There’s always something to howl about.

Contra Cammarosano: “You will know when BloodhoundBlog has attained its goals when there is no more carney-barker jive to be found anywhere in real estate.”

This is a response to a comment that grew up to be a post:

Louis Cammarosano: “[I]f it wasn’t for “Vendor” Zillow, Unchained Phoenix would have shown a loss.”

No, we would have done the show in a different facility, without food. Zillow.com paid for our guests to have a much better experience than they would have had otherwise. I’m very grateful for this, but it had nothing to do with what were doing. If we can, I want to pay for Orlando entirely from receipts, so that we will have heard the last of these specious charges.

Louis Cammarosano: “The anti vendor rhetoric falls flat when your conference was sponsored by one and you have become one yourself.”

Falls flat for whom? Is there anyone reading this who thinks that we are casting about for a way to make milch cows out of Realtors and lenders, in the way that virtually everyone associated with the Inman.com/Realtor.com/Move.com world seeks to milk Realtors and lenders? I’m completely serious. If you really think that, let me know, because I will want to dial up the anti-vendor/anti-broker/anti-NAR rhetoric quite a bit. I am sick to death of putatively self-employed business people being swindled by one huckster after another, and I am doing everything I can think of to put a stop to it. If I haven’t made that abundantly clear by now, the fault is mine, and I will mend my ways with renewed vigor.

I actually agree with the point you don’t quite make: Zillow.com — and possibly some other vendors fully within the Web 2.0 world — don’t deserve to be lumped together with the other companies making up the milking-machinery branch of the Inmanosphere. What can one say about this grievous injustice? How about: Dang.

BloodhoundBlog is a very costly endeavor. Our bandwidth needs are huge, so our hosting fees are fairly high. BloodhoundRealty.com absorbs all of that, along with any other costs associated with running this site. But those numbers pale when compared with the labor value — and the market value — of the content accumulated here — provided by me and by three dozen brilliant contributors over the past two years. In a sense, BloodhoundBlog was made possible by the real estate market slowdown. I made the conscious choice to devote my time here and to other blue-sky endeavors, rather than slugging it out with short sales and foreclosures. Even so, it is completely reasonable to argue that every post in BloodhoundBlog — and there are almost 2,800 of them so far — represents a modicum of lost income for its author. The people writing here chose, each on his or her own behalf, to contribute their knowledge and wisdom to the whole of us, instead of pursuing immediate pecuniary advantages.

Does any of this sound like the carney-barker jive you will find on the show floors of Inman Connect or the NAR Convention? We’re not a charity — I detest indiscriminate charity — but we definitely are a movement. You will know when BloodhoundBlog has attained its goals when there is no more carney-barker jive to be found anywhere in real estate. If people want to experience what we’re doing in person, they’re going to pay for it. Brian Brady always wants to charge the market value, where I’m always eager to cut our price to bone. Even using Brian’s numbers, we’re not going to get rich for our time — and there is a very real risk that we could end up taking losses for what we’re doing — especially in comparison to what we could be doing with our time instead. None of that matters to me. Everything we have to say is always available here for free, and every benefit I derive from this work comes in the form of philosophical and moral and emotional satisfaction. If I cared about money, I might actually have some.

Here’s what I want, Louis — and you were at BloodhoundBlog Unchained in Phoenix, so you already know this:

I want for the very best real estate professionals to reach a state where they are beyond competition in their own markets; where they never again have to take shit from morons; where they don’t have to ransom their own lives over and over again — to vendors, to brokers, to bosses, to the NAR, to politicians — to pandemic pestilential pusillanimous posturing pimps; and where their acquisition costs per closed transaction come as close as possible to zero dollars and zero cents.

If you can’t see the difference between this and what vendors do — you will. You have my word on it.

 
Addendum: Inlookers, take note, if you please: This is a nice example of the practical value of fully explicating an implied accusation. It is only by calling things by their true names that we can distinguish fact from falsehood, authenticity from sham, innocence from guilt. I’m not accusing Louis of anything nefarious, I am simply pointing out that leaving an implied accusation unexamined is potentially a very costly mistake. If you accept an unearned guilt, you will atone for your error with undeserved burdens. How is that just?

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