Forum Replies Created
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AuthorPosts
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UCGal
ParticipantAre you talking about homeowners insurance or a home warranty?
Homeowners insurance covers the house structure, etc… and protects against fire etc.
Home warranty can cover some of the major systems – if they fail – within a specific time period.
UCGal
ParticipantAre you talking about homeowners insurance or a home warranty?
Homeowners insurance covers the house structure, etc… and protects against fire etc.
Home warranty can cover some of the major systems – if they fail – within a specific time period.
UCGal
ParticipantPublic database diving works unless it’s held in an obscurely named trust or LLC.
Look up the property on sdlookup or redfin and get the parcel number (aka as APN number)
then go to the property tax records and plug in that parcel number.
https://www.sdctreastax.com/ebpp3/(a3spbh55kvymwy55i2vsrh55)/Start.aspx
UCGal
ParticipantPublic database diving works unless it’s held in an obscurely named trust or LLC.
Look up the property on sdlookup or redfin and get the parcel number (aka as APN number)
then go to the property tax records and plug in that parcel number.
https://www.sdctreastax.com/ebpp3/(a3spbh55kvymwy55i2vsrh55)/Start.aspx
UCGal
ParticipantPublic database diving works unless it’s held in an obscurely named trust or LLC.
Look up the property on sdlookup or redfin and get the parcel number (aka as APN number)
then go to the property tax records and plug in that parcel number.
https://www.sdctreastax.com/ebpp3/(a3spbh55kvymwy55i2vsrh55)/Start.aspx
UCGal
ParticipantPublic database diving works unless it’s held in an obscurely named trust or LLC.
Look up the property on sdlookup or redfin and get the parcel number (aka as APN number)
then go to the property tax records and plug in that parcel number.
https://www.sdctreastax.com/ebpp3/(a3spbh55kvymwy55i2vsrh55)/Start.aspx
UCGal
ParticipantPublic database diving works unless it’s held in an obscurely named trust or LLC.
Look up the property on sdlookup or redfin and get the parcel number (aka as APN number)
then go to the property tax records and plug in that parcel number.
https://www.sdctreastax.com/ebpp3/(a3spbh55kvymwy55i2vsrh55)/Start.aspx
UCGal
Participant[quote=paramount][quote=CA renter][quote=paramount][quote=CA renter]
We won’t even get into the details of the taxpayer-funded physical, legal, and social infrastructure that enables everyone else to focus on work instead of having to focus on survival. [/quote]
Apparently you don’t work in the private sector.[/quote]
I’ve worked in both the public and private sectors, and currently manage our investments (don’t work for anyone else). How about you? What is your experience in these sectors, and what is your frame of reference?[/quote]
My frame of reference is survival, and as a private sector employee I know plenty about that. Over the last 2-1/2 years I *survived* about 15 rounds of layoffs. That’s my frame of reference.[/quote]
Paramount:
Like you, I’ve survived a series of deep cuts/layoffs for my private sector employer going back almost a decade. My employer has “leveraged their synergies” to “unlease their core competancy” which is laying people off. All while paying the CEO(s) handsomely.In that same timeframe they froze the employee pension. Then they underfunded that frozen pension. (Just got the latest statement – it’s funded at 76% of the value needed.)
Rather than being jealous of public employees, because they still have pensions, I am jealous of what I used to have… an employer who funded their pension, grew their business and paid themselves a reasonable compensation. Now I have a CEO who’s paid enough to land in the most highly compensated CEO lists, all while losing money, laying off employees, freezing the pension, and underfunding the frozen pension. I miss the old private sector days.
I think targeting your anger towards public union employees is missing the point. The public employee worker bees are not the problem. Until 10-15 years ago private employers offered similar benefits to private sector, non-union, employees.
UCGal
Participant[quote=paramount][quote=CA renter][quote=paramount][quote=CA renter]
We won’t even get into the details of the taxpayer-funded physical, legal, and social infrastructure that enables everyone else to focus on work instead of having to focus on survival. [/quote]
Apparently you don’t work in the private sector.[/quote]
I’ve worked in both the public and private sectors, and currently manage our investments (don’t work for anyone else). How about you? What is your experience in these sectors, and what is your frame of reference?[/quote]
My frame of reference is survival, and as a private sector employee I know plenty about that. Over the last 2-1/2 years I *survived* about 15 rounds of layoffs. That’s my frame of reference.[/quote]
Paramount:
Like you, I’ve survived a series of deep cuts/layoffs for my private sector employer going back almost a decade. My employer has “leveraged their synergies” to “unlease their core competancy” which is laying people off. All while paying the CEO(s) handsomely.In that same timeframe they froze the employee pension. Then they underfunded that frozen pension. (Just got the latest statement – it’s funded at 76% of the value needed.)
Rather than being jealous of public employees, because they still have pensions, I am jealous of what I used to have… an employer who funded their pension, grew their business and paid themselves a reasonable compensation. Now I have a CEO who’s paid enough to land in the most highly compensated CEO lists, all while losing money, laying off employees, freezing the pension, and underfunding the frozen pension. I miss the old private sector days.
I think targeting your anger towards public union employees is missing the point. The public employee worker bees are not the problem. Until 10-15 years ago private employers offered similar benefits to private sector, non-union, employees.
UCGal
Participant[quote=paramount][quote=CA renter][quote=paramount][quote=CA renter]
We won’t even get into the details of the taxpayer-funded physical, legal, and social infrastructure that enables everyone else to focus on work instead of having to focus on survival. [/quote]
Apparently you don’t work in the private sector.[/quote]
I’ve worked in both the public and private sectors, and currently manage our investments (don’t work for anyone else). How about you? What is your experience in these sectors, and what is your frame of reference?[/quote]
My frame of reference is survival, and as a private sector employee I know plenty about that. Over the last 2-1/2 years I *survived* about 15 rounds of layoffs. That’s my frame of reference.[/quote]
Paramount:
Like you, I’ve survived a series of deep cuts/layoffs for my private sector employer going back almost a decade. My employer has “leveraged their synergies” to “unlease their core competancy” which is laying people off. All while paying the CEO(s) handsomely.In that same timeframe they froze the employee pension. Then they underfunded that frozen pension. (Just got the latest statement – it’s funded at 76% of the value needed.)
Rather than being jealous of public employees, because they still have pensions, I am jealous of what I used to have… an employer who funded their pension, grew their business and paid themselves a reasonable compensation. Now I have a CEO who’s paid enough to land in the most highly compensated CEO lists, all while losing money, laying off employees, freezing the pension, and underfunding the frozen pension. I miss the old private sector days.
I think targeting your anger towards public union employees is missing the point. The public employee worker bees are not the problem. Until 10-15 years ago private employers offered similar benefits to private sector, non-union, employees.
UCGal
Participant[quote=paramount][quote=CA renter][quote=paramount][quote=CA renter]
We won’t even get into the details of the taxpayer-funded physical, legal, and social infrastructure that enables everyone else to focus on work instead of having to focus on survival. [/quote]
Apparently you don’t work in the private sector.[/quote]
I’ve worked in both the public and private sectors, and currently manage our investments (don’t work for anyone else). How about you? What is your experience in these sectors, and what is your frame of reference?[/quote]
My frame of reference is survival, and as a private sector employee I know plenty about that. Over the last 2-1/2 years I *survived* about 15 rounds of layoffs. That’s my frame of reference.[/quote]
Paramount:
Like you, I’ve survived a series of deep cuts/layoffs for my private sector employer going back almost a decade. My employer has “leveraged their synergies” to “unlease their core competancy” which is laying people off. All while paying the CEO(s) handsomely.In that same timeframe they froze the employee pension. Then they underfunded that frozen pension. (Just got the latest statement – it’s funded at 76% of the value needed.)
Rather than being jealous of public employees, because they still have pensions, I am jealous of what I used to have… an employer who funded their pension, grew their business and paid themselves a reasonable compensation. Now I have a CEO who’s paid enough to land in the most highly compensated CEO lists, all while losing money, laying off employees, freezing the pension, and underfunding the frozen pension. I miss the old private sector days.
I think targeting your anger towards public union employees is missing the point. The public employee worker bees are not the problem. Until 10-15 years ago private employers offered similar benefits to private sector, non-union, employees.
UCGal
Participant[quote=paramount][quote=CA renter][quote=paramount][quote=CA renter]
We won’t even get into the details of the taxpayer-funded physical, legal, and social infrastructure that enables everyone else to focus on work instead of having to focus on survival. [/quote]
Apparently you don’t work in the private sector.[/quote]
I’ve worked in both the public and private sectors, and currently manage our investments (don’t work for anyone else). How about you? What is your experience in these sectors, and what is your frame of reference?[/quote]
My frame of reference is survival, and as a private sector employee I know plenty about that. Over the last 2-1/2 years I *survived* about 15 rounds of layoffs. That’s my frame of reference.[/quote]
Paramount:
Like you, I’ve survived a series of deep cuts/layoffs for my private sector employer going back almost a decade. My employer has “leveraged their synergies” to “unlease their core competancy” which is laying people off. All while paying the CEO(s) handsomely.In that same timeframe they froze the employee pension. Then they underfunded that frozen pension. (Just got the latest statement – it’s funded at 76% of the value needed.)
Rather than being jealous of public employees, because they still have pensions, I am jealous of what I used to have… an employer who funded their pension, grew their business and paid themselves a reasonable compensation. Now I have a CEO who’s paid enough to land in the most highly compensated CEO lists, all while losing money, laying off employees, freezing the pension, and underfunding the frozen pension. I miss the old private sector days.
I think targeting your anger towards public union employees is missing the point. The public employee worker bees are not the problem. Until 10-15 years ago private employers offered similar benefits to private sector, non-union, employees.
UCGal
Participant[quote=threadkiller]Didn’t read the original post-sorry! But in yesterday’s paper it showed the deficit for the last 40 years and the only time it wasn’t skyrocketing was during Clinton’s reign. Now was that the GOP congress or was it Clinton, sure that could be debated. Had Obama carried through on his promise to end the war (war’s?) in the middle east I’m sure his watch would not look as bad as it does. Unfortunately he did not. So now we as a country will have to pay for not only Bush’s mistakes but also Obama’s. Because of outsourcing,overseas production of goods, and foreign wars I for one do not see the light at the end of the tunnel, hopefully I am just blind.[/quote]
I agree with this. I don’t see a light at the end of the tunnel, either.I read the OP until about the 3rd or 4th inaccuracy. It’s one thing to have a politically slanted rant – but you lose me when you mess with the facts.
UCGal
Participant[quote=threadkiller]Didn’t read the original post-sorry! But in yesterday’s paper it showed the deficit for the last 40 years and the only time it wasn’t skyrocketing was during Clinton’s reign. Now was that the GOP congress or was it Clinton, sure that could be debated. Had Obama carried through on his promise to end the war (war’s?) in the middle east I’m sure his watch would not look as bad as it does. Unfortunately he did not. So now we as a country will have to pay for not only Bush’s mistakes but also Obama’s. Because of outsourcing,overseas production of goods, and foreign wars I for one do not see the light at the end of the tunnel, hopefully I am just blind.[/quote]
I agree with this. I don’t see a light at the end of the tunnel, either.I read the OP until about the 3rd or 4th inaccuracy. It’s one thing to have a politically slanted rant – but you lose me when you mess with the facts.
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