@JT - I didn't miss it, and I realize my most recent posts are going into a much deeper debate...sorry for doing that to your threadJ T wrote:Perhaps you missed earlier parts of this thread (it is really huge now), but the main point is that Wall Street and the National Banks led the economy to topple with the subprime mortgage crisis. Taxpayers bailed them out. The bailout total has been estimated at $12,200,000,000,000.00.mjmjr25 wrote:I guess i'm mystified at what the bad behavior of the wealthy is - or more importantly, how it affects you. No one forces any of us to buy stock in one company or another. No one forces us to work at one company or another. I still see it as feeling a need to place blame - sometimes there is no one to blame.
With that said, to echo a point we all understand. WE, the collective WE who bought houses we could not afford are as responsible as any bank or government entity. In most cases of loans that were granted, yes, the banks should have had more safeguards in place absolutely, but again, we the people also made our futures look brighter than perhaps they were.
My sister bought a house for $400,000 in Modesto 5 years ago. I've seen this house. It is worth $70,000 in materials / labor. Common sense should have told my sister, "this house is not worth $400K." Now, her house is appraised at $120,000 and she owes $300K+. Do I feel bad for her - absolutely, she's my sister and I love her. But...she made the choice and it was a poor one. The bank made the choice...and it was a poor one. We can affect our own choices, I think trying to affect the choices of a bank is a much greater feat and i'd rather spend my time and my resources affecting things I can control, things I can change.