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TheBreeze
ParticipantSo another person got ripped off in a real-estate transaction? When are people going to learn that buying a home is typically a horrible, horrible experience and not some kind of romanticized fairy tale?
TheBreeze
ParticipantSo another person got ripped off in a real-estate transaction? When are people going to learn that buying a home is typically a horrible, horrible experience and not some kind of romanticized fairy tale?
TheBreeze
ParticipantSo another person got ripped off in a real-estate transaction? When are people going to learn that buying a home is typically a horrible, horrible experience and not some kind of romanticized fairy tale?
TheBreeze
ParticipantSo another person got ripped off in a real-estate transaction? When are people going to learn that buying a home is typically a horrible, horrible experience and not some kind of romanticized fairy tale?
TheBreeze
Participant[quote=Daverz]I don’t see anything in the original post asking for a handout, and nothing about walking away or avoiding responsibilities. The well of bitterness here is getting pretty deep when you folks just make stuff up.[/quote]
Fair enough. The second poster did mention a possible bail out though. I just wanted the thread starter to know that foreclosing or doing a short sale doesn’t take money from bank executives. Eventually the loss will be passed on to innocent uninsured depositors and taxpayers.
TheBreeze
Participant[quote=Daverz]I don’t see anything in the original post asking for a handout, and nothing about walking away or avoiding responsibilities. The well of bitterness here is getting pretty deep when you folks just make stuff up.[/quote]
Fair enough. The second poster did mention a possible bail out though. I just wanted the thread starter to know that foreclosing or doing a short sale doesn’t take money from bank executives. Eventually the loss will be passed on to innocent uninsured depositors and taxpayers.
TheBreeze
Participant[quote=Daverz]I don’t see anything in the original post asking for a handout, and nothing about walking away or avoiding responsibilities. The well of bitterness here is getting pretty deep when you folks just make stuff up.[/quote]
Fair enough. The second poster did mention a possible bail out though. I just wanted the thread starter to know that foreclosing or doing a short sale doesn’t take money from bank executives. Eventually the loss will be passed on to innocent uninsured depositors and taxpayers.
TheBreeze
Participant[quote=Daverz]I don’t see anything in the original post asking for a handout, and nothing about walking away or avoiding responsibilities. The well of bitterness here is getting pretty deep when you folks just make stuff up.[/quote]
Fair enough. The second poster did mention a possible bail out though. I just wanted the thread starter to know that foreclosing or doing a short sale doesn’t take money from bank executives. Eventually the loss will be passed on to innocent uninsured depositors and taxpayers.
TheBreeze
Participant[quote=Daverz]I don’t see anything in the original post asking for a handout, and nothing about walking away or avoiding responsibilities. The well of bitterness here is getting pretty deep when you folks just make stuff up.[/quote]
Fair enough. The second poster did mention a possible bail out though. I just wanted the thread starter to know that foreclosing or doing a short sale doesn’t take money from bank executives. Eventually the loss will be passed on to innocent uninsured depositors and taxpayers.
TheBreeze
ParticipantHere’s a quote from someone who unwillingly transferred their hard-earned money to mortgagors who played the system:
Diane Klein isn’t sure what she would trust more to hold her money — IndyMac Bank or a hole in her backyard.
The retired teacher is among hundreds of people who have crowded outside IndyMac Bank branches across Southern California this week, many waiting hours in line to withdraw their funds from the failing bank that was seized by federal regulators.
“Once I get in the door, I’m going to get every penny I can out of there,” Klein told The Associated Press while waiting in line outside the bank’s headquarters in Pasadena. “I’m going to bury it in the backyard.”
Klein originally chose IndyMac for its high interest rates. She said her account has more than the federally insured limit of $100,000 and didn’t want to risk losing any of it.
“I worked my whole life for this money,” she said. “It’s kind of scary.”
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hUsHq4hmx_WYzcFWVjAsPnbQHB9AD91URDU80
Way to work the system, sdgldnbear. Angelo Mozillo would be proud. I hope this country can survive a generation of people like you.
TheBreeze
ParticipantHere’s a quote from someone who unwillingly transferred their hard-earned money to mortgagors who played the system:
Diane Klein isn’t sure what she would trust more to hold her money — IndyMac Bank or a hole in her backyard.
The retired teacher is among hundreds of people who have crowded outside IndyMac Bank branches across Southern California this week, many waiting hours in line to withdraw their funds from the failing bank that was seized by federal regulators.
“Once I get in the door, I’m going to get every penny I can out of there,” Klein told The Associated Press while waiting in line outside the bank’s headquarters in Pasadena. “I’m going to bury it in the backyard.”
Klein originally chose IndyMac for its high interest rates. She said her account has more than the federally insured limit of $100,000 and didn’t want to risk losing any of it.
“I worked my whole life for this money,” she said. “It’s kind of scary.”
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hUsHq4hmx_WYzcFWVjAsPnbQHB9AD91URDU80
Way to work the system, sdgldnbear. Angelo Mozillo would be proud. I hope this country can survive a generation of people like you.
TheBreeze
ParticipantHere’s a quote from someone who unwillingly transferred their hard-earned money to mortgagors who played the system:
Diane Klein isn’t sure what she would trust more to hold her money — IndyMac Bank or a hole in her backyard.
The retired teacher is among hundreds of people who have crowded outside IndyMac Bank branches across Southern California this week, many waiting hours in line to withdraw their funds from the failing bank that was seized by federal regulators.
“Once I get in the door, I’m going to get every penny I can out of there,” Klein told The Associated Press while waiting in line outside the bank’s headquarters in Pasadena. “I’m going to bury it in the backyard.”
Klein originally chose IndyMac for its high interest rates. She said her account has more than the federally insured limit of $100,000 and didn’t want to risk losing any of it.
“I worked my whole life for this money,” she said. “It’s kind of scary.”
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hUsHq4hmx_WYzcFWVjAsPnbQHB9AD91URDU80
Way to work the system, sdgldnbear. Angelo Mozillo would be proud. I hope this country can survive a generation of people like you.
TheBreeze
ParticipantHere’s a quote from someone who unwillingly transferred their hard-earned money to mortgagors who played the system:
Diane Klein isn’t sure what she would trust more to hold her money — IndyMac Bank or a hole in her backyard.
The retired teacher is among hundreds of people who have crowded outside IndyMac Bank branches across Southern California this week, many waiting hours in line to withdraw their funds from the failing bank that was seized by federal regulators.
“Once I get in the door, I’m going to get every penny I can out of there,” Klein told The Associated Press while waiting in line outside the bank’s headquarters in Pasadena. “I’m going to bury it in the backyard.”
Klein originally chose IndyMac for its high interest rates. She said her account has more than the federally insured limit of $100,000 and didn’t want to risk losing any of it.
“I worked my whole life for this money,” she said. “It’s kind of scary.”
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hUsHq4hmx_WYzcFWVjAsPnbQHB9AD91URDU80
Way to work the system, sdgldnbear. Angelo Mozillo would be proud. I hope this country can survive a generation of people like you.
TheBreeze
ParticipantHere’s a quote from someone who unwillingly transferred their hard-earned money to mortgagors who played the system:
Diane Klein isn’t sure what she would trust more to hold her money — IndyMac Bank or a hole in her backyard.
The retired teacher is among hundreds of people who have crowded outside IndyMac Bank branches across Southern California this week, many waiting hours in line to withdraw their funds from the failing bank that was seized by federal regulators.
“Once I get in the door, I’m going to get every penny I can out of there,” Klein told The Associated Press while waiting in line outside the bank’s headquarters in Pasadena. “I’m going to bury it in the backyard.”
Klein originally chose IndyMac for its high interest rates. She said her account has more than the federally insured limit of $100,000 and didn’t want to risk losing any of it.
“I worked my whole life for this money,” she said. “It’s kind of scary.”
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hUsHq4hmx_WYzcFWVjAsPnbQHB9AD91URDU80
Way to work the system, sdgldnbear. Angelo Mozillo would be proud. I hope this country can survive a generation of people like you.
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