The Social Deterioration of Funny, Floating Money

"Most of our important relationships with other humans are monetary in nature. We have employment contracts, lending contracts, pension agreements, annuities, welfare, taxes, and, more broadly speaking, the prices paid for goods and services. The basis for all of these relationships is money. When the money becomes 'immoral,' all of these relationships also lose their moral character. Instead of investors, builders and producers, we become traders: trading assets; trading jobs; trading money for favors; trading spouses; trading our supposed 'beliefs,' for short-term gain in a zero-sum, and in fact negative-sum society." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThe Social Deterioration of Funny, Floating Money

The Social Deterioration of Funny, Floating Money

"Most of our important relationships with other humans are monetary in nature. We have employment contracts, lending contracts, pension agreements, annuities, welfare, taxes, and, more broadly speaking, the prices paid for goods and services. The basis for all of these relationships is money. When the money becomes 'immoral,' all of these relationships also lose their moral character. Instead of investors, builders and producers, we become traders: trading assets; trading jobs; trading money for favors; trading spouses; trading our supposed 'beliefs,' for short-term gain in a zero-sum, and in fact negative-sum society." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThe Social Deterioration of Funny, Floating Money

Fannie To Allow Mortgage Walkaways by On-Time Borrowers

"Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac will let some borrowers who kept up payments as their homes lost value erase their debts by giving up the properties, helping Americans escape underwater loans while adding to losses at the mortgage giants bailed out with $190 billion of taxpayer money. Non-delinquent borrowers with illness, job changes or other reasons they need to move will become eligible in March to apply for a so-called deed-in-lieu transaction that erases the shortfall between a property’s value and the size of its mortgage." Continue reading

Continue ReadingFannie To Allow Mortgage Walkaways by On-Time Borrowers

Fannie To Allow Mortgage Walkaways by On-Time Borrowers

"Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac will let some borrowers who kept up payments as their homes lost value erase their debts by giving up the properties, helping Americans escape underwater loans while adding to losses at the mortgage giants bailed out with $190 billion of taxpayer money. Non-delinquent borrowers with illness, job changes or other reasons they need to move will become eligible in March to apply for a so-called deed-in-lieu transaction that erases the shortfall between a property’s value and the size of its mortgage." Continue reading

Continue ReadingFannie To Allow Mortgage Walkaways by On-Time Borrowers

Get ready for Washington’s “Automatic IRAs”

"The basic gist is that businesses with 10 or more employees would be required to start funding a new form of individual retirement account. While businesses that already have retirement plans would be exempt, it’s estimated the legislation would affect about 40 percent of the U.S. workforce. Employees would be automatically enrolled. What kind of investment choices would be offered? That’s not clear yet, though Mr. John — the initial creator — has said: 'There could be an R-Bond account at Treasury for first-time savers, but that money would be rolled into private sector accounts once the individual accounts reached a certain size.'" Continue reading

Continue ReadingGet ready for Washington’s “Automatic IRAs”

Get ready for Washington’s “Automatic IRAs”

"The basic gist is that businesses with 10 or more employees would be required to start funding a new form of individual retirement account. While businesses that already have retirement plans would be exempt, it’s estimated the legislation would affect about 40 percent of the U.S. workforce. Employees would be automatically enrolled. What kind of investment choices would be offered? That’s not clear yet, though Mr. John — the initial creator — has said: 'There could be an R-Bond account at Treasury for first-time savers, but that money would be rolled into private sector accounts once the individual accounts reached a certain size.'" Continue reading

Continue ReadingGet ready for Washington’s “Automatic IRAs”

Oklahomans Going It Alone Against Smart Meters?

Whether or not we are personally concerned about the possible privacy, security or health issues that surround smart meters, we all should be concerned when our government is not being properly responsive to those who have serious objections to having a smart meter installed on their property or homes Continue reading

Continue ReadingOklahomans Going It Alone Against Smart Meters?

Banks, at Least, Had a Friend in Geithner

"As financial adviser to the president in the tumultuous years immediately after the credit crisis, Mr. Geithner had immense sway over the government’s approach to all things economic. For everyday Americans, his major tasks included responding to the home foreclosure mess, unwinding federal bailouts under the Troubled Asset Relief Program and tackling the problem of financial institutions that are too big to manage and too interconnected for America’s good. But in scanning these agenda items, a pattern of winners and losers emerges. Let’s just say the financial institutions that dominate the United States were rarely on the losing end in the Geithner years." Continue reading

Continue ReadingBanks, at Least, Had a Friend in Geithner

Ireland votes to liquidate Anglo Irish Bank

"Anglo Irish Bank will be liquidated under the plan and its outstanding debt will be converted into a new long-term bond intended to spread the repayment over a longer period of time cutting the cost to the state. At present, the Irish government must pay €3.1bn (£2.7bn) every year to service the debt it took on to rescue the bank, equivalent to about 2pc of the country's GDP. The lender's collapse in 2008 forced the government to provide a guarantee for the debts of the country's entire banking system. Ireland was eventually forced to request an €67.5bn bailout from the EU and IMF as the costs of the banking rescue proved too much." Continue reading

Continue ReadingIreland votes to liquidate Anglo Irish Bank