by GEF @ 6:41 AM MST
Well Middle Class America thanks to your apathy all these years and your greed, the Rich Elite now get the last laugh… You are the Frogs that are in that boiling pot!
“Welcome to your worst nightmare! You are about to go into full slavery because of your apathy and blind trust in corrupt leaders and corrupt institutions like the media!
Godless Men and Women who live lavishly in pomp and privalege have decided that they want to rule the world by taking everything that you and I have and relegating us as their slaves..mere cogs in their evil schemes!
From Article..Families all over the country continue to lose homes in record numbers, stripping families of their wealth and destroying entire neighbourhoods”
Foreclosure wave sweeps America
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By Steve Schifferes |
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Thousands of abandoned houses in Cleveland have been vandalized |
A wave of foreclosures and evictions is about to sweep the United States in the wake of the sub-prime mortgage lending crisis. This could destabilise the US housing market and may also lead to further turmoil in financial institutions, who collectively own $1 trillion (£480.6bn) worth of sub-prime debt.
Cleveland, Ohio, is an industrial city on the banks of Lake Erie in the US “rust belt”.
It is the sub-prime capital of the United States. One in ten homes in the city is now vacant, and whole neighbourhoods have been blighted by foreclosed, vandalized and boarded-up homes.
| Families all over the country continue to lose homes in record numbers, stripping families of their wealth and destroying entire neighbourhoods Michael J Calhoun Center for Responsible Lending |
Many of these homes are now owned by the banks and investment pools owning the mortgages, and the company making the most foreclosures in Cleveland is Deutsche Bank Trust, which acts on behalf of such investment pools.
Cleveland is facing a rising crime wave, and the cost of demolishing the vacant houses alone will cost the city $100m of its tax base.
According to Jim Rokakis, the County Treasurer for Cleveland’s Cuyahoga County, “Wall Street strategies that made the cycle of no-money-down, no-questions-asked lending possible have sucked the life out of my city”.
Sub-prime crisis growing
Sub-prime lending is spreading across the United States, especially in the booming housing markets of Southern California, Florida, Washington, DC, and New York City.
One in five US mortgages now falls in this category. As the credit crunch continues to bite “families all over the country continue to lose homes in record numbers, stripping families of their wealth and destroying entire neighbourhoods,” says Michael Calhoun of the Center for Responsible Lending, which tracks these issues. Sub-prime mortgages carry a much higher risk of default by the borrower than other kinds of mortgage lending.
That is because most of them are “balloon” mortgages (technically known as hybrid-adjustable rate mortgages, or ARMs), which offer the borrower a fixed-rate loan for two or three years, and then switch to a much higher adjustable rate after that.
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HAVE YOUR SAY Everyone is going to feel this credit crunch to some extent |
Many of them are set to switch in the next two years, leaving borrowers unable to afford the higher payments.
There have already been 1.7 million foreclosure proceedings in the US in the first eight months of 2007, and up to 2 million families are expected to lose their homes over the next two years, according to estimates by the US Congress’s Joint Economic Committee.
Crisis origins
But why have so many people in the US taken out sub-prime mortgages?
The sub-prime lending market started as a way of lending to people with poor credit history – as long as they had collateral like a house that could be used to guarantee the loan.
It was particularly prevalent in inner-city areas, especially among black and Hispanic borrowers.
Many of these mortgages were sold by unscrupulous and little regulated mortgage brokers, who received handsome commissions for selling expensive and unsuitable products.
Some customers were not told that their interest rates would go up sharply after two years; others were promised they could refinance their home before higher rates took effect.
Others found that when they had difficulties paying, huge unexplained fees were added to their bills, putting them further in debt.
Marion’s story
One person hard hit is Marion Gardner, who lives in one of the worst affected sub-prime lending areas of Cleveland, known as Slavic Village.
A single parent, she had worked hard to buy a house where she could raise her two children and escape from the misery of the inner-city housing projects.
Two years ago Marion fell ill, and found she could not manage the stairs in her house.
She decided to refinance her home, using some of the money to buy an apartment where she could more easily manage.
She gave her old house to her two sons, expecting they would contribute to paying for the property she had struggled so hard to obtain. But the sons fell behind in their payments.
Marion went to her lender – Countrywide, the biggest sub-prime lender in the US – and offered to pay off all the arrears.
She said they accepted her offer, and began sending them $1,000 every month, using up her retirement savings.
But after six months she discovered that instead of clearing her arrears, her home was going to be foreclosed by Countrywide.
She still visits the house every day, trying to protect if from drug dealers and burglars, and leaves her dog in the backyard.
But she can see all along her street dozens of foreclosed properties that have been vandalised, boarded up, or gutted.
Now she has learned that a date has been set for the sheriff to come and evict her.
Deceptive practices?
Mark Seifert, the director of the East Side Organising Project (ESOP) in Cleveland, which has played a leading role in helping people affected by the sub-prime crisis, says Marion’s story is typical.
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SUB-PRIME CRISIS SERIES
Special reports on why bad US home loans are affecting us all Friday: US housing crash Monday: Financial meltdown |
He says lenders engaged in deceptive practices and clients found it difficult to get any information at all when they got into arrears.
Mr Seifert says that ESOP – using protest tactics – has managed to get a few mortgage companies to sign a deal agreeing a uniform set of criteria to decide whether someone’s mortgage qualifies for renegotiation rather than foreclosure.
But he says they have been unable to reach such an agreement with Countrywide, the nation’s largest sub-prime lender – although its boss has promised to meet them.
Spreading to the suburbs
The crisis has spread beyond the inner city to the suburbs of Cleveland.
Last month over 200 people turned up at a church meeting to seek ESOP’s help in avoiding foreclosure.
Some, such as Ron Todd, who lives in a suburb just south of the city, are in danger of losing their home after being made redundant by Northwest Airlines, a big local employer.
Others are worried that their neighbourhoods – and the property values of their own houses – will be ruined by the foreclosures all around them.
According to Claudia Coulton, co-director of the Centre for Urban Poverty at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, over 10,000 families – one in eight of all owner occupiers in Cleveland – will face eviction this year – and the number is expected to rise.
She says the crisis is threatening to “overwhelm the government agencies and community organisations that address the problem”.
Nationwide problem
Cleveland’s situation is not unique.
All around the country, aid agencies report a “tidal wave” of foreclosure cases, says Sarah Gerecke, director of New York City’s Neighborhood Housing Services.
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PREDATORY LENDING PRACTICES Ninja Loans: no income, no job, no assets 2/28: Mortgages that change from a fixed to a much higher adjustable rate after first two years Prepayment penalties: High fees for trying to change terms of mortgage |
She now employs six people full-time to provide mortgage debt counselling, up from one just two years ago, and could use another 12.
Her concern is that many recently regenerated neighbourhoods in New York will soon be blighted by crisis again.
Some people argue that the sub-prime lending crisis has been caused by irresponsible borrowers who lied about their income to cash in on the housing boom. Ms Gerecke disagrees. She says few of her clients would knowingly put their home at risk.
Many sub-prime borrowers report that mortgage brokers misrepresented the kind of mortgage they were being offered, their annual income, and even the value of their home.
Working together?
President George W Bush’s administration wants to solve the foreclosure crisis by getting lenders and borrowers to renegotiate the terms of loans.
| There is a natural level of foreclosures that goes on in an economy in good times and bad… it’s part of the nature of how our economy works Robert Steel US Treasury Under Secretary for Domestic Finance |
It is pledging more money for advice services, and has been urging key lenders to take a more sympathetic approach.
Robert Steel, the US Treasury Under Secretary for Domestic Finance, told the BBC that the government’s role was “to ensure that lenders and servicers are being flexible with regard to working with borrowers”.
He added that no policy could eliminate foreclosures altogether because there was “a natural level of foreclosures that goes on in an economy in good times and bad… it’s part of the nature of how our economy works.”
But according to Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s, only 1% of sub-prime mortgages have been renegotiated rather than foreclosed so far.
Ms Gerecke says a piecemeal approach involving millions of individual renegotiations will not work. Each case takes hours of negotiations, and the mortgage companies’ loan loss departments are overwhelmed by the crisis.
A way out?
The only way out, says Ms Gerecke, would be national loan terms agreed for the whole industry.
One such plan has been proposed by Sheila Bair, head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), one of the key banking regulators.
She told the BBC that sub-prime interest rates should not be reset if the borrower has kept up all payments and is not in arrears.
But such a deal is proving extremely difficult to reach, given that thousands of investors around the world own a share of these sub-prime mortgages.
Meanwhile Marion still sits in her Cleveland home every day, trying to stop it being vandalised even though she knows it is merely a matter of time before she will be evicted.
“I am just really working for the banks now, protecting their property from damage,” she says.













Yes, it’s a sad situation and thousands of people are losing their homes nationwide.
GEF ck msg..
Yep. It’s a grand national fleece and we’re about to become serfs for the slave masters.
>:(
Great post!
Going out on a huge limb here ….
If you have no credit, no down payment and cannot afford your house payment – why are you buying a home you cannot afford just because it sounds like a good deal?????
What have the RICH got to do with this? Sounds to me as if people still have expected to get something for nothing. There are stories about people signing mortgage loan papers in the back of someone’s car … excuse me?
Predatory lenders can only take advantage of people who are borrowing more than they can pay back to get a home they couldn’t afford anyway.
I’m sorry – I realize there are people who got legitimately caught up – AZ has been hit hard by this, however, I would never borrow money for a down payment – pay a loan with no interest … etc etc etc.
Go ahead guys, let fly – I know you’ll disagree and pity all these poor people….but then again, no one twisted their arms to sign those papers did they? They simply thought they were going to essentially get something for nothing.
Blaming the “rich” is a scapegoat and a cop out. Blame the people who were irresponsible in their choices and are now losing their homes – that they couldn’t afford to begin with, and most of them KNEW it. You don’t sign papers on an ARM without knowing what it entails.
Just my opinion …
Basheert,
I respectfully disagree..
Ehem..
This goes much deeper than housing and people with bad credit..
NAFTA, CAFTA, FTAA, CFR, Trilateral Commision is the biggest scam and disaster ever perpetrated on the Middle Class in this country..
The Rich are the ones who keep saying that Globalism is good and that it’s a good thing when we export our jobs and our roads, and our ports, and our forests, our whole country, and our National Heritage for the sake of THEIR profit!
You know something is wrong when Warren Buffet jokingly complains about the tax being too low on the rich..
There’s a class conflict(War) in the whole world and people need to realize that fact of what’s happening all around them…
The New World Disorder is as obvious as a plain bagel and we know that the Pharoahs(Rich Elites) want their slaves back!
We screwed up after 9/11 by letting them pass the Patriot Act.. Then came other evil “Acts”
We gave up our Freedoms to THEM for the illusion of Security and now we’re losing both and that’s precisely what this country’s Founding Fathers warned about…
P.S.
Why do you suppose they are passing all these UnConstitutional laws, and spying on us under the guise of National Security and Terrorism, when in reality it is being done in order to manage a National Revolt because THEY know that it’s very difficult to turn FREE people with guns into slaves..
GEF:
I do agree with your argument, however, my comments were directed at people who had NO jobs and NO credit buying homes with ARM’s they knew would roll up in 2 years – interest free payments -
I wasn’t talking about the super rich and the overtaking of the government. My comments were directed at the people who took out subprime loans KNOWING they had NO credit, NO way to pay it….
That is not acting responsibly.
As for your other comments, I do agree – we have 2 classes right now – rich and poor. But there is also the hidden SUPER rich – you are not necessarily wealthy because your net worth is in 7 figures – it simply depends upon how old you are, what you have saved, what you have inheirited and how much you are capable of earning.
What I was addressing was solely the foreclosure problem – and some of the people who got caught buying homes they never could originally afford.
Yep…it’s all about a fleecing of the sheeple GEF.
Bu$hco started talking about the Ownership Society before his re-election in 2004. These big finance industries that are in trouble now wrote up Billions of dollars in loans to unqualified buyers at low interest, but with an inflation clause that has allowed the interest to become so much that the sheeple can no longer pay it.
Basheert,
People will be people Basheert. A chance at a dream and they will take it.
Although I understand that aspect of what you’re saying, I cannot agree because the ultimate responsibility falls on Bankers and Financiers who created these risk instruments(as they call them) in order to make people, which they knew beforehand that couldn’t afford this level of debt, pay them in order to line their pockets and their investors pockets with wealth that was not really there in the first place.
They knew Basheert!
So I look at it in another way altogether..
don’t forget also, the fact that mortgage officers do NOT have to be licensed.
You are very right – but I still say that people simply must be held responsible for their own actions…..do you not yourself question when something sounds too good?
Of course the system was gaming them – but the fault lies with expecting something for nothing.
Especially when this Administration is gradually undermining every institution we have. Most people grew up to trust banks ….
Let the buyer beware – it isn’t something I made up.
GEF and Basheert both are right.
Personal responsibility has to be addressed, sometimes one gets what one deserves.
That said, the international and national banksters knew people at risk would bite, knowing human nature as they do. In fact they were counting on it.
All is going according to the NWO plan.
The Bankruptcy Act changes will make sure lenders have every whip hand with which to beat defaulters : uselessly. 2010 until the last of this is in the open ? Things seem to be accelerating.
Welcome to Suzie-Q Opit!
Many happy returns..
Basheert,
I will agree on this point. Ultimately “all people” eventually pay the price for their foolish get rich quick schemes and others for trying to make crooked dollars off their fellow human being’s sweat.
That’s even true for corporations, and government agencies..
The money is just the tool. All the ‘profits’ are garbage when assets and currency are debased. If it weren’t absolutely clear that environment, water and other conditions are a perfect storm that make the “Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse” seem like an insufficient description of the likely horrors to come, you’d almost have to give credit for ’solving’ overpopulation. Almost.