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Should i move to Mexico?

mexico mortgages
Ric asked:


I’m tired of paying my $4,000 monthly mortgage, if i move to Mexico i can buy an equivalent suburban home for $50,000. Plus i hear young hott mexican women love Americans, should i move or stay in the U.S.?

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Posted by Admin on June 28th, 2009 :: Filed under Politics
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What is happening with the European economy? Half of it in depression per this? What do you think?

mexico mortgages
DAR asked:


http://www.gata.org/node/7098

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard: Monetary union puts half of Europe in depression
Submitted by cpowell on Sat, 2009-01-17 20:18. Section: Daily Dispatches
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
The Telegraph, London
Saturday, January 17, 2009

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/427864…

Events are moving fast in Europe. The worst riots since the fall of Communism have swept the Baltics and the south Balkans. An incipient crisis is taking shape in the Club Med bond markets. S&P has cut Greek debt to near junk. Spanish, Portuguese, and Irish bonds are on negative watch.

Dublin has nationalised Anglo Irish Bank with its half-built folly on North Wall Quay and E73 billion (L65 billion) of liabilities, moving a step nearer the line where markets probe the solvency of the Irish state.

A great ring of EU states stretching from Eastern Europe down across Mare Nostrum to the Celtic fringe are either in a 1930s depression already or soon will be. Greece’s social fabric is unravelling before the pain begins, which bodes ill.

Each is a victim of ill-judged economic policies foisted upon them by elites in thrall to Europe’s monetary project — either in the European Monetary Union or preparing to join — and each is trapped.

As UKIP leader Nigel Farage put it in a rare voice of dissent at the euro’s 10th birthday triumph in Strasbourg, EMU-land has become a Volker-Kerker — a “prison of nations,” to borrow from the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

This week, Riga’s cobbled streets became a war zone. Protesters armed with blocks of ice smashed up Latvia’s finance ministry. Hundreds tried to force their way into the legislature, enraged by austerity cuts.

“Trust in the state’s authority and officials has fallen catastrophically,” said President Valdis Zatlers,
who called for the dissolution of parliament.

In Lithuania, riot police fired rubber-bullets on a trade union march. Dogs chased stragglers into the Vilnia river. A demonstration outside Bulgaria’s parliament in Sofia turned violent on Wednesday.

These three states are all members of the Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM2), the euro’s pre-detention cell. They must join. It is written into their EU contracts.

The result of subjecting ex-Soviet catch-up economies to the monetary regime of the leaden West has been massive overheating. Latvia’s current account deficit hit 26 percent of GDP. Riga property prices surpassed Berlin.

The inevitable bust is proving epic. Latvia’s property group Balsts says Riga flat prices have fallen 56 percent since mid-2007. The economy contracted 18 percent annualised over the last six months.

Leaked documents reveal — despite a blizzard of lies by EU and Latvian officials — that the International Monetary Fund called for devaluation as part of a E7.5 billion joint rescue for Latvia. Such adjustments are crucial in IMF deals. They allow countries to claw their way back to health without suffering perma-slump.

This was blocked by Brussels — purportedly because mortgage debt in euros and Swiss francs precluded that option. IMF documents dispute this. A society is being sacrificed on the altar of the EMU project.

Latvians have company. Dublin expects Ireland’s economy to contract 4 percent this year. The deficit will reach 12 percent of GDP by 2010 on current policies. “This is not sustainable,” said the treasury. Hence the draconian wage deflation now threatened by the Taoiseach.

The Celtic Tiger has faced the test bravely. No government in Europe has been so honest. It is a tragedy that sterling’s crash should have compounded their woes at this moment. To cap it all, Dell is decamping to Poland with 4 percent of GDP. Irish wages crept too high during the heady years when Euroland interest rates of 2 percent so beguiled the nation.

Spain lost a million jobs in 2008. Madrid is bracing for 16 percent unemployment by year’s end.

Private economists fear 25 percent before it is over. Spain’s wage inflation has priced the workforce out of Europe’s markets. EMU logic is wage deflation for year after year. With Spain’s high debt levels, this is impossible.

Either Mr Zapatero stops the madness, or Spanish democracy will stop him. The left wing of his PSOE party is already peeling off, just as the French left is peeling off to fight “l’euro dictature capitaliste.”

Italy’s treasury awaits each bond auction with dread, wondering if can offload E200 billion of debt this year. Spreads reached a fresh post-EMU high of 149 last week. The debt compound noose is tightening around Rome’s throat. Italian journalists have begun to talk of Europe’s “Tequila Crisis” — a new twist.

They mean that capital flight from Club Med could set off an unstoppable process.

Mexico’s Tequila drama in 1994 was triggered by a combination of the Chiapas uprising, a current account haemorrhage, and bond jitters. The dollar-peso peg snapped when elites bega
The dollar-peso peg snapped when elites began moving money to US banks. The game was up within days.

Fixed exchange systems — and EMU is just a glorified version — rupture suddenly. Things can seem eerily calm for a long time. Politicians swear by the parity. Remember John Major’s “soft-option” defiance days before the ERM blew apart in 1992? Or Philip Snowden’s defence of sterling before a Royal Navy mutiny forced Britain off the Gold Standard in 1931.

Don’t expect tremors before an earthquake — and there is no fault line of greater historic violence than the crunching plates where Latin Europe meets Teutonia.
Greece no longer dares sell long bonds to fund its debt. It sold E2.5 billion last week at short rates, mostly 3-months and 6-months. This is a dangerous game. It stores up “roll-over risk” for later in the year. Hedge funds are circling.

Traders suspect that investors are dumping their Club Med and Irish debt immediately on the European Central Bank in “repo” actions.

In other words, the ECB is already providing a stealth bailout for Europe’s governments — though secrecy veils all.

An EU debt union is being created, in breach of EU law. Liabilities are being shifted quietly on to German taxpayers. What happens when Germany’s hard-working citizens find out?

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Posted by Admin on April 6th, 2009 :: Filed under Politics
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CA’s unemployment is 10%. Nebraska’s is 4.5%. Should Obama cut our loses by giving CA to Mexico?

mexico mortgages
Mecca Swineherder asked:


Mortgage defaults are 70 times higher in CA than in Nebraska too.

Nebraska has a state surplus. CA has a massive debt and spending has soared over the past handful of years under the Dem legislature and the governor who is married to a Kennedy.
50% of kids in CA drop out of school
CA is using the bailout and stimuloot to loot the rest of America
lolcat,

companies are free to move if they dont’ want to join Mexico
The defaults are based upon the RATE being 70 times higher. Obviously the number is outrageously higher since CA is so big.
Jason,

you’re an idiot. The RATE is 70x higher but you lick so much liberal azz that you had no idea.

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Posted by Admin on March 12th, 2009 :: Filed under Politics
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Do Dems Find it Odd that Highest Mortgage Default Rates are in Heavily Hispanic States?

mexico mortgages
Hussein the Trojan Horse asked:


California, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Florida

Aren’t these the states where Dems in Congress ache to make sure their voters get houses even if they can’t afford to pay for them?

Wasn’t this the “American Dream” of the Hispanic Caucus?

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123111072368352309.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

Don’t you love how Dems did their best to make it so their voters did NOT have to save up a 10% or 20% downpayment?
Forget,

MI also has a high minority population that isn’t paying for their loans.
ogreat,

maybe you can learn to read the link

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Posted by Admin on February 15th, 2009 :: Filed under Politics
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Is this really Bush’s recession?

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Poe for President asked:


I don’t recall all of our businesses packing up and going south to Mexico until Clinton signed NAFTA and the trickle began.

I don’t recall their being a major housing crisis before democrats Chris Dodd and Barney Frank forced bad home loans and blocked Bush’s attempt at more oversight on both companies.

Yet Bush keeps getting the blame for the economy.

Specifically, which of the Bush administration policies caused an economic decline. Please cite actual facts and sources liberals.

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Posted by Admin on January 10th, 2009 :: Filed under Politics
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