Brian Detlefsen
Section 8 - PRO's & CON's List
6 May 2017 | 15 replies
Tenant paid on time but was the typical section 8 stereotype.
Aidan Mulligan
Pros and Cons of Section 8?
6 May 2019 | 11 replies
Of course this tenant ended up being the stereotypical welfare recipient.
Susan O.
New Rent Controls are being pushed through Local California Gov
7 September 2017 | 46 replies
Those people end up being the stereotype that all are painted with.
Kyle J.
Are you wealthy?
4 January 2018 | 57 replies
The goal for me, I would like to replace my and my wife’s income (perpetually) so we can both pursue other interests/hobbies and always be there for our children.
Jacob Prelle
How to invest in apts without a high income?
22 February 2018 | 51 replies
FYI - end goals are to have 10k relatively passive income a month - in perpetuity.
Karen Margrave
People are fleeing California, are you?
26 January 2019 | 311 replies
There's always been this stereotype of people being stuck up (especially in Santa Monica, where I live).
Jason Baldwin
Crime Rate - How high is too high?
1 September 2018 | 39 replies
No, no, no, the local stereotype of the general area holds, the comments on the Internet from 10-15 years back stick around, and the local retirees and their families keep their mouths clammed shut.
Tonette Whitted
What are the pros and cons to Section 8? Pa
5 November 2018 | 10 replies
These tenants were the stereotypical welfare recipients.
Forrest Faulconer
Investment properties are great, but let's get PERSONAL.
1 December 2020 | 96 replies
But maybe I shouldn’t have said that and instead should just live in a perpetual state of self-loathing because the world is unfair.
Jamie Fankhauser
What book has helped you the most? and why?
10 February 2021 | 96 replies
They can barely afford to pay their mortgages and taxes there and live in perpetual fear that they'll have to downgrade or move their kids out of the school system they're in, an unthinkable loss of social status.As their kids grow, they unthinkingly strengthen then strong and weaken the weak, culminating in too many avoidable instances of weak, brittle, fearful young people of privilege who are unable to deal with any sort of real adversity and only really do anything when faced with the possibility that inaction might significantly damage their own precious social status, documented daily on Instagram, Facebook, etc.So in my private life of old friends and family, I find myself somewhat hemmed in by incredibly hard-working people who care a great deal about social status and constantly make utterly inane excuses about why they're all so damned broke as they drive massively depreciating cars and live in houses that are dumpster fires of various expenses.