May
21

SOUTH CAROLINA Foreclosure Help from Mandelman Matters – START HERE

You have found the Mandelman Matters state specific series of pages dedicated to homeowners at risk of foreclosure in South Carolina.

On the pages in this section you’ll find accurate, straightforward information and guidance specific to the State of South Carolina related to such topics as loan modifications, short sales, foreclosure defense litigation, bankruptcy… and other topics related to getting through the foreclosure crisis.

 

We’ve created these South Carolina specific pages in response to the proliferation of scammers polluting the Internet with misinformation and outright lies intended to sell something to homeowners at risk of foreclosure that they don’t need.  These sites are literally everywhere, and some are very good at appearing credible, when in fact they are nothing more than elaborate cons.

 

Well, we’ve taken great care to make sure that the information you’ll find here is always correct… always impartial… always based on real facts… and always easy to understand.

 

In case you’re not already familiar with me, my name is Martin Andelman and for going on four years, I’ve been writing the widely read blog Mandelman Matters.  Over the last three and a half years, I’ve written more than 650 in-depth articles covering the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crises.

 

I decided that I had to do more to help stop homeowners from getting ripped off, by providing the state specific information homeowners need to make the right decisions for their individual goals and circumstances.  Moving forward on the best possible path… that’s what my state specific pages are all about.

 

And just so you know, I’ve never been in the mortgage business or the real estate business, but for more than twenty years I’ve been a writer that specializes in making complex subjects easy for people to understand… oh yeah, and people say I’m funny.  I have in-depth experience writing about subjects that fall under the broad headings of accounting, insurance, financial services and law.

 

You can read a lot more about me HEREHERE, and HERE.

 

You may want to start by getting to know my trusted attorney for the State of South Carolina, Russell A. DeMott.

No one pays to be listed as a trusted attorney on Mandelman Matters… that’s just not how it works.  The lawyers I list as trusted… are simply those I trust.  And when I say that, I mean that I would trust these people to represent me, or to watch my house while I went away on vacation for the summer.

 

In order to write close to 700 articles on the economic situation we’re facing today, I had to learn everything possible about the mortgage and foreclosure crises.  Not only did I read dozens of books, research reports, court decisions, and more… I also had to interview a lot of people and many were attorneys from all over the country.  Over time, some became good friends.  So, when homeowners would call me to ask if I could recommend a lawyer, I would refer them to one that I had gotten to know well, and trusted.

 

As a Mandelman Matters trusted attorney, Russell DeMott has agreed to take calls from South Carolina homeowners who have questions about foreclosures, and help them by providing answers regardless of whether the caller decides to hire his firm or not.  So, if you want to talk with someone who knows foreclosure in South Carolina, please don’t hesitate to call him.

For DeMott Law Firm’s contact information CLICK HERE.

And, if you’re looking for State ResourcesCLICK HERE.

Need to know more about South Carolina Foreclosure LawsCLICK HERE.

Want to read my latest post about South Carolina on Mandelman Matters?  CLICK HERE.

May
17

CALIFORNIA Foreclosure Help from Mandelman Matters – START HERE

You have found the Mandelman Matters state specific series of pages dedicated to homeowners at risk of foreclosure in California.

 

On the pages in this section you’ll find accurate, straightforward information and guidance specific to the State of California related to such topics as loan modifications, short sales, foreclosure defense litigation, bankruptcy… and other topics related to getting through the foreclosure crisis.

 

We’ve created these California specific pages in response to the proliferation of scammers polluting the Internet with misinformation and outright lies intended to sell something to homeowners at risk of foreclosure that they don’t need.  These sites are literally everywhere, and some are very good at appearing credible, when in fact they are nothing more than elaborate cons.

 

Well, we’ve taken great care to make sure that the information you’ll find here is always correct… always impartial… always based on real facts… and always easy to understand.

 

In case you’re not already familiar with me, my name is Martin Andelman and for going on four years, I’ve been writing the widely read blog Mandelman Matters.  Over the last three and a half years, I’ve written more than 650 in-depth articles covering the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crises.

 

I decided that I had to do more to help stop homeowners from getting ripped off, by providing the state specific information homeowners need to make the right decisions for their individual goals and circumstances.  Moving forward on the best possible path… that’s what my state specific pages are all about.

 

And just so you know, I’ve never been in the mortgage business or the real estate business, but for more than twenty years I’ve been a writer that specializes in making complex subjects easy for people to understand… oh yeah, and people say I’m funny.  I have in-depth experience writing about subjects that fall under the broad headings of accounting, insurance, financial services and law.

 

You can read a lot more about me HEREHERE, and HERE.

 

You may want to start by getting to know my trusted attornies for the State of California, Gordon F. Dickson and Deborah P. Gutierrez of Prosper Law.

 

No one pays to be listed as a trusted attorney on Mandelman Matters… that’s just not how it works.  The lawyers I list as trusted… are simply those I trust.  And when I say that, I mean that I would trust these people to represent me, or to watch my house while I went away on vacation for the summer.

 

In order to write close to 700 articles on the economic situation we’re facing today, I had to learn everything possible about the mortgage and foreclosure crises.  Not only did I read dozens of books, research reports, court decisions, and more… I also had to interview a lot of people and many were attorneys from all over the country.  Over time, some became good friends.  So, when homeowners would call me to ask if I could recommend a lawyer, I would refer them to one that I had gotten to know well, and trusted.

 

As Mandelman Matters trusted attornies, Gordon Dickson and Deborah Gutierrez have agreed to take calls from California homeowners who have questions about foreclosures, and help them by providing answers regardless of whether the caller decides to hire their firm or not.  So, if you want to talk with someone who knows foreclosure in California, please don’t hesitate to call them.

 

For Prosper Law’s contact information, CLICK HERE.

And, if you’re looking for State ResourcesCLICK HERE.

Need to know more about California Foreclosure LawsCLICK HERE.

Want to read my latest post about California on Mandelman Matters? CLICK HERE.

May
16

ARIZONA Foreclosure Help from Mandelman Matters – START HERE

You have found the Mandelman Matters state specific series of pages dedicated to homeowners at risk of foreclosure in Arizona.

 

On the pages in this section you’ll find accurate, straightforward information and guidance specific to the State of Arizona related to such topics as loan modifications, short sales, foreclosure defense litigation, bankruptcy… and other topics related to getting through the foreclosure crisis.

 

We’ve created these Arizona specific pages in response to the proliferation of scammers polluting the Internet with misinformation and outright lies intended to sell something to homeowners at risk of foreclosure that they don’t need.  These sites are literally everywhere, and some are very good at appearing credible, when in fact they are nothing more than elaborate cons.

 

Well, we’ve taken great care to make sure that the information you’ll find here is always correct… always impartial… always based on real facts… and always easy to understand.

 

In case you’re not already familiar with me, my name is Martin Andelman and for going on four years, I’ve been writing the widely read blog Mandelman Matters.  Over the last three and a half years, I’ve written more than 650 in-depth articles covering the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crises.

 

I decided that I had to do more to help stop homeowners from getting ripped off, by providing the state specific information homeowners need to make the right decisions for their individual goals and circumstances.  Moving forward on the best possible path… that’s what my state specific pages are all about.

 

And just so you know, I’ve never been in the mortgage business or the real estate business, but for more than twenty years I’ve been a writer that specializes in making complex subjects easy for people to understand… oh yeah, and people say I’m funny.  I have in-depth experience writing about subjects that fall under the broad headings of accounting, insurance, financial services and law.

 

You can read a lot more about me HEREHERE, and HERE.

 

You may want to start by getting to know my trusted attornies for the State of Arizona, Michael Fleishman and Doug Drury, Jim Mueller and Don Lawrence.

 

No one pays to be listed as a trusted attorney on Mandelman Matters… that’s just not how it works.  The lawyers I list as trusted… are simply those I trust.  And when I say that, I mean that I would trust these people to represent me, or to watch my house while I went away on vacation for the summer.

 

In order to write close to 700 articles on the economic situation we’re facing today, I had to learn everything possible about the mortgage and foreclosure crises.  Not only did I read dozens of books, research reports, court decisions, and more… I also had to interview a lot of people and many were attorneys from all over the country.  Over time, some became good friends.  So, when homeowners would call me to ask if I could recommend a lawyer, I would refer them to one that I had gotten to know well, and trusted.

 

As Mandelman Matters trusted attornies, Michael Fleishman and Jim Mueller, Doug Drury and Don Lawrence have agreed to take calls from Arizona homeowners who have questions about foreclosures, and help them by providing answers regardless of whether the caller decides to hire their firm or not.  So, if you want to talk with someone who knows foreclosure in Arizona, please don’t hesitate to call them.

 

For Fleishman Law’s contact information, CLICK HERE.

For Mueller, Drury & Lawrence’s contact information, CLICK HERE.

And, if you’re looking for State ResourcesCLICK HERE.

Need to know more about Arizona Foreclosure LawsCLICK HERE.

Want to read my latest post about Arizona on Mandelman Matters? CLICK HERE.

May
16

FLORIDA Foreclosure Help from Mandelman Matters – START HERE

You have found the Mandelman Matters state specific series of pages dedicated to homeowners at risk of foreclosure in Florida.

On the pages in this section you’ll find accurate, straightforward information and guidance specific to the State of Florida related to such topics as loan modifications, short sales, foreclosure defense litigation, bankruptcy… and other topics related to getting through the foreclosure crisis.

 

We’ve created these Florida specific pages in response to the proliferation of scammers polluting the Internet with misinformation and outright lies intended to sell something to homeowners at risk of foreclosure that they don’t need.  These sites are literally everywhere, and some are very good at appearing credible, when in fact they are nothing more than elaborate cons.

 

Well, we’ve taken great care to make sure that the information you’ll find here is always correct… always impartial… always based on real facts… and always easy to understand.

 

In case you’re not already familiar with me, my name is Martin Andelman and for going on four years, I’ve been writing the widely read blog Mandelman Matters.  Over the last three and a half years, I’ve written more than 650 in-depth articles covering the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crises.

 

I decided that I had to do more to help stop homeowners from getting ripped off, by providing the state specific information homeowners need to make the right decisions for their individual goals and circumstances.  Moving forward on the best possible path… that’s what my state specific pages are all about.

 

And just so you know, I’ve never been in the mortgage business or the real estate business, but for more than twenty years I’ve been a writer that specializes in making complex subjects easy for people to understand… oh yeah, and people say I’m funny.  I have in-depth experience writing about subjects that fall under the broad headings of accounting, insurance, financial services and law.

 

You can read a lot more about me HEREHERE, and HERE.

 

You may want to start by getting to know my trusted attorney for the State of Florida, Cox & Sanchez.

 

No one pays to be listed as a trusted attorney on Mandelman Matters… that’s just not how it works.  The lawyers I list as trusted… are simply those I trust.  And when I say that, I mean that I would trust these people to represent me, or to watch my house while I went away on vacation for the summer.

 

In order to write close to 700 articles on the economic situation we’re facing today, I had to learn everything possible about the mortgage and foreclosure crises.  Not only did I read dozens of books, research reports, court decisions, and more… I also had to interview a lot of people and many were attorneys from all over the country.  Over time, some became good friends.  So, when homeowners would call me to ask if I could recommend a lawyer, I would refer them to one that I had gotten to know well, and trusted.

 

As a Mandelman Matters trusted attorney, Cox & Sanchez has agreed to take calls from Florida homeowners who have questions about foreclosures, and help them by providing answers regardless of whether the caller decides to hire their firm or not.  So, if you want to talk with someone who knows foreclosure in Florida, please don’t hesitate to call them.

 

For Cox & Sanchez’s contact information, CLICK HERE.

And, if you’re looking for State ResourcesCLICK HERE.

Need to know more about Florida Foreclosure LawsCLICK HERE.

Want to read my latest post about Florida on Mandelman Matters? CLICK HERE.

May
12

UTAH Foreclosure Help from Mandelman Matters – START HERE

 

You have found the Mandelman Matters state specific series of pages dedicated to homeowners at risk of foreclosure in Utah.

On the pages in this section you’ll find accurate, straightforward information and guidance specific to the State of Utah related to such topics as loan modifications, short sales, foreclosure defense litigation, bankruptcy… and other topics related to getting through the foreclosure crisis.

 

We’ve created these Utah specific pages in response to the proliferation of scammers polluting the Internet with misinformation and outright lies intended to sell something to homeowners at risk of foreclosure that they don’t need.  These sites are literally everywhere, and some are very good at appearing credible, when in fact they are nothing more than elaborate cons.

 

Well, we’ve taken great care to make sure that the information you’ll find here is always correct… always impartial… always based on real facts… and always easy to understand.

 

In case you’re not already familiar with me, my name is Martin Andelman and for going on four years, I’ve been writing the widely read blog Mandelman Matters.  Over the last three and a half years, I’ve written more than 650 in-depth articles covering the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crises.

 

I decided that I had to do more to help stop homeowners from getting ripped off, by providing the state specific information homeowners need to make the right decisions for their individual goals and circumstances.  Moving forward on the best possible path… that’s what my state specific pages are all about.

 

And just so you know, I’ve never been in the mortgage business or the real estate business, but for more than twenty years I’ve been a writer that specializes in making complex subjects easy for people to understand… oh yeah, and people say I’m funny.  I have in-depth experience writing about subjects that fall under the broad headings of accounting, insurance, financial services and law.

 

You can read a lot more about me HERE, HERE, and HERE.

 

You may want to start by getting to know my trusted attorney for the State of Utah, Walter Keane.

 

No one pays to be listed as a trusted attorney on Mandelman Matters… that’s just not how it works.  The lawyers I list as trusted… are simply those I trust.  And when I say that, I mean that I would trust these people to represent me, or to watch my house while I went away on vacation for the summer.

 

In order to write close to 700 articles on the economic situation we’re facing today, I had to learn everything possible about the mortgage and foreclosure crises.  Not only did I read dozens of books, research reports, court decisions, and more… I also had to interview a lot of people and many were attorneys from all over the country.  Over time, some became good friends.  So, when homeowners would call me to ask if I could recommend a lawyer, I would refer them to one that I had gotten to know well, and trusted.

 

So, in Utah, my trusted attorney is Walter Keane, and if you CLICK HERE, you’ll be taken to the Utah state specific page on which you can get to know him by watching a documentary style video on which Walter talks about the foreclosure crisis in Utah.

 

Walter became somewhat famous last year when he successfully quieted the title for four Utah homeowners.  Unfortunately, as he explains, that window is no linger open in Utah, but there are still things that can be done to fight a foreclosure action.  To hear a Mandelman Matters podcast featuring Walter Keane, CLICK HERE.

 

As a Mandelman Matters trusted attorney, Walter has agreed to take calls from Utah homeowners who have questions about foreclosures, and help them by providing answers regardless of whether the caller decides to hire his firm or not.  So, if you want to talk with someone who knows foreclosure in Utah, please don’t hesitate to call him.

 

For Walter’s contact information CLICK HERE.

And, if you’re looking for State Resources, CLICK HERE.

Need to know more about Utah Foreclosure Laws, CLICK HERE.

Want to read my latest post about Utah on Mandelman Matters?

Deceptive Foreclosure Headlines Spread Like Wild Fire in Utah

Sep
15

Irresponsible Borrowers Documentary Trailer 2 – We Need Your Support

Here’s the second version of the trailer for “Irresponsible Borrowers,” the documentary that will show the country and the world the truth about the foreclosure crisis… that it is not the fault of borrowers, but rather it was and is being caused by the bankers of Wall Street who have placed the blame on those that have no voice… until now.

After writing over 500 in-depth articles on the political, social, economic and legal aspects of the crisis, Mandelman Matters is producing this documentary to lay out for the nation the facts of the crisis, interviewing homeowners, attorneys, and other experts to give a voice to those whose lives have unnecessarily been torn apart as our government looked the other way.

Watch it.  Link to it.  Post it.  Support it.  Everyone who contributes will be listed in the credits and we plan to take the film all the way to the Academy Awards.  If “Inside Job” can do it… so can we.  But only with your help… your stories and your financial support.

The final documentary will be delivered on DVD to every member of congress… to the White House… to every major media outlet… to the governors’ desks in all 50 states… help us make your voice heard.  I’ve traveled to several states to speak with members of their legislatures and found that many still don’t understand the crisis… many barely acknowledge its existence.  Me telling them about it… well, it’s not going to cut it… and we’re not going to win this war in the courts alone.

And I promise you this… the foreclosure crisis will only worsen… it will not end by itself… foreclosures only breed foreclosures… and we will see no economic recovery until it is addressed. And it will not be addressed until it’s understood.

Well… that’s all I have to say for the moment… click play and I’ll let the video speak for itself. Then please consider making a contribution below…

Jan
24

Do you need a lawyer to get a loan modified?

Okay, I’d like to straighten this issue out… Do you need a lawyer to get your mortgage modified?

(This is being written in response to a homeowner in Arizona asking a question on ABC15.com.)

By way of introduction, I’ve never been paid a nickel having anything to do with performing loan modification services, I am not personally at risk of foreclosure, I’m not an attorney, nor have I ever been in the mortgage, real estate, banking or related industries.  I’m a writer that has to-date written roughly 400 in-depth articles on the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crises and loan modifications.

Over the last 2+ years, I’ve interviewed thousands of homeowners and hundreds of attorneys, along with numerous mortgage experts, real estate licensees, bankers and mortgage servicers.  I’ve been a speaker on the foreclosure crisis at professional conferences held by the American Bar Association, Committee on Consumer Financial Services, and a judicial conference for 9th Circuit judges.  I am an outspoken advocate for homeowners.  For a more extensive bio covering my professional career, click here.

Now, as to your question: Do you need a lawyer to get your mortgage modified? No, there’s certainly no requirement that you be represented by an attorney to get a mortgage modified.  But, what you’re really asking is: Should you have an attorney represent you when trying to get a loan modified, right?

The answer is… it depends on you, but quite possibly… yes.

First, understand that there are only three kinds of mortgage servicers: 1. Unbelievably Annoying.  2. Unbearably Frustrating.  3. Infuriating to the point that you daydream about setting your own home on fire before letting them have it.   (And I’m not recommending that, it’s a joke, okay?)

Servicers make more money foreclosing than they do modifying loans, so that’s what they’re likely to try to do if they can, but not only that… before they try to foreclose, they’ll make you wait on hold forever, lose your paperwork three or four times, send you the rudest letters ever written, call you at 8 AM to ask why you haven’t made your payment… whatever obnoxious things they can do, they will do… count on it.

The mortgage servicers in this country don’t follow HAMP rules often, they lie often, they are wrong in what they tell homeowners often… AND I DO MEAN ALL OF THEM… Chase, BofA, Wells… yes I mean you guys specifically… and should any of the servicers want to sue me for saying that… you know, defamation or whatever… please file your damn suit TODAY!  I’m easy to serve… Just remember, I’m not folding, settling or anything remotely close… file it and let’s see if we can get an expedited trial date… because we’re definitely going all the way to trial and I’m certainly ready to proceed… just say when.

But, you might want to read this before you file… Chief Judge Gonzalez calls WaMu’s Conduct “Immoral, Unethical, Oppressive, Unscrupulous or Substantially Injurious to Consumers” (You go, Your Honor.)

Or this… The Kings and Queens Loan Mod Scammers: Arizona & Nevada Sue Bank of America Over Loan Modification Program

Or this… Report Shows Treasury Disagrees With Loan Mod Decisions at Chase, Wells & BofA – Requires Servicers to Make Changes Going Forward

Or who could ever forget this… INSIDE CHASE and the Perfect Foreclosure

I can go on like this forever, by the way… I’m not proud… or tired.

People stress out terribly during the modification process, they can’t sleep… they’re emotional, unknowledgeable, afraid and ashamed… not exactly the best position to be in when negotiating with a bank the size of Australia and Canada combined.  And, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and the rest don’t care about you threatening to sue them… besides you’re talking to a minimum wage person whose last job was asking people if they wanted fries with that… or darn close.

All of that being said… people do get their loans modified on their own, although many times they end up with terrible terms because by the time their bank offers them anything they’re so grateful they say yes to whatever is offered.  Running a REST Report and submitting it to your servicer, assuming it shows that you do in fact qualify, helps a lot… but it’s not a substitute for a good lawyer.

Qualified (and of course ethical) lawyers are infinitely better than the vast majority of homeowners for the same reason that I’m afraid of my wife, but I’m not afraid of yours… do you know what I mean by that?  Lawyers aren’t emotional, afraid, unknowledgeable or ashamed, and they deal with the banks every day on modifications, so they know who to call and what to say.  Nine times out of ten… they get much better results than any homeowner does flying solo.

By the way… I recently wrote an article on how to tell a good loan modification law firm from a scam, and you can find it online by searching: How to Tell Legitimate Loan Modification Firm from an Illegal Operation or Scam… The FTC’s New Bright Line MARS Rule.  You also might want to read: Mandelman’s Uncommon Advice for Getting Through the Loan Modification Process Without Losing It.  And you also might check out: How Banks View Loan Modifications, which I wrote about a year ago.

And for sure, all homeowners should read this… Reporting on Ongoing Outcomes Using the REST Report.

Now let me address what Joe Duffin of Blue Roof Realty said in his answer to your question.  With all due respect to Mr. Duffin, it’s not so much that he’s wrong in what he’s said, it’s more that his advice is nothing more than the same generic stuff you’ll get on thousands of Websites written by people with very little real life experience with loan modifications.  I’m sure he’s a good guy who is trying to help, and for that I applaud him.

  1. Shop around?  NO! Don’t “shop around.”  Every company you call will have great sounding sales people and that’s not how you want to make a decision.
  2. If you don’t know any local lawyers you can ask for a referral, call Legal Aid in your hometown.  They probably won’t be able to represent you… you have to be very low income to get free legal help, but the lawyers that work there know who the good private practice attorneys are that are representing homeowners and helping with loan modifications.
  3. Negotiate?  NO!  Okay, let’s face facts here… you don’t mind paying the fee, you just don’t want to get taken advantage of by some scammer, right?  So, concentrate on finding someone you’re sure of and stop trying to save $500.
  4. Forget about the whole “performance based” idea.  There’s no legitimate attorney anywhere that wants to work on your loan modification for months in the hopes of earning a $500 bonus, and besides it’s like a hospital bill… no one thinks you’ll pay it anyway.  You only hire a lawyer when the outcome is uncertain and you pay them for their time, knowledge, experience and effort… and they hate losing someone’s home.  How would you feel if you lost someone’s home?  Well, them too.
  5. Clarify define results?  Assuming you qualify for HAMP, your lawyer or servicer will pretty much tell you what your modified payment will be, there’s a formula.
  6. Mr. Duffin’s quite right when he says to be “patient and positive” when calling the firm for updates, but even better… ask them how often they update, and whether they’d prefer to be contacted through email or phone of you have a question.  Just know this… they on your side.
  7. Mr. Duffin’s also right when he says there are alternatives, and because he’s a Realtor, he mentions a “short sale,” but that’s not really an alternative because that means you don’t keep your house.  Short sales are the same uber-headache as loan modifications and you can end up losing the home to foreclosure anyway.  You want your home?  Then fight for it and don’t stop.

One more thing…

The FTC’s new MARS rule essentially makes it impossible for anyone but lawyers to handle loan modifications… any other kind of company is not allowed to charge you a dime until you approve a written offer from your servicer… and no one could operate a business like that.  So… it’s a lawyer you’re looking for… not a company that plays one on TV.

In closing I just want to say take your time and read up on everything to do with loan modifications.  You can email me at mandelman@mac.com.  I see homeowners get permanent loan modifications every single day… HAMP has only modified a little under 500,000 loans according to Treasury, but in-house modifications are in the 3+ million range.

It’s not easy, but it’s not Mt. Everest either… and start saving money everyday… see how much you can possibly save… get a big jar and save your change… you may need it to save your home… pay off credit cards, or whatever.  And if you don’t end up needing the money you’ve saved, you can use it to go on vacation after your loan gets modified… you’ll need a vacation by then for sure.

Heck, just having to write all that once again tired me out…

Mandelman out.

Dec
17

BREAKTHROUGH: Why Americans Are Allowing the Foreclosure Crisis to Continue


It’s coming up on two years since I started writing my blog, Mandelman Matters, and since those oh-so-humble beginnings back in late December of 2008, I’ve written and posted 375 in-depth articles focused on the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and resulting foreclosure crises.  And as I’ve said countless times before, although in hundreds of ways to avoid obvious repetition, both crises continue to drag our economy into a deep and prolonged recession as their combined impact destroys the accumulated wealth of all but America’s wealthiest citizens.

Those that have been reading my column since the early days, in many cases know me quite well by now. They know that I write in an effort to help homeowners better understand the global financial and credit crisis… so that they will know that what has happened to them was not their fault.  It’s not the borrowers that caused this crisis… it’s the banks.

Our country’s economic crisis wasn’t the result of people buying homes they knew they couldn’t afford.  In fact, considering everything that’s come to light over the last two years related to what our bankers did leading up to the meltdown, that sort of thinking at this point is just plain old idiotic.

I write because I want homeowners to know that, even though there’s quite a campaign being waged that’s intended to make them the irresponsible villains, they should not feel ashamed of their situations, afraid to speak out for fear of being judged harshly by others around them.  Easier said than done, perhaps…

My readers also know that I vehemently detest what the banks have done, and continue to do to homeowners, treating them as if they were deserving of nothing but disdain and their homes to foreclosure.  And they know that I hold my government directly responsible for this deteriorating state of affairs for our government has failed to do anything to improve the situation at every turn in the road.  It’s our government that has unabashedly shoveled $12.2 trillion into the very banks that caused both the crisis and their own insolvency… while allocating just 1/1000th of that amount to helping homeowners and communities through foreclosure prevention efforts.

Most of my readers also know that I’ve spent a great deal of time, not only looking for and sharing meaningful answers when I find them, but also trying to motivate others to take up the cause and speak out to their elected representatives, urging them to do more to stop the foreclosure crisis.  Because as long as it continues, and housing prices continue to fall, there can be no real recovery, and more and more homeowners will fall into the economic abyss.

The biggest challenge I’ve faced, has been the complexity of the situation that makes it impossible to influence anyone’s view through sound bites, and at the same time, those with only a cursory knowledge of the subject matter, the people I’d most like to influence, aren’t likely to read long, in-depth articles.

Still, I try to find entertaining ways to present complex subject matter, and I feel like I’ve been pretty successful getting people to read longer articles than they’re used to reading, and on topics they didn’t expect to be reading.  I know, from the thousands of emails I receive regularly, that there are more than a few whose lives I’ve touched in meaningful ways.  And even though I haven’t succeeded in many other ways as yet, that does in fact make it all worth it.

I remember the day the real crisis began… July 10, 2007… the day the music died, as it were.  Moody’s and S&P had announced that they were downgrading the ratings on 1,032 bond offerings, and not just slightly, but by several grades.  Two weeks later banks had stopped lending to each other.  The Fed was forced to reverse its position announced just weeks before and it started pumping cash into emergency programs to keep liquidity from drying up.  The availability of credit essentially dried up over night, starting on that summer day in 2007.

You see, up until that July 10th, all that was happening was that our housing bubble had started to deflate, largely due to the efforts of the Greenspan’s and then Bernanke’s Federal Reserve.  By the summer of 2006, the Fed had raised interest rates 17 times in a row.  As rates climbed, the market softened, homes stayed on the market longer than in the recent past, and prices began to slowly fall.  Those that had been closest to the edge of the precipice when they bought their homes, many the victims of predatory lending practices, although certainly some their own worst enemies, fell in, their homes lost to foreclosure when they couldn’t make the rising payments on adjustable rate loans, and couldn’t refinance or sell as a result of falling prices, and tightening credit standards for mortgage loans.

All of that is what’s supposed to happen as a bubble deflates, but on July 10, 2007, the impact of the bubble’s deflation was rendered moot and everything fell off a cliff.  Within a month following that July 10th announcement by Moody’s and S&P, no one could get a mortgage, no one could refinance one… homes stayed on the market until many were taken off the market… and prices started to fall fast.

By the end of 2007, we would all start hearing the surreal amounts of write-downs being taken by Merrill Lynch and Citibank… and the rest would soon join in. Before the following year would come to its end, Bear Stearns would be handed off to Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, essentially in the middle of the night… initially for just $2 a share, although the price was soon raised to $10 a share in deference to Bear’s shareholders.  It seems that even Jamie Dimon thought $2 a share was too much raping and pillaging.

A lot of people don’t know this, but it was right after Bear Stearns went down in flames in the Spring of 2008, that Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, horrified by having seen s glimpse of what was to come, used back channels to contact the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, to talk to her about the situation and the potential need for help from the legislature.  This contact by Secretary Paulson, although I never saw it reported by the media, was well documented by Phillip Swagel, Treasury’s Chief Economist during the last two years of the Bush Administration, in his white paper written for the Brookings Institute and published on March 9, 2009.

Swagel explains in his paper that Paulson was told not to come to Congress for help unless he could assure Congress that “a crisis was at the door”.  It was the last year of an unpopular Republican president, and since 2006, the Democrats had taken control of the House.  Congress simply wasn’t going to do anything to make the Bush Administration look good.  Whatever problems Paulson wanted to talk about would have to wait for the next president… because whether a he or a she, would likely be a Democrat.

It was the first of many times, when politics would prevent us from dealing with the tsunami that was now unquestionably growing in its destructive power as hosing prices continued their precipitous fall.  The foreclosure crisis, which had started a year earlier when higher rates started to have their intended effect, but shifted into a higher gear when the ratings agencies announced that they had been wrong about the ratings on 1,032 bonds, then quickly became a credit crisis as banks stopped lending even to each other.

And then it happened… I’m not sure of the date except to remember that it took me by complete surprise… what had been talked about in terms of bond ratings and a crisis in the credit markets all of a sudden was branded the “sub-prime crisis”.  It was all going to be the fault of the borrowers… those “irresponsible sub-prime borrowers,” not to put too fine a point on it.

Irresponsible sub-prime borrowers?  Yucky, who are they?  Get them away from me.  They sound like they have cooties, right?

Two things occurred to me right away:

  1. It’s wasn’t borrowers not making mortgage payments that was taking down the titans of Wall Street.  Not a chance.  There weren’t nearly enough of them, for one thing, the numbers just were not adding up.  The banks had abused the system in so many ways that it would be impossible to count them all, and to lay the blame for such acts at the feet of borrowers was nothing more than disingenuous crap.
  1. Telling everyone that their neighbors were the source of the growing problem would divide the country to an even greater degree than it was already, and we were already acting pretty much like Jets and Sharks.  When they figured out that it wasn’t irresponsible borrowers that had destroyed the global financial system, it would be too late.  No one would support helping what they had been told we’re  be “irresponsible sub-prime borrowers,” even if that was precisely what would be needed to stop the downward slide.

What they were saying about borrowers was just factually wrong.  Not that there weren’t some number of speculators, and some number of people that had bought homes beyond they’re ability to pay for them, but with home prices falling and credit frozen solid you didn’t have to be “irresponsible” in order to soon have trouble paying for the home you bought during a giant housing bubble.  No one had planned for what was about to come.

And, in point of fact, according to one of the country’s top real estate economist’s, Stan Liebowitz, professor of economics and director of the Center for the Analysis of Property Rights and Innovation in the management school at the University of Texas, Dallas, who conducted an exhaustive study of a database of some 34 million mortgages, sub-prime and prime loans had started defaulting at the same time.

There were more sub-prime defaults than prime, but that was only by definition.  From reading Professor Liebowitz’s study, it became quite clear to me then that if you made any real estate decisions based on believing that the next 10 years would look at least something like the last 70… well, you were likely going to find yourself being called an irresponsible homeowner in the near future.

And the longer the free fall in housing prices was allowed to continue, the more company you’d have, because increasing numbers of foreclosures meant lower home values, which meant reduced consumer spending, which led to corporations laying offer workers, which would in turn fuel more foreclosures.

This fire that began when investors realized that they could no longer trust the ratings of the mortgage-backed securities that Wall Street bankers had been pedaling all over the world for the last several years, was now burning out of control.

We’d borrowed our way out of the last recessions, but that wasn’t going to be possible this time because without investors to supply the capital through their purchases of asset- and mortgage-backed securities, credit simply wasn’t going to be available this time around.  And with the baby boomers marching faster and faster towards retirement age every year, we would soon no longer have 78 million boomers willing to spend their three trillion dollars in annual discretionary income, borrowing anytime and without a second thought.

There was never any doubt in my mind…. this one was going to hurt like the dickens, and for a long time.  Most of my lifetime anyway, and at only 49 years old, that meant much of my then 13 year-old daughter’s as well.  I felt that I had to try to do something to shorten the duration of what was to come… and I identified three areas on which I would concentrate my efforts: Education on what had happened in simple, entertaining terms.  2. Information and resources to get through the storm.  3. Actionable tools for moving beyond the crisis towards a secure future.

So, a full two years and 375 articles later, here we are.  The foreclosure crisis continues to grow in intensity and spread geographically.  The latest Zillow Report totaled the cost to American homeowners at over $9 trillion to-date.  And there is nothing in place, or even known to be on the drawing board with even the smallest potential to solve the problems, and the president has been clear… no more help is coming.

But, as the flood of foreclosures continue unchecked, and the bill being sent to all American homeowners continues to rise by trillions each year, it seems that only a relative few even notice, let alone care.  There are still people out there blaming the borrowers for buying homes they couldn’t afford, while the most devastating financial crisis the world has seen in at least 70 years, and perhaps ever, barely even makes the evening news most nights.

I mean specifically… how is it that anyone in this country is still on the side of the bankers?  Haven’t we learned enough despicable things about these Wall Street types over the last couple of years?  What more could we learn that would make them appear any worse?  Perhaps were they also molesting children en masse.

We gave them trillions and they gave out hundreds of billions in bonuses… they went broke and we bailed them out and the very same year and they used the money to pay record bonuses.  They made no apologies about it.  We provided them with hundreds of billions in TARP funds and when we asked what they did with the money they said “none of your business,” and we said… “okay, sorry we bothered you.”

We wanted to pass some financial reforms so that they would have a harder time destroying the world next time, and they fought every proposed every single regulatory change tooth and nail.  Regulate derivatives? No, we couldn’t possibly… it will ruin the economy.  But didn’t derivatives like credit default swaps being unregulated play a major role in ruining things this last time?  No, this last time was simply people buying homes they couldn’t afford.  Really?

Right now, as I write this, in Providence, Rhode Island, there’s a bankruptcy court that has a new rule that mandates that there be a meaningful dialog between servicer and borrower to try to work things out before a foreclosure can go through.  The bankruptcy judge has no right to force the servicer to modify, or to insist on the terms of a modification… just that the two parties talk about other possibilities before foreclosure and trustee sale of the property.  And the banking lobby is strongly opposing the rule, as if to say… “Nooooo, you can’t make us talk to them… nooooo.”

A few months back, in New York, there was a bill that proposed to allow a homeowner to recoup legal fees in a foreclosure suit if the homeowner won the case… just like the banks were already allowed to do.  The banks were already allowed to get their legal fees if they won, but the homeowners were not entitled to legal fees if they won, so this bill proposed to make that lopsided situation… I don’t know… fair?  And the banking lobby spent tens of millions to block its passage, and then when it passed anyway, they kept on fighting to stop it from being signed by the governor.  I mean… who does that?  Are these guys opposed to handicapped bathrooms too?

We passed a bill about credit card reform in 2009… we wanted to limit the annual fees that could be charged by credit card companies.  It passed, and there were fee limits imposed, but the banking lobby also removed any caps on interest rates.  So, now we have a credit card with a 79.9% interest rate.  Want to know how the bank chose the 79.9% figure?  Well, they obviously decided that 89.9% would have been offensive.

Elizabeth Warren, a Harvard Law School professor and consumer advocate, who has studied issues affecting the middle class in this country for the last 30 years, had an idea that we should have a federal agency whose job it is to protect consumers.  The president agreed and it was included in the financial reform bill.  The banking lobby… led by the Republicans, by the way, vehemently opposed her appointment to the post, and demanded that the new agency report to the Federal Reserve Chairman.

As if even having one single person in government… one out of so many I couldn’t even count them… whose job is to protect consumers and it’s: Nooooooo.  Because, I suppose, protecting consumers is dangerous to the economy?

And when they don’t have the paperwork required to foreclose what do they do… why forge it, of course.  Isn’t that what we all do when we lose some important piece of paper?  Of course it is.  Why just this morning, I was home forging my daughter’s birth certificate, and after that I’m going to recreate my social security card.  Luckily, although I’m not a notary, I stole one of those stamps they use from a notary’s office, so I’m all set there.

So, I’ve spent the last… I don’t know how long… asking myself the same question:

WHY? Why does it seem to be perfectly okay with the majority of Americans that foreclosures proceed as the banks see fit, even though it’s costing those same Americans trillions each year… and with all of the news of banking fraud now widely known… and after bailing out those same banks to the tune of $12.2 trillion… why is it perfectly okay with most folks that the foreclosure crisis continues and remains largely ignored if at all possible?

It makes no sense whatsoever.  Unless… hang on… I may have something here.  Actually, I’ve figured it out, and the answer was right in front of my face the whole time, but yet so hard to see.


It all started while I was watching CNN last week reporting Florida foreclosures.  They had footage of people approaching a table to ask questions about applying for loan modifications and the like… and something struck me… I thought… wow, those people look like they’re really poor.  I’m not talking about down on their luck, I’m talking about destitute.  Even the kids looked like they had come straight out of a modern day Oliver Twist… as in “please Sir, can I have some more?”

Right away, my mind started thinking… those people look like they should never have bought homes in the first place… hey, wait a minute here.  I went to my computer and started searching for imagery representing the foreclosure crisis and sure enough… a whole lot of very poor people… mostly minorities… African Americans and Hispanics… and a few “white guys” with ponytails and beards in ripped sweats with several dirty faced children clinging to his legs.

Now, please understand that I’m not saying anything bad about low-income people… I’ve been one before, and gotten to know quite a few over the years… and it’s no fun.  Also, I’m not someone who cares at all what someone looks like or wears out to the store.  I’m 49, so one more year and I figure I can wear socks with sandals pretty much anywhere I feel like it.

These were people who owned homes in Florida, however, and I’ve been to Florida on several occasions… and although there are certainly many economically disadvantaged neighborhoods throughout the state… not everyone is dirt poor there.  But that’s sure what it looked like in the photos and video footage of the foreclosure crisis.

See, the thing is that I have readers from all over the United States, plenty in Florida… and since I write, some would say, lengthy articles, my readers tend to be smarter than average… often times way smarter than average.  They may be struggling through this crisis, but everyone’s doing that, or lying about it.  And I give out my email address and phone number and I encourage readers to call or write and they do all the time.

In fact, I had just gotten off the phone with a homeowner from Florida who wanted to talk to me about what was going on in loan modification land, and he was a dentist… last name “Anderson,” and it doesn’t get much whiter than a dentist named Anderson.  Why wasn’t he shown as the face of the foreclosure crisis?

Oh my God, I said out loud but to myself… they’re reinforcing the image that the people losing homes shouldn’t have bought them in the first place.  Empty homes with trash piled everywhere, graffiti on walls, tiny little box homes… this is supposed to be representative of who’s losing homes today?  Like hell it is.

Then again… it occurred to me that the Anderson Family so rarely stops to pose for a photo-op in front of their Volvo before driving away from their foreclosed home for the last time.

From there I started thinking about the article I had posted just a few days earlier.  It was about how much the meltdown in the housing market had cost American homeowners, and titled: Zillow: U.S. Homeowners to Lose $1.7 Trillion in 2006, Already $9 Trillion Lost Since 2006.  And I realized that I hadn’t received a single email about the article… not even one.  That’s weird, I thought.  That article should have pissed someone off… at least a little bit anyway.  But not a peep from readers about it.

I mean, if losing $9 trillion since 2006 doesn’t make every single homeowners in this country scream out: “STOP THE FORECLOSURES, DAMN IT!” then I just can’t imagine what ever would.  I don’t care if you’re making your mortgage payments without any trouble at all, or whether you own your home free and clear… or if you’re a paycheck or two away from foreclosure… no matter how you slice it, you’re losing your ass and the end of those losses is nowhere in sight.  How can you possibly want the foreclosures to continue… unless, of course…

I started asking people I ran into the following question, and I encourage you to do the same: Why is (insert bank name here) continuing to foreclose on so many homes?

Assuming the person you asked isn’t someone intimately involved in the foreclosure crisis, here’s the sentiment you’ll hear from the average person:

“Well, the banks are foreclosing because it’s in their financial best interests to do so.  The people bought homes they couldn’t afford, and now the banks have the right to take them back and sell them to others.  That’s just how it works.  It’s unpleasant, and I’d rather not watch, so wake me when it’s over, okay?”

Well, well, well… do you see what’s happening there?  These people that are acting as if there is no foreclosure crisis are actually making total sense… they should be ignoring the foreclosure crisis… if they believe that statement above, and when you ask around, you’ll find that they do.

If someone believes that the people losing homes should never been able to buy them in the first place, that there’s no way they can afford to keep them… and that the banks are foreclosing because it’s in their best financial interests to do so… then ignoring the foreclosure crisis is perfectly logical.  It’s like the wounded gazelle that separates from the heard… the lion is going to eat it… it’s the natural order of things… but it’s unpleasant and I’d prefer not to watch… so wake me when its over.

And why wouldn’t people believe that banks are foreclosing because its in their own best financial interests?  I mean, that’s what banks do, right?  They act in their own financial best interests, right?  That’s what they’ve always done in the past, right? Show-me-the-money-type-banks, right?  Why would they possibly not be doing what’s in their own best financial interests?

Average American: Are you saying that banks are foreclosing when it’s NOT in their own best interests?


Mandelman: YES.


Average American: We are talking about banks, right?


Mandelman: WELL, NOT REALLY… NO.


Average American: Okay, now I’m confused.


Mandelman: TOTALLY UNDERSTANDABLE… AND YOU ARE NOT ALONE.

Here a bank, there a bank, everywhere a bank, bank…

So, you’re starting to see this pretty clearly, right?  People are right to assume that the banks are foreclosing only when it’s in their financial best interests to do so… they’re also right to believe that otherwise the banks wouldn’t be doing what they’re doing.

But, those of us that live in the foreclosure crisis every day, me by writing about it pretty much seven days a week, and others by dealing with it as they work through the hell of getting a loan modified, or walking away from their home of many years, we all know that the banks we’re talking about are not really banks… at least not in the traditional sense of the word.

The banks that are rapid fire foreclosing today, and thus causing every homeowner in the nation to lose tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars in equity are better thought of as “MORTGAGE SERVICERS”.  And mortgage servicers are not the investors that own loans, they are the companies that print and mail out monthly statements, maybe answer payment questions, send out late notices, post fees and charges, and when necessary, they foreclose.

Foreclosures are always more profitable for servicers because the servicers get 25 basis points to service a prime loan (a quarter of one percent), 50 basis points to service a sub-prime loan (half a percent), but then 125 basis points to service a delinquent loan, say… over 60 days late.

Then, should the borrower continue not making his or her payments, the servicer starts the foreclosure process and in doing so gets to add on lots of miscellaneous fees and charges that must be paid, if not by the borrower who loses the home and walks away, then by the investor when the home is foreclosed and is either sold or held in inventory as an REO… there’s just no way the servicer doesn’t get paid for the fees and charges associated with foreclosure.

(A few months back, I had the opportunity to interview an ex-employee from Chase Home Servicing, and I wrote an article that a huge number of people have read, but if you haven’t you’re missing out on something special and it’s titled: Inside Chase and the Perfect Foreclosure.)

So, servicers always make more money by foreclosing, even though the investor who owns the loan, in many instances, would likely come out ahead financially by modifying the loan.

Make Room for Daddy…

Lewis Ranieri is often referred to as the “father” of the securitized mortgage market.  During the 1980s, while he was vice chairman of Salomon Brothers Inc. he was responsible for capital markets becoming a source of funds for financing residential and commercial real estate purchases.

Most recently, Ranieri founded Hyperion Private Equity Funds, but he also serves as Chairman, CEO and President of Ranieri & Co. Inc., Chairman of American Financial Realty Trust, Capital Lease Funding Inc., Computer Associates International Inc., Franklin Bank Corp. and Root Markets Inc.  He was inducted into the National Housing Hall of Fame and a recipient of a lifetime achievement award given by the Fixed Income Analysts Society Inc.  Oh, and he’s Chairman of the Board of the American Ballet Theatre.

There is probably no one on the planet that knows more about securitizing pools of mortgages for single-family residences than Ranieri does, because he is the guy who brought it all together in a private sector, for profit environment, making the dream of homeownership one that could be realized on a scale never before possible.  And perhaps more so than anyone else, Ranieri knows what he’s talking about when he discusses how to handle securitized mortgages during a housing crisis.  Read his words carefully…

“You are almost always better off restructuring a loan in a crisis with a borrower than going to a foreclosure.

In the past that was never at issue because the loan was always in the hands of someone acting as a fiduciary. The bank, or someone like a bank owned them, and they always exercised their best judgment and their interest.  The problem now with the size of securitization and so many loans are not in the hands of a portfolio lender but in a security where structurally nobody is acting as the fiduciary.

And part of our dilemma here is “who is going to make the decision on how to restructure around a credible borrower and is anybody paying that person to make that decision?” And what we need here is financial innovation in the first instance because you can’t do this loan by loan, you are going to have to scale this up to a bigger level and we are going to … have to cut the Gordian knot of the securitization of these loans…

… because otherwise if we keep letting these things go into foreclosure it’s a feedback loop where it will ultimately crush the consumer economy.”

Will it really?  Do you think so, Mr. Ranieri?  My gosh, I had no idea something like that might happen.  A feedback loop that will “ultimately crush the consumer economy?”  That sounds really scary.

I am so glad we checked with you on this issue… and that you said what you just said… at the Miliken Institute Global Conference… that was held BACK ON APRIL 24, 2006!

Because…

… otherwise when Wall Street’s bankers one day cause the credit markets to freeze solid as a result of their fraudulent packaging of mortgage-backed securities and collateralized debt obligations which they sold as triple A rated bonds to pension plans and sovereign wealth funds all over the world…

… all because they were betting against them using entirely unregulated credit default swaps issued by insurance companies not required to hold reserves for paying claims…

… otherwise we might have STUPIDLY STARTED BLAMING BORROWERS and then allowed the housing markets to go into a free fall that would WIPE OUT THE AMERICAN MIDDLE CLASS, while we tried to prop up insolvent banks by pumping trillions of tax-payer dollars into them hoping against hope for our real estate markets to stabilize so that the toxic assets would magically turn non-toxic once again.

Whew… well we sure dodged a major bullet by talking to you back in 2006, and gaining an understanding of what servicers were all about.  Thank God we headed off that disaster…

OH WAIT A MINUTE… YOU MEAN I WASN’T DREAMING ALL OF THIS… YOU MEAN WE ACTUALLY DID KEEP LETTING THINGS GO INTO FORECLOSURE THUS CREATING A FEEDBACK LOOP THAT DID ULTIMATELY CRUSH AMERICA’S CONSUMER ECONOMY?

Noooooooooooo… We couldn’t be that stupid, could we?  We ran about blaming borrowers for doing things they could never have even gotten near, let alone understood… we allowed our society to focus on punishing people we called “irresponsible” when in reality they were swept under by forces way beyond their control…  instead of going after the bankers that were in fact the proximate cause of our economic collapse?

So, you see what’s happening here, right?

More than half of our country doesn’t care about the foreclosure crisis because to them, it’s just bankers acting in their own best interests by foreclosing on homes that borrowers irresponsibly bought knowing they couldn’t afford them.  It’s therefore the natural order of things, so to them, even though it’s already cost American homeowners $9 trillion and will soon wipe them out along with everyone else… it can’t be stopped, so they might as well not pay attention to the unpleasantness.  And please… wake me when it’s over.

But these individuals are wrong about their most basic assumption: what they think are banks aren’t actually banks… their mortgage companies that service loans, today widely just called “servicers”.  I wonder if Mr. Ranieri had anything to say back in 2006 about mortgage servicers specifically?

Oh, and wouldn’t you know it?  He did…

“Many mortgage (servicers) are reluctant to give strapped homeowners a break because the companies collect lucrative fees on delinquent loans.

Even when borrowers stop paying, mortgage companies that SERVICE the loans collect fees out of the proceeds when homes are ultimately sold in foreclosure.  So the longer borrowers remain delinquent, the greater the opportunities for these mortgage SERVICING companies to extract revenue — fees for insurance, appraisals, title searches and legal services.”

Wow… I wonder how the average American homeowner would think and feel about the foreclosure crisis continuing if he and she understood what Mr. Ranieri just said about mortgage servicer incentives.  Would they still feel the same way about foreclosures being allowed to go on unchecked… with no program anywhere in sight that might even partially stem the tide?

What if they knew that it wasn’t a case of banks foreclosing to protect their own best interests, but rather it’s servicers foreclosing merely in an effort to pump fees out of a transaction that is costing them their home’s equity?  Would they still be okay with what’s happening today, still ignore the crisis threatening their financial futures?

Break on through to the other side…

So, after two years and 375 in-depth articles on the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crises, after countless hours spent carefully analyzing the factors preventing homeowners from having a voice that could be heard over the vociferous din of Washington D.C. lobbyists, I have finally had a breakthrough moment.  I now know what needs be done and I’m going to lead the charge to get it done.  If you’re a reader of Mandelman Matters for some time now… you’ve read along as I’ve figured this out.

Do you see what I now see?  And will you help me do what’s necessary to change the national dialog that’s facilitating the total destruction of our consumer economy?  Because I hope you see that there is no time to lose.  Very soon we will have reached the point beyond which there will be no coming back… at least not in my lifetime.  We’re not there yet, but you feel the path we’re on accelerating downward, can’t you?  It’s a race to the bottom where many of us will stay indefinitely.

Our government is simply wrong in how they are handling the crisis.  The most straightforward and incontrovertible evidence of this can be seen in the numbers… we put $12.2 trillion into banks and other corporations to-date… and yet only 1/1000th of that amount into stopping the housing meltdown and foreclosure crisis.  There is no plausible justification for that sort of imbalance in allocating resources toward our economic recovery… none whatsoever.

We need to do two things:

OBJECTIVE #1: Destroy the factually incorrect widespread belief that banks are foreclosing because they are doing so in their own best financial interest, and therefore cannot and should not be stopped from doing so.

WHY? Because it couldn’t be further from the truth.  Because it’s not an accurate understanding of what’s happening today.  Because it’s tearing apart the fabric of our country, and cutting scars that may never heal.  And because it’s costing every American homeowner so much that unless it’s contained, few among us will be able to expect a secure financial future.

KEY MESSAGING: What we’re witnessing today is nothing more than a petty grab for fees and charges by mortgage servicers, without consideration for the actual investors, and at a cost, already well over $9 trillion dollars, that is being paid by our country’s working middle class.  Do what’s in the best interests of the investors, not the servicers… modify loans instead of foreclosing.  Do what’s better for the investor… better for the borrower… better for our economy… better for our society… better for our communities… and even better for our banks.

HOW?

Create an action plan that maps out the steps involved in changing America’s view of the foreclosure crisis by shattering the misconception that servicers make decisions in the best interests of investors.

Start recruiting others much smarter than me to help pull together the data needed to create a presentation of incontrovertible facts about servicers and foreclosures.  Distribute the facts in presentation formats so others can help to spread the facts.

Bring together the bloggers, journalists, and like-minded politicians around the mission of delivering signed petitions to Congress and the key messages to all Americans.


OBJECTIVE #2: Change the face of the foreclosure crisis from that of the very low-income and largely minority homeowner to a balanced depiction of Americans at risk of losing homes, or those that have already endured the tragedy of losing a home to foreclosure, so that the idea that foreclosures are only happening to those that never should have bought homes to begin with can finally be buried under the truth.

I will begin immediately looking for homeowners to interview on camera for inclusion into a thirty-minute DVD titled: Faces of the Foreclosure Crisis.  I have already discussed several powerful distribution channels with others, in addition to the Internet.  I you want to be interviewed or talk with me about it, first email me @ mandelman@mac.comn

WHY? Because there aren’t many people in this country at risk of foreclosure today, that went out and bought a home they knew they couldn’t afford.  And because foreclosures don’t discriminate and their not the exclusive purview of the working poor.

CONCLUSION…

Over the last two years, I’ve tried to attack the misperceptions about the foreclosure crisis by writing about hundreds of topics in order to educate and motivate America’s homeowners to stand together and speak out.  Now it’s time to focus on the two key areas that have combined to paint such a distorted picture that millions of Americans, like the frog that’s set into a pot of cool water and then slowly boiled, today don’t even oppose that which is causing them such significant harm every day.

Drill baby drill…

We’ll create the message and pull together the facts… then we’ll reinforce those facts until the old ideas sound as absurd as they are.

We can do this together… we can change the inaccurate view to a more correct one, and as we build momentum, we’ll see people change… because we’re right, and right always prevails.  No one should be comfortable turning his or her back on this country’s foreclosure crisis, because it is like turning one’s back to the ocean… you never know when that next set wave will crash into you from behind.

Two years ago there were days that I felt like the Maytag Repairman, often lonely in my view of the crisis and where we were headed.  Of course, there were a few others that came before me, but there are many more today than there were only yesterday.  My call to other bloggers is as simple as it is urgent: Let’s arm American homeowners with the facts that they can use to overcome the feelings of shame and force others to confront the truth of the crisis.

Because with so much being lost, someone should be winning.  But as we sit here today, that’s not the case… there are no winners. And there won’t be until all homeowners in this country start demanding that the rape of America’s middle class cease and desist, which can start as soon as we break the paradigms that are wrong, and start looking for win-wins… instead of lose-loses.

So, I guess it’s Mandelman’s March… In the best interests of America’s Homeowners…

(BTW… Blogger, Rortybomb, has a lot more of what Ranieri said at the conference, and his is a great blog besides.  You might also want to check out his take on strategic defaults, not as colorful as mine, perhaps, but the guys is obviously wicked smart.)

Aug
30

AMERICA LOST: Treasury’s meetings with bloggers tells a story that I didn’t want to hear.

I talk to a lot of homeowners from all over the country every single day, and it’s been like that for almost two years now.  Each day, I’ve try to do whatever I can to help those struggling to hold on both financially and emotionally.  They reach out to me looking for answers, and I don’t know what else I could do but help in whatever way I can.

I hear a lot of anger, a lot of fear, and a lot of resignation at America lost.  I write about injustice, rant about intolerance, and fight to stop ignorance.  I try to speak out for people that can’t find their voice at the moment.  A friend called me the other day.  When I answered he said, “Still trying to save the world one homeowner at a time?”  We both laughed.

Yes, I suppose I am, I thought to myself.  It’s what I can do… write and try to help where I can.  I started by writing a few articles in the fall of 2007, and I took my act online in December of 2008 when I started blogging on MSNBC’s Newsvine.  In April of 2009, Mandelman Matters was born and since then I’ve worked seven days a week, and so many hours a day that I’d rather not say.  I’ve written 350 in-depth articles on the political, social, economic and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crisis since then.

I figure I’ve probably written at least as many articles as anyone in the country on the foreclosure crisis, HAMP, and loan modifications… and it’s quite possible that I’ve written more than anyone else on those subjects.  I don’t sell advertising or make money on my blog, for the last couple of years its been enough that several thousand homeowners have written to me, saying that I’ve made a significant positive difference.

But, it’s not enough anymore.  And I want those that read my column to know why.

It all started this past August 16th and 18th, when the Treasury Department invited some bloggers to come hear what Tim Geithner and other nameless Treasury officials had to say on a range of topics, including the foreclosure crisis and the Home Affordable Modification Program, HAMP.  The first article I wrote about HAMP was on the night of President Obama’s speech introducing his Making Home Affordable plan to save the housing market, which at the time was already in a free fall.  My headline read: “I’m sorry Mr. President.  That’s just not enough.”

I knew right away that HAMP wasn’t going to work as advertised.  There were a lot of reasons why, but the simple truth is I only needed to hear one phrase to know the program would fail: responsible homeowners.

You see, there’s no such thing as irresponsible homeowners and responsible homeowners.  It wasn’t irresponsible sub-prime borrowers that caused this crisis; it was irresponsible Wall Street bankers that did it.  That’s not to say that there weren’t some number of people who bought a home they couldn’t afford, it’s just to say that those people, a tiny fraction of the whole, didn’t have anything to do with the crisis we seem unable to address, let alone solve.

Yet, just about every single week, I end up having to listen to someone tell me about some 24 year-old with a paper route, who bought a $12 million home on the water with a stated income loan.  I’m sure there are a few of those, but they don’t have anything to do with the crisis.

No, borrowers didn’t cause the crisis that the entire world is struggling through today, bankers did that… Wall Street’s bankers to be specific, but lots of other flavors of banker had a hand in it as well.

Millions of people have lost their homes already, and we’ve only just begun to feel the pain that’s sure to come if we stay on our current course.  Why some people don’t see that is beyond me.  But one thing I know for sure, is that the crisis is being allowed to continue because homeowners have no voice in Washington D.C.

Bankers, on the other hand have thousands of lobbyists and hundreds of millions of dollars in campaign cash to hand out.  So, last year, according to Special Inspector General of TARP, Neil Barofsky’s report, we gave the banks $3.7 TRILLION, while spending something way, way under one percent of that amount on stopping the foreclosure crisis.

The people have no voice because they are ashamed.  They think it’s their fault that they are in a difficult financial position today, and when someone is at risk of losing their home to foreclosure, they tell no one.  Should they hire an attorney and somehow save their home from foreclosure, neither they, nor their lawyer tells anyone.  The banks certainly don’t tell anyone anything. And the crisis goes on, worsening every day.  And the media just keeps writing stories about how economists were surprised at how bad things have become.  But, I can’t help but wonder… are they really surprised?  Or did they know all along how bad things would get?

I also can’t help but wonder why everyone’s so quiet about a crisis that’s far worse than any in my lifetime.  In California, for example, when gay marriage didn’t receive enough votes in the last election, there were people marching in the streets.  But millions lose homes to foreclosure, and not a peep.  Banks pay out hundreds of billions in bonuses after being rescued from insolvency by the U.S. taxpayer, and the most you hear is, something akin to “I don’t think I like that” coming from a distant source.

I was able to get through all of this until last week when I learned of what was said at the meetings between various bloggers and Treasury Department officials.  My friend, Richard Zombeck of Huffington Post and shamethebanks.org told me about the meetings and sent me a link so I could see for myself what went on.  Then others sent me links to what others had written about what was said during the meetings.  And that was it for me… I stopped writing… for about a week, and maybe a little longer.  What was the point, was all I could say to myself.

It made me sad to know what Treasury Department officials had said about the foreclosure crisis and HAMP… very, very sad.  In fact, I can’t think of another time in history when my government acted as these guys have acted, or are continuing to act today.  They truly do not care about people at all.  They are so shockingly devoid of compassion or empathy that they offend me so deeply that I don’t like thinking of this government as representing my country or I can’t help but feel that my country is lost.

Treasury Department officials said, in no uncertain terms that they knew HAMP wouldn’t save homeowners from foreclosure.  Here’s what was written in Huffington Post’s Shahien Nasiripour’s detailed article on the meeting

The administration knew they’d only reach a fraction of those needing help, the official claimed, and that millions of homeowners would ultimately lose their homes to foreclosures that the administration chose not to prevent. Taxpayer money was on the line, and the administration couldn’t justify spending the amount of money it thought would be necessary to save those homes, the official said.

Nevertheless, HAMP remains the best option — even though it’s reaching fewer borrowers than forecast. Other programs, the official noted, would have been either too expensive or unfair. Homeowners who consciously bought more homes than they could afford shouldn’t be bailed out.

Here’s what Steve Waldman of Interfluidity.com had to say about the meetings:

Officials pointed out that what may have been an agonizing process for individuals was a useful palliative for the system as a whole. Even if most HAMP applicants ultimately default, the program prevented an outbreak of foreclosures exactly when the system could have handled it least.

There were murmurs among the bloggers of “extend and pretend”, but I don’t think that’s quite right. This was extend-and-don’t-even-bother-to-pretend. The program was successful in the sense that it kept the patient alive until it had begun to heal.  And the patient of this metaphor was not a struggling homeowner, but the financial system, a.k.a. the banks.

Policymakers openly judged HAMP to be a qualified success because it helped banks muddle through what might have been a fatal shock. I believe these policymakers conflate, in full sincerity, incumbent financial institutions with “the system”, “the economy”, and “ordinary Americans”.

Treasury officials are not cruel people. I’m sure they would have preferred if the program had worked out better for homeowners as well.  But they have larger concerns, and from their perspective, HAMP has helped to address those.

This led to blogger Atrios of Eschatonblog.com to write the following:

Conning homeowners by announcing a government program designed to help them when in fact it was designed to help the banksters is, in my world, “cruel.”

Felix Salmon, blogging on Reuters, said the following:

HAMP is now coming into focus as a serious failure and cruel one at that.  The problem is that it’s not helping people stay in homes, but merely delays foreclosures. This helped banks weather a foreclosure crush, but raised false hopes among a substantial number of applicants, hundreds of thousands of whom were disqualified, as Felix points out, even though they made their payments on time.

HAMP might well have been a success in the ways that Treasury enumerates — helping out banks on the solvency front, reducing the rate of foreclosures, that sort of thing. It was almost certainly a good idea politically, as well: you don’t hear much about the plight of homeowners being foreclosed upon, these days, certainly compared to the huge amount of noise on the subject around the time that Obama was elected president. The government is perceived to have Done Something, and the circus has moved on.

But it’s still a tragedy that hundreds of thousands of people who signed up for loan modifications — and who made all of their modified loan payments in full and on time — have had their modifications cancelled. Many of those people blame the servicers; Treasury, meanwhile, is more prone to blaming the borrowers themselves, claiming they’re incapable of verifying their income.

My feeling is that even if income hasn’t been verified, servicers shouldn’t simply cancel the loan mods if they’re performing well. And that if that’s what the servicers are doing, the incentives within HAMP have been designed very badly. That’s a Treasury failure, and it’s impossible to credibly spin it as any kind of success.

And, incredibly, they are sticking by HAMP.  Only now Treasury is saying that the benefit is found in spacing out foreclosures, as opposed to stopping unnecessary foreclosures.  Tens of billions to spread out foreclosures in order to help banks take losses… on the backs of ordinary people… American citizens… taxpayers.  Because I suppose the $3.7 TRILLION we gave the banks in 2009 alone wasn’t enough.

Here’s Huffington Post Nasipour once again:

The official touted the ever-growing pipeline of homes likely to enter foreclosure as a success in the administration’s fight to stem the rising tide of home foreclosures. It’s taking longer for homes to enter foreclosure, and it’s taking longer to evict homeowners once they enter foreclosure.

The so-called “shadow inventory” of homes — those with severely delinquent mortgages, in foreclosure or already repossessed that have not yet been put on the market — has significantly grown since the administration took office and is estimated to range from 5 to 7 million homes.  Through June, borrowers in foreclosure have been delinquent for an average of 461 days before being evicted from their homes, according to Jacksonville, Fla.-based data provider Lender Processing Services.

That’s a good thing, the official said, because it gives the market time to absorb these homes gradually — without leading to a dramatic drop in home prices.

Richard Zombeck, writing for Huffington Post and shamethebanks.org, among many other things said the following:  (And I strongly suggest you read Richard’s entire article, click his name and it will take you to it.)

When President Obama delivered his speech in Arizona in February, 2009, nowhere in the speech did he come close to implying that this plan was intended to help the banks and servicers get more money out of homeowners before taking their homes. What he said was, “This will enable as many as three to four million homeowners to modify the terms of their mortgages to avoid foreclosure.” It wasn’t followed by, “…for a couple of months.”

Richard also included this paragraph, also from Nasipour’s article, describing it as “one of the more egregious statements to come out of this discussion”.

One of the reasons why HAMP has been effective ties back to the foreclosure pipeline. The official said that because some 1.2 million homeowners entered the program and immediately benefited from a trial period of lower monthly payments, not only were their foreclosures delayed but they also received what was essentially a tax cut of more than $500 a month — all without cost to the taxpayer, the official boasted. Even though nearly half of those borrowers have been booted from the program, they still benefited from lower monthly payments courtesy of the Treasury Department with the cost borne by lenders and investors of those mortgages. Plus, at the very least, those homeowners got a chance at a permanent modification, the official said.

And finally, Dean Starkman wrote:

“So, a debate over a complicated matter is sharpened, for me, anyway.  Not to overstate anything: the world didn’t change because of the meetings.  There’s no evidence the bloggers—via the meeting or their blogs—had any influence whatever, for instance, on HAMP policy.”

Oh, well good then.

So, before I say anything about all of that, there are a few facts I pulled from various sources that I want to lay before you.

1. President Obama appointed Timothy Geithner to be Treasury Secretary. As president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Geithner served under a board of directors headed by JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon.  Geithner had been partly responsible for the decision to let Lehman Brothers go under, for the tarp program, and for American International Group (AIG) paying its creditors with taxpayer money.  As his chief of staff, Geithner chose a former lobbyist for Goldman Sachs.

2. President Obama: “The recession was caused by a perfect storm of irresponsibility and poor decision-making that stretched from Wall Street to Washington to Main Street.”

3. On February 10, 2010 Obama said that he didn’t “begrudge” the $17 million bonus awarded to Dimon and the $9 million to Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein. “I know both guys. They are very savvy businessmen.”

4. A group within the White House that began calling themselves the “pitchfork gang,” said their attempts to persuade Obama take a tougher stance on Wall Street were undermined by Geithner and by National Economic Council head Larry Summers.  Geithner and Summers were apparently worried about upsetting business confidence.

5. In the stimulus’s first year, the administration spent only $17 billion of the $139 billion allocated for infrastructure spending.

6. Geithner and Summers repeatedly blocked attempts to get tough on Wall Street on the grounds that doing so would threaten the recovery itself by upsetting the bankers.

7. Organizing for America, the administration’s campaign organization, which is supposed to be focusing on the 2010 elections, recently devoted its resources to organizing parties across the country to celebrate Obama’s forty-ninth birthday.

Sorry, but I’m about done with the Oblabla Administration.  Waiter, check please.

Look, I’m not making a political statement.  I don’t see the Republicans doing anything to help the situation either.  I fact, to the contrary, the Republicans have offered nothing constructive since Obama took office in 2009.  They vote as a block as if they were elected to represent a party as opposed to individual constituents, and personally, I think if they’re going to vote like that, I think they should have to wear matching sweaters and sing their chorus of “Nooooooo” in harmony.

Just on one day I’d like to see Obama come out in favor of cream in coffee, just so I could watch some knucklehead Republican oppose it on Face the Nation.  “No, I say there should not be cream in coffee.”  Oh, sit back down you intellectual midget.

None of that excuses what the Obama Administration has allowed to happen as related to the foreclosure crisis.  Treasury officials now say they knew and it was okay with them.  In fact, it was a good thing.

Officials pointed out that what may have been an agonizing process for individuals was a useful palliative for the system as a whole.

No, I’m sorry but no, damn it.  I don’t even know what a palliative is, but it doesn’t matter.  Geithner, you elitist piece of garbage, you do not get to torture American citizens because you find benefit for the banks in doing so.  Who the hell do you think you are?  Did my president know about this?  Because you imply that he did, and if that’s the case then he should be impeached.  No American president would ever condone what you are describing and if this one did, he is not fit to lead our country.

Mr. Geithner… people have taken their own lives over what you’ve allowed to happen.  Children have gone to bed night after night scared to death, not knowing why their parents are so afraid… or so angry.  Marriages have ended.  Fathers have sat up at night wondering if their life insurance policies will pay off after suicide.  And all of this and more continues to this day and yet there is no plan to change a thing.  Because you’re happy that Wells Fargo is suffering too terribly much.

And why?  Because Citibank or Bank of America would have gone under if the foreclosures would have come at a faster pace?  Bullshit.  You think that it’s because of HAMP that it’s taking banks a long time to foreclose?  You’re a moron, Tim.

If banks were going to go under by foreclosing too quickly they would have slowed the pace themselves.  We didn’t need you to invent a fake loan modification program and lie to the American people about it in order to slow down the pace of foreclosures.  Besides they could have MODIFIED THE LOANS, Timmy.  There was always that alternative, lest you forget.

Before you showed up with HAMP banks were modifying loans much more frequently.  Is that what you wanted to do, STOP MODIFICATIONS?  So you invented a program that would do just that by promising to modify 3-4 million loans?  Did Obama know of your plan?  Did the President of the United States know that this outcome would be considered a success?  Is that what your cohorts at Treasury are saying… off the record, of course.  Cowards.

Mr. Geithner, you should be incarcerated for the rape of the American people.  You know what caused this crisis and you know damn well that it wasn’t some guy in Stockton, California not making a mortgage payment.  How do you sleep?  Do you even know what you’ve done to thousands of people’s lives so the banks wouldn’t have to foreclose too quickly?  If that made sense to you, you need help.

To my readers…

That’s it.  I can’t do it the same way I have been for the last two years.  The rules of the game have changed.  I suppose I could give up and walk away, but I won’t do that now no matter what.  This is a whole new ball game and we need to be much more aggressive, much louder, much more intolerant of the abuse by financial institutions.  We need the consumer attorneys to file more lawsuits, and we homeowners have to save our money to pay for them to do so.  We can’t sit back and watch 14 million more homeowners lose their homes to foreclosure, because if that’s the way it goes, then our country truly will be lost for decades… perhaps forever.

Do you feel what it’s like out there?  Not where Tim Geithner lives, but where you and I live.  Imagine what it will feel like a year from now, when it’s that much worse.  And then two years from now when it’s worse still.  And then worse still.  What will we all say then?  What will we tell our children about the country we have left for them?

Gee, it really was our fault.  We all took an irresponsibility pill in 2005 and went out and bought homes we couldn’t afford and that’s why your world looks like this?  Sorry about that?.

We gave the banks $3.7 TRILLION last year alone.  That’s $3.7 TRILLION.  And Goldman Sachs alone handed out $120 BILLION in bonuses last year?  We bailed out GMAC three times to the tune of almost $20 billion?  GMAC?  Why, were they too big to fail, too?  GM itself went bankrupt, that was okay… but GMAC was too big to fail?  Really?  Really?

Is someone going to make an argument as to why it made sense to hand $3.7 TRILLION to bankers who ran their banks into the ground while doing essentially NOTHING for millions of homeowners whose foreclosures only caused their neighbors to sink further underwater.

We need to do things differently.

I know that some people need to get their loans modified, so for those that do, use the REST Report and push like hell.  I see loans get modified every single day.  And there are a lot of dedicated people out there helping homeowners every day.  Oh, I know…  guess who wants you to believe they’re all scammers… that you don’t need a lawyer… that you should just call your bank directly.  Others may want to strategically default, and for those folks, let’s see just how long we can keep people in homes without paying for them.  And if you can afford to file a legitimate lawsuit, for God’s sake file it.  And I’ll help anyone who asks me to in any way I can.  I’ll organize more attorneys so they’re better prepared to represent homeowners.  I’ll help educate more people so they know that it’s not their fault, so that they can find their voice once again.

But this is going to take more than passion.  It’s going to take money…

From the very beginning of my journey into this crisis, I’ve wanted to produce documentary style programming… broadcast quality video… footage of homeowners telling their stories, sharing the horror of their experiences dealing with banks that don’t care about anything this country has given them.  Interviews with real people that didn’t do anything wrong or irresponsible in order to find themselves at risk of losing their homes.  And I’ve collected such interview footage over the last two years… and it’s powerful… like, kick you in the gut type powerful.

I wanted to produce such a documentary and have it delivered to every member of congress and every member of the senate… every state governor’s desk and every major media outlet… I wanted to see it on television and on YouTube… I wanted it delivered to the White House… and all on the same day.  I called the initiative, A Hundred Thousand Homeowners, and the idea was to get 100,000 people to each kick in a dollar.  After PayPal, it would produce a budget of $67,000, and with that money we’d get our message heard.

But it’s taking far too long.  The problem is that it doesn’t spread.  Someone sends in their dollar, but that’s where it stops.  They don’t tell anyone else, because they don’t want anyone else to know of their situation.

Two weeks ago, I was interviewing a homeowner who had struggled for 14 months to get his loan modified.  He finally did in a few short weeks after sending in a REST Report, so I wanted to hear his story.  I interviewed him on camera for 20 minutes and it was emotional.  He had a tear in his eye through most of the interview.  It was hell for him, and everyone there could feel his pain.  At the end I asked him if he had anyone to talk to through the experience and he explained that he didn’t.  Not the sort of thing you talk about, he explained.

Then I asked him if his wife had anyone to talk to through the nightmarish process of getting his loan modified, and he looked down at the floor and then back at me.  He said: “I never told her.”

Through 14 months of being put through hell by his bank, through 13 SCHEDULED SALE DATES THAT WERE EACH POSTPONED AT THE LAST MINUTE… and he never told his wife until it was over and his got his modification.  And that said everything to me.

So, here’s the deal.  We need to do more.  And I will do more.  It’s all a question of how fast we can move.  Last week I was invited to Washington D.C. to speak at a rally, and I said I probably couldn’t make it because I wouldn’t be able to afford it.  I’m sure it will go just fine without me, there are lots of others who can deliver the message, but the thing is… I really don’t believe that.  I think I’m uniquely positioned and prepared to deliver the message for homeowners.  I think I  would make a difference if I could be there.

I also know that I could produce documentary programming that would change minds… shatter paradigms… and force politicians to take action.  I’ve been successful in print.  I’ve written 350 articles on this topic… and readers say they’ve made a difference.  This is still our country.  It’s still a democracy.  Let’s not fail our children because we failed to act.

I’ll be putting a new tab on Mandelman Matters in the next few days.  It will be labeled “MY MISSION” and it will describe in greater detail what I want to do… what I will do… and it will ask for your support.  And if it comes, then we’ll move quickly, and if it doesn’t, it will take longer.  But I’m going to do it one way or the other.  Because I know now that I have no choice.  Treasury’s officials have made that much all too clear.

I’ve spoken with others around the country and they will come along… but we have to start somewhere.  We have to show that we can make our voices heard.

If you’re a business owner, consider supporting the effort by sending in a substantial donation and I’ll make sure your company is recognized and promoted online to thousands of people.  If you’re an individual homeowner, do what you can.  If you can’t send money, perhaps you can help in other ways.  Organizing meetings of homeowners, sending out emails, posting links to your Facebook page, calling your representatives and encouraging others to do the same.  There’s a role for everyone in this fight, and we’ll need all the help we can get.

And if you don’t want to be a part of this drive for American homeowners… write in and tell me I should quit… that it’s a waste of time… that we cannot win… that we won’t even be heard.

I won’t listen, of course, but I want to know how you feel one way or the other.  For God’s sake do something… even if it’s writing me an email telling me I’m nuts.  At least I’ll know you’re alive.

350 articles.  A lot to read… let alone to write.  I’ve gotten to know hundreds of lawyers around the country that are fighting for the rights of homeowners.  I’ve spoken with and helped thousands of homeowners and heard their stories first hand.  I’ve built alliances with others on-line.  ML-Implode will help.  Shamethebanks.org will help.  Danny Schechter, the producer/director of the documentary, Plunder, will help.  Steve Dibert of MFI-Miami will help.  Short Sale Power Hour will help.  ThinkBigWorkSmall will help.  And I know lots of others that will help too.

Let’s start somewhere.  Help me and I’ll fire the first shot.  After all, how do you eat an elephant?  Simple.  One bite at a time.

Mandelman out.

Jul
29

Mandelman on the News Dissector Radio Show

My goodness, I’ve been doing quite a few radio programs lately, have you noticed?  I really like doing the radio show thing, it’s a lot easier than writing long, in-depth articles… LOL… just kidding… sort of.  Anyway, this is a link to me on Danny Schechter the News Dissector’s show, which is out of New York.  We’re talking about the economy and the foreclosure crisis, what else?

Here’s a link to the show:

Mandelman on the News Dissector, with Danny Schechter

Danny Schechter produced and directed the movie, PLUNDER, and I like the movie so much that I suggested that others watch it and even hold “Plunder Parties” so that people across the country would start to realize who caused the economic catastrophe we’re going to be living with for the next way-too-many years.  Here’s a link to that, in case you missed it:

Have a Plunder Party and Help Change Our World

I’m not kidding when I say, “help change our world,” by the way.  The only way we’re going to change things in this country (short of waiting for them to change on their own which will happen eventually, but at 49 years old, it won’t matter to me by then) is for the people to speak out and demand balance… in other words, tell our elected representatives that the banks aren’t the only important members of our society… and the only way the people will speak out is if they realize that what’s happened is not their fault.

Until they (read: you) understand that its not the borrowers, it’s the banks that caused our national meltdown… they’ll (read: you’ll) remain ashamed and unable to speak out.  So, watch Plunder… seriously… buy it and watch it.  It’s like $16.99… and  you can throw $16.99 at something this important.

Anyway… all this radio show practice is going to come in handy… because soon I might just be doing a radio show of my own.  And maybe even some Podcasting… I’m so techie, after all.

Mandelman out.

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