
15 January 2013 | 1 reply
I have registered with Active Rain, a while ago, and was paying around $49 pm, after 2 months I asked to cancel, they ignored my request and after 7 months I discovered that they were still charging my card.

16 January 2013 | 11 replies
J Scott Also was meaning to ask you, when the contractor says $36 per linear ft for laminate counter tops, is this quoted figure ignoring counter depth?

8 September 2015 | 25 replies
At the micro level....Food, clothing and shelter being the main three required anywhere.IMO, in hard times, such as the Great Depression, people will "make do", clothing and textiles are products that can be ignored by most consumers, items owned can be repaired, traded and fabricated from other items, like Scarlet's gown from drapes.

3 February 2013 | 1 reply
Seller can choose to look at, ignore, respond to, counter or accept any offer he wants at any time (though there are procedural items his agent should take care of when counter-offering more than one offer at a time).Seller doesn't have any responsibility to look at, respond, counter or accept your offer for any reason.

3 February 2015 | 8 replies
@Elizabeth Read Why couldn't the appraiser just ignore the extra 600 square feet that was unpermitted?

7 February 2013 | 9 replies
If the first applicants have ignored you for 3 days, they may have moved on and no longer be interested.

11 February 2013 | 19 replies
I've kind of ignored the folks that advertise on tv and such because it always seems to have some annoying element to me.

19 February 2013 | 12 replies
What I've learned at my young age of 22 years of age is that if you just ask a top investor in your area they will more than likely help you at no cost...successful people tend to want to help/encourage people our ages because they wished they had those resources when they were this age...you'll do great, just get out there and meet people and ignore the nay sayers.

30 May 2013 | 35 replies
Too ignorant to realize they wont be making a doctors salary to help do that, and how much that debt really adds up to be.

11 February 2013 | 4 replies
So, if you ignored the fact you're contributing your time for free, the apparent returns would be much better.