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Posted by
thereknab (Friday, July 03, 2009) happy 4 th to all my mexican friends |
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Happy santa ana day to all my mexican freinds --crawl under the wire-hide in cars(i hid inside t.wolff a$$ to get in) but come to usa so i can get you and itin program...
viva mexicans,,,,usa sucks,,,,
EMAIL/CALL ME ASAP 909-829-3348 direct line antonioenriquezx@aol.com private email antonio.enriquez@iluminamortgage.com The126REIG at AOL dot COM theprivateinvestors@hushmail.com The126REIG@aol.com 909) 801-5500 866-651-0150 |
09-30-06 DD Report: MoneyBroker123:
Information is on way with CC to your Father. Greetings DD Report
09-30-06 MoneyBroker123: correction to my previous post:
The message should have read:
"DDRep", my father is interested in receiving the report too. Please send it to: antonio.enriquez@wellsfargo.com He sends his regards,
TonyCE
09-30-06 MoneyBroker123: DDRep: I am interested in receiving additional information. Please send me the report too. Thank you.
TonyCE
antonio.enriquez@wellsfargo.com
I took some holidays... hope it didn't bother you =) Just some weeks... Besides why do we work so much if we cannot enjoy our funds?
I know you are close to death... so I won't continue my speech about life... take care your heart instead bothering young people like me =)
Sorry Mike... Robert has 100% free time... Let's keep working Mike.
Blessings!
Jose Bueno
CEO
PERUVIAN BARYTES & MINES SAC
http://www.pbmsac.s5.com
this guy is a liar and a fraud!!!!
mike lindley
the real mikes pumps!!!
not the mikespumps who hides behind a fake name on the bradynet--with no monitor or manager!!!!!
Jose Bueno
josebueno12@hotmail.com
Peru loves you. Bang bang.
Return to Index
The new mortgage reality.
February 14 2009 at 11:03 AM
No score for this post PI (Login privateinvestors)
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The new mortgage reality
By Maria Fotopoulos
As the world as we knew it imploded in recent months after several years of writing on the wall for any Democrat, Republican, business or individual who chose to read it (not many did) a little-reported-on aspect of the mortgage meltdown has been where do as many as 38 million illegal immigrants fit into the new reality?
In 2006, writing for Californians for Population Stabilization (CAPS), I talked about how the housing boom was a major component of unsustainable debt creation that was luring in hundreds of thousands of illegal workers to the United States and creating the follow-up bubble to its dot-com predecessor.
With housing being the biggest jobs driver, the piece stated, it was no surprise that some 20 percent of the estimated 7.2 million illegal labor force worked in some area of construction.
A bust in the building boom most certainly would impact the estimated million illegals working in that industry I speculated.
Many of these illegal workers would have purchased homes, as federal law permitted banks to offer mortgages to illegal aliens.
No Social Security number was required. Starting in 2003, a potential buyer need only have an ITIN (individual tax identification number), which created a mortgage market estimated to be $3 billion.
Exactly how many of these immigrant workers jumped into the housing market by way of loose lending, no-doc loans or even fraudulent conveyances is not yet known (expect more on this though, as accountability is demanded by angry Americans of the U.S. government's multiple bailouts), but there are numerous anecdotal accounts.
The Washington Post reported that Argentinean immigrant Javier Amurrio (the article doesn't state his immigration status) began working in Washington in 2000, ultimately earning $32 an hour as a stonemason. When work dried up in 2007, the Post reported, Amurrio was unable to make home payments on his three mortgages.
Yes, that was three mortgages.
Few math skills are needed to understand that three mortgages on $32 an hour don't add up under even the most lax of mortgage lending schemes. We could speculate there was speculation on the part of Mr. Amurrio in those transactions.
Beyond the anecdotal, Kenneth M. Donohue, inspector general, Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), in Washington, D.C., wrote last year of "seeing a trend with organized groups in some parts of the country to recruit illegal aliens to purchase FHA-insured homes."
Illegal aliens are not allowed to buy FHA-insured homes.
Donohue said that "unscrupulous mortgage professionals" would help illegals obtain fraudulent Social Security numbers and other identifying documents. And the New York Post reported that fraudsters used illegal aliens as "straw buyers" in house-flipping schemes.
Indeed, the bust came, and we continue seeing the painful fallout from all the illusory wealth created. Last summer, the Washington-based Pew Hispanic Center reported that Latino workers had lost nearly 250,000 jobs in construction, and foreign-born workers were hardest hit. According to federal data, since a September 2006 peak, the construction industry has lost a total of 663,000 jobs.
Likely that number has grown as employment has continued to deteriorate. Here in California, unemployment hit a record 9.3 percent in December.
While there's some evidence of a few illegal aliens self-deporting in the sour economy, it's more likely that workers who arrive largely from Mexico and South American countries will stay rather than return home to situations worse than here.
So where do we go from here now that the prime economic model for our country in recent years has crashed? No more building and selling homes to each other and reselling them in the "flipper" mode for extreme returns with Wall Street creating clever ways to slice and dice packaged loans for more extreme returns.
Given "an overhang of new homes and unsold homes that have to be addressed," Tobias Levkovich, the chief U.S. equity strategist with Citi, believes that "maybe we have to relax certain immigration policies to address that."
This brilliant idea essentially to try and re-inflate the housing bubble on the backs of immigrants comes from what's fundamentally a failed bank that's thus far received $45 billion in government bailout bucks and guarantees of $300 billion.
Between corporate America and the new administration whose stance is to increase the number of legal immigrants and legalize most of those already here illegally taxpayers will be footing the bill for the housing fallout, including the component related to illegal aliens.
We'll be helping put illegal alien construction workers back to work, too. On Feb. 11, the Conference Committee on the economic stimulus package met to reconcile differences between the House and Senate versions.
Provisions which would have protected American and legal workers including requiring that any businesses receiving stimulus funds use E-Verify (an online system of the Department of Homeland Security that provides an easy way for employers to ensure they're hiring a legal workforce) were removed.
In other words, some of your stimulus dollars will go toward creating jobs that may go to illegal workers at the expense of American workers.
That's the new reality.
Maria Fotopoulos is a senior writing fellow for Californians for Population Stabilization (CAPS)
calls me 817 808 6128 and 682 365 4215 or sent me email
mikespumps@yahoo.com mikelindley@petro-quiptexas.com
usafuelsystem@yahoo.com
michael w lindley
825 e lamar st
arlington tx 76011
"dont worry it's just a ride"
Tony
---
Tony
formerly known as: reknab / Trb
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