I don't think a lot of people with mortgages are dumb. But when you need an advanced degree in mathematics to figure out how these investments are working, that's unfair. It is categorically unfair. The one thing law makes sense of is you need to comprehend or be able to reasonably comprehend what you're investing in.I'm just going to cave in to you and Mitch and say that perhaps my views are far too harsh. It's hard for me to step outside my own shoes and see what the normal person sees looking at these situations. I spent years in business school and practice as a professional in the feild. Please don't take this as me being arrogant. It's simply that the way I see things, the questions I would ask, the mistakes I see, may not be what someone else is even aware exists as an issue. Perhaps I significantly over estimate what the average person doesn't know---or isn't even aware that they don't know.
The biggest problem that I have right now with people saying "OOOOOOOOOOH, they just asked unethically, not illegally!" is it is patently untrue. We don't know because the SEC doesn't have the man power to investigate what happened. What we do keep finding out is, time and time again, the mortgages this all rested upon were shoddy at best, or non-existent at worst.
Buying a house is viewed, generally, as a lifetime investment. And I'll grant you, America treated it frivolously. Lots of people loved to tune into "Flip this House" and those garbage shows on E!; however, I don't think most people in the U.S. really thought about going out and buying property like that. The law isn't doing what it is supposed to be doing, and that is protecting the right people.
Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citi Group, etc. all have an advantageous position when making mortgages with people. They have the capital. Responsible lending says you don't give it to bad investments. However, when these same banks are in a high risk/high yield investment banking scheme, then shit gets ugly.
I'm not above caving to the little guy simply because I want him to win. I'm about saying we should stop hosing him simply because X company has way more money and can buy the political swagger to go along with it. I will never look at a group like MoveOn.org or any other special interest group that represents people broadly with the same derision as I do industry. Companies exist by the pure grace of our legal fiction. Have limited liability corporations strictly because it adds efficacy to our business. They don't exist naturally. They're not you or I. What has become a problem over the last 30 years is the awkward contempt Americans have for disinterested government oversight and fear of government mismanagement, but somehow believing the people who work in business will always be right.
It blows my mind when I hear how government "can't do nuthin' right" and then hear about how Business is the Holy Grail.
My mother and father are both pretty business savvy. I'm pretty keen on securities. I should be able to look at where my money goes and figure out how it will make me money. The current system of derivative markets makes it impossible to figure it out. At some point, we'll either fix it or just watch the world burn.
By the way - I'm assuming you're ThatsRight.