October 20, 20222 yr 1 hour ago, vikas83 said: Currently evicting one right now. Total PITA. It's a business in a mall we own, not a person. Before everyone has a stroke. Business is business. I've had to evict a tenant before (only once) and it sucked. I was lucky after that and had the same family for the next 11 years I owned the house before selling.
October 20, 20222 yr 8 minutes ago, vikas83 said: Currently evicting one right now. Total PITA. It's a business in a mall we own, not a person. Before everyone has a stroke. My dad was a commercial developer and dabbled in some residential stuff. I get it. Evictions blow.
October 20, 20222 yr 1 hour ago, Bacarty2 said: I don't know what the answer is, but I know that the first step to finding one is admitting that there's a problem.
October 20, 20222 yr 1 hour ago, vikas83 said: Currently evicting one right now. Total PITA. It's a business in a mall we own, not a person. Before everyone has a stroke. Not as if we care either way
October 21, 20222 yr 1 hour ago, TEW said: This is the Bay Area in one screenshot : It's important that we have strict permitting processes for buildings such as this to ensure public heath is not compromised. Meanwhile, also in San Francisco...
October 21, 20222 yr Biden hails ‘largest ever decline in the federal deficit' On Oct. 21, President Biden celebrated the $1.4 trillion drop in the federal deficit seen in 2022, the largest one-year decline in U.S. history. President Biden on Friday touted recent figures showing the federal budget deficit fell by $1.4 trillion in fiscal 2022 from the prior year’s levels as Democrats work to fend off Republican attacks on the economy and inflation ahead of the midterm elections. Biden boasted the decline as "the largest one-year drop in American history” in remarks to reporters on Friday. "Let me repeat that. The largest ever decline to the federal deficit,” he said. "Let me be clear. This record deficit reduction includes the cost of my student loan plan and everything else we’re paying for.” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen also marked the numbers as "further evidence of our historic economic recovery” on Friday, shortly after her office released data showing the deficit reached $1.375 trillion in fiscal 2022, which ended last month. The Biden administration said the figure was $40 billion less than forecasted in Biden’s 2023 budget and half of the fiscal 2021 deficit, which reached $2.8 trillion, the second largest in history. The new reporting also found that, as a percentage of gross domestic product, the fiscal 2022 deficit "was 6.8 percentage points lower than in the previous year.” "The President’s economic plan is focused on growing our economy from the bottom up and the middle out,” Shalanda Young, director of the Office of Management and Budget, said in a statement. "Under his leadership, more Americans are working today than at any point in our country’s history, our economy has added more than 10 million jobs, manufacturing is booming, and we cut last year’s deficit in half.” However, budget hawks and conservatives have seized on the news, sounding a different note by taking aim at Democratic pandemic-related relief like the American Rescue Plan and the Biden administration’s recent student loan forgiveness plan that they’ve panned as costly amid rising inflation. "We borrowed $1.4 TRILLION last year. That is not an accomplishment — it’s a reminder of how precarious our fiscal situation remains,” Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, said in a statement. "The entirety of the decline in the deficit between 2021 and 2022 can be attributed to the expiration of temporary COVID relief, not due to a renewed era of fiscal responsibility,” she said, while estimating the "deficit would have been almost $400 billion lower had the Biden Administration not decided to enact an inflationary, costly, and regressive student debt cancellation plan in August.” The news on Friday comes weeks after Biden signed a sprawling climate, health care and tax bill, dubbed the Inflation Reduction Act, into law. Democrats have touted the plan, a key piece of the president’s agenda, as a tool to fight inflation by putting billions toward deficit reduction. And while some experts agree the plan could be a step in the right direction to getting the country’s finances on track, many have downplayed the impact the plan would have on rising costs. The press conference comes as Republicans have been hammering Democrats on the economy to win over voters upset about rising prices weeks before the 2022 midterm elections. At the same time, Democratic leadership has acknowledged the party has room to improve in its messaging on inflation, as recent polling shows Republicans gaining the upper hand in key races. During the press conference on Friday, Biden noted that "the polls have been all over the place” but expressed optimism that Democrats will see "one more shift back to our side [in] the closing days.” "We’re starting to see some of the good news on the economy. Gas prices are down sharply in 46 of the 50 states because of what I’ve been doing. We’re moving in the right direction,” Biden said, before going after Republicans for "mega MAGA trickle down” policies. "If Republicans get their way the difference is going to soar, the tax burden is going to fall on the middle class and Republicans are working really hard,” the president said, while taking aim at GOP-backed proposals in areas like taxes and Social Security.
October 21, 20222 yr So basically, vikas is telling us that this guy was correct and we're all wrong ...
October 21, 20222 yr LOL. Martin tried to get me to invest. I passed because he seemed insane. Couple friends I know got very involved. What he did wasn’t illegal - the whole opportunity exists because the Orphan Drug Act is poorly written. As always, the fault lies with those making the rules because they are too stupid to recognize consequences.
October 21, 20222 yr 10 hours ago, TEW said: This is the Bay Area in one screenshot : China can build and destroy entire ghost cities before this gets built, embarrassing
October 21, 20222 yr 2 hours ago, jsdarkstar said: Biden hails ‘largest ever decline in the federal deficit' On Oct. 21, President Biden celebrated the $1.4 trillion drop in the federal deficit seen in 2022, the largest one-year decline in U.S. history. President Biden on Friday touted recent figures showing the federal budget deficit fell by $1.4 trillion in fiscal 2022 from the prior year’s levels as Democrats work to fend off Republican attacks on the economy and inflation ahead of the midterm elections. Biden boasted the decline as "the largest one-year drop in American history” in remarks to reporters on Friday. "Let me repeat that. The largest ever decline to the federal deficit,” he said. "Let me be clear. This record deficit reduction includes the cost of my student loan plan and everything else we’re paying for.” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen also marked the numbers as "further evidence of our historic economic recovery” on Friday, shortly after her office released data showing the deficit reached $1.375 trillion in fiscal 2022, which ended last month. The Biden administration said the figure was $40 billion less than forecasted in Biden’s 2023 budget and half of the fiscal 2021 deficit, which reached $2.8 trillion, the second largest in history. The new reporting also found that, as a percentage of gross domestic product, the fiscal 2022 deficit "was 6.8 percentage points lower than in the previous year.” "The President’s economic plan is focused on growing our economy from the bottom up and the middle out,” Shalanda Young, director of the Office of Management and Budget, said in a statement. "Under his leadership, more Americans are working today than at any point in our country’s history, our economy has added more than 10 million jobs, manufacturing is booming, and we cut last year’s deficit in half.” However, budget hawks and conservatives have seized on the news, sounding a different note by taking aim at Democratic pandemic-related relief like the American Rescue Plan and the Biden administration’s recent student loan forgiveness plan that they’ve panned as costly amid rising inflation. "We borrowed $1.4 TRILLION last year. That is not an accomplishment — it’s a reminder of how precarious our fiscal situation remains,” Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, said in a statement. "The entirety of the decline in the deficit between 2021 and 2022 can be attributed to the expiration of temporary COVID relief, not due to a renewed era of fiscal responsibility,” she said, while estimating the "deficit would have been almost $400 billion lower had the Biden Administration not decided to enact an inflationary, costly, and regressive student debt cancellation plan in August.” The news on Friday comes weeks after Biden signed a sprawling climate, health care and tax bill, dubbed the Inflation Reduction Act, into law. Democrats have touted the plan, a key piece of the president’s agenda, as a tool to fight inflation by putting billions toward deficit reduction. And while some experts agree the plan could be a step in the right direction to getting the country’s finances on track, many have downplayed the impact the plan would have on rising costs. The press conference comes as Republicans have been hammering Democrats on the economy to win over voters upset about rising prices weeks before the 2022 midterm elections. At the same time, Democratic leadership has acknowledged the party has room to improve in its messaging on inflation, as recent polling shows Republicans gaining the upper hand in key races. During the press conference on Friday, Biden noted that "the polls have been all over the place” but expressed optimism that Democrats will see "one more shift back to our side [in] the closing days.” "We’re starting to see some of the good news on the economy. Gas prices are down sharply in 46 of the 50 states because of what I’ve been doing. We’re moving in the right direction,” Biden said, before going after Republicans for "mega MAGA trickle down” policies. "If Republicans get their way the difference is going to soar, the tax burden is going to fall on the middle class and Republicans are working really hard,” the president said, while taking aim at GOP-backed proposals in areas like taxes and Social Security. Good one
October 22, 20222 yr Q How serious is the administration considering a ban on U.S. petroleum products? MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, everything is on the table. I don’t have anything right now to preview. Clearly, our focus today is to make sure that we deliver on the President’s promises to continue to lower gas prices for the American people. But again, I don’t have anything to preview at this time.
October 22, 20222 yr 13 minutes ago, The_Omega said: Source? https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-10-04/white-house-seeks-gasoline-export-limit-study-amid-price-fears
October 22, 20222 yr 7 hours ago, Tnt4philly said: Source? https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-10-04/white-house-seeks-gasoline-export-limit-study-amid-price-fears https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/press-briefings/2022/10/19/press-briefing-by-press-secretary-karine-jean-pierre-october-19-2022/
October 24, 20222 yr This looks like an ideal economy ....... As Bloomberg noted this week, "The US has just 25 days of diesel supply, the lowest since 2008, according to the Energy Information Administration. At the same time, the four-week rolling average of distillates supplied, a proxy for demand, rose to its highest seasonal level since 2007.
October 24, 20222 yr Quote The US Northeast is so short on heating oil that the fuel used to power home furnaces is being rationed even before the start of winter. Some wholesalers in Connecticut are putting retailers on allocation, meaning they can only get a limited amount of fuel based on availability, according to Chris Herb, president of the Connecticut Energy Marketers Association, which represents around 600 family-owned retailers in the state. These retailers must in turn ration their customers.
October 24, 20222 yr 3 hours ago, DEagle7 said: Wtf happened in Turkey and Argentina? The Turkish central bank is controlled by politicians. They need to raise interest rates but Erdogan won’t allow it, and they are currently cutting rates. Argentina is just doing very typical Argentinian things.
October 24, 20222 yr Diesel around here is up to $6 a gallon, which effects the price of EVERYTHING whether you personally use diesel fuel or not. I can't imagine filling a HHO tank right now.
October 24, 20222 yr 3 hours ago, DEagle7 said: Wtf happened in Turkey and Argentina? Clearly they elected Biden President there too. Duh
October 25, 20222 yr 8 hours ago, lynched1 said: it was a democrat that finally ripped off that band-aid and all we heard were complaints about withdrawing too quickly. follow here for more: https://twitter.com/ConSelfOwns
October 26, 20222 yr On 10/24/2022 at 4:41 PM, Gannan said: Clearly they elected Biden President there too. Duh Nah just been doing biden things for alot longer
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