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To: Mamzelle

I share what seems your dislike of carpets.

It's insane for people to walk around outdoors, then enter a house and walk around on something like a carpet.

Imagine taking off your coat, putting it on the floor, and having people walk on it all day. Gross!

Floors should above all be easy to keep clean because they are the places that get the dirtiest the fastest.

(I also believe, like those in other cultures, that one's shoes should be removed on entering a house; I switch to slippers.)


198 posted on 08/22/2004 11:20:41 AM PDT by Age of Reason
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To: Age of Reason
Check out this article

(snip)

One of these spells flared up during the last week in February, when Greenspan recommended that the home-owning public take a good hard look at switching from fixed-rate mortgages, under whose terms payments stay the same no matter what interest rates do, to adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs), where payments fluctuate along with interest rates--which, right now, makes close to zero sense. Interest rates are lower than they've been in 30 years, and, with all economists predicting a general economic upturn, and Bush's budget deficit and the weak dollar sucking up capital, little doubt exists that interest rates must rise, in which case, switching from a fixed-rate to adjustable-rate mortgage would be pretty costly for any family naïve enough to take Greenspan at his word. The episode did not pass completely without critical notice. It was "the strangest bit of advice ever to be proffered by an American central banker," Jim Grant, publisher of Grant's Interest Rate Observer, told the San Francisco Chronicle. Then the press moved on: "Oh, it's just Greenspan." But sometimes wacko ideas can betray deeper truths. It is tempting to ask what stake the chairman might have in trying to convince millions of people to do something so contrary to their own interest. One theory floated by Fed-watchers is that the chairman is trying to help out his classic institutional constituency, the big banks, which hold trillions of dollars in fixed-rate mortgage paper. There may be something to that theory, but there is almost certainly a deeper and more important motive behind this curious advice. Quite simply, Greenspan is trying to keep a wobbly and fragile recovery alive--and using mortgage refinancing to do it.

207 posted on 08/22/2004 12:23:45 PM PDT by Porterville (Dare to hate that which hurts what you love.)
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