LogFAQs > #892441403

LurkerFAQs, Active DB, DB1, Database 2 ( 09.16.2017-02.21.2018 ), DB3, DB4, DB5, DB6, DB7, DB8, DB9, DB10, DB11, DB12, Clear
Topic List
Page List: 1
Topicgovernment regulations are keeping millennials from getting ahead
FLUFFYGERM
12/18/17 12:31:03 PM
#32:


Burgess posted...
I'm not doing this with you again because it always ends with you saying the same thing over and over and getting beaten to death and I don't have the time today.


Keep shitposting if you want, but the data shows that I'm right and you're wrong. Illinois has the most people leaving out of any state. And the fewest new jobs being created.

Darkman124 posted...
FLUFFYGERM posted...


That average is brought way down by the people who live in the middle of nowhere out in the countryside. If you live near any of the large cities, especially in Chicagoland or close to it, you'll be paying a lore more than $3887 if you want to own a decent home.


are you still talking about $200,000 homes or did you abandon that metric in this post

the site i linked to quotes effective property taxes for each county; the highest is about 2.8% (which is still very high, but much less than your initial post)


The $200,000 home with $8,000+ property taxes is definitely an outlier. I never said that was the norm. The norm is still enormous yearly property taxes, though. Where I live right now there are homes that are in the $200,000 to $250,000 range and $5,000+ property taxes are common.
---
but Marxist theory is extremely consistent, both internally and with reality. -averagejeol
... Copied to Clipboard!
Topic List
Page List: 1