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How can you become an international real estate agent?

On October 13, 2009 / By Estate Planning Help / In Estate-Planning-Wills / 1 Comment

I am currently getting my real estate license (in TX) and everyone I have asked has no clue. I have family in Panama City, Panama and I plan on moving there in a year or so. I really would like to sell in the US as well as Panama.

Who else is tired of listening to women whine about deadbeat dads while totally ignoring deadbeat moms?

On October 12, 2009 / By Estate Planning Help / In Estate-Planning-Wills / No Comments

We constantly hear of crackdowns on “dead-beat dads,” but the topic of how they often originate remains hidden and deserves serious light: Dead-beat Mothers.

Motherhood has always been played off as a moral symbol beyond reproach. The truth is it has little moral worth; anyone on I-75 at rush-hour knows there is little risk of the race dying out. Babies are not the final frontier, though that lie certainly helps serve lazy parasites. When choosing to waste her life, her goal is twofold: to have her sustenance assured—to force a man into a position where he must support her—and second, to neatly dispose of her productive years.

There are certain levels of living that no one has the right to affect, including your spouse. First is your purpose in life. Second is the choice of rewards for your own effort, of which she too, is an extension. Trapping a significant other is among the worst malice; arguably worse then rape. Because it’s effects are so long term as it permanently affects so many. Pregnancy in this case is a grasping attempt to take your living energy and spend it on her own bumbling course of destruction: if she is willing to derail your life, she doesn’t care what happens to you and it’s just the beginning—the tip of the iceberg.

To accomplish her fraud, a woman is given a clear outline: created by legislators; funded by tax dollars; and backed up by the government’s monopoly on legal violence. If at any point a man refuses to cooperate men with guns will come to his home and drag him away. A man must finance the endeavor, regardless of how a woman becomes pregnant. When deception has no legal relevance, a serious opportunity exists for fraud to thrive. Here are a few real cases in which this type of insanity manifests it’s self: a middle age teacher statutorily rapes one of her 13 year old students, becomes pregnant, refuses to have an abortion, has a baby, sues him for support and wins. In another, a nurse has sex with a hospital patient, keeps the used condom, inseminates herself in the bathroom, has a baby, sues him for support and wins. Theoretically, a woman could break into a sperm bank, inseminate herself from a dead millionaire, then sue his estate for support and our courts would oblige. There are countless cases of equally asinine yet more conventional deception, which is all predation, period. Such women believe the state of motherhood is beyond moral question, and backed by our courts, is free to commit any atrocity to achieve it. What are our legal guardians thinking? I wouldn’t trust such a Judge to preside over a toaster: fraud is a felony. The legal and moral response to steal money through fraud in any other realm is prison time and restitution, but in this case, the penalties are reserved for the victim.

Couples must plan for the fact that no birth control method is 100% effective, and the choice to have children or not to and when, is not outside the court’s authority to acknowledge. A violation of trust is the basis for any legal suit, and it’s the court’s obligation to determine innocence and reward it as to determine guilt and punish it, or in this case, to grant it nothing.
Still, we hear “If you didn’t want children, you shouldn’t have had sex.” If couples have sex twice a week over the course of a twenty year relationship resulting in two children, sex was had .001% of the time for procreation. The other 99.999% of the time, it was for the sake of the sex. Do we see bikini-clad models and think lustfully of diapers? Does a woman see a gorgeous guy and think of a minivan and a fat ass? SEX IS AN END IN ITSELF. If not, then it is a form of prostitution. Unplanned pregnancy is no longer an irreversible malady hopeless to challenge, and if one partner changes the rules, both lives need not be taken off track. Every new choice our medical advancements offer poses an obligation by those involved to stand by their word, and it’s about time the courts recognized it.

There are enough people on the planet; surely there is room for justice. If men could opt out from the beginning, her pattern would be broken. If she violates her vows as wife or partner, she can face the consequences alone. Like welfare reform, she’d become self-responsible and weigh her choices more carefully. If she refuses abortion on supposedly moral grounds, she’ll have to come to grips with what her principles cost.

Parenting is too important to be handled haphazardly. A both parents should have to right to wait for the conditions he finds conducive to his being a good mate and father—conditions of his fulfillment, safety and honor. It is each person’s responsibility to find a mutually agreeable partner, together to develop a stable environment, and have children when both so intend. Children must be a product of love, trust, mutual respect and sound life progression—not of fraud, contempt and aimlessness.

The world is full of Spirit Murderers who will try to take control of

Does becoming a licensed real estate agent/broker before buying your home save you money?

On October 10, 2009 / By Estate Planning Help / In Estate-Planning-Wills / No Comments

I am planning to buy a home around $700K in New York City. I’m wondering if I will save any money by becoming a licensed real estate agent/broker (I realize I have to take the test and pass) and then purchasing the home for myself. I would think that by doing this, I would save the broker commission that I would otherwise be paying another real estate agent/broker. Is this a valid assumption? Please provide any information about this. Thanks a lot.

What is an average monthly payment for a luxury home/estate?

On October 10, 2009 / By Estate Planning Help / In Estate-Planning-Wills / 1 Comment

I’m doing a career planning unit in school and I have to know approximately how much a luxury home/estate payment would be monthly. Any idea?

Where to find a good real estate software for real estate investment analysis and household budget planning.?

On October 10, 2009 / By Estate Planning Help / In Estate-Planning-Wills / No Comments

I need a comprehensive real estate software, which would show me how to buy a house intelligently, so I can compare the properties, project the balances, do real estate investment analysis and household budget planning. All in one piece preferably. Thanks.
I checked out all the liks suggested.
It looks like the one at
<a http://www.rewiser.com>rewiser.com</a> is what I need
thanx
I checked out all the links suggested.
It looks like the one at
<a http://www.rewiser.com>rewiser.com</a> is what I need
thanx

What is a good Real Estate Company to work for?

On October 10, 2009 / By Estate Planning Help / In Estate-Planning-Wills / No Comments

I am looking to get into RE School starting on November 16th. I was planning on working for my uncle at his RE Office but have not heard back from him. So I was wondering if anyone can reccomend a good RE Company that I could look into working for. I am also looking for one that would help me pay for school.

Also, what is a decent split (i think thats what you call it) for a new real estate agent and how long until it becomes 50/50?

Need help fast: investment firm/financial consultant question.?

On October 9, 2009 / By Estate Planning Help / In Estate-Planning-Wills / 1 Comment

I am just out of college and I have a lunch appointment today. I will meet with a family friend who is a lawyer, and a partner at the friends firm who does estate planning. The estate planner has lots of high level connections with people at two major investment firms. I want to be a financial consultant (or private wealth manager, or investment adviser, or however you want to put it) and the estate planner has the ability to get me the interviews that I need. I already have a list of questions that I have made….but do any people in the industry know any intelligent questions that I can ask the estate planner? Any tips?

Thanks

Can anyone recommend an estate/will/trust planning software ?

On October 7, 2009 / By Estate Planning Help / In Estate-Planning-Wills / 3 Comments

My Brother-In Law is getting thrown out soon!?

On October 6, 2009 / By Estate Planning Help / In Estate-Planning-Wills / 1 Comment

My brother-in-law is a big time alcoholic! He is 48 yrs old, has been living with my mother-in-law and her husband for about 9 yrs now. He does not plan to stop drinking. Our family has already had somewhat of an intervention. he is at the point where he lost his job, the alcohol smell comes out of his pores, his eyes are yellowish, he can’t walk or stand for very long. He shuffles when he walks, he was picked up by the Police for falling asleep in someones driveway in the middle of winter. Well my mother in law and her husband are selling their home.
The real estate people came to their home to do a walk through, they said there is a definite odor coming from that room (my brother in laws bedroom). They told me today that they are going to tell him he has got to move. They are giving him two weeks. My issue…where is this guy going to go? They were the biggest enablers for all of these years. My mother in law would give him money knowing damn well that he would buy beer with it. This guy has had a drinking problem since he was 15. The problem is that my mother in law never made him to be a man about things, instead she made excuses for him all the time. He is divorced because of this. And as much as I feel bad for him, I am embarrassed to say, my husband and I can’t trust him in our home. He had stolen things from my husband in the past (when they lived in the same home) and we have an autistic child to take care of, I can’t have him drinking and passing out or getting into a drunken rage at my home. Any suggestions????

Estate planning - what legal document can be used?

On October 4, 2009 / By Estate Planning Help / In Estate-Planning-Wills / 1 Comment

Person#1 would like to give legal guarantee to Person#2 that specified property will be left to Person#2 after death of Person#1.
What legal document can be used for that purpose?

Thank you
I don’t mind if it will be public.