But first a "parody" of something slightly related.
Wink, Wink, Nod, Nudge!
Wink, Wink, Nod, Nudge!
The final stages of the "Plot to Destroy the American Dream" unfolds, part one the prequel before the storm ...
The Location: "Top Secret" an undisclosed secret underground bunker somewhere in the DC Beltway, perhaps below the basement of the U.S. congressional building or in a lobbyist's bathroom shower.
Then the fateful message arrives, part two ...
"The Plot to Destroy the American Dream"
"The Plot to Destroy the American Dream"
Now back to Dave Lindorff's latest at This Can't Be Happening!
Because it is happening, already!
Because it is happening, already!
... There are calls in this election season for establishing a moratorium of some sort on home foreclosures, and a number of large banks have even voluntarily stopped, at least until after Election Day, on foreclosing on houses. That’s fine as far as it goes, but what about the millions of homes that have already been lost or stolen over the past several years?
Behind the talk of a legal moratorium on foreclosures, and the voluntary pause announced by some banks, lies the reality that many if not most of the mortgages in question are legally dubious. The homeowner getting a foreclosure notice frequently has no idea who the actual holder or holders of a mortgage may be, and banks that are trying to foreclose often themselves have no idea who actually holds title to the papers. This is because with the securitization of mortgages, they have been traded and re-traded, and often have even been diced up into pieces of mortgage-backed securities, so that the paper trail of ownership has been lost, perhaps irrevocably.
In some cases and some jurisdictions, federal bankruptcy courts have been tossing out foreclosure cases, saying that the foreclosing bank has no proof of ownership of the mortgage and thus cannot claim the property. It’s a little like the person who is caught speeding and shows up in court to contest the charge only to have it tossed out because the ticketing officer didn’t show up in court to make her or his case.For the rest of this article go to This Cant Be Happening!, the new independent alternative online newspaper.
The truth is that there is nothing particularly virtuous about the moratorium that Bank of America and some other national banks have announced on foreclosures. They are probably only holding off because they know that they are in trouble for fraudulently signing and processing foreclosure documents claiming title to properties that they actually cannot prove they have any claim to. (It has even been suggested that the banks are temporarily halting foreclosures because they are afraid that the glut of foreclosed homes will depress the value of other properties which are in their mortgage portfolios, hurting their own balance sheets.)
But the real question is, why is nobody mentioning the over 9 million homes that have been foreclosed on already in this longest and deepest recession since the 1930s...
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