Forum Replies Created
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AuthorPosts
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TheBreeze
ParticipantMr. Mortgage has a much better idea. Instead of doing a bunch of useless (and possibly disastrous) handwaving, all that’s needed is for pricing of mortgage securities to be done on a zip-code-by-zip-code basis. This would result in a real market for the mortgage securities instead of some propped-up monstrosity that will come cratering down sooner or later.
http://mrmortgage.ml-implode.com/2008/09/30/banks-bad-math-home-price-indexing-responsible/#comments
TheBreeze
ParticipantMr. Mortgage has a much better idea. Instead of doing a bunch of useless (and possibly disastrous) handwaving, all that’s needed is for pricing of mortgage securities to be done on a zip-code-by-zip-code basis. This would result in a real market for the mortgage securities instead of some propped-up monstrosity that will come cratering down sooner or later.
http://mrmortgage.ml-implode.com/2008/09/30/banks-bad-math-home-price-indexing-responsible/#comments
TheBreeze
ParticipantMr. Mortgage has a much better idea. Instead of doing a bunch of useless (and possibly disastrous) handwaving, all that’s needed is for pricing of mortgage securities to be done on a zip-code-by-zip-code basis. This would result in a real market for the mortgage securities instead of some propped-up monstrosity that will come cratering down sooner or later.
http://mrmortgage.ml-implode.com/2008/09/30/banks-bad-math-home-price-indexing-responsible/#comments
TheBreeze
ParticipantMr. Mortgage has a much better idea. Instead of doing a bunch of useless (and possibly disastrous) handwaving, all that’s needed is for pricing of mortgage securities to be done on a zip-code-by-zip-code basis. This would result in a real market for the mortgage securities instead of some propped-up monstrosity that will come cratering down sooner or later.
http://mrmortgage.ml-implode.com/2008/09/30/banks-bad-math-home-price-indexing-responsible/#comments
September 30, 2008 at 10:02 PM in reply to: LOL. If you liked the Fed Bailout 1.0, you’ll love Fed Bailout 2.0-Beta #278519TheBreeze
ParticipantUnbelievable. It was pretty cool when a whole bunch of smart people joined together through the power of the Internet and were able to stop this thing. Now it looks like Congress has actually come up with a worse bill. Another poster called me cynical the other day, but even I wasn’t cynical enough to think that stopping the original bailout would lead to something worse.
This is disheartening. Our own government has taken something great and turned it into something evil.
My new strategy is to just vote out all the incumbents. If I’m really feeling crazy I might write in Ron Paul. Both major parties are full of asshats.
September 30, 2008 at 10:02 PM in reply to: LOL. If you liked the Fed Bailout 1.0, you’ll love Fed Bailout 2.0-Beta #278784TheBreeze
ParticipantUnbelievable. It was pretty cool when a whole bunch of smart people joined together through the power of the Internet and were able to stop this thing. Now it looks like Congress has actually come up with a worse bill. Another poster called me cynical the other day, but even I wasn’t cynical enough to think that stopping the original bailout would lead to something worse.
This is disheartening. Our own government has taken something great and turned it into something evil.
My new strategy is to just vote out all the incumbents. If I’m really feeling crazy I might write in Ron Paul. Both major parties are full of asshats.
September 30, 2008 at 10:02 PM in reply to: LOL. If you liked the Fed Bailout 1.0, you’ll love Fed Bailout 2.0-Beta #278796TheBreeze
ParticipantUnbelievable. It was pretty cool when a whole bunch of smart people joined together through the power of the Internet and were able to stop this thing. Now it looks like Congress has actually come up with a worse bill. Another poster called me cynical the other day, but even I wasn’t cynical enough to think that stopping the original bailout would lead to something worse.
This is disheartening. Our own government has taken something great and turned it into something evil.
My new strategy is to just vote out all the incumbents. If I’m really feeling crazy I might write in Ron Paul. Both major parties are full of asshats.
September 30, 2008 at 10:02 PM in reply to: LOL. If you liked the Fed Bailout 1.0, you’ll love Fed Bailout 2.0-Beta #278833TheBreeze
ParticipantUnbelievable. It was pretty cool when a whole bunch of smart people joined together through the power of the Internet and were able to stop this thing. Now it looks like Congress has actually come up with a worse bill. Another poster called me cynical the other day, but even I wasn’t cynical enough to think that stopping the original bailout would lead to something worse.
This is disheartening. Our own government has taken something great and turned it into something evil.
My new strategy is to just vote out all the incumbents. If I’m really feeling crazy I might write in Ron Paul. Both major parties are full of asshats.
September 30, 2008 at 10:02 PM in reply to: LOL. If you liked the Fed Bailout 1.0, you’ll love Fed Bailout 2.0-Beta #278845TheBreeze
ParticipantUnbelievable. It was pretty cool when a whole bunch of smart people joined together through the power of the Internet and were able to stop this thing. Now it looks like Congress has actually come up with a worse bill. Another poster called me cynical the other day, but even I wasn’t cynical enough to think that stopping the original bailout would lead to something worse.
This is disheartening. Our own government has taken something great and turned it into something evil.
My new strategy is to just vote out all the incumbents. If I’m really feeling crazy I might write in Ron Paul. Both major parties are full of asshats.
TheBreeze
Participant[quote=urbanrealtor]
While I agree that the patriot act was planned, I am not sure how the bailout benefits anyone.
I mean the patriot act brought US public safety standards to something closer to the rest of the world. I (and many others) disagree with it because most of the governments of the world are too intrusive and controlling. But the point was that there was a large powerful lobby that always wanted the measures of the patriot act adopted.
I don’t see that same kind of lobby for this measure. Its more like the “surge” in Iraq. It might be very successful and improve stability but it is really just dressed up damage control. I do think that the parts of our economy that led us here DID have a huge lobby (deregulation, loose money, loose securitization rules).
Hopefully the remedy will garner a huge lobby and address the causes as well. We’ll see.[/quote]
My god you are naive. No lobby for $700 billion? Your buddies at NAR have been begging for a bailout for months. PIMCO’s Bill Gross can’t wait to get his hands on that taxpayer money. There are tons of other bagholders out there who can’t wait to unload crappy mortgages on the taxpayer.
Who do you think is writing this bill? Congresspeople? Not a chance. This bill is most assuredly being written by lobbyists.
Do you live in a bubble or something? I don’t see how else you could believe that lobbyists wouldn’t be involved when $700 billion is at stake.
TheBreeze
Participant[quote=urbanrealtor]
While I agree that the patriot act was planned, I am not sure how the bailout benefits anyone.
I mean the patriot act brought US public safety standards to something closer to the rest of the world. I (and many others) disagree with it because most of the governments of the world are too intrusive and controlling. But the point was that there was a large powerful lobby that always wanted the measures of the patriot act adopted.
I don’t see that same kind of lobby for this measure. Its more like the “surge” in Iraq. It might be very successful and improve stability but it is really just dressed up damage control. I do think that the parts of our economy that led us here DID have a huge lobby (deregulation, loose money, loose securitization rules).
Hopefully the remedy will garner a huge lobby and address the causes as well. We’ll see.[/quote]
My god you are naive. No lobby for $700 billion? Your buddies at NAR have been begging for a bailout for months. PIMCO’s Bill Gross can’t wait to get his hands on that taxpayer money. There are tons of other bagholders out there who can’t wait to unload crappy mortgages on the taxpayer.
Who do you think is writing this bill? Congresspeople? Not a chance. This bill is most assuredly being written by lobbyists.
Do you live in a bubble or something? I don’t see how else you could believe that lobbyists wouldn’t be involved when $700 billion is at stake.
TheBreeze
Participant[quote=urbanrealtor]
While I agree that the patriot act was planned, I am not sure how the bailout benefits anyone.
I mean the patriot act brought US public safety standards to something closer to the rest of the world. I (and many others) disagree with it because most of the governments of the world are too intrusive and controlling. But the point was that there was a large powerful lobby that always wanted the measures of the patriot act adopted.
I don’t see that same kind of lobby for this measure. Its more like the “surge” in Iraq. It might be very successful and improve stability but it is really just dressed up damage control. I do think that the parts of our economy that led us here DID have a huge lobby (deregulation, loose money, loose securitization rules).
Hopefully the remedy will garner a huge lobby and address the causes as well. We’ll see.[/quote]
My god you are naive. No lobby for $700 billion? Your buddies at NAR have been begging for a bailout for months. PIMCO’s Bill Gross can’t wait to get his hands on that taxpayer money. There are tons of other bagholders out there who can’t wait to unload crappy mortgages on the taxpayer.
Who do you think is writing this bill? Congresspeople? Not a chance. This bill is most assuredly being written by lobbyists.
Do you live in a bubble or something? I don’t see how else you could believe that lobbyists wouldn’t be involved when $700 billion is at stake.
TheBreeze
Participant[quote=urbanrealtor]
While I agree that the patriot act was planned, I am not sure how the bailout benefits anyone.
I mean the patriot act brought US public safety standards to something closer to the rest of the world. I (and many others) disagree with it because most of the governments of the world are too intrusive and controlling. But the point was that there was a large powerful lobby that always wanted the measures of the patriot act adopted.
I don’t see that same kind of lobby for this measure. Its more like the “surge” in Iraq. It might be very successful and improve stability but it is really just dressed up damage control. I do think that the parts of our economy that led us here DID have a huge lobby (deregulation, loose money, loose securitization rules).
Hopefully the remedy will garner a huge lobby and address the causes as well. We’ll see.[/quote]
My god you are naive. No lobby for $700 billion? Your buddies at NAR have been begging for a bailout for months. PIMCO’s Bill Gross can’t wait to get his hands on that taxpayer money. There are tons of other bagholders out there who can’t wait to unload crappy mortgages on the taxpayer.
Who do you think is writing this bill? Congresspeople? Not a chance. This bill is most assuredly being written by lobbyists.
Do you live in a bubble or something? I don’t see how else you could believe that lobbyists wouldn’t be involved when $700 billion is at stake.
TheBreeze
Participant[quote=urbanrealtor]
While I agree that the patriot act was planned, I am not sure how the bailout benefits anyone.
I mean the patriot act brought US public safety standards to something closer to the rest of the world. I (and many others) disagree with it because most of the governments of the world are too intrusive and controlling. But the point was that there was a large powerful lobby that always wanted the measures of the patriot act adopted.
I don’t see that same kind of lobby for this measure. Its more like the “surge” in Iraq. It might be very successful and improve stability but it is really just dressed up damage control. I do think that the parts of our economy that led us here DID have a huge lobby (deregulation, loose money, loose securitization rules).
Hopefully the remedy will garner a huge lobby and address the causes as well. We’ll see.[/quote]
My god you are naive. No lobby for $700 billion? Your buddies at NAR have been begging for a bailout for months. PIMCO’s Bill Gross can’t wait to get his hands on that taxpayer money. There are tons of other bagholders out there who can’t wait to unload crappy mortgages on the taxpayer.
Who do you think is writing this bill? Congresspeople? Not a chance. This bill is most assuredly being written by lobbyists.
Do you live in a bubble or something? I don’t see how else you could believe that lobbyists wouldn’t be involved when $700 billion is at stake.
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