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Eliza Says:
> Long experience is not always perceived as expertise.
> An example would be a long-time environmental activist.
> Reliable expert or biased fanatic?
Anyone that self identifies as an “activist†is nuts and you can replace the word “activist†with “nut ballâ€.
Some examples (from both sides of the aisle) are:
“Animal Rights Nut Ballâ€
“Taxpayers Rights Nut Ballâ€
DinOR Says:
It’s time for the poster that observed it would simply be easier for the SacBee to advertise the homes that *aren’t* “for sale†to take a victory lap! Now who was that? SP? OO?
Well, half the time I don't remember what I said, but I don't believe that was me. May have been OO or stuckInBA or one of the other bon-mot'ers.
SP
I wonder what it would take to shift the perspective on Realtors?
For starters, the Main Street Media (TM) etc. should stop capitalizing the word Realtor (TM). It's a joke that they consider themselves a "profession" in the strict sense of the word.
From East Coast's Boston article link:
" We figure it is worth it for us to be house-poor."
What sane person wants to compete in a market with this mindset? Going into debt to build a new business in a act of hope and courage, but to fiscally enslave oneself to a consumer item is the worst of greed and folly.
Sheesh!
Well, being a Realtor â„¢ is a profession in the same sense that the oldest profession is...
Eliza Says:
Interesting to me that the media might view Realtors as experts and defer to them for that reason. I wonder what it would take to shift the perspective on Realtors?
Here are a few things that might work.
1. Recycle old lawyer jokes but with 'lawyer' replaced by 'realtor'
example: The doctors had given this old man only three more weeks to live, so he spent two weeks studying to become a realtor. When he finally got his license, a bimbo from the local tv station interviewed him:
"With only three weeks to live, why did you become a realtor? Was that always a dream or something?"
"Heck no," replied the old fart, "I hate realtors."
"Then why did you become one?" asked the bimbo.
"Ah, you see, I am about to die and you know what that means? One less realtor."
2. Recycle 'dumb blonde' jokes with 'dumb realtor' instead
example: The trouble with dumb realtor jokes is that realtors don't think they are funny, and everyone else doesn't think those are jokes.
3. Call them 'Used Home Salesman' in all your conversation and correspondence
SP
I'm messing with some files to see if I can speed up the site. If the site looks weird for a bit, not to worry...
Patrick
@SP
Those are actually awsome ideas!
The funny part is one in 50 people in CA is a Used Home Salesman™ so it would be sure to offend at every location.
It's nice to see some honest comments - completely devoid of spin - from a Realtor.
http://realtytimes.com/rtmcrcond/California~Tracy~martyhackworth
that prices are falling and inventory is way up.
...
Even homes that are pending are having an increasingly difficult time closing as buyers struggle to get a loan approval.
But there is no crash in Bay Area. Because Tracy is not in Bay Area. Any area that starts showing signs of crash will be removed from Bat Area.
Can the houses in Dublin (or any similar town nearby) maintain the 800K tag if you can get a similar house in Tracy for 400k ? This process is as (in)efficient as the bubble sort, but bubble up it will.
Yes it was fast ! I realized a mistake in tag, and before I could hit cancel, my post showed up.
In the above post, the missing part (and only this was supposed to be in bold)
was
It's no secret that prices are falling and inventory is way up. ...
Ok, all the natively hosted thread image files (the ones that point to Patrick.net, not other sites) are gone --even the ones from 2 years ago.
But there is no crash in Bay Area. Because Tracy is not in Bay Area. Any area that starts showing signs of crash will be removed from Bat Area.
That's so true. As inner Bay Area home prices have been forcing folks to move farther and farther out, people started calling areas well outside the Bay Area proper the "Bay Area." I remember 15 years ago thinking Livermore and the Tri Valley was a completely different part of the state, and now most clearly consider it Bay Area (it gets regular coverage on the local news - that's my rough guage). Fairfield, Vacaville - same story. Antioch, Oakley - same story. Morgan Hill, Gilroy - same story.
OK, I got the images back. Please let me know if other problems.
Patrick
FYI: The 'ol Mortgage Lender Implode-O-Meter just hit 91. At this rate, we ought to break 100 by end of July.
Ahh... those 'gloomy-Gus' Brits. Always with the Doom-'n-Gloom and baseless hand-wringing. Why, these guys would probably see a cloud in every silver lining.
"The United States faces a severe credit crunch as mounting losses on risky forms of debt catch up with the banks and force them to curb lending and call in existing loans, according to a report by Lombard Street Research.
The group said the fast-moving crisis at two Bear Stearns hedge funds had exposed the underlying rot in the US sub-prime mortgage market, and the vast nexus of collateralised debt obligations known as CDOs.
"Excess liquidity in the global system will be slashed," it said. "Banks' capital is about to be decimated, which will require calling in a swathe of loans. This is going to aggravate the US hard landing."
"We don't know what the value of this debt is because the investment banks shut down the market in a cover-up so that nobody would know. There is $750bn of dubious paper out there in the form of CDOs held by banks that have a total capitalisation of $850bn."
US property writer Paul Muolo described the Bearn Stearns crisis as the “subprime Chernobylâ€, saying the bank had created a “cone of silenceâ€.
Don't these wild-eyed Limeys know that the damage is "limited" only to second-lien subprime loans (that no one owns) and that the Fed/banksters have declared the situation well "contained"?
Nothing to see here, folks, move along...
HARM: And what exactly do the British know about banking and finance? ;)
Back in the 50's and early 60's my aunt and uncle owned a farm in Oakdale. When we would visit from Palo Alto or Campbell, it was almost a whole day's drive out there. Nowadays there are knuckleheads that commute from Oakdale to Silicon Valley.
Bakersfield's David Crisp, a Casey Serin South, continues to implode:
http://www.bis.org/publ/arpdf/ar2007e.htm
BIS warns of Great Depression dangers from credit spree
The Bank for International Settlements, the world's most prestigious financial body, has warned that years of loose monetary policy has fuelled a dangerous credit bubble, leaving the global economy more vulnerable to another 1930s-style slump than generally understood.
...
In a thinly-veiled rebuke to the US Federal Reserve, the BIS said central banks were starting to doubt the wisdom of letting asset bubbles build up on the assumption that they could safely be "cleaned up" afterwards - which was more or less the strategy pursued by former Fed chief Alan Greenspan after the dotcom bust.
It said this approach had failed in the US in 1930 and in Japan in 1991 because excess debt and investment built up in the boom years had suffocating effects.
While cutting interest rates in such a crisis may help, it has the effect of transferring wealth from creditors to debtors and "sowing the seeds for more serious problems further ahead."
The world waits to see what Ben Bernanke will do to "clean up" after Alan Greenspan.
Mass delete of spam underway. Please let me know if there is an unusual amount of weirdness...
Patrick
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Source
Hmmm... let's see. The Bakersfield Californian just laid off 12.5% of it's staff due to lost RE ad revenue alone (though it is still running lots of RE ads, just not as many as before). So... basically, this means that during the bubble, an even larger % of their total payroll was directly tied to RE revenue --perhaps 25%, 35%, 50%?? Who knows?
Any possibility of that great a share of your revenue, uh, "influencing" your journalistic bias or editorial policy?
Naaah --that's just crazy conspiracy talk!
Discuss, enjoy...
HARM
#housing