Recent comments

  • CitiMortgage Told Me to Default on My Loan   16 years 3 weeks ago

    You sound bitter and mean? Also checkout your spelling and remember everyone's life and problems are different.............

  • CitiMortgage Told Me to Default on My Loan   16 years 3 weeks ago

    Seek therapy your on here to much and comment on everything? Please focus on your problems...........

  • CitiMortgage Told Me to Default on My Loan   16 years 3 weeks ago

    you post alot that means your on the comp alot how is your marriage and sex life?

  • CitiMortgage Told Me to Default on My Loan   16 years 3 weeks ago

    your queer

  • CitiMortgage Told Me to Default on My Loan   16 years 3 weeks ago

    Your naive?

  • CitiMortgage Told Me to Default on My Loan   16 years 3 weeks ago

    Your queer!

  • 12 Cool Things to Do with Used Dryer Sheets   16 years 3 weeks ago

    I hesitate to wipe my house down with toxic chemicals @@

  • Make Your DVD Player Region-Free in Seconds   16 years 3 weeks ago

    How to I hack my new Sony DVP SR500H for multi region.

    Kathy

  • 6 Upsides of the Down Economy   16 years 3 weeks ago

    This guy has not no idea what hes talking about he wrights articles stuck to advertisements and get paid to do so. His life revolves around money as dose for those who have it.  Recession is a state of play put into action to shift the power of money control to a particular/entity division assuming control, check economic history.  Before the great desperation people had personal business with more mom a pop shops with no "dept".  After the great depression mom and pop shops were bought up at bottom dollar prices and the shift of money control was put in the hands of a few.  To this day those family's still own the 1% of wealth in the world, and after this recession is over that 1% will shift again, maybe 2% will have wealth or perhaps that 1% is cut in half.  When war is in action peoples attention is focused on there loved one fighting the war.  Most family's have a loved one in a war right now.  Its strikes me odd that economic history would show that when a billion dollar industry fails and the citizens are left to flip the bill, their job availability gos right out the window, everyone should know that when the younger population have no jobs available their alternative is the military, and what better way to draw the attention away from the what causing that problem then forcing a generation in to a state of war.  War is preventable and avoidable, those left with decision making don't think rational or realistic, no matter what anyone says, presidents love fighting wars after all they don't have to fight right, what do they have to lose.  People have lost sight to the fact that people fight wars, people run factories, people run business, its people to keep this nation alive, it people who die for this nation what gives them the right to assume all power control over our living habits our pursuit of happiness, not a damn one.  Yet look at us cowering back in to our homes accepting "the system" as if its the way its suppose to be.  Supply your self with your own water, try and grow as much of your own food as you can.  Stop going to work and buying gas for a week, if this were done on a national level it would grab their attention log enough to show them who's running the show.  We can continue to live as we do until nothing is left to freedom, or we could grow up and understand that people are meant to live free from dept and labor not at the cost of another but as their personal decision as a pursuit of happiness.  Air is in abundance and can not be regulated thus not charge for breathing it, although water is in abundance but we are charged for it; most of the time the water we are charged for is recycled and came for a sewer.  Food is easily grown and produced and can be done anywhere not just in the ground.  Hydroponics as allowed us to produce food faster bigger and in smaller quarters such as a 13 story building at 36,000 sq feet, and people mostly children die in the thousands every month due to lack of nutrition.  This government has no moral comps to help the people of its nation let alone a dieing one.

  • 15 Awesome Storage Solutions for Under $10   16 years 3 weeks ago

    Haha, I know most of these solutions, but still , it is a impressed post!

    Depends on your conditions, you should at least use four to five suggestions from it. I like to keep all mail box and use them to keep all my miscellaneous items.

    Thanks for author to give us a great list of storage ideas.

    My blog at http://www.tophotdeal.com

  • 10 Shocking Facts About Our World   16 years 3 weeks ago

    Are you kidding "drill baby drill."  Why not have the oil industry put  its profits where it would count maybe IDk renewable energy for  starters, just because your living rich docent mean everyone is, stop  being so arrogant.& For one I would rather not have to pay for what can  be provided free do to that fantastic nature of the world and universe.  I'm sure it wouldn't be hard to find your name somewhere in the list of  stock holders of a major oil company just itching to pop a rig up off  the coast of California... You're no better than the very people who  bind the American to a currency inflating out of control enslaving the  youth of to days feature of pasts "Dept". So keep telling your self you  know what its like, after all you do have a book?

  • Real Estate Agents: Do We Really Need Them?   16 years 3 weeks ago

    You'll be happy to know that we wound up sticking with our broker and bought a place about a month ago! You can read all about it here.

  • Alice.com: How to Save on Toilet Paper and Diapers Without Working Hard   16 years 3 weeks ago

    My question is do they sell in bulk? say a case of TP at a time?

  • Alice.com: How to Save on Toilet Paper and Diapers Without Working Hard   16 years 3 weeks ago

    My question is do they sell in bulk? say a case of TP at a time?

  • Real Estate Agents: Do We Really Need Them?   16 years 3 weeks ago

    Porter, dude, I know you are quite angry now about your ineffectual and foolish former real estate agent, but make no mistake that the act of purchasing a home or selling a home is one of the most complicated, involved and intense interactions of your life and that you should use a real estate agent for!

    I am not an agent myself, I am a graduate student in the humanities, but my father is a real estate agent and the training he had to undergo and that he must continually undergo to maintain his licensing and keep up with ever-changing legislation regarding property law (state and local) is very involved.

    Your 'assessment' of why you don't need an agent neglects many of the elements of what the real estate agent does to help you and neglects the actions an agent is NOT allowed to do and which could cost them many thousands of dollars in fines! For example, Agents are not allowed to lie to you regarding the make up of the neighborhood or situation of the seller, or tell you any truthful info about the house or neighborhood be it biased. This sort of information you find out on your own. What you can only ever do poorly on your own is the series of complicated assessments regarding the aforementioned ever-changing legislation and judicial rulings regarding property! I can't tell you how many people have come to my father exasperated and exhausted from trying to maneuver this process by themselves and have gratefully turned over the reigns his professional expertise!

    There may be many things that in our information age you no longer need someone else to do for you - booking a flight to Tahiti is in fact one of them. But to compare selling a home to buying a plane ticket and some hotel rooms is darned foolish and to advise others to do so is close to criminal! Why? Because buying a home, unlike a plane ticket that can be charged to credit card on travelocity, is a process which (as I know from personal experience), between putting in the offer and signing the last form, requires multiple lawyers, banking officials, property assessors, secretaries and witnesses to official documents!!

  • 7 Things I'd Love to Change About Meetings   16 years 3 weeks ago

    Great ideas!  Ideas  I want to promote as I meet with others.  An additional option as I think this through is, consider how to implement with those who are not so mobile/use wheelchair/other assists.  Prob huddling meetings make sense as long as not around a huge meeting table with comfy chairs that may communicate the group is settled in for the "duration".   Reactions/responses?

  • To Buy or Not to Buy? Criteria for Thrift-Store Clothes Shopping   16 years 3 weeks ago

    I've acquired excellent second-hand pieces (a down parka, a designer dress) with broken zips, knowing that replacing the zip would cost a fraction of buying the the item new. (And I've bargained down the seller because of the zip problem!) Your quoted $7/ zip seems high to me - my local sewing notions store charges signficantly less (usually $3/zip). And while it's true that they're tricky to put in if you don't have a sewing machine, you can also get your local drycleaner/garment repair place to do it for you at nominal cost

    Anyway, in sum, I don't think a broken zip is a good reason to leave an amazing bargain behind. Particularly winter coats.

  • 5 Money Ratios to Live By   16 years 3 weeks ago

    . . . ... "  MORE : WISE ~ INFO > @ http://www.zcb4u.com  " ... . . .

  • 5 Money Ratios to Live By   16 years 3 weeks ago

    . . . ... "  MORE : WISE ~ INFO > @ http://www.zcb4u.com  " ... . . .

  • 101 Tax deductions for bloggers and freelancers   16 years 3 weeks ago

    For #47 how do you deduct an invoice you get stiffed on for doing work for someone? I understand how you can do that if you put out money on product and are not paid. But how does it work if you are doing writing and other labor, but are not paid? Does it already have to have been taken as income in your accounts receivable?

  • How to Answer 23 of the Most Common Interview Questions   16 years 3 weeks ago

    I have given 2 interview in this week. one question really stuck me when they ask why do you want to left that job and want to join us.(Infact i am woking AS accounts officer and have applied for accountant vacany)

  • To Buy or Not to Buy? Criteria for Thrift-Store Clothes Shopping   16 years 3 weeks ago

    Lucky enough to live in a neighborhood with lots of thrift shops and plenty of choices, I usually buy items that look new and need only hemming. I've also had luck in hand washing solid-colored silk items in Woolite even if they say dry cleaning only (printed silk colors tend to run into each other).

    I've also noticed more and more teenagers shopping together at Goodwill, getting a kick out of their retro finds.

    http://savvysavingbytes.com/2009/08/scouting-the-thrifts-for-gems/

  • Beware of Pretty Things: 4 Reasons I’m Keeping My Ugly, Old Stuff   16 years 3 weeks ago

    Hey Lindsey,

     

    It's so scary how many of my coaching clients have a hart time not having the nicest or newest furniture.

    The ones who find it the hardest are those who've just bought a new house. The house is shiny and new and they feel everything else should be too.

    My pearents on the other hand, and many others of their generation, still have my grandmother's reapolstered furniture.

     

    Thanks Lindsey,

    Guy

     

  • 3 Reasons Why Keeping Your "Latte Factor" Will Help You Save Money   16 years 3 weeks ago

    Hey thanks for justifying my wife and my addiction to the weekend Starbuck's Caramel Macciato.

    I use to feel guilty, but you're right. As far as dates go, $10 is pretty cheap.

  • 3 Reasons Why Keeping Your "Latte Factor" Will Help You Save Money   16 years 3 weeks ago

    I disagree with this "the little stuff is worth it", and that's based on 30+ years of experience and actually becoming a millionaire: owning one home outright, having a second home, over $100K in a bank account and college funds for kids. The key issue here is mindset and discipline. If you really want to become rich, you are focused and passionate about reaching your goal. And that includes little expenses. The best entrepreneurs I've ever worked for are frugal to a fault: reusing typewriter ribbons and the like. They know how hard it is to make a buck. The same thing is true for individuals. And remember, what you're spending is after tax dollars. Add anywhere from 10 - 40% (based on your tax dollars) to the cost of something to figure out how much of your salary is being eaten up. Your best bet is to learn how to enjoy the small things that don't cost money -- sunsets, taking walks, being with children, etc. Those are investments, not expenses.