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Federal Home Loan Bank of New York Announces Third Quarter 2012 Operating

on Oct 28, 2012 in Stated Income Loans | Comments Off on Federal Home Loan Bank of New York Announces Third Quarter 2012 Operating

A few good condominium photos I identified: Fotoloco The Alexandra Condominium Halloween Party by Ortigas and Company 070 Image by FOTOLOCO! Fotoloco photo booth images @ The Alexandra Condominium Halloween Celebration | Ortigas &amp Business | Viridian in Greenhills | All-you-want photo prints from Fotoloco photo booth For much more houses click right here… Fotoloco The Alexandra Condominium Halloween Party by Ortigas and Firm 089 Image by FOTOLOCO! Fotoloco photo booth pictures @ The Alexandra Condominium Halloween Party | Ortigas &amp Firm | Viridian in Greenhills | All-you-want photo prints from Fotoloco photo booth For more homes click here… The Empire of Debt by Dee Hon Image by Renegade98 From Adbusters #74, generic Nov-Dec 2007 The Empire of Debt Money for nothing. Own a home for no money down. Do not pay for your appliances until 2012. This is the new American Dream, and for the last few years, millions have been giddily living it. Dead is the old version, the one historian James Truslow Adams introduced to the world as “that dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement.” Such Puritan ideals – to work hard, to save for a better life – didn’t die from the natural causes of age and obsolescence. We killed them, willfully and purposefully, to create a new gilded age. As a society, we told ourselves we could all get rich, put our feet up on the decks of our new vacation homes, and let our money work for us. Earning is for the unenlightened. Equity is the new golden calf. Sadly, this is a hollow dream. Yes, luxury homes have been hitting new gargantuan heights. Ferrari sales have never been better. But much of the ever-expanding wealth is an illusory façade masking a teetering tower of debt – the greatest the world has seen. It will collapse, in a disaster of our own making. Distress is already rumbling through Wall Street. Subprime mortgages leapt into the public consciousness this summer, becoming the catchphrase for the season. Hedge fund masterminds who command salaries in the tens of millions for their supposed financial prescience, but have little oversight or governance, bet their investors’ multi-multi-billions on the ability that subprime borrowers – who by very definition have lower incomes and/or rotten credit histories – would miraculously find means to pay back loans far exceeding what they earn. They didn’t, and surging loan defaults are sending shockwaves through the markets. Yet despite the turmoil this collapse is wreaking, it’s just the first ripple to hit the shore. America’s debt crisis runs deep. How did it come to this? How did America, collectively and as individuals, become a nation addicted to debt, pushed to and over the edge of bankruptcy? The savings rate hangs below zero. Personal bankruptcies are reaching record heights. America’s total debt averages more than 0,000 for every man, woman, and child. On a broader scale, China holds nearly trillion in US debt. Japan and other countries are also owed big. The story begins with labor. The decades following World War II were boom years. Economic growth was strong and powerful industrial unions made the middle-class dream attainable for working-class citizens. Workers bought homes and cars in such volume they gave rise to the modern suburb. But prosperity for wage earners reached its zenith in the early 1970s. By then, corporate America had begun shredding the implicit social contract it had with its workers for fear of increased foreign competition. Companies cut costs by finding cheap labor...

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