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Election '06


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2006 Nov 7, 4:45am   30,080 views  331 comments

by Randy H   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Election 2006 is underway. I'd like to ask for how people think the outcome will affect housing. But I know better, so ... have at it.

I do request that this thread remain free of name-calling. I reserve the right to delete any comment which takes the form of "all cheese is smelly". All opinions are welcome. Shouting and spitting are not.

And for the record, I am neither liberal nor conservative, republican nor democrat. I voted accordingly, which while satisfying emotionally, has the practical effect of doing nothing more other than getting me queued up for jury duty.

--Randy H

#housing

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24   DinOR   2006 Nov 7, 7:32am  

Borrowing fell by 1.2 bil in Sept. The biggest drop since April 1992 (the FED reports). Uh...... maybe we ARE screwed. I'd read that MEW YTD has been greater than for all of 2005. Lord just give me one last Xmas!

25   skibum   2006 Nov 7, 7:38am  

@DinOR,

C'mon, let's not be SOOO negative! Like ConfusedRealtwhore says, "Just wondering, with all the doom and gloom on the board, anybody notice the Melt UP in the stock market and the 4.4% unemployment rate?

Could it be that the economy isn’t imploding?" LIFE IS GOOD! (Unless you're currently a realtor).

26   Doug H   2006 Nov 7, 8:25am  

Forget what damage they will do to the housing market; what about the whole freakin' country?!

FIRE THEM ALL!

I've been a staunch Republican all my life and I've decided to sit this one out. I cannot, in good conscience, vote for either party. Before anyone goes off on "Don't vote; don't complain" lecture.....save it. You are wasting bandwidth.

This is one election where your only choice is the "evil of two lessers".

27   requiem   2006 Nov 7, 8:42am  

Being in California, I'm mostly watching the propositions and Congressional elections in other states. It also means that we still have a duty to go out and squash bad propositions, even if we don't like the candidates for elected positions.

28   skibum   2006 Nov 7, 8:59am  

If anyone has a chance to catch it, Market Place on NPR this evening has a piece on the horrible numbers put out by the HB's today and its potential impact on the economy. More MSM dissemination! In fact, this venue probably gets better play in bubble states, as bubble states probably = NPR listener-heavy states.

29   e   2006 Nov 7, 9:02am  

Personally, I feel that the current market effectively prices the middle-class out of owning a home in many areas. My parents could afford a middle-class home with a single working parent, I cannot. To be completely selfish about this, a policy that had as it’s working target that housing should be “affordable” (yes I know this is too loose on MANY levels) to own would have many long-term benefits despite short-term hardships to specific groups and areas.

I think there's a bigger question at play here - is government responsible that you have water, food, energy... or housing?

Some days I think so.

Some days I don't think so.

I guess I'm confused.

30   skibum   2006 Nov 7, 9:08am  

Some days I think so.

Some days I don’t think so.

I guess I’m confused.

@eburbed,

That makes you a confused renter, doesn't it?

31   StuckInBA   2006 Nov 7, 9:23am  

Skibum,

Now you are engaging in name-calling and violating threadmaster's rules. I request Randy to remove your comments towards eburbed.

32   astrid   2006 Nov 7, 9:23am  

Guliani is a scumbag. I'd much rather have a president Mike Bloomberg.

I'm not voting this year.

33   skibum   2006 Nov 7, 9:33am  

Now you are engaging in name-calling and violating threadmaster’s rules. I request Randy to remove your comments towards eburbed.

At least I'm not calling him a ... REALTOR (tm) ...

he he he

34   Peter P   2006 Nov 7, 9:36am  

Guliani is a scumbag. I’d much rather have a president Mike Bloomberg.

Bill Gates would be the best!

35   skibum   2006 Nov 7, 9:47am  

Speaking of Realtors (tm), looks like the johnny-come-lately types in their ranks (like ConfusedRealtor) are screwed:

http://money.cnn.com/2006/11/07/real_estate/brokers_experience/index.htm?postversion=2006110716

"Real estate: Babes in bear land"

Most Realtors haven't been in the business long enough to see anything but a boom market, and the current slump is new to all but a handful of industry veterans.

36   HARM   2006 Nov 7, 9:51am  

Great housing article just posted on CNN:

Real estate: Babes in bear land
Most Realtors haven't been in the business long enough to see anything but a boom market, and the current slump is new to all but a handful of industry veterans.

Just more than half of members of the National Association of Realtors (NAR) had four years or less of experience in a 2005 survey - which means they came into this year's real estate downturn knowing nothing but boom times.

...Home sales set record after record from 2001 through 2005, as prices rose to record levels as well. But the pace of sales is off 14 percent so far this year and the year-over-year change in existing home prices has fallen in the past two monthly reports from NAR.

That's the first time there has been a decline in that key price measure in 11 years - not even one in three Realtors today was around back then.

..."If you're able to make $100,000 selling a house rather than $50,000 everyone and their cousin wants to be a broker," he said. "All that demand to be brokers is caused by the fact that the commission structure is fixed. Commissions should be plummeting from 6 to 4 to 2 percent because it's not."

37   skibum   2006 Nov 7, 9:53am  

Hey HARM,

Looks like we both posted links to that article at about the same time. Great article, eh? Relatively non-NAR cheerleader-ish, although their commentary is from that REIC shill masquerading as an academic, Nicholas Restinas.

38   astrid   2006 Nov 7, 9:53am  

"why?"

exhibit 1: Bernard Kerik

exhibit 2: Guiliani Partners

exhibit 3: how he hooked up with the current missus

He's plenty corrupt. I prefer Spitzer or even Pataki over Guiliani.

39   skibum   2006 Nov 7, 9:56am  

@astrid,

I tend to agree about his (lack of) moral compass. He seems to me like an opportunist who happened to be at the right place at the right time (NYC, 9/11). I will say that he did appear to do a good job with reducing crime in NYC during his tenure, although I always wonder how much of that was secondary to a good overall (national) economy and its effect on reducing crime and general discontent during the 90's.

40   e   2006 Nov 7, 9:59am  

I will say that he did appear to do a good job with reducing crime in NYC during his tenure, although I always wonder how much of that was secondary to a good overall (national) economy and its effect on reducing crime and general discontent during the 90’s.

Right before September 11th though, Rudy's popularity was definitely on the wane. The series of police shootings/raping-with-a-broomstick really left a mark.

As a New York-American I found what Ray Nagin had to say (comparing Katrina to September 11th) offensive - but to some degree he was right. September 11th happened, and then it was over. New Orleans drowned.

Very mixed feelings.

41   skibum   2006 Nov 7, 10:00am  

I once asked her, “so it has been a booming market ever since, right?” She didn’t get my subtle dig, and actually took it as a compliment - as if I was actually saying she was personally responsible for the good times. Ye Olde Compleat Twit.

@SP,

Oh yeah, I do fondly recall your "Main Street Media" story from many threads back. That was a good one. God forbid she loses the Bimmer SUV.

42   e   2006 Nov 7, 10:03am  

He’s plenty corrupt. I prefer Spitzer or even Pataki over Guiliani.

Pataki only got his job because people wanted a change (Cuomo had been around too long) and Alfonse did a great job.

Pataki was always this bland kind of guy that only Upstate could like.

Rudy, on the other hand, is shady (his marital life is a great example) and the fact that he now stumps at Fundie places is also shady. But that shadiness is something to be respected. :)

43   astrid   2006 Nov 7, 10:05am  

eburbed,

Yes, and I would respect that shadiness more, but only if he was a mobster and not the ex-mayor of arguably the greatest city on Earth today.

44   FRIFY   2006 Nov 7, 10:09am  

Guliani is a scumbag. I’d much rather have a president Mike Bloomberg.

Respectfully disagree. NYC certainly cleaned up and attracted more investment under his leadership, although he managed to alienate a large chunk of the Black community. On 9/11, Guliani showed true leadership under fire. He didn't have the deer-in-the-headlights look of another important authority figure.

although I always wonder how much of that was secondary to a good overall (national) economy and its effect on reducing crime and general discontent during the 90’s

He busted the squeegie guys. That alone is enough to endorse him. ;-) The notion that small crimes lead to larger crimes, if not his, was at least put on the map by him.

Of course, if you extrapolate this policy to other nations, you'll probably be picking a lot of fights; it does sounds familiar...

45   OO   2006 Nov 7, 10:23am  

Democrats or GOPs are both scumbags. Nobody has a plan for whatever deep doo doo we are in. Most of the ads dollars are spent on demonizing the opponent rather than promoting one's plan, if he has any.

Nevertheless, Bush is the biggest idiot of them all. But I'd like to see Republicans retaining the current control so that Bush will have NOBODY to blame when Iraq eventually blows right up in his face. Also, I would like to see him keep spending like mad, because I don't have patience for a drawn-out slow-motion deflating, I want to see it crash hard.

Don't stop the cart right before it goes off the cliff, it is just going to prolong the pain trying to pull it back before it succumbs to the inevitable fate. Just run it into the ground spectacularly so that we all get it over with.

46   Bruce   2006 Nov 7, 10:45am  

OO,

While I understand your irritation, we're talking about suffering and death for a lot of people if the present administration's momentum isn't broken.

A bipartisan legislature is an ineffecient mechanism, to be sure, and I think most - or anyway some of us are under no delusions as to the dawning of a bright new day. But I take some comfort that the likes of Nancy Pelosi will be a part of our future and that K. Harris will not.

47   Different Sean   2006 Nov 7, 10:46am  

The Green Party here has a very good affordable housing policy, and they are attracting more and more of the vote each year -- around 10% now. They are attractive to voters for other reasons than housing tho -- and now the main parties are poaching their policies as global warming and drought seem to be more of a reality...

48   chuckleby   2006 Nov 7, 10:49am  

I voted today, but my expectations are always low. I think no politican (D or R) wants to address the large purple gorilla in the middle of the room, the housing bubble being but a facet: the ginormous public and private debt we seem to run the economy on. Let's just keep driving to the edge of the cliff instead.

49   Bruce   2006 Nov 7, 10:51am  

Oh, snap! Inefficient.

50   HARM   2006 Nov 7, 11:11am  

OO's point about Republicans maintaining control of Congress is not necessarily a bad one. I've read a few MSM (main-STREAM media ;-) ) op-eds that more-or-less argued the exact same thing.

Personally, I have to wonder why the Democrats would even WANT to win this one (with the possible exception of dispelling the perception that they can't win an election). If Dem's win control of the House and REIC-based economy (and foreign policy) implodes in our faces, they will share some of the blame. If they win control of both House & Senate, they might get ALL of the blame.

The general public doesn't have an inkling of even the basic root causes of the RE/credit bubble, so they will reflexively blame/punish whoever happens to be "in power" at the moment. So, if I were a Democrat (disclaimer: neither R or D), I would badly want to LOSE this puppy.

51   astrid   2006 Nov 7, 11:12am  

That's why I won't vote in this election.

52   HARM   2006 Nov 7, 11:13am  

"main street media"

@Different Sean,

What do you call those again?

53   FRIFY   2006 Nov 7, 11:22am  

I know most of you guys live on that other coast, but it’s Giuliani, not Guiliani, OK?

I originally used "Rudy" because I didn't know the correct spelling. ;-)

What's up with everyone wanting the country to go off a cliff? Expecting Jesus to arrive then to solve all of our problems?

If they win control of both House & Senate, they might get ALL of the blame.... So, if I were a Democrat (disclaimer: neither R or D), I would badly want to LOSE this puppy.

Have you thought that, maybe, they actually want to try to attempt to correct some of the royal screwups in fiscal and foreign policy that the Republicans have introduced? When a little boy starts a fire, you don't wait for the fire to get worse so that you can blame the boy; you put out the fire.

54   astrid   2006 Nov 7, 11:29am  

FRIFY,

I'd be just a tinge less enthused if I know that little boy's dad (who has an anger management problem) is going to come up and beat the shit out of me for "molesting" his son.

55   HARM   2006 Nov 7, 11:30am  

Have you thought that, maybe, they actually want to try to attempt to correct some of the royal screwups in fiscal and foreign policy that the Republicans have introduced?

Possibly, though to be fair to R's, most of the Dems are hardly blameless. How many Dems voted for Iraq? BK bill? Patriot Act? (hell, Adam Schiff (D) co-wrote the thing!) Opposed reasonable immigration control measures? Requested pork spending cuts? Didn't the speculator-friendly tax subsidies and of massive GSE expansion start under Clinton? (hint: the answer is "yes").

Oh, and on top of that, if the Dems get the brunt of the blame for the housing bubble implosion, they will be voted out during the next election and therefore powerless to "fix" anything.

56   astrid   2006 Nov 7, 11:35am  

GC,

Huh, since when was Bill Clinton accused of rape. Sexual harassment and indencent acts with a cigar was about the extent of his womanizing. And would you like to supply proof for what you're nudge nudge wink winking him for doing?

Any funny enough, the Clintons are still married and their daughter appears to be a very well adjusted young woman (and actually looking rather attractive now that her skin has cleared up). Meanwhile, how many GOP congress critters are on their third marriages? Dispite their profession of love for God and all that?

At least no prominent Democrat has been tied to going after underaged pages or giving WH press passes to manwhores...that's something in these dissolute times.

57   astrid   2006 Nov 7, 11:40am  

HARM,

The difference is that the Dems of the 1990s were trying new things - some of them didn't quite work out, but they were worth a shot. They lost power long before most of the hidden problems appeared and weren't in a position to fix the problems.

The GOP went in with impossible numbers and create enormous deficit spending under the guise of "responsible government" and somehow think things will turn out okay...?

The difference between Dems and GOP is like the difference between a normal person trying new things (and stumbling) and Casey Serin.

58   astrid   2006 Nov 7, 11:43am  

GC,

Yeah, an accuser so uncredible that it never left the GOP's lunatic fringe. Was not even touched by the Starr commission.

59   Different Sean   2006 Nov 7, 12:00pm  

“main street media”
@Different Sean,
What do you call those again?

Huh?

oh, eggcorns -- The Eggcorn Database -- I think that one's in there...

60   Sylvie   2006 Nov 7, 12:01pm  

Watching CNN looks like a good night for the Dems.

61   astrid   2006 Nov 7, 12:01pm  

I hope the GOP completely implodes in 2007, and the Dems die a quiet death 2009-2015. This country needs more logically organized parties.

62   Different Sean   2006 Nov 7, 12:05pm  

I think that one’s in there…

no, it's not -- this is our chance to make a meaningful contribution to lexicography... Drop in your Eggcorns

63   Sylvie   2006 Nov 7, 12:17pm  

At the very least if Dems sweep the abuses on Wall Street will be scrutinized more carefully. The investor community especially big corporation fear regulatory measures. Alot of scandal broke out this year HP, Major backdating of options (many Tech), oil. Somebody needs to take a big push broom to the floor and clean up the dirt and dust. Nothing wrong with capitalism as long as the playing field is honest.

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