Dreams for Sale: The Story of Lehigh Acres, Florida

Welcome to Lehigh Acres, Florida.
Half-built homes litter the seemingly endless grid of half acre plots in a town built entirely on speculation. Dreams were built on the promises of Lehigh Acres, where the social benefits of a wholesome American town were second only to the vast economic potential of affordable land ownership. It was about fulfilling the American dream on dirt plots in southwest Florida.
For decades, things went roughly according to plan. By the mid-2000s, however, the dreams that were sold as half-acre lots to unsuspecting Midwesterners had turned into gold, surging in price at breakneck speed. And then, like a game of musical chairs, the music stopped.
DREAMS FOR SALE is a documentary film that traces the bittersweet story of the rise and fall of Lehigh Acres, told through the eyes of its citizens. It is a tale of hope and despair, of prosperity and loss, and of memories and dreams.
Directed and Produced by Raymond Schillinger
Additional Production by Luke Kosar and Thomas Keenan
www.dreamsforsalemovie.com
All Rights Reserved. Copyright 2011.

Пікірлер: 1 200

  • @skipstalforce
    @skipstalforce6 жыл бұрын

    Lost my home in 08 to a variable mortgage, saved for 9 years and bought a foreclosed home for half value for cash. No more banks!

  • @armando6565

    @armando6565

    4 жыл бұрын

    Banks are only to make money from the people, they are fucken thieves,..everything you buy carries a ....finance charege which is astronomical. If you buy a new car, and the car goes for ten thousand dollars from the ....dealer with the fucken finance ......you wind up paying twenty thousand dollars,....them and the fuckennnn.......dealers are just as badddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd.

  • @gc8024

    @gc8024

    4 жыл бұрын

    Alot of people did with balloon rate

  • @divinee.155

    @divinee.155

    4 жыл бұрын

    Good job hun so do i i do not borrow never have never will

  • @darkhorse3557

    @darkhorse3557

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@armando6565 Banks are illegal. Watch the History of Banks. The way they work and what they do are illegal as the IRS.

  • @TerryReedMiss

    @TerryReedMiss

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@darkhorse3557 The people had some protection after the big crash in 1929 but I think it was Bush Jr admin that repealed the SEC ACT of 1932 (CK that date, unsure at 8am without coffee!). That act kept Wall Street from mingling our funds with their "investment" funds. Now? We're phucked until another huge crash, or a real revolution. Never say never. ✌️

  • @BrianSmith1969
    @BrianSmith196910 жыл бұрын

    My grandparents owned a lot in this place, and decade or so ago they said they got an offer on the property, but it was for the same as they paid, I made them sell it, and they were so relieved. A few years later they saw the news of what was happening there, and realized they were one of the lucky ones to have at least been able to get their money back.

  • @inquisitor4635
    @inquisitor46356 жыл бұрын

    I found out in year 2000 that residential real estate bubble was going to burst. I sold all my Florida real estate in the year 2004. It was no accident that this happened. The banks were ready to diminish the middle class.

  • @ClotEastwood

    @ClotEastwood

    Жыл бұрын

    Just watch what happens now. . . It's all going to crash

  • @doninmichigan

    @doninmichigan

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ClotEastwood Sure the heck is, things are going to get a LOT worse. People will have to hang on to what they've got, if they can.

  • @dnssigns

    @dnssigns

    Ай бұрын

    The crash that's coming is going to make 2007 look like a hiccup. We bought our first home in St. Pete 1992 for 52k. In 2018 we sold it for 350k. We had done 60k in renovation in 2007. Pool and custom back porch etc. Paid cash for a 40 acre mini farm in N. FL and never looked back. That home in St. Pete is now valued after 2 more sales at 650k. That's just insane in my book.

  • @michaelcuff5780
    @michaelcuff57806 жыл бұрын

    We were forced to bail out the banks! Nobody bailed us out!

  • @lorib5398

    @lorib5398

    4 жыл бұрын

    That's how they pass on "risk". We need to avoid risk too, by not engaging in their business practices and social constructs.

  • @nomorewar4189

    @nomorewar4189

    4 жыл бұрын

    Michael Cuff not just banks but companies like GM got $50B and they are using that money to relocate their factories in Mexico and overseas - the government was giving the excuse it was necessary to “save jobs” but no restrictions or conditions put on that gift to the “capitalist” system.

  • @jimkennedy7050

    @jimkennedy7050

    2 жыл бұрын

    Very true. Obama caved in very quickly.with AIG. And his mortgage relief came 2 years late.

  • @ripvanrevs
    @ripvanrevs4 жыл бұрын

    I was in Florida (from Ohio) around 2007 and drove around the St Pete area. Every other house was for sale. I remodel houses so I stopped in a Realtors office and ask about properties in that area. I was told most were speculation where the buyer bought, did nothing to the property and was simply waiting for the value to go up. I ask about foreclosures and the realtor looked at me with disdain and informed me that they NEVER have any foreclosures in that area. Three years later, they had the highest percentage of foreclosures in the United States!!

  • @SamlovesLulu

    @SamlovesLulu

    Жыл бұрын

    I lived in and around St. Pete for a long while. including in 2007. I actually arrived in Florida for the first time in 1982. I am still OT allowed to claim that I am a native Floridian. I lived on 16th St. in ST. Pete, near to Central and downtown. We owned a house there. Lived in Dunedin, and also in Clearwater, out on the beach side. We owned another home in New Port Richie right around 2007 as it happens. Lived there for about three years. We walked in different neighborhoods, you and I, it seems. I am not filthy rich and visited numerous middle income and lower income neighborhoods over the years. I never saw communities anywhere that were half empty. Were there foreclosures? Of course. Especially after the crash of 2008. But many, many places were hit far worse than St. Pete. And the thing about loose talk like yours is that, after 2009, there were PLENTY of communities that WERE half empty. Daytona Beach, where I and my wife lived in 2010-2013, and still have extensive extended family in, was devastated. Not just neighborhoods, but businesses. It was distressing. The places they are discussing in this video are virtually destroyed. To this day three out of five homes are empty and abandoned. What remains can't be sold at a quarter the price it is actually worth. I now own an 1800 sq.ft. home in Lady Lake, in a lovely, quiet, well-kept neighborhood, with an in-ground pool, on a shaded quarter acre lot. Bought my home six years ago for $110K from a house flipper who bought it for $35K and refurbished/remodeled it. It is worth $170-ish now. My daughter and son in law own a home in the St. Pete area, in an HOA community. They bought seven years ago at $165K and their home is worth $250K now. I also lived in Lehigh Acres. Both my wife and I are/were troubleshooters in our fields. In my case, high end art/production facilities systems, and in hers, retail store operations. We work/worked under contract always, and therefor moved often. She still works, I am retired. Lehigh Acres is a pit, and the real estate speculators that ruined that natural wetland and built all those f*cking houses, and are responsible for how it all is now, which is more or less a ghosted wasteland, should be stripped of all their personal wealth and run out of town on a rail. As of now, nearly all of the greater Tampa/St. Peterburg metro complex, some 2.5 million people strong, is prosperous, bustling, and growing. Not to mention the benefits we all here in Florida enjoy from living in the freest, most protected, most "woke-free" state in the country, thanks to our pit bull, mofo, pagan god of a governor. I will take DeSantis for President in 2028, right when we are likely to need him most, six days a week and twice on Sundays. You might want to consider getting updated info before you talk about someone else's home, friend.

  • @alexmartinez5222
    @alexmartinez52227 жыл бұрын

    I moved from NYC to Lehigh Acers FL 2 years ago. I am a renter and me and my family LOVE the peace it offers. I wish I could buy a small piece of the American dream. To all the are Veterans, the VA HOSPITAL is outstanding. Semper Fi

  • @muzikunit7148

    @muzikunit7148

    5 жыл бұрын

    coming from New York City anything look good especially when you don't got to deal with that weather and the rodents and rats as take over that City

  • @davehibbs9111

    @davehibbs9111

    4 жыл бұрын

    You can! For what you have paid on rent you could have bought the place! Fact not fiction, but everyone has an excuse...

  • @nancyfigueroa9266

    @nancyfigueroa9266

    4 жыл бұрын

    SHIP PROGRAM, HELPS WITH DOWNPAYMENT. AND IT'S A GRANT YOU DON'T HAVE TO PAY, YOU'LL HAVE TO LIVE FOR A CERTAIN AMOUNT OF YEARS WITHOUT SELLING, RENTING ETC FOR THE GRANT TO BE NON PAYABLE. GOOD LUCK AND GOD BLESS! SORRY, FOR THE CAPS BUT THE PURPOSE IS SO PPL COULD SEE THIS BLESSING.

  • @ifukill7538

    @ifukill7538

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@davehibbs9111 if you can't pay rent , you can find somewhere cheaper. If you can't pay your house then the bank takes it.

  • @ericcarlson2166

    @ericcarlson2166

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's already happening or been happening. The homes are now targets for crime and poverty.

  • @DustinBlythe
    @DustinBlythe3 жыл бұрын

    I live just north of Lehigh, moved here a year ago, and was curious about the history. I'm anxious to watch this and learn the backstory.

  • @patrickvillacreses1532
    @patrickvillacreses15326 жыл бұрын

    This is a great video, I almost punched the wall when I heard the lady who opened the coffee shop. Her story about the credit card companies raising her APR was one I personally related to. It happened to me too. I recall how unfair it was, I was so pissed. She spoke about it with a smile and I just cried at her resilience to deal with it and smile. God bless her, hope she gets out if it.

  • @crystalynnbearr
    @crystalynnbearr6 жыл бұрын

    I'm from Lee County, lived in Lehigh during the recession. It was absolutely hell, my husband was a land surveyor, a crew chief. We had it all. And then suddenly, we lost it all. It's taken us about a decade to get back on track, hubby is finally back in surveying, and we are good. But being pregnant and homeless with 3 kids, it does something to you. I still have a hard time feeling secure, I'm always waiting for the rug to be pulled out beneath us.

  • @altha-rf1et

    @altha-rf1et

    6 жыл бұрын

    From Tampa a lot of people did You should stayed in the house and fight it for years.. My brother n law is a retired police officer. wife left him They lived two doors down. He has not paid on his mortgage for 4 years. He file for bankruptcy the banks are foreclosing he use the system to keep putting the sell off. He is not paying the mortgage payments pocking that

  • @kristyniederkorn1105

    @kristyniederkorn1105

    6 жыл бұрын

    Another reason to rid yourself of any and/or all credit cards and pay in cash or check. Wife and I have not had credit card for 30+ years.

  • @dominickmasonry3878

    @dominickmasonry3878

    6 жыл бұрын

    Feel that! I was devastated in the recession. I never feel secure...it was my fault, to be honest.

  • @sadikmeah4057

    @sadikmeah4057

    5 жыл бұрын

    If you don't want the rug to be pulled from under you, then do what i did. Use laminate flooring instead

  • @globalnews2149

    @globalnews2149

    5 жыл бұрын

    Hello

  • @lylecosmopolite
    @lylecosmopolite10 жыл бұрын

    The following simple mortgage lending rule would have stopped all this: "The loan to value ratio at the time of purchase shall not exceed 80%." "An entitity has to retain at least 20% of the mortgages it originates."

  • @booneyinc9515
    @booneyinc95156 жыл бұрын

    i admire that women who opened the coffee shop. shes still smiling

  • @archangele1
    @archangele15 жыл бұрын

    There is an old saying. If the deal sounds too good to be true, it is too good to be true. Too many people think living on credit and with a mortgage is supposed to be the norm. It works until you loose your job or get sick. Then the house of cards falls in on it's self.

  • @edneg1951
    @edneg19514 жыл бұрын

    THAT CPA, MELISSA SMILES THRU THE WHOLE ORDEAL😁😁😁😁

  • @flman1284
    @flman128411 ай бұрын

    History is repeating it's self right now. We own a house that was built in 2006, bought it in 2012 for $86k... Today it evaluates at over $300k. The empty lots next door are worth maybe $3k and have sold for $15+k. New home across the street has asking price of $360k. Lehigh is growing very fast right now. Hurricane Ian has made many people want to move east of 75.

  • @RPSchonherr

    @RPSchonherr

    9 ай бұрын

    It will be very hard to try to sell a house there with lot prices low enough that you can build a house for under 200k. It may not be a big house.

  • @flman1284

    @flman1284

    9 ай бұрын

    @@RPSchonherr lots are 1/4 acre... Only people buying are the building companies.

  • @drew6167
    @drew6167 Жыл бұрын

    It's horrifying to watch the ease at which these individuals casually discuss their own dishonest actions, which led the one of the largest land scams in the United States

  • @daveassanowicz186

    @daveassanowicz186

    Жыл бұрын

    @9:28 the lady laughing at scamming people

  • @bizgateway
    @bizgateway10 жыл бұрын

    Surprised no mention of the Chinese Drywall problem in that area.

  • @bizgateway

    @bizgateway

    10 жыл бұрын

    LeHigh is FULL of Chinese drywall! Google it ....nasty stuff!

  • @Fanofmusic106

    @Fanofmusic106

    6 жыл бұрын

    That is false

  • @TampaFanatic1

    @TampaFanatic1

    5 жыл бұрын

    A lot of it was used during the rebuild after Hurricane Charley hit Cape Coral and Punta Gorda. Nasty Stuff!

  • @cincoy3679

    @cincoy3679

    5 жыл бұрын

    Eric Smith News home are not made right. They are so bad. I can’t even tell you. I owned a plumbing business l went to see a house man was it bad. You get what you pay for and what people do it. Most don’t even know how teach as you go lol. It’s sad so sad.

  • @texasgun2731

    @texasgun2731

    5 жыл бұрын

    this is what happens when people refuse to teach the young workforce. shot yourselves in the foot... but hey enjoy your dollar store deals!

  • @kennyetenne8894
    @kennyetenne88946 жыл бұрын

    Thank god i baught my house in Lehigh back in 2009 for $60k. Now its worth $180k!

  • @beverlykennedy126
    @beverlykennedy1264 жыл бұрын

    My Husband and I bought an old two story house that was built in 1920 back in 1964it was for the mines the miners and their family’s. We got it for 3600 dollars fixed it up somewhat and raised our 5 kids .We didn’t have much but we had four walls a roof and heat so we made out just fine . We didn’t need a mansion couldn’t afford one and now I’m a widow living on a very fixed income still in this near 100 year old house kids and husband are gone lm all alone in this ole house but it’s mine and it’s paid for as are my bills. It doesn’t pay to try to live beyond your means..

  • @MrCountrycuz

    @MrCountrycuz

    4 жыл бұрын

    Beverly can you tell me where you live because I know an elderly gentleman who would rent a room from you and take care of all the yard work. He is an honest and simple man hwo lives on 1350.00 a month social security.

  • @DM-mu4et

    @DM-mu4et

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hope your kids are well and u get some form of care and attention.

  • @Leasafb1
    @Leasafb17 жыл бұрын

    I used to live in Cape Coral and Fort Myers. then big corporate bankers came in and offered people a dream that turned into a nightmare.

  • @juandulanto4884
    @juandulanto48844 жыл бұрын

    I'm a miami native (hialeah exactly) i lived in lehigh (2013-2018 ) for 5 years or so right off of sunshine and lee blvd (11st SW). it was a amazing home and great quiet block. I honestly was never advised about the "dangers" compared to cape coral it is a huge bang for your buck. I found out later how bad it was from locals but nevertheless i just put up a huge nice fence , cameras, and 2 german shepherds but i never had a problem thank god , and honestly i'm from miami so i've always "watched my back" and have that mentality already so no biggie at all. Still compensates the low mortgage i had trust me i wish i can go back but my family refuses to leave miami so im stuck since i want my kids to grow up around their grandparents.

  • @TheChuck624
    @TheChuck62410 жыл бұрын

    Good film and thanks for sharing it with us. I can comment on this first hand. I was a production manager for a certain large and successful building products company. I went out on several occasions in Florida, California and Nevada to perform field audits on our products. We knew this was going to happen as early as 2003. We made our money and the smart people in the business jumped ship before everything fell apart. It was pretty sad to say the least.

  • @timcalhoon7469
    @timcalhoon74696 жыл бұрын

    Not the problem now! Lehigh is a growing place!

  • @benvasilinda9729

    @benvasilinda9729

    6 жыл бұрын

    Tim Calhoon so is it really getting better down there? I live up in Tallahassee and never heard of this place.

  • @BrittMFH

    @BrittMFH

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@benvasilinda9729 Lots of crime there.

  • @loditx7706
    @loditx77066 жыл бұрын

    Not only a great informative video, but made more real and interesting by including the history and the people. Thanks

  • @ryann8680
    @ryann86806 жыл бұрын

    As a real estate appraiser , I have walked in on more grow houses than i can count on both hands, during the foreclosure crisis when we had entire subdivisions sitting built but unoccupied

  • @Mom_sBasement
    @Mom_sBasement6 жыл бұрын

    There used to be a saying "If you believe that, I have some swampland in Florida to sell you." I believe they were referring to Lehigh Acres.

  • @drewlaredo7220
    @drewlaredo722010 жыл бұрын

    ....'These people (my customers) buying with no money down....' - Mr. Part of the Problem

  • @phyl1283
    @phyl12834 жыл бұрын

    I was born in No. Fla. 80 years ago. I lived on 17 acres in north Florida that my dad bought at a delinquent tax sale for $250 in 1947. When I was 27 years old I married a girl from Tennessee. We moved to Tennessee and after a period of adjustment (secure jobs and some small savings) we bought a city lot for $3500 and co-built our house using builders to do what we couldn't. It took four years to move in. We had a child who was 7 years old. We bought the vacant lot adjacent to our house for an additional $5300 and have kept it vacant (undeveloped) since 1980. We paid our house off early by making additional principal payments on the loan. That cut 5 years off the mortgage. We still live in the house 40 years later. I bought another additional lot that an old couple occupied and both of whom died within a week of each other. The property was auctioned at the courthouse by the sheriff (Their children were not interested in owning and paying taxes on the property). We bid $2850 for the property and got it. We demolished the crappy house that the old couple had occupied because it would cost more to fix than it would be worth and paid the $55 taxes owed on the property. That vacant lot is now assessed at $35,000+ and remains empty. The adjacent lot we purchased for $5,300 is now assessed at over $40,000 and remains empty. The house that we co-built with a loan from a local bank for about $38,000 (2400 SF) is now valued at about $250,000 but is assessed at $169,000. Our taxes on all three properties are about $2500 a year for both city and county taxes. We still maintain our properties ourselves and have specialists do work that we can't do when necessary. My wife and I have been married for 52+ years and have been retired for 13 years. With her pension and mine and her SS we are as happy as can be. We still save and invest conservatively. We both enjoy unusually good health. We were also able to have good jobs with almost no interruption for over 44 years and saved and invested conservatively which means that we will never have to worry about expenses. Our son lives in California and makes more money in the tech sector per year that either or both of us ever did. LIFE IF GOOD. I don't miss living in Fla. but I do like to visit there occasionally.

  • @ziggymon2529

    @ziggymon2529

    4 жыл бұрын

    (Liked, But..) Learn to use ctrl + enter. Makes for an easier read. Many will will have scrolled this (good info), due to. .........

  • @donbagley2322
    @donbagley23226 жыл бұрын

    I refused to re-finance for cash or anything, and I still have my house.

  • @DENAANN1000
    @DENAANN10006 жыл бұрын

    I was lucky enough to settle a law suit to pay my lien in full, the feeling that your gonna loose your house is the worst on the planet, wouldn't wish it on anybody.

  • @youraninee

    @youraninee

    4 жыл бұрын

    Fuck ur feelings ...you can still loose your house if don’t pay property taxes!

  • @garthlocklin6355
    @garthlocklin63556 жыл бұрын

    Hola! Como Estas! I went to Lehigh Acres December 2017 to help a buddy clean up his house which is 70% finished. The entire house was overgrown with thick bushes that are some rapid growing plant thats as hard as a tree. He used to be a house builder and contractor but the recession knocked him out. He can't afford to keep a car on the road these days since he's now in his 70's. He's into that house for $60-70K or more. He's barely keeping the taxes paid on his little SSI check. People offer him $7500 for it regularly; they find his name and address at the tax assessors office. He can't get a CO because it's not finished. The whole neighborhood speaks Spanish, except him. A neighbor he doesn't know called the cops and said we were living there, while we were cleaning up the property for a few days with chainsaws and a mower. The police officer who showed up obviously spoke Spanish as his 1st language. I don't have a problem with Hispanic folks but while the officer was questioning me I had to keep asking him to repeat the question? "Take your hands out of your pockets and show me your ID!" That cop was "jumpy" to say the least. I know when the cops run your license plate (which I'm sure he did) it comes back the owner has a CCW. "You plan on keeping this house Steve? You better learn to speak Spanish if you want to live in Lehigh Acres."

  • @henryhawkins1194
    @henryhawkins11944 жыл бұрын

    I live in Ft Myers Fla, about twenty minutes from lehigh acres. For all of those looking for an update, it has recovered. Hurricane Irma was a minor setback in 2017, crime has risen a bit in certain areas of the city. Otherwise the housing market is strong there.

  • @henryhawkins1194

    @henryhawkins1194

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@JMARTIN1947 It has nothing to do with Trump, housing market's have a history of fluctuating depending on spending and interest rate changes. States such as Florida rebound quicker than most market's because the population has continuous growth. Trump has already been given too much credit for things that he had nothing to do with. He's not getting credit for this.

  • @pincushionllama

    @pincushionllama

    3 жыл бұрын

    I live in Lehigh, did during the recession too. My parents lost their house so I had to teach what is like to rent. My dad still rents to this day as he never fully recovered from the bust. I luckily own.

  • @daveassanowicz186

    @daveassanowicz186

    Жыл бұрын

    😂

  • @jeffpeterson2838

    @jeffpeterson2838

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@henryhawkins1194lmfao

  • @TheJamason123
    @TheJamason1236 жыл бұрын

    So I live in Lehigh acres and this video is old, but there was a chance to go from rags to riches if you were buying up the inventory and sat on them for about 4 years.I purchased my home for 94k (June 2014) and I did absolutely nothing to it and it was just appraised at 180k (April 2018). The Fort Myers area is booming and there is tons of work. Since Lehigh’ homes are more reasonably priced there is pretty much zero inventory in the housing market. I’ve been seeing so many plots of land for sale and a lot of new construction homes being built.

  • @TheJamason123

    @TheJamason123

    6 жыл бұрын

    3MM4 P33L well not directly but I do think about the problem about people not being able to own a home due to high rent cost. My longer term plan is to have several homes paid in full so I can set lower rents. I hope this would give people an opportunity to save a higher percentage of their income and use it to purchase their own place. I have a couple other ideas but I’m not sure of the legality. Such as charge a higher rent but put a percentage away for them and when they leave I would give it back to them. Basically I would be clear in letting people know that I’m looking for people that want to purchase a home in the future but don’t have the money saved. The implementation is further away so the idea isn’t thought out all that well at the moment, just some generalities.

  • @TUCOtheratt
    @TUCOtheratt7 жыл бұрын

    Lehigh Acres FL... been there done that and escaped. Lehigh is third world.

  • @pattihainline1573

    @pattihainline1573

    4 жыл бұрын

    I read it's sinking like the rest of Florida not to mention the drinking water problems! Buying into the florida dream is dieing!

  • @mikebrabant4170
    @mikebrabant41706 жыл бұрын

    One rule you should always follow in business is never combine your personal home with any financing of your business ventures!!

  • @shelleygreyrealtor

    @shelleygreyrealtor

    5 жыл бұрын

    It's not that she lost her house because her business failed.

  • @BrittMFH

    @BrittMFH

    4 жыл бұрын

    Mike B, Yep!

  • @divinee.155

    @divinee.155

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@shelleygreyrealtor of course u wouldn't understand..y am i not surprised

  • @shelleygreyrealtor

    @shelleygreyrealtor

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@divinee.155 What is that supposed to mean? As an investor, I can easily see the problems. Everyone was speculating, too much fraud with banks, agents, builders, buyers, everyone.

  • @kwamedavis7634

    @kwamedavis7634

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@shelleygreyrealtor she said she took out an equity loan to open the business tho ...then admitted if the business didnt work out that shed sell her house . i guess her plan would have worked had the market not crashed .

  • @MrPBCas
    @MrPBCas3 жыл бұрын

    You know its funny cause now this town is BOOOOOOMING like never before. They are building houses and commercial properties on State Road 82

  • @daveassanowicz186

    @daveassanowicz186

    2 жыл бұрын

    Quickly on its way to Detroit

  • @kenstewart840
    @kenstewart8408 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting! A BIG lesson to be learned! Thank you!

  • @vernonchelski7385
    @vernonchelski73854 жыл бұрын

    I'm still living in the same house I've been living in since 1961. I never had a mortgage, either. The house was owned by my father before I inherited part of the house and paid my brother and sister for their share of it.

  • @vernonchelski7385

    @vernonchelski7385

    4 жыл бұрын

    @danger dork's ghost s Snidely Whiplash had an effect on me years ago. kzread.info/dash/bejne/an-az8mxmaqxmNY.html

  • @ripvanrevs

    @ripvanrevs

    4 жыл бұрын

    @danger dork's ghost s Are you very good at math? Boomers are between the age of 55 and 74 right now. Vernon Chelski has lived in the house for 49 years but doesn't say how old he was when he moved in. If he moved in between the age of 6 and 25, then he would indeed be a boomer. On the other hand, he may not be.

  • @synone4013

    @synone4013

    4 жыл бұрын

    Is there a point to your post?

  • @vernonchelski7385

    @vernonchelski7385

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@synone4013 Vote Republican!

  • @ScottChittockBC
    @ScottChittockBC10 жыл бұрын

    Moral:...Sell only to Families and only sell them what they can afford !!!...That way prices don't rise exorbitantly !!!

  • @jaddy540

    @jaddy540

    5 жыл бұрын

    Rent only to former home owners. Renters have no idea of landlord expenses.

  • @GeoHvl
    @GeoHvl2 жыл бұрын

    Today 1/13/22, Zillow over 3000 listings just in Lehigh.

  • @CharGC123
    @CharGC12310 жыл бұрын

    It's currently 6/14. We moved to Lehigh about 10 years ago because our son and DIL moved here via job transfer, and we liked it too. We saw an opportunity to finally afford to own our own home here. Other family and friends followed. Yes, we saw our properties devalued to maybe half of what we originally paid, but that was not unique to this area, just the scale of houses built was higher, therefore more left idle when the crash came. Nevertheless, we still love it here. Coming from a crowded city in CT, living here in a semi rural area with space between houses and neighbors who are great has been a wonderful change! Our little "neck of the woods" is idyllic in so many ways, I have never regretted moving here! I know there are problems and it isn't perfect, but that can be said about any place. I still feel like I am on vacation in paradise, even 10 years later. I'm not blind, and I'm not stupid. I can point out the negatives and go on about the positives, but the point is, I am at home and at peace here, and that is a very good thing. I can go bike riding after dark and have no worries, maybe I'm a fool, but that is how laid back it is here, and I love it. Again, like anyplace else, some areas are worse, some better. I hate the negative focus this area gets when so many other places are worse, and no where near as beautiful overall. We chose to live here and have no regrets. I guess I should embrace the negative view of the press...it'll keep the population stable, just the way I like it!

  • @MarkGloverMasterson
    @MarkGloverMasterson9 жыл бұрын

    "Betty and I love it here. It's healthy, warm and friendly. And speaking of friendly, our afternoon 'Stepford Wives' orgy event is mere moments away. Thanks for checking in."

  • @usachapwife

    @usachapwife

    6 жыл бұрын

    Mark Glover Masterson i

  • @icebergrose8955

    @icebergrose8955

    6 жыл бұрын

    Eww Granddad!

  • @renovatenyc

    @renovatenyc

    6 жыл бұрын

    Haha! Crazy old coot !

  • @KingJamesBible
    @KingJamesBible10 жыл бұрын

    Clever use of credits at the end. When you have to use naked women to draw customers the end will not be good. If it STARTS wrong it will END wrong

  • @redlion9199

    @redlion9199

    3 жыл бұрын

    Very well said, I agree with you.

  • @toddlang5080
    @toddlang50806 жыл бұрын

    Great video! I am a native Floridian (from West Palm Beach) and currently living in Charleston SC. We are looking to move back to Florida (Lee County) due to the close proximity of my home town (WPB) , Tampa, the Keys all about 2-4 hours drive depending on what city we're going. Upon my real estate search Lehigh Acres dominiated the listings. I thought it was due to the fact it was west of the beaches and larger cities. Had no clue of the history behind this town. Makes sense now that I have seen this. We are going down to do some home shopping in a couple months and I will STILL consider Lehigh as it seems to still have a ton of potential.

  • @topofthemuffin2u
    @topofthemuffin2u9 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting and well-done.

  • @no1luhrs
    @no1luhrs10 жыл бұрын

    wow so very very sad...... don't buy a home you can not afford.... if the deal is to good to be true....... well then it is!!!!!......

  • @mushroomcloud1

    @mushroomcloud1

    10 жыл бұрын

    In many cases the people bought a house that was expensive because in the inflated market at the time that was all there was..everything was expensive in Florida and the wages were still low. People bought because they thought if they waited the price would be higher tomorrow and they thought they would be priced out of the market. It wasn't about a deal, It was about getting a house, any house before all house prices were out of reach.

  • @no1luhrs

    @no1luhrs

    8 жыл бұрын

    +mushroomcloud1 very well said..... I was not aware of that condition

  • @richardcoe5776

    @richardcoe5776

    4 жыл бұрын

    mushroomcloud1 pl

  • @mahituna1
    @mahituna19 жыл бұрын

    It will never recover to the 2006-7 levels. Those prices where a product of no money down loans, if you are 18 and over you qualify for the loan. Those days will never come back and neither will the inflated prices.

  • @shelleygreyrealtor

    @shelleygreyrealtor

    5 жыл бұрын

    Never??? QE, artificially low interest rates, inflation....of course it will....eventually.

  • @davehibbs9111

    @davehibbs9111

    4 жыл бұрын

    Already rebounded in 2019' to prices of 06' people always think it's the end of the world!

  • @col2959

    @col2959

    4 жыл бұрын

    Do you still think so paul. ? Lehigh 2.0 is happening now. Who would've thought? Good day

  • @ripvanrevs

    @ripvanrevs

    4 жыл бұрын

    Some areas the prices are higher in 2019. Gov't is propping up economy to get Trump re-elected. My prediction is a pretty big recession in 2021 or 2022 at the latest.

  • @col2959

    @col2959

    4 жыл бұрын

    Paul P governments don't prop up economies. Central banks like the fed do. When that involves further inflating a huge bubble in an environment of love interest rates and unemployment it's a case of kicking the can down the road. The big bust is most definitely coming

  • @sky5jump
    @sky5jump6 жыл бұрын

    I live here in Lehigh and it has gotten back to normal. A lot of people got greedy here during the boom. Started taking equity loans on their homes. Or tried to jump in on booming market without a clue of what was going on. The dust settled afterwards and a whole lot of new buyers started coming in getting great prices on homes witch started a demand which leads to higher prices. Lehigh is also very big, if we incorporate as a city we will be the second largest city in area in Fla. Neighborhoods very from wouldn't want to live there to very nice.

  • @JessicaTG2008
    @JessicaTG20088 жыл бұрын

    Lets not look past the fact that regardless of why the housing boom is what it is, Lehigh Acres Florida is a literal craphole. There is a very very small community of higher end homes in a neighborhood in the heart of the town that is literally maintained by the people in that community but outside of there, it is a crime ridden, drug infested low class ghetto population of low and no income people living in filth. I wouldn't buy a home or even rent there if it was free.

  • @captjimMcintyre

    @captjimMcintyre

    6 жыл бұрын

    You must be very proud of yourself, so much better than your fellow mankind--If there be a God, could you be the BIG BANG herselfie? Of course God is love, so whose's team are you on--have you ever gone to the Publix there in Lehigh, just as nice and clean as any in the 'parking lot' of Naples--and a lot more accessible! If there's one thing I do like about Lehigh, it is the eclectic makeup of its people--much more friendly, and hospitable than the folks you run into in those more wealthy domains--me gusto mis vencinos un pequena mas porque ellos tienen corazones grandes, y mucho felicidad

  • @tgthomas5229

    @tgthomas5229

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@rickrebel489 Haha. You tell 'em buddy!

  • @whiskywillie
    @whiskywillie4 жыл бұрын

    Live a simple life.

  • @MrJoshuaAtwood
    @MrJoshuaAtwood3 жыл бұрын

    Melinda's story was so sad, seeing her smile while telling her story. The worse the things she says are, the bigger her smile gets. I feel like she must be psychotropic medication. Shes even older now, I hope she's alright.

  • @tiffsaver
    @tiffsaver4 жыл бұрын

    I don't know whether to give this a Thumbs Up or a Thumbs Down. In 2008, I bought three lots in Lehigh Acres, and lost my entire life's savings... everything. Expensive lesson to learn.

  • @cobra3289
    @cobra32896 жыл бұрын

    Very good documentary, thanks for sharing

  • @homingpigeonraces
    @homingpigeonraces10 жыл бұрын

    Who likes to hear the truth? here it goes.... A contractor would approach you and say, buy a house from this company, and I will give you $20,000 CASH. Just pay rent the first month.. than after that.. live in it, sell it, abandon it.. but you still got your $20,000. And than he would say, you want another $20,000? your wife can buy a home too.. than after that... he asked you if you had brothers and sisters.. so on. These contractors ran around paying people to buy houses form the companies they built for. they were in $60,000 in profit.. so they could afford to pay you $20,000. the problem was that $40,000 profit was no longer enough for them so they started selling $700,000 houses and giving people $100,000 to buy a home. all these people were involved in this scam... they guy who talks about not paying rent after 4 months knows exactly why they weren't paying rent.. they never lived there in the first place.. bunch of crooks..

  • @adrianmcalmont9989

    @adrianmcalmont9989

    10 жыл бұрын

    I've never seen anyone put it the way you put it but now it makes even more sense to me. I remember seeing ads for No Money Down or Mortgage assistant. I use to think they were odd but I never connected the dots. As long as the bubble was inflating everyone was making money except the home owner. The bank would dump the loans before the bust/ the apraser got more work/Realator got her comession/ Government officials looked good/ Tax man got their tax/Contractor got work/Developer got paid/ Oh and a bank keep what little mortgage home owner paid before forclousure then resell the properity so they never really lose. The Only looser is the homeless homeowner.

  • @phreeesubz

    @phreeesubz

    6 жыл бұрын

    shit man. i should have gotten into that.

  • @wisolutions

    @wisolutions

    6 жыл бұрын

    Yes I wouldn't doubt this is true interesting I guess I don't get the full scope of how the scam works but it makes since that their could be one. Someone has to pay for the materials and such someone has to have the loan etc .... Someone is getting screwed at some level they have to have some idea of what is happening before everything goes to bricks.

  • @barbarajenkins5009

    @barbarajenkins5009

    6 жыл бұрын

    The taxpayers are the ones who got whacked in the end, since their moeny went to support the banks that failed, and FANNY MAE.

  • @mk7mk777

    @mk7mk777

    6 жыл бұрын

    bush cartel still at large, we guess best approx 400 TRILLION. NET Worth all fleeced. And tax bailed out. Ready for the next, 911? its coming.

  • @CinemaSickness
    @CinemaSickness10 жыл бұрын

    Great video!

  • @trisnics
    @trisnics6 жыл бұрын

    This is very a interesting documentary even though it is over 6 years old. I looked at the real estate for 2018 for Lehigh Acres and there are TONS of lot listings. It all makes sense with this video. I'm Canadian and we haven't had a big crash since the early 80s. People keep saying we will have a crash and with the house prices increasing like crazy it's got to happen eventually.

  • @nickyceresney1045

    @nickyceresney1045

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ya but we had interest rates of 20% then so understandable... Very different.

  • @billmadison2032
    @billmadison2032 Жыл бұрын

    We came to Florida on vacation from the Chicago area in 1977. We were in Tampa in the motel and my father got a phone call to come down to a place and check it out for a free night in the hotel dinner of course. Well, the sucker bus took us to Lehigh Acres and they bought a 1 acre lot for $7,000 that was probably worth $500 at the time. Long story short we moved down here in 1980, it was a boring but decent place to live. We came on those sucker buses you were talking about. First homes and Fort Myers closing down the projects killed Lehigh Acres. I moved out and 17 because I didn't feel like shooting somebody because they try to mug me or Rob the place I was shopping at. With all that stuff going on rents were skyrocketing from 1300 to possibly 3,000 a month for the same home we are in since 2017. Moved to Lake Placid Florida, what a nice place to live

  • @alansmlth7989
    @alansmlth79897 жыл бұрын

    Lesson here, STAY OUT OF DEBT.

  • @justanotherdrunk

    @justanotherdrunk

    7 жыл бұрын

    seems like common sense

  • @Smartyppq

    @Smartyppq

    3 жыл бұрын

    Common sense isn’t common

  • @livefromtheground7274

    @livefromtheground7274

    3 жыл бұрын

    Good luclk with that

  • @camman6912
    @camman69126 жыл бұрын

    My dad always said all this crap would collapse He bought a home in 68 and paid 30,800 He paid it off in 18 years He always said live within your means I should have listened to him

  • @gimongi77

    @gimongi77

    5 жыл бұрын

    Smart man

  • @1misskey

    @1misskey

    4 жыл бұрын

    Don Dressel my parents paid 60k for their home paid off in 20 years and lived within their means happy n retired

  • @col2959

    @col2959

    4 жыл бұрын

    Don Dressel you should have don

  • @debbieframpton3857

    @debbieframpton3857

    3 жыл бұрын

    I took a 30 year mortgage in 2003 paid my house off in 14 years the banks always want to sell you more house than you can afford. Listen to your gut I have always lived below my means.

  • @ericfresh
    @ericfresh9 жыл бұрын

    Great watching

  • @ACT1O1
    @ACT1O12 жыл бұрын

    this come in full circle. 2021, lets see what happens in the near future

  • @mitchg7809
    @mitchg78093 жыл бұрын

    Bought my first place in 2002 for $95K which was the top of my budget. My realtor’s suggested Mortgage broker had approved me for a loan of $320 with zero down. They both were flabbergasted when I declined. “I wouldn’t even be able to make the first payment” I said. One rolled her eyes while the other shook his head like I was some kind of hayseed. But what they were offering me made no sense.

  • @lo2740

    @lo2740

    Жыл бұрын

    sadly, a lot of peoples in US are not this wise. Well, it is natural selection by capitalism i guess.

  • @markinnes4264
    @markinnes42646 жыл бұрын

    I really don't have a lot of sympathy for those who chose to buy houses to flip rather than live in. Homes are for keeping you off the street and giving you a decent, living environment... not a short term investment. This is what you get for being greedy. Too bad it sucked others down with the flippers.

  • @jasonhochheiser6670

    @jasonhochheiser6670

    6 жыл бұрын

    without flippers, there would be nothing in the innercities. just boarded up houses that aren't up to code for anyone to live in. the overall household debt nationally would be far worse. it really is a stupid notion. it's like saying that we shouldn't have used car lots, like saying that you should only be allowed to buy new cars. imagine how many more people would be living in the streets. when you buy a refurbished house, you're paying for the time, resources, and abilities of other people to rehab a house that you don't have yourself. which is most people.

  • @markinnes4264

    @markinnes4264

    6 жыл бұрын

    Close to me is Toronto, detached homes sell for about a million dollars each. No one can afford them except the very wealthy or lucky. locally in my city which is 40 miles southwest of Toronto... houses that cost $200,000 in 2008 cost $400-$500,000 now most working people even with two professional incomes it's a close shave just to scrape by. I guess I'm thinking locally not in the slummy cities. Sure in St Louis or Detroit or Cleveleand, Chicago, Buffalo etc those need flippers.

  • @jasonhochheiser6670

    @jasonhochheiser6670

    6 жыл бұрын

    fair enough. i think most cities in the US have or are still going through phases of innercities being complete trash. detroit is the famous city. but every city within the top 100 populations have areas with delapitated housing. these areas need investment. unfortunately, the people that still live in these areas do get screwed when investors come in and refurbish homes en mass because it lifts the housing values and most of the residents are renters which pushes the out of their markets.

  • @justmissjamey

    @justmissjamey

    6 жыл бұрын

    Mark Innes..agreed.....but there should be some sort of programs to help disabled and elderly fix up their homes if need be

  • @obfuscated3090

    @obfuscated3090

    6 жыл бұрын

    The solution is not to live in expensive areas so I didn't. I didn't feel the Recession because I bought CHEAP property and renovated it. I never owned a new car because that's a poor use of money. I can easily afford to buy one for cash. Live BELOW your means, cover your ass, and don't buy shit you don't need. My parents were young during the Great Depression and I learned from them. They retired quite comfortably because they never wasted money.

  • @JustforFun-ki6fk
    @JustforFun-ki6fk6 жыл бұрын

    Wow did not know that was going on in florida great story!

  • @charlesterrizzi8311
    @charlesterrizzi83116 жыл бұрын

    Well done.

  • @RichieRouge206
    @RichieRouge2068 жыл бұрын

    Excellent and very informative and professional film about Lehigh. The housing market here in the UK is not much better with new build homes going up and people seemingly buying them but people losing more and more jobs? Does not add up

  • @theuglykwan

    @theuglykwan

    6 жыл бұрын

    The UK isn't building enough homes to meet demand, the population is growing. Plus there are foreign buyers.

  • @petermautner1013
    @petermautner10136 жыл бұрын

    When all money is created as debt.There can only be debt.

  • @aloharay
    @aloharay5 жыл бұрын

    Sarasota county, about an hour north of Lehigh, saw a huge year on year appreciation from 2002 to around 2006. While the per capita income in Sarasota is much higher than in Lee county, it was not a protection. They experienced a similar boom and crash cycle. Property bought for $80K went to over $350k before it started sliding back down, and boy did it drop fast. Being upside down in more than one property was an experience that many shared. Knowing they were going to eventually default anyways, it was quite common in that time period for homeowners to rent their property out and keep the cash instead of paying the mortgage.

  • @iadesigns
    @iadesigns6 жыл бұрын

    Wow, I used to go there every winter from NY as a kid, parents had a vacation home. Boring place but was very clean, tranquil and safe. It took years for my dad to sell the property.

  • @kellyhoward5893
    @kellyhoward58937 жыл бұрын

    I know this is an old story, but I processed mortgage loans for years. Many of the loans that were approved, I knew would end up in foreclosure. Mortgage lenders were lending money to people that couldn't possibly afford the loans and loaned them with low adjustable rate mortgages, but didn't explain to the borrower that their low rate would only last a couple of years. I wasn't in a position to tell the borrower what they were getting in to....Not only did the mortgage industry cause the foreclosure crisis, but it also caused thousands of people like me to lose their careers and means of living. I can't even tell you how many times I was laid off and the career that I had for so many years is gone. I am no longer in the business and struggle to make ends meet.

  • @DIVISIONINCISION

    @DIVISIONINCISION

    Жыл бұрын

    You can still be a loan officer. How did it end your career?

  • @michaelcuff5780
    @michaelcuff57806 жыл бұрын

    Hey i was in the building trade. I lost my house too! Its the banks and the government. Screwed everyone! In 2009 when i lost my job I lost my house! 11 years i paid the mortgage! GONE!

  • @MrScottie68

    @MrScottie68

    4 жыл бұрын

    Losing your home must be one painful experience, sorry that happened to you. However, why are you putting all the blame on banks and the government? You play a part in it too.....When you buy a house you need to stick to your means and not over extend yourself. And before you buy a house you also have to be prepared to cover at least 6 months of monthly expenses with savings in case of an emergency where your income is interrupted.

  • @justrydin7231

    @justrydin7231

    4 жыл бұрын

    Maybe they did have enough for six months but still couldn't find work. I watched so many hardworking people lose jobs in Florida from company closings after closings, I learned to withhold judgement.

  • @divinee.155

    @divinee.155

    4 жыл бұрын

    Always secure the roof over ur head buy cash buy something cheap fix it up if i cam do it u can i was once homeless living on the street and rhat fear trained me never to borrow cause i don't wanna loose my job and back on the street. The grar is so much i have over 100 acres of lad with a lake for water ocean front for fishing i even make my own gad and power im recession proof i am not going homless or hungry again

  • @raymondcollado7180
    @raymondcollado718010 жыл бұрын

    I lived in Lehigh Acres on and off from 1968 to 1986. This is so sad. :-(

  • @shadow-Sun
    @shadow-Sun6 жыл бұрын

    That really opened my eyes ...thanks for the upload ...and sorry for all the victims that were fucked by the big business and banks

  • @wanderingman8921
    @wanderingman89216 жыл бұрын

    *Don't buy things on credit.*

  • @joannebarrett1639

    @joannebarrett1639

    6 жыл бұрын

    Wandering man...I concur wholeheartedly. Buy just some something on credit, something small you know you can pay for. Pay it out ON TIME! Then, and so important...pay your utilities ON TIME! Have a system: my grandmother paid her bills as soon as she got them in the mail; my mother created a tickler file--wrote the date each bill was due on the outside of the envelope and mailed her payment a few days before.

  • @ireneduke5022

    @ireneduke5022

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@joannebarrett1639 set up auto draft for monthly bills.... Hassle free...

  • @joannebarrett1639

    @joannebarrett1639

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@ireneduke5022 Hi...auto draft is an option, all right, but one of which I choose not to avail myself.

  • @shelleygreyrealtor

    @shelleygreyrealtor

    5 жыл бұрын

    Seriously??? Credit is not the problem. People need to have the discipline to buy only what they can afford and pay it off on time.

  • @bukwild00

    @bukwild00

    4 жыл бұрын

    What do you own and do you live in north dakota

  • @clarky23
    @clarky236 жыл бұрын

    watched this on 12/2017. I'd like to see an update video on this.

  • @Lookup2Wakeup

    @Lookup2Wakeup

    6 жыл бұрын

    Me too ....

  • @djones9122

    @djones9122

    6 жыл бұрын

    Michael Clark sink holes tides to hot Florida nice place to avoid it was good in the 1960 s I lived there then

  • @chrisparlow4450

    @chrisparlow4450

    6 жыл бұрын

    That's because you all were greedy. Morons

  • @JadesMommy86

    @JadesMommy86

    6 жыл бұрын

    Prices went up its more crowded now

  • @hugolopez6644

    @hugolopez6644

    6 жыл бұрын

    it's booming, not enough houses. it gets crazily overcrowded when the northern birds come down on winter

  • @tj3221
    @tj32213 жыл бұрын

    One of the best things that I have done was to not buy a house that was above my financial means, leaving no wiggle room to survive a crisis. That one smart decision afforded me the ability to be able to make a double mortgage payment going on 8 years now. Bigger and better was never my dream house!

  • @waitaminute2015

    @waitaminute2015

    Жыл бұрын

    That's exactly how I have survived here in my small condo in Bonita Springs FL and I'm paid off. The freedom of being debt free takes out so much anxiety. I wish people would stop considering their homes as dream homes or ATMs.

  • @jahovahut
    @jahovahut10 жыл бұрын

    Cool. One of those videos your glad you fell on.

  • @cecillyles2678
    @cecillyles26786 жыл бұрын

    When a police dept. call and complains that there aren't enough tickets being written, that is what leads to corruption and dirty deals in the police force! and that will break down trust with that police force and with the people with-in that community!

  • @SunRabbit

    @SunRabbit

    6 жыл бұрын

    Goes to show you that the police is just another business.

  • @jondavis2206
    @jondavis22064 жыл бұрын

    In my office I have a chair worth about $40 that I paid for, at 14 minutes into this you see the clerk of court sitting in a chair that probably cost about $800........ Does anyone other than myself see something wrong here?

  • @daveassanowicz186

    @daveassanowicz186

    2 жыл бұрын

    That guy seems like a total idiot. How is he in charge of anything?

  • @AlexandriaTylerPhoto
    @AlexandriaTylerPhoto10 жыл бұрын

    Great production!

  • @Press1for
    @Press1for Жыл бұрын

    Hello 2008 nice to see you again I will be mowing your vacant homes once again. Hello old friends.

  • @kct1975
    @kct19756 жыл бұрын

    A very well done film 📼!

  • @jojizzle78
    @jojizzle787 жыл бұрын

    It's about to happen again but this time there will be no bail out.

  • @shelleygreyrealtor

    @shelleygreyrealtor

    5 жыл бұрын

    There's always another bailout.

  • @williammcintyre1054

    @williammcintyre1054

    4 жыл бұрын

    You are right. 2020 is going to bring with it a repeat of 10 years ago 1,000s of times worse.

  • @jarrodbarkley7573

    @jarrodbarkley7573

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@williammcintyre1054 how and when?

  • @ifukill7538

    @ifukill7538

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@jarrodbarkley7573 it's started. Unemployment, most jobs gone. People maxed out on credit cards and loans. Food shortages because of lockdown and farmers have to destroy crops milk animals. You can't just flick a switch. My advice pay off your debt. Sell things and live somewhere cheap. Crime will increase and civil unrest, gangs breaking in. Watch survival programmes and prepping and how to keep safe.😷

  • @jarrodbarkley7573

    @jarrodbarkley7573

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ifukill7538 thank you

  • @jdcollis
    @jdcollis10 жыл бұрын

    I lived in Lehigh from 1973 to 1979, and I remember a retirement community of about 24,000, with a few hundred unfortunate teenagers living in a town that was not in the least bit interested in providing facilities to occupy us and being bused to a rural school built like a prison. For a time we had a miniscule building (YMCA-affiliated?) that we could pile into, but that was about it. I think there are some rose-colored glasses being viewed through here...

  • @GeoHvl
    @GeoHvl2 жыл бұрын

    My family moved to Clewiston Fl. in 1960. As a child, we would go to Ft. Myers beach. On the way, there were hundreds of signs saying Live in Beautiful Lehigh Acres. I looked on Maps looks like there are a few homes there. Not much to show for 60 years.

  • @BrickworksDK
    @BrickworksDK6 жыл бұрын

    "Nobody was predicting a crash." Riiiiiiiighhhhttt... There was plenty of warnings throughout the 90s and early 2000s that we were going way too deep into debt and that the economy was overheating, producing multiple bubbles. But people wouldn't listen - they were too busy trying to ride the hype-train to what they thought would be a quick and easy fortune. And did we learn anything? Nope! We're all aboard the hype-train once again, with real estate dealers gleefully declaring that the housing marked is booming, rising even higher than the 2008 level. Oh yeah...? And what happened in 2008, pray tell. Sigh... For such an advanced species, we're remarkably stupid. We keep on repeating the mistakes of yesteryear, entirely oblivious to our own history.

  • @johnnieo66
    @johnnieo666 жыл бұрын

    The cheesiness of it all. Follow the money, you'll find the criminals.

  • @EconCat88
    @EconCat8812 жыл бұрын

    Very nice job with this. I'm shocked it hasn't rec'd more views.

  • @covercalls88
    @covercalls8810 жыл бұрын

    About the same thing happened in Las Vegas. Properties selling in the boom time for 270Ks and dropped to the low 70Ks. Some areas looked like a ghost town. I bought a 4 plex for $268,000 in 2004 and in in Jan. 2006 sold for $435,000. the market was going crazy. Too bad for me instead of holding the money, I rook the money back to the Los Angeles area and bought a rental house for $489,000. The valued dropped to $390,000 during the bad times, now it is up to $450,000. One of the good things that happen to me was refinancing the loan from 5.5% to 3.75%. Most of the Southern California region was not hit quite as hard as other regions of the country. Update It's 2/2016 the comp houses are now selling for $535,000. It probably won't hold at that level, and I see a small drop in the future but I don't a crash because all sales requires the buyers to put some money in. No more no down, no credit check.

  • @se7ensnakes
    @se7ensnakes9 жыл бұрын

    OWNING AMERICA "On Sept 1st, 1894, we will not renew our loans under any consideration. On Sept 1st we will demand our money. We will foreclose and become mortgagees in possession. We can take two-thirds of the farms west of the Mississippi, and thousands of them east of the Mississippi as well, at our own price... Then the farmers will become tenants as in England..." - 1891 American Bankers Association as printed in the Congressional Record of April 29, 1913

  • @se7ensnakes

    @se7ensnakes

    9 жыл бұрын

    ***** I would say MISSSION ACCOMPLISH

  • @se7ensnakes

    @se7ensnakes

    9 жыл бұрын

    +SNEAK982 Why are you here intentionally misinforming people? The following statement is a horrendous lie "Banks pay out loans to costumers from other people's savings " We are refering to COMMERCIAL BANKS, correct? Empirical data clearly and absolutely shows that banks do not lend from other people's deposit, and moreover, they are outright telling you that that is not what they do. If a banks has 10 million dollars in deposit, and they lend 300k for a mortgage, they still will have 10 million dollars of savings in reserve. The 300k DOES NOT reduce the amount of money in other people's saving account. We know this with absolutely certainty because the monetary base lags behind the credit cycle. But despite this the banks have to balance their books. They can balance their books because of intrabank loans, the FED's discount window or the effects of the velocity of money. However, too much credit too fast destroys the velocity effect, and we get recessions and depressions. But this is, in its modern version, three centuries old. So yeah digital money is counterfeit money. The banks can choose what business can use them and which cannot. They can effectively control online businesses because accepting digital money is their exclusive privilige.You also hinted about regulation? Have you been sleeping under a rock all this time! Politics dont work that way. Politics work with $. If you dont have $ you dont get represented. It workds exactly like that for both parties. Sometimes the banks write the laws, and the respective law makers get campaing contributions. Most of the time the banks write the laws word for word, leaving out blanks so that the supporting congressman can fill in their names. When representatives go to Washington they spend most of their time trying to get money for their party, Republican or Democrat. They even have dinner clubs in Washington where lobbyist and lawmakers meet.. REFERENCES“In the real world banks extend credit, creating deposits in the process, and look for the reserves later” (Moore (1979, p. 539)-quoting Fed economist)“In the real world, banks extend credit, creating deposits in the process , and look for the reserves later.”Alan Holmes, then Senior Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of New York (1969)@835955103154389www.bostonfed.org/economic/conf/conf1/conf1i.pdf"the difference of m2-m1 leads the cycle by even more than m2 with the lead being about three quarters" kydland and prescott Pg 14@835955103154389minneapolisfed.org/…/presc…/papers/prescott-et91.pdf“Banks lend by simultaneously creating a loan asset and a deposit liability on their balance sheet. That is why it is called credit “creation” - credit is created literally out of thin air (or with the stroke of a keyboard).”Paul Sheard, Chief Global Economic & Head of Global Economics and Research, Standard and Poors@8359551031543892joz611prdme3eogq61h5p3gr08.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/…There is no evidence that either the monetary base or M1 leads the [credit] cycle, although some economists still believe this monetary myth. Both the monetary base and M1 series are generally procyclical and, if anything, the monetary base lags the [credit] cycle slightly.Nobel prize winners Finn Kydland and Ed Prescott , Federal Reserve bank of Minneapolis (1990)@835955103154389www.minneapolisfed.org/research/qr/qr1421.pdfUnder the present system banks do not have to wait for depositors to appear and make funds available before they can on-lend, or intermediate, those funds. Rather, they create their own funds, deposits, in the act of lending. This fact can be verified in the description of the money creation system in many central bank statements, and it is obvious to anybody who has ever lent money and created the resulting book entries.IMF Working Paper Chicago Plan Revisited, p9@835955103154389@2012The key function of banks is money creation, not intermediation.Michael Kumhof, Deputy Division Chief, Modeling Unit, Research Department, International Monetary Fund@835955103154389vimeo.com/64807284@835955103154389www.bostonfed.orgBOSTONFED.ORG

  • @roseguber3240

    @roseguber3240

    6 жыл бұрын

    Same people though...

  • @GeorgeStar

    @GeorgeStar

    6 жыл бұрын

    But the ignorant right wing hillbillies keep saying the problem is socialism.

  • @katheryneclayton3379
    @katheryneclayton33794 жыл бұрын

    These abandoned homes in this film today (2019) have been completed and are landscaped and occupied. The building boom began again where it left off in 2008 starting in about 2015, I know, I live in Fort Myers, Fla.

  • @terrylunsford352

    @terrylunsford352

    4 жыл бұрын

    The scary part is when something like this happens nobody knows where the bottom will be or how long it will take to reverse coarse.

  • @ripvanrevs

    @ripvanrevs

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@terrylunsford352 In Ohio, it took about 8 years.

  • @kateyare4708
    @kateyare47084 жыл бұрын

    18:40 This woman was a CPA and she did not know the state of the market in January 2008? Thank God I was not one of her clients back then.

  • @jimsmith9853

    @jimsmith9853

    4 жыл бұрын

    That is exactly what I was thinking. She is a CPA and making stupid basic financial decisions. I am surprised she didnt buy a magic bean stalk.

  • @andrewplantagenet5811
    @andrewplantagenet58116 жыл бұрын

    Great!

  • @tapptom
    @tapptom6 жыл бұрын

    Ratner? Weinberg? And she moved from Miami Beach? Says a lot

  • @wintersbattleofbands1144
    @wintersbattleofbands11444 жыл бұрын

    3:32, Florida, where the Mullet lives on.

  • @CDN1975
    @CDN19753 жыл бұрын

    The discontentment of having an average size home is the problem. The generations that bought and stayed for 40 years had the right idea.

  • @lonewolfMI
    @lonewolfMI5 жыл бұрын

    Dam in just now watching this. Been in fort Myers almost all my life

  • @landongendur
    @landongendur8 жыл бұрын

    Wow, pretty sad when a house is worth the same amount as a new luxury SUV. There must've been a serious oversupply in the area when the market downturned.

  • @MrGMAN92985

    @MrGMAN92985

    8 жыл бұрын

    I feel sad for the people who lost their homes but it was an investors dream

  • @GrinNBarrett

    @GrinNBarrett

    8 жыл бұрын

    +MrGMAN92985 do not feel sorry this whole thing was based on greed an unhealthy one at that. Many had a home all paid for and took out the equity which is considered very foolish for the payments made in the early purchase were a fraction of the new ones even with a low interest rate. My original mortgage with PItY was 164.00 a month had I taken the equity it would have been over 700 a month how smart is that? They only heard one side the sales pitch and never considered the small print.

  • @MrGMAN92985

    @MrGMAN92985

    8 жыл бұрын

    It's ridiculous, prices are going back up again now but I doubt anything like that will happen again. They put too much regulation in place now

  • @GrinNBarrett

    @GrinNBarrett

    8 жыл бұрын

    +MrGMAN92985 LOL What regulations? Hedge funds still active now all debt even car loans.

  • @MidagedgamerBlogspotter

    @MidagedgamerBlogspotter

    8 жыл бұрын

    "Wow, pretty sad when a house is worth the same amount as a new luxury SUV" Kinda tells you how worthless that SUV is doesn't it....

  • @starquant
    @starquant8 жыл бұрын

    Florida's legacy: Sinkholes and Foreclosures.

  • @MrShobar

    @MrShobar

    8 жыл бұрын

    +starquant And insects and bad water.

  • @mperry1329

    @mperry1329

    8 жыл бұрын

    Florida is one big sinkhole and people are just fools for wanting to move there anyway.

  • @starquant

    @starquant

    8 жыл бұрын

    M Perry It's a man made disaster isn't it ?. With the local farmers using groundwater on their crops?. It's a bloody shame.

  • @mperry1329

    @mperry1329

    8 жыл бұрын

    starquant And when I said that, I also had two people in mind who are moving there for the wrong reasons at that. Coral Gables for example have a Crocodile infestation going on where there have been over 100 cases of them in doorways, eating the family pet, attacking people. One problem after another in Florida.

  • @mudguppy

    @mudguppy

    7 жыл бұрын

    +M. Perry+ You are such an idiot! Have you ever had a thought that you thought through before opening your ignorant fucking mouth?

  • @404errorcodeV
    @404errorcodeV3 жыл бұрын

    it's 2021 and it's happening again. now's your time at bat! get loud! don't let them do this to the next generations.

  • @patcupolo9274
    @patcupolo92746 жыл бұрын

    My wife and myself to Lehigh with 2 young dAughters on a pro notional visit. The idea was reasOnable thank GOD we passed, but now 40 Year’s later we moved to a very nice area in ft Myers semi retired would not move up north love the warmth, have deal with the tourists for a short time, but worth it!