
8 January 2013 | 0 replies
The moral of my rant is that it's never the investment, its always the investor.

27 January 2013 | 20 replies
Im not the moral's police but if she has not been paying the mortgage what did she think was going to happen?

19 January 2013 | 13 replies
We market our properties for the price we feel they will sell for and not what may or may not be morally correct, this is a business.

24 March 2013 | 7 replies
@ aaronjunck thank you the moral support!

12 March 2015 | 19 replies
They could be sued or prosecuted, or both.2) "Wholesalers" putting themselves in a position to either lose money or fail to close.3) The moral difficulty of causing the sellers to lose other buyers who could close, if the "wholesaler" is unable to close.
4 February 2013 | 11 replies
I own a business in a small strip mall with 5 other storefronts. My landlord has been having some serious financial issues, and had stopped paying the mortgage and taxes last year. The bank holding the mortgage exer...

2 February 2013 | 26 replies
Of course I must say I am not that close to this guy and know for a fact he isnt the most moral of characters.

28 May 2013 | 6 replies
So moral of my story is that you should be able to still qualify for financing on an investment property if you remain in you field of work and are in a good position financially.

25 March 2013 | 29 replies
Self-policing is great in theory, but if ones moral compass points to "due ME" instead of "due north", they likely wont get it until their actions come around to bite them in the "due south"!

25 March 2013 | 17 replies
There is a moral issue here: this would not be YOUR problem, since it’s the seller’s name on the mortgage.