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January 16, 2009 at 10:14 AM in reply to: OT: THE FIX IS IN: OBAMA SELECTED BY THE POWERS THAT BE #329873January 16, 2009 at 10:14 AM in reply to: OT: THE FIX IS IN: OBAMA SELECTED BY THE POWERS THAT BE #330212
cr
ParticipantIn reference to the doomsday crackpot theory that our country is ruled by an elite few comtrolling every industry, business, politician and policy…
I liked that story better when they called it “the Matrix.”
January 16, 2009 at 10:14 AM in reply to: OT: THE FIX IS IN: OBAMA SELECTED BY THE POWERS THAT BE #330284cr
ParticipantIn reference to the doomsday crackpot theory that our country is ruled by an elite few comtrolling every industry, business, politician and policy…
I liked that story better when they called it “the Matrix.”
January 16, 2009 at 10:14 AM in reply to: OT: THE FIX IS IN: OBAMA SELECTED BY THE POWERS THAT BE #330312cr
ParticipantIn reference to the doomsday crackpot theory that our country is ruled by an elite few comtrolling every industry, business, politician and policy…
I liked that story better when they called it “the Matrix.”
January 16, 2009 at 10:14 AM in reply to: OT: THE FIX IS IN: OBAMA SELECTED BY THE POWERS THAT BE #330395cr
ParticipantIn reference to the doomsday crackpot theory that our country is ruled by an elite few comtrolling every industry, business, politician and policy…
I liked that story better when they called it “the Matrix.”
cr
Participant[quote=sdnerd]DollarSavingsDirect – 4%
FDIC insured, division of Emigrant.[/quote]
Have you used them? Good experience? Bad? Anyone used them and recommend them? Just wondering…
Here’s the link BTW https://www.dollarsavingsdirect.com/DollarSavingsDirectWeb/index.jsp
And not to hijack Xbox’ thread, but has anyone used Millennium Bank? They’ve got a 6.5% 1-YR CD that seems too good to be true…
http://www.mlnbank.com/EN/services/premcds.htm
UPDATE: I may have answered my own question, but still wondering if anyone has used them…
http://www.thepiggybanker.com/bank-reviews/millennium-bank-review-scam/
cr
Participant[quote=sdnerd]DollarSavingsDirect – 4%
FDIC insured, division of Emigrant.[/quote]
Have you used them? Good experience? Bad? Anyone used them and recommend them? Just wondering…
Here’s the link BTW https://www.dollarsavingsdirect.com/DollarSavingsDirectWeb/index.jsp
And not to hijack Xbox’ thread, but has anyone used Millennium Bank? They’ve got a 6.5% 1-YR CD that seems too good to be true…
http://www.mlnbank.com/EN/services/premcds.htm
UPDATE: I may have answered my own question, but still wondering if anyone has used them…
http://www.thepiggybanker.com/bank-reviews/millennium-bank-review-scam/
cr
Participant[quote=sdnerd]DollarSavingsDirect – 4%
FDIC insured, division of Emigrant.[/quote]
Have you used them? Good experience? Bad? Anyone used them and recommend them? Just wondering…
Here’s the link BTW https://www.dollarsavingsdirect.com/DollarSavingsDirectWeb/index.jsp
And not to hijack Xbox’ thread, but has anyone used Millennium Bank? They’ve got a 6.5% 1-YR CD that seems too good to be true…
http://www.mlnbank.com/EN/services/premcds.htm
UPDATE: I may have answered my own question, but still wondering if anyone has used them…
http://www.thepiggybanker.com/bank-reviews/millennium-bank-review-scam/
cr
Participant[quote=sdnerd]DollarSavingsDirect – 4%
FDIC insured, division of Emigrant.[/quote]
Have you used them? Good experience? Bad? Anyone used them and recommend them? Just wondering…
Here’s the link BTW https://www.dollarsavingsdirect.com/DollarSavingsDirectWeb/index.jsp
And not to hijack Xbox’ thread, but has anyone used Millennium Bank? They’ve got a 6.5% 1-YR CD that seems too good to be true…
http://www.mlnbank.com/EN/services/premcds.htm
UPDATE: I may have answered my own question, but still wondering if anyone has used them…
http://www.thepiggybanker.com/bank-reviews/millennium-bank-review-scam/
cr
Participant[quote=sdnerd]DollarSavingsDirect – 4%
FDIC insured, division of Emigrant.[/quote]
Have you used them? Good experience? Bad? Anyone used them and recommend them? Just wondering…
Here’s the link BTW https://www.dollarsavingsdirect.com/DollarSavingsDirectWeb/index.jsp
And not to hijack Xbox’ thread, but has anyone used Millennium Bank? They’ve got a 6.5% 1-YR CD that seems too good to be true…
http://www.mlnbank.com/EN/services/premcds.htm
UPDATE: I may have answered my own question, but still wondering if anyone has used them…
http://www.thepiggybanker.com/bank-reviews/millennium-bank-review-scam/
cr
Participant[quote=The author of the article]
It’s not too crazy, no? I mean, if you’re of the opinion that these borrowers should in fact be saved and given back home equity that perhaps they gambled on in the first place. The cost, NCRC estimates, $50-$100 billion.”
[/quote]And what if you’re not of that opinion?
What a terrible idea. And what’s the banks say in all this? And who will these private equity buyers be? And what about current housing inventory sitting at unaffordable prices?
This is just another thing the Gov’t (and short sighted commentators) fails to understand. Forcing reductions in the value of assets discourages future lending for the purchase of those assets.
Everyone wonders why banks won’t lend the bailout money…What do you expect when their own money they lent is being written down on a daily basis.
$50-$100 Billion. Sounds like Bernanke.
cr
Participant[quote=The author of the article]
It’s not too crazy, no? I mean, if you’re of the opinion that these borrowers should in fact be saved and given back home equity that perhaps they gambled on in the first place. The cost, NCRC estimates, $50-$100 billion.”
[/quote]And what if you’re not of that opinion?
What a terrible idea. And what’s the banks say in all this? And who will these private equity buyers be? And what about current housing inventory sitting at unaffordable prices?
This is just another thing the Gov’t (and short sighted commentators) fails to understand. Forcing reductions in the value of assets discourages future lending for the purchase of those assets.
Everyone wonders why banks won’t lend the bailout money…What do you expect when their own money they lent is being written down on a daily basis.
$50-$100 Billion. Sounds like Bernanke.
cr
Participant[quote=The author of the article]
It’s not too crazy, no? I mean, if you’re of the opinion that these borrowers should in fact be saved and given back home equity that perhaps they gambled on in the first place. The cost, NCRC estimates, $50-$100 billion.”
[/quote]And what if you’re not of that opinion?
What a terrible idea. And what’s the banks say in all this? And who will these private equity buyers be? And what about current housing inventory sitting at unaffordable prices?
This is just another thing the Gov’t (and short sighted commentators) fails to understand. Forcing reductions in the value of assets discourages future lending for the purchase of those assets.
Everyone wonders why banks won’t lend the bailout money…What do you expect when their own money they lent is being written down on a daily basis.
$50-$100 Billion. Sounds like Bernanke.
cr
Participant[quote=The author of the article]
It’s not too crazy, no? I mean, if you’re of the opinion that these borrowers should in fact be saved and given back home equity that perhaps they gambled on in the first place. The cost, NCRC estimates, $50-$100 billion.”
[/quote]And what if you’re not of that opinion?
What a terrible idea. And what’s the banks say in all this? And who will these private equity buyers be? And what about current housing inventory sitting at unaffordable prices?
This is just another thing the Gov’t (and short sighted commentators) fails to understand. Forcing reductions in the value of assets discourages future lending for the purchase of those assets.
Everyone wonders why banks won’t lend the bailout money…What do you expect when their own money they lent is being written down on a daily basis.
$50-$100 Billion. Sounds like Bernanke.
cr
Participant[quote=The author of the article]
It’s not too crazy, no? I mean, if you’re of the opinion that these borrowers should in fact be saved and given back home equity that perhaps they gambled on in the first place. The cost, NCRC estimates, $50-$100 billion.”
[/quote]And what if you’re not of that opinion?
What a terrible idea. And what’s the banks say in all this? And who will these private equity buyers be? And what about current housing inventory sitting at unaffordable prices?
This is just another thing the Gov’t (and short sighted commentators) fails to understand. Forcing reductions in the value of assets discourages future lending for the purchase of those assets.
Everyone wonders why banks won’t lend the bailout money…What do you expect when their own money they lent is being written down on a daily basis.
$50-$100 Billion. Sounds like Bernanke.
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