Re: Bad Ruling
There is of course a hidden silver lining (always is eh).
This ruling won't impact and or mean squat to that large array of the american population that has no clue what it feels like to actually own property.
Every renter, every person not sufficiently well off to actually own a home, won't have ANY reason to even take notice.
I feel sorry for those that find themselves in the lower 10% of the few that can actually own property. But then, their home is likely barely worth fighting for (I have looked at starter homes for the not really all that well to do, and trust me, sometimes it won't be worth fighting for).
If you just bought a brand new shiny home in a brand new sub division, the chances of a developer coming along to flatten the area is rather remote.
So chances are this ruling means nothing to the top half of the homeowners out there (who will be living in those nice shiny new homes).
Thus, this is likely only something for the people that live in the nice, but not really new, reasonable priced, yet likely took some looking to actually find, sort of homes.
Or in other words, probably not a white collar hassle, probably a problem for the upper levels of the blue collar worker crowd.
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