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Re: That's What Rush Has Been Saying [message #55689 is a reply to message #55688] Wed, 01 October 2008 11:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18674
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

I am not convinced that either party is without blame in the current financial situation. Nor am I fully certain that either party was completely responsible. I don't think there is 100% fault to be found on one side of the aisle and none on the other side, nor do I think the private sector banks were helpless, without influence. Each of them must have been partially responsible. But I do think there are some more responsible than others.

I think the banks could have fought back harder, and that, in fact, it was there responsibility to do so. However, I do think that the low income loans are things that only Democrats would have an agenda to promote, so I think it is unreasonable to place blame on Republicans for them. It just stands to reason.

If the loans had gone out to large corporations, it might make more sense to think Republicans had their hands in it. Their policy tends towards trickle down economics. But that wasn't the case. The high-risk loans that caused problems were made to low and lower-middle income individuals trying to buy homes they couldn't afford. I just don't see this as being something Republicans would get behind, but I can definitely see it as being something squarely in a liberal agenda.

It's sometimes hard to know what to believe. But looking at results and motives, I think probably this was more a Democrat thing.

Are you going to watch the VP debate? Have you heard about the moderator?


The "moderator" [message #55690 is a reply to message #55689] Wed, 01 October 2008 14:09 Go to previous messageGo to next message
colinhester is currently offline  colinhester
Messages: 1349
Registered: May 2009
Location: NE Arkansas
Illuminati (3rd Degree)
This is complete bullshit. Think Biden has been given the questions already?

Re: The "moderator" [message #55691 is a reply to message #55690] Wed, 01 October 2008 17:48 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18674
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

I agree with you, it was a really bad choice. I wonder how that got setup in the first place. But in the end, if you cheat, you lose. So if Mrs. Ifill isn't completely fair and honest, it may backfire on her.


It's maybe a bit more complicated than that? [message #55692 is a reply to message #55688] Wed, 01 October 2008 20:54 Go to previous messageGo to next message
The Irishman is currently offline  The Irishman
Messages: 5
Registered: May 2009
Esquire
The little video is the best amalgam of lies and distortion the people trying to cover their tracks could have come up with.

The guys causing all the trouble? Lehman, Morgan Stanley? They're INVESTMENT banks. The CRA only applies to depository institutions, i.e., COMMERCIAL banks. The lenders involved in the subprime mortgage process now crisis were not even covered by the CRA. Indeed, the vast majority of nontraditional and subprime loans are issued outside the federally regulated banking system. Those mortgages aren't backed by Freddie or Fannie because they're NON-CONFORMING loans - inadequate documentation, inadequate down payments, they're commonly known as LIAR loans and nobody gets liar loans under the CRA - they get FHA CONFORMING LOANS. Just as importantly, many of the investors who were buying mortgages in the secondary market from mortgage companies were not covered by the CRA either.

These bad loans were the result of jumbo mortgages (over $250K) with no equity and ARM terms that went belly up. And those properties were in southern California, on the Florida coasts, and in NYC - not some rundown Cleveland suburb.

But it really all comes out the same - facts mean nothing anymore - only what Rush says is true now.

Re: It's maybe a bit more complicated than that? [message #55693 is a reply to message #55692] Thu, 02 October 2008 11:31 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18674
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

Well, I can tell you this for certain because I just purchased a home last month. During the mortgage shopping process, I got to talk to several of them, both lenders and brokers, and I was able to learn some of the issues they face today.

FHA policies have changed radically in the last six months. They were handing out the so called "liar loans" via brokers - stated income loans - just a few short months ago. Just about anyone could get a loan by stating income that was not verified, and it would be approved by the Federal Housing Administration. So this wasn't just outside lenders, it was government approved lenders too.

In fact, now the only loans you'll get are from outside lenders. They're the ones that take reasonable risks, the ones that live and die by their decisions. I got a conventional loan by a lender that checked me out. It is as it should be. But apparently it hasn't been that way for quite some time. Anyone with a heartbeat could get a loan, and that's why we're in the trouble we're in.


Re: That's What Rush Has Been Saying [message #55694 is a reply to message #55689] Fri, 03 October 2008 20:08 Go to previous messageGo to next message
FredT is currently offline  FredT
Messages: 704
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (1st Degree)
Something we're all guilty of to a much greater extent than we would like to admit is filtering out information that contradicts our beliefs. A Republican is far more likely to filter out any suggestion that Rebublican policies and actions are responsible for the mortgage crisis, and a Democrat is far more likely to filter out any suggestions of Democrat culpability. Something else we do is to accept without skepticism messages that reinforce our point of view. Example: Anybody ever watch a Michael Moore documentary? Am I the only one that sees them as extremely one-sided? And this guy has actually received awards and standing ovations!

It's helpful to me to seek a more balanced explanation of any public issue that I'm concerned about. In the case of the subprime mortgage crisis, the explanation in the Wikipedia appears to be a balanced and comprehenisve summary. For example, it does mention the Community Reinvestment Act, and it summarizes the positions of detractors and supporters. This is very different from the one-sided comments of politicians about the causes of the crisis.


Re: That's What Rush Has Been Saying [message #55695 is a reply to message #55694] Sun, 05 October 2008 11:32 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18674
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

Good link, thanks Fred. I don't know why I didn't think of looking there. That website has tuned into a really good source of information, in most cases.

Honestly, it only increases my feelings that we should not have done the bailout. I had worried in the back of my mind that the "sky is falling" reports might have been real, that maybe if the bailout didn't happen, unemployment would go to 25% and other bad things like that. But really, I don't think this bailout will help much, it just directs funds to organizations that shouldn't get it. If we're headed for a deep cavern economically, this probably won't help it. Only true protection of our workers and industries will work, in my opinion.

I think no job should be exported or allowed H1B status without a prohibitive tax applied, nor should any import be allowed without a high tax. I used to not believe in protectionism, but now I really do. Lower income tax, lower corportate tax, lower all internal taxes but juice up the import tax and impose a tax on any work that is exported, whether by outsourcing overseas or by bringing in H1B workers. That's what I think should be done. It will increase prices of things, but at least Americans will have jobs to pay for them.

As for the credit crunch and the "sky is falling" guys, it still looks to me like the problem started when the door was opened by liberal policies that forced commercial and mortgage banks to lend to high-risk borrowers. Liberal congressmen pushed the impossible situation where people that couldn't afford homes were given unnatural opportunities. Once that door was open, the housing market grew artificially. Banks that were originally forced to make bad loans then adapted themselves to take advantage of the situation. After a while, you had these weird situations where "loans" were given to just about anyone, and they weren't even looking at the ability of the borrowers to pay back the loans. Then, when the leaks in the system started showing, they began to offer even weirder loan types, those "Ninja" loans and "payment option" loans in addition to ARM loans.

In my mind, this is all a progression of the initial attempts at wealth redistribution by the liberals, starting decades ago. It looks like they have gotten what they wanted, millions of homes in the hands of people that can't afford them, and a bailout of the banks that lended the money on the taxpayers tab. This is socialism, forced on us all by crisis. It came in the form of subsidizing homes, millions were living in homes that weren't paid for for months or years. But worse even than taking the money from taxpayers and giving it to the poor in the form of subsidized housing, it looks like lots of mortgage bankers were allowed to profit from the situation. They aren't paying the consequences of their bad actions, instead, their bad loans are being paid for via bailout.

Some have said what caused the problem was the lack of regulation. Perhaps that is true. But if you're going to regulate the banks, the first thing you should do is absolutely prohibit it from being an avenue for the redistribution of wealth. So that pretty much means the liberals need to leave their opinions at the door. They're the ones that pushed that direction in the first place. The second thing is probably the banking games that arose as a result of opening the door to subprime lending should be stopped. But then again, that takes me back to the first point that if you don't allow (encourage, even force) subprime lending in the first place, then the games will stop. The dominoes started falling when the subprime loans were being forced on the banks. That's the root cause, in my opinion.

If we vote in Obama and have a Democrat executive in addition to the Democrat majority in Congress, my fear is we in America will have a real "sky is falling" economy. I'm not sure we can avoid a pretty serious correction, but I am downright afraid of a Obama win. I think America will see 1930's style depression if that happens. I hope I'm wrong.


Re: Welcome to the Republican Party [message #60927 is a reply to message #55678] Sat, 19 September 2009 14:49 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Marlboro
Messages: 403
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (1st Degree)
And if that was the essential Repbulican party, I would be a republican.

But I don't see the participation in all kinds of foreign wars, the destruction of public education, and the failure to properly monitor our financial institutions, meddling in the woman's right to choose, or life styles of people, as something that I can support

I actually voted for the second GB over Gore, with the asumption that he would turn to typical republican fiancial ideals andhe did not.

So yeah, I agree with that part, but not the idiocy or putting someone as green or of limited ability(mental or managerial) in an office. And though I voted for Obama, I'm still not happy with him on Iraq, Afghanistan, or public education. I still think he's for this idiocy of believing that CO2 caused the global warming that we aren't actually having now(don't confuse me with facts). But he did manage a huge national campaign that beat the pants off the rest of the democratic field and then the republican too.

And I believe that most of the disagreements with him are just disagreements, except for those that use pictures or slogans that are most clearly racist.

So there!!
Re: Welcome to the Republican Party [message #62492 is a reply to message #55678] Mon, 03 May 2010 21:16 Go to previous messageGo to next message
AudioAJ is currently offline  AudioAJ
Messages: 25
Registered: February 2010
Chancellor
My son and I were talking about socialism one day (he's an 8th grader) and I used the same analogy about the grades. He said the idea of equal distribution is crazy.
Re: Welcome to the Republican Party [message #64299 is a reply to message #62492] Tue, 12 October 2010 11:41 Go to previous message
badman is currently offline  badman
Messages: 11
Registered: May 2009
Chancellor
Except that if you used your friend's back to write your test on, while they had to forego taking their own while serving you, it would be a more apt analogy. Fortunes are made with the assistance of many, and would not happen without governement infrastructure and regulation, and laborers to achieve the ends. Capital investment income is not EARNED income, and people at the top end are paying less now than they did under Reagan or in any other modernized nation.

And, nobody is proposing fully equal distribution. And grades are different than basic living needs.



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