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Strategies & Market Trends : The Financial Collapse of 2001 Unwinding -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Vosilla who wrote (6447)10/15/2020 3:50:22 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13879
 
70% out of wedlock births


John,
This correlates with what I have been witnessing in Africa since 1983 (was out between 1991 and 2008) and have been here since 2008 to this day.

I can tell about African women.
African women still sees the motherhood as their sole responsibility.
The Caucasian women tend to be childless if they do not find suitable father for their kids.

My observation is this:
The women look left and right and do not find a partner who they see it is for life.

They decide to reproduce knowing that they have to raise that child. And they do. They, thus, prefer to have a white man fathering their babies if they could.

Some have a good outcome. My girlfriend 1987-1991 in Nigeria had a daughter from a Scotsman. Born 1985.
We stayed together till I left.

Today we reconnected and her daughter grew up to be a pretty woman. Married a decent man is a now 35 years old. She is the proud grandmother of two beautiful kids.

Some get a bad outcome.
I know mother of kids that had to work hard and the kid grew up in the streets and got beaten to death before 18.

The church tries to get the society in check and if the person is religious family tends to be important for them



To: John Vosilla who wrote (6447)10/16/2020 10:41:26 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 13879
 
As Manhattan Commercial Real Estate Slumps, Big Tech Sees Golden Opportunity

The COVID-19 pandemic has seen hundreds of thousands of white-collar Manhattanites engage in working from home – one that appears to be a permanent trend, and something many could’ve not predicted earlier this year. Days ago, Microsoft allowed some of its employees to work remotely on a “permanent” basis, setting a precedent for other technology companies to follow.

However, four technology companies – Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google – who have told employees to work remotely until the first half of 2021, are also acquiring office space in Manhattan as the commercial real estate market sags.


“Apple, Amazon, and Facebook have gobbled up more than 1.6 million square feet of office space since the start of the year, most of which was leased or bought during the pandemic. Before the pandemic, Google added about 1.7 million square feet of office space as part of a corporate campus rising along the Hudson River in Manhattan.”
ELMAT: AOC must be surprised !

NYT reports these four tech companies “are all significantly expanding their footprint in the city, giving it a badly needed vote of confidence.” This is happening as new coronavirus cases in the US are nearing 60,000 again, driven by infections in the Midwest and other areas of the country – and many office workers in Manhattan have yet to be called back to their workstations.

After Amazon abandoned plans for a new headquarters in Queens, the e-commerce giant has acquired nearly 2 million square feet of office space for corporate employees in the city, along with warehouse space in Staten Island, Queens, and the Bronx.

In March, just weeks after nationwide lockdowns, Amazon purchased the Lord & Taylor building for around 1 billion dollars, enough space to hold 2,000 employees. In total, the company has eight office properties scattered across the city, with many situated in Midtown.

Here are the areas where Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google have recently bought or leased commercial space in NYC.

[/url] h/t NYTBig tech is making a risky bet on NYC commercial estate amid the virus-induced downturn that has crushed the city’s local economy. Many offices across Manhattan are deserted and likely not to return workers until sometime in 2021. Commercial real estate firm CBRE, who manages roughly 20 million square feet in the city, said approximately 12% of office workers in Manhattan had returned back to work.

As some say, “strike while the iron is hot” – and that is precisely what big tech companies are doing – they’re acquiring some of the highest quality office spaces on the market for a fraction of the price. As we noted in August, top property owners in the city are begging companies to return their employees to work because remote working has stalled the recovery.

NYT points out, while NYC commercial real estate sours, “Apple, Amazon, and Facebook have gobbled up more than 1.6 million square feet of office space since the start of the year, most of which was leased or bought during the pandemic. Before the pandemic, Google added about 1.7 million square feet of office space as part of a corporate campus rising along the Hudson River in Manhattan.”

This year alone, the four big tech companies have hired 2,600 employees in the city, bringing their total to 22,000. Facebook has added 1,100 workers, with nearly a 4,000 workforce in the town.

All of this new office space added this year supports more than 15,000 new employees that could be added over the next couple of years.

“The big takeaway here is that New York will always be a tech hub,” said William Floyd, director of external affairs for Google’s New York offices, which has about 9,000 workers, more than half of whom are engineers.

For big tech executives, their expansion into NYC is happening at the city’s darkest periods for commercial real estate.

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