
20 June 2016 | 3 replies
I need to understand how a mortgage lender thinks re: short sales when they've been paid a mortgage for 8 years.Situation: Nice 3/2, 1,350 sq. ft. SFR in good location (great neighborhood, near schools, desirable par...

20 January 2020 | 19 replies
I'm following just to hear the logic behind blaming the title company.You'll want to research the subject of nonconforming use and retain a local attorney to help you through this.
22 January 2019 | 20 replies
A live trap would give you that option.Daves' solution is to set 12 traps around the tires of your car every time you return home.I doubt many people are going to be able to do that over an extended period of time.I am 70 YO, the traps I use are very sensitive and trying to bend down and set them under every wheel without them going off would be very tedious, time consuming and too hard on my back.Dave keeps deleting my replies to his Youtube video because he doesn't have any answers to my logical questions.

27 March 2020 | 60 replies
My logical question was why not just save money for a down payment or take equity out of your other property to get the down payment?

28 March 2019 | 53 replies
There is no logical reason to ignore your lease.

26 April 2017 | 61 replies
Seems kind of logical for me to live in an RV for a year, hoard away money and truly educate myself, get my real estate license (I'm 60% done with my course now), and then have a tangible item I can resell or keep after it's all said and done versus throwing away money in rent.

17 July 2020 | 75 replies
Imo, it really is the journey and not the destination and I'd trade it all to be able to do it again (I'd have to be young again though - no deal on just starting over as of right now) haha.Good luck and please update this thread with your decision as I'm sure your logic will help influence my own.

14 July 2020 | 85 replies
What I hear people saying is that it is not prudent for inexperienced, under-capitalized newbie investors to shrug off what opportunities are available locally and concluding, using often faulty logic, that their market is "too expensive" and throwing their hard earned dollars into highly speculative ventures - whose risks they are too inexperienced to properly assess - promoted by promises of the "clear, blue sky."

16 April 2020 | 30 replies
@John TeachoutThe law makers and their logic lol

13 April 2020 | 11 replies
I sent the pics 1) because logically as I explained it will likely reduce the likelihood they complain and 2) I will have to present the evidence in court anyways.