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re: Value of a dollar in every state
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:14 am to Wtodd
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:14 am to Wtodd
For the value, Bama has some great places to live. Helena, Hoover, north of the river in Tuscaloosa are all pretty good. You are no more than 4 hours from Memphis, NOLA, Nashville, Atlanta, the coast and Bama has great beaches.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:17 am to MontyFranklyn
quote:
Bama has great beaches.
You are welcome for not taking that sliver we gave you.
Signed,
Florida
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:19 am to MontyFranklyn
Alabama should own the panhandle from the MS/AL line to the AL/GA line IMO.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:20 am to Titus Pullo
I'm gonna go buy a bunch of dollars in New York and then sell them in Mississippi.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:21 am to TheCaterpillar
quote:
Thanks
I do work in Nashville too, you know, like full time. As do my financial analyst and friends in commercial and residential real estate. And they all completely disagree. As do the the investment banks like Goldman Sachs that are rapidly buying both commercial and residential property here.
Other than the massive population growth of 81 employed people moving here per day, monthly addition of large companies to our city, the music industry hub, and healthcare industry backbone, which most consider one of the most stable industries in the country, yeah this bubble might “burst”. Not to mention the massive tourism industry, that has our city in such demand the hotels cost as much as NYC. Or the top flight public school systems in the suburbs.
In reality, it might slow down do to over development in say, 5 years, but there is no chance it “bursts”.
ETA:
Unless of course Bernie Sanders becomes president and clones himself 50 times and all the clones are elected to congress.
Or Russia invades.
Or our whole country goes under some other way.
But unless that shite happens, Nashville will remain a case study of how to build and maintain a vibrant city.
We get it. You like Nashville.
Are you the chamber of commerce?
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:21 am to dbeck
Good thinking. That extra cent will pay dividends.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:23 am to Titus Pullo
quote:
Hey Mississippi, how does it feel to not be 49th or 50th.
Ha ha Mississippi!
As a Louisianan I learned a long time ago the only two states we can make fun of are Mississippi and Arkansas. We are better than those two.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:23 am to Titus Pullo
It's been tried many times
quote:
Alabama annexation proposals Edit
During the course of the century, proposals for ceding the Florida counties west of the Apalachicola River to Alabama were often raised:
In 1811, while Florida was still a Spanish possession, American residents sent a petition to Congress asking to be incorporated into the Mississippi Territory, which at that time included present-day Alabama.[8] (See West Florida article.)
In 1819, the constitutional convention of Alabama asked Congress to include West Florida in their new state.[8]
In 1822, only a year after the U.S. acquired the entire Florida territory from Spain, residents of West Florida sent a petition to the U.S. House of Representatives asking that their section be annexed to Alabama, and Alabama Senator John Williams Walker also promoted the idea.[7]
In 1826, the Pensacola Gazette published a number of letters advocating annexation to Alabama, though the editor remarked that some Pensacolians opposed the idea.[7]
In 1840, a public meeting in Pensacola produced a demand that West Florida be united with Alabama. In the same year, the territorial Legislature notified Congress that it opposed allowing Alabama to annex West Florida, but in 1844, the year before statehood, the Legislature reversed its stance and asked that West Florida be separated.[7]
In 1856, advocates of annexation were able to get a bill passed by the Legislature authorizing a referendum on the issue but the Governor James E. Broome vetoed the measure. The Pensacola Gazette reported that "annexation is desired by a large majority of the people" of the area.[7]
In 1858, the Alabama Legislature unsuccessfully tried to open negotiations with Florida on the subject.[8]
The annexation issue was eclipsed by the Civil War and the war's effects on the region, but in 1868, with Pensacola now connected by the Panhandle's sole railroad line to the Alabama cities of Mobile and Montgomery, the issue came to a head again and was finally put to a vote of the people. In that year, the Alabama Legislature approved a joint resolution authorizing their Governor to negotiate with the Governor of Florida about the annexation of West Florida. An offer of one million dollars in Alabama state bonds, paying 8 percent interest for thirty years, was included. Both states appointed commissioners to make detailed recommendations on the matter.[9]
On November 2, 1869, a referendum was held in the West Florida counties (except Jackson, which was in the throes of bloody racial violence[10]), with a result of 1162 to 661 in favor of annexation.[6] However, political objection developed in Alabama to the high price, and the Legislature took no action on the results of the referendum.[8][11]
In 1873, a similar proposal was made in the Alabama Legislature, which the state senate approved, though it did not pass a separate proposal to finance the measure by selling all of Alabama's territory west of the Tombigbee River, including the city of Mobile, to Mississippi.[12] However, nothing came of this action.
In 1901, Alabama made yet another offer when the Legislature appointed a commission to negotiate with Florida about annexation, but this attempt, too, was unsuccessful
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:25 am to Wtodd
I am going to take all my money to miss and cash in
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:28 am to genro
Yep.
And we will get it right after GA gets more water from TN.
And we will get it right after GA gets more water from TN.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:28 am to SabiDojo
quote:
Yeah, you can live quite comfortably in Mississippi on a $50k/yr salary.
Yeah but then you actually have to live in Mississippi
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:30 am to lsunurse
The state should actually have to pay you $50k/yr to live there.
Which is a policy Ole Miss boosters are already doing.
Which is a policy Ole Miss boosters are already doing.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:31 am to TheCaterpillar
The city of Nashville just doesn't have the housing available to sustain the demand. You'll see a lot of Realty companies buying up lots and homes and adding duplexes, townhomes, and other communal living style housing to keep up with the demands. The price is sky high.
$265 a square foot for (your words) "a house in a crappy neighborhood the other day going for $265 a sq ft". I pay right around that for a great spot Old Town, Chicago. And here's the main outlier...I get paid a lot more in Chicago. If you look at salaries across the board, in all industries, Nashville frankly doesn't keep up with the bigger cities in the US. You're charging a top-rate price, but the citizens are not getting paid as much.
That's why I'd be hesitant to buy right now.
$265 a square foot for (your words) "a house in a crappy neighborhood the other day going for $265 a sq ft". I pay right around that for a great spot Old Town, Chicago. And here's the main outlier...I get paid a lot more in Chicago. If you look at salaries across the board, in all industries, Nashville frankly doesn't keep up with the bigger cities in the US. You're charging a top-rate price, but the citizens are not getting paid as much.
That's why I'd be hesitant to buy right now.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:33 am to Forkbeard3777
Can y'all take this Nashville shite elsewhere, we are trying to make fun of MS and the interruptions aren't appreciated.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:33 am to Titus Pullo
I think it's funny when people brag about the low cost of living of where they live at.
You do realize that when a place has a really low cost of living....it's usually because it's such a shithole no one wants to really live there?
Places have high costs of living because of demand...everyone wants to live there.
You do realize that when a place has a really low cost of living....it's usually because it's such a shithole no one wants to really live there?
Places have high costs of living because of demand...everyone wants to live there.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:36 am to lsunurse
I think it's funny that we are bagging on MS when the rest of our States are just as shitty yet they still take it.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:36 am to genro
quote:
It's been tried many times
And every single time...

Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:37 am to Forkbeard3777
quote:
$265 a square foot for (your words) "a house in a crappy neighborhood the other day going for $265 a sq ft". I pay right around that for a great spot Old Town, Chicago. And here's the main outlier...I get paid a lot more in Chicago. If you look at salaries across the board, in all industries, Nashville frankly doesn't keep up with the bigger cities in the US.
A crappy neighborhood 3 minutes from downtown that is RAPIDLY gentrifying. The housing won't catch up with demand for a while, but even when it does level out a little, its not going to "bust". That's absurd.
quote:
You're charging a top-rate price, but the citizens are not getting paid as much.
And the houses are selling $10k about asking 2 hours after they hit the market.
There's a waiting list in most of these new developments.
quote:
That's why I'd be hesitant to buy right now.
This housing market isn't slowing down for at least 5 years. I'll sell my house by then and move to the burbs. We went under contract in January and our place has appreciated $15k already based on what our wall-sharing neighbor (townhome) just went under contract in his home for.
The salaries will catch up. This has happened countless times in the US and salaries almost always catch up. Its just the last thing to do so. The new companies moving here, like Hankook's North American headquarters, etc. are giving higher wages than the traditional Nashville based companies and its ushering in a change.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:38 am to Titus Pullo
quote:
the rest of our States are just as shitty yet they still take it.
Not all of us can compete with AL, MS and LA in poverty, obesity and poor education. A few of us, refuse to get on your level.
Posted on 5/19/16 at 11:38 am to lsunurse
quote:
You do realize that when a place has a really low cost of living....it's usually because it's such a shithole no one wants to really live there?
Just because YOU don't want to live there, doesn't mean they aren't happy.
I'm sure a lot of people like Mississippi...
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