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How Banks Are Enslaving Humans

pro4life

Member
First of all, whenever you take out a loan you are basically signing a contract to the bank that you will be her slave and she will be your master.

Banks give out loans that basically it doesn't have. For example if the bank has in cash form $5 million , it can loan up to $20 million. The government can raise or lower the limits. But as we all know banks have a big say in government, so it becomes just a whole big circle.



Algebraic equations:



$=Work

Work=Time x Energy



When the bank gives four people $5 million dollars each, that is fake $15 million thrown into the economy. This is money that doesn't really exist. It is like a master telling his slave to do something under the name of the master.



If $1 million= 1 unit of Work(W), then $ 20 million= 20 units of W



Initially the bank had 5 units of work, but assigned 15 units of work to 4 people by taking loans from the bank. That 15 units of work is basically giving work orders to its enslaved population who opt in for this kind of institution. The government helps in a way to force people to opt in for loan receiving.



Nevertheless, the 4 people will go out to work to create a profit and repay back the money it took from the bank and not only that but additional interest. What a heinous prank this is on the public. Not only they are paying back the 5 units of Work the bank originally carried(not even owned), but also the extra 15 units of work and an addition probably 4 units because of interest.



So at the end the bank clears out with 24 units of work, profit=19 units of work they received from their slaves.





Lets say one of their slaves wasn't able to pay back the units of work, the bank with the enforcement of the law can seize your previous owned articles without your consent.



In the end the bank doesn't lose anything but gains a lot.



It is a legalized form of Slavery!
 

oldbadger

Skanky Old Mongrel!
First of all, whenever you take out a loan you are basically signing a contract to the bank that you will be her slave and she will be your master.

Banks give out loans that basically it doesn't have. For example if the bank has in cash form $5 million , it can loan up to $20 million. The government can raise or lower the limits. But as we all know banks have a big say in government, so it becomes just a whole big circle.



Algebraic equations:



$=Work

Work=Time x Energy



When the bank gives four people $5 million dollars each, that is fake $15 million thrown into the economy. This is money that doesn't really exist. It is like a master telling his slave to do something under the name of the master.



If $1 million= 1 unit of Work(W), then $ 20 million= 20 units of W



Initially the bank had 5 units of work, but assigned 15 units of work to 4 people by taking loans from the bank. That 15 units of work is basically giving work orders to its enslaved population who opt in for this kind of institution. The government helps in a way to force people to opt in for loan receiving.



Nevertheless, the 4 people will go out to work to create a profit and repay back the money it took from the bank and not only that but additional interest. What a heinous prank this is on the public. Not only they are paying back the 5 units of Work the bank originally carried(not even owned), but also the extra 15 units of work and an addition probably 4 units because of interest.



So at the end the bank clears out with 24 units of work, profit=19 units of work they received from their slaves.





Lets say one of their slaves wasn't able to pay back the units of work, the bank with the enforcement of the law can seize your previous owned articles without your consent.



In the end the bank doesn't lose anything but gains a lot.



It is a legalized form of Slavery!

OK........ so banks are slavers.
Now that we've got that sorted out, how do you want to move forward?
A young couple want to buy a small home and start a family. ok?
How would you like this situation to be resolved?
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
OK........ so banks are slavers.
Now that we've got that sorted out, how do you want to move forward?
A young couple want to buy a small home and start a family. ok?
How would you like this situation to be resolved?
Easy!
They should become slaves to us landlords until they can afford to pay cash in full for their own home.

Ain't it just silly how people will call any obligation "slavery" today?
Actual slavery was (is) a horror far different from having to repay borrowed money or work in exchange for wages.
 

Stevicus

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
OK........ so banks are slavers.
Now that we've got that sorted out, how do you want to move forward?
A young couple want to buy a small home and start a family. ok?
How would you like this situation to be resolved?

There are plenty of easy solutions, actually.

A good place to start might be with price controls, so that house which might list for $150k could be reduced in price to $15k. The payments would be much cheaper and easier to manage for a young couple.

Another way might be to increase taxes on unused or vacant properties, as well as a special foreclosure penalty imposed on banks which foreclose on any properties. The penalty should be no less than 3x the market value of the property, ensuring that the banks would definitely lose a lot of money on every foreclosure they make.* The vacant property tax could then be doubled (quadrupled if it's a bank-owned property) for each consecutive month the property remains vacant. This will act as an incentive for property owners to get rid of their properties quickly and will result in downward pressure on real estate pricing, thus making housing more affordable for young couples just starting out.

Since there are 18,600,000 vacant homes in the USA and over 3 million homeless, there's obviously no housing shortage and it seems that the market is glutted.

*Edited to add: According to the link, banks have foreclosed on 8 million homes since 2007. If the aforementioned penalty had been applied, assuming an average property value of $100k (probably a conservative estimate), then 8,000,000 x 300,000 = $2.4 trillion which could have been used to reduce the national debt. It's about time that banks started pulling their own weight.
 
Last edited:

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
A good place to start might be with price controls, so that house which might list for $150k could be reduced in price to $15k. The payments would be much cheaper and easier to manage for a young couple.

Another way might be to increase taxes on unused or vacant properties, as well as a special foreclosure penalty imposed on banks which foreclose on any properties. The penalty should be no less than 3x the market value of the property, ensuring that the banks would definitely lose a lot of money on every foreclosure they make.* The vacant property tax could then be doubled (quadrupled if it's a bank-owned property) for each consecutive month the property remains vacant. This will act as an incentive for property owners to get rid of their properties quickly and will result in downward pressure on real estate pricing, thus making housing more affordable for young couples just starting out.

Since there are 18,600,000 vacant homes in the USA and over 3 million homeless, there's obviously no housing shortage and it seems that the market is glutted.
Of course, these proposed solutions would have some unintended consequences.....
- If banks are prohibited from foreclosure (by economic disincentive), then this would greatly decrease their ability to enforce loan agreements, thereby increasing their losses. This would lead to greatly reduced lending. And what remains would be at a higher cost to the borrower.
- Price controls are confiscation. This would make home ownership very unattractive, turning us all into tenants.
- Higher property taxes on vacant properties would lead to abandonment or removal of all improvements.

How do I know all this?
I am a recognized authority on losing money in real estate.
I'm a real estate developer, investor, manager & former licensed broker.
 

Stevicus

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
Of course, these proposed solutions would have some unintended consequences.....
- If banks are prohibited from foreclosure (by economic disincentive), then this would greatly decrease their ability to enforce loan agreements, thereby increasing their losses. This would lead to greatly reduced lending. And what remains would be at a higher cost to the borrower.

However, with lower prices and greater access to communal resources, reduced lending by the banks would have less relevance and less of an impact to the overall economy.

I actually disagree with the OP's contention that the banks are "slavers," but the fact remains that, either directly or indirectly, they have a great deal of control over the economy. Decreasing their ability to enforce loan agreements entails decreasing the level of power they hold in society. This would take power away from "the few" and put it back in the hands of "the many," which would lead to greater freedom and opportunity for a larger number of Americans.

- Price controls are confiscation. This would make home ownership very unattractive, turning us all into tenants.

I disagree that price controls would amount to "confiscation." It was used successfully during WW2 and continued into the post-war years, transitioning America's economy from the ravages and despair of the Great Depression into one of the most productive and prosperous economic booms in our history. Home ownership increased dramatically during the decades following WW2.

I think that price controls would actually make home ownership far more accessible and reduce the number of tenants overall. It would also mean that homeowners would own their homes outright much sooner, rather than be stuck with 20-30 year mortgage. They're still "tenants" until that's paid off and then they're free and clear (although sometimes not even then, depending on the kind of deed they have, whether they're part of an HOA, etc.).

- Higher property taxes on vacant properties would lead to abandonment or removal of all improvements.

It might also be an incentive to not let properties sit there vacant. In any case, if it's abandoned, the government can then seize it, sell it, and put it to a productive purpose. It's better than letting it sit vacant for months or even years just because the banks demand too high a "tribute." I can't see how that's any good for society.

How do I know all this?
I am a recognized authority on losing money in real estate.
I'm a real estate developer, investor, manager & former licensed broker.

Very well, although I'm thinking more in terms of what may be better for society as a whole, not just for one particular sector of it. Perhaps short-term losses in some sectors might be sustainable in return for long-term gains.

I'll defer to your expertise on the real estate industry, although my sense is that big banking is higher up on the food chain.
 

Twilight Hue

Twilight, not bright nor dark, good nor bad.
First of all, whenever you take out a loan you are basically signing a contract to the bank that you will be her slave and she will be your master.

Banks give out loans that basically it doesn't have. For example if the bank has in cash form $5 million , it can loan up to $20 million. The government can raise or lower the limits. But as we all know banks have a big say in government, so it becomes just a whole big circle.



Algebraic equations:



$=Work

Work=Time x Energy



When the bank gives four people $5 million dollars each, that is fake $15 million thrown into the economy. This is money that doesn't really exist. It is like a master telling his slave to do something under the name of the master.



If $1 million= 1 unit of Work(W), then $ 20 million= 20 units of W



Initially the bank had 5 units of work, but assigned 15 units of work to 4 people by taking loans from the bank. That 15 units of work is basically giving work orders to its enslaved population who opt in for this kind of institution. The government helps in a way to force people to opt in for loan receiving.



Nevertheless, the 4 people will go out to work to create a profit and repay back the money it took from the bank and not only that but additional interest. What a heinous prank this is on the public. Not only they are paying back the 5 units of Work the bank originally carried(not even owned), but also the extra 15 units of work and an addition probably 4 units because of interest.



So at the end the bank clears out with 24 units of work, profit=19 units of work they received from their slaves.





Lets say one of their slaves wasn't able to pay back the units of work, the bank with the enforcement of the law can seize your previous owned articles without your consent.



In the end the bank doesn't lose anything but gains a lot.



It is a legalized form of Slavery!
Don't do business with the bank.
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
However, with lower prices and greater access to communal resources, reduced lending by the banks would have less relevance and less of an impact to the overall economy.
Things don't work that way. In the steady state, existing real estate prices are determined by competition with new housing costs, which wouldn't see any big decrease. With no financing available, home ownership would simply become less available to ordinary folk. Barring rent control, homes would become rentals.
I actually disagree with the OP's contention that the banks are "slavers,".....
This is because you have an excellent command of the language.....& you're not crazy.
.....but the fact remains that, either directly or indirectly, they have a great deal of control over the economy. Decreasing their ability to enforce loan agreements entails decreasing the level of power they hold in society. This would take power away from "the few" and put it back in the hands of "the many," which would lead to greater freedom and opportunity for a larger number of Americans.
They don't have much control at all. Things they do which the OP dislikes are just a response to markets & to regulation (which requires foreclosure over renegotiation in many circumstances). And again, if gov imposes regulations which make it riskier & more costly to lend money, then lending goes down, & interest rates go up. Is this cost worth it just so people can stay in homes with loans they won't repay?
I disagree that price controls would amount to "confiscation."
Example:
I own an apartment building worth $1000K, based upon net income & capitalization rate (the market's expected rate of return).
If a rent control law proposed rolling back rents to some prior level, then this would reduce net income, thereby lowering the value of the property.
(We defeated a rent control ordinance a few years back which tried a roll back.)
A 20% roll back in gross income, would yield a larger reduction in net income, perhaps 30%, which would result in a $300K loss in value. While not a physical taking in the sense that title of a portion of the property transfers to the state, it is a taking of economic value, transferring it to the tenants. This will create a looming housing shortage, as developers see that anything they build will lose value over time.
It was used successfully during WW2 and continued into the post-war years, transitioning America's economy from the ravages and despair of the Great Depression into one of the most productive and prosperous economic booms in our history. Home ownership increased dramatically during the decades following WW2.
That would depend upon one's definition of "successful". If a portion of property is taken by government, those who favor takings would see it so. Those of us who respect property rights would see it otherwise.
I think that price controls would actually make home ownership far more accessible and reduce the number of tenants overall. It would also mean that homeowners would own their homes outright much sooner, rather than be stuck with 20-30 year mortgage. They're still "tenants" until that's paid off and then they're free and clear (although sometimes not even then, depending on the kind of deed they have, whether they're part of an HOA, etc.).
If you make it less profitable to build housing, then you'll create a shortage. On top of this, you're still confiscating some of the homeowner's value, which could make it impossible for them to sell if they don't net enuf to pay off their loan plus transfer costs.
It might also be an incentive to not let properties sit there vacant. In any case, if it's abandoned, the government can then seize it, sell it, and put it to a productive purpose. It's better than letting it sit vacant for months or even years just because the banks demand too high a "tribute." I can't see how that's any good for society.
Government would put it to a productive use? That hasn't worked in Detroit. Essentially, you're proposing enacting socialism by inducing owners to abandon private property.
Very well, although I'm thinking more in terms of what may be better for society as a whole, not just for one particular sector of it. Perhaps short-term losses in some sectors might be sustainable in return for long-term gains.
I'm thinking in broader terms too. The difference is that I understand the induistry well enuf to see that these proposed changes are naive & dangerous.
I'll defer to your expertise on the real estate industry, although my sense is that big banking is higher up on the food chain.
Big banking is not the problem usually, although my problems have been due to governement interference, eg, demanding foreclosure of current loans for regulatory reasons, prohibiting lenders from renegotiating loans with troubled borrowers, & by taxing the bejesus out of us when we do refinance loans in order to avoid foreclosure.
What I propse:
Government should stop incentivizing & subsidizing speculative buying of real estate. This will lead to treating home ownership as fulfilling personal nees, rather than a hedge against inflation, thereby preventing housing bubbles.
 

ChristineES

Tiggerism
Premium Member
I see it differently. When you borrow money from a bank, the interest is the money you pay for the service. In other words, you are paying for a service.
 

Stevicus

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
Things don't work that way. In the steady state, existing real estate prices are determined by competition with new housing costs, which wouldn't see any big decrease. With no financing available, home ownership would simply become less available to ordinary folk. Barring rent control, homes would become rentals.

Then what would happen to all of those empty homes, many of which were built, bought, and paid for decades ago? They could still be used. If what you said in your earlier post is true, the banks would just abandon them anyway, and the government could then take them over and sell them at a substantially lower cost and more manageable for the aforementioned young couple starting out. There would be no need for financing, since the new homeowner could just pay the government monthly installments until it's paid off.

This is because you have an excellent command of the language.....& you're not crazy.

They don't have much control at all. Things they do which the OP dislikes are just a response to markets & to regulation (which requires foreclosure over renegotiation in many circumstances). And again, if gov imposes regulations which make it riskier & more costly to lend money, then lending goes down, & interest rates go up. Is this cost worth it just so people can stay in homes with loans they won't repay?

It depends on what the cost is, who's paying it, and whether everyone is paying their fair share.

I won't speak for the OP, although I think the foundation of many complaints against big banking is rooted in the perception that they appear to be gaining the lion's share of the fruits of society's labors, while ostensibly doing the least amount of work in any given enterprise. A banker is neither an architect nor an engineer, and a bank is not a factory, farm, or mine. And they certainly didn't create the land on which these houses are built. At best, their function is administrative and bureaucratic - something that any government can do.

Of course, even administrators and bureaucrats deserve to get paid, but only at a level commensurate with the level of the value of their work. If they're perceived as doing the least amount of work, then those who see them getting the most money might have reason to suspect that dishonest or otherwise nefarious activities are taking place.

When considering some of the shady dealings involving banks and real estate which have become known to the public, I would say people have enough cause to be wary of the banking industry. I don't think we need to go overboard and condemn them all, but perhaps if they did a better job at policing their own, it wouldn't be necessary for the government to step in and impose these dread regulations they hate so much.

Example:
I own an apartment building worth $1000K, based upon net income & capitalization rate (the market's expected rate of return).
If a rent control law proposed rolling back rents to some prior level, then this would reduce net income, thereby lowering the value of the property.
(We defeated a rent control ordinance a few years back which tried a roll back.)
A 20% roll back in gross income, would yield a larger reduction in net income, perhaps 30%, which would result in a $300K loss in value. While not a physical taking in the sense that title of a portion of the property transfers to the state, it is a taking of economic value, transferring it to the tenants. This will create a looming housing shortage, as developers see that anything they build will lose value over time.

I think the question of what something is "worth" is the big issue here.

What seems apparent right now is that there's a shortage of affordable housing, yet there seems to be quite a glut of unaffordable housing, along with numerous boarded-up storefronts and an increasing number of empty lots in cities all across the country. I know of quite a few businesses around here which have had to close up - not because of taxes or government regulations, but because their rents were too high.

As far as the issue of price controls and confiscation, what it really comes down to is a difference of opinion over what something is actually worth. But if it's something needed for the benefit of the greater society, then the government has to consider what is actually affordable for the general population. That's why utility rates are regulated, among other things.

That would depend upon one's definition of "successful". If a portion of property is taken by government, those who favor takings would see it so. Those of us who respect property rights would see it otherwise.

I think property rights should be respected, although if property rights come into conflict with human rights, then I think human rights should prevail. In WW2, it was more of a national security concern, and the government just didn't have time to fiddle around. They had to lay down the law.

In a larger sense, government also has a role to maintain political stability and harmony in society, in addition to safeguarding the rights of its citizens. Keynesianism was kind of a happy medium between hardcore socialism and capitalism, taking the better elements of both systems and combining them into a system that worked quite well from the 1940s up until the 1970s. Once Friedman and his Chicago School came on the scene (with Greenspan and Reagan being among the disciples), they wanted to fix something that wasn't broken, and then they ended up breaking it.

And that's why we're in the mess we're in now.

If you make it less profitable to build housing, then you'll create a shortage. On top of this, you're still confiscating some of the homeowner's value, which could make it impossible for them to sell if they don't net enuf to pay off their loan plus transfer costs.

I'm not particularly worried about any housing shortage at any point in the near future. I can walk a mile in any direction from where I'm at now and find quite a number of vacant properties for rent or for sale.

My grandparents and many of that generation built their own houses, not because it was profitable - but because they wanted a place to live. My grandfather only had an 8th grade education, and he was able to do it. I'm not really worried about a housing shortage. People will find a way, and perhaps it may even lead to a resurgence of self-reliance with people building their homes with their own two hands. Programs like Habitat For Humanity do a lot of good, so perhaps a more concerted and widespread effort in that direction could work wonders.

Government would put it to a productive use? That hasn't worked in Detroit. Essentially, you're proposing enacting socialism by inducing owners to abandon private property.

I don't know much about what's being done in Detroit, although I've heard about their former mayor and a lot of the corruption of that city. Like many cities in the old Rust Belt, they've had a difficult history, especially in recent decades due to deregulation and outsourcing. A lot of things that used to be made in America are made in other countries, and this has taken its toll on cities like Detroit.

When you say that I'm "proposing enacting socialism," that seems like kind of a loaded term which can be interpreted any number of ways. In some ways, socialism might be seen as a hedge against revolution - a compromise which can forestall or prevent any political upheaval or chaos which is often associated with some of the more malignant regimes in history.

I'm thinking in broader terms too. The difference is that I understand the induistry well enuf to see that these proposed changes are naive & dangerous.

I'm also looking at some of the historical examples and the consequences of not nipping things in the bud before they get too far out of control.

As far as what's "dangerous," that's also a matter of perspective. If the net worth of a wealthy banker is reduced from $10 billion to $5 billion, I may not regard that as particularly "dangerous," although he might think that it's the end of the world and that the sky is falling. I would not share that perspective.

I can only draw upon the example of history and demonstrate that whenever there are large disparities between rich and poor, and when there are heavier financial and economic pressures exerted upon the working classes, if left unchecked and allowed to fester, there can be consequences which are indeed quite dangerous.

In many ways, I think it's the capitalists who are naive. I say this because, by and large, they speak in an abstract, ideological context, apparently unwilling or unable to understand the reasons why many of these horrible government regulations had to be enacted in the first place. They didn't just pop up out of nowhere because a bunch of socialists decided to stick it to the capitalists for no reason.


Big banking is not the problem usually, although my problems have been due to governement interference, eg, demanding foreclosure of current loans for regulatory reasons, prohibiting lenders from renegotiating loans with troubled borrowers, & by taxing the bejesus out of us when we do refinance loans in order to avoid foreclosure.

So are you saying if the government didn't interfere, there would have been fewer foreclosures? I think the government should work to try to reduce foreclosures so more people can keep their homes. That's what Obama said he was going to try to do, but just as with most political promises, they always fizzle into dust.

Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying the government is a panacea to all of this, and to be sure, a great deal of reform is needed within government itself. We need a better mechanism and system of checks and balances to root out corruption and eliminate abuses of power.

What I propse:
Government should stop incentivizing & subsidizing speculative buying of real estate. This will lead to treating home ownership as fulfilling personal nees, rather than a hedge against inflation, thereby preventing housing bubbles.

Yes, this makes sense. I suppose the ultimate issue rests with government anyway. Banks are only as powerful as the government will allow, but overall, the government has allowed quite a bit.
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
Then what would happen to all of those empty homes, many of which were built, bought, and paid for decades ago? They could still be used. If what you said in your earlier post is true, the banks would just abandon them anyway, and the government could then take them over and sell them at a substantially lower cost and more manageable for the aforementioned young couple starting out. There would be no need for financing, since the new homeowner could just pay the government monthly installments until it's paid off.
There's still financing of the purchase....you're just proposing that the government do it instead of the banks.
This whole thing is essentially a government takeover of the housing industry...too socialist (along with all the attendant problems) for me.
It depends on what the cost is, who's paying it, and whether everyone is paying their fair share.
I won't speak for the OP, although I think the foundation of many complaints against big banking is rooted in the perception that they appear to be gaining the lion's share of the fruits of society's labors, while ostensibly doing the least amount of work in any given enterprise. A banker is neither an architect nor an engineer, and a bank is not a factory, farm, or mine. And they certainly didn't create the land on which these houses are built. At best, their function is administrative and bureaucratic - something that any government can do.

Of course, even administrators and bureaucrats deserve to get paid, but only at a level commensurate with the level of the value of their work. If they're perceived as doing the least amount of work, then those who see them getting the most money might have reason to suspect that dishonest or otherwise nefarious activities are taking place.

When considering some of the shady dealings involving banks and real estate which have become known to the public, I would say people have enough cause to be wary of the banking industry. I don't think we need to go overboard and condemn them all, but perhaps if they did a better job at policing their own, it wouldn't be necessary for the government to step in and impose these dread regulations they hate so much.
I think the question of what something is "worth" is the big issue here.
What seems apparent right now is that there's a shortage of affordable housing, yet there seems to be quite a glut of unaffordable housing, along with numerous boarded-up storefronts and an increasing number of empty lots in cities all across the country. I know of quite a few businesses around here which have had to close up - not because of taxes or government regulations, but because their rents were too high.

As far as the issue of price controls and confiscation, what it really comes down to is a difference of opinion over what something is actually worth. But if it's something needed for the benefit of the greater society, then the government has to consider what is actually affordable for the general population. That's why utility rates are regulated, among other things.

I think property rights should be respected, although if property rights come into conflict with human rights, then I think human rights should prevail. In WW2, it was more of a national security concern, and the government just didn't have time to fiddle around. They had to lay down the law.

In a larger sense, government also has a role to maintain political stability and harmony in society, in addition to safeguarding the rights of its citizens. Keynesianism was kind of a happy medium between hardcore socialism and capitalism, taking the better elements of both systems and combining them into a system that worked quite well from the 1940s up until the 1970s. Once Friedman and his Chicago School came on the scene (with Greenspan and Reagan being among the disciples), they wanted to fix something that wasn't broken, and then they ended up breaking it.

And that's why we're in the mess we're in now.

I'm not particularly worried about any housing shortage at any point in the near future. I can walk a mile in any direction from where I'm at now and find quite a number of vacant properties for rent or for sale.

My grandparents and many of that generation built their own houses, not because it was profitable - but because they wanted a place to live. My grandfather only had an 8th grade education, and he was able to do it. I'm not really worried about a housing shortage. People will find a way, and perhaps it may even lead to a resurgence of self-reliance with people building their homes with their own two hands. Programs like Habitat For Humanity do a lot of good, so perhaps a more concerted and widespread effort in that direction could work wonders.

I don't know much about what's being done in Detroit, although I've heard about their former mayor and a lot of the corruption of that city. Like many cities in the old Rust Belt, they've had a difficult history, especially in recent decades due to deregulation and outsourcing. A lot of things that used to be made in America are made in other countries, and this has taken its toll on cities like Detroit.

When you say that I'm "proposing enacting socialism," that seems like kind of a loaded term which can be interpreted any number of ways. In some ways, socialism might be seen as a hedge against revolution - a compromise which can forestall or prevent any political upheaval or chaos which is often associated with some of the more malignant regimes in history.

I'm also looking at some of the historical examples and the consequences of not nipping things in the bud before they get too far out of control.

As far as what's "dangerous," that's also a matter of perspective. If the net worth of a wealthy banker is reduced from $10 billion to $5 billion, I may not regard that as particularly "dangerous," although he might think that it's the end of the world and that the sky is falling. I would not share that perspective.
Individual bankers don't have that kind of wealth. The losers would be the bank's shareholders.
I can only draw upon the example of history and demonstrate that whenever there are large disparities between rich and poor, and when there are heavier financial and economic pressures exerted upon the working classes, if left unchecked and allowed to fester, there can be consequences which are indeed quite dangerous.

In many ways, I think it's the capitalists who are naive. I say this because, by and large, they speak in an abstract, ideological context, apparently unwilling or unable to understand the reasons why many of these horrible government regulations had to be enacted in the first place. They didn't just pop up out of nowhere because a bunch of socialists decided to stick it to the capitalists for no reason.

So are you saying if the government didn't interfere, there would have been fewer foreclosures?
Yes.
I think the government should work to try to reduce foreclosures so more people can keep their homes. That's what Obama said he was going to try to do, but just as with most political promises, they always fizzle into dust.
Obama either lied or he was wrong. It's hard to tell which, because he had no real estate or business experience from which to judge the efficacy of his program. But he's also a politician, & they're prone to saying comforting things with no intention of following thru. I know many people who tried to qualify for his home loan program, but there was always some catch which disqualified most, eg, requiring a perfect payment record. This was why he kept re-booting it, but without much participation. Moreover, there were other things in place which encouraged foreclosure......
1) Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac (government run corporations) would not allow loan renegotiation of loans they underwrote.
2) The fed ordered banks to call in renewable loans which were out of profile (risky), forcing borrowers into forclosure because (at the time) no alternate financing was available.
3) In commercial real estate, we had to pay income tax on waived principal & interest, which forced new lenders to require that we had that much cash on hand as a condition of lending. Needless to say, this was impossible for many, leaving them in foreclosure.
Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying the government is a panacea to all of this, and to be sure, a great deal of reform is needed within government itself. We need a better mechanism and system of checks and balances to root out corruption and eliminate abuses of power.



Yes, this makes sense. I suppose the ultimate issue rests with government anyway. Banks are only as powerful as the government will allow, but overall, the government has allowed quite a bit.
Yours is a long post, so I'll answer it over the course of several edits.
 
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Stevicus

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
There's still financing of the purchase....you're just proposing that the government do it instead of the banks.
This whole thing is essentially a government takeover of the housing industry...too socialist (along with all the attendant problems) for me.

I think I was mainly offering an alternative to the banks. As someone suggested upthread, if a young couple starting out wanted to buy a house, they would have very few options other than going hat-in-hand to a banker for a loan. I can't see how giving that young couple more options could be a bad thing. Maybe the banks wouldn't like it, but they're the ones who started this mess in the first place.

Individual bankers don't have that kind of wealth. The losers would be the bank's shareholders.

Still, it never ceases to amaze me how uptight and panicky many upper class people can be about money. Unless they're in imminent danger of ending up on skid row or having to scrounge pennies and spare change just so they can eat another day, then they don't really know what "danger" means.

Yes.

Obama either lied or he was wrong. It's hard to tell which, because he had no real estate or business experience from which to judge the efficacy of his program. But he's also a politician, & they're prone to saying comforting things with no intention of following thru.

And just like most politicians, his training and education was in law. Lawyers and the legal profession in general are another part of the equation which should be mentioned. Real estate companies and banks most definitely have crews of lawyers who know how to game the system and find the loopholes which they can work to their advantage.

I know many people who tried to qualify for his home loan program, but there was always some catch which disqualified most, eg, requiring a perfect payment record. This was why he kept re-booting it, but without much participation. Moreover, there were other things in place which encouraged foreclosure......
1) Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac (government run corporations) would not allow loan renegotiation of loans they underwrote.

Was that something written into the law itself, or were the bureaucrats just acting unilaterally? I ask this because, while my experience is not so much in real estate, I do have experience with bureaucracies.

2) The fed ordered banks to call in renewable loans which were out of profile (risky), forcing borrowers into forclosure because (at the time) no alternate financing was available.

The Federal Reserve Bank is private and operates quasi-independently, even though the Chairman and Board of Governors are appointed by the President. It was designed that way, although there is some righteous criticism of that organization from both sides of the spectrum. But it's not directly organizationally controlled by "government" per se. Perhaps it should be placed under the Treasury Department - or abolished altogether. But again, I think the answer would be to restructure government.
 

Monk Of Reason

༼ つ ◕_◕ ༽つ
Those dastardly banks. Actually its people who create systems of economic inequality with little to no way to breech out of this system and advance themselves in terms of financial capabilities. America is a low runner when it comes to advancement up the economic latter compared to most other booming European countries. One of the key issues with it has to do with the income gap between the well off and everyone else. The banks of course facilitate this but in reality it is the corporations that have hijacked our economy.
 

farouk

Active Member
First of all, whenever you take out a loan you are basically signing a contract to the bank that you will be her slave and she will be your master.

Banks give out loans that basically it doesn't have. For example if the bank has in cash form $5 million , it can loan up to $20 million. The government can raise or lower the limits. But as we all know banks have a big say in government, so it becomes just a whole big circle.



Algebraic equations:



$=Work

Work=Time x Energy



When the bank gives four people $5 million dollars each, that is fake $15 million thrown into the economy. This is money that doesn't really exist. It is like a master telling his slave to do something under the name of the master.



If $1 million= 1 unit of Work(W), then $ 20 million= 20 units of W



Initially the bank had 5 units of work, but assigned 15 units of work to 4 people by taking loans from the bank. That 15 units of work is basically giving work orders to its enslaved population who opt in for this kind of institution. The government helps in a way to force people to opt in for loan receiving.



Nevertheless, the 4 people will go out to work to create a profit and repay back the money it took from the bank and not only that but additional interest. What a heinous prank this is on the public. Not only they are paying back the 5 units of Work the bank originally carried(not even owned), but also the extra 15 units of work and an addition probably 4 units because of interest.



So at the end the bank clears out with 24 units of work, profit=19 units of work they received from their slaves.





Lets say one of their slaves wasn't able to pay back the units of work, the bank with the enforcement of the law can seize your previous owned articles without your consent.



In the end the bank doesn't lose anything but gains a lot.



It is a legalized form of Slavery!


Welcome to the World of secularism where slavery is very alive and the entire system is nothing but manipulation.
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
I think I was mainly offering an alternative to the banks. As someone suggested upthread, if a young couple starting out wanted to buy a house, they would have very few options other than going hat-in-hand to a banker for a loan. I can't see how giving that young couple more options could be a bad thing. Maybe the banks wouldn't like it, but they're the ones who started this mess in the first place.
Still, it never ceases to amaze me how uptight and panicky many upper class people can be about money. Unless they're in imminent danger of ending up on skid row or having to scrounge pennies and spare change just so they can eat another day, then they don't really know what "danger" means.
And just like most politicians, his training and education was in law. Lawyers and the legal profession in general are another part of the equation which should be mentioned. Real estate companies and banks most definitely have crews of lawyers who know how to game the system and find the loopholes which they can work to their advantage.
Was that something written into the law itself, or were the bureaucrats just acting unilaterally? I ask this because, while my experience is not so much in real estate, I do have experience with bureaucracies.
The Federal Reserve Bank is private and operates quasi-independently, even though the Chairman and Board of Governors are appointed by the President. It was designed that way, although there is some righteous criticism of that organization from both sides of the spectrum. But it's not directly organizationally controlled by "government" per se. Perhaps it should be placed under the Treasury Department - or abolished altogether. But again, I think the answer would be to restructure government.
Have flu.
Enuf energy to say....
- Fed Reserve doesn't lend us folk money.
- Crews of lawyers to game things? There's a different perspective....we need lawyers to protect us from government & fraudsters (a very high cost of business).
- Easy solution for those who hate banks. Don't deposit money. Don't borrow.
 

pro4life

Member
OK........ so banks are slavers.
Now that we've got that sorted out, how do you want to move forward?
A young couple want to buy a small home and start a family. ok?
How would you like this situation to be resolved?

Very good question!

It all really depends on the environment. Just think about it for a minute. If your father dies and you inherit from him a 1 million dollar home. Am guessing you will not be able to live in that home because you will not be able to pay 30,000 tax/yearly on the property. So basically the property you inherited is actually not yours. Bare with me..

If that property your inherited is not yours who owns it actually? the ans: government.

A better environment which makes it easier for newly couples to acquire a property would be to eliminate property taxes as a whole. This will give a chance for young couple to inherit money/property from their parents.

Another solution is for the government to provide the basic needs for survival. Example: Shelter, water, food, clothing, and electricity. I believe those are rights and not privilege.
 
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