How Are People Affording Homes in 2024?! (Breaking Down The Real Numbers)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 3 июн 2024
  • Have you ever wondered how many people get financial help from their parents when purchasing a home?
    What mistakes do people make when it comes to buying or selling a home?
    What should people know about interest rates?
    What are strategies for building wealth through real estate?
    We spoke with Yael Ishakis, a loan officer with FM Home Loans, who dropped knowledge in a big way - we're talking real numbers, real stories, real areas.
    You can contact Yael at 845-548-9075.
    To subscribe to Eli Fried's great weekly newsletter, visit tinyurl.com/EliFriedNewsletter
    CHAPTERS:
    00:00:00: Episode Preview
    00:00:26: Introduction to Yael Ishakis
    00:02:00: Realistic Home Purchasing
    00:10:38: Colel Chabad
    00:11:52: Analyzing Mortgage Rates
    00:14:12: Financial Help
    00:15:53: Exploring Affordable Communities
    00:21:08: Kehilla of East Meadow
    00:23:58: Pioneering Communities
    00:27:51: Creative Solutions
    00:29:57: Market Trends
    00:32:41: Foreclosures and Credit Card Debt
    00:37:06: The Donors Fund
    00:39:00: Good Investments, Risks, and Tips
    00:44:13: Everything to Know About Credit Cards
    00:47:35: Home Inspections
    00:49:16: Buyers and Sellers Negotiation Tips
    00:51:16: Twillory
    00:52:30: Women in Real Estate
    00:54:04: Advice for Aspiring Loan Officers
    00:56:36: Final Thoughts: Own a Home!
    00:59:41: Conclusion and Thank You
    01:00:30: Living Smarter Jewish
    01:01:01: Kosher Money Tip
    01:01:34: Donate + Premium Membership
    ✬ SPONSORS OF EPISODE 73 ✬
    ► EAST MEADOW: Experience the warmth and excitement of East Meadow, Long Island, an out-of-town community right next door to Queens & the 5 Towns! Schedule a visit or learn more by contacting Malki at 917-376-6364 or clicking www.kehillaofeastmeadow.com/
    ► COLEL CHABAD: Please help Israel as its people need all the help they can get! Visit www.ColelChabad.org/KosherMoney to make a much-needed donation!
    ► THE DONOR'S FUND: More people are using this banklike system for charity. With a sleek mobile app or desktop solution, you can keep all your charity giving in a single place, plus there are about a dozen additional perks. Get your account here: thedonorsfund.org/koshermoney
    ► TWILLORY: Get $18 OFF your first purchase of absolutely comfortable clothing for today's casual professional look. Use code CHAI at Twillory.com/KosherMoney
    By the way, here's the link to the Waterbury school that I referenced. Growing since the year 2000 b"H! -- ykwaterbury.org/
    And here's a link to the 401K finder tools that I referenced in my outro: www.finder.com/retirement/how...
    ✬ Donate and Inspire Millions (Tax-Deductible) ✬
    Your generous donation enables us at Living Lchaim to share uplifting & insightful content! » www.livinglchaim.com/donate
    Follow Kosher Money for Bonus Shorts:
    TikTok - / koshermoneypod
    Instagram - / koshermoneypod
    Follow Living Lchaim for More Goodies:
    TikTok - / livinglchaim
    Instagram - / livinglchaim
    Facebook - / livinglchaim
    LinkedIn - / living-lchaim
    Free Call-In-To-Listen Hotline:
    USA: 605-477-2100 UK: 0333-366-0154
    ISRAEL: 079-579-5088
    Need financial guidance? Get help from our friends at LivingSmarterJewish.org/
    WhatsApp feedback to 1-914-222-5513
    All investment strategies and investments involve risk of loss. Nothing contained in our content, ads and videos should be construed as investment or actual life advice.
    #KosherMoney #KosherMoneyPod #Money #Mortgage #Homes

Комментарии • 104

  • @johnshim7206
    @johnshim7206 25 дней назад +5

    Great podcast. Very informative and breaks down the concerns of many prospective buyers.

  • @bailatwerski2951
    @bailatwerski2951 26 дней назад +32

    It's absolutely ridiculous to dress your children well and not be able to afford your home. You can find much cheaper deals and the kids look good at the Goodwill or Target or learn how to sew and sew your children's clothing. There are tons of Gemach

    • @ericah6546
      @ericah6546 26 дней назад +4

      When I was little I wore a lot of clothes handed down from my older cousins. My parents were financially smart and by age 14 we moved into a much nicer house.

    • @randomperson1815
      @randomperson1815 26 дней назад +8

      Any kid under 10 years old will destroy their clothes. It's pointless to get overpriced kids clothes

    • @aggieglitter
      @aggieglitter 26 дней назад +3

      At the end of the day your kids don't care what they wear. Kids can be dressed well for cheap. That story shocked me.

    • @TexasCountryLiving
      @TexasCountryLiving 26 дней назад +4

      There is a whole lot more going on with that family’s finances beyond their kids’ clothes.

    • @davidglad
      @davidglad 4 дня назад +1

      @aggieglitter at least when I was in middle school, there was some peer pressure to fit in. Not really as much in high school because by then you're really free to do your own thing. In hindsight, I'm of course happy my parents made the choices they did (often by inaction) as life these days is great both for me and them

  • @sportsallday8795
    @sportsallday8795 26 дней назад +10

    Buying a home “is the only way for a layman to build wealth” is a very silly statement.

  • @VBoo459
    @VBoo459 20 дней назад +5

    The fact she said that buying a home is the only way regular people can grow wealth shows she lacks quite a bit of education in that front. . It gave different insights anyway and I had no clue about credit freezes which is also possible in the UK

  • @BJ-bc7sl
    @BJ-bc7sl 26 дней назад +6

    The risk of having rental properties is that the renter can become a squatter really quickly and then you may lose your investment property if you can’t pay the mortgage on it. That young girl Yale was referring to was really lucky that she found a good renter for the property.

    • @eliot5220
      @eliot5220 23 дня назад

      That’s a rare occurrence. But there are risks. You just have to minimize that but buying cheaper properties for rent

  • @hope4allisbest553
    @hope4allisbest553 26 дней назад +3

    Attending a home inspection is always beneficial, even for women. You will learn more about the home and will learn what to look for when making future home purchases. If you are pressed for time ask the inspector how long they think it will take to inspect the home then come for the last hour and ask the inspector to walk you through the house to highlight what they found with you. Not all inspectors are great and you may point out something they missed or have questions that can be immediately answered. Also, keep in mind that a home inspector is not a specialist. If there are features of the home that are considered extras they may not be covered, such as a chimney. Your home inspector may be able to find the obvious that the chimney is not compromising the structure of the home, but they won’t be able to tell you if the chimney is functional. If you want to know that you’ll need to contact a chimney company and schedule a chimney inspection at an additional cost to you (as your bank won’t require it for a loan). Chimney repair costs can go into the thousands of dollars very easily.

  • @ICDimension
    @ICDimension 24 дня назад +3

    Come to Mill Basin in Brooklyn. Real Eruv. 4 Ashkenaz Shuls. 3 Sefaradic Shuls. 1 Yemenite shul. Supermarket. Mikveh. Starter homes from $600k. Large waterfront homes $1.5-2mm. 15 mins from Flatbush. Amazing sense of community. Dozens of frum families moved in in the past two years. Busing to all flatbush yeshivahs. Quiet and quaint neighborhood close to everything.

  • @jgonzalez372
    @jgonzalez372 26 дней назад +3

    Great interview full of knowledge abd wisdom, thank you ❤

  • @user-og2wt3le4j
    @user-og2wt3le4j 26 дней назад +7

    The bank of Mom and Dad always approves your "loan". They are at least good for a down payment.

  • @zookeeper510
    @zookeeper510 26 дней назад +6

    For many frum people, $600-700K (East Meadow) is still unaffordable - a mortgage will be at least $4500 a month...

    • @Bitachon
      @Bitachon 26 дней назад +3

      100%

    • @Zensci18
      @Zensci18 24 дня назад +1

      Huh…Easy solution- move away from high cost areas and cities.

    • @zookeeper510
      @zookeeper510 24 дня назад

      ​@@Zensci18, absolutely agree with you! I've lived in small and affordable communities.

  • @cohenlabe1
    @cohenlabe1 26 дней назад +27

    The lesson is dont live in a frum area we price ourselves out

    • @Zensci18
      @Zensci18 25 дней назад +1

      Or maybe strive to pursue a better paying profession? go to grad school, get a doctorate, or learn to code software. Don’t have kids right out of high school. Use your early to mid 20’s to get educated and have kids after. the “frum world” might look down upon this but I did that and make over 200k a year and my wife as well and suddenly those folks who looked down upon my wife and I for doing that are “our friends” again because we can afford a upper class life. you want a rich frum life ? Fantastic - now work hard and go earn it.

    • @cohenlabe1
      @cohenlabe1 25 дней назад +2

      @@Zensci18 I know you're coming from a good place but not all of us are grad school material and that does not negate the fact that we price ourselves out we find an affordable place build a shule and 5 years later the house is double in price which is good for the people who bought it but not for the people who didn't

    • @Zensci18
      @Zensci18 25 дней назад +1

      @@cohenlabe1 but it shows that building Jewish community brings value. This phenomenon you bring up is much more of a good thing than a bad. It might not even really be “bad” at all frankly.
      Ok - indeed Not everyone is grad school material but not everyone has to live in the tri-state area or Pico in LA. I grew up in AZ and while I don’t live there now, the Jewish community in Phoenix has grown by leaps and bounds compared to how it was when I was a kid. There are cheaper areas in several parts of the country that are only growing more and more every year. In places like Phoenix, you don’t need to be doctorate-level professional or have family money to qualify for a home loan. You just need a good amount of savings and a steady job. It ain’t NY but it ain’t bad.

    • @cohenlabe1
      @cohenlabe1 25 дней назад

      @@Zensci18 agreed we all don't have to live in and around in New York. I have theory about that there are two types of people that live in New York those who are trapped here those who don't know they're trapped here for example jobs in schools for for children are known traps but there are also high earners who would not be of they left

    • @Zensci18
      @Zensci18 25 дней назад

      @@cohenlabe1 m’shaneh makom, m’shaneh mazel

  • @bailatwerski2951
    @bailatwerski2951 26 дней назад +6

    Same thing with Airmont New York. Now prices are going up because more and more Kosher stores and restaurants are popping up

  • @heythereall
    @heythereall 26 дней назад +3

    Correction about Naugatuck- the Bais Yaakov that services Waterbury is actually IN Naugatuck

  • @RiviHipHop
    @RiviHipHop 22 дня назад

    Great info. I used fm loans and was thrilled.

  • @PlutoTheGod
    @PlutoTheGod 26 дней назад +1

    I think more people need to be comfortable moving. Saving is extremely important for self preservation, and the second you’re in a situation where your career to cost of living is not allowing for it you might as well be comfortable moving elsewhere for the prosperity of your family instead of slowly draining everything you’ve built to sit in a city. We know the markets correct or crash every decade or so, and there will always be another opportunity for you to come back and buy in, but people trying to live on a $3000 a month salary in NYC today just aren’t going to get ahead and would be much better suited moving to a more rural and affordable area.

  • @mariapalumbo6630
    @mariapalumbo6630 13 дней назад

    Awesome lessons. Great instruction. Thank you

  • @MDavidoff
    @MDavidoff 26 дней назад +2

    Check out Rochelle Park in NJ. I own a pharmacy in the neighborhood and it’s very affordable and great neighborhood

  • @aaronfriedman7013
    @aaronfriedman7013 26 дней назад +3

    As a home inspector I'll disagree with her. The less you know, the more important it is for you to be there. If you understand basics, you'll understand the report. If you don't know, come and ask questions. Your inspector should have the time and patience to explain everything

  • @lavidadeerick
    @lavidadeerick 26 дней назад +3

    Thanks for sharing these data with us...

  • @kaylacook5727
    @kaylacook5727 26 дней назад +6

    Nice episode,
    I personally disagree with buying a house for equity. You buy a house if you need or can afford.
    If your house went up in price, most likely, the houses around went up in price as well.
    So what good did that do?! (Unless you pull out equity and invested another places)
    I lived in Europe for a couple years. And I saw wealthy people who owned properties and businesses but never lived in their own house.

  • @steveneumann32
    @steveneumann32 21 день назад

    Great episode

  • @ralphripoff1
    @ralphripoff1 25 дней назад +8

    Ok so i went into this optimistically, thinking that i will finally hear some real down-to-earth insight. Instead what im hearing is "instead of paying $1.2-1.5m maybe pay only $700-800k"
    I dont have any rich relatives and household income is under $100k.
    My family's only chance of owning a home is if i die then my wife gets a $1.5 million payout.

    • @BJ-bc7sl
      @BJ-bc7sl 25 дней назад +1

      1) Start out with a coop or condo and build equity. 2) Look for other work opportunities that can increase your income. 3) Stay positive & pray.

    • @Zensci18
      @Zensci18 24 дня назад

      Or move to lower cost of living area or city - and be at peace with that, there’s a lot of great Jewish communities in middle America, southwest, Texas, even the South.

    • @BJ-bc7sl
      @BJ-bc7sl 24 дня назад +2

      ⁠@@Zensci18That doesn’t always solve the cost of living problem…
      1) Lower cost of living city could mean lower incomes and fewer job opportunities
      2) More expensive kosher food
      3) Travel expenses increased when visiting family in other communities
      4) Fewer Jewish educational options for children that don’t fit the options offered in the “out of town” Jewish schools.

    • @Zensci18
      @Zensci18 23 дня назад

      @@BJ-bc7sl indeed those are considerations that have to be taken into account but at end of the day a lower cost of living area or city permits those at lower end of income strata with more opportunity to own their own home versus high cost areas and cities. For example, in AZ or TX if you have a housekeeper, there’s a decent chance they are or will be a homeowner. In NY or LA or similar, one’s housekeeper is likely to be an apartment renter for life with little to no hope of ever owning property.
      As a real world example, my gardener (an immigrant from Latin America with maybe a high school diploma - not sure - has a beautiful home with huge acreage about 1 hour or so outside of the main city where it is quite cheaper area (especially 20 or so years ago when he bought).

    • @jw9597
      @jw9597 22 дня назад

      Move to Cleveland, Ohio

  • @brachastolov4864
    @brachastolov4864 16 дней назад

    This was phenomenal. Soooo impressed. Fyi my son went to yeshiva in Nagatuck beautiful beautiful community. Would love to take Yael out for coffee I love in Dallas. Morah Bracha

  • @Zensci18
    @Zensci18 26 дней назад +3

    Where I live: 1.5 mil home is the average not above. Hence, Younger people are moving to lower cost areas: Houston, Dallas, Vegas, Phoenix, others. Orthodox Judaism in established LA, NYC, DC neighborhoods AND having a middle to upper middle class lifestyle is increasingly only attainable to those with incredibly good jobs where both parents earn or there is serious family assistance. If you are not a high dual income earner family or do not have substantial family assistance it makes no financial sense to live in LA or NY. Move to lower cost cities if you want to keep your lifestyle, OR seek out better paying jobs. Those are the only options. Or just live a lifestyle poorer than you grew up as. Some folks seem to be ok with that. Not me though.

  • @yr5713
    @yr5713 21 день назад

    FYI in Canada its way easier to get a mortgage and you can lock for upto 50 years.
    With the current rates and high housing costs you are not building wealth when purchasing a house. The rent is way lower then the monthly payments. (Its a negative ROI)..

  • @GGg-qr6vw
    @GGg-qr6vw 26 дней назад +1

    As a newly(ish)wed this is constantly on my mind. Mrs. Ishakis is actually a neighbor of my parents and I was so excited to hear from her :)

  • @aggieglitter
    @aggieglitter 26 дней назад +4

    Its so bad here in Sydney. I feel for the young families wanting to buy a house. For 1mil AUD you will get a 3 bed fixer upper in a crappy suburb. 7 years ago i was a single mum, i couldnt afford to buy in Sydney. For my price range, which was $450k AUD, all i could get was a fixer upper that needed everything fixed. So i built in a different state, that was about to boom and i could afford. While the house was being built, i picked up over time and worked my butt off to be able to afford it. It was hard for a year. I didnt even buy lollies or chips fir the kids. They knew and were happy to wait a year. My new build cost me all up $525k AUD and now valued at almost $800k. I have tenants in there while i rent here in Sydney. I hope to purchase in Sydney also, using my equity on my first house. Its doable but hard. This was a great podcast.

  • @JJ-kf4kc
    @JJ-kf4kc 26 дней назад +4

    I have seen this time and time and time again and it will not be ending soon. How are these people dressing their children head to toe and matching outfits driving the latest model bands and then taking and taking and taking......

  • @ekoller
    @ekoller 26 дней назад +12

    $5k is typical mortgage payment?! Is everyone making a half a million bucks a year??

    • @pizza4fresers
      @pizza4fresers 25 дней назад

      Sounds like it

    • @Zensci18
      @Zensci18 24 дня назад

      My wife and I are not making that amount but not that far less than that and we live in a very high cost area with multiple kids in private school and we struggle to not have to dip into our savings. We have one really nice car and one old one, and are not materialistic (we haven’t even fully furnished our home completely). This financial condition of the frum community is not going to be sustainable in the long term. we are going to need to learn how to expect a much more modest lifestyles for our children. But good luck trying to impart that to the next generation.

    • @ekoller
      @ekoller 24 дня назад +1

      @@Zensci18 I’ve been trying to share that vision and all I get called is a curmudgeon or old timer. Things will change when our generation can’t subsidize our children’s lifestyle

    • @Zensci18
      @Zensci18 24 дня назад

      @@ekoller we’re getting pretty darn close to that point I think. I’m seeing a lot more young people moving away - it’s just getting going now but I can envision once the 1st wave goes, more and more will follow. Of course those who took the plunge first will benefit the most because they will have bought when prices were low and then when successive waves come to those locations - their investment will have appreciated (maybe not as high as it would in NY or LA) but still an ROI that’s not too shabby.

    • @JJ-mn8md
      @JJ-mn8md 10 дней назад

      East coast living

  • @chana6184
    @chana6184 17 дней назад +3

    You buy a house to eventually sell to pay for your nursing home.

  • @please866
    @please866 26 дней назад +3

    So whats the solution? And why are house prices not coming down if no one can afford it?!

    • @Zensci18
      @Zensci18 26 дней назад +2

      See my comment above. Solution: move to lower cost of living area OR get better jobs OR live below a lifestyle level that you are accustomed to. That’s it.
      Housing prices not likely to come down as demand is still strong enough despite high inflation and interest rates. Things have to get worse before prices really come down substantially. That’s the reality.

    • @613AllDay
      @613AllDay 25 дней назад +2

      As she said during the episode, at least 60% of buyers that she sees are receiving significant parental and/or familial help. I would posit that the actual number is even higher.
      That being the case, prices will continue to skyrocket.

  • @Ben-mf4go
    @Ben-mf4go 26 дней назад +7

    “I called a lady yesterday, um she has, not even so much…she had about $35,000 in credit card debt”
    lol not that much??

    • @VBoo459
      @VBoo459 20 дней назад

      There are Americans with 70k 100k in debt. Lord knows.

    • @AlexanderY18
      @AlexanderY18 11 дней назад +1

      I guess, in contrast to others, it is considered "not so much"...

    • @krl970
      @krl970 11 дней назад

      She is advocating for leveraging debt on real estate, kind of a wheeler/dealer type of person who makes commissions on sales. This is not good advice at all.

  • @Bitachon
    @Bitachon 26 дней назад +4

    *I'm hoping to wait 2 years to buy a home and hopefully save up money by then.*

  • @eliot5220
    @eliot5220 23 дня назад +1

    I don’t see how you can complain about prices at the same time buy a house for 740,000$ and have a job.

  • @fromdemotoclose
    @fromdemotoclose 25 дней назад

    I live in south fl...it's practically untouchable

  • @youtub6521
    @youtub6521 25 дней назад

    Get the Reventure Consulting channel guy as a guest on your podcast.

  • @heisenberg6886
    @heisenberg6886 26 дней назад +3

    let's keep it short: want to live in a center frum area? get ready to pay for it

    • @Zensci18
      @Zensci18 25 дней назад

      “a center frum area”…in metro NY or LA. Lots of center frum areas in other cities that are less than half (average home price) of high cost areas.

  • @jacklanger
    @jacklanger 26 дней назад +8

    This was such an informative and good episode. Like my steak - well done! (my steak isn't actually well done. I only said that for the line. I'm actually more of a medium guy. Not physically. Physically I am a short guy. Ok. Where were we? Oh right). A+ conversation!

  • @cowboydelnorte3078
    @cowboydelnorte3078 26 дней назад +2

    $2k mortgage is ridiculous just plain ridiculous. Following the simple 50/30/20 model it doesn’t even make sense.

    • @WebSurfingIsMyPastime
      @WebSurfingIsMyPastime 26 дней назад +4

      2k mortgage is cheap as heck if you're living on a coastal city where even mcdonalds workers make $20 an hour.
      Different story if your in podunk nebraska with no real economy.

    • @gabrielgaidos7015
      @gabrielgaidos7015 26 дней назад +3

      in the northeast that is very cheap

    • @Zensci18
      @Zensci18 24 дня назад +1

      2k mortgage doesn’t exist anymore where I live unless people got their mortgage decades ago. In elite cities, mortgages are much much higher.

    • @Noname-wi8xp
      @Noname-wi8xp 7 дней назад

      Maybe 2-3bedroom condo units for under 150k. I think that comes out to under 2k a month.
      Across from a JCC and 2 orthodox Shuls. Only one Jewish school in town though.

  • @Menchman
    @Menchman 26 дней назад +1

    Why is Waterbury so cheap?

  • @paul_domici
    @paul_domici 23 дня назад

    Great interview!!! I love to hear people that are honest and realistic about their money! Very educational for the young people that are looking for a new home!

  • @thomasleeper2202
    @thomasleeper2202 26 дней назад +2

    They are not ,it is a illusion!!

  • @aggieglitter
    @aggieglitter 26 дней назад

    In a Jewish Sydney suburb, which is St Ives and Bondi Beach, you can get a 2 bed apartment for 1.2Mil AUD. Don't even mention a house! You're looking at over 2mil AUD for a house thats a fixer upper. And you need a 10% deposit and then taxes on top of that.I don't know how young couples will it. You either need to have an empire or bank of mum and dad. Or to off your parents. I don't know. It's not going to get any better.

  • @yosefa90
    @yosefa90 3 дня назад

    “Out of town” communities are much more affordable

  • @VBoo459
    @VBoo459 20 дней назад +1

    My parents bought 2 houses and eventually sold. Both at a loss. Both. Irrespective of there being a decade in between. It’s not so straightforward like this.

    • @LivingLchaim
      @LivingLchaim  20 дней назад

      Oy, so sorry to hear. Which areas?

  • @Bitachon
    @Bitachon 26 дней назад +1

    Are people moving to Tampa?

    • @please866
      @please866 25 дней назад

      I wonder why she didn't speak of Tampa. Very affordable there. It's a growing community.

  • @eliot5220
    @eliot5220 23 дня назад +1

    Some of the way she’s talking sounds illegal😮

  • @hansanaik3835
    @hansanaik3835 23 дня назад

    People should get married and buy their own property when they are financially and emotionally ready. I do not understand why parents have to pay for their children's weddings. Anybody over the age of 21 should be independent because they are adults at that age. Also, if people cannot afford a big wedding then go for a small wedding and have a fairly big reception instead. Similarly, if people cannot afford to buy a house in their neighborhood, go further out or buy a fixer upper and renovate it on your own one room at a time. There are many ways of living within your means when you are middle class. Only people who live below poverty line struggle in their lives.

  • @morningspyder
    @morningspyder 26 дней назад +1

    この人はユダヤ教ですか?

  • @eliot5220
    @eliot5220 23 дня назад

    What country are these people in? She’s saying 4-5000 in rent. That’s so crazy. People are doing dumb stuff and I don’t understand why. Example: I own 4 houses and they cost me $2500 a month

    • @please866
      @please866 21 день назад

      These are the prices now in NY to rent a home. What's your solution?

    • @eliot5220
      @eliot5220 21 день назад

      @@please866 First off I wouldn’t rent a house. If you’re renting it should be a small apartment. If you don’t see yourself earning a comfortable wage in the near future you might as well leave and go to a state with lower housing cost.

  • @CaesarRenasci
    @CaesarRenasci 26 дней назад +2

    She did't "drop" knowledge, she revealed or shared it. What you refer to is good, intersting, useful, but not "awesome." Why can't you speak your native language?
    The Sages emphasize that a word is a poweful pweful weapon. You follow Hashem in everything else, why are you so flippant when it comes to language?

    • @LivingLchaim
      @LivingLchaim  26 дней назад +2

      Thanks for this. I will work on it.

    • @AlexanderY18
      @AlexanderY18 11 дней назад +3

      Some people just have a passion to criticize...

  • @rave715
    @rave715 26 дней назад +1

    Go trump he's rite

    • @LivingLchaim
      @LivingLchaim  26 дней назад +4

      Trump isn’t mentioned in the episode.

  • @yitzlebo12
    @yitzlebo12 22 дня назад

    The way how landlords are renewing leases and to raise the rents are ridiculous. What makes them raise the rent amount every two years ? It’s not that their mortgage payment went up why are they raising the rents that’s ridiculous reason renters and struggling