What is your "Debt Free Date"

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/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #181  
Very typical of you of late. Throw the label. It is all the governments fault. It was this policy it was that regulation. It was deregulation. Just cannot see the fact that regular people took advantage of things and got away with it.

You know what? If congress passes a law that says I can go down to any bank and pick up $10,000 for free, I am going to do it. And so is 90+ % of the rest of the country.

Is it my fault for following the law to my own advantage? I don't think so, it is the government's fault for passing a stupid, destructive law in the first place.

Same thing with the housing bubble. Congress passed and enforced a very stupid law, and very high ranking members of congress (Dodd and Frank) just plain lied about the fiscal condition of Freddie Mac and Fannie May.

Fault does not lie with the citizens who took advantage of a government mistake, or with the banks who profited from it. If the banks had not profited from the law, their shareholders would have had a wonderful cause for a lawsuit based on breach of fiduciary responsibility.

Fault lies directly with those in congress who make the rules of the game.

A congressman does not operate alone. Each representative is allowed up to 18 full-time and 4 part-time staff. Senators get more, the average is 34.

If Barney Frank can't find room for just one real economist on his staff, and Chris Dodd couldn't find room for another one, the fault is not with all the people of the United States. The fault lies with the congress critters and with the people who elected them.
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #182  
Don't forget how congress encouraged the stampede to Home Equity Lines of Credit when it made credit card interest no longer deductible

I remember that in the early 80's, home equity loans were called 2nd mortgages. And around here anyway, they were considered to be a desperation ploy. Then the banks got into marketing money, promoting loans for any, all or no purpose. I think, but I am not sure, that the change was in the tax reform of 86, that was the same year they changed the rules on guys losing money on horses - the horse market went south, and maybe has never recovered.
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #183  
You know what? If congress passes a law that says I can go down to any bank and pick up $10,000 for free, I am going to do it. And so is 90+ % of the rest of the country.

Is it my fault for following the law to my own advantage? I don't think so, it is the government's fault for passing a stupid, destructive law in the first place.

Same thing with the housing bubble. Congress passed and enforced a very stupid law, and very high ranking members of congress (Dodd and Frank) just plain lied about the fiscal condition of Freddie Mac and Fannie May.

Fault does not lie with the citizens who took advantage of a government mistake, or with the banks who profited from it. If the banks had not profited from the law, their shareholders would have had a wonderful cause for a lawsuit based on breach of fiduciary responsibility.

Fault lies directly with those in congress who make the rules of the game.

A congressman does not operate alone. Each representative is allowed up to 18 full-time and 4 part-time staff. Senators get more, the average is 34.

If Barney Frank can't find room for just one real economist on his staff, and Chris Dodd couldn't find room for another one, the fault is not with all the people of the United States. The fault lies with the congress critters and with the people who elected them.

What's amazing to me is that people really seem to believe this stuff. Is that what Faux News is spouting nowadays? If there was ever a law that banks had to give anything out for free, I must have missed it, because I never got my $10,000.

A big part of the insane bubble that made people think they were entitled to high living was the economists. They know nothing. Economics is all theory and no practice, like the theory that government spending will stimulate the economy. Hey, it worked in the '30s, right? Except they forget that we used that government spending to build a huge military machine, and then we bombed the rest of the industrial world into rubble. It's no wonder we didn't have any competition in the '50s and '60s, and it had nothing to do with government spending. That world is gone, and we can't spend our way back to it.

The whole country is still living way beyond its means. The gummint is running us in the hole at $3 billion a day and Cathy Consumer is running us in a foreign debt hole at $2 billion a day. We can all yearn for the day we will be debt free, or brag about how long we have been debt free, but the fact is the whole country is so far undewater we will never see daylight in our lifetimes. Young people would do well to consider moving to a country with a brighter future, because the standard of living in America has a long way to fall.
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #184  
In support of Eddie, all he is saying (I think) is most people are greedy rather they are in Congress or not and this, for the most part, includes some here on TBN. It's always the other guy. Some should look in the mirror. Sometimes things start out with good intentions and then greed takes over.
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #185  
I think we are seeing the fruits of "there is no such thing as a free lunch".
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #186  
In support of Eddie, all he is saying (I think) is most people are greedy rather they are in Congress or not and this, for the most part, includes some here on TBN. It's always the other guy. Some should look in the mirror. Sometimes things start out with good intentions and then greed takes over.

Clearly it is our own behavior and NOT congress that is at the root of our problems today. Congress is US.

If I sign a loan that I do not have the means to service who's name is on that loan. If no guns were used to get me to sign than who is responsible in the end.

Blamers of the government are buck passers. We elect and we own the results pure and simple.

If I only act right because of laws passed I have a heart problem. If I act within the law and the law permits something that is not finacially smart then I am still responsible for the results. Not everyone spent beyond their financial means the last 50 years.
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #187  
Imagine how many problems would be solved if nobody borrowed any money.

We'd have no slaves, no masters of those slaves, no need to try to regulate the lending industry, no way for people to take advantage of each other thru "predatory lending", excessive interest rates, risky borrowing.

But then in a supposedly free country you should be free to borrow some money from somebody if you want to.

So I guess there really is no answer.
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #188  
Imagine how many problems would be solved if nobody borrowed any money.

We'd have no slaves, no masters of those slaves, no need to try to regulate the lending industry, no way for people to take advantage of each other thru "predatory lending", excessive interest rates, risky borrowing.

But then in a supposedly free country you should be free to borrow some money from somebody if you want to.

So I guess there really is no answer.
Give more than you receive. It does not have to be money.
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #189  
What doe ANY of the past 3 pages (save 2 posts) have to do with the OP's original question... What is your Debt free Date??
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #190  
What's amazing to me is that people really seem to believe this stuff. Is that what Faux News is spouting nowadays? If there was ever a law that banks had to give anything out for free, I must have missed it, because I never got my $10,000...

Well, don't believe the $10,000. That was a purely a hypothetical, and I made the mistake of thinking that everyone would recognize it as such.

Hey, it worked in the '30s, right? Except they forget that we used that government spending to build a huge military machine, and then we bombed the rest of the industrial world into rubble. It's no wonder we didn't have any competition in the '50s and '60s, and it had nothing to do with government spending.

What happened in the 1940s was called World War II, and concept that the US bombed the rest of the world into rubble is utter nonsense. Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK, China, Russia and the US were the major participants and all of them did plenty of bombing.

By many measures, the US was only a secondary participant. World War II casualties - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia I have been to Russia, and they claim to have lost 25 million people in that war, although the link "only" counts it as 23.4 million. The US lost ~420,000. The US was the only country with a significant industrial base which was left intact at the end of the war, which gave us enormous economic advantages for many years.

I think the standard liberal mindset of "blame the US first" is showing through in your post.
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #191  
Tell me where you think the blame belongs:

Government adopts a cheap money policy, believing it will encourage economic growth.
Citizen borrows the full value of a house he wants to buy - or more - reasoning that the appreciation of the real estate will exceed the cost of borrowing. He sees a chance to beat the wealth game.
Mortgage brokers lend him the money on behalf of banks, often not even requiring proof of income and almost never worrying about his debt/equity ratio.
Banks take the broker's mortgage and turn a blind eye to the way it was written. The government allows them to put the mortgage on their balance sheet at, say, 70 cents on the dollar. Still, nobody questions the underlying value.
Then, the banks sell those mortgages to investment banks, which roll up a bunch of them together and turn it into an investment product to be resold.
Credit rating agencies give these 'mortgage backed securities' great ratings, almost as good as what bonds get.
Institutional investors buy up the mortgage backed securities, seeing a way to beat the sideways performance of equity markets and taking the ratings agencies assessments at face value.
But houses stop appreciating, and the folly of easy money rears its head. Some are foreclosed, but many other buyers walk away just because they now have negative equity on paper, rather than honor their obligations to repay those loans.
The underlying value in the mortgage backed securities implodes. Big institutional investors are suddenly on the edge of solvency. The government writes down the value of the assets, maybe more than they needed to, putting financial institutions now under water at the stroke of a pen.
To solve this new problem, the government lets them use some taxpayer money to shore up their balance sheets for a while (the TARP money).
Now, up to their eyeballs in debt, the government has no choice but to keep borrowing costs low and keep printing cash.

So, whose fault is it? Everybody's, as far as I can see. The belief in easy money is the most dangerous drug there is. But if I was going to send the FBI in, I'd start with the ratings agencies and go from there. Most of the culprits are guilty of wilful ignorance and blind optimism, but the ratings agencies were somewhere between negligent and fraudulent.
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #192  
Clearly it is our own behavior and NOT congress that is at the root of our problems today. Congress is US.

If I sign a loan that I do not have the means to service who's name is on that loan. If no guns were used to get me to sign than who is responsible in the end.

Blamers of the government are buck passers. We elect and we own the results pure and simple.

If I only act right because of laws passed I have a heart problem. If I act within the law and the law permits something that is not financially smart then I am still responsible for the results. Not everyone spent beyond their financial means the last 50 years.

I'm sure it is different elsewhere... here is what happened in my city of 450k +/-

Almost every home sold in vast areas of the city circa 2005-07 went to first time Hispanic buyers... on one city block 7 homes went this way.

Homes that had sold for 80k 20 years ago and 180k around 2000 were breaking the 500k mark (1920's craftsman bungalows with 1200 square feet)

All 7 of the Hispanic families have moved... some tried to sell, none were successful, they owed more than the home was worth... the one next to my old home that went from 80k 20 years ago to 510k in 2007 was sold by the bank for 80k to an investor who later resold it for 135k.

Not making any excuses... just saying what happened.

I think it is important to point out that Jose and his family got caught up in the wave if you do not buy now... you will never be able.

Property taxes came as a huge shock. Jose showed my his tax bill and was almost in tears... $8000 and change.

He worked for a landscape company along with his brother... they were doing new subdivisions and had work 7 days a week... that all stopped.

Jose, his family and brother returned to Mexico... he had a green card and was not a US citizen. Didn't have any trouble getting the loan and he could not read English.

The schools district is closing 5 schools due to declining enrollment... 6 years ago they were adding because of all the new families moving into the area...

Some would call it a perfect storm...

I also know others living 1.5m homes that walked away... making the payments was not at issue. It was a simple business decision... at least that is what one lawyer told me that had bought a similar home for 40% less then he owed on his first home... once he was settled, he let the first home go... California is a non-recourse State so the lawyer maximum risk was a hit on his credit score and he was not worried because he said he is just one of the many and if he had to, he could have paid cash for the replacement home.

As to the Hispanic first time home buyers... the local banks agreed under the consent order to specifically do community outreach... there were monthly first time home buyers seminars at the auditorium tailored in Spanish and Chinese and they were sponsored by HUD, Fannie and Freddie...

These programs waived traditional down payment requirements and long credit history requirements... in fact, if you made too much money, you often were not eligible.

For Jose' and his family... their debt free date started the minute they returned to Mexico...
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #193  
What doe ANY of the past 3 pages (save 2 posts) have to do with the OP's original question... What is your Debt free Date??

We may have gotten slightly off track.






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/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #195  
Tell me where you think the blame belongs:

........So, whose fault is it? Everybody's, as far as I can see. The belief in easy money is the most dangerous drug there is. But if I was going to send the FBI in, I'd start with the ratings agencies and go from there. Most of the culprits are guilty of wilful ignorance and blind optimism, but the ratings agencies were somewhere between negligent and fraudulent.

Last I checked the SEC, Treasury and Justice Departments were all trying to recoup or investigate Wall Street and Bankers.

I have not been called into court for my monetary transactions.

The problem with money is it is a transaction in time. So the CEO can say, well at the time we looked solvent. Which is BS, because the transactions were based on negligent and fraudulent information. Proving that is another matter.
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #196  
Thanks Creemore and Ultrarunner for adding aspects to the discussion not well covered before.

However, I and many others here share no blame for the debt mess because we were responsible about handling credit, carried no debt or paid all our bills.

I still contend the root cause was the government which set the stage, compelling lenders (not just mortgage brokers) to make loans no sane person would have made to borrowers who couldn't pay. And those borrowers irresponsibly took advantage of opportunities, opportunities everyone was talking about because they greedily followed the herd. If the government had not set penalties for what it saw as bad behavior on the part of banks (redlining) or had come up with a better solution (redlining was real) we would never have gotten into this mess.
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #197  
You're in good company in your assertion that the root cause was an earlier government's loose money policy. It was a bad idea, and clearly created a temptation a lot of people couldn't handle.

I, like you, was never part of the problem, and I don't much like that my retirement plans have to change as a result...
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #198  
Tell me where you think the blame belongs:

Government adopts a cheap money policy, believing it will encourage economic growth.
Citizen borrows the full value of a house he wants to buy - or more - reasoning that the appreciation of the real estate will exceed the cost of borrowing. He sees a chance to beat the wealth game.
Mortgage brokers lend him the money on behalf of banks, often not even requiring proof of income and almost never worrying about his debt/equity ratio.
Banks take the broker's mortgage and turn a blind eye to the way it was written. The government allows them to put the mortgage on their balance sheet at, say, 70 cents on the dollar. Still, nobody questions the underlying value.
Then, the banks sell those mortgages to investment banks, which roll up a bunch of them together and turn it into an investment product to be resold.
Credit rating agencies give these 'mortgage backed securities' great ratings, almost as good as what bonds get.
Institutional investors buy up the mortgage backed securities, seeing a way to beat the sideways performance of equity markets and taking the ratings agencies assessments at face value.
But houses stop appreciating, and the folly of easy money rears its head. Some are foreclosed, but many other buyers walk away just because they now have negative equity on paper, rather than honor their obligations to repay those loans.
The underlying value in the mortgage backed securities implodes. Big institutional investors are suddenly on the edge of solvency. The government writes down the value of the assets, maybe more than they needed to, putting financial institutions now under water at the stroke of a pen.
To solve this new problem, the government lets them use some taxpayer money to shore up their balance sheets for a while (the TARP money).
Now, up to their eyeballs in debt, the government has no choice but to keep borrowing costs low and keep printing cash.

So, whose fault is it? Everybody's, as far as I can see. The belief in easy money is the most dangerous drug there is. But if I was going to send the FBI in, I'd start with the ratings agencies and go from there. Most of the culprits are guilty of wilful ignorance and blind optimism, but the ratings agencies were somewhere between negligent and fraudulent.

The ratings agencies were afraid if they did not give out good ratings, another one would, and get the fees. I agree, they were negligent in the extreme.
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #199  
The ratings agencies were afraid if they did not give out good ratings, another one would, and get the fees. I agree, they were negligent in the extreme.

It could also be that they felt any downgrading they might've considered doing would've actually caused the problems that eventually did happen anyway.

Of course I'm probably giving them too much credit (puntended).
 
/ What is your "Debt Free Date" #200  
Is the person whole sold one of these greatly "overpriced" homes (or many of these homes) and walked with the money somewhat responsible for the problem. Is it possible that regulations were influenced by an industry that was enjoying huge profits?
I suggest that anyone who made more than reasonable profits may not be exempt from some responsibility. Many good, honest people who purchased homes did not for see the job losses and collapse of the market.
Maybe some of the stocks owned by the pure among us were in companies that had a selfish influence in this scheme. It's so easy to blame others - makes us feel better:thumbsup:

Loren
 
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