See it seems to me that you have a problem and its not being gay.
Have you ever met one of those religious types that say Jesus 3 times in every sentence?
See you and those types, whatever the obsession, is the only thing that matters.
It seems to me you could have been hood winked here.
Imagine for a second that the seller finds a house with religious paintings right on the walls or a house in shape of a cross or something.
My lord we got to find us a Southern Baptist quick or this will never sell.
They fact that you are so proud of yourself for finding a house where everyone involved in selling you the house was gay is quite strange to me.
But whatever makes you happy dude, just don’t expect everyone to understand why you paid twice the value of the house just cause it was a gay house.
A: I’m a woman.
B: “Proud” and “pleased” are not synonymous. I’m pleased. As a general rule, I enjoy gay men.
C: Where do you get the “twice the value”? As it happens, I made a bit of a killing (I think…the inspection is tomorrow, maybe it’s falling down!). The house is beautfiul to begin with, beautifully cared for and updated, on a particularly good street in a very hot-and-getting-hotter-by-the-minute neighborhood, and they sold it for * at least * 30K less than they could have easily gotten.
And ** Jeff, ** you are probably right. Harry would be a hypocrite in this situation if he was actually fucking men and despised and derided other people fucking men.
It’s not entirely obvious why living down the street from “some of the biggest” bars of any type would enhance your property values compared to Harry’s, unless he’s living on the edge of a toxic waste dump.
Harry (who is, obviously, a jerk) may have felt the need to rattle your chain with his inane comments because you went out of your way to mention the sexual orientation of the former owners of your new home - possibly to indicate how WAY cool you are.
Hardly, Jack. Does that count for “Way cool” in your neck of the woods? I believe I’ve explained why I mentioned it at least twice already.
And the multiple gay bars, coupled with at least three gay homes on my block alone, tend to indicate a neighborhood that is trending gay. In L.A., neighborhoods that become popular with gay men have consistently become better neighborhoods,often dramatically better, depending on where they started from, and the property values have gone up dramatically thereafter.
And having “some of the biggest bars” (of any type) just down the street, tends to indicate to me a neighborhood that has to deal with noise, parking problems, litter and drunks pissing on the lawn. I hope for your sake the bars are way down the street.
This crowing over the expectation that someone else’s property values will decline relative to yours seems…I don’t know, Stoid…so bourgeois.