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November 24, 2010 at 8:46 AM #633202November 24, 2010 at 11:33 AM #634260CascaParticipant
When I want a good meal, I walk 100′ to my private club. It’s an old mansion from the ’20s built on the banks of the St John’s River. The food is fabulous.
November 24, 2010 at 11:33 AM #633159CascaParticipantWhen I want a good meal, I walk 100′ to my private club. It’s an old mansion from the ’20s built on the banks of the St John’s River. The food is fabulous.
November 24, 2010 at 11:33 AM #633941CascaParticipantWhen I want a good meal, I walk 100′ to my private club. It’s an old mansion from the ’20s built on the banks of the St John’s River. The food is fabulous.
November 24, 2010 at 11:33 AM #633237CascaParticipantWhen I want a good meal, I walk 100′ to my private club. It’s an old mansion from the ’20s built on the banks of the St John’s River. The food is fabulous.
November 24, 2010 at 11:33 AM #633812CascaParticipantWhen I want a good meal, I walk 100′ to my private club. It’s an old mansion from the ’20s built on the banks of the St John’s River. The food is fabulous.
November 24, 2010 at 12:00 PM #633946briansd1GuestI hear that Jacksonville is the San Diego of Florida. The Navy is there.
November 24, 2010 at 12:00 PM #634265briansd1GuestI hear that Jacksonville is the San Diego of Florida. The Navy is there.
November 24, 2010 at 12:00 PM #633164briansd1GuestI hear that Jacksonville is the San Diego of Florida. The Navy is there.
November 24, 2010 at 12:00 PM #633242briansd1GuestI hear that Jacksonville is the San Diego of Florida. The Navy is there.
November 24, 2010 at 12:00 PM #633817briansd1GuestI hear that Jacksonville is the San Diego of Florida. The Navy is there.
November 24, 2010 at 10:13 PM #634325CA renterParticipant[quote=permabear]You guys can’t be apologizing for the banks, can you? It’s so obvious that fraud has been perpetrated at every single level. There’s evidence that no-doc loans were very much desired by banks explicitly because then there was no paper trail if/when the whole securitization process was found to be a complete sham. A get out of jail free card, if you will.[/quote]
Guys, do realize that BG did not let the banks off the hook at all. Here’s an important quote from BG’s post:
It’s amazing what these “poor” lenders (in firing all their in-house mortgage loan officers and allowing their *new* “independent mortgage brokers” to pad HUD-1’s with multiple points and garbage charges and then offer them generous back-end “yield-spread-premiums” upon closing) did for the US economy!!
The way I read it, she’s also blaming the banks when referring to the “poor lenders who fired all their in-house loan officers.”
Also, IMHO, when she refers to greed “at the top” that would include the big-time executives at the banks and large financial firms, and I would add that it includes the government officials and representatives who were supposed to regulate the financial industry but failed miserably. Some say it’s because “they didn’t know or understand what the consequences of their actions would be,” but I think they are totally guilty of intentionally bringing down our financial system for their own benefit. Funny how a guy can go to jail for stealing a car, but when people cause trillions of dollars worth of damage, none of them are brought to justice. How many big-time CEOs and/or regulators have been put in jail and had all of their assets stipped? Oh, that’s right…none of them.
Crime pays, but you’ve got to be rich and powerful in order to avoid prosecution, apparently.
November 24, 2010 at 10:13 PM #634006CA renterParticipant[quote=permabear]You guys can’t be apologizing for the banks, can you? It’s so obvious that fraud has been perpetrated at every single level. There’s evidence that no-doc loans were very much desired by banks explicitly because then there was no paper trail if/when the whole securitization process was found to be a complete sham. A get out of jail free card, if you will.[/quote]
Guys, do realize that BG did not let the banks off the hook at all. Here’s an important quote from BG’s post:
It’s amazing what these “poor” lenders (in firing all their in-house mortgage loan officers and allowing their *new* “independent mortgage brokers” to pad HUD-1’s with multiple points and garbage charges and then offer them generous back-end “yield-spread-premiums” upon closing) did for the US economy!!
The way I read it, she’s also blaming the banks when referring to the “poor lenders who fired all their in-house loan officers.”
Also, IMHO, when she refers to greed “at the top” that would include the big-time executives at the banks and large financial firms, and I would add that it includes the government officials and representatives who were supposed to regulate the financial industry but failed miserably. Some say it’s because “they didn’t know or understand what the consequences of their actions would be,” but I think they are totally guilty of intentionally bringing down our financial system for their own benefit. Funny how a guy can go to jail for stealing a car, but when people cause trillions of dollars worth of damage, none of them are brought to justice. How many big-time CEOs and/or regulators have been put in jail and had all of their assets stipped? Oh, that’s right…none of them.
Crime pays, but you’ve got to be rich and powerful in order to avoid prosecution, apparently.
November 24, 2010 at 10:13 PM #633877CA renterParticipant[quote=permabear]You guys can’t be apologizing for the banks, can you? It’s so obvious that fraud has been perpetrated at every single level. There’s evidence that no-doc loans were very much desired by banks explicitly because then there was no paper trail if/when the whole securitization process was found to be a complete sham. A get out of jail free card, if you will.[/quote]
Guys, do realize that BG did not let the banks off the hook at all. Here’s an important quote from BG’s post:
It’s amazing what these “poor” lenders (in firing all their in-house mortgage loan officers and allowing their *new* “independent mortgage brokers” to pad HUD-1’s with multiple points and garbage charges and then offer them generous back-end “yield-spread-premiums” upon closing) did for the US economy!!
The way I read it, she’s also blaming the banks when referring to the “poor lenders who fired all their in-house loan officers.”
Also, IMHO, when she refers to greed “at the top” that would include the big-time executives at the banks and large financial firms, and I would add that it includes the government officials and representatives who were supposed to regulate the financial industry but failed miserably. Some say it’s because “they didn’t know or understand what the consequences of their actions would be,” but I think they are totally guilty of intentionally bringing down our financial system for their own benefit. Funny how a guy can go to jail for stealing a car, but when people cause trillions of dollars worth of damage, none of them are brought to justice. How many big-time CEOs and/or regulators have been put in jail and had all of their assets stipped? Oh, that’s right…none of them.
Crime pays, but you’ve got to be rich and powerful in order to avoid prosecution, apparently.
November 24, 2010 at 10:13 PM #633302CA renterParticipant[quote=permabear]You guys can’t be apologizing for the banks, can you? It’s so obvious that fraud has been perpetrated at every single level. There’s evidence that no-doc loans were very much desired by banks explicitly because then there was no paper trail if/when the whole securitization process was found to be a complete sham. A get out of jail free card, if you will.[/quote]
Guys, do realize that BG did not let the banks off the hook at all. Here’s an important quote from BG’s post:
It’s amazing what these “poor” lenders (in firing all their in-house mortgage loan officers and allowing their *new* “independent mortgage brokers” to pad HUD-1’s with multiple points and garbage charges and then offer them generous back-end “yield-spread-premiums” upon closing) did for the US economy!!
The way I read it, she’s also blaming the banks when referring to the “poor lenders who fired all their in-house loan officers.”
Also, IMHO, when she refers to greed “at the top” that would include the big-time executives at the banks and large financial firms, and I would add that it includes the government officials and representatives who were supposed to regulate the financial industry but failed miserably. Some say it’s because “they didn’t know or understand what the consequences of their actions would be,” but I think they are totally guilty of intentionally bringing down our financial system for their own benefit. Funny how a guy can go to jail for stealing a car, but when people cause trillions of dollars worth of damage, none of them are brought to justice. How many big-time CEOs and/or regulators have been put in jail and had all of their assets stipped? Oh, that’s right…none of them.
Crime pays, but you’ve got to be rich and powerful in order to avoid prosecution, apparently.
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