Yeah, you do have to pay $766 land rent for your not-so-mobile mobile home, but still. Rehobeth!
Awesome Elmira, NY castle.
10BRs, 4BAs, 41 rooms.
*$99,900*
Enormous, but "not currently habitable."
Appears to be in the middle of a gut-and-rebuild. zillow.com/homedetails/61…#FridayNightZillow
This 10K square foot home is a stunner and seems built for massive dance / pool parties. Heart-shaped hot tub; another hot tub; big indoor pool w/I think a Tiki bar; enormous spaces.
Hunting lodge for people who like shooting stuff with separate party barn (?) for big events with like-minded folk, I guess. Never seen anything quite like this.
17 acres, 19K square feet, $2M. "An hour from metro Detroit"
(PETA types don't click.) zillow.com/homedetails/63…?
Over the top mansion. Texas. $3.2M. Kind of seems like somebody famous must live here? zillow.com/homedetails/31…?
Thinks are cheaper in Arkansas. This 20 acre compound features a big house, pool, hot tub, patio of the gods, sweet kitchens.
8BRs, 8BAs, 8,900 square feet for, checks notes, $850K??? zillow.com/homedetails/11…? #FridayNightZillow
Ending tonight's #FridayNightZillow with the most expensive new home listed on Zillow this week. It's one of the late Paul Allen's homes. $55.5M, Beverly Hills. zillow.com/homedetails/94…?
If you made it this far, tell me which listing you liked/hated the most.
My favorite is the over-the-top Skiatook party mansion. (I think I just saw a fourth hot tub). And not sure what this is exactly. A room-sized shower w/speakers?
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Let’s do a U.S. finances quiz poll.
What is the combined *net worth* of all USA households + nonprofits, per the Q1 2021 Federal Reserve stats? (Correct answer provided at 10:30 pm)
Ok, so 36% of you were right. The correct answer is the net worth of U.S. households and nonprofits is $137 trillion, a staggering amount of money.
More than $400,000 net worth per USA resident is kind of a mind-blowing stat.
It’s more than $100T larger than the federal debt.
Total government spending over the next decade is about $62T. This represents ballpark 5-6%.
Big? Yes, but we are in a land of very large numbers.
The budget package is about 1/10th the cost, for example, of Medicare for All. The Green New Deal as originally envisioned was theoretically much larger too.
But Biden's plan is bigger than the ACA, and the scope of the package would affect many different aspects of American life -- child tax credits, Medicare dental/vision/hearing, pre-K, community college, child care, family leave, labor, climate, immigration, corp tax
! Senate Budget Democrats announcing plan for $3.5 trillion budget package
$3.5 trillion topline still has a lot of details to be filled in on how to pay for it, how to score it, and exactly what will be in or out. But it sets stage for a ~$4 trillion long-term Biden agenda uniting moderates like Warner with liberals like Sanders bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
In the photo that's WH's Brian Deese over there by the window.
If you are a young reporter wanting to understand Washington, you could do worse than reading the budget from start to finish. On almost any page you can find a multi-decade saga if you look hard enough.
The wrong way to read it is just as a bunch of numbers. Why is there breast cancer research in DOD of all places? There’s a fun story behind that. Why do government rocket launches cost so much more than private launches? Another story. Every line item started somewhere.
My favorite are the charts in the back. They are key to putting in perspective other stories. You should know, for example, that the Gov’t will spend ~$62T on autopilot over the next decade. A $6T increase would be a little less than 10%. And so on.