R
RCIAGraduate
Guest
I wager many are, but don’t many need resources and support to help them succeed?People have to be willing to learn and to work.
Last edited:
I wager many are, but don’t many need resources and support to help them succeed?People have to be willing to learn and to work.
You start small.I wager many are, but don’t many need resources and support to help them succeed?
Federal housing laws make any sort of quality control wrt tenants legally risky, since a landlord could be accused of “disparate impact” discrimination. The only way, in practice, for a landlord to exclude undesirable tenants is to raise prices. This has the perverse effect of creating a situation where increasing the price of a rental unit itself increases its perceived value (whereas in most transactions it’s the other way around, prices rise when value does).Do you think something ought to be done about it, and if so, what?
Half are above average.It’s like running a race. It’s good to encourage a runner to train harder, eat healthy, and all that. At the same time, someone’s going to be last. Education and encouraging people to get skills only works if you assume a significant proportion of the population won’t do it and will be in low-level jobs.
We’re seeing this with college education now. Jobs that didn’t used to require a degree now do. Jobs that required a degree now need a PhD. Jobs that needed a PhD require that plus an internship or something. There are only so many “good jobs” out there, and a lot of places are mechanizing the good jobs and replacing them with minimum wage jobs.
If an insurance company won’t write a policy to protect the mortgage lender, they aren’t going to risk their money by making the loan,Can you explain your argument that the insurance industry results from the mortgage industry? Thanks!
I would like to see that argument.Arguably, if the government didnt get involved, there also wouldn’t be any need for government involvement.