Mortgage Fraud

The ACORN I Know

By David Swanson

If someone told you that a bunch of low-income people, most of them African-American or Latino, most of them women, most of them elderly, had been victimized by a predatory mortgage lender that stripped them of much of their equity or of their entire homes, you might not be surprised. But if I told you that these women and men had gotten together and, after three years of work, brought the nation's largest high-cost lender to its knees, forced it to sell out to a foreign company, and won back a half a billion dollars of what had been taken from them—one of the largest consumer settlements ever—you'd probably ask me what country this had happened in. Surely it couldn't have been in the United States of the Second Gilded Age, the land of unbridled corporate power and radical government activism on behalf of the rich and the greedy.

A New Way Forward Is Live Streaming Teach-Ins on Opposition to Bankster Bailout

http://www.livestream.com/anewwayforward

The webcasting events are:
New York City, 6/8 at 7PM with Leo Hindery, Les Leopold, Alice Kessler-Harris at the Tank, (webcasted)

San Francisco, 6/10 at 6:30PM with Ernesto Dal Bo, Doug Rucskoff, Donald Goldmacher at Mechanic Library, (webcasted)

New York City, 6/10 at 7PM video screening with Danny Shechter, New Roosevelt Institute, Working Families at Le Poisson Rouge (webcasted)

Washington DC, 6/11 at 9:00AM with Simon Johnson, John Taylor, Nancy Cleeland, Mike Lux at the Capitol Hill, (one hour broadcast delay)

"Looting of America" Author Sees Opportunity in Meltdown

By David Swanson

I've just interviewed Les Leopold, who blames the recent financial disasters on trends that began over 30 years ago, explains how a great deal of Wall Street's "investing" has had as much connection to the real economy as fantasy baseball has to baseball, diagnoses the failures of labor and the left to resist the financialization of the economy, views the current situation with genuine optimism as a rare moment in which we might be able to make necessary changes to regulate finance and to shift money from a tiny group of billionaires to the rest of society, and explains why that latter step is needed to stabilize any economy.

With teach-ins planned everywhere on June 10th and people trying to educate each other on exactly what just happened to trillions of our children's dollars, you could do a lot worse than to gather some friends together, read or listen to, and discuss, this interview, and then take appropriate actions.

Here's the audio in an mp3. It's a little under an hour.

David Swanson interviewing Les Leopold:

Fantasy Finance and Real Fixes

By David Swanson

If you're like me you find it at least a bit disturbing that we're giving trillions of dollars to save the economy to the very people who wrecked it, and more disturbing that we're doing so without any solid basis for expecting to get much of it back and without making fundamental changes to prevent a repetition. But if you're like me, you also aren't 100 percent certain how a credit default swap works with a cubed collateralized debt obligation, much less whether such a monstrosity needs to be eliminated or reformed. What to do?

How to Take Congress Back from the Banks

Bankruptcy "cramdown" reform was defeated in the Senate today, which caused Sen. Dick Durbin to accurately declare, "banks own the place." Glenn Greenwald, Jane Hamsher and Howie Klein explain how. So what do we do about it?

Chris Bowers thinks we must retreat until broader cultural change occurs:

Help the Economy by Helping Homeowners -- Or Just Help Homeowners Because You're Human

From Center for Responsible Lending

On Thursday, the U.S. House of Representatives postponed helping homeowners and the economy by delaying action on a crucial bill (H.R. 1106). Please take the time to tell them the only way to get the economy back on track is to stop foreclosures.

For each day that Congress delays this vote:

* Another 6,600 families lose their homes.
* More families living near foreclosed properties see their home values drop.
* More senior citizens lose their life savings.
* More families can't send their children to college because they have lost their home equity.
* Towns and cities lose tax revenue and struggle with the extra costs of dealing with vacant properties.
* Economic recovery remains that much more out of reach.

TELL YOUR REPRESENTATIVE TO STAND UP FOR ORDINARY AMERICANS AND VOTE FOR H.R. 1106. DON'T WEAKEN IT. SUPPORT ENACTMENT NOW.

Rick Santelli Meet America

My favorite part of Rick Santelli's now-famous CNBC rant is when he waves to the floor traders around him and shouts, "This is America!" And after his rant went viral, he claimed 99% of the emails he received were supportive.

Really? Rick Santelli, meet America.

dday:

Lost from this complaint is the plain fact of predatory lending, that lenders got cash rebates to put people in crappy, high-interest mortgages, that they hid terms of the agreement and denied disclosure, and that all of those hardworking folks are seeing their property values plummet as a result of millions of foreclosed homes glutting the market. To the tune of $6 trillion dollars in home value.

A Car Dealer Explains Why the Bailout is a Raw Deal

By Dave Lindorff

A brief conversation I had earlier this week with a car dealership
executive while standing in a post office line demonstrated simply both
why the bank deregulation and consolidation process of the past two
decades has been a screw job for ordinary people, and why the
Washington bailout has been both a taxpayer rip-off and a failure (if
it was even intended to work!).

I was chatting with the guy standing behind me who works at one of
the 14 dealerships in a Philadelphia-area regional family-owned chain
of GM dealerships called Bergey’s. Noting that a number of big dealers
like Knopf (a Chrysler Dealer) and McGarrity’s (Ford) had been closing,
I asked this Bergey’s manager if the problem was that the banks had
frozen lending, making it hard for people to buy new cars.

A State Attorney General Stops Home Foreclosures - Exactly As They All Should

Massachusetts judge stops foreclosures on H&R Block unit's loans
By Jerry Kronenberg, Boston Herald

A Massachusetts judge is blocking H&R Block from automatically foreclosing on up to 9,700 Bay State homeowners, ruling that the firm apparently wrote mortgages with "reckless disregard (for) the risk of foreclosure."

"Any lender with even a modicum of business morality should recognize that it is immoral, unethical and unscrupulous to issue a home loan with reckless disregard (for) the risk of foreclosure," Suffolk Superior Court Judge Ralph Gants wrote in a preliminary injunction against H&R Block.

Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley has sued Block over Bay State subprime mortgages issued by the firm's Option One subsidiary.