Foreclosuregate for Dummies

74

By bgamall

Understanding Foreclosuregate

Understanding foreclosuregate requires a bit of sophisticated thinking. Many average mainstreet people are easily brainwashed and have a very difficult time sorting out the ins and outs of the issues. This article is a simple, but understandable explanation of the foreclosure crisis.

The main reason that many do not understand the issues is that news nowadays is made up of sound bites and brief talking points and even censorship. These do nothing to help people delve deeper into an understanding of the issues of the day. We all start out as dummies when it comes to foreclosuregate, or foreclosure-gate. Staying dumb when you have understanding at your fingerprints is wrong, especially when many you comment on blogs and forums about what you don't know. This article is written in the hope that many will become more fully informed and have the tools to discuss the issues.

Over the years, I have been self taught enough to be a contributor to Seeking Alpha, a major financial website as well as contributing to Business Insider, another major financial website. I have also worked to understand the issues of the housing ponzi scheme since I saw a bubble of inventory growing back in 2005. I will try to use simple language to help you understand the fatal flaw regarding most reactions to people who are fighting for their houses when behind on their payments.

You see, it has to do with the rule of law. I want to focus on the rule of law as it applies to foreclosures. Essentially, we are seeing mortgages that have been divided from their loan documents. This is not supposed to happen. So when someone is in a position to be turned out of their homes for non payment, there are people who cannot prove they have the right to foreclose, who are going into court, using fake papers, and getting judges and sheriffs to improperly foreclose on the owners.

But we have a history of both English common law and 400 years of US property law that has allowed the US to prosper. If this certainty of title, certainty of who owns the loan and who has the right to foreclose is not sorted out, then we weaken the rules. We weaken the rule of law.

That is why it is necessary for people who are concerned about the law to make sure that people are not stealing property that they cannot prove is theirs. If anyone thinks that the big banks were not involved in the original housing scam that resulted in foreclosurgate, please read this.

The Santelli Rant

It is my hope that people will no longer be distracted by Rick Santelli. He was the motivation for the Tea Party. I am not here to tell you all the Tea Party movement is bad. Some is good. I have argued that many of the leaders and funders of the Tea Party are bad.

The Santelli rant that motivated the Tea Party was a rant that was factually inaccurate. The Tea Party is founded on this rant, and that foundation is fatally flawed. Indeed, the Chicago and St Louis Tea Parties, the first Tea Parties formed on February 22, while the rant took place on February 19, 2009, cite Santelli's rant as their inspiration. Santelli said that those borrowers who were underwater were "losers". The tone was clearly derogatory as it means that the borrowers were poor quality people. The claim is actually inaccurate. I can prove that it is inaccurate. We must understand that Santelli is a paid employee of CNBC, a network that I watch and have observed defending the big banks over many years.

The tag "losers" implies that these people understood the nature of the ponzi that was going on around them, that they made a bet and lost. I would say that by far the vast majority did not understand it. Furthermore, the price appreciation of the houses was artificial based upon the easy money loans themselves.This was a typical Wall Street churn, but instead of programmed trading or derivatives trading pushing up prices, as is the case with oil and some food products, this churn was commanded by Wall Street but carried out by the borrowers.

People were told they could refinance later. They were told that real estate always goes up. They were told that if they didn't get in they would be locked out of the market. Almost every day on CNBC, David Lereah of the National Association of Realtors (NAR), was allowed to come on and say these things.

So then, this was a very sophisticated scam that included bankers, real estate professionals and mortgage professionals. Underwater borrowers were victims of a very sophisticated and lawless scam. The lawlessness centers on the corruption and taking away of underwriters, who have historically protected sound and honest banks. The underwriters were the law, the authority, of the banks regarding good loans and solvency. While not having sound underwriting violates no governmental law, it violates the principles that guide banking. Take away sound underwriting and you are guaranteeing bank insolvency and government bailouts of the biggest banks. That is exactly what happened.

Not only was it a sophisticated scam, but it was a scam that deliberately corrupted the underwriting process. These underwriters were important assets to banks because they always made sure in the past that people would not buy "too much house" based on their incomes. But with the new plan, the desire banks had for everyone to "qualify", so that they could get as many mortgages as they could to pool into the mortgage bonds sold abroad and to cities and counties, resulted in the massive ponzi that has caused foreclosuregate.

To repeat, because this is so important: The banks needed warm bodies to qualify for mortgages. So they took away the police of mortgages, the underwriters, and left it to buyers to determine how much house they could afford. Now,this is not good, because underwriters are well trained and knowledgeable about the process, but home buyers were not at all skilled at this process. The banks wanted it this way because they could show the investors that they would be getting a good investment, as prices artificially appreciated.

But it was a process built on sand, and the crash has now resulted in the real lawlessness of illegal foreclosures, called foreclosuregate.

People Behind on their Payments Should Be Foreclosed Upon Right? Maybe Not!

We must understand that the housing bubble drove prices up artificially. People would not have qualified for mortgages, or if they did they would not have been given equity loans, without proper underwriting. Many people would have had houses that they could afford, had this ponzi scheme not created the motive to drive prices up on the part of the banks.The ponzi was set up by the banks, starting with the Bank of International Settlements in Basel, which is the central bank to our Federal Reserve Bank and the other central banks.

So, most people who are being ousted, many without documentation, should never have been put in this position of humiliation in the first place. Banks are not supposed to behave like this. They are not supposed to grant loans willy nilly, drive up the price of houses to unsustainable levels, and then mop up through the foreclosure process after the storm that they caused.

It is my hope that people will understand, and give some slack to people who choose to fight the banks. They are doing all of us who own property a favor. They are strengthening the title process, and it must be done or your title may be clouded in the future!

I posted this at Seeking Alpha:

The author has a point, but is falling into a trap. While the banks should pay instead of the government, the banks won't let that happen. It doesn't do away with the truth, however, that the banksters did this. They took away the underwriting. They turned mortgage lending into payday loans, where there are no underwriting standards, just greed on the part of the lenders.

Take away the police of mortgage sanity, the underwriters, and you have a crisis. The BIS thought up shadow banking for one reason, to screw mainstreet and avoid regulation.



Important Parody. Warning: Strong Words in Subtitles!

Santelli Rant Flawed as He Calls Borrowers "Losers"

Foreclosure Fraud Explained

Mortgage Wars: How You Can Fight Fraud and Reverse Foreclosure
Amazon Price: $8.55
List Price: $15.95

Comments

Hello, hello, profile image

Hello, hello, 19 months ago

Thank you for an interesting hub. I am at the moment fighting for my house and home with all my might. Now GE Money whom my mortagage is with adding every month a £1200-1500 because I pay only the interest charge. Now to my mind when you pay pay the interesting charge that is it and the capital stays put which is fair enough but they adding this money every months to it which is wrong.

bgamall profile image

bgamall Hub Author 19 months ago

Yes, at some point you need to ask GE Money for the note. If they cannot produce it, some in the states have quit paying and are squatting in their houses. You cannot ever pay of this loan if they keep tacking the principle payment on to the back end of the loan. This is a loan doomed to failure, and of course, that was the plan of this scam in the first place. That is why they minimized the underwriters. In England they may have done some underwriting, but it was flawed as amount of payment they say you could afford for a loan jumped from 28 percent to 40 percent of total income. This is generally unsustainable.

Hello, hello, profile image

Hello, hello, 19 months ago

Thank you very much for a very good advice and help.

Micky Dee profile image

Micky Dee Level 4 Commenter 19 months ago

I danced on all your buttons even the funny button. But these people with their schemes are sad. There are no redeeming values in this "make money from nothing while stealing". God bless you and please keep us informed. Main Street and Main Stream may never "get it". But people cannot be treated as cattle. God bless!

dallas93444 profile image

dallas93444 Level 6 Commenter 19 months ago

Lots of geed information...

bgamall profile image

bgamall Hub Author 19 months ago

Thanks for your support guys. I get more angry everyday with the Santelli rant. It is a lie, and the borrowers who were left to their own devices is wrongheaded on the part of the banks. Millions of people think the banks are good when they became very evil by pulling their expertise from how much house people should buy. Santelli should be ashamed at the widespread spread of his disinformation that fails to hold the real culprits accountable.

TheMoneyGuy profile image

TheMoneyGuy Level 1 Commenter 19 months ago

bgamall,

You know the only thing I ever feel I have to apologize for is for working for AIG.

If I knew then what I know now, I would have never worked with them, but then I wouldn't know what I know now without them. What a catch 22.

Keep preaching the gospel brother, eventually with enough disciples a movement will form.

TMG

bgamall profile image

bgamall Hub Author 19 months ago

Again, I appreciate your encouragement, Moneyguy. It is a truth that this scam was really big, really beyond what all but a few could have figured out early on.

Ray Gollis 13 months ago

I left a comment on Facebook Profile, Click On My Name And Feel Free To Comment On Facebook. I agree with Foreclosuregate, Everyone wants to blame the Unions and The Unions Have Nothing To Do With It. It is just a Blame Game Going On The Political Fronts! Great Blog, I enjoy Reading Some Great Material! Keep Up The Good Work!!!! And Tell The Truth!!! Bgamall Take care, Ray Gollis

bgamall profile image

bgamall Hub Author 13 months ago

Thanks for the encouragement, Ray.

Submit a Comment
Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.



    • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
    • Comments are not for promoting your Hubs or other sites

    Please wait working