|
Post by galant on Feb 2, 2009 12:11:38 GMT 1
the commy mentality is something which suits the croatian general way of thinking, it deals with croat issues, such as jelous, image, hierarchy, power, peergroup pressure, laws to suit certain people , and soooo many people here wanto be like tito, etc.... so yeah i rekon the commy mentality is here to stay, cos its just the way some if not most croats think. yeah sanader is a nighmare as is suker etc... they are in the position to get the country running, but they do nothing but fill their pockets and enjoy being in positions where they can be befriended by peiople who can bribe them. they are getting rich, im pretty sure thats all they think about. and same goes for the people who run local opcine in croatia....same recipe, same mentality.
|
|
|
Post by janjohansen on Feb 2, 2009 12:26:59 GMT 1
darcy
"Do not worry, it would not be any better in Croatia then it is now, a new law does not change the people"
"The communism is very much alive in Croatia."
"Any liberal capitalism is better then any form of totalitarian Stalinist communism"
Since totalitarian Stalinist communism only survived a very short time after Stalin's death some 55 years ago and never was practiced by Tito, your statements above about Croatia suggest that in your opinion it has been reborn in today's Croatia.
Why does it not surprise me that you equate Croatia with a tyrannical regime which was responsible for 10s of millions of deaths, hundreds of gulags, mass starvation, no democracy, no individual freedom, no freedom of travel, no freedom of speech and of course no real estate market.
Guess with the barbarian restrictions practiced in this country it's too late to travel to another country and perhaps Anna should shut down this site where you and everone else expose ourselves to extreme danger by our couragous defiance of these restrictions.
|
|
|
Post by dalmatino on Feb 2, 2009 20:20:15 GMT 1
darcy "Do not worry, it would not be any better in Croatia then it is now, a new law does not change the people" "The communism is very much alive in Croatia." "Any liberal capitalism is better then any form of totalitarian Stalinist communism" Since totalitarian Stalinist communism only survived a very short time after Stalin's death some 55 years ago and never was practiced by Tito, your statements above about Croatia suggest that in your opinion it has been reborn in today's Croatia. Why does it not surprise me that you equate Croatia with a tyrannical regime which was responsible for 10s of millions of deaths, hundreds of gulags, mass starvation, no democracy, no individual freedom, no freedom of travel, no freedom of speech and of course no real estate market. Guess with the barbarian restrictions practiced in this country it's too late to travel to another country and perhaps Anna should shut down this site where you and everone else expose ourselves to extreme danger by our couragous defiance of these restrictions. Darcy is uneducated and indoctrinated, one of the sheeple
|
|
|
Post by joffey on Feb 3, 2009 21:21:18 GMT 1
Dalmatino, can't pm you. Where is this house?
|
|
|
Post by dalmatino on Feb 3, 2009 21:36:03 GMT 1
joffey I replied to your pm the house is on the coast, between Omis and Makarska
|
|
|
Post by cropal on Feb 11, 2009 15:52:15 GMT 1
I also pm'd you, is the house for sale? Can you pm me?
|
|
zoran
Junior Member
Posts: 23
|
Post by zoran on Mar 20, 2009 11:02:34 GMT 1
I am not happy to write this but I must beacuse I can not tolerate that someone write dirty comments on my country so DARCY if you dont like it here please go in other country and stop writing stupid comments about somenthing you dont know.(you may think that you know) Thats all from me in this forum and administrator is not doing nothing about this.
|
|
|
Post by irac on Mar 21, 2009 19:17:14 GMT 1
I am not happy to write this but I must beacuse I can not tolerate that someone write dirty comments on my country so DARCY if you dont like it here please go in other country and stop writing stupid comments about somenthing you dont know.(you may think that you know) Thats all from me in this forum and administrator is not doing nothing about this. So what are you doing about the millions in drug money being funnelled through your town Zoran? Is it benefitting the real estate market there? Didn't think so! Better you concentrated on business or try to take a stand in one of the most corrupt and criminalised towns in Croatia!
|
|
|
Post by ray51 on Mar 31, 2009 22:17:21 GMT 1
Eh , I remember now : it was the 4 "d" issues , namely death divorce , distress ( financial , or otherwise ) and departure ( to elsewhere ) that made for qualified , motivated genuine sellers i.e. the ones we could do good business with ( in my own , long gone-by , real-estate days ) ; guess you don't get much of such cases in Croatia , then ?
|
|
|
Post by Carol on Apr 1, 2009 10:54:16 GMT 1
Death : no. It means property ownership changes eventually and someone inherits who didn't have to pay for it so doesn't want to turn it back into money. And until the will is settled (which involves the infamously slow court system), nothing can happen no matter how much all parties would wish it could.
Divorce: maybe this affects the flats in cities like Zagreb and Split but I don't think I've seen even one case of it causing a sale outwith these areas.
Distress: there is a bit of that around, mainly among the foreign owners and apartment developers.
Departure: they just shut up the house and come back to it for holidays.
Here are our major reasons:-
Financial distress (as already mentioned) but also a poor tourist season resulting in the need to raise some cash (late 2009???);
need the money to buy the student son a flat in Zagreb or to build a new family house on some other piece of land they own.
Otherwise people prefer to hold onto their property as they regard it as part of their heritage.
|
|
|
Post by crojoe on Apr 9, 2009 14:35:31 GMT 1
Just walk away! Have you already signed an agreement? If not, then walk. Call their bluff. If anything, Croatians are going the way of UK landlords, thinking their houses are worth more then they really are. If you have an agreement, then take them to court. Generally, when you make a contract, you should put a clause in there that if the landlord wants to pull out then he needs to pay you back the 10%, plus another 10%, plus any legal costs.
|
|
|
Post by crojoe on Apr 9, 2009 14:40:57 GMT 1
Just for your sake do your home work and get a lawyer to check out all the paperwork, and a lawyer that is not related or a friend of the seller. In Croatia it's not what you know but who you know. So, make sure the property is actually owned by the owner, and not all his brothers and sisters, plus aunties, which is often the case in Croatia at this time, or maybe to some Serb or Bosnian owner out of the country. The land registry is the first place to visit.
|
|