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Biden's America


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14 minutes ago, Scarlet said:

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.vox.com/platform/amp/22338417/james-carville-democratic-party-biden-100-days

 

Carville pretty much nails it in this interview.  The democrats have no strategy and they constantly rub the average workaday Americans the wrong way.  Just speak truthfully, to the point without all the p.c. bulls#!t. Move to the center and you have a chance.  It's the economy, covid, and the border.  Show some semblance of addressing those issues then you have a chance to stay in power.  But they won't and the GQP will guide us into a bright future.  

Good interview. Thanks

 

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4 hours ago, Scarlet said:

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.vox.com/platform/amp/22338417/james-carville-democratic-party-biden-100-days

 

Carville pretty much nails it in this interview.  The democrats have no strategy and they constantly rub the average workaday Americans the wrong way.  Just speak truthfully, to the point without all the p.c. bulls#!t. Move to the center and you have a chance.  It's the economy, covid, and the border.  Show some semblance of addressing those issues then you have a chance to stay in power.  But they won't and the GQP will guide us into a bright future.  


James Carville: Florida voted overwhelmingly for a $15 minimum wage, we can win Florida with more of that strategy. 
 

Also James Carville: We cant have anyone left of Joe Manchin if we want to win. 
 

Lol no wonder the democrats suck a$$ with schmucks like this are their “strategists” 

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14 minutes ago, Archy1221 said:

What an utter disaster Uncle Joe has turned the border into.  Insane how stupid his policies are on immigration and people actually voted for it.  

Yeah, he really needs to overhaul the port of entry process to allow so many more legal immigrations to avoid the issues of unaccompanied minors. Only going to get worse as coronavirus cases ebb and flow and entries will likely hit in waves.

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56 minutes ago, Archy1221 said:

What an utter disaster Uncle Joe has turned the border into.  Insane how stupid his policies are on immigration and people actually voted for it.  

The border situation is remarkably sub optimal, but in exchange for getting rid of a usurping, fraud ridden, lying, manipulative, narcissistic, insurrectionist clown with his own bag of awful and failed policies, here we are.

 

We should probably be doing a better job as a country of identifying and voting for better presidential candidates. These last two election cycles have presented some pretty underwhelming options.

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3 hours ago, DevoHusker said:

 

Don't know if this is occurring much in NE, but I agree with the sentiment on home prices.

There's an issue with this though. A lot of corporations buy housing for temporary employees, expats, or executives that are expats working for a year or two away from home. It's something that is a necessity to attract good talent.

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1 hour ago, BigRedBuster said:

I know why they are saying that. But, how the f#&% would that work?

 

So, my company couldn’t go buy a local home to rent to new employees moving to town?

 

You and @ZRod bring up valid points. I am not sure how you differentiate between what you to make reference to, and this:

https://www.cnn.com/2021/08/02/business/family-homes-wall-street/index.html

 

Housing markets are hotter than ever, and big money is getting in on the act.

Pension funds, investment firms and Wall Street banks are snapping up family homes in Europe and the United States at a rapid pace as prices rocket higher, looking for alternatives to lockdown-hit office parks and shopping malls, and betting that a permanent increase in remote working following the coronavirus pandemic will keep demand for suburban houses elevated.
At the same time, the soaring cost of home ownership means that growing numbers of younger Americans and Brits renting rather than buying houses as they start families and gravitate toward the suburbs. Some of them may find their next landlord is based on Wall Street or in London's financial district.
In the years following the 2008 housing crash, pension funds and traditional real estate investors mostly steered clear, leaving it to opportunistic hedge funds and private equity firms to mop up supply.
Now, big institutions can't get enough of family homes. Earlier this year, funds managed by Invesco Real Estate, one of the world's largest property investors, gave Mynd $5 billion to buy 20,000 homes in the United States in the next three years on behalf of pension funds.
Mynd is currently buying between 30 and 40 homes a month and wants to increase that to over 1,000, according to Brien.
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