Better move fast

From the Star Ledger:

N.J. ranks second in nation for fastest selling homes. See latest list.

Homes in New Jersey sold within a median of 39 days in February, the second fastest in the nation, the latest data from Realtor.com showed.

Only Rhode Island, where homes sold within 38 days, had a hotter housing market. New Jersey and Massachusetts tied for second for fastest selling homes in the nation.

Nationwide, homes sold within a median of 61 days in February, the data showed. Homes in Montana stayed on the market the longest. 

This entry was posted in Economics, Housing Bubble, New Jersey Real Estate. Bookmark the permalink.

71 Responses to Better move fast

  1. Hold my beer says:

    First

  2. Fast Eddie says:

    I presume the muppet masses aren’t yet priced out forever here in the northern prominences of The People’s Commonwealth of New Jersey. It’s t00 bad for the house tour guides – their ‘smash n’ grab’ tactics are coming to end. You can’t show up to the closing and expect a check anymore.

  3. Fast Eddie says:

    Donald Trump’s social media company Truth Social completed a merger Friday morning that could net the former president over $3 billion.

    snicker… lol.

  4. Juice Box says:

    re: “Better move fast”

    Any questions now about where you will live?

    Multi-family housing permits now represent approximately two thirds of all building permits issued in New Jersey.

    Every single plot of land that had a old factory or close to the train line will mostly likely be be mixed use, and when the privacy fence goes up and they start construction the sign out front will be one of these builders.

    APPLIED COMPANIES
    ATLANTIC REALTY DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
    AVALONBAY COMMUNITIES
    BNE REAL ESTATE GROUP
    CANOE BROOK
    HOBOKEN BROWNSTONE COMPANY
    INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS, LLC
    KUSHNER
    MILL CREEK RESIDENTIAL TRUST
    PREMIER DEVELOPMENT
    RUSSO DEVELOPMENT
    SHARBELL DEVELOPMENT
    SKYLINE DEVELOPMENT GROUP
    TANTUM
    VERIS RESIDENTIAL
    WOODMONT PROPERTIES

  5. grim says:

    How many are age restricted?

  6. Juice Box says:

    I was in downtown Hillsborough Friday.. They whole area has completely changed Mixed use downtown and townhouse developments everywhere as far as the eye can see near the 206 bypass.

    I was in Westfield Sunday. There are loads of mid size mixed use going up all in every nook and cranny by the power lines and train tracks.

    What are the permits like these days? something like 25,000 mixed use and what the rest 1 and 2 family?

  7. 3b says:

    Grim: 60 age restricted apartments were built in Oradell on Kinderkamack Rd. They were completed in late Fall, and they are all empty.

  8. Very Stable Genius says:

    BREAKING NEWS!

    *BOEING’S DAVE CALHOUN ANNOUNCES INTENT TO STEP DOWN AS CEO

  9. 1987 Condo says:

    Re: Calhoun- disliked that guy from his first interviews after the Max crashes, good riddance.

  10. Phoenix says:

    Capitalism and Wall Street killed those Boeing Max passsengers.

    Enjoy your blood money investors. You wanted profits, you got ’em.

    If there is Karma, which I don’t believe in, but you might, it’s comin’

  11. Phoenix says:

    Hillsborough used to be farmland. I guess Green Acres isn’t cutting it anymore.

    At some point you realistically can’t call this the “Garden State” anymore.

    This place can’t even provide enough “garden grown” food to feed the fatties in Bergen county.

    I was in downtown Hillsborough Friday.. They whole area has completely changed Mixed use downtown and townhouse developments everywhere as far as the eye can see near the 206 bypass.

  12. Phoenix says:

    So Poland watched a missile fly over it’s territory knowing it’s target is Ukraine.

    Hey buddy, better you than me. Don’t need that crap crashing in Poland. Hehe.

    “The Polish command emphasizes that the military knew that the Russian missile that flew over Lublin region in the morning would turn back to Ukraine.

    “The Ukrainian air defense has learned that most Russian missiles come from the east or north; defenders are less likely to expect an attack from the west. Therefore, the Russian Federation deliberately maneuvers its missiles in such a way that they circle and hit targets in Ukraine from the west,” said Lieutenant Colonel Jacek Goryszewski, spokesperson for the Armed Forces Operational Command.

    He emphasized that the Polish military knew that the Russian missile would turn back to Ukraine.

    He also explained that the decision that the missile would not be shot down was made by the Operational Command of the Armed Forces.
    “The decision was based on information from our radar systems. The assessment of the missile’s trajectory, speed, and altitude indicated that it would leave our airspace,” the spokesperson said.

    According to Lieutenant Colonel Goryszewski, an attempt to shoot down the missile would have posed a greater risk to locals.

    “The missile weighs more than two tons, of which 400 kilograms is the payload. After the missile is shot down, its debris will fall on our territory. The remnants of the effector that was used to shoot down the missile itself will also fall here,” he said.

  13. Hold my beer says:

    Maybe hipsters will be drawn to Jersey because of its ironic nickname and proximity to New York.

  14. Phoenix says:

    Hey Russia, you are going to be attacked. How do we know? We sponsored it, that’s how.
    These guys can be bought off easily.

    But Russian authorities again tried to discredit the direct claims made by the terror group, instead appearing to blame the attack on the West, after it emerged that the US tried to warn Russia about the massacre weeks before it happened.

  15. Juice Box says:

    3b – Empty Apartments? That is a no good, they will go back to the town and cry to get the age restriction changed. They will claim lack of diversity is why it won’t rent.

  16. BRT says:

    How, as a senior citizen are you supposed to drive in that area of Kinderkamack Rd? You got a bunch of maniacs hellbent on cutting you off every 5 seconds.

  17. BRT says:

    Juice, did you get to see the mess that is the 206 abandoned construction project? They tore up the entire place, curbs included, and then left it. Now it’s just a muddy mess everywhere all the time. I remember in 2008 everyone was like, “oh you’re commute will improve once they finish that”. At the time, it was 25 years in.

    Why anyone would buy a townhome in Hillsborough is beyond me. Somerville is much more attractive. Better restaurants, nicer downtown, closer to the highways. They both however come with views of historic Kenny’s house.

  18. BRT says:

    I drove through Freehold and Manalapan yesterday. I passed the elementary school on 33 right past the racetrack. They were building a huge addition onto it. In this environment of nobody having kids, most elementary schools were running grades half the size of what they were 15 years ago. As a result, we’ve seen a lot of downsizing of staff and even building consolidation in districts. How many people with young kids moved into Monmouth County the past few years?

  19. Juice Box says:

    We have a new development for seniors going up on Rt 35 in Holmdel at the old Peck Farms. It’s being setup on the Medicare gravy train model. BrightView chain of senior care for folks in their 80s and 90s only, placed will be staffed with three full time shifts.

    They estimate only seven 911 calls a month…. I haven’t checked but there might even be a freezer onsite..

  20. leftwing says:

    “Capitalism and Wall Street killed those Boeing Max passsengers.”

    Meh, no fan of Boeing, how they handled MCAS, or Calhoun but a good part of the blame lands on third world pilots…but it was too un-PC to say so….

    You’re not corporate, ask anyone who is…airlines are blacklisted for corporate travel because of safety, maintenance, training, or insurance purposes…your company will prohibit you from getting on a certain airline, but no one says that out loud….

  21. BRT says:

    but isn’t the airline industry supposed to be very heavily regulated by our government to prevent such simple problems that didn’t exist 30 years ago?

  22. 3b says:

    Juice: I am sure they will go back to the town, to try and get the restrictions removed. Meanwhile, a developer has gone back to the town (Oradell) for a 3rd time to have a 70 unit apartment complex approved also on KKR.

  23. 3b says:

    BRT: The development on KKR was built with the back of the development facing KKR ( built on the site of the old AAA building) ,entry and exits are located on opposite sides of the development.

  24. Boomer Remover says:

    I can recommend “Turning Point: The Bomb and the Cold War Documentary” on Netflix. Really good walk through the cold war era from a US point of view, great footage, and all nicely tied together. Nine one hour episodes.

    Nothing we already don’t know, but there are some nuggests in there. For example, I didn’t know the CIA provided the Polish Solidarnosc movement with printing presses to be able to print underground newspapers, and also a custom built device to superimpose images over television signals. This device was used to communicate the locations of pope John Paul II’s masses slash solidarity pep rallies to the masses.

  25. Boomer Remover says:

    How about these terrorists, eh? Setting aside the whole affair around Putin’s attribution to Ukraine, these guys graduate top of class from ISIS K’s school of hard knocks, kill 140 people and then….

    do not go out in a blaze of glory?
    do not have a plan for final encounter with authorities?
    all four of them allow themselves to be captured?
    russia is able to track this vehicle to some rando countryside road?

    Surely they knew it would end in torture for life for them, you’re telling me they didn’t have the sidearm and will to finish the job?

    How were they captured with no gunshot wounds? I don’t believe they would just come out of their vehicle, hands up and allow themselves to be cuffed. Come on…

    ISIS-K has videos of body cams worn during the shooting, and I read that they blurred the attacker’s faces before releasing snippets. Only russian and ISIS-K officials know whether the persons captured and paraded in russian courts are in fact the perpetrators.

  26. Libturd says:

    On Boeing. There are few who dislike Wall Street as much as I do. This is not their doing. This was a poorly calculated decision by Boeing. After the original whistleblower incident, I watched a news special on the MAX issues up to that point. Don’t forget about the initial batteries overheating and catching fire too. This was before the software programming errors which was mainly traced to an error in metric vs. imperial units. The real shame of this being, Boeing designed a great plane. I’ve flown on three and they are far superior to anything Airbus is producing. On one flight, where we had one of those pilots who feels the need to come out of the cockpit to give his initial flight briefing. He said it’s the smoothest commercial jet to fly to and said he’d be happy never having to fly anything else. As a passenger, the larger windows, larger seats in economy and wider aisle are fantastic. Heck, there’s even a window in the rear bathroom and it’s a pretty large bathroom to boot too. But ultimately, the plane is almost all carbon graphite and little aluminum, making it much lighter, much more fuel efficient and supposedly longer lasting with less weather related stress. Where Boeing completely dropped the ball, was outsourcing 99% of the part manufacturing. Besides the initial delays, which were tremendous, the quality of the outsourced work was inferior. When you have multiple vendors trying to manufacturer so many parts that have to fit together to very high standards, it’s a recipe for disaster. And it was. This idea, to save money through outsourcing, turned out to be a giant failure.

    I heard on the news on Saturday, the emergency door patch issue, was being investigated as a criminal act. They didn’t provide any more information than that, but I bet it was another case of Boeing knowingly cutting corners. Like the Three-Mile-Island disaster (which ended up really not being that bad), it doesn’t seem to matter if there is a profit-motive or not. Once a few problems arise, us stupid humans have a tendency to rush on the solutions to make up for lost time, without thinking it through. In the case of Three-Mile-Island, they actually turned off the water to the reactor when a failing sensor said the water was off, thinking they were turning it on. This single bone-headed decision destroyed our countries desire to build a single new nuke plant to this day.

    Where I am employed, I am usually brought in when we have a current manufacturing issue. I can’t tell you how many times the panic has customer service and sales making the most boneheaded decisions. Again, adding risks to make up for prior bad decisions. In nearly all cases, I find the best solution is to let the customer know what occurred as expediently as possible and let them have a stake in determining the best solution. This way, if things do go awry, they are not only aware of the risks taken, but they also own a part of it. Covering things up always results in a loss of client. Boeing clearly has not learned this. I really hope they can turn it around. It really is a very great plane they designed.

  27. Phoenix says:

    Inspectors, like other lazy government workers, just hung around, took Boeing’s word for everything, and collected their pensions.

    Civil crimes rarely end up with real prison time. That should be corrected.

    BRT says:
    March 25, 2024 at 8:59 am
    but isn’t the airline industry supposed to be very heavily regulated by our government to prevent such simple problems that didn’t exist 30 years ago?

  28. Libturd says:

    Let me fix that.

    Government crimes (and Wall Street crimes) rarely end up with real prison time. That should be corrected. Of course, they are in bed together so this makes total sense.

  29. Phoenix says:

    Outsourcing is for profit, Wall Street style. They outsourced engineers as well.

    Why do that when you have seasoned workers already? Cause it’s cheaper, and that means more profit for investors.

    They also went cheap and only put one AOA sensor in. Hey, save a buck mentality, no backup, no redundancy.

    And no, it had nothing to do with the pilots, third world or not. It had to do with being a cheapskate and cutting corners.

  30. Phoenix says:

    BrightView chain of senior care for folks in their 80s and 90s only, placed will be staffed with three full time shifts.

    Why is it called BrightView. Cause they are all about to follow the light?

  31. BRT says:

    I saw the downfall of manufacturing occurring in real time in the early 2000s. Playing guitar, it was very well known that the 70s electronic stomp boxes for any number of effects were far superior to the modern ones. There were guys running businesses where you could mail them your stomp box, they would swap out the cheap electronics for quality ones and send it back. I started doing it to my own pedals and basically calculated, they dropped the quality of the product off the side of a cliff to save $1 on a $50 dollar product. The tradeoff just isn’t there. But they didn’t care. At that point, I just started buying things from the 60s/70s exclusively off ebay. All of it still works to this day including my 1967 15 Watt Univox tube amplifier which still uses the original tubes.

  32. grim says:

    One of the dirty little secrets of outsourcing, is that in many cases, what’s being outsourced is risk and liability.

    Ask anyone in the business what the most common thing is that scuttles a deal – everyone will tell you, disagreements around liability provisions in the contract.

    It’s easy to tell when clients are looking to outsource risk, they ask for uncapped liability, when they get countered with liability to not exceed some single digit multiple of contract value, they turn their nose up in disgust.

    Te second dirty secret around outsourcing is disconnecting negative perception about labor actions with the company itself. For example, for large healthcare payers, we ramp up thousands of employees for 2-3 months of the year, most all of them get laid off. Rinse, repeat, every year. They don’t want the annual PR disaster, the negative perception. Outsource it, and nobody knows, nobody cares, no warn notices, etc etc. Easy way to accessing labor flexibility, hire or fire thousands in a shot, without ever making the news.

  33. grim says:

    Some of the best vintage electronics can’t be replicated anymore, the components that made them sound great simply aren’t made anymore.

    Good example of this were the echo pedals that used analog bucket brigade ICs. Digital versions were far more elaborate, but just didn’t have the same sound. Find a sleeve of new old stock bucket brigades? Jackpot.

    China is actually doing a great job with tubes these days. Sure, nothing will beat NOS Mullards, RCAs, etc, but the growing audiophile population in China is powering the next wave of vintage audio resurgence.

    My brother has been rewinding vintage pickups, experimenting with what works best, what doesn’t work best. Ironically, coils wound perfectly sound like shit, coils wound like they were at 4pm on a Friday before quitting time sounded great. The folks that knew the secrets here are all dead now, it’s got to be reinvented. Perfectly wound coils, like ones that would come off computer controlled winders sound like shit because nearly the entire coil is wound perfectly parallel to each other, which creates significantly more capacitance, which kills the high end. Hand winding/guiding introduces more air gaps, less capacitance, which better replicates the sound of the older gear. This is also why point to point wiring is preferred in a lot of cases, you are controlling the positioning of the wire paths in a 3d space. Where the components are located on that amp chassis is absolutely not based on chance. The locations of parts, transformers, and the routes the wiring were placed are all absolutely critical. In some cases the paths were made to eliminate noise, in other cases the paths were chosen to absolutely induce noise and feedback. You know Trainwreck? Build a clone, use the same schematic exactly, guarantee you that it won’t sound the same.

  34. Chicago says:

    Freehold Boro is exploding as a magnet of the undocumented. In addition there are quite a number of Ukrainian refugees too. There is some nexus down here with that diaspora. A whole chunk of them have been shunted to Colts Neck high school as ESL students.

    My son is colorblind; he judges based on character. He is friendly with most ESL Ukrainians and a few ESL Latinos. There are a few Latinos that are disdainful of the broader group. A few are motivated to learn English, assimilate and excel at school. A good chunk bring third world style behavior. Cutting class, vaping in the bathrooms, making out heavily in the hallways in full view. Not “gang” behavior, but groups of kids targeting other ESL’s. especially the Ukrainians.

    I would contrast that to Red Bank where tons of people in 2004-2007 came and immediately had anchor babies. Well, those anchor babies are now 16-20. They are all over Count Basie and work a lot of the public facing jobs in the area. It feels VERY family oriented. Polite kids. Much more polite that the Red Bank Catholic clowns. The West side of Red Bank is now a really stable family oriented middle class neighborhood. You feel the two parent households impact.

    BRT says:
    March 25, 2024 at 8:50 am
    I drove through Freehold and Manalapan yesterday. I passed the elementary school on 33 right past the racetrack. They were building a huge addition onto it. In this environment of nobody having kids, most elementary schools were running grades half the size of what they were 15 years ago. As a result, we’ve seen a lot of downsizing of staff and even building consolidation in districts. How many people with young kids moved into Monmouth County the past few years?

  35. Juice Box says:

    Chi – A half million Ukrainian refugees have come to the U.S. since the war began. Most about 300,000 or so had some money and came and overstayed on a tourist visa Wink, Wink ala Joe Biden. NJ and PA are #1 and #2 for most of them. One kid now plays on my son’s soccer team. His dad is fighting age too and works construction so he ain’t disabled….Who am I to judge?

    I just don’t want my kids or anyone else’s kids sent over there in a few years to man the trenches. This war needs to end in a negotiated settlement. There won’t be any kind of resounding military victory. There is no talk of even a spring counter offensive this year.

  36. Phoenix says:

    Since you are a taxpaying American, and your money is going there, why can’t you judge?

    His dad is fighting age too and works construction so he ain’t disabled….Who am I to judge?

  37. leftwing says:

    “Surely they knew it would end in torture for life for them, you’re telling me they didn’t have the sidearm and will to finish the job?”

    Yeah, was thinking these guys in the coming days are really going to earn those 40 virgins waiting for them…

    “And no, it had nothing to do with the pilots, third world or not. It had to do with being a cheapskate and cutting corners.”

    Yeah, that’s just flat out wrong. Talk to me when you spend 180+ days in the air annually across the globe, especially on intra-country carrier flights.

    And, if you care to ignore that point again answer this….

    How many successful takeoffs, landings, and flights did the Max have in first world countries up to the Eithiopian crash? Thousands? Tens of thousands? 100k?

    No crashes.

    Care to identify the independent and dependent variables in your conclusion?

    One thing was not like the others…..

  38. Juice Box says:

    Phoenix – They won’t be going back anytime soon. My cousin owns a pub in Ireland, he told me that the ones there all say they won’t be leaving until long after the war ends. There are 100,000 thousand in Ireland, so we aren’t carry our fare share for sure.

  39. leftwing says:

    Same reason people choose to go to your medical facility, and not some shithole Medicaid hostel in an urban core…

  40. Hughesrep says:

    Don Poorleone’s appeal bond reduced to $175 million with an extra 10 days.

    Food has gotten much better in Freehold last few years as well. Ukrainian place just opened up in Howell.

  41. Phoenix says:

    Do you know what function an AOA sensor does? Or a pitot tube?

    Or why some planes had one, others had two?

    Maybe watch the Frontline series on this, or go to a pilot’s forum where those who understand the technology can explain it to you.

    None of us is good or educated on everything. Not even you.

  42. Phoenix says:

    Considering our meddling, all the way back to Ronnie Reagan caused all this, you are right, bring ’em all over here. We most certainly aren’t carrying our fair share.

    Juice Box says:
    March 25, 2024 at 11:28 am
    Phoenix – They won’t be going back anytime soon. My cousin owns a pub in Ireland, he told me that the ones there all say they won’t be leaving until long after the war ends. There are 100,000 thousand in Ireland, so we aren’t carry our fare share for sure.

  43. Phoenix says:

    Hehe. Goal posts move again. American court systems are for circus clowns.

    Trump’s bond is slashed from $464 million to $175 MILLION in the New York fraud case: Appeals court rules ex-president now has 10 days to pay smaller sum in move that could save his assets from Letitia James

  44. LAX says:

    Teflon Don

  45. Phoenix says:

    Hunter Biden served on the board of the Ukrainian oil and gas company Burisma Holdings from 2014 to 2019.

    America’s fingerprints are all over the crime scene.

  46. Very Stable Genius says:

    Rightwing trickle down economics to destroy the middle class.

    Tax payers bailing out multimillion CEOs bonuses.

    Phoenix says:
    March 25, 2024 at 9:56 am
    Outsourcing is for profit, Wall Street style. They outsourced engineers as

  47. Fast Eddie says:

    Tax payers bailing out multimillion CEOs bonuses.

    Doesn’t this benefit you? You wear suits in the $1,000s and live a luxurious lifestyle so I would venture that it trickles down to you and your ilk.

  48. Juice Box says:

    Trump clowns keep buying DWAC today.

    His 3 Billion dollar share just became nearly 4 Billion.

    $46.16 24.96% +9.22 Today

  49. leftwing says:

    “Do you know what function an AOA sensor does? Or a pitot tube?”

    I do.

    And I also know that if you cannot follow the, yes complicated, flight procedures that common fucking sense tells you that if you are on autopilot and the plane starts ‘misbehaving’ first thing to do is turn the fucking autopilot off…

    May want to let your kid and significant other know the same for their cruise control, just in case their car starts inexplicably accelerating on I80 one day…

    Not to mention the same Lion flight had the same experience the day before and a more senior pilot in the cockpit – wait for it – took down the autopilot according to procedure.

    For the same reason Grim with his recent issues went to the top doctors in town and not the community hospital…everyone is ‘certified’, everyone is ‘experienced’, but not everyone is nearly equal…

  50. Libturd says:

    Leftwing is correct about the autopilot mishap. I was not bothered so much by the crash. It’s the other stuff that has me dumbfounded.

  51. leftwing says:

    Agree there, lib. The corporate ineptitude since then is mind boggling.

  52. grim says:

    It’s funny, I know exactly when I tipped the scales from being a profitable United Healthcare “member” to being unprofitable. It’s when your coordinator calls to introduce themselves. The whole while it’s under the guise of helping you, when in reality they are assigning a “nurse” to control the spend.

    Curious how much their fight with Mt. Sinai cost them. Started treatment at Sinai, was forced to transition care to Sloan Kettering. The amount of duplicity was staggering. Now, surprisingly, they’ve reached an agreement, so instead of only having the top doc in the country, I was able to have the top TWO docs in the country.

    Wasteful, but not my fault, and I’m not going to complain about that.

  53. Phoenix says:

    It wasn’t the autopilot.

  54. grim says:

    The Kettering radiologists were pretty damn impressive. They managed to find a third possible lesion that I had to get checked out, that all the imaging up to that date had missed. Wasn’t even in a related area, so they were absolutely thorough about the review.

    If the last series of non-anesthesia ass probes was not embarrassing enough, I had to go get an ultrasound of the testes. Not sure if you’ve ever gotten an ultrasound, but the typical ultrasound tech is not a 60 year old male, in fact, just about as far opposite of that as is possible. FML.

    On the bright side, I’ve been so thoroughly checked out, I’m feeling pretty good that there isn’t something that’ll blindside me for the next few years.

  55. Juice Box says:

    No expert on Autopilot or MCAS but the two pilots on the first plane crash kept the jet at full throttle while the speed warning lights were flashing too. All kinds of warnings…that it was flying at 700 miles per hour and they then take a turn at that speed back to the airport and kaboom…

    Pilot who was 29 years old had allot of hours by the copilot 25 years old was something like only 200 hours of flight experience…never mind it being a complex aircraft like a 737.

    There is a reason why our pilots are generally older and many ex military etc, and to even have a chance at flying a multi engine commerical aircraft you need at least 1,500 hours.

  56. Chicago says:

    80% of Ukraine “aid” is spent in the U.S. Mostly in the Midwest and for the military complex. Makes no sense why Republicans would want to mess with where their bread is buttered. Beyond the strategic sensibility.

  57. Juice Box says:

    Grim – “all the imaging up to that date had missed”

    They weren’t using Grok or Watson.

  58. JUice Box says:

    Chi – You are not looking in the right place for the grift. There is a multi-billion dollar supply chain of old and outdated ammo and equipment that is getting shipped there. Stuff that was paid for sometimes decades ago by the taxpayers.

    Best case in point is the 155 mm shell. If you can procure some you become the next Lord of War. $8000 thousand euros for just one shell…… A standard one.

    A truck load of 155 mm Excalibur GPS guided? Well those suckers go for $100,000 a shot….

  59. Juice Box says:

    re: “ultrasound of the testes”

    I know a place off Canal Street were you can buy a monthly pass….vibrating option is extra….

  60. Juice Box says:

    Yup they gave Trump another Billion.

    DWAC – 50.51 USD +13.57 (36.74%)today

  61. Fast Eddie says:

    DWAC – 50.51 USD +13.57 (36.74%)today

    Is that NY AG Qwaneesha James in on the action?

  62. leftwing says:

    Oh FFS Phoenix you’re just now being obstinate to fit facts to your anti-WS/anti-corp screed…

    Read the ‘Investigation’ part.

    Massive failure on account of the airline (maintenance and known issues with the AoA) and the pilots (failure to follow standard runaway trim procedure).

    The flight had major issues the night before and was not grounded. The AoA was replaced and still known to be not functioning properly the flight before. Yet the plane was not grounded and allowed to continue flying. With a crew that did not follow, on the crash day, basic procedure.

    This is why you don’t fly shitty third world airlines, and why major corporates don’t allow their employees onboard.

    Maintenance and training are not up to par.

    That plane would have never taken off with a US carrier especially with that crew.

    Was MCAS a software/design bridge for Boeing? Yes.

    Could they have provided more and better instruction and certification? Yes.

    But the pilots and maintenance crew flew this fucker into the ocean, not Boeing.

  63. LAX says:

    Hey grim, any discomfort after they snip the pollups?? Asking for a friend.

    Glad to hear you caught that. Hang out with us a while longer.

  64. Libturd says:

    “The whole while it’s under the guise of helping you, when in reality they are assigning a “nurse” to control the spend.”

    The D started out with nearly 2 million in supposed invoiced dollars. We would be assigned one of these “nurses” about every six months. The worst part of it, is that they don’t even bother to learn D’s history, so you end up explaining to them the whole history and it takes about an hour since our little guy was so complicated. By the third nurse, we told them WE would call THEM.

  65. NJ RE, and Assman report says:

    “Not sure if you’ve ever gotten an ultrasound,”

    I’ve had that, they checked me out for DVT after surgery. I didn’t realize that the test would check the artery in the groin.

    Had my inspection this morning. I went for the 2for1 and had the cameras go both ways. One polyp removed and some inflammation in the stomach, biopsied and sent for testing.

    The fasting and flushing is the worst part. The only pain is the IV. I almost didn’t get to go. I had been off my BP meds. I felt fine, but they are looking at my numbers saying “I think we may need to send you to the ER”. I was hot and dehydrated from the fasting. After a few min of relaxing I got the systolic down 40 points and the diastolic to double digits and we were off to the races.

  66. Libturd says:

    Just don’t get the camera up the wee wee to inspect the prostate from the inside. Trust me.

  67. Hughesrep says:

    Think that costs extra.

  68. Phoenix says:

    Lib

    Especially the 28F

  69. Phoenix says:

    Duffy got raided. Hehe

  70. Phoenix says:

    Remember that time when you owed the IRS $475 and they just said, make it $175 and take an extra 10 days?

    No?

    Me either.

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