why that was nice

Should i start using crystal meth?

  • Sure...its not that bad...

    Votes: 93 62.0%
  • Just say no!

    Votes: 57 38.0%

  • Total voters
    150
just because you owe $950K doesnt mean its worth that much.
Notice his wording, he said he lives in that house. Probably renting it with a bunch of other peoples, or sponging off of his parents...

Nah it's actually worth about 955-960
No need for me to bs about it..
Apparently there is a need to bs about it, because you did... House is valued at about a third of what you think it is. Doesnt look like a $1mil house to me at all, the 600k figure seems much more accurate.

what is that telling the price of the houses?
Probably zillow.com

 
Notice his wording, he said he lives in that house. Probably renting it with a bunch of other peoples, or sponging off of his parents...
Apparently there is a need to bs about it, because you did... House is valued at about a third of what you think it is. Doesnt look like a $1mil house to me at all, the 600k figure seems much more accurate.

Probably zillow.com
It's not my house. It's my parents. so yeah you're right i don't own it.

You're forgetting the fact that this is NYC so all that "it doesn't look mess" is pretty irrelevant since the cost of living is the highest in the country(yes that plays a huge factor into prices)

Peep this..

1939 Gleason Ave in the bronx. T E R R I B L E area. You couldn't even walk through here at 12am without the fear of being robbed.

8rfcmjg62dx6oya1fkh2.jpg


See the value of that white house? IN THE HOOD. highly doubt that house is worth 15k less than the house i live in. see where i'm going with this?

ZESTIMATE®: $2,605,000
Zestimate

A Zestimate home valuation is Zillow's estimated market value. It is not an appraisal. Use it as a starting point to determine a home's value.

Learn more

The Value Range is the high and low estimated market value for which Zillow values a home. The more information, the smaller the range, and the more accurate the Zestimate. See data coverage and accuracy table

* Value Range: $599,150 - $2,735,250
According to zillow it has a value of 2 mill. i don't know anyone who would pay 1/4 of that to live there.

 
It's not my house. It's my parents. so yeah you're right i don't own it.
You're forgetting the fact that this is NYC so all that "it doesn't look mess" is pretty irrelevant since the cost of living is the highest in the country(yes that plays a huge factor into prices)

Peep this..

1939 Gleason Ave in the bronx. T E R R I B L E area. You couldn't even walk through here at 12am without the fear of being robbed.

8rfcmjg62dx6oya1fkh2.jpg


See the value of that white house? IN THE HOOD. highly doubt that house is worth 15k less than the house i live in. see where i'm going with this?

According to zillow it has a value of 2 mill. i don't know anyone who would pay 1/4 of that to live there.
u mad lol

 
Whether you wanna admit it or not eggy, local sales affect the value of your parents house. This means that very expensive houses located near the hood are negatively affected by their sales, just as much as cheap *** houses are positively affected by expensive houses being built/sold near them.

Your parents house isnt worth what you think.

 
In this spirit, it’s important to take a closer look at Wrangham and Peterson’s theory. In reviewing the research on apes, these authors present a picture of male violence with a remarkably meaningful pattern, which is both shocking and familiar. In all three cases, the underlying premise is that of males using force in order to increase their chances of reproduction. The orangutan male does it by raping–most female orangutans are ***** regularly–and the chimpanzee does it by battering–all female chimpanzees get battered. As for the gorilla, this otherwise gentle and peaceful ape is apparently into infanticide. The really strange thing in the case of the gorilla is that after the male kills the female’s infant (from another male), the female may voluntarily join the killer and have her next baby with him. She may even spend the rest of her life with him. This, despite her strong and very affectionate bond with her infant.

The logic of gorilla infanticide, according to Wrangham and Peterson, is the same as that of the **** and battery exercised by their orangutan and chimpanzee cousins. The common theme is the female’s vulnerability and the male desire to control and dominate her so that he can get his way with her, ultimately, without resistance. In the case of chimpanzee battering, for example, the male seems to attack the female initially for the purpose of consortship. Apparently, after several such attacks the female ends up following him to the edge of the community’s range, where the two may travel together peacefully with no further signs of her having been coerced. In the case of chimpanzee infanticide, it seems that the very act makes the killer attractive to the mother of the killed baby–presumably because he can offer her protection from other male baby killers.

In terms of the comparison to humans, Wrangham and Peterson make one critical, if frightening, point. They explain that ape violence is not just some kind of innate impulse gone out of control. Rather, it’s been reinforced evolutionarily because it works, and it works not only because of female vulnerability but because apes are in fact intelligent. That is, unlike other species, their use of violence is guided by a cognitive understanding of how it will get them what they want in their relationships. What’s frightening, of course, is that we are even more intelligent and therefore can put our aggressive endowment into even greater use–which we have clearly done by progressively producing ever more destructive killing technologies. (back to top)

12

Amazingly, even this purely psychological hypothesis seems to have an equivalent in the world of apes from which I’ve tried to separate. Apparently, the orangutans who **** belong to a special class of males who are physically small and are therefore not followed voluntarily by females. It’s scary and scientifically probably misguided to directly connect this to human ****. Yet one cannot help but speculate that if they could talk, these small male orangutans would tell a variation of the story told by aggressive men to their therapists. Of course the fact that they don’t have language–let alone therapists–is not incidental. Indeed, the capacity to think and talk about one’s story in words changes the story itself, not only at the time of the telling, but even beforehand, as its events and elements are conceived and developed in the person’s life. I will return to discuss these orangutans in relation to men a bit later, but for a more comprehensive discussion of the similarities and differences between orangutan and human ****, see Wrangham and Peterson.

 
Activity
No one is currently typing a reply...

About this thread

faulkton

5,000+ posts
CarAudio.com Veteran
Thread starter
faulkton
Joined
Location
neverland
Start date
Participants
Who Replied
Replies
31,921
Views
604,166
Last reply date
Last reply from
natisfynest
IMG_0710.png

michigan born

    May 14, 2026
  • 0
  • 0
IMG_0709.png

michigan born

    May 14, 2026
  • 0
  • 0

New threads

Top