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Central California Housing Crash
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Re: Central California Housing Crash
Originally posted by olivegreen View PostNow am I being too "conspiracy" oriented when I look at the fires going on right now in California and the housing crisis? Are they related? How does insurance work?
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Re: Central California Housing Crash
Originally posted by RickBishop View PostSame thing I was thinking - if I had a home now in So Calif I would sprinkle a little gas on the walls and get the family out of town"Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one."
- Charles Mackay
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Re: Central California Housing Crash
Of course... if we were "really" into this conspiracy thing...
If I were a Bank holding a mortgage for a house that ... no.... better not go there... that would be too awful... but then there's...
If I were a government of a state whose houses were going down the drain value wise.... no... that's just as bad....
I think I better stop thinking...
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Re: Central California Housing Crash
Of course I can't stop thinking...
If I were a bank... do I want the keys to a worthless house?
or
Do I want the insurance money that is sure to come down the pipes?
AND
If I were a government... do I want a state full of abandoned worthless real estate?
or
Do I want the houses replaced with lots of money in the hands of the people who lost their houses for the local economy and lots of people put back to work to build those houses?
or
Do I want a ghost state?
AND
If I were a builder...
oh hell... i'm going to bed...
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Re: Central California Housing Crash
Originally posted by Tet View PostI remember being evacuated from the Harmony Grove fires in 1996 and it turned out many people lit their own homes on fire because they were underwater on their mortgages. I know of two just in the few blocks around where I lived at the time. I think there were about 56 homes in that area that burned down. We've got all the makings of the same situation.
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Re: Central California Housing Crash
Originally posted by DemonD View PostWhile I might think the same as you guys, I would just like to remind the forum that many many homes were lost in similar fires in 2003 especially in San Diego, back when there was pretty much zero defaults. With conditions as they are, you don't even need fuel accellerant- just a cigarette to the side of a road and you've got a whole wildfire going.
Edit add 2 hours later: Just saw an updated news report from California and truly saddened to see that amount of destruction and damage, major evacuations (apparently half of San Diego now evacuated?). Lukester, DemonD and anyone else in California who may find themselves in a fire zone; hope everything's OK with you and your families.Last edited by GRG55; October 23, 2007, 06:49 AM.
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Re: Central California Housing Crash
Alright. I realize I was being very cynical and forgetting how horrible the situation is for so many... fires AND housing crisis. Either way it amounts to alot of fellow human beings going through dark times and my thoughts are with them all. I apologize for my cynicism... It seems too easy these days to go down that path. I wonder why.
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Re: Central California Housing Crash
Originally posted by olivegreen View PostAlright. I realize I was being very cynical and forgetting how horrible the situation is for so many... fires AND housing crisis. Either way it amounts to alot of fellow human beings going through dark times and my thoughts are with them all. I apologize for my cynicism... It seems too easy these days to go down that path. I wonder why.
Hey, olivegreen, watch it! Cynicism is good.Jim 69 y/o
"...Texans...the lowest form of white man there is." Robert Duvall, as Al Sieber, in "Geronimo." (see "Location" for examples.)
Dedicated to the idea that all people deserve a chance for a healthy productive life. B&M Gates Fdn.
Good judgement comes from experience; experience comes from bad judgement. Unknown.
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Re: Central California Housing Crash
Originally posted by olivegreen View PostAlright. I realize I was being very cynical and forgetting how horrible the situation is for so many... fires AND housing crisis. Either way it amounts to alot of fellow human beings going through dark times and my thoughts are with them all. I apologize for my cynicism... It seems too easy these days to go down that path. I wonder why."Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one."
- Charles Mackay
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Re: Central California Housing Crash
Olive: I live in Hollywood, right now it's dry as hell over here but wildfires don't affect the urban areas, we don't have any brush to burn. There have been some fires in the Hollywood Hills but they never turn into bazillion acres. Griffith Park has the highest concentration of foliage and it burned about 600 acres or so earlier this year, that's about the closest we get to it.
Originally posted by Tet View PostI believe we can all thank God that these poor insurance companies will be able to settle these multi billion d0llar claims by selling their stocks at profitable higher prices. Thankfully the refinance companies are going to respectfully wait until tomorrow evening before they start calling me to see if I want to refinance my home now that it's going to be worth a lot more in another month. These construction companies that were going out of business only yesterday now have two years worth of backlog and the fire isn't even out yet. Yes cynicism is a slippery slope and when you start to realize how easy it is to correct any of these October market crashes with a good ole fashioned Southern California multi-billion d0llar fire you can see how tempting it becomes. I used to think these things started when some asshole threw his cigarette out the car window, now I'm older and understand that's not how it's done.
Your point about insurance companies are well taken though, screwing the homeowners into the ground.
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Re: Central California Housing Crash
Originally posted by DemonD View PostOlive: I live in Hollywood, right now it's dry as hell over here but wildfires don't affect the urban areas, we don't have any brush to burn. There have been some fires in the Hollywood Hills but they never turn into bazillion acres. Griffith Park has the highest concentration of foliage and it burned about 600 acres or so earlier this year, that's about the closest we get to it.
Tet, I'm going to say that I'm sure there was some arson going on. But every fire? Including in 2003? I was IN San Diego in 2003 the weekend it was raining ash. I saw the freeway closures and evacuations then, I saw the smoke all the way up through Los Angeles - back then. In 2003. When no one was in foreclosure. And everyone was making bazillions on RE. IIRC the fires were almost the same - had em in SD, IE, Santa Clarita. Big difference now is that a lot more in malibu, not so much in Simi Valley which is where they hit hard in 2003.
Your point about insurance companies are well taken though, screwing the homeowners into the ground."Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one."
- Charles Mackay
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Re: Central California Housing Crash
Well they KNOW that an illegal campfire started the blaze that affected Tahoe this year... or maybe I just forgot to put on my tinfoil hat when the backpackers admitted to it.
Look, I'm not saying arson wasn't involved this time around. I am saying that california wildfires happen all the time and to ascribe personal gain for every single fire is overly conspiratorial. Besides, I'm guessing most arson fires are done by plain pyromaniac idiots, or people doing DUMB things... like that woman park ranger that started the arizona wildfires a couple of years ago. I think you give too much credit to people having that kind of forethought, and not enough to the power of nature and the idiocy of humans.
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