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Engaging and Heartfelt: 5 NYC Real Estate Blogs Worth Reading

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The Internet is hooking into real estate, and quickly. According to a 2013 report conducted by the National Association of Realtors , a full 90% of buyers searched online during their home search process, and 45% researched a specific home online. Listing pages and databases can be fantastic resources for clients looking for specific information - but the search itself can be overwhelming and dull.   Buyers, sellers, and real estate agents alike wade through pages upon pages of listing numbers, housing photos, cost estimates, neighborhood descriptions, benefits, detractions, and pages upon pages of (ir)relevant information. For all their searching, these exhausted researchers usually end their investigation as soon as they find the bare facts they need before gratefully closing out their tabs. But real estate isn't the stressful, confusing business that its web presence makes it out to be. Beyond the bland on-screen display of listings and stats, it's a thriving ind

The Viscardi Center Deserves Your Support

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It’s a frustrating fact that those with physical disabilities are all too often sidelined in our society. For some, the path towards success is wrought with unnecessary obstacles and detours that most don’t have to face - or even think about. It might be this widespread, harmful unawareness that makes legislation protecting and supporting those with physical disabilities slow to come, and not as helpful as it needs to be. I’m a firm believer that those with disabilities deserve the same access to opportunities that the non-disabled take for granted. That’s one of the many reasons that I support the work carried out by the Viscardi Center . The Center was founded in 1952 with the mission to empower individuals to live fully integrated, active, and independent lives , and is a global force advocating for disability rights and more supportive legislation. Its founder, Henry Viscardi, was a driving power behind the Disabilities Education Act (1975), as well as the Americans with Dis

She's Not Just Good "For a Girl."

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Billie Jean King understood that symbolism mattered on that hot September day when she stepped up to match against Bobby Riggs in 1970. She knew that she needed to win. The match she faced had been hyped for months, with Riggs sneering misogynistic comments such as: “I’ll tell you why I’ll win. She’s a woman and they don’t have the emotional stability,” and “ Women play about 25 percent as good as men, so they should get about 25 percent of the money men get.” The sexism and frustrated anger surrounding the conflict built to the point that people would refer back to the match as the “Battle of the Sexes.” Fortunately, Riggs’s venom was kicked back in his face when King defeated him handily in all three sets, proving that women could, in fact, stand toe-to-toe with male athletes. Women in sports were jubilant after King’s win, and her victory is often pointed to as the spark for a sudden increase in women’s athletics. But under the joy and excitement of the victory, an unwel

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This is Camille Duvall's first post on her Blogspot. Come back soon!