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Foreclosure Home Gutting!? Right or wrong?!


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2009 Sep 29, 4:14pm   15,920 views  61 comments

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So what do people on here think of people who gut homes and sell them for parts.. down to the copper wire in the walls?

I can sympathize with the anger of having a bank forclose on "your" home... But I think these people better watch out because banks could easily sue an owner for the damages I would imagine...

For instance,  If i just bought a new car.. had a $20,000 5 year loan.. I decided to stop paying my loan for whatever reason.  The loan company says they are sending someone to repo my car...   I sell the tires, car stereo, nav system, leather seats... gut the car just as these people are gutting homes.  (I didn't just sell the car outright because the loan company has the car TITLE).

Would they be off the hook for their $20K loan?   I didn't think so...

I know laws vary from state to state.. But I doubt a judge would have much sympathy for someone who destroys a home before they leave...

#housing

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41   Austinhousingbubble   2009 Oct 2, 11:59am  

But no one held a gun to their heads and told them to buy.

Something much more powerful: a blank check!

They spent money, usually the bank’s, to rehab the house into a granite countertopped, stainless applianced McMansion. They spend months not paying the payment and enjoying homes that would made HGTV so proud… They drank the koolaid and now they want thier money back ’cause it tasted like colored sugar water after all.

I'm not trying to vindicate either side, but I think you'd have to concede that the banks and these losers are birds of a feather. Their behavior is a nice match to the profligate lending practices and subsequent massive socialized losses of the banks. I reserve little energy for splitting hairs so fine, distinguishing between slime and scum.

The banks were riding the wave too - but if the tables were turned and the homeowners made a shitload of money (and the bust never happened), the banks wouldn’t be asking for part of the profits earned.

Banks have vastly more elegant means for extracting their pound of flesh.

42   Richmond   2009 Oct 2, 12:49pm  

Austin,

You said it all with "a blank check' and "usually the bank's." It was all too easy. Think about it. In another time, so much responsibility was required to put yourself in the position of being able to buy a house, such behavior would have long been outgrown and never even contemplated. Hence, these purchases probably never would have ocurred in the first place. How many kids can be trusted with a pillow case full of Halloween candy? Dicipline (on either side) was, unfortunately, never part of the equation.

43   Ryan1781   2009 Oct 2, 12:58pm  

Is it stealing when you take something that belongs to another person? I think everyone can agree that it is.

Is it stealing when you take something that belongs to a dog? If you attribute human characteristics to a dog, then I suppose. But, if you believe that animals should not have human type rights, then you cannot steal from a dog.

Can you steal from the sky? Giving human characteristics to an inanimate object is more of a metaphysical stretch, but possible in the realm of human imagination. But, if you believe inanimate objects should not have human type rights, then it is not possible to steal from the sky.

Can you steal from a corporation? Obviously, a corporation is not a person, but rather a piece of paper with writing on it. Human imagination can attribute human characteristics on a piece of paper as easily as attributing human characteristics on a dog or the sky, so it can be possible to steal from it. But, if you do not believe a corporation should have human type rights, then you cannot steal from it.

If a corporation hires someone to kill a human, can you send the corporation to the electric chair as you could a human? If a corporation's existence is ended, does it have a soul to go to heaven or hell? What is the natural life span of a corporation? If a corporation has an indefinite life span and people give it the rights of humans, does it not have more rights than a human? Example, Prop 13 revalues real property in CA to market conditions after a transfer. A corporation and a human buy adjacent properties. The human can live 80 years and only his/her children will see the revaluation of the property after the human dies. The corporation can exist for centuries without a revaluation of the property.

44   chrisborden   2009 Oct 2, 6:01pm  

People who commit such morally reprehensible acts will get their comeuppance one way or another, sooner or later. It is the law of life (for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction). No one can escape that. You want to see how it works? Next time you express anger toward someone, guess what you're going to get in return? Then try being nice; it comes right back. Evildoers eventually get caught, even big ones. It is only a matter of time.

45   homeowner_for ever_san jose   2009 Oct 2, 6:22pm  

chrisborden says

People who commit such morally reprehensible acts will get their comeuppance one way or another, sooner or later. It is the law of life (for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction). No one can escape that. You want to see how it works? Next time you express anger toward someone, guess what you’re going to get in return? Then try being nice; it comes right back. Evildoers eventually get caught, even big ones. It is only a matter of time.

This is called karma in hindu philosophy and its applicable beyond this life ...now i am getting too philosophical

46   Bap33   2009 Oct 3, 12:48am  

The example of bailing out the banks is very bad for national morals.
Once people see so clearly that the banks don’t “get foreclosed on” no matter how bad they are, then people feel justified in cheating the banks.
We need moral leadership willing to let the banks fail.
Maybe I’m being too hasty though. The FDIC has shut down quite a lot of banks lately, though I’d bet you the bankers come out of it just fine.

my understanding of this situation is the banks were forced (or allowed) to lend money to people that were not properly (traditional) qualified buyers. Would you agree that this lending standard change was the begining of such problems?

47   elliemae   2009 Oct 3, 12:57am  

Can you steal from the sky? Can you steal from a dog (I just did). Can you steal from a corporation - we've already established that they can steal from us, but since we can't "see" a corporation did we really just get ripped off? If a tree falls on a teevee program but I muted it, was there any sound? Can flowers talk? How much wood would a wood chuck chuck if a wood chuck could chuck wood? Why is there air? If you break a cookie, doesn't that cause calorie leakage thereby reducing the caloric content of the remaining pieces? And how in the blazes did that pig get his wooden leg?*

Sure the banks offered blank checks, but the sheeple signed papers that said they'd pay it back. They surely have some responsibility.

Is it morally okay to throw a family out on the street? I would want to ask what the family's responsibilty would be - If they don't pay their rent, they are morally responsible for their own eviction.

Like Bap, I'm just regurgitating at this point. To answer the original question, it's wrong.
------------------------------------------------------

*Yes, yes, yes-yes, not for me, I don't know but this one keeps me up at night, A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood, to blow up basketballs, sure (if it makes you feel better), and because a good pig like that - you can't eat him all at once.

48   Patrick   2009 Oct 3, 4:11am  

Bap33 says

my understanding of this situation is the banks were forced (or allowed) to lend money to people that were not properly (traditional) qualified buyers. Would you agree that this lending standard change was the begining of such problems?

Lending to people who can't really afford a house is a bad idea, but I think that wasn't the begining of the problems.

Letting banks push the risk for bad lending onto bond investors and onto the government is what really made bad lending take off. The banks thought they couldn't lose, so they were willing to lend to anyone.

The repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 was the biggest single problem, IMHO. That meant that mortgage could be turned into bonds and sold on Wall Street. Wall Street loved it, because they in turn thought they could just push all the risk onto bond buyers or the gov't.

"The repeal enabled commercial lenders such as Citigroup, which was in 1999 the largest U.S. bank by assets, to underwrite and trade instruments such as mortgage-backed securities..." from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_steagall

So utlimately, the problem is Wall Street being involved in government. Or in more general terms corporate involvement in government.

49   Bap33   2009 Oct 3, 4:49am  

in my opinion that is focusing on effects as oposed to the cause that was used to build this problem. The easy lending was, in my most humble opinion, the very first change that had to take place to allow any of the other very valid points to take place.

What I mean is this, the human nature factors are a constant .. greed, desire, fear, are all nothing new, and as Ellie points out, sheeple see - sheeple do. So those factors are not unique to the bubble, just a constant factor in the human experience. In the chronicalogical(sp) order of things the very valid points that Patrick makes follow the step that I believe was the first step ... loose lending forced on the banks. That step alone drove prices up by increasing the buyer pool beyond those with the means to repay the loans. And then all of the other poop started hitting the rotating cooling device.

@Patrick,
That is a very good point about how the banksters were able to play on wall-street. I would almost bet that they knew they would be saved (unless, ofcourse, the mighty Gov felt you should fall on the sword) (and if you work for $1 a year plus bonuses it sure sucks to have your bonuses attacked by folks that demanded the system you work under be put into place.) I see your point as having a large roll in the bubble going as big as it did and global also. Maybe that was the banksters way to get back at (or planned pay-off) gov (B.Frank and Co) for getting involved in banking?

50   homeowner_for ever_san jose   2009 Oct 3, 5:05am  

So utlimately, the problem is Wall Street being involved in government. Or in more general terms corporate involvement in government
Its like trying to keep a prostitute (govt) and john (wallstreet) apart by making prostitution illegal.....never worked and never will....but we can always try.

wallstreet has money and govt has power. I don't know how you can keep money and power apart. money and power survive on each other. Ofcourse USA has been the most successful coutry where money and power are most separated due to our contitutions focus on freedoms.

51   thomas.wong87   2009 Oct 3, 6:04am  

"The example of bailing out the banks is very bad for national morals."

It may seem like that on the surface, but what exactly happened.

The banks, which hold the funds of depositors*,

lent the money to end user (home buyers) in return for a promissory note. Now that the homebuyer were unable to pay back the promissory note, the depositors* funds have disappeared. The bailout (funding) was the last resort for the depositors to be whole again.

The US Government/Fed walked in and provided liquidity until the banks can convert the housing inventory they seized into cash back to the depositors accounts.

* and who are the depositors?, personal savings and checking accounts, corporate accounts(investments, checking for fund operations/payroll), non-profits like (churches, universities, and the like), government (local, state, federal entities), international account holders doing business in the US, and other entity funds.

The alternative would be finding that you, me, everyone else who is a depositor would find a huge drop in their bank balances, if any balance. How are you going to divide whats left to each account class and account holder as depositor?

Things would be far worst had that happened. Depression indeed. The alternative what 'could have happened' is far worst than you or I can imagine.

52   thomas.wong87   2009 Oct 3, 6:14am  

"wish i was lucky" - clearly you sound like an accountant. Only an accountant / auditor would ask such questions. Kudos to my Bro!

53   thomas.wong87   2009 Oct 3, 6:18am  

"What I mean is this, the human nature factors are a constant .. greed, desire, fear, are all nothing new,"

Agreed Babs, that is why we need more internal controls... it is a 'mechanism' to stop conflicts of interest which harm the consumer/public at large.

54   thomas.wong87   2009 Oct 3, 6:29am  

Lending to people who can’t really afford a house is a bad idea, but I think that wasn’t the begining of the problems.

Agreed!
The laundry list regarding Banks, Lenders, Realtors is very long !
We can start not so much at the top but at 'first contact' on main street where the transactions start.. local buyer, sellers, realtors, and lenders.
We still have people and the NAR running around talking about how RE is the best investment. Yet we haven't even touched the NAR.

55   elliemae   2009 Oct 3, 7:46am  

Why in the world would you put an accountant in charge of a program that involves money? They'd ask too many questions and streamline the system, thereby causing countless useless bureocrats to lose their jobs. Nah, they'd just get transferred to another useless program...

56   bob2356   2009 Oct 3, 8:42am  

Ryan says

Bob2356,
Here’s a harder moral issue for you:

Is it morally ok for you (personally) to forcibly throw a family out on the street because you can?

In a heartbeat if they trashed my house. I'd file charges too. We are talking adults here not 15 year olds.

What ever happened to personal responsibility? I'm sick of hearing about the poor people who were taken advantage of by the greedy banks. No one held a gun to anyone's head and forced them to take a no money down 105% mortgage for 500,000 with a 50,000 income. A large percentage were gambling and lost. Now want someone else to bail them out. Didn't anyone ever learn not to gamble with money you can't afford to lose?

The banks are just as bad. Oh my God the world will end if we didn't bail out the banks. BS. What makes banks so special that they couldn't have gone into bankruptcy like anyone else. Business continues, just under protection of the court. The good parts of the business are sold off. The bad parts are dissolved. The stockholders and bondholders eat the loss.There my friends is the rub. Follow the money. Who are the bondholders? Mostly foreign governments and sovereign wealth funds. The same people who are financing the operations of the US government by buying insane amounts of Tbills that are eventually going to be worthless anyway. Oops, can't let them eat it or they won't buy any more tbills. That would be end of the world for the US government. The bailouts are the greatest fraud ever perpetuated on the American public in the history of the republic.

57   thomas.wong87   2009 Oct 3, 9:02am  

bob2356 says

What makes banks so special that they couldn’t have gone into bankruptcy like anyone else. Business continues, just under protection of the court.

Read my statement above! Bankruptcy for a bank wouldn't work... so what happens to the funds on deposit by the public and other entities, like your employer who pays his payroll and vendors from the funds in the same bank. Ho hum! banks go under and ho hum everything goes like any other day... Jez! get real!

58   thomas.wong87   2009 Oct 3, 9:10am  

elliemae says

Why in the world would you put an accountant in charge of a program that involves money?

Instead of laywers, maybe we need accountants in Congress and State Gov'ts!

OK here comes the firestorm!

59   Bap33   2009 Oct 3, 10:36am  

@ellie,
that is exactly why I (and just enough other conservatives) voted for Perot. We needed a money stud, not a political pud.

60   elliemae   2009 Oct 4, 5:36am  

Okay on the chandelier, but should they take it and not replace it with the first one? Built-in dishwashers that come with the home - okay to take? If you replace a light switch, does that mean you can remove it and leave bare wires? Garbage disposal? Does this mean they can peel the paint off the walls (I'm reaching here). IF they built a patio on, can they take it? What if they planted flowers, can they dig 'em up and take 'em with?

The homes should be left in the shape in which it was purchased - if not better.

61   bob2356   2009 Oct 4, 9:40am  

thomas.wong87 says

bob2356 says

What makes banks so special that they couldn’t have gone into bankruptcy like anyone else. Business continues, just under protection of the court.

Read my statement above! Bankruptcy for a bank wouldn’t work… so what happens to the funds on deposit by the public and other entities, like your employer who pays his payroll and vendors from the funds in the same bank. Ho hum! banks go under and ho hum everything goes like any other day… Jez! get real!

Nothing happens to the deposits, they are FDIC insured (until the FDIC runs out of money, coming very soon). The bank operates under a bankruptcy judge or the FDIC. The business, what you are calling deposits, gets sold to a healthy bank. Creditors, bondholders, and stockholders take a bath. At least they should in a capitalistic society. That's the burden of being an investor, researching you investments. It's called risk management.

Banks go through bankruptcy all the time, but it's almost always through the FDIC not a bankruptcy judge because of FDIC insured accounts. Investment banks don't have FDIC insured accounts so they go to bankruptcy court. Or should have instead of being bailed out. You don't cure gamblers by giving them more money and sending them back into the casino. That is exactly what has happened. With your (and your children's and your grandchildren's) tax dollars.

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