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Diego Mamani
ParticipantOf course they always seem to be busy. Around here. That is, we’re in relatively high-income San Diego. Other regions of the country are doing much worse.
Roast? Hahaha
Diego Mamani
ParticipantOf course they always seem to be busy. Around here. That is, we’re in relatively high-income San Diego. Other regions of the country are doing much worse.
Roast? Hahaha
Diego Mamani
ParticipantOf course they always seem to be busy. Around here. That is, we’re in relatively high-income San Diego. Other regions of the country are doing much worse.
Roast? Hahaha
Diego Mamani
ParticipantOf course they always seem to be busy. Around here. That is, we’re in relatively high-income San Diego. Other regions of the country are doing much worse.
Roast? Hahaha
Diego Mamani
ParticipantThe real culprit here, other than this nutcase woman, is the fertility doctor who (1) provided fertility treatment to a single woman who already had SIX kids (WTF!!), and (2) implanted 8 embryos when standard practice calls for implanting 2 or 3 at most.
Unlike the nutty mother, the doc is an educated person who shuld’ve known better. That the guy isn’t being shamed in public right now is beyond me. The AMA should expel him, and the state should sue him to recoup some of the costs of caring for the infants (the true victims here).
Diego Mamani
ParticipantThe real culprit here, other than this nutcase woman, is the fertility doctor who (1) provided fertility treatment to a single woman who already had SIX kids (WTF!!), and (2) implanted 8 embryos when standard practice calls for implanting 2 or 3 at most.
Unlike the nutty mother, the doc is an educated person who shuld’ve known better. That the guy isn’t being shamed in public right now is beyond me. The AMA should expel him, and the state should sue him to recoup some of the costs of caring for the infants (the true victims here).
Diego Mamani
ParticipantThe real culprit here, other than this nutcase woman, is the fertility doctor who (1) provided fertility treatment to a single woman who already had SIX kids (WTF!!), and (2) implanted 8 embryos when standard practice calls for implanting 2 or 3 at most.
Unlike the nutty mother, the doc is an educated person who shuld’ve known better. That the guy isn’t being shamed in public right now is beyond me. The AMA should expel him, and the state should sue him to recoup some of the costs of caring for the infants (the true victims here).
Diego Mamani
ParticipantThe real culprit here, other than this nutcase woman, is the fertility doctor who (1) provided fertility treatment to a single woman who already had SIX kids (WTF!!), and (2) implanted 8 embryos when standard practice calls for implanting 2 or 3 at most.
Unlike the nutty mother, the doc is an educated person who shuld’ve known better. That the guy isn’t being shamed in public right now is beyond me. The AMA should expel him, and the state should sue him to recoup some of the costs of caring for the infants (the true victims here).
Diego Mamani
ParticipantThe real culprit here, other than this nutcase woman, is the fertility doctor who (1) provided fertility treatment to a single woman who already had SIX kids (WTF!!), and (2) implanted 8 embryos when standard practice calls for implanting 2 or 3 at most.
Unlike the nutty mother, the doc is an educated person who shuld’ve known better. That the guy isn’t being shamed in public right now is beyond me. The AMA should expel him, and the state should sue him to recoup some of the costs of caring for the infants (the true victims here).
Diego Mamani
ParticipantYou spent a lot of money in down payment and upgrades. Why? Where you planning on staying there for many many years?
If so, do you see yourself ever coming back to this area? Would you consider retiring and living in this house? If the answers are yes, then I’d consider renting.
OTOH, if you’ll never be back to the area, then take your losses now and sell. If you rent, there are ways to minimize the likelihood of bad tenants: charge a below-market rent, but be super aggressive and picky when checking credit scores and references; only rent to people with high FICO scores, spotless references, etc.
Diego Mamani
ParticipantYou spent a lot of money in down payment and upgrades. Why? Where you planning on staying there for many many years?
If so, do you see yourself ever coming back to this area? Would you consider retiring and living in this house? If the answers are yes, then I’d consider renting.
OTOH, if you’ll never be back to the area, then take your losses now and sell. If you rent, there are ways to minimize the likelihood of bad tenants: charge a below-market rent, but be super aggressive and picky when checking credit scores and references; only rent to people with high FICO scores, spotless references, etc.
Diego Mamani
ParticipantYou spent a lot of money in down payment and upgrades. Why? Where you planning on staying there for many many years?
If so, do you see yourself ever coming back to this area? Would you consider retiring and living in this house? If the answers are yes, then I’d consider renting.
OTOH, if you’ll never be back to the area, then take your losses now and sell. If you rent, there are ways to minimize the likelihood of bad tenants: charge a below-market rent, but be super aggressive and picky when checking credit scores and references; only rent to people with high FICO scores, spotless references, etc.
Diego Mamani
ParticipantYou spent a lot of money in down payment and upgrades. Why? Where you planning on staying there for many many years?
If so, do you see yourself ever coming back to this area? Would you consider retiring and living in this house? If the answers are yes, then I’d consider renting.
OTOH, if you’ll never be back to the area, then take your losses now and sell. If you rent, there are ways to minimize the likelihood of bad tenants: charge a below-market rent, but be super aggressive and picky when checking credit scores and references; only rent to people with high FICO scores, spotless references, etc.
Diego Mamani
ParticipantYou spent a lot of money in down payment and upgrades. Why? Where you planning on staying there for many many years?
If so, do you see yourself ever coming back to this area? Would you consider retiring and living in this house? If the answers are yes, then I’d consider renting.
OTOH, if you’ll never be back to the area, then take your losses now and sell. If you rent, there are ways to minimize the likelihood of bad tenants: charge a below-market rent, but be super aggressive and picky when checking credit scores and references; only rent to people with high FICO scores, spotless references, etc.
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