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Has the bubble burst?
News and Review ^ | Sep 21 06 | Sasha Abramsky

Posted on 09/22/2006 8:47:25 PM PDT by churchillbuff

In mid-2004, John and Karen Philbrook bought a home in Sacramento’s North Highlands neighborhood, when buying a house seemed like a sure ticket to security. They opted for an interest-only, adjustable-rate mortgage and counted on the value of their house continuing to rise as a way to build up equity. ...

[snip]

In 2004, Karen and John realized their dream by buying a house in the North Highlands section of Sacramento that’s situated several miles northeast of downtown. It’s a small, three-bedroom bungalow, with a brick chimney running down its wooden exterior. With John’s two jobs and Karen’s at Safeway, the Philbrooks believed they could manage the mortgage. They were on their way to building their own personal American Dream and creating a secure future for their young daughter, Nicole.

“We prayed and prayed and prayed to have a home,” recalled John, a large, suntanned man, his muscular arms highlighted by a sleeveless blue vest as he sat in his backyard. “This is perfect for us. I come out here, throw up my hammock and lay out here on a Sunday afternoon. It’s perfect. It’s like a park back here. We’ve got fruit trees: oranges, plums, a pear tree there. Those are pistachios.”

“I could own a dog now,” Karen said, recalling her sense of elation when they moved in. “Having a place we could call our own. Not having to worry about apartment rules. Total freedom. It felt really nice to have our own place--we’re achieving something in life.”

For John, it seemed a perfect story of redemption, perhaps even a quintessential American story of second chances and reinvented lives. Then, earlier this summer, a note from the Philbrooks’ mortgage broker arrived in the mail. Overnight, the note informed them, their monthly payment was increasing by close to $500. And the Philbrooks, who had about $900 saved up for their daughter’s future, a few hundred more for emergencies and nothing in reserve beyond that, realized their entire dream now stood ready to fall.

Over the past year, as interest rates have risen and for-sale houses have sat unsold for months, much has been written on various aspects of the housing market.

Journalists and analysts--not to mention homeowners or potential buyers--want to know: Is the current slowdown just a blip in an otherwise vibrant market, or is it the end of a decade-plus bubble? Will national trends be magnified in Sacramento’s suburbs, which have seen startling appreciation in house values in the recent past? Will the air in the bubble gradually leak out, giving people time to adjust their expectations and their financial planning, or will it burst spectacularly? Will interest rates continue edging upward? If so, will the real-estate market collapse, when it becomes impossible for new buyers to make offers that are acceptable to sellers who bought homes when rates were low and prices were high?

Much of the ink spilled on this has examined these issues as a series of isolated problems. It’s becoming clear, however, that the problems are interlocking. Indeed, there’s a fear voiced in real-estate circles that some parts of the country, including Sacramento, might be facing a perfect storm in which the true losers are families who borrowed cavalierly without adequately crunching the numbers. Families like the Philbrooks--who, at the urgings of sometimes-unscrupulous mortgage brokers, seriously over-extended themselves at the height of the housing boom--now will pay a high price for reaching toward the American Dream.

This summer, analysts delivered bad news for Sacramento. It’s now one of the five riskiest housing markets in the country, according to a report issued in June by PMI Mortgage Insurance Co. Factoring in home prices, wages in the local labor market, local unemployment rates and the percentage of families’ average monthly income now spent on covering home costs, PMI predicted that there was a 58.5-percent chance home prices would decline in the next two years. That number was up from 41.9 percent a year earlier, already a far higher risk rate than in much of the rest of the country. Sacramentans, the report warned, paid 30 percent more as a percentage of their monthly income toward housing in 2006 than they did in 1995 before housing prices spiraled so sharply upward.

Another blow came that same month, when National City Corp. estimated that the Sacramento housing market was severely overpriced--along with 39 percent of the 317 U.S. markets included in the survey--to the extent that it was at risk for a price correction.

How are Sacramentans paying for this?

“We think people are stretching by getting different kinds of mortgages, what Alan Greenspan called the 'exotic’ mortgages,” said PMI’s Beth Haiken. “We do know these mortgages have become much more popular in the last few years. They give you a lower payment in exchange for additional risk. They all work by transferring risk to the borrower--higher-interest balloon payments.”

“You’re seeing people who were living off the equity in their house. It worked real good for three or four years,” said attorney Scott Coben, a bankruptcy specialist who works out of an airy office, built around an inner, roofed atrium decorated with palms and tropical plants, in downtown Sacramento. Seeing their houses keep appreciating, Coben explained, homeowners borrowed against the increased paper value of their property, essentially living off the promise of an eternally rosy real-estate environment. “But now the gravy train is coming to an end. They’ve got the credit cards, crazy loans, 40-year mortgages, and they’ve done refinancing. A lot of them are going to lose their homes.

“People were just totally unrealistic about real estate--refinancing to sustain their lifestyles, or people who got in the game late took out horrible loans to get real estate,” Coben said. “They’re getting killed now.”

“There are a lot of properties on the market now where I see people in that position,” asserted Patti Priess, a local Dunnigan realty agent. “All of a sudden, in a market where foreclosures were not the norm, I’m seeing in the comments 'pending foreclosure.’”

By the early months of the summer, 1,352 Sacramento County homes had default notices filed against them in the second quarter of the year, the highest number in nine years, according to DataQuick Information Systems, a La Jolla company that tracks California’s real-estate market. Surrounding counties also saw significant increases in default activity. That represents an increase from the previous year of 109 percent, while across California foreclosures increased only 67 percent, according to Foreclosures.com. RealtyTrac Inc. ranks the capital region as the second-highest area in the state in terms of foreclosures.

John Philbrook relaxes in the park-like perfection of his own backyard. Photo By Larry Dalton

Some homeowners, while escaping foreclosure, are being driven out of the real-estate market entirely. One couple Priess represents moved to Palo Alto, put their Sacramento house up for sale and watched in horror as the market softened and the house remained unsold. “They’ve been in Palo Alto unable to purchase a new home, and their house here is empty. And we’ve reduced the price and reduced the price,” Priess said. Still, they have been unable to sell it.

The number of people looking to declare Chapter 13 bankruptcy as a way to avoid foreclosure is mushrooming, Coben said. While the filer’s credit goes into the toilet, bankruptcy allows some breathing room to set up payment schedules and avoid losing everything.

The attorney also says he’s seeing an increase in what are known in the real-estate business as “short sales.” In a short sale, the lender gets less than the amount owed on the loan. It’s a better-than-nothing alternative for the lender and often an only alternative for the homeowner or borrower. Short sales strive to avoid a situation like the following. Because most banks issue mortgages for only 80 percent of the home value, some cash-strapped buyers take out second loans to finance the entire cost of their homes. If buyers with these kinds of cobbled-together loans default on their mortgages, the home is sold under foreclosure, and the second lender typically forfeits its lien, losing everything. To avoid this situation, Coben explained, the second lender agrees to a “short sale.” The home is sold quickly at a low price, and the lender of the second mortgage accepts a discounted payment. It allows an escape for the borrower, but the price is temporarily wrecked credit, no money left over from the sale and a tax obligation of thousands of dollars, since the government counts the money not paid back to the second lender as income paid to the borrower.

Borrowing 100 percent of the cost of a home in a changing market may not be the most serious problem some homeowners currently face. A slew of “exotic” mortgage options add their force to the “perfect storm” some argue has hit Sacramento’s housing market. Many of the individuals most at risk took out Option Adjustable Rate Mortgages. These allow borrowers to make monthly payments for a temporary period of time that don’t even cover the interest accruing on their loan. The unpaid interest gets tacked onto the loan, and many buyers never notice the fine print stating that after a couple of years their interest rates will soar. Others bought a variety of loan products, including large loans against future appreciation in equity taken out by some longtime homeowners that are proving risky in a climate of market slowdowns and interest hikes. Still other borrowers, like John and Karen, agreed to interest-only mortgage payments on loans covering 100 percent of the cost of their homes but which don’t permit for the accumulation of any ownership capital in the property they are paying a mortgage on.

In the Philbrooks' case, John and Karen borrowed almost the entirety of the $244,000 cost of their modest North Highlands home: One loan was written for $195,000 at 6.375-percent interest; another financed the remainder of nearly $45,000 at 9.125 percent. The rate on the small loan was fixed. But on the large loan, the rate was fixed for only two years, and after that it was variable.

John said the Realtor who arranged the loan verbally assured him it would never go up by more than a quarter of 1 percent at any time. In fact, in the (very) small-print clauses attached to that loan were four poison-pill provisions.

Having not understood the small print of their contract, the Philbrooks were unaware that the loan’s rate would never be lower than its starting rate--meaning all the risk attached to the variable rate fell on them. Neither did they fully understand that the interest rate could never go up by more than 1 percent in a given month, except for the first increase, when it could leapfrog to 9.375 percent in one go, and from then on rise incrementally to a maximum of 12.375 percent. They weren’t aware that their variable rate was tied not to the prevailing mortgage rates but to a market index based out of London, which circulates money at a far higher rate of interest than does the fixed-rate-mortgage market. The final poison pill--a $7,300 penalty if they chose to seek new financing during the first three years--discouraged the Philbrooks from refinancing once high rates kicked in. Not understanding the first three provisions, the couple were not fully appreciative of the dangers of this refinancing clause.

What does all of this mean? When the contract is teased apart, it’s clear the Philbrooks signed a real-estate deal guaranteed to boomerang back on them two years later in a staggeringly unpleasant way. “Life’s a losing gamble without Jesus,” reads the decal on the bumper of the Philbrooks’ old pickup truck, part of a package of religious iconography that dots the family’s vehicles as well as the walls of its house. Quite possibly, the Philbrooks’ failure to read the fine print represents a similarly blind roll of the dice.

On the day of the couple’s 14th wedding anniversary, John said, “We got a notice saying the payment had increased from 6.375 percent to 9.375 percent in just one month.” Sitting at his small dining-room table, he recalled his startled reaction that day: “Oh my gosh. How am I going to pay the mortgage? What am I going to do with my family? I can’t afford this.”

Overnight, the monthly payment on the $195,000 loan went from $1,350 to $1,841. Factor in the payment on the smaller, second loan, and the Philbrooks now were paying $2,250 a month servicing their mortgage. Since Karen and John bring home a total of about $4,000 after taxes each month from their three jobs, this was a crushing burden. Add in two hefty car payments, utilities and insurance bills, and that didn’t leave much left over for such necessities as food.

“This was our first time purchasing a house,” Karen said. “When the interest rates went up, we were told it would go up just a little bit. When it went up more than that, it went up nearly $500. My husband had to get a third job, give up his Sundays. It made me feel like, 'Wow, you can’t trust anybody anymore.’”

Undoubtedly, John and Karen were staggeringly naive in signing such a contract. The problem is that the Philbrooks aren’t alone. During the heady days of this most recent real-estate boom, increasing numbers of people borrowed 100 percent of the costs of their homes. And since banks are reluctant to finance such risky mortgages, frequently these homebuyers ended up signing contracts with fly-by-night operators whose profits, while legal, were largely generated by convincing clients to sign dubious deals such as the one bought into by John and Karen. With today’s shifting real-estate sands, those contracts are starting to hurt, and badly.

“Loan officers, they’ve replaced car salesmen as the shadiest people you deal with,” John said, bitterly.

As the summer unfolded, staving off insurmountable bills and foreclosure on their home became the Philbrooks’ overriding priority. They wouldn’t, couldn’t, accept that a dream they’d adhered to so obstinately was rapidly becoming a nightmare.

“I told my wife, 'We’re not going to lose this place,’” John said in early August, with a determined, if somewhat hollow, optimism. “I’m not going to do anything illegal ever again, but I’m not going to lose this. I’ll get a third job. I don’t want this to be taken from us.”

John applied for yet more employment, eventually getting an offer to work another several nights a week as a security guard at a local country club. Ultimately, he wouldn’t have to start this job. If he had, though, he would have been working well over 80 hours a week, missing several nights’ sleep and hardly ever seeing his daughter. It was a steep price to pay, but for John and Karen it seemed the only way to keep their house.

“[The realty company we chose to sell our house] gave us a sign last week. But we haven’t put it up yet. I guess we’re embarrassed. My wife’s humiliated that our neighbors will see we’re selling our home. I don’t want to rent my whole life. As corny as it sounds, it’s the American Dream--it’s the dream for most people. I don’t think we’ll lose our house, because we’re praying for it. And I don’t think God would leave us like that.”

Reluctantly, the Philbrooks put their house up for sale, listing it at $279,000. At that price, they would be able to walk away from their venture into Sacramento’s housing with a few thousand dollars in their pocket. If it sold for less than the asking price, however, they’d start losing money on the whole deal. Worst case: They couldn’t sell at all, a not-unlikely scenario in a housing market glutted as of the end of June with more than 16,000 homes for sale in the surrounding region--a more than 60-percent increase since the start of the year. In that case, they’d lose their house to the mortgage company and go into bankruptcy in the process. That fear explains why they readily listed their house for $21,000 less than its appraised value of $300,000.

“Because there’re so many houses on the market right now,” John explained. “After we’d paid all the fees and stuff, we’d probably come out with $10,000.”

As it turned out, the Philbrooks were lucky. After working the phones and approaching several different brokers, they managed to get a new mortgage in August. They ditched their interest-only, variable-rate mortgage and locked in a 30-year, fixed-rate loan at a little over 6 percent.

But luck in this uncertain market is more a matter of not losing everything than of actually coming out ahead. In fact, the Philbrooks’ two-year venture into Sacramento real estate will, over the decades of their mortgage, cost them a huge amount more than they’d originally anticipated.

After two years of making monthly payments that covered only the interest on their $240,000 initial debt, they now had to borrow to pay the $7,300 opt-out provision and cover the debts they’d incurred during the chaotic summer of 2006. In the end, they borrowed $260,000--$16,000 more than the initial cost of the house--at a higher rate of interest than they were paying when they first bought the house in 2004.

Since they weren’t paying anything toward the principal of their mortgage between 2004 and 2006, they didn’t have any more equity when they refinanced in 2006 than when they moved in. For those 24 months, all John and Karen had done was pay close to $2,000 a month servicing their debt. This was a far higher monthly payment than if they had been renting during this time.

And to cap it off, instead of only having 28 years of mortgage payments left, they were back to square one, owing 30 years of payments at an additional $150 a month, making for an extra $54,000 in payments (spread over three decades) more than their first mortgage. By any measure, this wasn’t exactly a sound business proposition.

“I don’t feel secure,” Karen admitted. “I feel like I have to keep my house. I feel grateful, though, that we’ve come this far. But I don’t feel as secure as before. I feel I have to pay more attention, be more alert, watch the spending and everything now. I can’t relax.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Front Page News; US: California
KEYWORDS: bubble; bubblebrigade; depression; despair; doom; doomedweredoomed; dustbowl; grapesofwrath; hoovereconomy; housing; housingbubble; neville
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To: Toddsterpatriot

Thanks, as always, for you great charts! :-)


441 posted on 09/24/2006 2:34:49 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: Toddsterpatriot
To be honest, I was tempted but I never looked into it. This isn't about temporal advantage. It was about a higher calling that I am not living up to. I failed. I will try to be better in the future. Sorry for being such a jerk--GGG
442 posted on 09/24/2006 2:35:06 PM PDT by GodGunsGuts
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To: Toddsterpatriot

:-)


443 posted on 09/24/2006 2:36:54 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons
Furious
444 posted on 09/24/2006 2:37:53 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: churchillbuff

"They opted for an interest-only, adjustable-rate mortgage and counted on the value of their house continuing to rise as a way to build up equity. ..."

They're morons.


445 posted on 09/24/2006 2:38:34 PM PDT by toddlintown (Six bullets and Lennon goes down. Yet not one hit Yoko. Discuss.)
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To: nopardons

You may question my political judgment, but my judgment but the fact I voted against Clinton (twice), Gore, and then Kerry shows I have good judgment (not to mention my 5 votes for Reagan - in primaries and general elections of 80 and 84, and in the primary - against Ford - in 76). Yes, I criticized a sitting GOP president - Ford - just like Reagan did. And I criticize the current one, when he's made mistakes. The invasion of Iraq was one of those mistakes, and I count it as more evidence of my political judgment that I opposed that invasion before it happened - and years before it led to the turmoil in Iraq that I predicted, and before the majority of Americans came to oppose it (as they do now, according to all polls). My judgment on political things has never failed me. I opposed LBJ when most people were voting for him (by a landslide margin over my choice, Goldwater). I warned that Carter was a fraud and an incompetent, before most people caught on to that truth. And, yes, I warned that the invasion of Iraq was unnecessary and unwise. And now, I'm warning that if we don't get control of our borders, we're courting major trouble in the years ahead.


446 posted on 09/24/2006 2:44:33 PM PDT by churchillbuff
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To: nopardons; Howlin

Actually, in the interest of truth, she was on this thread. But no matter. I regret listing any names at all. And I concede my actions haven't derived from my highest calling. I have found that the separation a computer screen creates can be a very dangerous thing. I hope you will find it in your heart to break off the second half of your screen name and apply it to me.

Sincerely, GGG


447 posted on 09/24/2006 2:49:50 PM PDT by GodGunsGuts
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To: churchillbuff
But who did you vote for, when you voted against Slick Willie; Perot or President Bush the elder/Dole? That's the REAL question...whose answers WILL tell us whether or not you have any political acumen at all, or not!

You do NOTHING but criticized this President Bush;/ nothing he has ever done or said, have YOU been for/given praise to him for.

You're completely wrong about the Iraq situation. You've been predicting complete failure in Iraq, not to mention calling it a "quagmire" before it was a week old, from day one. And you're proud of all of that. *snicker*

You're quite the doom&gloomer! How come you've never criticized Reagan for his BLANKET AMNESTY and for completely ignoring our Southern Border?

448 posted on 09/24/2006 2:55:51 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: GodGunsGuts
If you purchase Real Estate for the long haul, buy a house in a desireable area and take care of it, over time, in the USA you're not going to lose money. We had a house in California that appreciated rapidly during the last up-turn, we made a profit, but not as large as we could have made two years before we sold it, but the house sold not long ago for four times what we sold it for 12 years ago.

These interest rates are great. They may stay around 6% or go to 7% of drop to 8%, but I've lived long enough to tell you 6% is great.

I don't know if Japan has the same tax incentives for homeownership, so can't comment on why they have problems, I just know that our prices are very reasonable when you look at property around the world at as a whole and historically property has never been a bad long-term investment in this country... as long as you are careful in the purchase.

449 posted on 09/24/2006 7:30:29 PM PDT by Arizona Carolyn
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To: Petronski

>>The premise is false.<<

Point eloquently made. It's really hard to fault your logic.


450 posted on 09/27/2006 10:20:42 AM PDT by RobRoy
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To: Howlin

"Do you spend a lot of time searching for articles to trash America with?"

While you are at it, why don't you join forces with McAullife and remind us that Wallace is a republican tool?

It's the same spirit.

Truth is truth. Facts is facts. Read the article and make up your own mind pointing out factual inconistencies or incorrect deductions, but slamming the poster is really immature.


451 posted on 09/27/2006 10:24:28 AM PDT by RobRoy
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To: Petronski

>>Of course, it's the fault of "unscrupulous financing," not "punchdrunk borrowers" or "careless fools."<<

Actually, it's the responsibility of both. But sadly, as a taxpayer I have a niggling feeling this is gonna cost me in the end.


452 posted on 09/27/2006 10:25:33 AM PDT by RobRoy
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To: churchillbuff

I suspect that most of the people that fell for the creative financing were just hoping they wouldn't be the last ones in on the pyramid scheme.

The sad part of musical chairs is that when the music stops, SOMEONE is going to be left standing.


453 posted on 09/27/2006 10:27:23 AM PDT by RobRoy
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To: Petronski
The premise is false.

No kidding. Ahhh, the poor Philbrooks.

...And the Philbrooks, who had about $900 saved up for their daughter’s future, a few hundred more for emergencies and nothing in reserve beyond that, realized their entire dream now stood ready to fall.

But why is that?

Ahhh...here it is...

...Having not understood the small print of their contract, the Philbrooks were unaware that the loan’s rate would never be lower than its starting rate--meaning all the risk attached to the variable rate fell on them.

If they didn't understand the documents, why did they sign them? No sympathy.

454 posted on 09/27/2006 10:34:30 AM PDT by Bloody Sam Roberts (I can't complain...but sometimes I still do.)
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To: Bloody Sam Roberts

You can't legislate stupidity.


455 posted on 09/27/2006 10:46:41 AM PDT by petercooper (It could be worse, it could be raining.)
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To: Bloody Sam Roberts
If they didn't understand the documents, why did they sign them?

I don't think they even read them. That stuff is written right there in the note.

456 posted on 09/27/2006 11:30:52 AM PDT by Petronski (Living His life abundantly.)
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To: churchillbuff
In the Philbrooks' case, John and Karen borrowed almost the entirety of the $244,000 cost of their modest North Highlands home: One loan was written for $195,000 at 6.375-percent interest; another financed the remainder of nearly $45,000 at 9.125 percent. The rate on the small loan was fixed. But on the large loan, the rate was fixed for only two years, and after that it was variable.

John said the Realtor who arranged the loan verbally assured him it would never go up by more than a quarter of 1 percent at any time. In fact, in the (very) small-print clauses attached to that loan were four poison-pill provisions.

Having not understood the small print of their contract, the Philbrooks were unaware that the loan’s rate would never be lower than its starting rate--meaning all the risk attached to the variable rate fell on them.

Idiots that cant read shouldn't be making real estate deals without a third party adviser helping them. I signed an enlistment contract ... after that I make sure I READ EVERYTHING and understand all of it before doing ANY deal.

These people were complete fools to agree to these terms. A little research would have save their lives.

457 posted on 09/27/2006 11:45:07 AM PDT by Centurion2000 ("Be polite and courteous, but have a plan to KILL everybody you meet.")
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To: nopardons

I did not say conservatism is Fascism. What I said is that if you accuse ME of being Marxist because I am concerned about outsourcing and the undermining of the middle class, then what could someone else call conservatism that is equally WRONG and INSULTING.

As to my class warfare, I never said that I thought that 30 years ago when CEOs were earning 40 TIMES what their low level employees earned that this was wrong. What I did question is what has happened in the interim to make these same CEO's 10 to 25 TIMES more valuable than they were before, and is this huge salary inflation at the top one reason for pushing jobs to cheap labor outside OUR country.

If I recall correctly, the Communist ideal was "from each according to his abilities, and to each according to his needs." I hardly think that a 40 time earnings disparity would ever be approved of in that thought pattern.


458 posted on 09/28/2006 10:53:40 PM PDT by gleeaikin
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To: nopardons

"You assume that people never before lost jobs or their savings."

Why would you think I assume that. First of all, I am in my late 60s, and I can remember how scarred my parents generation was by the "great depression". I heard plenty of tales of woe growing up. Before the crash, my fathers parents were earning around $50,000 per year. They lost all their money to an unscrupulous stock adviser. They also lost their work as they were professional artists. If it hadn't been for FDR's projects for the employment of artists, many would literally have starved. My maternal grandfather lost his job as a chief engineer on major passenger liners around 1916, and only could get work on tramp steamers after that. He had just bought a new house for his family, and my mother remembers that food became very restricted after that even though her mother went to work as a nurse/home health aide. Incidentally my grandparents were all loyal Republicans.


459 posted on 09/28/2006 11:04:52 PM PDT by gleeaikin
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To: Centurion2000

These people were fools, and they were INCREDIBLE fools for not even understanding their limitations and not hiring someone to represent them during the process. Can they READ? No one in their right mind would sign that contract.


460 posted on 09/28/2006 11:37:40 PM PDT by The Antiyuppie ("When small men cast long shadows, then it is very late in the day.")
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