I sometimes wonder if you even read your comments before posting them.Great letter. The points made are solid, and for those shills who keep crowing, "it's all about fees", if you are capable of shame, then feel it, because the appraisal profession did not just get attacked from without, it got undermined from within.
Prior to the housing market crash, appraisers signed a petition about mortgage broker pressure ( which was ignored, as is our input now) but the point is that the petition had nothing to do with fees, in fact it was at the expense of our livelihood that many of us signed it. But now, there is an intersection of fees and the concern over market impacts- which a certain set of appraisers exploited to discredit any arguments ; (It's really about the fees ! ) The undermining of the profession from within. Yet, it never occurred to them it was about the fees to the stakeholders. who stood to profit. Wonder why that was.
We can support this man or sign a petition and contact agencies, and it is always worth a try, though I doubt it would do much good. Our petition back then was ignored, and a correction only took place after the housing market imploded, and we saw how that worked out. I can only hope that the good appraisers will stay, and the weaker appraisers leave if the lack of volume decimates the ranks. However, there is no way to control that, and with the low fee AMC model acting as a Darwinian selector in the wrong direction, I fear it might be the reverse.
This is so reductive that it's pointless. Everything in life is about money. That's how society works. If you don't have money, you live a ****ty life and die before your peers.But I am saying that none of you are fooling anyone by claiming that it NOT about the money because that is a lie. And everyone telling it is a liar.
All you're doing is proving my point that the gaslighting and virtue signaling that it somehow ISN'T about the money is an obvious lie.This is so reductive that it's pointless. Everything in life is about money. That's how society works. If you don't have money, you live a ****ty life and die before your peers.

See, the way you can tell that I (obviously) anticipated in advance this type of response is by going back and looking for where I already addressed it. My only mistake was in overestimating your intellect as being higher than JGrant's because I assumed she would be the one to take the path of feelz over realz.I'm imagining a xerox repairman in 1986 saying, "Yeah, but if there were jobs then you'd take em. Don't tell me you wouldn't! Signing a petition is hypocritical. It's all about self-interest!"
All you're doing is proving my point that the gaslighting and virtue signaling that it somehow ISN'T about the money is an obvious lie.
If the real concern is about the money (which is an entirely legitimate and real aspect for appraisers to fret) then just be direct about it. Stop assuming the opposition is dumber than the appraisers are.
So then what's your point?See, the way you can tell that I (obviously) anticipated in advance this type of response is by going back and looking for where I already addressed it. My only mistake was in overestimating your intellect as being higher than JGrant's because I assumed she would be the one to take the path of feelz over realz.
"Now please refrain from going into your normal reimagination tack and dishonestly distorting my comment as conveying some criticism of your concerns about the money. I'm not critical of appraisers wanting to act in their own self-interests or of them being worried about their futures or of them hating the fees or the manner in which those fees are set or any of that. Nor am I critical of the ethics of organizing and engaging in collective bargaining. It won't work because it won't work, but I don't think there's anything wrong with wanting what you want."