The ascent of right wing populism

you have no proof of that you lying fuck

There's been books written on it. You claiming ignorance doesn't change that.

And there's no proof LBJ lied about the Gulf of Tonkin? Were all the college kids and hippies protesting wrong Desh?
 
Early signs of trouble[edit]

In spring 2010, news stories begin to emerge detailing erroneous foreclosures and evictions, including banks variously foreclosing on homes which were paid for without a mortgage, accidentally foreclosing on the wrong home, and providing fraudulent documentation in courts.[9]

Robo-signing controversy[edit]

In the fall of 2010, major U.S. lenders such as JP Morgan Chase,[10] Ally Financial (formerly known as GMAC), and Bank of America[11] suspended judicial and non-judicial foreclosures across the United States over the potentially fraudulent practice of robo-signing.

On September 21, 2010, HousingWire ran an article citing defects in affidavits used in some foreclosure cases at Ally Financial, formerly known as GMAC Mortgage."This situation with GMAC isn't limited to GMAC," Margery Golant, of Golant & Golant, a foreclosure law firm in Boca Raton, Fla., said in an interview with HousingWire reporter Jon Prior. "All the mortgage servicers do the same thing. They have people either on the inside or through outsourcers that we call Robo-signers. They just sign everything in sight, but the legal system requires that they actually know the information."

In an October 21, 2010 Wall Street Journal article, the Journal reported that foreclosure lawyer/advocates, Thomas Ice and Matthew Weidner, were discussing the deposition testimony of mortgage company employees; Weidner recalled, "Tom and I were talking, and it was, 'Jesus, they're like robots!'" Weidner, a blogger, called them "robo signers" in a January 8, 2010 posting.[12]

The terms "robo-signing" and "robo-signers" then gained wider exposure by mortgage fraud activists Michael Redman and Lisa Epstein via their blogs.[13] "Robo-signing" is a term used by consumer advocates to describe the robotic process of the mass production of false and forged execution of mortgage assignments, satisfactions, affidavits, and other legal documents related to mortgage foreclosures and legal matters being created by persons without knowledge of the facts being attested to. It also includes accusations of notary fraud wherein the notaries pre- and/or post-notarize the affidavits and signatures of so-called robo-signers.

On July 18, 2011, the Associated Press and Reuters[14] released two reports that robo-signing continued to be a major problem in U.S. courtrooms across America. The AP defined robo-signing as a "variety of practices. It can mean a qualified executive in the mortgage industry signs a mortgage affidavit document without verifying the information. It can mean someone forges an executive's signature, or a lower-level employee signs his or her own name with a fake title. It can mean failing to comply with notary procedures. In all of these cases, robo-signing involves people signing documents and swearing to their accuracy without verifying any of the information."[15]

In 2009, Maine attorney Thomas Cox pointed out the wide-scale practice of robo-signing in depositions taken of GMAC's Jeffrey Stephan and other robo-signers.[16][17] News outlets reported that on September 14, 2010, Jeffrey Stephan testified that he had signed affidavits which he hadn't actually reviewed on behalf of Ally Financial Inc.[9][18] This revelation led to increased scrutiny of foreclosure documentation. The practice was apparently common in the mortgage industry.[9] In the weeks following the robo-signing revelation, other large banks came under fire for employing robo-signers as well, including JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America.[19]

You have to do better than Wikipedia. I know for a high school dropout like you it is like going to Oxford but I require a higher standard of proof
 
facts are facts


lying wont change the fact that your party is stabbing its self to death to protect lies
 
http://www.housingwire.com/articles/9862-robo-signer-effect-housing-market-reaching-critical-mass


Robo-signer effect on housing market reaching critical mass


October 8, 2010


Recent issues with foreclosure affidavits spawned reviews and lawsuits for mortgage servicers across the nation, and while the overall housing market may be able to shrug off the effects, if regulators or any more lenders add to the suspensions, another crisis may be at hand. Ally Financial (GJM) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM) suspended foreclosures and REO sales in 23 states, while Bank of America (BAC) declared a nationwide freeze. All three admitted employees signed foreclosure affidavits without verifying certain information or having a notary present, now known as robo-signing. Nearly all of the major servicing shops have come under nationwide scrutiny, investigations and even full-scale lawsuits from politicians, regulators and state attorneys general offices. Rick Sharga is the senior vice president of RealtyTrac, which monitors foreclosure filings across the country and releases monthly and quarterly reports. He said the effect the robo-signers are having on the overall housing market could be marginal. For now. "If the temporary 'freeze' on foreclosure proceedings is limited to new actions and loans in the current foreclosure pipeline in the 23 judicial states, it should have a minimal effect on the overall housing market," Sharga said. He added that the most likely scenario would be a brief slowing of foreclosures over the next quarter while servicers re-check loan documents and put new internal procedures in place. Foreclosure activity would then accelerate in the first quarter of next year and return to "normal" levels by the mid-point of 2011. Alex Villacorta is a senior statistician for Clear Capital, which tracks home prices nationwide. He said the amount of REO weighing on individual housing markets is the single-largest contributor to price drops. In Atlanta, the worst-performing market in August, the REO saturation rate was 66%. Meaning, REO has taken up two-thirds of the market there. "If there were all these moratoriums coming up with all these AGs calling for halts that slows the overall flow, then it has a potential to decrease this rate of new REO material coming onto the market. The REO saturation could decrease as well," Villacorta said. Meaning home prices could get a much needed bump, if only for a short amount of time as Sharga said. The most active part of the housing market by far is the lower-tier price range of REO. Investors are identifying good deals, buying those properties up and renting them back to those who may not be able to afford a home (or who may have been recently evicted from another). "If there's this perceived, rather real or not, notion that all these REOs are going to dry up soon, that could push competition. The investors would then increase their bids," Villacorta said. But if any more lenders or regulators announce a suspension, the already fragile housing market may begin to buckle. Sharga said REO sales account for 30% of the market, and taking almost a third of all sales away could have "serious consequences" for an unstable market. It all depends on how many more banks suspend these sales. "An overall moratorium would also delay foreclosure processing on thousands of homes, delaying their entry onto the market beyond the critical spring selling season, adding to the glut of distressed inventory, probably causing further deterioration in home prices, and perhaps triggering yet more foreclosures," Sharga said. "And, at a minimum, extending the housing downturn by at least another two quarters." Currently only Ally, JPMorgan Chase and BofA have suspended foreclosures. While PNC Financial (PNC) has said it is currently communicating with lawyers over the issue, Wells Fargo (WFC) has stood by the accuracy of its documents, and a spokesman for HSBC Holdings (HBC) told HousingWire that it regularly reviews its process, alluding it may not suspend foreclosures. Write to Jon Prior.

post 117 which you refuse to adress
 
Fascism and power distribution[edit]

Benoît Mandelbrot writes:


One of Pareto's equations achieved special prominence, and controversy. He was fascinated by problems of power and wealth. How do people get it? How is it distributed around society? How do those who have it use it? The gulf between rich and poor has always been part of the human condition, but Pareto resolved to measure it. He gathered reams of data on wealth and income through different centuries, through different countries: the tax records of Basel, Switzerland, from 1454 and from Augsburg, Germany, in 1471, 1498 and 1512; contemporary rental income from Paris; personal income from Britain, Prussia, Saxony, Ireland, Italy, Peru. What he found – or thought he found – was striking. When he plotted the data on graph paper, with income on one axis, and number of people with that income on the other, he saw the same picture nearly everywhere in every era. Society was not a "social pyramid" with the proportion of rich to poor sloping gently from one class to the next. Instead it was more of a "social arrow" – very fat on the bottom where the mass of men live, and very thin at the top where sit the wealthy elite. Nor was this effect by chance; the data did not remotely fit a bell curve, as one would expect if wealth were distributed randomly. "It is a social law", he wrote: something "in the nature of man".

Pareto's discovery that power laws applied to income distribution embroiled him in political change and the nascent Fascist movement, whether he really sided with the Fascists or not. Fascists such as Mussolini found inspiration for their own economic ideas[citation needed] in his discoveries. He had discovered something that was harsh and Darwinian, in Pareto's view. And this fueled both the anger and the energy of the Fascist movement because it fueled their economic and social views. He wrote that, as Mandelbrot summarizes:


At the bottom of the Wealth curve, he wrote, Men and Women starve and children die young. In the broad middle of the curve all is turmoil and motion: people rising and falling, climbing by talent or luck and falling by alcoholism, tuberculosis and other kinds of unfitness. At the very top sit the elite of the elite, who control wealth and power for a time – until they are unseated through revolution or upheaval by a new aristocratic class. There is no progress in human history. Democracy is a fraud. Human nature is primitive, emotional, unyielding. The smarter, abler, stronger, and shrewder take the lion's share. The weak starve, lest society become degenerate: One can, Pareto wrote, 'compare the social body to the human body, which will promptly perish if prevented from eliminating toxins.' Inflammatory stuff – and it burned Pareto's reputation.

Pareto had argued that democracy was an illusion and that a ruling class always emerged and enriched itself. For him, the key question was how actively the rulers ruled. For this reason he called for a drastic reduction of the state and welcomed Benito Mussolini's rule as a transition to this minimal state so as to liberate the "pure" economic forces.[13]

To quote Pareto's biographer:


In the first years of his rule Mussolini literally executed the policy prescribed by Pareto, destroying political liberalism, but at the same time largely replacing state management of private enterprise, diminishing taxes on property, favoring industrial development, imposing a religious education in dogmas.[14]

Karl Popper dubbed him the "theoretician of totalitarianism",[15] but there is no evidence in Popper's published work that he read Pareto in any detail before repeating what was then a common but dubious judgment in anti-fascist circles.[16]

It is true that Pareto regarded Mussolini's triumph as a confirmation of certain of his ideas, largely because Mussolini demonstrated the importance of force and shared his contempt for bourgeois parliamentarism. He accepted a "royal" nomination to the Italian senate from Mussolini. But he died less than a year into the new regime's existence.

Some fascist writers were much enamored of Pareto, writing such paeans as:


Just as the weaknesses of the flesh delayed, but could not prevent, the triumph of Saint Augustine, so a rationalistic vocation retarded but did not impede the flowering of the mysticism of Pareto. For that reason, Fascism, having become victorious, extolled him in life, and glorifies his memory, like that of a confessor of its faith.[3]

But many modern historians reject the notion that Pareto's thought was essentially fascistic or that he is properly regarded as a supporter of fascism

who your party is
 
You have? Where?



I'm nit going to tell you until you answer what I asked you many questons before yours



you never answer questions


you merely ask divertabot crap ot avoid dealing with your evil lies bein g blown to simtherines
 
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