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View Full Version : PROOF that Libs lied about Fannie and Freddy


Mr. Carpenter
09-28-2008, 10:02 AM
The conservatives in Congress warned everyone, tried to get it fixed, but the libs were not only not having any of it, they either lied, or proved that they were entirely too stupid to be in Congress in the first place.

_MGT_cSi7Rs

NO Obamanation
09-28-2008, 10:10 AM
This is a great GREAT post. Please can you post the actual link so I can send it to someone via email?


Thank you !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Mr. Carpenter
09-28-2008, 10:11 AM
This is a great GREAT post. Please can you post the actual link so I can send it to someone via email?


Thank you !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

As you wish. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MGT_cSi7Rs

Mr. Carpenter
09-28-2008, 10:15 AM
If you liked that one, you'll just LOVE this one!

H5tZc8oH--o

Mr. Carpenter
09-28-2008, 10:17 AM
And this one.

cMnSp4qEXNM

NO Obamanation
09-28-2008, 10:18 AM
As you wish. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MGT_cSi7Rs

Thank you :)

I am sooooooooooooo glad you have joined the forum


what a plus!

NO Obamanation
09-28-2008, 10:31 AM
If you liked that one, you'll just LOVE this one!

H5tZc8oH--o

This one is really good too

I wish they did not make it presidential political politics. Just the facts alone were compelling. and I really really really wish they didnt do that class warefare stuff like so and so has a big house, do you? they did that a few times and I hate class warefair.

but other than that its great, fast pace good music and great info :)

thanks again!!!

Andy
09-28-2008, 11:59 AM
I take it all back. This is exactly the crap I expect from liberals. Where are you top gun? Where are you Dawkins? Where are you liberals? You defend this crap! Tell me how the democrats were looking out for the good of the public! Show me why you support this!

Unbelievable.

Andy
09-28-2008, 12:12 PM
WHAT?! Franklin Raines... says "These loans are so 'RISK LESS' the capital to hold them should be less than 2%"...

RISK LESS?! You democrats obama supporters what this guy to be your economic advisor?!? Good heavens! The company went bust on loans that the Obama's economic advisor considers 'RISK LESS'!!! Every single thinking democrat in existence should be voting for McCain now!

NO Obamanation
09-28-2008, 12:17 PM
I take it all back. This is exactly the crap I expect from liberals. Where are you top gun? Where are you Dawkins? Where are you liberals? You defend this crap! Tell me how the democrats were looking out for the good of the public! Show me why you support this!

Unbelievable.

Last week my boss (flaming lib) and I were arguing about this, he said I should be supporting democrats because republicans fought against regulation. I had sent him some info on this stuff before he said this. I just sort of looked dumbfounded. This is a very educated man, and a very very nice man but he buys the lies too. I don’t think there is anything you could say or do that would change their minds. I really don’t understand it.

I don’t understand it when people stand by their "guys" right or wrong, defend them right or wrong.

In our state R Senator Gordon Smith is up for re-election. I do not see how I can vote for him, he is such a rino. But I have never heard of a Dem who would vote against their guy if their guy under performed. And no Dem will go against the Dem party on this no matter what proof you have.

Andy
09-28-2008, 02:31 PM
Last week my boss (flaming lib) and I were arguing about this, he said I should be supporting democrats because republicans fought against regulation. I had sent him some info on this stuff before he said this. I just sort of looked dumbfounded. This is a very educated man, and a very very nice man but he buys the lies too. I don’t think there is anything you could say or do that would change their minds. I really don’t understand it.

Actually, in some insane way, that does make sense. Generally speaking, republicans do not support regulations. Generally speaking democrats do support regulations.

The problem here is that most people don't understand that it all depends on WHO we are regulating.

Democrats NEVER want to regulate the spending of public funds. For example, the Senate has a "Pay-Go" rule. This rule regulates government spending. It say's the if you pass a spending bill, you can only pass it if you can "pay" for it as you "go". If the money isn't there, you can't spend it.

Yet the democrats have ignored this rule constantly, and with such massive spending pork bills as the Farm Subsidies, always spending way more than they can pay for.

Similarly, they have no problem with Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac blowing tax payer money without any regulations.

Alternatively, they have no problem regulating GM or Walmart who provide jobs.

This is because they don't want any restrictions on what they can do, only what we the public can do. You heard it yourself in the video. The exact same rules they apply to all privately run banks, didn't apply to the government sponsored companies Fannie and Freddy.

Republicans are the very reverse. This is because most... not all, but many understand that taxes money is OUR money, and they have responsibility to steward it correctly. Similarly, a private corporations money, is not their money, and they don't have the right to control it.

This is the great dividing line in our political ideals. The liberals believe it is about them. That we exist to supply them with funds. And that they can do whatever they please with 'their' funds as they wish, but we can not. Do as I say and not as I do.

Conservatives see government as required evil, that should be given as little as possible because it's our money, not theirs. And they should be controlled and regulated, not us.

NO Obamanation
09-28-2008, 02:59 PM
Actually, in some insane way, that does make sense. Generally speaking, republicans do not support regulations. Generally speaking democrats do support regulations.

The problem here is that most people don't understand that it all depends on WHO we are regulating.

Democrats NEVER want to regulate the spending of public funds. For example, the Senate has a "Pay-Go" rule. This rule regulates government spending. It say's the if you pass a spending bill, you can only pass it if you can "pay" for it as you "go". If the money isn't there, you can't spend it.

Yet the democrats have ignored this rule constantly, and with such massive spending pork bills as the Farm Subsidies, always spending way more than they can pay for.

Similarly, they have no problem with Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac blowing tax payer money without any regulations.

Alternatively, they have no problem regulating GM or Walmart who provide jobs.

This is because they don't want any restrictions on what they can do, only what we the public can do. You heard it yourself in the video. The exact same rules they apply to all privately run banks, didn't apply to the government sponsored companies Fannie and Freddy.

Republicans are the very reverse. This is because most... not all, but many understand that taxes money is OUR money, and they have responsibility to steward it correctly. Similarly, a private corporations money, is not their money, and they don't have the right to control it.

This is the great dividing line in our political ideals. The liberals believe it is about them. That we exist to supply them with funds. And that they can do whatever they please with 'their' funds as they wish, but we can not. Do as I say and not as I do.

Conservatives see government as required evil, that should be given as little as possible because it's our money, not theirs. And they should be controlled and regulated, not us.


Thank you for explaining it, I think I understand where he is coming from now.

I still wont agree though :)

Why do their brains work that way, we should do a study

BigRob
09-28-2008, 03:33 PM
Well, since no Liberal on the board has the balls or stomach to put up a counter-argument I will do so for the sake of debate.

So bear with me because I personally do not buy into this argument, but here it is:


1) Yes, Republicans were pointing out problems with oversight and government regulation regarding Fannie/Freddie before this meltdown.

2) This however glosses over the bigger problem that these two companies alone are not responsible for the meltdown.

Fannie and Freddie certainly followed the market into higher risk loans, but were stopped from going full-bore into the subprime paper business by their charter and conforming loan limits. They were allowed, by the Government, to keep less capital on hand to offset risk. And they were woefully under supervised by their government regulators. And they (acting like an investment fund) acquired lots of private label MBS’ backed by toxic mortgages.

3) While Republicans were attacking Fannie/Freddie, the housing bubble was being pushed to the limits by other banks, that would have maintained and burst the bubble, even if Fannie and Freddie did not exists.

4) This crisis could have been avoided if regulation was placed on outside investment banks as much as it was placed on Fannie/Freddie, to prevent them from getting to heavily involved in the sub-prime debacle.

5) In 1999, Congress passed the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which abolished “all of the significant rules put in place at the time of the Great Depression designed to prevent a repeat.” Specifically, this act “destroyed the Depression-era barrier to the merger of stockbrokers, banks and insurance companies.”

It was this deregulation that spiraled "predatory" lending practices by de-regulated banks, who felt secure knowing that they could package these loans together and sell them off to government backed Fannie/Freddie.



As I said, I don't buy this argument, but since none of the libs here want to give a shot, for the sake of debate, here it is.

Andy
09-28-2008, 03:38 PM
Thank you for explaining it, I think I understand where he is coming from now.

I still wont agree though :)

Why do their brains work that way, we should do a study

There are some things I'd rather... not know. Like men and women. I just try and enjoy the differences of women, rather than try and explain it.

Or in the case of liberals, I just try and mitigate the differences. lol

Mr. Carpenter
09-28-2008, 04:03 PM
Why do their brains work that way, we should do a study


Their brains should be studied...cold.

NO Obamanation
09-28-2008, 04:11 PM
Their brains should be studied...cold.

LOL we can ask them to leave their large brains to science and we can figure out what went wrong :)

Mr. Carpenter
09-28-2008, 04:11 PM
LOL we can ask them to leave their large brains to science and we can figure out what went wrong :)

Or we could remove them ourselves, after all, they're not using them anyway!:D

NO Obamanation
09-28-2008, 04:17 PM
Or we could remove them ourselves, after all, they're not using them anyway!:D

Thats a good one :)

but that would kill them and I really am against death. I dont like killing babies or killing prisoners or even liberals.

Mr. Carpenter
09-28-2008, 04:27 PM
Thats a good one :)

but that would kill them and I really am against death. I dont like killing babies or killing prisoners or even liberals.

Babies? NO! Prisoners? If they've been sentenced by a jury of their peers, NO PROBLEM! Liberals? Only as many as I can before Wal-Mart runs out of ammunition.

Besides, like I said, it's not as if they're using them. After all, they're so "open minded" that their brains have fallen out!

NO Obamanation
09-28-2008, 04:31 PM
Babies? NO! Prisoners? If they've been sentenced by a jury of their peers, NO PROBLEM! Liberals? Only as many as I can before Wal-Mart runs out of ammunition.

I believe in the Death P. only in extreme and rare cases like Ted Bundy

Live is so valuable and also there are some religous reasons.

BigRob
09-28-2008, 04:32 PM
No one liked my brilliant liberal response? :p

TruthAboveAll
09-28-2008, 04:51 PM
Well, since no Liberal on the board has the balls or stomach to put up a counter-argument I will do so for the sake of debate.

So bear with me because I personally do not buy into this argument, but here it is:


1) Yes, Republicans were pointing out problems with oversight and government regulation regarding Fannie/Freddie before this meltdown.

2) This however glosses over the bigger problem that these two companies alone are not responsible for the meltdown.

Fannie and Freddie certainly followed the market into higher risk loans, but were stopped from going full-bore into the subprime paper business by their charter and conforming loan limits. They were allowed, by the Government, to keep less capital on hand to offset risk. And they were woefully under supervised by their government regulators. And they (acting like an investment fund) acquired lots of private label MBS’ backed by toxic mortgages.

3) While Republicans were attacking Fannie/Freddie, the housing bubble was being pushed to the limits by other banks, that would have maintained and burst the bubble, even if Fannie and Freddie did not exists.

4) This crisis could have been avoided if regulation was placed on outside investment banks as much as it was placed on Fannie/Freddie, to prevent them from getting to heavily involved in the sub-prime debacle.

5) In 1999, Congress passed the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which abolished “all of the significant rules put in place at the time of the Great Depression designed to prevent a repeat.” Specifically, this act “destroyed the Depression-era barrier to the merger of stockbrokers, banks and insurance companies.”

It was this deregulation that spiraled "predatory" lending practices by de-regulated banks, who felt secure knowing that they could package these loans together and sell them off to government backed Fannie/Freddie.



As I said, I don't buy this argument, but since none of the libs here want to give a shot, for the sake of debate, here it is.

You know, it's not that there isn't some merit in some points of this "argument." The Republican majority in Congress, along with the Presidency since 2001 should have helped clean a few issues up. There were warnings going up enough to warrant action.

The videos from this guy, NakedEmperorNews, are phenomenal. I know there is a bit of creative license involved, but it's pretty insignificant. One of them (which?) showed that one action out of committee never came to the floor to vote, because the Republican leadership felt they couldn't pass it.

Duhhhhh! Now THAT is why the Republicans lost control in 2006 - because of their lack of conviction and adherence to Conservative principals.

Congratulations on being able to put into words, in such a civil manner, the irrational rationalizations of the Obama-Libs. Great evidence that you must understand your enemy....well, somewhat anyway....

TruthAboveAll
09-28-2008, 04:52 PM
No one liked my brilliant liberal response? :p

LOL! I was workin' on it! I've been off exploring the Emperor's videos!

Andy
09-28-2008, 05:14 PM
I believe in the Death P. only in extreme and rare cases like Ted Bundy

Live is so valuable and also there are some religous reasons.

I believe life is so valuable, that those who would take life without cause should be forfeit of theirs. After all, the vast majority of death row inmates are second time offenders. Meaning we caught them, we charged them, and yet we allowed them the opportunity to murder again. That innocent blood is on our heads for not doing something the first time.

Gensis 9:6 Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man, shall his blood be shed.

Pual speaking of government...
Romans 13:3 Do you want to be unafraid of authority? Do what is good, and you will have praise from the same. For he is God's minister to you for good. But if you do evil, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword in vain; for he is God's minister, an avenger to execute wrath on him who practices evil.

Sword in the text was taken literally, and was a reference to capital punishment.

Supporting texts are:
Jesus spoke to Peter
Matthew 26:52 Put up your sword in it's place, for all who take the sword will perish by the sword. (no matter how unjust the arrest of Jesus was, Peter had no right to commit murder)

Leviticus 24:17 Whoever kills any man shall surely be put to death.

You can correlate the murder rates in America directly to our moving away from this divine statement. As authority has abrogated it's duty to wield the sword, evil has been unabated.

Andy
09-28-2008, 05:58 PM
You know, it's not that there isn't some merit in some points of this "argument." The Republican majority in Congress, along with the Presidency since 2001 should have helped clean a few issues up. There were warnings going up enough to warrant action.

The videos from this guy, NakedEmperorNews, are phenomenal. I know there is a bit of creative license involved, but it's pretty insignificant. One of them (which?) showed that one action out of committee never came to the floor to vote, because the Republican leadership felt they couldn't pass it.

Duhhhhh! Now THAT is why the Republicans lost control in 2006 - because of their lack of conviction and adherence to Conservative principals.

Congratulations on being able to put into words, in such a civil manner, the irrational rationalizations of the Obama-Libs. Great evidence that you must understand your enemy....well, somewhat anyway....

First, yeah, but Democrats control both the Senate and House currently, and they controlled the Senate in 2001-2003. Plus, having a one or two vote majority isn't really having complete control. When the size of your lead in only 1 vote, it's not like you can pass whatever you need without the other side. However, I do see what you mean. Remember, not all republicans and in fact Republicans. Jumping Jim Jeffords? "RINO"

Second, there is a large difference between, seeing the need to pass something yet realizing that your political opponents are simply not going to allow it, and having a lack of conviction or adherence to conservative principals. When you know that you will be thwarted, sometimes it's better to pick a battle you can win, than fight something you know you can't.

Third... with the above said... I don't buy it. I think they should have tried it anyway, and forced a vote on it. That way they can say they tried and were stopped. Just like Welfare reform. They passed it 3 or 4 times, and Billy vetoed it each time. It built my faith in them at the time.

BigRob
09-28-2008, 06:18 PM
First, yeah, but Democrats control both the Senate and House currently, and they controlled the Senate in 2001-2003. Plus, having a one or two vote majority isn't really having complete control. When the size of your lead in only 1 vote, it's not like you can pass whatever you need without the other side. However, I do see what you mean. Remember, not all republicans and in fact Republicans. Jumping Jim Jeffords? "RINO"

Doesn't that statement kind of deflate the entire argument that the inaction of this Congress is not due to the Democrats, since they only hold a tiny majority in the senate.


Second, there is a large difference between, seeing the need to pass something yet realizing that your political opponents are simply not going to allow it, and having a lack of conviction or adherence to conservative principals. When you know that you will be thwarted, sometimes it's better to pick a battle you can win, than fight something you know you can't.

I agree with this.


Third... with the above said... I don't buy it. I think they should have tried it anyway, and forced a vote on it. That way they can say they tried and were stopped. Just like Welfare reform. They passed it 3 or 4 times, and Billy vetoed it each time. It built my faith in them at the time.

I agree it should have been pushed harder. It is hard to push for that however when the economy is running along in a strong manner though.

NO Obamanation
09-28-2008, 06:22 PM
I believe life is so valuable, that those who would take life without cause should be forfeit of theirs. After all, the vast majority of death row inmates are second time offenders. Meaning we caught them, we charged them, and yet we allowed them the opportunity to murder again. That innocent blood is on our heads for not doing something the first time.

Gensis 9:6 Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man, shall his blood be shed.

Pual speaking of government...
Romans 13:3 Do you want to be unafraid of authority? Do what is good, and you will have praise from the same. For he is God's minister to you for good. But if you do evil, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword in vain; for he is God's minister, an avenger to execute wrath on him who practices evil.

Sword in the text was taken literally, and was a reference to capital punishment.

Supporting texts are:
Jesus spoke to Peter
Matthew 26:52 Put up your sword in it's place, for all who take the sword will perish by the sword. (no matter how unjust the arrest of Jesus was, Peter had no right to commit murder)

Leviticus 24:17 Whoever kills any man shall surely be put to death.

You can correlate the murder rates in America directly to our moving away from this divine statement. As authority has abrogated it's duty to wield the sword, evil has been unabated.

Do you know who the son of Sam is? David Berkowitz. I am sure you probably do. When he was arrested it was right after they abolished the Death Penalty in New York State, so he was never given it. Had the death penalty been an option he would have gotten it and would have been dead within a year or so. But since it was not an option, he just stayed in prison for the rest of his life.

For the first few years he said he felt crazed and possessed. There was one guy in prison who felt like he should reach out to him. David refused to talk to the guy and was bitter and angry for the first few years. He said after a few years he felt compelled to talk to the guy but still treated him badly. After a number of years he had a total change of heart.

He now has a ministry and helps others who come to prison. Because of the laws during the time of his conviction he must go in front of a parole board every year. He always lets them know that he doesn’t want out, and he is sure they don’t want him out and he is happy to stay and keep his ministries going. He says he does not deserve to be free when he has taken other people’s lives.

Today David Berkowitz is a saved man. His soul is redeemed. Had he died right after conviction via the death penalty we as a society would have killed his body and soul. I am not willing to meet my Maker with him knowing I supported that.

Anyways, I hope you understand where I am coming from. I do understand where you are coming from and respect it completely

TruthAboveAll
09-28-2008, 06:27 PM
First, yeah, but Democrats control both the Senate and House currently, and they controlled the Senate in 2001-2003. Plus, having a one or two vote majority isn't really having complete control. When the size of your lead in only 1 vote, it's not like you can pass whatever you need without the other side. However, I do see what you mean. Remember, not all republicans and in fact Republicans. Jumping Jim Jeffords? "RINO"

Agreed, definitely. My question is, why are there RINO's, but no DINO's? Watching the Senate or House in action on C-Span, I can sometimes only shake my head in wonderment (dismay?) that THESE are who we send to Washington to make laws and guide our country? I'm wondering if it's something found in coastal waters... at least north of the Mason-Dixon line.

Second, there is a large difference between, seeing the need to pass something yet realizing that your political opponents are simply not going to allow it, and having a lack of conviction or adherence to conservative principals. When you know that you will be thwarted, sometimes it's better to pick a battle you can win, than fight something you know you can't.


Again, I agree for the most part. This issue is huge though, and seems that it HAS been known to be huge for quite some time. Anyone on the correct side on this one and standing against mismanagement and corruption should have been having sit-ins on the Capitol Building and picketing the Treasury to bring it to light, if necessary. And exactly what battle were they saving their ammo for? They're not there to play nice - they're there to do the job we "hired" them to do.

Third... with the above said... I don't buy it. I think they should have tried it anyway, and forced a vote on it. That way they can say they tried and were stopped. Just like Welfare reform. They passed it 3 or 4 times, and Billy vetoed it each time. It built my faith in them at the time.

Exactly. I officially became a Republican during the Reagan years. I got VERY enthused again with the Gingrich Revolution, and actually started to support Republicans financially as well as with my vote. Since 2003, my enthusiasm has gone steadily downhill. I support them in essence, as corporately they are still the closest thing to conservatism in a viable party.

They didn't lose power in 2006 because of the war, or because of things like welfare reform that they'd passed but been unable to implement. They lost power because they've forgotten what their CORE principles MUST be. Without commitment to them, to WE the PEOPLE, they're no better than the Dems. Without the voting record to prove their principled stance, they have nothing to offer.

On the side - we had a RINO in the House for our district in 2006. I worked hard getting him defeated in the primary, to get a true Conservative on the ballot. Thankfully, he won. He's facing a hard re-election campaign right now, and I'll support him any way I can due to fact he's proven himself and earned my trust and support.

GenSeneca
09-28-2008, 06:38 PM
You can correlate the murder rates in America directly to our moving away from this divine statement. As authority has abrogated it's duty to wield the sword, evil has been unabated.

Exodus 35 verse 2:
For six days work may be done, but on the seventh day you shall have a holy day, a sabbath of complete rest to the LORD; whoever does any work on it shall be put to death.

I'm Glad we don't follow that divine statement...

Not sure what any of this has to do with Freddie and Fannie though.

NO Obamanation
09-28-2008, 06:57 PM
ack! sorry gen that is my fault. I was the one who got off track.
this is a really important topic...I hope it stays on topic. Ill try to stay on topic ok

Andy
09-28-2008, 07:02 PM
Well, since no Liberal on the board has the balls or stomach to put up a counter-argument I will do so for the sake of debate.

As I said, I don't buy this argument, but since none of the libs here want to give a shot, for the sake of debate, here it is.

To a liberal, everything is to gain political points. Since Billy Clinton signed these laws into effect, regardless if they do or do not have merit, there is no political gains to be made. Thus, you won't hear from them.

One reason I was not responding was because I'm more into Science and Technology, and Theology, than I am into accounting and numbers. I have learned far more about this topic than I had ever hoped to, yet... I'll give it my best shot.

2) This however glosses over the bigger problem that these two companies alone are not responsible for the meltdown.

Fannie and Freddie certainly followed the market into higher risk loans, but were stopped from going full-bore into the subprime paper business by their charter and conforming loan limits. They were allowed, by the Government, to keep less capital on hand to offset risk. And they were woefully under supervised by their government regulators. And they (acting like an investment fund) acquired lots of private label MBS’ backed by toxic mortgages.

Hmm... I must be missing something. I was under the impression that the market followed Fannie and Freddie, not the reverse. In fact, it wasn't until the mid 90s when the feds started pushing for more home loans, through their sponsored corporations, that sub-prime loans began to rise.

3) While Republicans were attacking Fannie/Freddie, the housing bubble was being pushed to the limits by other banks, that would have maintained and burst the bubble, even if Fannie and Freddie did not exists.

Is not the vast majority of the loans that have gone bust, been loans from Fannie and Freddie? Cheap low interest loans from Fannie and Freddie are what caused the bubble to exist. Without them, the private bank, most of whom didn't make sub-prime loans, would never have had the wide ranging power to create a bubble.

4) This crisis could have been avoided if regulation was placed on outside investment banks as much as it was placed on Fannie/Freddie, to prevent them from getting to heavily involved in the sub-prime debacle.

That doesn't even follow logic. Fannie and Freddie where chocked full of sub-prime Securitization. There was more regulation on outside investment banks, than was on F&F.

5) In 1999, Congress passed the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which abolished “all of the significant rules put in place at the time of the Great Depression designed to prevent a repeat.” Specifically, this act “destroyed the Depression-era barrier to the merger of stockbrokers, banks and insurance companies.”

It was this deregulation that spiraled "predatory" lending practices by de-regulated banks, who felt secure knowing that they could package these loans together and sell them off to government backed Fannie/Freddie.

What? :D So if a bank doesn't merge with an insurance company... then it won't engage in predatory lending practices? Not logical.

In the end, the sub-prime melt down, is due to two people. Lenders... Borrowers...

First, Borrowers. A bunch of people choose to get loans they could not afford, on the bet that they could refinance them, due to increasing home values, before the sub-prime loan ballooned or adjusted. They gambled a loan on the economy and rising home values. Like any gamble, eventually you lose. The home values didn't rise as planned, the economy slowed down slightly, preventing them from refinancing, and when their sub-prime loans adjusted or ballooned, they were crushed financially.

Solution: Flat out, don't borrow money unless you know you can pay it back. I'd even say, never borrow money at all, but if your going to, make for sure that you can pay it off in the condition you are presently in. Not some theoretical future situation that doesn't exist yet. Doing so is playing with a snake, and your going to get bitten.

Second, the Lenders. You really don't need regulation on lending because if a lender gets burned enough loaning money to people who can't pay back, they'll be broke and out of business, or they'll figure out not to loan to people who can't pay back.

Now based on what I understand of how the market works, Fannie and Freddie have the greatest, most wide ranging influence in the industry. If they had been required to follow the standards the rest of the market has to, I wager very little of this would have happened. It's because they set the tone by offering secruitizing for loan that were sub-prime, at low interest rates, that caused the rest of the industry to believe it could follow the same pattern.

I'm way out of my zone, so if I'm wrong please do tell. Explain it if you can.

TruthAboveAll
09-28-2008, 07:02 PM
Exodus 35 verse 2:
For six days work may be done, but on the seventh day you shall have a holy day, a sabbath of complete rest to the LORD; whoever does any work on it shall be put to death.

I'm Glad we don't follow that divine statement...

Not sure what any of this has to do with Freddie and Fannie though.

You don't? Freddie refused to rest on the Sabbath, and insisted on 7 day banking available to offer risky, sub-prime loans. So God, coming to visit as he was prone to do on the Sabbath, called out to Freddie, saying "Freddie, where art thou, and why aren't you in the Garden eating lovely fruit on this beautiful day?"

And Freddie answered the Lord, saying "Lord! I was only trying to make houses for all the birds of the air and dig holes for all the mice in the field! I had to break the rules and labor long and hard, getting all my friends to help, too. Fannie came along also, and we cleaned caves, cleared lagoons of debris, and even erected brush piles for rabbits. We knew that even though you've said we're in your image, that all rights should be afforded the least of all creatures, whether they deserve it or not, need it or not, or even want it."

And God looked upon all that Freddie had done, and saw that it was NOT good. So he promptly grabbed Freddie, turned him around and over his knee. Then he grabbed Fannie, for she had said to Freddie "Do it!" and he had done it, and whipped her through the air, saying, "Because you thought to do so poorly, I will make you a scourge, and a pain on his back side, which he will call from this day forth "Fannie." And the Lord God did scourge Freddie's Fannie for all the housing failures.

BigRob
09-28-2008, 07:39 PM
I will attempt a rebuttal, but I do agree with what you have said, but here goes.

To a liberal, everything is to gain political points.
Hmm... I must be missing something. I was under the impression that the market followed Fannie and Freddie, not the reverse. In fact, it wasn't until the mid 90s when the feds started pushing for more home loans, through their sponsored corporations, that sub-prime loans began to rise.

"Fannie and Freddie may finance most of the home loans in America, but most of the home loans in America aren’t the problem; the problem is that very substantial slice of home loans that went outside the Fannie and Freddie box. It is right to focus on the fact that it was the regulatory and charter constraints of the GSEs that kept that box closed. In the schizoid reality of the GSEs, when they had their “shareholder-owned private company” hats on they did plenty of envelope-pushing. When they had their “affordable housing” hats on, they rationalized dubious theories of credit quality–like the fervent belief that low or no down payment can be fully offset by a pretty FICO score–to beef up their affordable housing goals, often at the expense not of the poor put-upon “private sector” but of FHA, whose traditional borrower pool they pretty thoroughly cherry-picked. Nonetheless, the immovable objects of the conforming loan limits and the charter limitation of taking only loans with a maximum LTV of 80% unless a well-capitalized mortgage insurer took the first loss position, plus all their other regulatory strictures, managed fairly well against the irresistible force of “innovation.” If there has ever been an argument for serious regulation of the mortgage markets, the GSEs are it." (Krugman)



Is not the vast majority of the loans that have gone bust, been loans from Fannie and Freddie? Cheap low interest loans from Fannie and Freddie are what caused the bubble to exist. Without them, the private bank, most of whom didn't make sub-prime loans, would never have had the wide ranging power to create a bubble.

Fannie and Freddie did not give out these loans, they simply bought them from other banks who gave them out. Those banks looked at Fannie and Freddie and the government secured entity that would cover them should these loans start to have problems.

A substantial portion of Fannie’s and Freddie’s credit losses comes from Alt-A mortgages that the agencies imprudently bought or guaranteed in recent years to boost their market share. These are mortgages for which little or no attempt was made to verify the borrowers’ income or net worth. The principal balances were much higher than those of mortgages typically made to low-income borrowers. In short, Alt-A mortgages were a hallmark of real-estate speculation in the ex-urbs of Las Vegas or Los Angeles, not predatory lending to low-income folks in the inner cities.


That doesn't even follow logic. Fannie and Freddie where chocked full of sub-prime Securitization. There was more regulation on outside investment banks, than was on F&F.

It was this sub-prime securitization that put off the inevitable collapse of the housing market to begin with. The percent of sub-prime loans in the market (that Fannie/Freddie where buying up to increase market share, and were regulated out of getting into other markets) spiked in 2003 and then doubled to its current spot. Blaming a Clinton policy in 1995 for this seems a bit off base.


What? :D So if a bank doesn't merge with an insurance company... then it won't engage in predatory lending practices? Not logical.

I think the idea was that it enabled all of these companies to combine and sell all these bad loans to Fannie/Freddie, which only makes the problem that much worse.


In the end, the sub-prime melt down, is due to two people. Lenders... Borrowers...

Agreed, so what does some republicans in congress trying to reform Fannie and Freddie, who neither borrowed nor lent, have to do with this crisis?


Second, the Lenders. You really don't need regulation on lending because if a lender gets burned enough loaning money to people who can't pay back, they'll be broke and out of business, or they'll figure out not to loan to people who can't pay back.

Or they will bundle all their bad debt together and sell it to government backed companies, that then tanks the entire sector.


Now based on what I understand of how the market works, Fannie and Freddie have the greatest, most wide ranging influence in the industry. If they had been required to follow the standards the rest of the market has to, I wager very little of this would have happened. It's because they set the tone by offering secruitizing for loan that were sub-prime, at low interest rates, that caused the rest of the industry to believe it could follow the same pattern.

I'm way out of my zone, so if I'm wrong please do tell. Explain it if you can.

I would say that was more a government action than a Fannie/Freddie action.


So, that was my attempt at a liberal rebuttal, hope the debate can continue, or better yet, an actual liberal can come take over my side here. :D

Andy
09-28-2008, 07:48 PM
Do you know who the son of Sam is? David Berkowitz. I am sure you probably do. When he was arrested it was right after they abolished the Death Penalty in New York State, so he was never given it. Had the death penalty been an option he would have gotten it and would have been dead within a year or so. But since it was not an option, he just stayed in prison for the rest of his life.

Today David Berkowitz is a saved man. His soul is redeemed. Had he died right after conviction via the death penalty we as a society would have killed his body and soul. I am not willing to meet my Maker with him knowing I supported that.

Anyways, I hope you understand where I am coming from. I do understand where you are coming from and respect it completely

I know what you are saying, and I'm all for God saving any man. No doubt he works in strange and incredible, unbelievable ways.

Nevertheless, the command to deal justice, and to punish murder with the sword, is not an option. It's a word from the creator of the universe. He doesn't say to follow his direction... unless we don't like it, or if violating it might save someone. God is not going to hold it against us for following his command, any more than he will withhold judgment for not following his command. Which side of that do you wish to be on?

Do you believe that if He wants to accomplish something, that us by passing a law is going to thwart God? Just think about that for a second. Is God biting his nails thinking "oh no, they might kill him!". If capital punishment in NY had not been abolished, you can trust that God would accomplished his goal in some other way. This is not such a wimpy God, that a few overpaid elected wind bags passing a law, can stop him. Otherwise, christianity would have been wiped out hundreds of years ago.

Consider this for a moment. Nearly every murderer sitting in death row, and the majority in prison for life, are second time offenders. People who were caught once, and allowed to murder again because we did not follow the Lord's command.

How many of those thousands of innocent murdered victims may not have been saved? How many were denied a chance to hear the Gospel because we failed to stop their killers the FIRST time, as God commanded? I hope you can see it from my perspective... I don't want to answer to God for that.

I don't want to stand before the White Throne Judgment saying the reason I completely disobeyed his command, completely disregarded his word, causing thousands of lives to be murdered before hearing of salvation, because I thought there might be another David Berkowitz on death row.

I can almost hear the reply. You were supposed to do as I instructed and let me worry about the David Berkowitzs of the world.

It reminds me of a bit of TV evangelists who commit fraud and shading accounting, and deceptive TV shows, and then claim they did it all to save people. Yes they might be saving people. However, if you're sinning, you are sinning, and there is no excuse.

This seems to read a bit harder than I had intended it to come across. This is not an attack. I am, as always, saying what I know about a topic :) Please don't take this as confrontational. When I think of how our God would want me to act, I remember this:

"Not everyone who says to Me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father who is in heaven will enter. Many will say to Me on that day, 'Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name, and in Your name cast out demons, and in Your name perform many miracles?' And then I will declare to them, 'I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness'" (Matt. 7:21-23).

Quiet frankly, that scares the fire out me :D

NO Obamanation
09-28-2008, 08:12 PM
I know what you are saying, and I'm all for God saving any man. No doubt he works in strange and incredible, unbelievable ways.

Nevertheless, the command to deal justice, and to punish murder with the sword, is not an option. It's a word from the creator of the universe. He doesn't say to follow his direction... unless we don't like it, or if violating it might save someone. God is not going to hold it against us for following his command, any more than he will withhold judgment for not following his command. Which side of that do you wish to be on?

Do you believe that if He wants to accomplish something, that us by passing a law is going to thwart God? Just think about that for a second. Is God biting his nails thinking "oh no, they might kill him!". If capital punishment in NY had not been abolished, you can trust that God would accomplished his goal in some other way. This is not such a wimpy God, that a few overpaid elected wind bags passing a law, can stop him. Otherwise, christianity would have been wiped out hundreds of years ago.

Consider this for a moment. Nearly every murderer sitting in death row, and the majority in prison for life, are second time offenders. People who were caught once, and allowed to murder again because we did not follow the Lord's command.

How many of those thousands of innocent murdered victims may not have been saved? How many were denied a chance to hear the Gospel because we failed to stop their killers the FIRST time, as God commanded? I hope you can see it from my perspective... I don't want to answer to God for that.

I don't want to stand before the White Throne Judgment saying the reason I completely disobeyed his command, completely disregarded his word, causing thousands of lives to be murdered before hearing of salvation, because I thought there might be another David Berkowitz on death row.

I can almost hear the reply. You were supposed to do as I instructed and let me worry about the David Berkowitzs of the world.

It reminds me of a bit of TV evangelists who commit fraud and shading accounting, and deceptive TV shows, and then claim they did it all to save people. Yes they might be saving people. However, if you're sinning, you are sinning, and there is no excuse.

This seems to read a bit harder than I had intended it to come across. This is not an attack. I am, as always, saying what I know about a topic :) Please don't take this as confrontational. When I think of how our God would want me to act, I remember this:

"Not everyone who says to Me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father who is in heaven will enter. Many will say to Me on that day, 'Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name, and in Your name cast out demons, and in Your name perform many miracles?' And then I will declare to them, 'I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness'" (Matt. 7:21-23).

Quiet frankly, that scares the fire out me :D

Andy, if you make a thread about this I would love to talk more. but I dont want to distract from the real topic, its an important one. I wish we could transfer what we have said so far to some other thread so it stays a fanny freddie topic. sorry for distracting the thread.

Crystal :)

TruthAboveAll
09-30-2008, 04:14 PM
Andy, if you make a thread about this I would love to talk more. but I dont want to distract from the real topic, its an important one. I wish we could transfer what we have said so far to some other thread so it stays a fanny freddie topic. sorry for distracting the thread.

Crystal :)

And back on the subject....

This is from WSJ online (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122257274028583113.html?mod=googlenews_wsj) from Sunday, 9/28. I'd missed it before. It IS an opinion piece, but the facts are solid and chronologically accurate.

We will look back on the failure of Congress to reform the government-sponsored enterprises at the heart of the mortgage meltdown as one of the most expensive derelictions of its duty ever. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac used their lobbying clout, political contributions and even charitable largesse to charm or bully anyone demanding reform in their lending practices.

This is the opening paragraph and a brief summary of the conclusions in the piece.

Mr. Carpenter
09-30-2008, 04:43 PM
Agreed, definitely. My question is, why are there RINO's, but no DINO's?

There are a few, but most, like Zell Miller and Joe Lieberman have left the party because while they may be Democrats, they're not Communists.

Watching the Senate or House in action on C-Span, I can sometimes only shake my head in wonderment (dismay?) that THESE are who we send to Washington to make laws and guide our country? I'm wondering if it's something found in coastal waters... at least north of the Mason-Dixon line.

You won't see them on C-Span, CNN, FoxNews, ABC, NBC, CBS, or anywhere else, except for their own local home TV stations, and then only when they're back home to talk to their constituancy. The Commies in the party leadership in Congress will marginalize them the moment they find out that they're not "politically viable", so they ensure that they never get a spot on any of the "proper" high profile committees, or get recognized by the chair, or even get their name on any legislation, and without those credentials, they don't get noticed.

TruthAboveAll
09-30-2008, 06:03 PM
There are a few, but most, like Zell Miller and Joe Lieberman have left the party because while they may be Democrats, they're not Communists.

I'm 54. No spring chicken, but still with a limited long-term perspective. I need to go back and re-read Zell's book. I need to read Bernie Goldberg's book, too. We often decry that the Republican party has strayed from Conservatism and is the worse for it; the same is true for the Democrats, as their party is a far cry from what it was even 20 years ago.

Speaking about Communists, I've a point to share but am off to seek a thread that might be better for posting it...

Andy
09-30-2008, 08:21 PM
the problem is that very substantial slice of home loans that went outside the Fannie and Freddie box. It is right to focus on the fact that it was the regulatory and charter constraints of the GSEs that kept that box closed. When they had their “affordable housing” hats on, they rationalized dubious theories of credit quality–like the fervent belief that low or no down payment can be fully offset by a pretty FICO score–to beef up their affordable housing goals, often at the expense not of the poor put-upon “private sector” but of FHA, whose traditional borrower pool they pretty thoroughly cherry-picked. Nonetheless, the immovable objects of the conforming loan limits and the charter limitation of taking only loans with a maximum LTV of 80% unless a well-capitalized mortgage insurer took the first loss position, plus all their other regulatory strictures, managed fairly well against the irresistible force of “innovation.” If there has ever been an argument for serious regulation of the mortgage markets, the GSEs are it."

I'm lost. Clearly GSEs didn't prevent sub-prime mortgage purchases given the fact it forced Fannie Mae into bankruptcy... right?

Fannie and Freddie did not give out these loans, they simply bought them from other banks who gave them out. Those banks looked at Fannie and Freddie and the government secured entity that would cover them should these loans start to have problems.

Yes of course. Do you believe a private institution would make these loans, if a government backed company, such as Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, would not securitize it from risk? If you knew, you were going to eat the bullet for a sub-prime Alt-A loan, I doubt you'd make the loan unless you knew for sure you could cover it. They knew they could cover it, not from their capital, but from Fannie Mae's capital. Which Fannie Mae knew they could cover it, not from their company, but from government backing.

A substantial portion of Fannie’s and Freddie’s credit losses comes from Alt-A mortgages that the agencies imprudently bought or guaranteed in recent years to boost their market share. These are mortgages for which little or no attempt was made to verify the borrowers’ income or net worth. The principal balances were much higher than those of mortgages typically made to low-income borrowers. In short, Alt-A mortgages were a hallmark of real-estate speculation in the ex-urbs of Las Vegas or Los Angeles, not predatory lending to low-income folks in the inner cities.

And was it not Frank Raines who championed this program to boost minority home ownership?

It was this sub-prime securitization that put off the inevitable collapse of the housing market to begin with. The percent of sub-prime loans in the market (that Fannie/Freddie where buying up to increase market share, and were regulated out of getting into other markets) spiked in 2003 and then doubled to its current spot. Blaming a Clinton policy in 1995 for this seems a bit off base.

I would suggest it was also securitization that led those companies to believe they had shifted the risk off enough to make the risky loans. Now I'm not against securitization. However, I would suggest that it's possible without F&F securing sub-prime loans, I don't think other private institutions would have done it. If they hadn't done it, I don't think there ever would have been a sub-prime bubble.

I think the idea was that it enabled all of these companies to combine and sell all these bad loans to Fannie/Freddie, which only makes the problem that much worse.

I'm not seeing it. Merging with an insurance company, or are stock broker company, and being able to bundle Conventional and sub-prime mortgages, to me does not seem to be related. Further, the bill in question only address the merger ability, not the bundling loans ability.

Agreed, so what does some republicans in congress trying to reform Fannie and Freddie, who neither borrowed nor lent, have to do with this crisis?

There is two issues at hand. First is the cause of the sub-prime bubble, and the second is Fannie and Freddy going broke. I contend neither are a crisis.

With F&F going broke, the problem was not keeping the capital on hand to cover the loans outstanding should they fail. This has to do with F&F being government sponsored, and cooking the books, and not following the established rules the govern the rest of the industry. The Republicans attempted to reform this, and the democrats thwarted that attempt. The results are obvious.

The second, I would suggest is not directly responsible, but played a major part. By allowing F&F to secure questionable risky Alt-A loans and sub-prime loans, F&F set a tone for the industry, since they are the dominate ones. Private mortgage companies became willing to lend these risky loans because they knew F&F would buy them. Once F&F started buying them, the rest of the industry followed suit.

I would say that was more a government action than a Fannie/Freddie action.

F&F are ultimately pawns. Socialized. Yes some might claim they were privatized, but as I pointed out in the other thread on Socialist CEOs... all the CEOs were government appointed, and a revolving door for liberals who needed a place to stay. Obviously it was socialized since it required government about 1 day to plan to take completely control again. There wasn't even a hint at letting the companies fail, like would be expected if a private company failed.

Libsmasher
09-30-2008, 09:31 PM
BigRob:

3) While Republicans were attacking Fannie/Freddie, the housing bubble was being pushed to the limits by other banks, that would have maintained and burst the bubble, even if Fannie and Freddie did not exists.

Where the hell did you come up with that??? :D What "other banks"? NO BANK would make ANY of the kind of risky loans that caused the credit crisis unless Fanny and Freddy agreed to be a secondary market for them, which they did. The inability of people here to grasp what happened, when it is crystal clear what happened, is driving me up the wall! :mad:

BigRob
10-01-2008, 03:30 AM
Where the hell did you come up with that??? :D What "other banks"? NO BANK would make ANY of the kind of risky loans that caused the credit crisis unless Fanny and Freddy agreed to be a secondary market for them, which they did. The inability of people here to grasp what happened, when it is crystal clear what happened, is driving me up the wall! :mad:

Don't get mad here, I do not even agree with my comments, I am just attempting to make the liberal argument since the resident liberals don't have the balls to argue it.

Mr. Carpenter
10-01-2008, 01:57 PM
Bill Clinton admits that the Democrats in Congress are responsible for the current crisis...

OOPS!

XsynspIqAoE

bododie
10-01-2008, 02:02 PM
Bill Clinton admits that the Democrats in Congress are responsible for the current crisis... No, HE'S responsible. Congress merely backed HIM. Oh wait a minute, no he's totally irresponsible and immoral about everything. Never mind....

Mr. Carpenter
10-01-2008, 03:46 PM
Oh, and while we're at it, CONCLUSIVE PROOF that the Bush Administration has been trying since he has been in office to fix the problems with Fannie and Freddie, but has been blocked by the Democrats in Congress.

JsfMicOgufA&feature=related

And why would the Democrats block efforts to fix Fannie and Freddy? Follow the money!

9nU3fNh-PRk

Chris Dodd, Barack Obama, Harry Reid, Hillary Clinton, Barney Frank, Chuck Schumer, Maxine Waters, Gregory Meeks, Lacy Clay (who plays the "race card" because his "boy" Raines screwed up so bad and got called on it), Artur Davis, but who else was involved?

Does the name Andrew Cuomo ring any bells? Franklin Raines? Jim Johnson? Jamie Gorelick?

LSqhrHIfJV0
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7h00DsC9-zI

Now, you libs were saying...WHAT?????

bododie
10-01-2008, 04:30 PM
Now, you libs were saying...WHAT????? Something equally important like Palin shot a moose...

Mr. Shaman
10-17-2008, 08:20 AM
Last week my boss (flaming lib) and I were arguing about this, he said I should be supporting democrats because republicans fought against regulation.
Whatta shame when the high-rollers argee, with him (http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/10/17/siu.wall.street/index.html), huh? :rolleyes:

"Frank, author of "Richistan," says the enormous amounts of money earned by Wall Street elite made them practically a nation unto themselves.

"They just looked at the guy with the bigger house, the nicer Ferrari, the better artwork," he said. "And it was all competitive spending."

One prominent example is the CEO of Lehman Brothers, Richard Fuld. In 2007 alone, according to the executive compensation firm Equilar, he earned total take-home compensation of more than $45 million in salary and bonuses.

Congressional researchers said he earned nearly $500 million from 2000 through 2007.

Fuld told Congress that the failure of his company centered on inaction on the part of government (http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/10/17/siu.wall.street/index.html) and a loss of confidence in the financial markets."