
13 August 2009 | 26 replies
I don't care about where he came from, ethnicicity, birth cert etc.

24 April 2021 | 23 replies
Look at it like this: suppose someone said they want to live in a neighborhood with (x) ethnicity as the predominant inhabitants.

10 March 2010 | 4 replies
Assuming fair-housing laws are still in effect 20 years from now, Ralph had a good point that the more-relevant question is the impact from a socio-economic standpoint more so than from an ethnicity standpoint.

27 November 2010 | 57 replies
It's happened to kids, to old people, to people in wheelchairs, people of all races, ethnicities, religions, etc.

11 April 2008 | 13 replies
She got the message and it wasn't an issue anymore...lolIf it's ethnic food, maybe you need to run an ad in that ethnic group's newspaper and get a tenant who will appreciate the smell.

23 November 2014 | 6 replies
Most states and just about all counties & cities feature their own incentives that are generally tiered to assorted tax consequences---essentially obviating, or appreciably reducing the impacts of whatever debt's used to purchase and operate real estate benefiting particular demographic occupancies. a few of the lead affinity groups are disabled, elderly, economically disadvantaged, ethnic minority women and home based enterprise operator/owners---along with honorably discharged military veterans. other private charities sponsor trillions of dollars in incentives for parallel use & occupancies. interacting with their funding channels can be tremendously enriching.

31 January 2017 | 3 replies
The kicker is that the ethnicity of the first and last name of the owner and her late husband is very different than the ethnicity of the caller's name.Is it worth the time getting the experience of meeting with a person like this?

27 March 2017 | 27 replies
I can't believe how many fantastic ethnic restaurants there are!
10 April 2016 | 2 replies
“Because of widespread racial and ethnic disparities in the US criminal justice system,” HUD’s new guidelines read, “criminal history-based restrictions on access to housing are likely disproportionately to burden African-Americans and Hispanics. . . .

22 January 2016 | 7 replies
Even if race or ethnicity didn't influence you, you can't make exceptions for one person and not another.