Paul Or Nothing II
Member
- Joined
- May 20, 2011
- Messages
- 2,288
Not really. It's just a tax on people who rent (like I do)
I'm surprised and disturbed by the mindset being expressed in this thread. It's very un-libertarian. Two wrongs do not make a right. While the bank bailouts were wrong and never should have happened, a government mandate forcing debt forgiveness would be equally as wrong, because there is someone on the other end of that transaction being given the shaft. One of the most important characteristics of a free society is protection of private property. A government mandate which forces people (lenders) to give away their money to borrowers who lent it to them in good faith that it would be returned with interest is the antithesis of a freedom. Mortgage debt is a voluntary agreement between two parties. No one was pointing a gun at the head of the borrowers saying "take our money or else."
And make no mistake, if this mandated debt forgiveness really happened (which I doubt), there will be severe unintended consequences. Who in their right mind would want to lend money to the people of Iceland knowing that the government can come in at any time and prevent them from ever getting it back again? The stifling of lending that would no doubt follow would have a devastating impact on the economy.
It's theft when bankers get bailouts at the expense of the people.
It's theft when the people get bailouts at the expense of the bankers.
+1
I see people dancing in the aisles for they think it's the bankers who got screwed but wait...........it's NOT JUST the bankers........it's also the SAVERS that get screwed
The people who worked, produced goods & services, & SAVED, did NOT go into debt -
The capital & economic resources that were spent on building those houses, which now these UNSOUND BORROWERS are going to get for below par prices; that capital, those economic resources would've been used more fruitfully to produce other goods/services which would've enhanced the lives of the SAVERS.......but instead they were spent on building these houses & now the borrowers aren't willing to pay up, they SHOULD pay up, those resources didn't fall from the sky, they were expended at the expense of SAVERS
And as usually happens, it's another thing where the productive people get the shaft for the sake of unproductive & less productive
