselves, not the rest of the world.
BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantMilitary service sent me over much of the globe, and one thing I learned is that every place has some things that are great, and some things that are bad. For my situation, moving out of CA was the best financial decision we could have made. There is simply no way we could have such a nice standard of living in SD with only myself working and the wife staying home with the new baby. The funny thing I’ve witnessed is how in California many people say, “Man, I wouldn’t live anywhere but California.” And then here many people say, “There’s no way I would Ever live in California.” Too funny.
As for this part –
“We are on our way to become irrelevant as a world power and we are watching the collapse of our civilization come about before our eyes.”
In my opinion our civilization will not collapse, but yes we will become much more irrelevant. We will follow much the same path as Great Britain did from the 1850’s to present. They were the super power from the early-mid 1800’s until WWII. After all that expensive colonization and the devastating wars they still exist, but can no longer leverage even a fraction of the old world influence. BTW – our country becoming irrelevant as a world power is a Good thing in my opinion. We need to worry about ourselves, not the rest of the world.
June 10, 2009 at 8:30 PM in reply to: Pivotal Day in US History Supreme Court says FU to Contract Law #413507BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantJust curious…Why is gold down?
Perhaps there is a short period of deflation before the other central banks print away their currencies to where they’re Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door
June 10, 2009 at 8:30 PM in reply to: Pivotal Day in US History Supreme Court says FU to Contract Law #413745BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantJust curious…Why is gold down?
Perhaps there is a short period of deflation before the other central banks print away their currencies to where they’re Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door
June 10, 2009 at 8:30 PM in reply to: Pivotal Day in US History Supreme Court says FU to Contract Law #413997BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantJust curious…Why is gold down?
Perhaps there is a short period of deflation before the other central banks print away their currencies to where they’re Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door
June 10, 2009 at 8:30 PM in reply to: Pivotal Day in US History Supreme Court says FU to Contract Law #414066BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantJust curious…Why is gold down?
Perhaps there is a short period of deflation before the other central banks print away their currencies to where they’re Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door
June 10, 2009 at 8:30 PM in reply to: Pivotal Day in US History Supreme Court says FU to Contract Law #414217BuyerWillEPB
ParticipantJust curious…Why is gold down?
Perhaps there is a short period of deflation before the other central banks print away their currencies to where they’re Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door
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