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SanDiegoDaveParticipant
San Diego County Apartment Association (http://www.sdcaa.com) is a good place to start. They link to a place called InfoLink for screening.
http://www.moco-inc.com/infolink/SanDiegoDaveParticipantSan Diego County Apartment Association (http://www.sdcaa.com) is a good place to start. They link to a place called InfoLink for screening.
http://www.moco-inc.com/infolink/SanDiegoDaveParticipantSan Diego County Apartment Association (http://www.sdcaa.com) is a good place to start. They link to a place called InfoLink for screening.
http://www.moco-inc.com/infolink/SanDiegoDaveParticipantSan Diego County Apartment Association (http://www.sdcaa.com) is a good place to start. They link to a place called InfoLink for screening.
http://www.moco-inc.com/infolink/SanDiegoDaveParticipantJoining the discussion late, but wanted to add my $0.02.
I think the most American thing you can do when making purchasing decision is to base it on your own personal system of values and economics. That’s really what America is about: self-determination. Decide what’s best for you and your family rather than allowing group think tactics to guilt you into something one way or the other, or a government that forces you to do it a certain way.
If I do my own research and determine that foreign made goods are suitable for my needs and at a price I want, it’s more American of me to make that purchase than it is to sit there and feel guilty or pressured by people who may not share my same values. Likewise, I would not presume to tell the person buying the American-made equivalent of that product that they’re wasting their money or buying for the “wrong reasons”. I don’t know what their reasons are, and even if I did, who am I to judge that?
SanDiegoDaveParticipantJoining the discussion late, but wanted to add my $0.02.
I think the most American thing you can do when making purchasing decision is to base it on your own personal system of values and economics. That’s really what America is about: self-determination. Decide what’s best for you and your family rather than allowing group think tactics to guilt you into something one way or the other, or a government that forces you to do it a certain way.
If I do my own research and determine that foreign made goods are suitable for my needs and at a price I want, it’s more American of me to make that purchase than it is to sit there and feel guilty or pressured by people who may not share my same values. Likewise, I would not presume to tell the person buying the American-made equivalent of that product that they’re wasting their money or buying for the “wrong reasons”. I don’t know what their reasons are, and even if I did, who am I to judge that?
SanDiegoDaveParticipantJoining the discussion late, but wanted to add my $0.02.
I think the most American thing you can do when making purchasing decision is to base it on your own personal system of values and economics. That’s really what America is about: self-determination. Decide what’s best for you and your family rather than allowing group think tactics to guilt you into something one way or the other, or a government that forces you to do it a certain way.
If I do my own research and determine that foreign made goods are suitable for my needs and at a price I want, it’s more American of me to make that purchase than it is to sit there and feel guilty or pressured by people who may not share my same values. Likewise, I would not presume to tell the person buying the American-made equivalent of that product that they’re wasting their money or buying for the “wrong reasons”. I don’t know what their reasons are, and even if I did, who am I to judge that?
SanDiegoDaveParticipantJoining the discussion late, but wanted to add my $0.02.
I think the most American thing you can do when making purchasing decision is to base it on your own personal system of values and economics. That’s really what America is about: self-determination. Decide what’s best for you and your family rather than allowing group think tactics to guilt you into something one way or the other, or a government that forces you to do it a certain way.
If I do my own research and determine that foreign made goods are suitable for my needs and at a price I want, it’s more American of me to make that purchase than it is to sit there and feel guilty or pressured by people who may not share my same values. Likewise, I would not presume to tell the person buying the American-made equivalent of that product that they’re wasting their money or buying for the “wrong reasons”. I don’t know what their reasons are, and even if I did, who am I to judge that?
SanDiegoDaveParticipantJoining the discussion late, but wanted to add my $0.02.
I think the most American thing you can do when making purchasing decision is to base it on your own personal system of values and economics. That’s really what America is about: self-determination. Decide what’s best for you and your family rather than allowing group think tactics to guilt you into something one way or the other, or a government that forces you to do it a certain way.
If I do my own research and determine that foreign made goods are suitable for my needs and at a price I want, it’s more American of me to make that purchase than it is to sit there and feel guilty or pressured by people who may not share my same values. Likewise, I would not presume to tell the person buying the American-made equivalent of that product that they’re wasting their money or buying for the “wrong reasons”. I don’t know what their reasons are, and even if I did, who am I to judge that?
SanDiegoDaveParticipantThey’re only good in that sense until Post Office starts mucking up the definition of a “first class” letter. Trust me, at some point they’re going to drop the weight and size threshold on what constitutes First Class mail, crushing the value of Forever Stamps that were bought before the change.
The Post office is the only entity I have ever seen that raises its price in response to a lack of demand, and then wonders why demand drops even further.
SanDiegoDaveParticipantThey’re only good in that sense until Post Office starts mucking up the definition of a “first class” letter. Trust me, at some point they’re going to drop the weight and size threshold on what constitutes First Class mail, crushing the value of Forever Stamps that were bought before the change.
The Post office is the only entity I have ever seen that raises its price in response to a lack of demand, and then wonders why demand drops even further.
SanDiegoDaveParticipantThey’re only good in that sense until Post Office starts mucking up the definition of a “first class” letter. Trust me, at some point they’re going to drop the weight and size threshold on what constitutes First Class mail, crushing the value of Forever Stamps that were bought before the change.
The Post office is the only entity I have ever seen that raises its price in response to a lack of demand, and then wonders why demand drops even further.
SanDiegoDaveParticipantThey’re only good in that sense until Post Office starts mucking up the definition of a “first class” letter. Trust me, at some point they’re going to drop the weight and size threshold on what constitutes First Class mail, crushing the value of Forever Stamps that were bought before the change.
The Post office is the only entity I have ever seen that raises its price in response to a lack of demand, and then wonders why demand drops even further.
SanDiegoDaveParticipantThey’re only good in that sense until Post Office starts mucking up the definition of a “first class” letter. Trust me, at some point they’re going to drop the weight and size threshold on what constitutes First Class mail, crushing the value of Forever Stamps that were bought before the change.
The Post office is the only entity I have ever seen that raises its price in response to a lack of demand, and then wonders why demand drops even further.
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