Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
mike92104
Participant[quote=nostradamus][quote=SD Transplant]I do agree that action must be taken. However, I would like to see the big picture, and there are a couple of immediate options that make sense:
1) Write your congressman/senators/representative
= keep the status quo2) Elections are in just a few months/day – let’s make our voices heard PROPERLY.
= DO NOT VOTE ANY INCUMBANT IN THE OFFICE AGAIN[/quote]
I think there is a third option: buy off the candidates to make them do what we want. Face it, lobbyists have all the power in this country. Find a lobbying group that supports your beliefs and back them. Or form one of your own. Voting doesn’t work so well when whomever is elected is then bought by lobbyists. Whether you vote incumbent or not, they’ll all sell out.
I think we should start a piggs lobbying force (remember swift boat?) to push our agenda. The beauty of this is it can be a tax-free enterprise gathering donations from people with similar beliefs. So each person doesn’t need to contribute a lot, we just need a lot of people to contribute a small amount.
Writing your reps is useless unless you’re writing them a check. Sad but true.[/quote]
I’m in.
mike92104
Participant[quote=nostradamus][quote=SD Transplant]I do agree that action must be taken. However, I would like to see the big picture, and there are a couple of immediate options that make sense:
1) Write your congressman/senators/representative
= keep the status quo2) Elections are in just a few months/day – let’s make our voices heard PROPERLY.
= DO NOT VOTE ANY INCUMBANT IN THE OFFICE AGAIN[/quote]
I think there is a third option: buy off the candidates to make them do what we want. Face it, lobbyists have all the power in this country. Find a lobbying group that supports your beliefs and back them. Or form one of your own. Voting doesn’t work so well when whomever is elected is then bought by lobbyists. Whether you vote incumbent or not, they’ll all sell out.
I think we should start a piggs lobbying force (remember swift boat?) to push our agenda. The beauty of this is it can be a tax-free enterprise gathering donations from people with similar beliefs. So each person doesn’t need to contribute a lot, we just need a lot of people to contribute a small amount.
Writing your reps is useless unless you’re writing them a check. Sad but true.[/quote]
I’m in.
mike92104
Participant[quote=nostradamus][quote=SD Transplant]I do agree that action must be taken. However, I would like to see the big picture, and there are a couple of immediate options that make sense:
1) Write your congressman/senators/representative
= keep the status quo2) Elections are in just a few months/day – let’s make our voices heard PROPERLY.
= DO NOT VOTE ANY INCUMBANT IN THE OFFICE AGAIN[/quote]
I think there is a third option: buy off the candidates to make them do what we want. Face it, lobbyists have all the power in this country. Find a lobbying group that supports your beliefs and back them. Or form one of your own. Voting doesn’t work so well when whomever is elected is then bought by lobbyists. Whether you vote incumbent or not, they’ll all sell out.
I think we should start a piggs lobbying force (remember swift boat?) to push our agenda. The beauty of this is it can be a tax-free enterprise gathering donations from people with similar beliefs. So each person doesn’t need to contribute a lot, we just need a lot of people to contribute a small amount.
Writing your reps is useless unless you’re writing them a check. Sad but true.[/quote]
I’m in.
mike92104
ParticipantI agree that all the assets of the CEO’s from the bail out institutions should be seized. They should walk away dead broke like any one of us would if we drove our company into the ground!
mike92104
ParticipantI agree that all the assets of the CEO’s from the bail out institutions should be seized. They should walk away dead broke like any one of us would if we drove our company into the ground!
mike92104
ParticipantI agree that all the assets of the CEO’s from the bail out institutions should be seized. They should walk away dead broke like any one of us would if we drove our company into the ground!
mike92104
ParticipantI agree that all the assets of the CEO’s from the bail out institutions should be seized. They should walk away dead broke like any one of us would if we drove our company into the ground!
mike92104
ParticipantI agree that all the assets of the CEO’s from the bail out institutions should be seized. They should walk away dead broke like any one of us would if we drove our company into the ground!
mike92104
Participant[quote=nostradamus][quote=mike92104]You can contact them by email as well. I’ve already complained to mine. Unfortunately I just got a BS response about having to help the poor homeowners. Have to keep it up though. It’s the only way to get through their thick melons.[/quote]
What about the people who want to be homeowners but can’t?Can you post their response?[/quote]
Here It is:
Dear Mr. Lowe:
Thank you for contacting me regarding the current foreclosure crisis. I appreciate hearing from you.
Over the past decade, as housing prices rose sharply, lenders and mortgage brokers began offering new exotic loan products frequently using low initial interest rates and predatory tactics to steer borrowers toward loans they could not afford.
Now higher payments on these loans combined with declining property values are forcing many families into foreclosure. California is being hit particularly hard by the foreclosure crisis, reporting 481,392 foreclosure filings on 249,513 properties in 2007, the highest total of any state and more than triple the number in 2006. These foreclosures will cost Californians an estimated $67 billion in lost property values, and local governments are likely to see a decline of $4 billion in collected property, sales, and transfer taxes.
I have supported several sensible steps to ease the mortgage crisis. On April 10, 2008, the Senate passed H.R.3221, the Foreclosure Prevention Act of 2008. This bill contains $150 million for foreclosure counseling, nearly $4 billion in funds to rehabilitate foreclosed properties through Community Development Block Grants, and $10 billion for mortgage revenue bonds for states to extend lower-cost loans to distressed borrowers. H.R.3221 also amends the Truth in Lending Act to improve the disclosure of loan terms to borrowers upon original application or refinancing of a loan.
Previously, Congress approved an additional $180 million for housing counseling and a temporary increase in the size of loans that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) can back.
Though these actions are a good start, we need to do more. That is why I am co-sponsoring several bills that would regulate the mortgage
industry, prevent some of the worst lender abuses from reoccurring, and promote sustainable and affordable homeownership.
The Homeownership Preservation and Protection Act (S.2452) would require mortgage lenders and home appraisers to act in good faith in all aspects of the home appraisal and mortgage process while giving borrowers recourse against lenders who do not. This bill would also require lenders to verify the borrower’s ability to repay a loan and prevent lenders from steering a client into inappropriate loans. In addition, S.2452 would prohibit the use of balloon payments and prepayment penalties in subprime and non-traditional mortgages, and it would increase funding for the FBI to pursue cases of mortgage fraud.
Despite industry promises, the pace of loan modifications to help families stay in their homes remains too slow. To address this problem, I am co-sponsoring legislation to allow bankruptcy judges to modify unaffordable mortgages on a homeowner’s primary residence, the same power judges already have for vacation homes or investment property. The Center for Responsible Lending estimates this change would help over 600,000 families save their homes from foreclosure.
We must use all the means we have to move towards a solution to the foreclosure crisis. The Federal Trade Commission’s reach should be extended to include deceptive and unfair acts committed by banks and lenders. The increase in FHA and Fannie Mae loan limits must be made permanent. In order to keep loans affordable for many subprime borrowers, we must work closely with and keep the pressure on large lenders and the HOPE NOW coalition of housing counselors, lenders, and investors.
Again, thank you for writing to me. Be assured that I am committed to finding a fair and equitable solution to the housing foreclosure crisis.
Barbara Boxer
United States SenatorPlease visit my website at http://boxer.senate.gov
What really upset me was that I wrote to complain about all the crap she is touting in her response. Made it feel like a form letter response.
mike92104
Participant[quote=nostradamus][quote=mike92104]You can contact them by email as well. I’ve already complained to mine. Unfortunately I just got a BS response about having to help the poor homeowners. Have to keep it up though. It’s the only way to get through their thick melons.[/quote]
What about the people who want to be homeowners but can’t?Can you post their response?[/quote]
Here It is:
Dear Mr. Lowe:
Thank you for contacting me regarding the current foreclosure crisis. I appreciate hearing from you.
Over the past decade, as housing prices rose sharply, lenders and mortgage brokers began offering new exotic loan products frequently using low initial interest rates and predatory tactics to steer borrowers toward loans they could not afford.
Now higher payments on these loans combined with declining property values are forcing many families into foreclosure. California is being hit particularly hard by the foreclosure crisis, reporting 481,392 foreclosure filings on 249,513 properties in 2007, the highest total of any state and more than triple the number in 2006. These foreclosures will cost Californians an estimated $67 billion in lost property values, and local governments are likely to see a decline of $4 billion in collected property, sales, and transfer taxes.
I have supported several sensible steps to ease the mortgage crisis. On April 10, 2008, the Senate passed H.R.3221, the Foreclosure Prevention Act of 2008. This bill contains $150 million for foreclosure counseling, nearly $4 billion in funds to rehabilitate foreclosed properties through Community Development Block Grants, and $10 billion for mortgage revenue bonds for states to extend lower-cost loans to distressed borrowers. H.R.3221 also amends the Truth in Lending Act to improve the disclosure of loan terms to borrowers upon original application or refinancing of a loan.
Previously, Congress approved an additional $180 million for housing counseling and a temporary increase in the size of loans that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) can back.
Though these actions are a good start, we need to do more. That is why I am co-sponsoring several bills that would regulate the mortgage
industry, prevent some of the worst lender abuses from reoccurring, and promote sustainable and affordable homeownership.
The Homeownership Preservation and Protection Act (S.2452) would require mortgage lenders and home appraisers to act in good faith in all aspects of the home appraisal and mortgage process while giving borrowers recourse against lenders who do not. This bill would also require lenders to verify the borrower’s ability to repay a loan and prevent lenders from steering a client into inappropriate loans. In addition, S.2452 would prohibit the use of balloon payments and prepayment penalties in subprime and non-traditional mortgages, and it would increase funding for the FBI to pursue cases of mortgage fraud.
Despite industry promises, the pace of loan modifications to help families stay in their homes remains too slow. To address this problem, I am co-sponsoring legislation to allow bankruptcy judges to modify unaffordable mortgages on a homeowner’s primary residence, the same power judges already have for vacation homes or investment property. The Center for Responsible Lending estimates this change would help over 600,000 families save their homes from foreclosure.
We must use all the means we have to move towards a solution to the foreclosure crisis. The Federal Trade Commission’s reach should be extended to include deceptive and unfair acts committed by banks and lenders. The increase in FHA and Fannie Mae loan limits must be made permanent. In order to keep loans affordable for many subprime borrowers, we must work closely with and keep the pressure on large lenders and the HOPE NOW coalition of housing counselors, lenders, and investors.
Again, thank you for writing to me. Be assured that I am committed to finding a fair and equitable solution to the housing foreclosure crisis.
Barbara Boxer
United States SenatorPlease visit my website at http://boxer.senate.gov
What really upset me was that I wrote to complain about all the crap she is touting in her response. Made it feel like a form letter response.
mike92104
Participant[quote=nostradamus][quote=mike92104]You can contact them by email as well. I’ve already complained to mine. Unfortunately I just got a BS response about having to help the poor homeowners. Have to keep it up though. It’s the only way to get through their thick melons.[/quote]
What about the people who want to be homeowners but can’t?Can you post their response?[/quote]
Here It is:
Dear Mr. Lowe:
Thank you for contacting me regarding the current foreclosure crisis. I appreciate hearing from you.
Over the past decade, as housing prices rose sharply, lenders and mortgage brokers began offering new exotic loan products frequently using low initial interest rates and predatory tactics to steer borrowers toward loans they could not afford.
Now higher payments on these loans combined with declining property values are forcing many families into foreclosure. California is being hit particularly hard by the foreclosure crisis, reporting 481,392 foreclosure filings on 249,513 properties in 2007, the highest total of any state and more than triple the number in 2006. These foreclosures will cost Californians an estimated $67 billion in lost property values, and local governments are likely to see a decline of $4 billion in collected property, sales, and transfer taxes.
I have supported several sensible steps to ease the mortgage crisis. On April 10, 2008, the Senate passed H.R.3221, the Foreclosure Prevention Act of 2008. This bill contains $150 million for foreclosure counseling, nearly $4 billion in funds to rehabilitate foreclosed properties through Community Development Block Grants, and $10 billion for mortgage revenue bonds for states to extend lower-cost loans to distressed borrowers. H.R.3221 also amends the Truth in Lending Act to improve the disclosure of loan terms to borrowers upon original application or refinancing of a loan.
Previously, Congress approved an additional $180 million for housing counseling and a temporary increase in the size of loans that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) can back.
Though these actions are a good start, we need to do more. That is why I am co-sponsoring several bills that would regulate the mortgage
industry, prevent some of the worst lender abuses from reoccurring, and promote sustainable and affordable homeownership.
The Homeownership Preservation and Protection Act (S.2452) would require mortgage lenders and home appraisers to act in good faith in all aspects of the home appraisal and mortgage process while giving borrowers recourse against lenders who do not. This bill would also require lenders to verify the borrower’s ability to repay a loan and prevent lenders from steering a client into inappropriate loans. In addition, S.2452 would prohibit the use of balloon payments and prepayment penalties in subprime and non-traditional mortgages, and it would increase funding for the FBI to pursue cases of mortgage fraud.
Despite industry promises, the pace of loan modifications to help families stay in their homes remains too slow. To address this problem, I am co-sponsoring legislation to allow bankruptcy judges to modify unaffordable mortgages on a homeowner’s primary residence, the same power judges already have for vacation homes or investment property. The Center for Responsible Lending estimates this change would help over 600,000 families save their homes from foreclosure.
We must use all the means we have to move towards a solution to the foreclosure crisis. The Federal Trade Commission’s reach should be extended to include deceptive and unfair acts committed by banks and lenders. The increase in FHA and Fannie Mae loan limits must be made permanent. In order to keep loans affordable for many subprime borrowers, we must work closely with and keep the pressure on large lenders and the HOPE NOW coalition of housing counselors, lenders, and investors.
Again, thank you for writing to me. Be assured that I am committed to finding a fair and equitable solution to the housing foreclosure crisis.
Barbara Boxer
United States SenatorPlease visit my website at http://boxer.senate.gov
What really upset me was that I wrote to complain about all the crap she is touting in her response. Made it feel like a form letter response.
mike92104
Participant[quote=nostradamus][quote=mike92104]You can contact them by email as well. I’ve already complained to mine. Unfortunately I just got a BS response about having to help the poor homeowners. Have to keep it up though. It’s the only way to get through their thick melons.[/quote]
What about the people who want to be homeowners but can’t?Can you post their response?[/quote]
Here It is:
Dear Mr. Lowe:
Thank you for contacting me regarding the current foreclosure crisis. I appreciate hearing from you.
Over the past decade, as housing prices rose sharply, lenders and mortgage brokers began offering new exotic loan products frequently using low initial interest rates and predatory tactics to steer borrowers toward loans they could not afford.
Now higher payments on these loans combined with declining property values are forcing many families into foreclosure. California is being hit particularly hard by the foreclosure crisis, reporting 481,392 foreclosure filings on 249,513 properties in 2007, the highest total of any state and more than triple the number in 2006. These foreclosures will cost Californians an estimated $67 billion in lost property values, and local governments are likely to see a decline of $4 billion in collected property, sales, and transfer taxes.
I have supported several sensible steps to ease the mortgage crisis. On April 10, 2008, the Senate passed H.R.3221, the Foreclosure Prevention Act of 2008. This bill contains $150 million for foreclosure counseling, nearly $4 billion in funds to rehabilitate foreclosed properties through Community Development Block Grants, and $10 billion for mortgage revenue bonds for states to extend lower-cost loans to distressed borrowers. H.R.3221 also amends the Truth in Lending Act to improve the disclosure of loan terms to borrowers upon original application or refinancing of a loan.
Previously, Congress approved an additional $180 million for housing counseling and a temporary increase in the size of loans that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) can back.
Though these actions are a good start, we need to do more. That is why I am co-sponsoring several bills that would regulate the mortgage
industry, prevent some of the worst lender abuses from reoccurring, and promote sustainable and affordable homeownership.
The Homeownership Preservation and Protection Act (S.2452) would require mortgage lenders and home appraisers to act in good faith in all aspects of the home appraisal and mortgage process while giving borrowers recourse against lenders who do not. This bill would also require lenders to verify the borrower’s ability to repay a loan and prevent lenders from steering a client into inappropriate loans. In addition, S.2452 would prohibit the use of balloon payments and prepayment penalties in subprime and non-traditional mortgages, and it would increase funding for the FBI to pursue cases of mortgage fraud.
Despite industry promises, the pace of loan modifications to help families stay in their homes remains too slow. To address this problem, I am co-sponsoring legislation to allow bankruptcy judges to modify unaffordable mortgages on a homeowner’s primary residence, the same power judges already have for vacation homes or investment property. The Center for Responsible Lending estimates this change would help over 600,000 families save their homes from foreclosure.
We must use all the means we have to move towards a solution to the foreclosure crisis. The Federal Trade Commission’s reach should be extended to include deceptive and unfair acts committed by banks and lenders. The increase in FHA and Fannie Mae loan limits must be made permanent. In order to keep loans affordable for many subprime borrowers, we must work closely with and keep the pressure on large lenders and the HOPE NOW coalition of housing counselors, lenders, and investors.
Again, thank you for writing to me. Be assured that I am committed to finding a fair and equitable solution to the housing foreclosure crisis.
Barbara Boxer
United States SenatorPlease visit my website at http://boxer.senate.gov
What really upset me was that I wrote to complain about all the crap she is touting in her response. Made it feel like a form letter response.
mike92104
Participant[quote=nostradamus][quote=mike92104]You can contact them by email as well. I’ve already complained to mine. Unfortunately I just got a BS response about having to help the poor homeowners. Have to keep it up though. It’s the only way to get through their thick melons.[/quote]
What about the people who want to be homeowners but can’t?Can you post their response?[/quote]
Here It is:
Dear Mr. Lowe:
Thank you for contacting me regarding the current foreclosure crisis. I appreciate hearing from you.
Over the past decade, as housing prices rose sharply, lenders and mortgage brokers began offering new exotic loan products frequently using low initial interest rates and predatory tactics to steer borrowers toward loans they could not afford.
Now higher payments on these loans combined with declining property values are forcing many families into foreclosure. California is being hit particularly hard by the foreclosure crisis, reporting 481,392 foreclosure filings on 249,513 properties in 2007, the highest total of any state and more than triple the number in 2006. These foreclosures will cost Californians an estimated $67 billion in lost property values, and local governments are likely to see a decline of $4 billion in collected property, sales, and transfer taxes.
I have supported several sensible steps to ease the mortgage crisis. On April 10, 2008, the Senate passed H.R.3221, the Foreclosure Prevention Act of 2008. This bill contains $150 million for foreclosure counseling, nearly $4 billion in funds to rehabilitate foreclosed properties through Community Development Block Grants, and $10 billion for mortgage revenue bonds for states to extend lower-cost loans to distressed borrowers. H.R.3221 also amends the Truth in Lending Act to improve the disclosure of loan terms to borrowers upon original application or refinancing of a loan.
Previously, Congress approved an additional $180 million for housing counseling and a temporary increase in the size of loans that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) can back.
Though these actions are a good start, we need to do more. That is why I am co-sponsoring several bills that would regulate the mortgage
industry, prevent some of the worst lender abuses from reoccurring, and promote sustainable and affordable homeownership.
The Homeownership Preservation and Protection Act (S.2452) would require mortgage lenders and home appraisers to act in good faith in all aspects of the home appraisal and mortgage process while giving borrowers recourse against lenders who do not. This bill would also require lenders to verify the borrower’s ability to repay a loan and prevent lenders from steering a client into inappropriate loans. In addition, S.2452 would prohibit the use of balloon payments and prepayment penalties in subprime and non-traditional mortgages, and it would increase funding for the FBI to pursue cases of mortgage fraud.
Despite industry promises, the pace of loan modifications to help families stay in their homes remains too slow. To address this problem, I am co-sponsoring legislation to allow bankruptcy judges to modify unaffordable mortgages on a homeowner’s primary residence, the same power judges already have for vacation homes or investment property. The Center for Responsible Lending estimates this change would help over 600,000 families save their homes from foreclosure.
We must use all the means we have to move towards a solution to the foreclosure crisis. The Federal Trade Commission’s reach should be extended to include deceptive and unfair acts committed by banks and lenders. The increase in FHA and Fannie Mae loan limits must be made permanent. In order to keep loans affordable for many subprime borrowers, we must work closely with and keep the pressure on large lenders and the HOPE NOW coalition of housing counselors, lenders, and investors.
Again, thank you for writing to me. Be assured that I am committed to finding a fair and equitable solution to the housing foreclosure crisis.
Barbara Boxer
United States SenatorPlease visit my website at http://boxer.senate.gov
What really upset me was that I wrote to complain about all the crap she is touting in her response. Made it feel like a form letter response.
mike92104
Participantdeleted
-
AuthorPosts
