My nigga. Show the bank whos boss!.
Quote from BPtrader:
I was right: the Americans are not only stupid, but also illogical, both elected politicians and the electors.
Think about it, if a country has stupid politicians, whose fault is it? Answer: those who elected the politicians. Oftentimes, we hear Americans blaming their elected officials: stupid this, stupid that. But the root of the stupidity is the Americans themselves.
Bulldoze your own house to avoid paying debt? What are you Americans thinking?
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=191605&perpage=6&pagenumber=4
PS: you Americans invaded Iraq with the reason of destroying weapons of mass destruction. Now you know the Iraqis have no weapons of mass destruction, you should leave now, right? Why the hell are you still there?
What? you want to destroy terrorists? Those who flew the planes on 9/11 are Saudis and Egyptians. Iraq has nothing to do with 9/11.
If you want to kill terrorists, invade Saudi Arabia and Egypt. But then, talking logic to Americans is futile! Americans don't understand logic. Hey, it's your hundreds of billions of tax dollars you are wasting, not mine. Hope your grand children will be able to pay for what you are spending now.
"We have to pay?" asked a puzzled American, "Fuck, I am not going to pay. I am going to bulldoze my house to avoid paying the debt."
Debaser82 - that's how most homes are made in the US. They are stick frame construction with plywood sheets. Brick is very expensive, so it is usually seen in older homes in older cities or in older homes or if recent construction, very expensive homes, and even then, it is siding, not structural. I'm guessing homes may be made differently in earthquake-prone areas such as California - probably more concrete - someone please correct me here if I'm wrong.Quote from Debaser82:
The house looks totally made out of wood.
How can it be worth more than several 100K.
Where are the bricks?
Quote from 377OHMS:
Normally I would debate back and forth with the british guys because there was some respect for them on my side. No longer.
Once the UK sold out to Libya over the PanAm bomber I don't really pay any attention to any brits over anything. You folks have no business lecturing anyone on morality in any form.
I'm reasonably sure the US would not deem to save the UK again should some calamity occur. You guys have no idea to what degree you are on your own now. Even the US military is shunning the UK military as untrustworthy. In your own parlance, "piss off".
Quote from Misthos:
Debaser82 - that's how most homes are made in the US. They are stick frame construction with plywood sheets. Brick is very expensive, so it is usually seen in older homes in older cities or in older homes or if recent construction, very expensive homes, and even then, it is siding, not structural. I'm guessing homes may be made differently in earthquake-prone areas such as California - probably more concrete - someone please correct me here if I'm wrong.
Quote from the1:
Shouldn't this guy be in jail for Criminal Destruction of Property? That's not to suggest I side with the bank. Kudos to this guy for having the balls to do that.
And how exactly does a person's home become cross collateral for business debts? I sure hope this guy wasn't a sole proprietor.
the cost of a brick house to construct is only about 10% higher than wood frame, they pour the foundation a little wider, construct a frame house , and the bricklayers set there bricks on the wider foundation and stack em to the roof, instead of wood, vinyl stucco or cement siding, the advantage is lowered heating and cooling costs, and low exterior maintenanceQuote from Misthos:
Debaser82 - that's how most homes are made in the US. They are stick frame construction with plywood sheets. Brick is very expensive, so it is usually seen in older homes in older cities or in older homes or if recent construction, very expensive homes, and even then, it is siding, not structural. I'm guessing homes may be made differently in earthquake-prone areas such as California - probably more concrete - someone please correct me here if I'm wrong.
Quote from Misthos:
Debaser82 - that's how most homes are made in the US. They are stick frame construction with plywood sheets. Brick is very expensive, so it is usually seen in older homes in older cities or in older homes or if recent construction, very expensive homes, and even then, it is siding, not structural. I'm guessing homes may be made differently in earthquake-prone areas such as California - probably more concrete - someone please correct me here if I'm wrong.