• DigitalTraveler42@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    A lot of these people here are braindead about that stuff, and if they consume right wing media they “know” the problem is “Biden” or at least that’s how they’ll reason it.

    • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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      11 months ago

      Heard a 20-something on NPR who lived in FL saying she was going to vote for DeSantis because she can’t afford to move out of her parents house, but will vote for Trump now.

      Bitch, you for real? You thought DeSantis was your savior, and now you think it’s an actual real estate mogul?

      The house I bought in 2015 has tripled in value since then. Most of that before 2020. I moved in 2019 and my new house has seen a similar gain. Not that it matters for me as a homeowner, I can’t afford to sell it because then I have to buy something else, now with a higher interest rate.

      • DigitalTraveler42@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        I can’t afford to sell it because then I have to buy something else, now with a higher interest rate.

        I’m in the same boat now too, and I’m being forced away from my home for work, so now i have to maintain my existing home in FL while living in Atlanta, and somehow my company thinks I’m just supposed to make it all work out. Meanwhile everything was great while working remote until they forced us back into the office, an office I’ve never worked in as I hired on as remote work.

        • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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          11 months ago

          And I’m not really complaining about the high interest rates either. While I love the interest rate that I refi’d at, I recognize that that was very much an anomaly that I was fortunate to take advantage of, and that the comparatively higher interest rates now were necessary to keep inflation from spiraling out of control even more than it did.

          Interest rates now are still, historically, at a rather modest level. Still means that what would otherwise be a very lateral move ends up being much more expensive.

          At least 0% interest rate offers on credit cards are plentiful and I can use large (otherwise planned and budgeted) purchases to leverage that against inflation a little more. And some of that is going into refreshing home appliances and sweat-equity improvements, so at least it’s (even if barely) helping to improve the value of my home. Only appliance I haven’t upgraded yet is the range. And considering the energy improvement 0% loans to replace my oil boiler with heat pumps with resistive backups and potentially add solar.