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May 5, 2009 at 1:52 PM in reply to: 20 new homes to be bulldozed in Temecula (signaling a bottom:) #393316May 5, 2009 at 1:52 PM in reply to: 20 new homes to be bulldozed in Temecula (signaling a bottom:) #393573
Rt.66
ParticipantI just had to pay another visit to Temecula to get a little more intel. Driving around I noticed that there is a big area at 79/Butterfield graded for a housing tract that is now just a huge eye sore/weed farm.
Heading out of Town, I guess it would be east on 79, there is just endless square miles for TV to expand for decades.
There is a brand spankin new condo complex on Margarita near 79 that has a huge ugly crooked bent up gate blocking the entrance with some sort of Foreclosed signage going on. Total depression era scene. If I took a photo and told you it was Detroit you’d beleive it. The weeds are gettin big, maybe they’ll eventually cover it.
Lots of new CR buildings with a pretty empty look about them on 79.
The Mall expansion is pretty cool. However I did notice this time around that half the store fronts on the expansion are empty. And what’s the deal with that smell? Has anyone else smelled Tiajuana type odors there? Walking around you’d about get bowled over by a waft of pungent sewer smell off and on. Now before TVMOD gets all riled up, let me assure you that I am not trying to disparage the mall, just curious about that smell.
May 5, 2009 at 1:52 PM in reply to: 20 new homes to be bulldozed in Temecula (signaling a bottom:) #393784Rt.66
ParticipantI just had to pay another visit to Temecula to get a little more intel. Driving around I noticed that there is a big area at 79/Butterfield graded for a housing tract that is now just a huge eye sore/weed farm.
Heading out of Town, I guess it would be east on 79, there is just endless square miles for TV to expand for decades.
There is a brand spankin new condo complex on Margarita near 79 that has a huge ugly crooked bent up gate blocking the entrance with some sort of Foreclosed signage going on. Total depression era scene. If I took a photo and told you it was Detroit you’d beleive it. The weeds are gettin big, maybe they’ll eventually cover it.
Lots of new CR buildings with a pretty empty look about them on 79.
The Mall expansion is pretty cool. However I did notice this time around that half the store fronts on the expansion are empty. And what’s the deal with that smell? Has anyone else smelled Tiajuana type odors there? Walking around you’d about get bowled over by a waft of pungent sewer smell off and on. Now before TVMOD gets all riled up, let me assure you that I am not trying to disparage the mall, just curious about that smell.
May 5, 2009 at 1:52 PM in reply to: 20 new homes to be bulldozed in Temecula (signaling a bottom:) #393837Rt.66
ParticipantI just had to pay another visit to Temecula to get a little more intel. Driving around I noticed that there is a big area at 79/Butterfield graded for a housing tract that is now just a huge eye sore/weed farm.
Heading out of Town, I guess it would be east on 79, there is just endless square miles for TV to expand for decades.
There is a brand spankin new condo complex on Margarita near 79 that has a huge ugly crooked bent up gate blocking the entrance with some sort of Foreclosed signage going on. Total depression era scene. If I took a photo and told you it was Detroit you’d beleive it. The weeds are gettin big, maybe they’ll eventually cover it.
Lots of new CR buildings with a pretty empty look about them on 79.
The Mall expansion is pretty cool. However I did notice this time around that half the store fronts on the expansion are empty. And what’s the deal with that smell? Has anyone else smelled Tiajuana type odors there? Walking around you’d about get bowled over by a waft of pungent sewer smell off and on. Now before TVMOD gets all riled up, let me assure you that I am not trying to disparage the mall, just curious about that smell.
May 5, 2009 at 1:52 PM in reply to: 20 new homes to be bulldozed in Temecula (signaling a bottom:) #393977Rt.66
ParticipantI just had to pay another visit to Temecula to get a little more intel. Driving around I noticed that there is a big area at 79/Butterfield graded for a housing tract that is now just a huge eye sore/weed farm.
Heading out of Town, I guess it would be east on 79, there is just endless square miles for TV to expand for decades.
There is a brand spankin new condo complex on Margarita near 79 that has a huge ugly crooked bent up gate blocking the entrance with some sort of Foreclosed signage going on. Total depression era scene. If I took a photo and told you it was Detroit you’d beleive it. The weeds are gettin big, maybe they’ll eventually cover it.
Lots of new CR buildings with a pretty empty look about them on 79.
The Mall expansion is pretty cool. However I did notice this time around that half the store fronts on the expansion are empty. And what’s the deal with that smell? Has anyone else smelled Tiajuana type odors there? Walking around you’d about get bowled over by a waft of pungent sewer smell off and on. Now before TVMOD gets all riled up, let me assure you that I am not trying to disparage the mall, just curious about that smell.
Rt.66
ParticipantGood point, we need some perp walks on that front.
Rt.66
ParticipantGood point, we need some perp walks on that front.
Rt.66
ParticipantGood point, we need some perp walks on that front.
Rt.66
ParticipantGood point, we need some perp walks on that front.
Rt.66
ParticipantGood point, we need some perp walks on that front.
Rt.66
ParticipantThe shift of manufacturing to other countries is what I see as the biggest problem. How can a country flourish if they do not make “stuff”? We have become the world’s buyers, we buy a majority of our stuff, sending our jobs and money to other countries.
We tried the whole bubble mania thing and simply selling each other houses for higher and higher prices. That’s not sustainable work. Making the shit you use on a day to day basis, is sustainable work.
I have been lambasted for supporting US automakers many times recently and not just on this board.
I look at US jobs as something we all should band together and fight for. Especially well paying manufacturing jobs with good benefits. I think its odd that Europeans will block roads and protest to keep US automaker factories open in their countries, yet so many of us here seem to want to see them fail.
By the time most people “get it” it will be too late. I think we should bring fairness into “free” trade even if it means risking a trade war to bring manufacturing back to the states. Better a trade war than a military war to get us out of this mess.
“May 4 (Bloomberg) — Post-recession America may be saddled with high unemployment even after good times finally return.
Hundreds of thousands of jobs have vanished forever in industries such as auto manufacturing and financial services. Millions of people who were fired or laid off will find it harder to get hired again and for years may have to accept lower earnings than they enjoyed before the slump.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aOhkusQ9LifQ&refer=home
Rt.66
ParticipantThe shift of manufacturing to other countries is what I see as the biggest problem. How can a country flourish if they do not make “stuff”? We have become the world’s buyers, we buy a majority of our stuff, sending our jobs and money to other countries.
We tried the whole bubble mania thing and simply selling each other houses for higher and higher prices. That’s not sustainable work. Making the shit you use on a day to day basis, is sustainable work.
I have been lambasted for supporting US automakers many times recently and not just on this board.
I look at US jobs as something we all should band together and fight for. Especially well paying manufacturing jobs with good benefits. I think its odd that Europeans will block roads and protest to keep US automaker factories open in their countries, yet so many of us here seem to want to see them fail.
By the time most people “get it” it will be too late. I think we should bring fairness into “free” trade even if it means risking a trade war to bring manufacturing back to the states. Better a trade war than a military war to get us out of this mess.
“May 4 (Bloomberg) — Post-recession America may be saddled with high unemployment even after good times finally return.
Hundreds of thousands of jobs have vanished forever in industries such as auto manufacturing and financial services. Millions of people who were fired or laid off will find it harder to get hired again and for years may have to accept lower earnings than they enjoyed before the slump.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aOhkusQ9LifQ&refer=home
Rt.66
ParticipantThe shift of manufacturing to other countries is what I see as the biggest problem. How can a country flourish if they do not make “stuff”? We have become the world’s buyers, we buy a majority of our stuff, sending our jobs and money to other countries.
We tried the whole bubble mania thing and simply selling each other houses for higher and higher prices. That’s not sustainable work. Making the shit you use on a day to day basis, is sustainable work.
I have been lambasted for supporting US automakers many times recently and not just on this board.
I look at US jobs as something we all should band together and fight for. Especially well paying manufacturing jobs with good benefits. I think its odd that Europeans will block roads and protest to keep US automaker factories open in their countries, yet so many of us here seem to want to see them fail.
By the time most people “get it” it will be too late. I think we should bring fairness into “free” trade even if it means risking a trade war to bring manufacturing back to the states. Better a trade war than a military war to get us out of this mess.
“May 4 (Bloomberg) — Post-recession America may be saddled with high unemployment even after good times finally return.
Hundreds of thousands of jobs have vanished forever in industries such as auto manufacturing and financial services. Millions of people who were fired or laid off will find it harder to get hired again and for years may have to accept lower earnings than they enjoyed before the slump.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aOhkusQ9LifQ&refer=home
Rt.66
ParticipantThe shift of manufacturing to other countries is what I see as the biggest problem. How can a country flourish if they do not make “stuff”? We have become the world’s buyers, we buy a majority of our stuff, sending our jobs and money to other countries.
We tried the whole bubble mania thing and simply selling each other houses for higher and higher prices. That’s not sustainable work. Making the shit you use on a day to day basis, is sustainable work.
I have been lambasted for supporting US automakers many times recently and not just on this board.
I look at US jobs as something we all should band together and fight for. Especially well paying manufacturing jobs with good benefits. I think its odd that Europeans will block roads and protest to keep US automaker factories open in their countries, yet so many of us here seem to want to see them fail.
By the time most people “get it” it will be too late. I think we should bring fairness into “free” trade even if it means risking a trade war to bring manufacturing back to the states. Better a trade war than a military war to get us out of this mess.
“May 4 (Bloomberg) — Post-recession America may be saddled with high unemployment even after good times finally return.
Hundreds of thousands of jobs have vanished forever in industries such as auto manufacturing and financial services. Millions of people who were fired or laid off will find it harder to get hired again and for years may have to accept lower earnings than they enjoyed before the slump.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aOhkusQ9LifQ&refer=home
Rt.66
ParticipantThe shift of manufacturing to other countries is what I see as the biggest problem. How can a country flourish if they do not make “stuff”? We have become the world’s buyers, we buy a majority of our stuff, sending our jobs and money to other countries.
We tried the whole bubble mania thing and simply selling each other houses for higher and higher prices. That’s not sustainable work. Making the shit you use on a day to day basis, is sustainable work.
I have been lambasted for supporting US automakers many times recently and not just on this board.
I look at US jobs as something we all should band together and fight for. Especially well paying manufacturing jobs with good benefits. I think its odd that Europeans will block roads and protest to keep US automaker factories open in their countries, yet so many of us here seem to want to see them fail.
By the time most people “get it” it will be too late. I think we should bring fairness into “free” trade even if it means risking a trade war to bring manufacturing back to the states. Better a trade war than a military war to get us out of this mess.
“May 4 (Bloomberg) — Post-recession America may be saddled with high unemployment even after good times finally return.
Hundreds of thousands of jobs have vanished forever in industries such as auto manufacturing and financial services. Millions of people who were fired or laid off will find it harder to get hired again and for years may have to accept lower earnings than they enjoyed before the slump.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aOhkusQ9LifQ&refer=home
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