House OKs rescue for homeowners and Bad Credit Mortgage
Posted by James Breen at 24 July 2008 18:42
I remember going out to lunch with a group of young people. We talk so many posts about bad credit mortgage.
I like to take a look, but it was mostly pretense, just touching the words of bad credit mortgage with my eyes and making a swallowing movement accompanied by a delighted smile.
I found this one on yesterday, quite interesting:
That's me in my new heels, sporting the fancy oven Working Mom just got me. Remember the assless chaps from anniversary number three, our "leather" anniversary? Well, today marks our Fourth Anniversary — the "Appliances" Anniversary. (No, I'm not making it up.) Who the hell thinks up these things? (Sears and Walmart, I expect.) In this "credit crunch" edition, here's what I predict our upcoming anniversaries are likely to celebrate: Five. Unnecessary Electronics Anniversary. ..other part.
While have powerful value proposition is still essential part of building bad credit mortgage, it certainly is not the only part. But because it is indispensable, the value proposition has better be clear, concise, and compelling. This article applies all these points:
AP - Rescue legislation sailed through the House on Wednesday aimed at helping 400,000 strapped homeowners avoid foreclosure and preventing the collapse of troubled mortgage companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The 272-152 vote reflected a congressional push to send election-year help to struggle borrowers and to reassure jittery financial markets about the health of two pillars of the mortgage market. Hours before the vote, President Bush dropped his opposition to the measure, which now .. read the rest.
Everyday if all of us who can make the same choice, it will be amazing. Yeah, I like to read this:
The plan for the Treasury Department to prop up shaky mortgage institutions like Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac is the most kaleidoscopically idiotic scheme I've ever heard of. The incredible scope of the plan just reflects the equally humongous scale of regulators' abysmal failure to monitor both the mortgage market and Wall Street's leveraged investments in same. It's really fair too. If I screw up my business, I get broke ASAP. If Henry Paulson's buddies blow it, they get bailed out via ..Read the rest of this post.
You are now ready to rock, so stop sitting there, and get on with the post already!
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