From the picture you've been painting you seem to be doing generally alright. Sure, maybe a 600k house is a little out of your range but you seem to be financially secure with a nice emergency fund and decent savings. You mentioned you have disposable income and you're able to go out to eat whenever you want which is really nice. — BitconnectCarlos
I understand you want the house but you know the mortgage on that thing is going to be a constant stressor and much more than what you're paying now for the land — BitconnectCarlos
I live in a 1 bedroom apartment so I figure we probably live in similarly-sized areas and I'm honestly perfectly happy with mine. I think even if I had a partner 700 square feet is fine for me. — BitconnectCarlos
It's just hard to me to try to sympathize with you when you're able to go out to eat whenever you want. — BitconnectCarlos
I accidently ended up watching some CNN today. An analyst pointed out that a high percentage of Bernie supporters don't remember anything about the Cold War. They remember 911, the 2008 crisis, Obama and Trump, but nothing about the Berlin Wall or anything like that.
I think that probably is part of the divide. It's a different set of fears. — frank
That's fair, but all of that is minor compared to '16. Sanders was a relatively unknown candidate at the beginning, came out of nowhere, and so they didn't quite know how to handle him. They thought they could just sweep him aside without much backlash. They were obviously wrong. — Xtrix
It's four years later and almost everyone knows what happened. You have Trump tweeting about it at this point. And Sanders is now the clear frontrunner, so there's no excuse of "Well Hillary won fair and square, the so-called Revolution didn't show up!" and so forth. It's very different -- this time, the DNC is aware that everyone is watching closely and will be livid if there are any shenanigans. The media is slightly better at covering it as well this time around, as they can't ignore Sanders' numbers. They aren't stupid, they must see this. — Xtrix
You could be right, in the end. But I both think and hope that you're wrong. — Xtrix
I tried to mortgage right now it would be yeah, which is why I need to save a ton of money for a huge downpayment in order to make it manageable. I basically have to pre-pay-off over half the house in order for “buying” (mortgaging) to not delay the day I have something paid off even longer than renting + saving already will take. — Pfhorrest
I don't fully follow your numbers. You save 75% of your income — Hanover
This points to either (1) low income and fear of a high mortgage — Hanover
(2) unrealistically financially conservative. — Hanover
(3) credit problems — Hanover
or (4) residing in a very affluent unaffordable area. You seem to suggest it's 4, but that you're in a trailer suggests otherwise (sorry, but true). What area are you from? — Hanover
It might also be 2, based upon your statement that you think the goal of buying is to outright own. The goal of buying is to accumulate equity and hence wealth, as well as to get tax benefits, regardless of whether you eventually pay off the mortgage. — Hanover
And the point of complaint isn’t that a specific price point of house is out of my reach, but that ANY house available for purchase (not a MH on rented land) in a very very broad area is out of my reach, and consequently out of reach of almost everybody else in that area, who mostly do barely scrape by check to check.
If I tried to mortgage right now it would be yeah, which is why I need to save a ton of money for a huge downpayment in order to make it manageable. I basically have to pre-pay-off over half the house in order for “buying” (mortgaging) to not delay the day I have something paid off even longer than renting + saving already will take.
Take a look at his position on climate change and the policies enacted under his administration. How his administration isn't a unique existential threat for this alone, I really don't understand.
— Xtrix
I am looking, and I do not understand how his "position on climate change" the "policies enacted under his administration" are an "existential threat". Can you explain? — Nobeernolife
I think he has a chance to win Trump. I hope that finally the Dems can pick a good candidate, not a bad candidate like Hillary.I'm impressed by the Bernie-mania right now. — fishfry
If you are saying that the DNC won't be able to screw him because it would be too obvious, I respectfully stand by my cynicism. But I am definitely impressed by the post-Nevada vibe in the country. Latinos and African-Americans came out for Bernie Sanders, a 68 year old Jewish guy from a virtually all-white state. It's something to behold. It's what this country's all about. — fishfry
That's right: As I call her, She Who Must Not Be Indicted: Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Dick Morris thinks that this is exactly the plan. So if I'm cynical about the lengths the Dem establishment will go to in order to stop Bernie ... I'm not alone. — fishfry
I will say this is great entertainment. Suddenly there's excitement on the Dem side. Liz destroying Bloomie so that Bernie can surge. Could that be part of a plan too? Maybe she's hoping to be his Veep. It would be a great ticket. Not one I'd vote for, but it would be a hell of an interesting election. — fishfry
And once again for the 5th time, i agree with you that an absolute free market has never existed. You would really like to twist that notion wouldn't you. — christian2017
Just curious, what's your solution to this problem? Should homeowners not be allowed to decide which price to sell at? — BitconnectCarlos
I think you're viewing it wrong. I want to show you a podcast a successful real estate investor sent me. The goal isn't to pay off the mortgage ASAP and therefore have no more payments (which even then isn't true you'll always have payments.) But seriously that money could be invested in much, much better places than in a house.
The podcast that was sent to me was "Get Rich Education: With Keith Weinhold" it's an apple podcast it's #6 "Here's why you aren't financially free" and it directly addresses this question of financially free vs debt-free. — BitconnectCarlos
And once again for the 5th time, i agree with you that an absolute free market has never existed. You would really like to twist that notion wouldn't you.
— christian2017
I never said "absolute." Not once. So who's twisting things?
If you want to argue a relativity of freedom of the markets, located on some technical notion of "spectrum," you're welcome to. But that's completely irrelevant.
The fact remains our economy is a mixed one, with massive state intervention on all levels. Again, this is a fact.
It's on a spectrum too. As are you, apparently. — Xtrix
rent and interest which create a pressure away from center (pushing the rich richer and the poor poorer) in proportion to the relative scarcity — Pfhorrest
So in the places where lots of people live, their biggest economic factor is necessarily scarce, so people in those places more readily face the failures of our capitalist economic system and call for policies ameliorating them. — Pfhorrest
Latinos and African-Americans came out for Bernie Sanders, a 68 year old Jewish guy
— fishfry
ahem, 78. The difference might matter. — Wayfarer
I think he has a chance to win Trump. I hope that finally the Dems can pick a good candidate, not a bad candidate like Hillary. — ssu
If Bernie wins Trump, I think he will be like Lopez Obrador. Mexico hasn’t gone the way of Venezuela, even if the President is a leftist. And likely won’t the US either, even if the GOP will portray a Sanders ”regime” putting the US on the road to Venezuela like socialism. — ssu
If you are saying that the DNC won't be able to screw him because it would be too obvious, I respectfully stand by my cynicism. But I am definitely impressed by the post-Nevada vibe in the country. Latinos and African-Americans came out for Bernie Sanders, a 68 year old Jewish guy from a virtually all-white state. It's something to behold. It's what this country's all about.
— fishfry
Needless to say I agree, except with the cynicism. I'm more optimistic in that case...or maybe more "hopeful." Time will tell. — Xtrix
Dick Morris thinks that this is exactly the plan. So if I'm cynical about the lengths the Dem establishment will go to in order to stop Bernie ... I'm not alone.
— fishfry
Now here I really disagree. This is wild speculation and I see no evidence for it. It's true that Bloomberg is throwing a lot of money around, but that it's part of a conspiracy to elect Hillary Clinton? Come on. — Xtrix
Not one you'd vote for? Given the alternative and the importance of this election? — Xtrix
That's mind boggling. — Xtrix
I'd vote for Bloomberg/Clinton over Trump. — Xtrix
One believes in climate change, the other doesn't. That's enough of a reason right there. — Xtrix
To argue "Well, climate change would exist without Trump" is, at best, childish to the point of embarrassment. — Xtrix
First off, Xtrix didn't say that, he said this particular administration exacerbates the problem of global warming due to its policies. Second, I reacted to Nobeernolife claim that doing everything in his power wouldn't make a difference. So in short: whut? — Benkei
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