from the Working Life blog:
J.P. Morgan: Give Me Your Money, Now Get The Hell Out of Your Homeby Jonathan Tasini
Tuesday 13 of September, 2011
Every day that passes, I get the sense that the people who run the big banks are even more brazen in their view that we, the people of the country, are just sharecroppers on their financial plantations. We work, we give--and they take and take...and, then, when they are done with us, we get tossed off their little island.
J.P. Morgan is competing with Bank of America for the honor of worst overlord on the plantation--and in this story one can grasp the reason for the rage we see in the land.
Kudos to the Times' Michael Powell for his story today about Mimi Pierre Johnson:
She and her husband bought their four-bedroom home in Elmont, on Long Island, for $413,000 in 2005. Then the recession blew in. Her husband lost his construction job, her real estate work slowed and their boiler wheezed and died. Their once-reasonable mortgage resembled a forbidding mountain.
She dialed her bank, JPMorgan Chase, seeking a lifeline. The bank gave her a temporary modification, but then canceled it. It lost her documents. It did not return her calls. Late fees and lawyer bills piled up. “I’m a Realtor; I know I’m doomed,” Ms. Johnson said. “But I want to say to Chase, ‘Hello!? The government gave you a bailout to help people like me.’ ”
Here, Ms. Johnson is mistaken. Presidents George W. Bush and Obama spent more than $1 trillion in taxpayer money to bail out our largest banks and corporations. But they exacted no quid pro quo. JPMorgan Chase has recorded splendid profits and has no obligation to bail out hundreds of thousands of homeowners facing dispossession.
Whether you believe the banks should have gotten the money or not, and whether you believe that we should have let the banks fail (I do not because of the wreckage that would have caused), it is absolutely clear that this is an important point: they basically got the money with almost no strings attached. The banks were supposed to give the money out in the form of loans to help the economy--and they have not, by in large. ...........(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.workinglife.org/blogs/view_post.php?content_id=15291