Obama to commit up to $100 billion of the $350 b TARP financial bailout fund to help Struggling Homeowners »

Posted By altnrg 9 months, 2 weeks ago in News

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Incoming President Barack Obama will allocate up to $100 billion of the $350 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program financial bailout fund for foreclosure prevention.

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  • 100%
    ekklesiawarrior9 months, 2 weeks ago

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    Or is this putting money in a dark hole?

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  • 71%
    bks1mcs29 months, 2 weeks ago

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    Many of these homeowners who are struggling are people who purchased homes they could not afford with the hope that the prices of homes would continue to rise and they would have equity that they could cash out.

    Well guess what. The housing bubble burst and those people are now in trouble. I am sorry about that but there was no one to bail me out of all of my troubles. I have made some business decisions that have cost me hundreds of thousands of dollars (way more money than I have now) and I had to pay the price.

    We cannot depend on the government to bail us out of every stupid decision that we make. We must be held accountable for our own actions. Not just home owners but banks, corporations, Wall Street, etc.

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  • 60%
    bks1mcs29 months, 2 weeks ago

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    Why are we bailing out anyone? Many of these homeowners are people who purchased homes that they never could have purchased to begine with. The lax lending laws created by the Democratic congress enabled people to purchase homes that were beyond their means.

    These people purchased these homes hoping that housing prices would continue to rise and they would have lots of equity in their homes or that they would be able to cash out and make money.

    Guess what.... the housing bubble burst (just like everyone was predicting, but no one was listening). Now these people are in trouble. I am very sorry for them. My husband and I lost $250K on our houses and no one bailed us out. I did not ask them to and I did not expect them to. We were responsible for our own decisions and actions.

    Let's stop expecting the government to finance our foolish decisions and we really can get this country back on track.

    There should be no bailouts for anyone, not homeowners, not corporations, not banks, not Wall Street.

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  • 100%
    most_reasonable9 months, 2 weeks ago

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    Notice the price of oil going higher, even with the lessening of the tensions in the middleast?

    I just found out that the banks are buying oil futures in a big way. The futures permit a large leverage, about 8-1. Therefore for a $1 you can commit to owning $8 with of oil futures.
    With 100 billion in Tarp money available, the banks can play the same game that brought us into this disaster. If they bet wrong, just ask for some more money.

    And of course the higher oil prices will undercut any effort to restart the economy.

    Call your reps and demand that the use of Tarp money be restricted.

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  • 100%
    beavith19 months, 2 weeks ago

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    you said twice what you could've said once.

    the good news, you're right both times. : -)

    there isn't enough money available to bail everyone out. the GDP is $13T. CDO and CDS liability is between $40-60T. by any measure, the system is broke. what the heck is $1T (or $2T) going to do? we're throwing it away by trying to save the unsaveable.

    if this is plan A, we need a plan B.

    anyone see the WSJ today? Barney Frank gets exposed for 'putting in a good word for one of his local banks.'

    i'm shocked i tell you. shocked! (eyes rolling)

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  • 0%
    FredSmilek9 months, 2 weeks ago

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    All of these bailouts will = a weaker dollar and hyper inflation.
    Fred Smilek
    Fred Smilek is the acting president of the Society to Save Endangered Species
    Website- http://Sites.google.com/site/Fredjsmilek/

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  • Neutral
    Patrhone9 months, 2 weeks ago

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    I don't know why people have a problem with nationalizing the Banks. The taxpayer is paying all these bailouts which is being distributed by the Government, which is in effect acting as a national bank.

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  • 75%
    BB649 months, 2 weeks ago

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    This is as stupid as bailing out the big 3. We shouldn't be rewarding people for either lying on the loan applications or being stupid. I could see insisting several big banks that took bailouts to start using that money for loans but this is a bad idea.

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  • 100%
    aceofspades19 months, 2 weeks ago

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    way before any legislation that allowed easier to get financing , the FHA insured mortgages for those who would have had problems getting financing & mortgage insurance. When defaulting seemed imminent, the agency would try to set up deferred payment plans. you know what? most of those marginal borrowers ended up in foreclosure anyway. Bailing out homeowners in trouble with public funds is an exercise in futility.
    Many of those losing their homes might need public assistance in the short haul, but eventually they will survive.
    Bailing them out is only forestalling the inevitable.

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  • Neutral
    simonsez9 months, 2 weeks ago

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    We are in the midst of a panic and doing things we will look back on and wonder "what were we thinking"?

    Obama is already moving too fast, in my opinion.

    Slow down and develop a practical plan ...

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    • Neutral
      simonsez9 months, 2 weeks ago

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      I have this feeling that Obama likes being liked. I hope that doesn't get in the way of sound government. The Legislature is loaded with sheep now, so anything could happen if you put a rosy face on it.

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      • Neutral
        csaw29 months, 2 weeks ago

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        He would bail homeowners out. He raked in a six-digit figure by supporting the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac bunch who were pulling their crooked maneuvers to suck those in who couldn't afford a house payment if it was less than $200.00 a month. How much will he get from this "bailout"? Maybe if I just quit paying my bills, I can get a Democratic handout.
        We're about to be living in hell land led there by Osama bin Obama. Mark my words.

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