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Memories and Misery in CNN Land While Homeowers Seek Mortgage Justice and Foreclosures Mount
ATLANTA -- Somehow, I can't escape CNN. Last Saturday I joined Ted Turner, Wolf Blitzer and more than 300 current and former CNN employees at a celebration of the network's 30th anniversary at the National Press Club in Washington. I was there as one of the "CNN Originals," the many staffers who helped originate what was mocked as the Chicken Noodle Network in Atlanta back in June 1980.
There was pride and sense of achievement in the room by those who pioneered 24 Hour Cable News on small budgets but with lots of heart, coffee and sleepless nights. Being there was often thrilling and part of my personal learning curve on how big media works, a story I tell in my book The More You Watch The Less You Know. It was an unforgettable time, and, even though I soon moved on to ABC News, I was pleased, even honored, to be part of it.
As fate would have it, a day after that CNN celebration, I was back in Atlanta at CNN Center, actually, across the street, at the Georgia World Congress Center where another news-making network was holding forth.
Drawing tens of thousands of people trying to save their homes, the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America (NACA) was holding its 19th SAVE THE DREAM event, this time in cooperation with the City of Atlanta.
Fox in Atlanta called it "hugely successful." CBS reported what I saw up close and personal:
"More than 25,000 people have asked for help. NACA said so far it's their biggest event. They said people were coming in from all over the country.
Judy Richmond from Lithonia has waited more than 24 hours. She said, "We knew there would be a lot of people, but we thought the process would be a lot smoother."
She said she was willing to wait for help navigating the mortgage world.
Bruce Marks, CEO of NACA, said, "When you have the opportunity to save thousands of dollars a month people are willing to do that.
He said they have a thousand volunteers working to keep things moving. He said there are also thousands working the phones.'"
In the giant hall designed for trade shows, homeowners were getting up every few minutes to report on how much they had had their payments cut. With every announcement, those who were still waiting broke into cheers. For many, those cuts represent a chance at economic survival in hard times. To them, these are real "solutions" for very stressed lives.
I found it bizarre that outside the Center, an outfit called Billboards for America was paying for a huge sign proclaiming "GOD IS NOT A SOCIALIST." Inside, the Federation of Retail Merchants was also holding a Loss Prevention Summit in response to a spike in shoplifting blamed on the lousy economy.
Unfortunately, there had been no loss prevention seminars for these homeowners who were talked into taking mortgages they couldn't afford. They were there in droves to receive free counseling and seek out mortgage modification in meetings with representatives of lenders and banks. The Bank of America, which just settled a major mortgage fraud case, was out in force reducing mortgage payments for borrowers who qualified.
Another bank, JP Morgan Chase, which has recently been targeted with protests by NACA members was not taking part. Instead, they were cynically competing with NACA by running their own home ownership event at a nearby hotel to demonstrate how responsible they are. They sent a truck with a big sign promoting their offering to drive around the Congress Center and taunt NACA which found it amusing since their event was minuscule in comparison.
NACA's issue is getting some national attention too, from of all quarters, the FBI, which is reportedly planning a national crackdown on mortgage fraud this week. The Financial Times reported, "Hundreds of people are expected to be arrested in the sweep, which will start as early as next week," citing two people with knowledge of the operation. An F.B.I. spokesman declined to comment to the newspaper.
"Charges are expected to be leveled over offenses ranging from pushing borrowers to lie about their income on mortgage applications to providing homeowners with false information about foreclosure rescue programs," the newspaper said.
The British newspaper is ahead of the US press in stating that "it was mortgage fraud that led to the expansion of the housing bubble and eventually accounted for its catastrophic burst, as loans were handed out to borrowers with unsubstantiated incomes and low credit ratings."
These homeowners wait patiently for help from a not for profit group, not their own government. The basement of the Georgia conference center is packed with victims of the financial crisis while the people who caused it operate freely from their office towers and penthouses.
They are the mortgage industry backed by their friends in the big banks who lent the money, and the Wall Street firms that securitized and resold the mortgages at inflated values with high ratings bought from rating agencies. (The "financial reformers" in Congress have just dropped new rules for these agencies from the "reform bill.") Also to blame are the insurance firms that protected the lenders against defaults in an enterprise they knew was fraudulent.
Unfortunately the FBI is not going after this triad but only the lowest level violators. There should be a RICO prosecution of the big guns in this avaricious cartel, not just the small fry and street soldiers. If there ever was a organized criminal enterprise this is it.
At least there is this force fighting for justice. Arguably it is bigger than the Tea Party and its populism is just as angry even as its been overlooked on the left. Can this anger be organized politically? There are those in NACA who are thinking about mobilizing their many members to press politicians to act and play a more political role.
If they go in that direction they will be confronting the corporate goliaths who are very angry them selves about all this anger and quite condescending. Listen to GE's CEO Jeffrey R. Immelt: "People need to tone down the rhetoric around financial services and stop the populism and be adults."
Excuse me, Mr. GE: The people here are adults with a right to be pissed off.
This is part of the story I
tell in my film PLUNDER The Crime of Our Time
(Plunderthecrimeofourtime.com.
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16 Comments so far
Show AllHomeowners should be walking away in droves. Banks won't do principle reductions until they think that homeowners will just stop paying *and* walk away. If more homeowners did this, Banks would get the message loud and clear and there would be no need to line up like cattle for days to show some stiff your paystubs and assure them that you aren't a deadbeat. Stop paying, stop paying right now, threaten bankruptcy, do bankruptcy. At least half of the media, and most of the Government is guilty of giving people bad advice. Banks do not want to own houses, but their contracts stipulate that if you stop paying they then take the house. Hold 'em to it.
Banks are attempting to price-fix entire markets, they are terrified of another 15-20 percent drop in prices. F#$k 'em, save your money and buy another property. Tell them (courteously) to take the house and shove it. Banks routinely default and abandon underwater properties. Don't throw good money after bad, be a "savvy investor".
I am a Social Worker who works for the Poor. The people that I see, who have had homes and lost them, did so because they lost their jobs and have not been able to find another one that pays (if they find one), what they were previously paid.
I worked for the State of Indiana for 20 years and my job was privatized so that the Corporations like ACS and IBM could hire people off of the streets, give no training, and pay less than $8 per hr. I have a college degree and had plenty of contacts in the job market.It took me 5 months to get my unemployment and I could have lost my house then. I was unemployed for 18 months.
I just saw a guy yesterday that was a General Manager in a GM car lot. He was making over $100,000 per year and had to sell his house and boat and motorcycle. He has not had a job offer and he is 55yrs old. He is really Bitter. We were brought up to believe that we would increase our income, by our increasing job skills, as we gained seniority in our jobs.We would retire with a pension and a supplement of Social Security. The Corporations broke faith with us when their bottom line became their top priority, and retirement pensions and medical became unwanted expenses.
Losing your house is just a part of the Big Picture of jobs loss. If you have no job, or a low paying job, you can't afford a Mortgage. Are all of those organizations that are to help homeowners going to pay the Mortgage for them??
Everyone has a *human right* to shelter. Most of the mortgages were fraudulent. NACA is a bit of a mystery, since they've received widespread press for "Saving the Dream", (the idea that "housing" is a "dream" is another US propaganda victory) that alone should raise suspicions. Years into the mortgage crisis they are just now considering political activism?! They could be a front group for Banks Inc, that hope to shake down borrowers for some knickles and dimes that only postpone an eventual foreclosure.
Look here:
http://www.alternet.org/economy/147106/why_banks_try_to_make_borrowers_feel_like_sinners_when_they_can%27t_pay_off_their_mortgages/
Look here too:
http://ssrn.com/abstract=1597835
Common sense, never seems to be the choice. Instead, it too is some kind of "dream":
http://www.counterpunch.org/mokhiber03052010.html
Excellent post!
Currently, I am completely skeptical of any rhetoric that includes the word "dream."
Pssst... Kay, I know EXACTLY what you mean!
And it took guts, because let's face it-- they can be a little touchy here at times. ;)
Obedient Servant: I hope you never lose your sense of humor!
Thanks!
Considering "GE's CEO Jeffrey R. Immelt" comment, "People need to tone down the rhetoric around financial services and stop the populism and be adults," have you ever noticed how "populism" is to "be adults" when "government can't do anything right" a la Sarah Palin, and not to "be adults" when "business can't do anything right?"
Two things. One, maybe we should go back to calling it Chicken Noodle Network because like the soup it's substance is heavily diluted and two, 24/7 news means 24/7 propaganda. Before CNN there were 1-2 hours of TV propaganda per day.
Fannie Mae is suggesting existing foreclosed homes and housing developments be BULLDOZED.
They claim this measure will help keep real estate values inflated THUS PROTECTING Mortgage lenders from losses.
This is the "efficiency" of the free market in action. People are homeless sleeping in streets. Other live in slums and perfectly good homes , NEWLY built fave being bulldozed to help prop up "value" of existing investments.
I agree -- it makes no sense to bulldoze perfectly good houses and apartment buildings when people are homeless.
Disgusting, isn't it?
Only if you put human needs above "The Market".
Joe
...
Houses Bulldozed?????
Are we living in Gaza yet?
You wouldn't believe the wicked police drones in testing right now. They are the size of a small refrigerator with two rotors, a bullhorn and (no doubt) a gun. EVery police force is clamoring to get one.
"Attention Citizen! Attention! Get out of the house citizen, the Bulldozer will crush you in five minutes! Hands in the air for trespassing! I will shoot to kill, just like I do in Iraq, so come out with your hands in the air...
Thank you for your cooperation.... BAM BAM BAM!!!!"
And I thought "judge Dread" and "Robocop" were science fiction. Silly me.
TJ
I'm sorry but I can't help but think that if people were foolish enough to buy houses they couldn't afford in the hope of cashing in through appreciation, or refinancing to buy luxuries, and are bailed out by the government they will learn the wrong lesson.
Smitty are you kidding me? You obviously have no clue what's happened here; is that because you watch too much CNN or did you get this way all by yourself? I mean, people were scammed here, not the banks! Many were placed in ARM loans by design but actually qualified for better rates. Your comment seems to indicate you may think the world of poor people woke up one day and colluded to take out the economy. I mean really, do you honestly think they all decided to go out and get themselves into risky loans that they intended to default on? That's interesting. Did you mind bailing out the banks or worry of what kind of lesson they learned from it all? Your comment is ridiculous.
Is there something to celebrate at CNN? Is whiny Wolf Blitzer retiring?