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From: enough on 8 Mar 2010 08:51 http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/nov/12/united-nations-us-property-fallout UN meets homeless victims of American property dream A home advertised for sale at a foreclosure auction in Pasadena, California. Photograph: Reed Saxon/AP There were not many people packed in to the Los Angeles "town hall" meeting who had heard of the foreign woman with the unfamiliar title who had come to listen to their tales of plight. But many took it as a good sign that she had worried the last American government enough for it to keep her out of the country. Deanne Weakly was among the first to the microphone. The 51-year-old estate agent told how a couple of years ago she was pulling in $80,000 (£48,000) a year from commissions selling homes in LA's booming property market. When the bottom fell out of the business with the foreclosure crisis, she lost her own house and ended up living on the streets in a city with more homeless than any other in America. She was sexually assaulted, harassed by the police and in despair. She turned to the city and California state governments for help. "No one wanted to listen. They blame you for being homeless in the first place," she said.<snip> Welcome to housing in America. Let's build these rigid structures, price them to hundreds or thousands of times what they are worth, and fleece the populous, If you try to live anyway else, or we feel your home is not up to our codes, we are going to get you. Sieg Hei...I mean Good day. \=.\ /.=/ '-,
From: Cindy Hamilton on 8 Mar 2010 13:14 On Mar 8, 8:51 am, enough <blinkingblyth...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/nov/12/united-nations-us-propert... > > UN meets homeless victims of American property dream > > A home advertised for sale at a foreclosure auction in Pasadena, > California. Photograph: Reed Saxon/AP > > There were not many people packed in to the Los Angeles "town hall" > meeting who had heard of the foreign woman with the unfamiliar title > who had come to listen to their tales of plight. But many took it as a > good sign that she had worried the last American government enough for > it to keep her out of the country. > > Deanne Weakly was among the first to the microphone. The 51-year-old > estate agent told how a couple of years ago she was pulling in $80,000 > (£48,000) a year from commissions selling homes in LA's booming > property market. > > When the bottom fell out of the business with the foreclosure crisis, > she lost her own house and ended up living on the streets in a city > with more homeless than any other in America. She was sexually > assaulted, harassed by the police and in despair. > > She turned to the city and California state governments for help. "No > one wanted to listen. They blame you for being homeless in the first > place," she said.<snip> > > Welcome to housing in America. Let's build these rigid structures, > price them to hundreds or thousands of times what they are worth, and > fleece the populous, If you try to live anyway else, or we feel your > home is not up to our codes, we are going to get you. Sieg Hei...I > mean Good day. What is your suggested solution?
From: zeez on 8 Mar 2010 16:37 For starters, outlaw real estate speculation, at least the out of control kind.
From: Rod Speed on 8 Mar 2010 17:19 zeez wrote: > For starters, outlaw real estate speculation, at least the out of control kind. Impossible to define, and so impossible to outlaw, stupid.
From: Patriot Games on 8 Mar 2010 19:15 On Mon, 8 Mar 2010 13:37:49 -0800 (PST), zeez <blinkingblythe01(a)gmail.com> wrote: >For starters, outlaw real estate speculation, at least the out of >control kind. There's no such thing.
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