Tuesday, September 23, 2008
terrorism or peace
Regardless of what is written about Obama doesn’t mean it is true. What is true is “what comes out of the mouth the heart is full of” and we hear what Obama says and we can judge his heart accordingly.
Our biggest problem now aside from energy is terrorism (if we fix our energy we fix the economy) and there’s two ways to address terror, offensively or defensively. Both face the same tossup war or peace. Why radical Islam hates us? Education is the key. Talking and listening with our enemies and allies spending money on the schools that will prevent the teaching of radical Islam and at the same time be sensitive to the ancient customs of the Arab nations and leave diversity the role it needs to play. I am an American that lived in Israel ten years near an Arab neighborhood (Bethlehem) and I know how Arab-Israeli (Arabs that were born in Israel) and Palestinians (Arabs who were born outside usually Jordan) and have an understanding how both think. The more violence we will use against this Holy War, the more they are given the right to use terror.
bailout, financial crisis
Financial Crisis
Here is one way to tackle it. First let’s look at the numbers. I am just a laymen who is not in the position to obtain these numbers, especially real numbers. I would like to start right before the housing bubble around December, 1999 when there was a created rumor that the would will end New Years Day. Who created and why has to do with the beginning of a real-estate thrust. Year 2000 houses were still cheap. I’m from NYC and happen to come to visit
The baby boomer era has a part in this because in places like
Here is were I would like to know these numbers. By rule of thumb if a person bought a house for $100,000 at a rate of 6% he still needed 10%, $1,000/mo with taxes/insurance. My particular problem is not so bad, although here is where the failure accrued. At the peek of the high priced homes using my same neighborhood, someone would buy my house at $150,000 with a monthly payment of $1,500, who probably purchased their house with the equity from their previous house. Which meant, with all their expenses phone, cell, cable, utilities, car, insurance, and food, their income would have to be at least $3,500/mo. Someone who took a second mortgage at that time when the prices began to drop helped fuel the crisis. The brave who lived in places like
We can sit here and say the banks and the buyers are to blame and somewhere there’s a greedy con-artist hiding in a condo, but it’s not the solution to our problem.
Out of all the foreclosures out there, how many of them are the buyers only home? Out of those numbers, how many are out in the street? The next number is how many are living with relatives? The next number is how many are renting now? Now the biggest number and in my view is the most important of all is, out of the number of foreclosures how many are priced over the head of the actual incomes.
Here is my suggestion; let these people humble themselves and get in homes adjacent to their actual income. Second, the homes that are left after all the musical chairs of houses are left then these should be simply put up for auction.
If we did this we wouldn’t have to use billions of taxpayers’ money.