Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Sub prime suckers!

As the Washington Post reports today the other shoe is about to drop on the sub prime loan debacle and as I predicted it is going to fall on us taxpayers. In a cryptic speech yesterday Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson announced a "plan" to help bailout the sub prime loan borrowers and lenders. Details of which are supposed to be announce "later this week". Let's hope it is not in the dark of night here are some of the money quotes:

"Municipal housing authorities now offer mortgages at lower-than-average rates to credit-worthy, first-time buyers whose earnings are at or below the average household income levels, which vary by region. Cities and states can provide such advantageous loans because they sell tax-exempt bonds backing the mortgages to investors at lower rates, passing on the savings to homeowners. "

Translation: The loan risk will be slid off the banks portfolio and onto the taxpayers, Hola suckers taxpayers!

"The lack of details has made it hard to know how many homeowners the plan would help. In the past two years, about 2 million credit-challenged, or sub prime borrowers bought houses with mortgages that typically had interest rates of 7 to 8 percent. "

Credit challenged? What type of politically correct nonsense is this? The banks and lenders gave these loans out to these people. They are the ones responsible but, there is a slight of hand going on here and these "credit challenged" homeowners are about to become the problem of us taxpayers and not the lenders and banks who gave them the loans.

"Paulson's plan also faces a daunting task of figuring out who is eligible for mortgage relief, because many loans have little documentation of a homeowners income, said Douglas W. Elmendorf, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution"

You can just smell the lawsuits beginning from those who don't get relief. I'm not even going to go into the number of illegal immigrants who have gotten sub prime loans which is the eight hundred pound gorilla in the room that no one wants to talk about.

" Whatever plan Paulson presents, "they are going to need the nonprofit community," said Kenneth D. Wade, chief executive of NeighborWorks America, who spoke at the housing forum yesterday. "

Oh yeah this is a good one. Let the "non profits" run the show. You can see the corruption beginning. The banks will be off the hook and by the time anyone realizes how much money was ripped off from the taxpayers who are subsidizing this bailout it will be too late. Get ready to open your wallets sucker taxpayers!


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