In OC and Los Angeles county, you can get your house reappraised and send it
to the county office. They will readjust your property taxes.

-----Original Message-----
From: N Parr [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, September 26, 2008 8:24 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: $700B?

Don't forget that you're still paying $350,000 worth of real estate
taxes on a house that's only worth $175,000 now. 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, September 26, 2008 10:07 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: $700B?

Track down as many "loan officers" as possible and play grab ass-et with
them!  (Hundred million $ bonuses/salaries for screwing up???)  Then
disappear 'em to Gitmo...

<rant>Here's the thing.  Let's suppose I'm super wealthy.  (If I were,
I'd not be a sysadmin!)  I pay cash for a new house and car.  I still
have a substantial sum in mutual funds, money market accounts, and
CDs...

Now, some hucksters come up with "creative financing" and convince
$30k/yr folks they can take out a $350k loan.  It will be at, say, 1%
interest, and their payment (wild guess here) is $350/month.  They're
told it's an ARM, and the rate will go up a point.  Not to worry -
houses are going up in value; they can re-finance against the increased
value.

Well, the buyer thinks, "a 1% increase in my $350 payment is only
$3.50". 
WRONG!  The "1% increase" means that 1% interest now becomes 2% - his
payment doubles!

Meanwhile, other hucksters keep paving over the world's greatest
farmland for more McMansions.

Other hucksters buy up all these sub-prime 1% loans, package them, and
put them on the world market.  They're sold to dang near every major
financial institution in the world because what actually happened was
never considered...

SO, with all those McMansions, the population ran out of people who
would buy them, so they sit empty.  Someone does want to buy a house,
and these new empty structures have had their prices slashed - supply
far excedes demand.

Meanwhile, this drags down the value of any and all houses.  Those
sub-primers find that, at the time their $350 payment becomes $700,
their $350,000 McMansion is now worth only, say, $175,000 (but they owe
$350,000).  They walk away (literally), so the house is now vacant.
Folks default on mortgages, so there is no more money to be lent (for
not only mortgages but for business loans as well.)

Meanwhile, the house for which I paid cash has also gone way down in
value.  If my neigbors are all moving out, leaving their houses vacant,
then squatters or salvagers descend upon the neighborhood.  My house is
now worth even less, and I am now in a high crime area.

Meanwhile, those bundles of mortgages everyone bought?  Well, they're
pretty close to worthless now.  Consequently, my mutual funds begin
losing thousands per month.  Banks are no longer lending, so the
interest rates on my CDs and money markets approach nil.

So, as I approach "retirement age", my assets (the house I thought I
could sell to move into a tiny place as well as my investments) are no
longer there.  I obviously don't retire, but if the cash-flow situation
results in my company folding (and me out of work), ...?

Note that although the USA is most deeply affected, the fact that these
bad mortgage packages were sold world-wide affects the economies in the
rest of the world as well.

So, although it might seem satisfying to "let the rascals rot", the
situation is going to take down everybody unless some action (preferably
the correct action!) is taken.</rant>
--------------------------------------
Richard McClary, Systems Administrator
ASPCA Knowledge Management
1717 S Philo Rd, Ste 36, Urbana, IL  61802
217-337-9761
http://www.aspca.org


"Devin Meade" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on 09/26/2008 09:28:41 AM:

> 700 Billion / 300 Million = $2,333.  Thats what every resident (legal 
> and non-legal) will be paying to bail out the crooks.  How bout 
> sending US a check instead.  Shutting up now.

> On Fri, Sep 26, 2008 at 9:19 AM, Eldridge, Dave <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> I like the idea going around to reverse the "trickle down" and start 
> at the bottom and let 700b flow upwards. J
> 
> From: Vue, Za [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Friday, September 26, 2008 7:33 AM
> To: NT System Admin Issues
> Subject: $700B? 
> 
> This sounds more like a ransom from the master of evil for wanting to 
> take over Earth or a Lewis Farrakhan lawsuit.
> 
> -Z.V.
> 
> 
> 
> 
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> strictly prohibited.
> 
> If you have received this message in error, please contact the sender 
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> This e-mail contains the thoughts and opinions of the sender and does 
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> This communication is intended only for the recipient(s) named above, 
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> 
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> Devin
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> 

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