LA
Living the Life

Good, bad, or difficult as hell, I'm living "The Life" the best I can.

Asche


My Poodie-licisous



Read me here:

All God's Children

Driving Queen Charlotte

Whiskey and Words

Gossip

How to Clean a Colon Before Surgery

My Articles at Associated Content

My Photos at Flickr

Coastal Commentaries



LA's Demand Studio Articles





Cost of the War in Iraq
(JavaScript Error)




Previous Entry :: Next Entry

Read/Post Comments (4)
Share on Facebook




me


Photobucket

Aliens

Afternoons with Puppy by Dr. Aubrey Fine and Cynthia J. Eisen

HeavyGlow Flash Fiction Anthology Edited by Stacy Taylor

Blue by J.D. Riso. Also available at lulu

Dogster





Not so timely reply from my other senator

Can't say it is very timely, but he did finally reply and he seemed to be one of the few who listened to the constituents and he is not up for reelection this year.

Mel Martinez didn't and he voted for the bail out package.

Here is my reply from Bill Nelson...

Dear Ms. O'Hare:

Thank you for contacting me about the $700 billion to bail out Wall Street. I voted against it because I believed it lacked meaningful relief for homeowners facing foreclosure, and it left taxpayers with the short end of the stick.

Still, make no mistake: I understand the severity of this financial crisis. The bottom line is that until we stem the record number of home foreclosures, this crisis will continue to worsen.

That’s why I’ve proposed a three-part plan to address the financial crisis, including help for homeowners.

First, I’m working on legislation to create new ways for homeowners to refinance their mortgages and stay in their homes. My proposal will require Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to retool mortgages that they hold on their books. It will also establish a direct loan facility within the Federal government to require lenders and other financial institutions that benefit from the bailout to refinance or modify mortgages in danger of default or foreclosure.

Second, I am calling for an investigation into the business practices of major credit rating agencies that helped foster the enormous growth of the mortgage-backed securities industry. Investors relied on and trusted in those credit ratings, and the public deserves to know how these rating agencies concluded that such risky investments could receive high credit ratings.

And finally, we must better regulate all aspects of the financial markets. Today’s financial crisis results from years of inadequate oversight that has been far too tolerant of excessive risk taking.

Meantime, I’ll continue to press Congress to act quickly to keep people in their homes and put our economy back on track.


I would like to note that Mr. Nelson asked if I would like to receive updates on what he's up to in the Senate, and pointed me to the address where I could, voluntarily, sign up for them.

Mr. Martinez just sends me newsletters without asking permission.


Read/Post Comments (4)

Previous Entry :: Next Entry

Back to Top

Powered by JournalScape © 2001-2010 JournalScape.com. All rights reserved.
All content rights reserved by the author.
custsupport@journalscape.com