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Now where did she sign a contract with the person her mortgage was sold to? If someone wants to sell a contract to another party, all parties should have to resign.
The ninth amendment comes to mind:
Source: en.wikipedia.org... (same as yours)
The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
However, in the case of the housing fiasco in the states.
Regarding the ninth amendment, a person should have the right to enter into honest contract. And by honest contract, I mean ones that aren't designed to screw them in the end.
And "collected" their gold and jewellery to boot:
“They hired some off-the-wall great big jerks to come into my home,” she said. “My daughter had a little piggy bank. She was saving those gold dollar coins. They broke it on the floor and took that. I have no idea where some of my jewelry is—
The US Constitution limits powers of government, not powers of businesses. Businesses are restricted by laws, not by the Constitution. The Constitution restricts what laws may be made.
That contract, if "designed to screw them", was an abject failure, but a neighbor who signed the same contract but lost his job and was foreclosed upon could say the contract was "designed to screw him".
Once a contract is signed to repay a loan, who it is repaid to is not the issue; the issue is that it must be repaid. As an example, if the contract is with bank A and bank B buys bank A, does it make sense to just wipe the contract out? No... it makes sense to transfer ownership of that contract to the new owner.
The US Constitution limits powers of government, not powers of businesses. Businesses are restricted by laws, not by the Constitution. The Constitution restricts what laws may be made.
I think I meant that more in the regards that businesses committed a fraud by repacking risky loans into AAA securities and selling them, with the government actually helping them in the end.
Mind you, in regular market, that isn't being manipulated... You have winners and losers based on their choices, not on the fact that a penny is worth $100.
Originally posted by AGWskeptic
Misleading title. Makes it sound like it was a total surprise to them that they were being evicted.
I'm not saying I agree with the banks, far from it actually, just that the thread title is misleading. They obviously have tried to get them out before.