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Jan 08 2009

Credit Crisis - What’s Next?

Published by lisam1364 at 10:32 am under Uncategorized Edit This

Hey all you real estate newbies,

I’ve been a bit lax over the holidays in keeping up with my blog, so I apologize about that.

I want to start off by wishing all of you an awesome New Year.  But I am afraid I am bringing a bag of mixed tidings.  Below, you will find an article that I believe is so very important for every middle class American to read.  I believe that the middle class American is about to become a thing of the past and this article shows the progression and why it is happening.

If you are a Democrat, you are gonna feel picked on reading the article, but as you get closer to the bottom, you’ll find he picks on Republicans as well.  I don’t think it’s the Democrats in general he’s pointing a finger at as much as he’s pointing out how this credit crisis came into being, who her feels the responsible parties are, that it isn’t fixed and won’t be fixed unless we hold those so named parties responsible and make them stop.

Changing direction and on a more exciting note, I believe the John Alexander course website has many good options for new investors as I have said in the past.  I do believe one of the problems with this website is that it is not easy to catch on if you are really new.  You have to work hard at it to understand what he is saying, there is no clear direction of where to start, and there is no definitions given for industry standard words to help you understand what is going on.

But there are other good courses out there that do not cost the amount of money the Alexander course does and that are much better at giving one a foundation in creative real estate and how it works.

One such free course is at http://tinyurl.com/r-e-newbie-course

I found this site over the holidays and was so impressed with it that I signed up so you will find this to be my affiliate site.  If you find the link does not work, just copy and paste it into your browser.  If that doesn’t work, write me a comment here at Today.com.

Even though this course is free, don’t take it for granted.  It is chock full of great information for anyone who is thinking about getting into real estate and needs to know how financing and deals work, including creative financing.

The main Alexander course is called the Inverse Purchase, which is a brilliant strategy for finding a good deal and reselling to an end buyer all in the same closing, end result, keeping your closing costs to a minimum.

One of the obstacles I have foreseen with the Alexander Inverse Purchase course is that he does not recommend any lenders for your buyers.  And as fast as the deal needs to take place you need a good lender waiting in the wings who is versed in creative deals to make the transaction happen.  (I’ll talk more about all of the Alexander courses in the days to come).  However, you will find just such loan programs for you and your buyers at the site where the free newbie real estate courses are.  Just visit URL http://tinyurl.com/clipperlns

This lender has a plethora of loan packages, including hard money loans, which I have found are being recommended for real estate investors.  I have actually worked with one of this lender’s resources, Sunset Mortgage, and I have found them to be fair and a good source for people with credit problems.  I’ll be sharing more about the variety of loan packages soon as well.

Newbies, I am about to start really looking for my first deal.  So get ready to take this ride with me.

My best to you,
Lisa

A Conspiracy of Imbeciles
Washington is playing you for a sucker
— shamelessly robbing you blind —
and they’re not just getting away with it;
they’re actually being rewarded for it
Here’s what you must do now
to hit them where it hurts
and quite possibly, to save your financial future

Dear Business-Builder,
I sincerely hope that by now, you fully understand how deeply all of us
here at The Total Package are committed to your success.
That’s why our team spends hundreds of hours every week and well
over one-hundred thousand dollars each year to bring you all the
business-building, response-boosting secrets this blog has become known
for. All for free.

But this issue isn’t about any of that. Because the fact is, there’s an
800-pound gorilla in the room — a crisis that overshadows and dwarfs the
importance of our individual careers and businesses.

I’ve avoided writing about this situation here for months. But now, it’s
getting to the point where it could hurt you. I can’t, in all good conscience,
stay silent and let that happen.

Now, I’m well aware that what I’m going to say will be controversial.
The truths I’m about to present will be welcomed by many of my readers.
Many others will be offended by these facts. For that, I can only apologize
in advance — and humbly suggest that if the truth offends you, it just
might be a hint that your point of view could benefit from an honest reexamination.

I’m also aware that a few readers will complain that this is another
“political” article — and that I should shut the hell up and stick to what I
know.

Fair enough: I know this stuff. True, I’m only a high-school drop-out;
self-taught in the ways of the world. But had my first immersion in this
very early in life.

At the age of 12, I could tell you all about the Hegelian dialectic, the
foundations of Fabian socialism and the tenets of free market capitalism.
Since then, I’ve devoured the works of Keynes, von Mises, Friedman and
many other legendary economists.

Plus, to create the promotions I do every day for financial clients, I’ve
spent my life studying and writing about how the economy and the
financial markets work. I have to eat, sleep and breathe politics and
economics just to do my job.

And although I have, by any measure, passed this 37-year long
college-level course in politics and economics with flying colors, I don’t
mind telling you that I spent several additional weeks researching and
documenting the particulars in this article.

Nevertheless, if it helps, you might try not thinking of this as a political
article or even an economic one. Think of it as an example of how a
veteran copywriter tackles a complex subject and makes it simple enough
and entertaining enough to engage the man on the street.

And no matter who you are, you would do well to heed the suggestions
to help you through this at the end of this article.
That said, let’s dive in …

They call this 800-pound gorilla the “Credit Crisis”
— and whether you realize it yet or not,
it is the single greatest financial catastrophe
of your lifetime …

• It has probably already cost you tens of thousands of dollars and
crippled your retirement – whether you know it or not: Depending
on where you live, this crisis has already slashed as much as 35% off
the value of your home. And since home equity is the #1 source of
retirement savings for most Americans, it is destroying the retirement
dreams of millions.

• It has cost investors and retirees and pension funds hundreds of
billions more: Skyrocketing mortgage defaults have killed great
American institutions like Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, AIG,
Washington Mutual and more … caused Washington to take control of
mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac … and gutted the share
value of nearly every U.S. bank and brokerage. Millions of people who
owned those stocks are now hundreds of billions; perhaps trillions of
dollars poorer.

• It has launched U.S federal deficits through the roof: The attempt
to save our dying institutions has caused the U.S. government to
spend $25 billion to rescue Bear Stearns … another $80 billion to save
American Insurance Group (AIG) … $200 billion to save Fannie and
Freddie … $165 billion on last spring’s stimulus package for
consumers … and in the next few hours — a few days at the most —
Washington will blow another $700 billion attempting to prevent a
financial meltdown that could surpass the Great Depression.
Altogether, that’s more than $1 trillion (one thousand billion dollars!)
spent so far in an attempt to fight this crisis … an attempt that may —
or may not — prevent, as Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson phrased
it recently, “The total meltdown of the entire U.S. financial system.”

• It is crushing the dollar and killing jobs: A global loss of confidence
in Washington’s ability to manage the U.S. economy combined with the
tidal wave of paper dollars Washington has created to fight this crisis
have contributed to the greatest crash in the value of the U.S. dollar in
ages and raised the specter of hyper-inflation.
Plus, as banks get stingier with borrowers out of sheer self-defense,
this crisis is crushing corporate earnings and share prices. Private
investors, retirees, pension funds and institutions have lost more than
$3 trillion in the past 12 months alone.

And it has stalled the U.S. economy in its tracks. America’s three
largest automakers are now begging Congress for $25 billion to help
them survive. Unemployment is careening higher; costing legions of
Americans the ability to provide for their families.

• It’s pushing the U.S. economy relentlessly towards what may well
be a new Dark Age: With that $1 trillion plus, plus, PLUS being added
to America’s skyrocketing budget deficits for 2008 and 2009, there’s a
real danger this crisis will also crush the bond market … send interest
rates exploding through the roof … and trigger yet another, more
intense phase of business failures, stock market losses and soaring
unemployment in the months ahead.

And make no mistake:
It’s not over yet. Not by a long shot.

Compared to the losses now being suffered in every part of America’s
$13 trillion economy, the $700 billion bank bailout that’s being rammed
through Congress is like putting a Band-Aid on a sucking chest wound.
And remember: That money is just to save the banks that have
already suffered huge losses from past mortgage defaults. Not even
Washington could print enough money to stop the massive NEW tidal
wave of mortgage defaults that’s taking shape now.

The monthly payments on more than six million adjustable rate
mortgages with an estimated face value of $1.2 trillion are poised to reset
in the months ahead. Some of the payments on these loans are expected
to more than double. And many of them on homes that are no longer
worth anywhere near what buyers owe on them.

That means millions more mortgage defaults are dead ahead no
matter what Congress does. Millions more repossessed homes will flood
onto the market and homeowners will suffer even more dramatic losses of
home equity as the glut of unsold properties hammers the value of our
homes into the ground.

And it means even greater pain for those who had counted on that
equity to see them through retirement.

It also means that lenders who are fighting for their companies’ lives
will have no choice but to continue raising credit requirements … slashing
credit limits … and denying loans to all but the most supremely qualified
applicants.

And that, in turn, means that every manufacturer, wholesaler, retailer
and service business in America is now facing the specter of plunging
sales, profits, share prices and in all too many cases, bankruptcy.

As those companies slash jobs or vanish altogether, millions of family
paychecks will vanish, too. Nearly every American family is now a
candidate for having to live off their savings; many are sitting ducks for
bankruptcy and poverty. And every American child and even the as-yet
unborn will suffer the consequences and pay the price for decades to
come.

But that’s not what really scares me …

What terrifies me … what wakes me in a cold sweat … is that the
single most corrupt, inefficient, incompetent and idiotic institution on face
of the planet is now trying to “fix” the problem.
And that especially frightens me because, the closer I examine the
roots of this crisis, the clearer it becomes that it was engineered almost
entirely by the very bumbling buffoons who are now charged with ending
it: The U.S. government.

And yet nowhere in the media do I see anyone even trying to uncover
the roots of this crisis. What caused it? How can we make sure it will
never happen again?
Instead, they simply report that …

• Banks and mortgage companies made loans to unqualified
borrowers.

• Banks then sold those loans to Fannie, Freddie and other financial
institutions.

• Fannie, Freddie and others then turned those loans into investment
vehicles – and sold them to governments, banks and investors both
here in the U.S. and worldwide.

• When all those unqualified borrowers inevitably defaulted on their
mortgages, these investments crashed in value.

• And when their investments crashed, they pushed institutions and
investors who had bought them to the brink – or in the case of Bear
Stearns, Lehman, Fannie, Freddie, IndyMac, AIG and many other
banks and investment banks, over the cliff.

But nobody I know is asking the obvious question …

“Why did so many smart lenders
make so many stupid loans
to so many people who couldn’t pay?”

It’s clear that lenders granted mortgages to millions of people with no
savings or down payment … no proof of income, too little income to qualify
and even no income at all … with no assets and with a record for welching
on every debt they’d ever incurred; who’d had flaked out on credit cards,
auto loans and pretty much every other loan they had ever been granted.

But why?

Why did lenders begin saying “YES” to these abysmal credit risks
instead of their standard, resounding “NO”?

Were the CEOs at the helm of these lending institutions merely
overpaid idiots who had no idea that loaning money to unqualified
borrowers — and worse; to borrowers who had proven time and time
again that they would NOT repay — would come back to bite them on the
arse?

Or were they simply financial masochists; intentionally bankrupting
their institutions and destroying their shareholders’ wealth just to get a
cheap thrill?

The answer, of course, is neither. They were simply doing what they
were told to do: What Washington forced them to do — under penalty of
law.

Here’s the simple, frank truth about this crisis
the mainstream media will never tell you …

Here’s a quick timeline — all easily checkable online:

Gee, thanks, Mr. Carter …
1977: Jimmy Carter rams the Community Reinvestment Act
through Congress. It all began 31 years ago when Billy Carter’s brother

Jimmy heard that some lenders were “discriminating” against low-income
borrowers …

Now, nobody I know has ever accused Mr. Carter of being the
sharpest crayon in the box … But he did know one thing: He was by-god
incensed — incensed, I tell you — at discrimination of any kind!

Make no mistake here: Oprah was NOT having problems getting
loans; nor were most of the millions of other hard-working, responsible
minority wage-earners in America.

And it’s not like credit was available to low-income white people with
no savings, no down payment and lousy credit histories.

But the facts, of course, didn’t matter to Carter. All that mattered was
that someone had used the “D” word, so something had to be done.

Political correctness demanded it.

And so, unfazed by the fact that lenders are supposed to be
discriminating when deciding who’s a good credit risk — and blissfully
unburdened by even the glimmer of an understanding of the catastrophic
long-term impact of his actions — Mr. Carter sprang into action.

And in no time flat, Jimmy’s Community Reinvestment Act – “CRA” for
short – had sailed through the Democratic Congress.

Suddenly, any lender caught denying mortgages and other loans to
low-income people faced serious penalties — including denial of
applications to open new branches, to do mergers and acquisitions and
other draconian measures.

1992: The Fed drops a bombshell. In what was then heralded as a
“landmark study,” the Boston branch of the U.S. Federal Reserve
announced that, despite the many pounds of flesh the CRA exacted from
lenders who turned down low-income loan applicants, mortgage
discrimination was still pandemic in the financial system.

So in a matter of days, the Boston Fed produced a manual for
mortgage lenders nation-wide stating, “Discrimination may be observed
when a lender’s underwriting policies contain arbitrary or outdated criteria
that effectively disqualify many urban or lower-income minority applicants.”

“Hey buddy – forget the beer.
You want a HOUSE?”

So what were these “arbitrary” and “outdated” criteria?
“Oh, little things,” said the Fed. “Like the size of the mortgage
payment relative to income. And the prospective borrower’s savings or
credit history.

“And don’t even bother checking to see if the borrower has any income
at all,” said the Fed. “If you do … and he doesn’t … and you deny the
loan … you’re a dirty, no good discriminator!”

“In fact, come to think of it,” the Fed mused, “if the applicant has
participated in a credit-counseling program, that means he’s now a
responsible borrower. Better grant him the loan or you’re toast!”

“Oh. And also? Welfare payments and unemployment benefits are
valid income so you’d better include them when qualifying loan
applicants.”

And so lenders did what they were told under penalty of law and the
surge of bad loans accelerated.

1995: Bill Clinton cranks it up a notch. Thirty-six months later, still
alarmed at the “discrimination” the Fed had uncovered and eager to
reward low-income voters for sending Bubba to the White House, Andrew
Cuomo — Clinton’s secretary of Housing and Urban Development —
investigated Fannie Mae for racial discrimination.

He “found” it of course — and quickly proposed that fully HALF of
Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s portfolio be made up of loans to low income
borrowers by the year 2001.

Next, Clinton introduced significant revisions to the Community
Reinvestment Act. In testimony prior to the new bill’s passage, Gene
Ludwig — Clinton’s Comptroller of the Currency — explained why reform
was so desperately needed:

“Fifteen years ago,” said Ludwig, “Congress passed the Community
Reinvestment Act. But the CRA has never achieved its full promise.

“The proposed reform package will channel billions of dollars a year in
new credit into America’s distressed communities.”

PLAIN ENGLISH TRANSLATION: Hey, lenders! You’re still not giving
enough money to people who can’t — or won’t — pay it back. This law
ensures that you will!

“Don’t want to give loans to lousy credit risks?
“I’ll fix you!”

Staggeringly idiotic. Right? But wait — the Clinton administration was
only getting warmed up.

According to the Los Angeles Times, the president and his Democratic
majority in Congress “… mandated that Fannie and Freddie increase their
purchases of mortgages for low-income and medium-income borrowers.

Operating under that requirement, Fannie Mae, in particular, has been
aggressive and creative in stimulating minority gains.”

Then, the Clinton administration added the final kicker: Fannie,
Freddie and the nation’s lenders would be allowed to turn these sub-prime
loans into securities and sell them to financial institutions and investors
world-wide!

Given the fact that Clinton enjoyed a Democratic majority in Congress
at the time, it should come no surprise that the revisions sailed through
Congress in no time flat.

1999: It’s working! Four years later, with low-income borrowing
skyrocketing, an enthusiastic Fannie Mae could be heard publicly
bragging about “the end of discriminatory lending in America.”
It even singled out its most shining example: A lender, it said, that
worked with community organizers and followed “the most flexible
underwriting criteria permitted.”

Previously, this lender had made only $1 billion in low-income loans.
By 1992, under the provisions of the Community Reinvestment Act, it had
loaned $80 billion to low-income borrowers. And thanks to Clinton’s
“refinements,” that firm’s loans to low-income borrowers were well on their
way to surging to over $600 billion.

“We just did what Congress told us to do. ”
– Angelo Mozilo, CEO Countrywide Financial

So, one might ask, “Who was this virtuous lender that had increased
its loans to low-income people a whopping 59,900% in just over one
decade?”

You guessed it: It was the very lender whose demise in 2007 turned
out to be the first domino to fall in the sub-prime lending mess:
Countrywide Financial.

2001: Bush administration warns of impending doom. In Bush’s
first year in office, the White House’s chief economist, N. Gregory Mankiw,
warned Fannie and Freddie’s loans to unqualified borrowers and other
complications at the two institutions were creating a huge risk for the
entire financial system.

Representative Barney Frank (D-MA) denounced Mankiw, accusing
him of having no “concern about housing.”

The New York Times fell into lockstep with its Democratic masters in
Congress, reporting that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were “under heavy
assault by the Republicans,” but that it was O.K. — because these entities
still had “important political allies” in the Democrats.

Congressional Democrats dug in their heels and made absolutely sure
nothing was done to address the impending crisis.

2003: The Bush administration tries to avert catastrophe a second
time. Alarmed by fraud and abuses that had been discovered at Fannie
and Freddie, President Bush repeatedly urged Congress to pass a bill
increasing oversight on the two companies.

The Bush administration had every reason to be worried: A report by
outside investigators had concluded that Freddie Mac manipulated its
accounting to mislead investors. Experts were warning that Fannie Mae
was not adequately hedging against rising interest rates.

“These two entities – Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac –
are not facing any kind of financial crisis.”
Representative Barney Frank (D-MA)
Arguing against Republican attempts to reform the two corrupt
mortgage lenders in 2003.

Bush’s Treasury Secretary, John Snow, told the House Financial
Services Committee, ”There is a general recognition that the supervisory
system for housing-related government-sponsored enterprises neither has
the tools, nor the stature, to deal effectively with the current size,
complexity and importance of these enterprises.”

After the hearing, two Republican congressmen — Representative
Michael G. Oxley of Ohio, chairman of the Financial Services Committee,
and Senator Richard Shelby of Alabama, chairman of the Senate Banking
Committee — announced their intention to draft legislation based on the
administration’s proposal.

”We have seen in recent months that mismanagement and
questionable accounting practices went largely unnoticed” by the
independent agency that regulated Fannie and Freddie, said Oxley.

But once again, congressional Democrats and their lackeys in the
media scoffed at the Bush plan to save Fannie and Freddie. Some went
so far as to point at the plan as proof that Republicans hate minorities and
poor people.

And Barney Frank (D-MA) now the Chairman of the powerful House
Financial Services Committee — the sack of excrement in a suit you see
grandstanding on TV as Congress mulls this newest bail-out — denied
there was any crisis at all.

“These two entities — Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,” declared Frank,
“are not facing any kind of financial crisis.”

And so, yet another opportunity to avert the crisis that now is —
according to Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson — threatening to
“completely destroy the entire U.S. financial system” was lost.

The simple truth
Despite everything the Democrats in Congress are telling you now …
Despite all the mindless spin the mainstream media is trying to shove
down your throat on the six-o’clock news …

Despite all the talk about how “greedy lenders and incompetent CEOs
and lax government regulation” caused this crisis …
Despite the ridiculous claims that only increased government
regulation and intensified congressional oversight can end the crisis
(regardless of the fact that political regulation and oversight caused it) …

And despite the lies congressional Democrats and their presidential candidate
are telling in an unbelievably hypocritical attempt to hang this crisis on the
Bush administration (and by extension, on John McCain) …

The simple truth is, this crisis was engineered and implemented almost
entirely by Democrats.

The more frightening truth is, they once again control Congress — just
like they did when the laws were passed that created this crisis.

And the terrifying truth to anyone who cares about his family’s financial
security is that they will probably also control the White House, come next

January.
The CRA — the idiotic law that created this crisis —
also made Obama who he is today.

“Why is that so terrifying?” you ask …
Consider this: According to his autobiography, Obama spent his years
after college and before he ran for the Illinois Senate becoming an expert
in real estate law and fair housing while working as a “community
organizer.”

What he was really doing was blackmailing Chicago lenders into
throwing money at his low-income constituents. And the club Obama
used to bludgeon banks into submission — into granting loans to people
with no down payment, no job, no income and lousy credit histories —

“The Government Did It”
“Through the stick of the CRA and the
carrot of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
the Fed created the mortgage market
debacle.”
– Economist Yaron Brook
was called … you guessed it … “The Community Reinvestment Act of
1977.”

Now, to anyone who has even the glimmer of an understanding of how
Washington works, it should come as no surprise that Mr. Obama was
well-rewarded for his untiring efforts to force banks to throw money at
unqualified borrowers — and it should also come as no surprise that those
rewards flowed from the two quasi-private companies that benefited most
from the explosion in sub-prime  mortgages: Fannie and Freddie.

Recently, we learned that of the hundreds of political contributions
made by Fannie Mae over the last couple of years, Obama received the
second highest amount — second only to the Chairman of the Senate
Banking Committee, Christopher Dodd (D-CT).

Other Democrats were also well-rewarded for this catastrophic
explosion in sub-prime  lending with lucrative jobs at Fannie and Freddie.
And four of these former Fannie and Freddie big shots — former CEOs
and a board member of these corrupt institutions — have been on the
Obama bandwagon since Day One:

1. Franklin Raines, former Clinton administration budget
director who earned $90 million in his five years as Fannie
Mae CEO, from 1999 to 2004 — has been called by the
Obama campaign several times for advice on (believe it or not)
housing and the economy according to The Washington
Post …

2. James Johnson, former aide to Democratic Vice President
Walter Mondale, who earned $21 million in his last year alone
serving as Fannie Mae CEO from 1991 to 1998 — was
appointed to head Obama’s vice presidential selection
committee …

3. Jamie Gorelick, former Clinton administration deputy
attorney general, who earned $26 million as vice chair of
Fannie Mae from 1998 to 2003 — has been mentioned as a
prime candidate for a possible cabinet position in an Obama
administration by insiders, and …

4. Rahm Emanuel, former Senior Advisor in the Clinton
White House served on the Board of Directors for Freddie
Mac where he is said to have opposed every reform proposed
by the Bush Administration. Emanuel is credited with being
the one man responsible for rallying support for Obama early
on among Congressional Democrats.

Take a good, long look at those names and faces: These, along with
the aforementioned Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, Barney Frank and
Christopher Dodd, are the eight people who created this crisis and who
profited the most from it — both politically and financially.

Now, their abysmal economic ignorance, political ambition and
mindless greed are killing great American companies … robbing millions
of their home equity and their paychecks … driving the federal deficit
through the roof … and pushing us to the brink of the greatest financial
catastrophe in U.S. history.

Plenty more blame to go around
Now, I make it no secret that I’m no fan of either one of the major
political parties.

Like Reagan, I believe that government isn’t the solution; it’s the
problem. And by studying history, I’ve learned that whenever Washington
attempts to solve any problem, it’s a slam-dunk it will only wind up creating
two, three or even more far more serious ones.

Even the most casual observer would conclude that as a class,
politicians in both parties are notorious for their inability to locate their own
arses — even if allowed to use both hands. Until now, we have tolerated
them because they — and the massive, bloated, abusive, oppressive
government they have created — have been merely a dead weight on us.

Not now. Now, there’s a very real risk that their lust for power, political
ambition, corruption and cowardice will cost you your job, your home, and
any prospects for a prosperous life.

The ONLY way to limit the damage they do to you, to me and to every
other American is to keep Washington on a short leash … prohibit them
from dabbling in matters they have no business fooling with … and to
strictly limit the size and scope of the government.
“A pox on both their houses,” is my studied philosophy.

So I don’t mind telling you that plenty of Republicans bear guilt for this
crisis as well.

Many are guilty of not having the guts to scream bloody murder while
these mindless laws were being passed …

Of not taking a stand when Bush tried not once but twice to head off
this crisis at the pass …

Or worse; voting with the Democratic majority for laws that elevated
populism and political correctness above financial prudence.

And sure: Many CEOs at our distressed or defunct financial
institutions are guilty of the same things.

And of extending the same courtesies the government demanded for
low-income borrowers to the middle class; luring millions of others into
more house than they could afford with no-down-payment loans and
adjustable rate mortgages with irresistibly low interest rates.

Plus, the way I see it, there’s no reason why anyone with an IQ larger
than my shoe size (11) would invest a penny in mortgages signed by
people who had no means or no intent of repaying them.

And of course, millions of Americans are also complicit for allowing
themselves to be seduced into taking on more debt than they could ever
repay.

But make no mistake: It took two Democratic presidents working with
Democratic majorities in Congress to engineer this crisis. Without the
disastrous “fair housing” legislation imposed on this country by Carter,
Clinton, Frank, Dodd and other Democratic lawmakers, this crisis would
never have happened.

And never forget; it was the Democratic Party that killed not one but
two attempts by the Bush administration to stop this credit catastrophe
before the first sub-prime  lender bit the dust.

This is what happens when hysterical race-baiting and populist politics
are allowed to subvert prudent business practices.

This is what happens when despicable politicians are allowed to buy
votes from low-income people with laws that endanger your financial
survival.

This is what happens when imbeciles — most of whom have never
held a real job or have had to make payroll in a company of their own —
are allowed to tamper with the economy.

And now, these same clowns are about to make matters worse
… AGAIN!

Unbelievably, these same drooling morons — the very people who
caused this mess in the first place — are now charged with saving our
economic system from certain destruction.

Because they are the majority party in Congress, the very Democrats
who engineered this crisis — most notably Senate Banking Committee
Chairman Christopher Dodd (Fannie Mae’s fair-haired boy and #1
beneficiary of its political contributions) and House Financial Services

Committee Chairman Barney Frank (who blocked every early attempt to
avoid this crisis) — are running the show.  And if the current state of the presidential polls are any indication, our next vice president — Obama’s running mate, Joe Biden, a loyal Democrat while this disaster was being created in Congress — will be available to break any ties on future Senate votes.

And of course, Obama himself — the self proclaimed
“Candidate of Change” — who has never attempted to change
or reform one, blessed thing in his entire life …

Who, much to the contrary, shamelessly exploited Chicago’s
notoriously corrupt “pay-to-play” political system for all it’s worth and also
built his entire political base on the very law that created this crisis …
… Will soon be lighting up his beloved Marlboros in the Oval Office.

So …
• The next time you hear that your home equity
has vanished into thin air and that your house
is now worth less than you paid for it; maybe
even less than you OWE on it …

• Or find that your credit limit has just been slashed or you get rejected when you apply for a loan …

• Or check your stock portfolio or retirement plan only to find that it’s a
mere shadow of what it once was …

• Or discover to your horror that our massive federal deficit has gutted
your buying power and driven the price you pay at the supermarket or
gas station sky high …

• The next time you hear that a friend or family member has been laidoff,
is teetering on the brink of bankruptcy and in danger of losing
everything he or she has ever worked for …

• The next time you want to kick the dog because your newly
nationalized mortgage or insurance company is suddenly exhibiting all
the competence of the U.S. Post Office and the sensitivity of an IRS
collection agent …

• And the next time Barney Frank or Charlie Rangel or Joe Biden or any
other one of these unrepentant, hypocritical scoundrels tells you he’s
raising your taxes because you’re not shouldering “your fair share” of
the $1 trillion burden his blundering has saddled you with …

You know who to thank.

The moral of the story:
If you trust Washington to save you; you’re
screwed.

If this crisis proves anything, it’s that these people don’t give a good
goldarn about you. You’re not rich enough to bail out or poor enough to
be given a hand-out.

So you, my friend, are on your own.
There are certain things you can do to protect yourself, though. And
with this crisis unraveling at a breakneck pace, there’s no time to waste.
Here’s a checklist I hope will come in handy …

1. Rake in every dollar you can. First and foremost, it is absolutely
critical that you do everything in your power to increase your income while
you still can. Pull out all the stops in your business. If you work for
someone else, work overtime or even multiple jobs if you have to. Sell
stuff you don’t need or don’t use. Scrape together all the dollars you can.

2. Save every dollar you can. Guard every one of them like a
junkyard dog. You’re going to need them. Go through your family budget
with a fine-toothed comb and ruthlessly, unapologetically slash every
unnecessary expense. The more you save now, the more you’ll have to
see you through when the ca-ca hits the air conditioner.

You might also want to check with a financial advisor to explore ways
to cut every payment you have to the bone. Because when the trillions of
counterfeit paper dollars Washington’s now creating out of thin air begin
working their way through the economy, you’ll probably be able to repay
every debt you owe with dollars that are worth a fraction of what they’re
worth today.

Also — whether you realize it or not, your single largest monthly
expense is NOT your mortgage or your car or your health insurance or
anything else. Your largest financial burden by far is the government —
the federal, state and local taxes you pay dwarf every other expense you
have.

So seeing a qualified tax advisor about ways to make absolutely sure
you’re paying the absolute minimum required by law would be a stellar
idea. Be sure not to forget your property taxes. If your home is declining
in value, you may be able to appeal for a downward adjustment that could
save you thousands.

3. Watch your bank accounts like a hawk. Whatever you do, do
NOT assume that your bank is safe just because this most recent bail-out
proposal is likely to become law.

Most banks have already suffered massive losses. Many are wounded;
bleeding; struggling to survive. And many still have huge amounts of toxic
loans in their portfolios that are steadily eroding their asset bases even
further.

The bail-out is NOT going to replace the money they originally paid to
buy those investments — and that means they’ll be booking even more
losses as they dump those investments into the U.S. Treasury in the
months ahead.

If you have more than $100,000 in a bank, make absolutely sure that
no single account at any one bank contains even a single dollar more than
the limit that’s insured by the FDIC. If you’re not clear on the rules, check
out the FDIC website at WWW.FDIC.GOV

4. Program your business for success in this tough environment.
If you are starting a business or are considering expanding your business’
product line, carefully consider this new economic environment when
setting your strategy.

Think especially hard about recession-proof products and services —
the things people can’t live without. Seriously consider products and
services that cater to the very wealthy who are likely to be least affected
as this crisis unfolds. Also consider things that might help beleaguered
wage-earners, consumers, taxpayers, and other business owners get
through this alive.

5. Expect stocks and mutual funds to plunge. If you own stocks —
either directly, in a mutual fund or ETF or through a retirement or pension
plan — you should seriously consider the risk you’re taking with that
money.

Some analysts, including the ones who have been the most accurate
in their warnings about this crisis from the get-go, are warning that, with
the economy and stock market now as nervous as a hooker at a snakehandler
convention, the next chunk of bad news that hits the wires could
be the straw that breaks the market’s back.

And please — for all our sakes:
HELP US GET THE WORD OUT!

Send this article — in its entirety — to everyone you know. Post it or
link to it on every blog, every forum you can think of. Send more links to
everyone on your Contacts List and to reporters at the newspapers you
read and the TV networks you watch.

Write letters to both of your Senators and Congressperson and urge
everyone you know to do the same.

Demand that they repeal the Community Reinvestment Act that
caused this crisis (yes, it’s still on the books and still being enforced!).
Tell them you know what they did to cause this crisis.

Demand that criminals in Congress who actually DID cause this crisis
suffer at least as distressing a fate as the corporate CEOs they’re
scapegoating.

The sooner Washington gets the message that we’re on to them and
that we’re not going to take it any more, the sooner things can begin to
change.

This is YOUR financial future we’re talking about here. If Washington’s
power brokers have proven anything, it’s that they can NOT be trusted to
do the right thing until millions of us rise as one and shout “Enough!”
Yours for Bigger Winners, More Often,

Clayton Makepeace
Publisher & Editor
THE TOTAL PACKAGE™

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