
4 September 2013 | 3 replies
Maybe this is just a plague of human nature, but it’s very prevalent in my industry and in real estate investing in general.Here are just two examples.

6 January 2013 | 9 replies
Doing so, you'll lose, so long as guests are human. :)Tenancy is determined locally, here if they have furniture there, they are not guests, if they hand clothing, more than a traveler might have, they may be a tenant.

10 December 2013 | 0 replies
I am an avid outdoors-man so house hunting, fishing for clients and riding the slippery slopes of human relations just seems like an extension of my passions [ hunter, fisherman, skier, gatherer].

1 June 2013 | 9 replies
Once you know they're living like human beings, you don't have to visit more than once or twice a year.

17 January 2011 | 16 replies
While that's good in some ways because it can make someone more savvy, it can also make someone very jaded about human beings in general.

14 November 2015 | 4 replies
I guess we can get a little burned out on the human aspect and the responsibility involved in saving/rendering personal investments in property.

14 January 2017 | 76 replies
Really tragic, he was in his early 20s, a college kid and one of the kindest humans you would ever have met.

1 May 2017 | 15 replies
If you have a local Habitat for Humanity store, check them out for glass replacements.Gail

3 November 2019 | 7 replies
Instead of her trying to communicate with B about the lingering laundry (like a normal & civil human being), she then texts me she will do her laundry off-site and deduct the cost from next month's rent.

26 June 2017 | 13 replies
I have known him for 7 years and he is a decent human being.