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Posted on 5/17/20 at 4:43 pm to 56lsu
quote:
doesn't look like trump, pence, and pompous arse secretary of state.
You need a break
Posted on 5/17/20 at 4:52 pm to 56lsu
quote:Just keep in mind . . .
56lsu
Posted on 5/17/20 at 5:00 pm to cokebottleag
Might as well go ahead and make your koolaid concoction and give it to all your family and friends. No reason to continue in darkness.
Posted on 5/17/20 at 5:22 pm to cokebottleag
Might wanna have a doc get you tapered back onto your meds
Posted on 5/17/20 at 6:09 pm to bluedragon
quote:I just wonder how fast retail gets replaced... retail was already suffering from online. Restaurants are hard enough to run. Going to need far lower rent and expenses, wages if they can't cram people together. Also doubt many large office leases will renew when the time comes as HR managers/execs shift towards a combination of WFH and flex/coworking for much less $. Landlords can't cover mortgages/expenses - then the banks get involved (or get help from Govt)? I don't know man, I see a of vacancies ahead.
The news media makes it a point of emphasis that 100,000 small businesses closed permanently. No they didn't. Temporarily. If someone doesn't reopen ...someone else will step in their place.
Posted on 5/17/20 at 6:38 pm to Nephropidae
Places more likely to get hit with vacancies are large office buildings, typically in high rent areas.
Think Manhattan, LA, Chicago, etc.
Restaurants may take a hit but not the level of hit that office space will take of companies decide that telecommuting is a feasible option.
Doesn’t mean there won’t be downstream effects as well. Lots of restaurants thrive on the lunch rush from large office buildings. If those go away, they better hope that either their delivery business picks up or that they are considered a desirable dinner spot.
Think Manhattan, LA, Chicago, etc.
Restaurants may take a hit but not the level of hit that office space will take of companies decide that telecommuting is a feasible option.
Doesn’t mean there won’t be downstream effects as well. Lots of restaurants thrive on the lunch rush from large office buildings. If those go away, they better hope that either their delivery business picks up or that they are considered a desirable dinner spot.
Posted on 5/17/20 at 6:43 pm to NC_Tigah
Next ten years are going to be very dark.
IDK.
I just visited the Puckerbutt Pepper Factory in a tiny SC town. It looked like a festival was going on. No parking anywhere. All the little eateries with outdoor tables packed.
We'll see how it ferrets out.
He may be referring to the return of Creed to the charts in the next decade.
IDK.
I just visited the Puckerbutt Pepper Factory in a tiny SC town. It looked like a festival was going on. No parking anywhere. All the little eateries with outdoor tables packed.
We'll see how it ferrets out.
He may be referring to the return of Creed to the charts in the next decade.
This post was edited on 5/17/20 at 6:44 pm
Posted on 5/17/20 at 8:02 pm to tigerfoot
If and when America collapses, is anyone really gonna give a crap if Tom Brady was the GOAT ? The NFL going defunct would not be a bad thing.
Posted on 5/17/20 at 8:05 pm to cokebottleag
I'd say the best 150 will be dark until civilization is reset.
Posted on 5/17/20 at 9:52 pm to bluedragon
Now this is the kind of sunshine I lotion up for
Posted on 5/17/20 at 10:07 pm to cokebottleag
1. We live if the biggest food exporting country in the world. Diesel this cheap even corn farmers who are part owners of ethanol plants that are shutdown are planting every fricking piece of dirt in Iowa. Fuel is one of their biggest costs.
2. Oil? A personal friend who owns one of those never heard of oil companies but has percentages in fields internationally told me the he saw the price collapse coming a year ago and positioned himself to make money at $20 a barrel. He is now buying conventionally drilled oil fields and paying cash. 60+ years in the biz he might know more than some young petroleum buck who is leveraged out the axx
I will not even go into other bullshiite,
Hasn't everyone realized by now that all journalists are morons?
2. Oil? A personal friend who owns one of those never heard of oil companies but has percentages in fields internationally told me the he saw the price collapse coming a year ago and positioned himself to make money at $20 a barrel. He is now buying conventionally drilled oil fields and paying cash. 60+ years in the biz he might know more than some young petroleum buck who is leveraged out the axx
I will not even go into other bullshiite,
Hasn't everyone realized by now that all journalists are morons?
Posted on 5/18/20 at 12:45 am to bluedragon
quote:
The news media makes it a point of emphasis that 100,000 small businesses closed permanently. No they didn't. Temporarily. If someone doesn't reopen ...someone else will step in their place.
That doesn’t happen overnight.
It will take years for us to recover from this closure.
Posted on 5/18/20 at 12:58 am to cokebottleag
This is the type of shite someone types when they take both the red and blue pills at the same time.
Posted on 5/18/20 at 1:13 am to cokebottleag
quote:.
Here's what it all means: We're in for a wild ride. It's possible, maybe even likely, that the USA as we have known it since 1865, is coming to an end
How are we to take anything in this post seriously?
It's like you dont even know that we've had electricity since 1957 or that Al Gore invented the internet...
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