Timminz wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Timminz wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Timminz wrote:
A couple that bought too much house, and that feels they can spend money on "luxuries", while failing to think about anything beyond the immediate-term, are just a couple of morons. They're making more than enough money to get by, yet they insist on living beyond their means. They get no sympathy from me, and I'm supposed to be one of the bleeding-hearts, here.
you are absolutely correct. Could I prod further into your accuracy and ask you how such people were able to get those loans in the first place? or have these kind of people always been able to get loans that easy? what's your take
The way I (in my layman's view) see it, there was a severe lack of useful oversight on the financial institutions, who saw a handful of ways to abuse the regulations that actually were there, with the end result being them bilking the whole system out of billions, upon billions of dollars.
surely they are a large part. I'm still with you so far, and I won't bring out the nobody put a gun to the home buyer's head (oops).
Guns, no, but there are plenty of ways to rip someone off without them knowing until it's too late. Do you blame the thousands of seniors who get scammed out of large sums of money by phone, every year?
Let me ask you this. Do you think the housing bust happened because, suddenly there were tons more people who were stupid enough to get scammed, or is it perhaps more likely that banks figured out new ways to rip off people (read: convince to sign up for loans that there's no way they could pay for, once the introductory offer period is up), that they were previously prevented (by proper regulation and oversight) from using?
It's bigger than that. It's the financials (assured by gov't) + the consumers (assured by gov't) = gov't
However, the point I want to make here is, the financial institution did it because they had the assurances (insurance?) from the gov't that if it all went bad they would get bailed out in the end.
Again, I am with you there. I was the person on the other end of that phone call to sign into a adjustable rate. I always always always told the person to put their manager on the phone. Over and over again, they agreed, it was a bad deal, as I broke down the mortgage telemarketers pitch to the manager. Almost every time they admitted it, a few said "I have kids to feed" and others had ego's too big to even care about the long-run results, only about the immediate (sound familiar?)
Now, my point is not that just because I knew exactly what they were doing and exactly how it would end up, everyone else should have known too. Afterall, "everyone else" were the people actually signing their name on something that would be at least 400-500k (over the future of the loan ((median income prices, adjusted, regionally, san fran to iowa, 280k). Me, I have never owned real estate, but I am about to.

At that time, the house had never been so expensive before in history. Red flag for me not to buy it, even though I was constantly bombarded with phone calls trying to sell me a mortgage on any house up to 300k. (buying a mortgage over the phone was the second red flag for me)
The thing is that those people told me to shut the f*ck up and that I was retarded and that since I did not own a home I didn't have a clue what I was talking about, and also that I was crazy, since, afterall, according to them, "It can't heppen here. It's different this time." Moreover, this was a super-charged dose of human error and herd mentality, aided by greed and generational/culturak "don't worry about tomorow-isms"
You see, I was only trying to help, and I know some people who treated me harshly in the past have seen it my way and thanked me for the tough love, while others actually blame ME for their house crashing in price. I can't begin to tell you how many real-estate owners bragged about how they earned every penny of their property increase 2004-2006, and how it was going to double by 2008. You see, they were the geniuses. It is hard for me to blame this all on the financials, given I have spent so much time "on the ground" in the battle-field of the economy.
Overall, my point here is that I did not get the heads up from the banks, or from the consumers, I got the heads up from Bill Clinton and Barney Frank and Chriss Dodd in 1999. Sure, it would take a few years to play out, but in the end, they own all the mortgages, and we just rent from the govt....the banks and the consumers simply followed the handouts......
It's the same case I make against gov't handouts in any other given issue.