Use absolute positioning
If you style the container to be positioned relatively, then you may position the child elements absolutely if necessary. Giving you more control over their location relative to the container. This is often used to create a div that expands to match the height of the container it's in; e.g., .right-column-full { position:absolute; top:10px; bottom:10px; right:5px; }
Why use absolute positioning?
The major pitfall in Josh C's solution, is if you add additional text or change the height of the container div (among other changes), your buttons will remain where they are unless you also adjust their margin-top properties.
For perhaps a simpler and more easily manageable solution, you can do something like the following:
HTML
<div class="infoblock-container">
<p>text</p>
<p>text</p>
<p>text</p>
<p>text</p>
<p>text</p>
<p>text</p>
<p>texttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt</p>
<input type="button" class="button-one" value="Button-One">
<input type="button" class="button-two" value="Button-Two">
</div>
CSS
.infoblock-container {position:relative;}
.button-one {position:absolute; right:5px; bottom:5px; width:80px; margin-right:84px;}
.button-two {position:absolute; right:5px; bottom:5px; width:80px;}
Demo
Unlike Josh C's solution, this will always keep the buttons at the bottom right corner and will always have a 5px (or whatever you specify) distance from the edge. By specifying the width and margin, we easily give the right-most button enough room plus 4px.