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August 7, 2010 at 10:58 PM in reply to: File under Bizarre: “Housing Markets that Will Be Strongest by 2014” #587962
patb
Participant[quote=briansd1]bearishgurl, you always have great descriptions of different areas.
I know someone who used to live in Livonia, MI (not far from the University of Michigan). There are some good jobs there.
Prices dropped a lot in Michigan. I’m thinking that those hard-hit areas could become our own “emerging markets” as Bill Clinton put it.[/quote]
with emerging water systems
August 7, 2010 at 10:58 PM in reply to: File under Bizarre: “Housing Markets that Will Be Strongest by 2014” #588055patb
Participant[quote=briansd1]bearishgurl, you always have great descriptions of different areas.
I know someone who used to live in Livonia, MI (not far from the University of Michigan). There are some good jobs there.
Prices dropped a lot in Michigan. I’m thinking that those hard-hit areas could become our own “emerging markets” as Bill Clinton put it.[/quote]
with emerging water systems
August 7, 2010 at 10:58 PM in reply to: File under Bizarre: “Housing Markets that Will Be Strongest by 2014” #588592patb
Participant[quote=briansd1]bearishgurl, you always have great descriptions of different areas.
I know someone who used to live in Livonia, MI (not far from the University of Michigan). There are some good jobs there.
Prices dropped a lot in Michigan. I’m thinking that those hard-hit areas could become our own “emerging markets” as Bill Clinton put it.[/quote]
with emerging water systems
August 7, 2010 at 10:58 PM in reply to: File under Bizarre: “Housing Markets that Will Be Strongest by 2014” #588700patb
Participant[quote=briansd1]bearishgurl, you always have great descriptions of different areas.
I know someone who used to live in Livonia, MI (not far from the University of Michigan). There are some good jobs there.
Prices dropped a lot in Michigan. I’m thinking that those hard-hit areas could become our own “emerging markets” as Bill Clinton put it.[/quote]
with emerging water systems
August 7, 2010 at 10:58 PM in reply to: File under Bizarre: “Housing Markets that Will Be Strongest by 2014” #589009patb
Participant[quote=briansd1]bearishgurl, you always have great descriptions of different areas.
I know someone who used to live in Livonia, MI (not far from the University of Michigan). There are some good jobs there.
Prices dropped a lot in Michigan. I’m thinking that those hard-hit areas could become our own “emerging markets” as Bill Clinton put it.[/quote]
with emerging water systems
patb
ParticipantStocks going up and 10 year treasury rates going down must mean the guberment is printing money.
dangerous assumption
patb
ParticipantStocks going up and 10 year treasury rates going down must mean the guberment is printing money.
dangerous assumption
patb
ParticipantStocks going up and 10 year treasury rates going down must mean the guberment is printing money.
dangerous assumption
patb
ParticipantStocks going up and 10 year treasury rates going down must mean the guberment is printing money.
dangerous assumption
patb
ParticipantStocks going up and 10 year treasury rates going down must mean the guberment is printing money.
dangerous assumption
August 4, 2010 at 12:41 PM in reply to: Gone with the Globalization, that is the US Middle Class #586292patb
Participant[quote=sdrealtor]So most of the poor stay poor and most of the rich stay rich. My challenge is that wealth is not a finite thing. It grows over time. So even though the richest get richer, others can still get richer too even though they may hold a smaller share of the ever increasing pie. We live in the real world not on some graph with an income distribution. I still see people better off today than a generation or two ago.[/quote]
not really.
life expectancy is falling,
education/literacy is falling.
it takes 2 incomes to do what 1 income didAugust 4, 2010 at 12:41 PM in reply to: Gone with the Globalization, that is the US Middle Class #586385patb
Participant[quote=sdrealtor]So most of the poor stay poor and most of the rich stay rich. My challenge is that wealth is not a finite thing. It grows over time. So even though the richest get richer, others can still get richer too even though they may hold a smaller share of the ever increasing pie. We live in the real world not on some graph with an income distribution. I still see people better off today than a generation or two ago.[/quote]
not really.
life expectancy is falling,
education/literacy is falling.
it takes 2 incomes to do what 1 income didAugust 4, 2010 at 12:41 PM in reply to: Gone with the Globalization, that is the US Middle Class #586918patb
Participant[quote=sdrealtor]So most of the poor stay poor and most of the rich stay rich. My challenge is that wealth is not a finite thing. It grows over time. So even though the richest get richer, others can still get richer too even though they may hold a smaller share of the ever increasing pie. We live in the real world not on some graph with an income distribution. I still see people better off today than a generation or two ago.[/quote]
not really.
life expectancy is falling,
education/literacy is falling.
it takes 2 incomes to do what 1 income didAugust 4, 2010 at 12:41 PM in reply to: Gone with the Globalization, that is the US Middle Class #587026patb
Participant[quote=sdrealtor]So most of the poor stay poor and most of the rich stay rich. My challenge is that wealth is not a finite thing. It grows over time. So even though the richest get richer, others can still get richer too even though they may hold a smaller share of the ever increasing pie. We live in the real world not on some graph with an income distribution. I still see people better off today than a generation or two ago.[/quote]
not really.
life expectancy is falling,
education/literacy is falling.
it takes 2 incomes to do what 1 income did -
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