
13 July 2009 | 8 replies
For people really concerned about socialism in this country, I think a huge issue should be the illegal spying by our government on our citizens:http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-wiretap11-2009jul11,0,1159123.storyThanks W. for all you did to try to destroy this country from the inside out.

19 July 2009 | 24 replies
The Clinton News Network people and msnbc people are more oriented to the reports on " how wonderful socialism will be", and that is not what real estate people want to hear!!!

20 July 2009 | 177 replies
I see myself as social liberal and fiscal conservative...

16 September 2010 | 80 replies
probably for social bugs.Her study is theater with a BACKUP of computer tech.

4 October 2010 | 25 replies
The guy is a little bit fringe (he thinks we should do away with all public organizations, including the FBI, CIA, Social Security, Welfare, Public Schools, etc), but about as fiscally conservative as they come.

7 September 2010 | 13 replies
I was mentioning to another BP member today that my ideal Presidential candidate would be someone who was socially progressive, very fiscally conservative and who didn't push religion in any way, shape or form.

15 September 2010 | 5 replies
I am not a social butterfly but my partner is better at socializing, networking and asking questions.

15 October 2010 | 5 replies
But because those shows are produced in Canada, and most places they show may be in Canada, too, I was wondering if any Canadian LL/tenant here can enlighten me if that is standard practice "across the border".

29 September 2010 | 7 replies
I think of it as combination of a social network and simple blogging platform for real estate professionals.

22 December 2010 | 36 replies
Kotlikoff says: “The IMF is saying that, to close this fiscal gap [by taxation], would require an immediate and permanent doubling of our personal income taxes, our corporate taxes and all other federal taxes.“America’s fiscal gap is enormous – so massive that closing it appears impossible without immediate and radical reforms to its health care, tax and Social Security systems – as well as military and other discretionary spending cuts.â€He cites earlier calculations by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) that concluded that the United States would need to increase tax revenue by 12 percentage points of GDP to bring revenue into line with spending commitments.