The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #118561   Message #2564231
Posted By: John on the Sunset Coast
11-Feb-09 - 03:42 PM
Thread Name: BS: Reverend Wright said, God Damn America'
Subject: RE: BS: Reverend Wright said, God Damn America'
This was, just a few minutes ago, sent to me by my son who lives in Europe, and who is as Hard Left on political issues as anybody at Mudcat, and ecomomic issues as well.

I have changed nothing except deleting previous and later personal stuff. Except I have put a clarification or two in brackets for clarity.

I believe the Michael Hudson, whom he quotes, was/is Dennis Kucinich's economic advisor:

More importantly, the more I see [it] the US stuff as a total scam, absolutely criminal. Geithner's plans should be taken to court -- they are a complete rip-off. And the bits about helping mortgage owners?? There's a sting in the tail. This excerpt is from today's Michael Hudson article in Counterpunch and is frightening (about the ``bad bank'' part). Unfuckingbelievable:


"The "Bad" bank that the Obama plan decided was not quite ready to be created this week will take the form of a public/private partnership (PPP), of the sort that Tony Blair made so notorious in Britain. It will be financed with private funds – in fact, with the funds now being given to re-capitalize America's banks (headed by the Wall St. banks that have done so poorly). Banks will use the money they receive from the Treasury for selling their junk mortgages at par – along with other bailout funding – to buy shares in a new $5 trillion institution. Something like Fanny Mae or Freddie Mac will be created and its bonds guaranteed (that's the "public" part – "socializing" the risk). The PPP institution will start with, say, $3 trillion in funds, and will have the power to buy and renegotiate the mortgages that have passed into the hands of the government and other holders. This "Middle Class Homeowner Recovery Trust" will use its private funding for the "socially responsible" purpose of "saving the taxpayer" and homeowners by renegotiating the mortgage down from its original $500,000 to the new $250,000 price.

"Here's the patter talk you can expect, with the usual Orwellian euphemisms. The "rescue the homeowners" PPP, a veritable Savior Bank, will go to a family strapped by its home mortgage debt and feeling more and more desperate as the price of its major asset plummets deep into Negative Equity territory. An offer will be made: "We've got a deal to save you. We'll renegotiate your mortgage down to $250,000, the current market price, and we'll also lower your interest rate to just 5.50 per cent. This will cut your monthly debt charges by nearly two thirds. You will escape from negative equity, and you can afford to stay in your home."

"The family probably will say, "Great."

"But they will have to make a concession. That's where the new public/private partnership makes its killing. Its Savior Bank, funded with private money that is to take the "risk" (and also the rewards) will say to the family that agrees to renegotiate its mortgage: "Now that the government has taken a loss while we've let you stay in your home, we need to recover the money that's been lost. So when the time comes for you to sell, or to renegotiate your mortgage, our Savior Bank will receive the capital gain up to the original amount written off. If we've made you whole, we want to be made whole too."

"In other words, if the homeowner sells the property for $400,000, the Savior Bank will get $150,000 of the capital gain. If the property sells for $500,000, the bank will get $250,000. And if it sells for more, thanks to some new clone of Alan Greenspan acting as bubblemeister, the capital gain will be split in some way. If the split is 50/50, then if the home sells for $600,000, the owner at that time will split the $100,000 further capital gain with the Savior Bank. The Savior Bank will thus make much more through its share of capital gains than it extracts in interest!

"This plan will be even better for Wall Street than the Greenspan bubble was! Last time around, it was the middle class that got the gains. To be sure, it really was the bank that got the gains, because mortgage interest charges absorbed the entire rental value. But at least homeowners had a chance at the free ride, if they didn't squander their money in refinancing their mortgages. And many did use their homes "like a piggy bank" to support their living standards."

I guess you don't have to be a Conservative to find heavy flaws in Pres. Obama's programs.

The entire article, "The Recovery Plan From Hell", What Wall Street Wants, By MICHAEL HUDSON is here--->

http://www.counterpunch.org/hudson02112009.html