🚨🚨🚨Joe Kent,The Director of The National Counter Terrorism Center, has resigned in protest of Israel taking control of U.S. foreign policy and launching the mother of all miscalculations, the new IRAN WAR!!🚨🚨🚨
Trump endorses Lindsey Graham because Trump works for the same handlers that Lindsey Graham works for.
Trump hates Thomas Massie because Thomas can’t be controlled by those handlers.
I’m sorry but I gotta get this off my chest.
So far 5 months into Trump’s second term he has :
• Promised to end all current wars, but Ukraine is still not improving while he’s starting ANOTHER war in the Middle East.
• Turned ICE into a modern Gestapo.
• Promised lower gas prices, didn’t happen.
• Promised lower grocery prices, didn’t happen.
• Selling off dozens of millions of acres of federal land to the ultra elite for short term profit while sacrificing wilderness areas that were meant for ALL Americans to enjoy.
Yall voted for this dude begging for change that he promised, but has so far failed to deliver in almost every aspect.
@charliekirk11 Just “trust” Trump… like operation warp speed???
Saying so much, to say such little. You sound gay to be honest.
I voted for Epstein list, 9/11 and JFK declassification, crypto boom, mass deportation, and the economy.
Besides securing boarder he has done nothing. Grade D-
The cost of buying a house with a mortgage has exploded.
Back in 1955, it cost $112/month to take out a mortgage to buy a house.
In 2025, it costs $2,800/month. That's an astounding 2,300% increase over 70 years.
In the last five years alone, mortgage costs have nearly doubled.
These costs have surged faster than people's incomes, creating a massive housing affordability crisis.
The question is: what happens next?
Following the 2000s housing bubble, there was a crash, and mortgage costs dropped 40% in half a decade.
But following the 1970s housing inflation, there was no crash. Instead, home-buying costs stabilized for two decades, allowing incomes to catch up.
I see similarities in 2025 to both previous eras, as we are in a massive home price bubble today (similar to the mid-2000s) and have also experienced rampant inflation over the last several years (similar to the 1970s).
The net result is that no one can afford homes right now. And the only cure for this is a combination of cheaper prices, lower mortgage rates, and higher incomes.
And it might take years to get there.