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Just wait until they start taking money out their 401ks and IRAs after a few years due to inflation/medical bills. Tens of millions will all do it. What goes up because of people putting money away...
Illinois pension debt is 270%, the worst in the nation, worse than California. 20% of Illinois budget goes to pensions as of today, right now.
I guess I'm wrong:
https://www.onetonline.org/link/summary/15-2011.00
That website is awesome - now you know where the HR flunkies get their materials. Have your kid check it out - it's great for building resumes.
stereotomy says
I guess I'm wrong:
https://www.onetonline.org/link/summary/15-2011.00
That website is awesome - now you know where the HR flunkies get their materials. Have your kid check it out - it's great for building resumes.
THANK YOU. I did forward the link. You are right, this site is a good resource for HR flunkies.
Also, he got an offer to intern as an aspiring with an insurance company yesterday. Going to interview with a very top level investment company soon!
Just wait until they start taking money out their 401ks and IRAs after a few years due to inflation/medical bills. Tens of millions will all do it. What goes up because of people putting money away...
I listened to a senior brag that he had 7 knee surgeries and didn't pay a dime out of pocket. Yeah, go home boomer.
mell says
I listened to a senior brag that he had 7 knee surgeries and didn't pay a dime out of pocket. Yeah, go home boomer.
He can't, he has a bum knee. Might need that free medical transportation.
Speaking of houses, I hope AD is okay after that hurricane blew through.
creating one of the most unaffordable housing markets in a generation.
It's always been unaffordable. Mortgages used to only be 7 years
Back in the 1980's my grandma told me they got their Long Island house during the Great Depression on a 7 year mortgage.
Who is the Replacement Coalition?
Sure leftists want more voters, and the usual suspects hate goys and whitey... but its more than that, why did it take off so aggressively after 2020?
Because the housing market rests on sand! Haitians don't do real work, they cost thousands a month... but what they do if you give them the money is they occupy housing. Then they'll displace the whites and producitve young people who have to bid up the housing that's left.
The core demographic of replacement migration, the people who have infinite time and money and would have resisted this to the point of bombings if it happened in the 70s, are all boomers who are willing to allow it just so long as their home price doesn't collapse and their retirement plans with it.
American children are being ethnically cleansed because boomers can't accept the house they bought for 50k is actually just worth 50k because they didn't have enough kids to make property values go up naturally.
They want their cruises and 800k in medical expenses that add negative 2 weeks to their life, and they'll gladly let their granddaughters be raped and eaten by Haitians to not have to face the fact they saved nothing and can't afford them.
2000 bombs went off in the US in 1972. The boomers are perfectly capable of resisting government policies they don't like up to and including violence... they just don't want the replacement to stop, otherwise their reversed mortgaged "million dollar" home is actually worth 50k and about 150k underwater.
Here Come the Vacant Homes: New Listings Jump when they Normally Drop in September, Active Listings Pile up, Listing Prices Drop below 2 Years Ago. Buyers on Strike, Prices too High
realize you're going to be like the guy who found the Meteorite in Creep Show.
Westside, not even that close to the ocean.
Blackrock and the others stopped buying many quarters ago.
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https://finance.yahoo.com/news/pimco-kiesel-called-housing-top-160339396.html?source=patrick.net
Bond manager Mark Kiesel sold his California home in 2006, when he presciently predicted the housing bubble would pop. He bought again in 2012, after U.S. prices fell more than 30% and found a floor.
Now, after a record surge in prices, Kiesel says the time to sell is once again at hand.