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nostradamus
Participanthave you the sales numbers?
nostradamus
Participanthave you the sales numbers?
nostradamus
Participanthave you the sales numbers?
nostradamus
Participantmazdaspeed 3, grand touring… zippy!!! The money you save in the “depreciation” of one car vs. another is more than spent on the cost of maintenance, this coming from my friends who own the bmw’s. Japanese cars are the cheapest to maintain (and need less maintenance to boot).
Now on to the “the right time to buy depends on each person” topic. I do not agree. I think the right time to buy is at or after the bottom. Why? Say you buy a $500k house in a decent neighborhood of working professionals. Later the house is worth $300k. As old neighbors move out and new ones move in, you go from a neighborhood of above-average-wage professionals to a ‘hood of junkies and gangstas. OK that’s an exaggeration, but you get my point. It happened to me: in this bubble my neighbors went from engineers, doctors, dentists, and teachers to burger flippers, retail sales clerks, and so on. I’m no snob but there has been an increase of unsavory behavior in my neighborhood.
nostradamus
Participantmazdaspeed 3, grand touring… zippy!!! The money you save in the “depreciation” of one car vs. another is more than spent on the cost of maintenance, this coming from my friends who own the bmw’s. Japanese cars are the cheapest to maintain (and need less maintenance to boot).
Now on to the “the right time to buy depends on each person” topic. I do not agree. I think the right time to buy is at or after the bottom. Why? Say you buy a $500k house in a decent neighborhood of working professionals. Later the house is worth $300k. As old neighbors move out and new ones move in, you go from a neighborhood of above-average-wage professionals to a ‘hood of junkies and gangstas. OK that’s an exaggeration, but you get my point. It happened to me: in this bubble my neighbors went from engineers, doctors, dentists, and teachers to burger flippers, retail sales clerks, and so on. I’m no snob but there has been an increase of unsavory behavior in my neighborhood.
nostradamus
Participantmazdaspeed 3, grand touring… zippy!!! The money you save in the “depreciation” of one car vs. another is more than spent on the cost of maintenance, this coming from my friends who own the bmw’s. Japanese cars are the cheapest to maintain (and need less maintenance to boot).
Now on to the “the right time to buy depends on each person” topic. I do not agree. I think the right time to buy is at or after the bottom. Why? Say you buy a $500k house in a decent neighborhood of working professionals. Later the house is worth $300k. As old neighbors move out and new ones move in, you go from a neighborhood of above-average-wage professionals to a ‘hood of junkies and gangstas. OK that’s an exaggeration, but you get my point. It happened to me: in this bubble my neighbors went from engineers, doctors, dentists, and teachers to burger flippers, retail sales clerks, and so on. I’m no snob but there has been an increase of unsavory behavior in my neighborhood.
nostradamus
Participantmazdaspeed 3, grand touring… zippy!!! The money you save in the “depreciation” of one car vs. another is more than spent on the cost of maintenance, this coming from my friends who own the bmw’s. Japanese cars are the cheapest to maintain (and need less maintenance to boot).
Now on to the “the right time to buy depends on each person” topic. I do not agree. I think the right time to buy is at or after the bottom. Why? Say you buy a $500k house in a decent neighborhood of working professionals. Later the house is worth $300k. As old neighbors move out and new ones move in, you go from a neighborhood of above-average-wage professionals to a ‘hood of junkies and gangstas. OK that’s an exaggeration, but you get my point. It happened to me: in this bubble my neighbors went from engineers, doctors, dentists, and teachers to burger flippers, retail sales clerks, and so on. I’m no snob but there has been an increase of unsavory behavior in my neighborhood.
nostradamus
Participantmazdaspeed 3, grand touring… zippy!!! The money you save in the “depreciation” of one car vs. another is more than spent on the cost of maintenance, this coming from my friends who own the bmw’s. Japanese cars are the cheapest to maintain (and need less maintenance to boot).
Now on to the “the right time to buy depends on each person” topic. I do not agree. I think the right time to buy is at or after the bottom. Why? Say you buy a $500k house in a decent neighborhood of working professionals. Later the house is worth $300k. As old neighbors move out and new ones move in, you go from a neighborhood of above-average-wage professionals to a ‘hood of junkies and gangstas. OK that’s an exaggeration, but you get my point. It happened to me: in this bubble my neighbors went from engineers, doctors, dentists, and teachers to burger flippers, retail sales clerks, and so on. I’m no snob but there has been an increase of unsavory behavior in my neighborhood.
nostradamus
ParticipantI don’t think things have changed. You’re hearing these stories more and more because news is able to spread rapidly and globally like never before. While I hate to see all the terrible things happening, I believe it’s a good thing that they’re being reported more, mainly by internet news coverage. We can log in and see news from all over the world. Knowing what’s going on everyhwere should (I would hope) lead to a broader-minded view.
So to summarize, IMO nothing new is happenening, it’s just that news coverage has expanded.
nostradamus
ParticipantI don’t think things have changed. You’re hearing these stories more and more because news is able to spread rapidly and globally like never before. While I hate to see all the terrible things happening, I believe it’s a good thing that they’re being reported more, mainly by internet news coverage. We can log in and see news from all over the world. Knowing what’s going on everyhwere should (I would hope) lead to a broader-minded view.
So to summarize, IMO nothing new is happenening, it’s just that news coverage has expanded.
nostradamus
ParticipantI don’t think things have changed. You’re hearing these stories more and more because news is able to spread rapidly and globally like never before. While I hate to see all the terrible things happening, I believe it’s a good thing that they’re being reported more, mainly by internet news coverage. We can log in and see news from all over the world. Knowing what’s going on everyhwere should (I would hope) lead to a broader-minded view.
So to summarize, IMO nothing new is happenening, it’s just that news coverage has expanded.
nostradamus
ParticipantI don’t think things have changed. You’re hearing these stories more and more because news is able to spread rapidly and globally like never before. While I hate to see all the terrible things happening, I believe it’s a good thing that they’re being reported more, mainly by internet news coverage. We can log in and see news from all over the world. Knowing what’s going on everyhwere should (I would hope) lead to a broader-minded view.
So to summarize, IMO nothing new is happenening, it’s just that news coverage has expanded.
nostradamus
ParticipantI don’t think things have changed. You’re hearing these stories more and more because news is able to spread rapidly and globally like never before. While I hate to see all the terrible things happening, I believe it’s a good thing that they’re being reported more, mainly by internet news coverage. We can log in and see news from all over the world. Knowing what’s going on everyhwere should (I would hope) lead to a broader-minded view.
So to summarize, IMO nothing new is happenening, it’s just that news coverage has expanded.
nostradamus
ParticipantOver here in the US of A, we’re being screwed twice:
1. By dropping rates the dollar is devaluated causing an inflationary recession.
2. With threats of bailouts they are keeping home prices artificially high, thereby reducing further the things we can afford (mainly, a home) which compounds the affects of the recession.
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