Van Helsing: "The strength of the vampire is that nobody will believe in him."
America's debt to Wall Street has soared since 1945 - and although the banks were rescued at public expense, the public's been left holding the bag for the recent drop in housing prices:
Hmm ... How many times has the word "vampire" appeared in books during the same period [1]?
What does this mean? Does it reflect the public's subconscious response to predatory banking? Or is it just some guy having nerdy fun with data sets by juxtaposing two trend lines that have nothing to do with one another? We report, you decide.
Here's what we do know: Like their fictional counterparts, America's banks are revenants, re-animated creatures who were brought back from the dead through the public's generosity. Now they're feasting on the rest of us again, while politicians in Washington work to rob us of the few tools we can use to defend ourselves. With some Democratic complicity, Republicans are fulfilling the promise of Rep. Spencer Bachus, who said that "Washington and the regulators are there to serve the banks."
And what they're serving them is you.
The Count: "Listen to them! The creatures of the night. What music they make ..."
The rap sheet against America's banks grows longer and longer. They keep stringing people along with phony foreclosure negotiations, and then foreclose anyway. And we're hearing more and more stories about bank agents who, as they're invading and padlocking illegally foreclosed homes, also steal the private property inside them. In
Van Helsing: "The strength of the vampire is that nobody will believe in him."
America's debt to Wall Street has soared since 1945 - and although the banks were rescued at public expense, the public's been left holding the bag for the recent drop in housing prices:
Hmm ... How many times has the word "vampire" appeared in books during the same period [1]?
What does this mean? Does it reflect the public's subconscious response to predatory banking? Or is it just some guy having nerdy fun with data sets by juxtaposing two trend lines that have nothing to do with one another? We report, you decide.
Here's what we do know: Like their fictional counterparts, America's banks are revenants, re-animated creatures who were brought back from the dead through the public's generosity. Now they're feasting on the rest of us again, while politicians in Washington work to rob us of the few tools we can use to defend ourselves. With some Democratic complicity, Republicans are fulfilling the promise of Rep. Spencer Bachus, who said that "Washington and the regulators are there to serve the banks."
And what they're serving them is you.
The Count: "Listen to them! The creatures of the night. What music they make ..."
The rap sheet against America's banks grows longer and longer. They keep stringing people along with phony foreclosure negotiations, and then foreclose anyway. And we're hearing more and more stories about bank agents who, as they're invading and padlocking illegally foreclosed homes, also steal the private property inside them. In
Source:http://removeripoffreports.net/
<b>News</b> of the World feigns shock at new twist in the phone-hacking <b>...</b>
Who is the paper trying to fool with its 'internal investigation' - the public or Rupert Murdoch?
Modernizr <b>News</b>
We're kicking it off with some pretty exciting news right away. First, we've expanded our team to include Alex Sexton. Due to this addition we've also formalized our individual roles in the Modernizr Team, as such: ...
Arnold Schwarzenegger set to make Hollywood comeback as a nice <b>...</b>
Look out, Hollywood. Former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has a warning for.
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