Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
ltsddd
Participant[quote=outtamojo]Watch for signs this turns out to be a large enough conflict to affect world economy[/quote]
It’ll be interesting to see what kind of rage putin will unleash in response to the downed plane in egypt. I agree that us humans are stupid. We just can’t leave good enough alone.
ltsddd
Participantsupposedly one of the attackers was a Syrian “refugee” that came over via Greece just this past October. May be that’s just one bad apple.
ltsddd
Participantwhat would Karl Marx do? We all know what the disciples of chairman Mao did. Operations strike hard – quite effective.
ltsddd
ParticipantI would short Europe. Not sure if the problem could ever be fixed.
ltsddd
ParticipantWarning: Thread jacking
Close to half a mil, at $290/psf, for the privilege to live in a 3/2 in lemon grove (sigh). I’ll go out on a limb and say this – there’s a housing bubble out there in lemon grove.
ltsddd
Participant[quote=Jazzman]
I don’t recall any country in Europe putting a man on the moon, or becoming a super power for that matter, building a huge industrial military complex, or even producing so many great gymnasts. There was Europe’s colonial past, which even the US fought against. The KGB was very effective and was considered, at least by Mi6, to be a force to be reckoned with. My point, therefore, is about the human experience, the collective wisdom available to us, and how it shapes what we are today. It is not about who ultimately is “better”, however you measure that. It seems there is also a case to be made about cultural conditioning and how that limits our ability to tap into the collective wisdom.[/quote]How was all this benefited the general population? What was life like for the average citizen living behind the iron curtain?
ltsddd
Participant[quote=Rich Toscano]Harvey, I’m not talking about during the crisis, I’m talking about after the crisis. The easy money continued for Bernanke’s entire tenure, years after the risk of “economic collapse” had passed. That’s the period I’m talking about.[/quote]
Hindsight is always 20/20. How many folks knew or realized that the “economic collapse” had passed while it was happening? It’s a big economy that they tried to right, the bigger the ship the slower the turn.
ltsddd
Participantbtw., what’s the role of school cops? Is it even their job to intervene with a non-complying/stubborn student? It’s not a crime is it?
ltsddd
Participantltsddd
Participant2 Wrongs. Cop is just more wrong.
ltsddd
Participant[quote=ocrenter][quote=The-Shoveler]Meh,
Maybe closer to a 1989 feeling, we are no where near the situation of 2006.
You need crazy loan officers OKing every loan to anyone with a pulse, then you got to let that run a few years to get to 2006.[/quote]
what if the crazy loan officers are in China?[/quote]
…something like this?
Chinese investors lost $1.2 billion in the country’s wild west online lending industry
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/chinese-investors-lost-1-2-093727318.html
ltsddd
ParticipantWouldn’t buy the books.
Bernanke doesn’t get enough credit for preventing a more serious economic meltdown.
Greenspan doesn’t get enough blame for the mess he “dumped” on Bernanke.
…as for Yellen, I am not exactly sure what she’s been doing.
ltsddd
Participant[quote=spdrun]Good riddance. It’s a shame San Diego is playing along with their extortion, though.[/quote]
+1. Don’t care much for the Chargers’ owners. Their plan all along was to squeeze that piece of valuable land from the city…..as for putting in more high-density housing, man, that stretch along Friars is very, very congested as it is.
ltsddd
ParticipantAgree that this property is not in a great location. It’s actually is very close to SD’s version of “skid row”. Folks living in OB would know what I am talking about.
-
AuthorPosts
