- Thread starter
- #1
That's no fault of the people who are getting robbed out of the pensions they were promised as part of their salaries for the years they worked.
It's against the state constitution to declare bankruptcy protection on those accounts, yet Snyder signed the damn thing anyway. He's been a far more effective governor so far than Granholm was, but his blatant disregard for state and federal laws as well as the our state and the US constitution is down-right criminal.
Don't get me wrong- the city of Detroit absolutely needed to decaler bankruptcy, but that pension $$ should be 100% untouchable.
If not, then why am I required to pay Wells Fargo back the $$ I borrowed from them? Same exact logic as not paying workers $$ they've already earned. A promise is a promise after all...
If not, then why am I required to pay Wells Fargo back the $$ I borrowed from them?
Strictly speaking in mortgage terms, you didn't really borrow any money. The bank owns your home, and you pay interest on the money they used to buy your home (and then allow you to live in it). If you put 5% down, it really means the bank owns 95% of your home. That's why when people stop paying their mortgage, the bank kicks you out. Some people say "they took my house", no they kicked you out of their house. A mortgage is really a fancy way to say you rent from the bank. You only own your home when it's completely paid off. I know it doesn't seem like that, the way they throw around the word "home owner", but that's how it works.
Wow. I just gained a lot of respect for the Governator! What an awesome shirt, too...