GLOBAL EFFORTS TO
SOLVE AN ONGOING FINANCIAL CRISIS
Iceland forces debt forgiveness: total us media
blackout
ICELAND FORCES DEBT FORGIVENESS: TOTAL US MEDIA BLACKOUT – “When Debt Is Fraud, Debt Forgiveness is the last and only remedy” Zeus Yiamouyiannis, Ph.D. / TDP BLACKLISTED [Alert]
ICELAND FORCES DEBT FORGIVENESS: TOTAL US MEDIA BLACKOUT – “When Debt Is Fraud, Debt Forgiveness is the last and only remedy” Zeus Yiamouyiannis, Ph.D. / TDP BLACKLISTED [Alert]
APRIL
16, 2012 BY ADMIN
Finally
serious economists are considering a position I have been maintaining and
writing about since the 2008 financial meltdown. Whatever its name— erasure,
repudiation, abolishment, cancellation, jubilee—debt forgiveness, will have to
eventually emerge forefront in global efforts to solve an ongoing systemic
financial crisis.
The
US Rothschild Controlled Media (RCM) has completely BLACKED OUT/CENSORED any
news about Iceland’s DEBT FORGIVENESS.
If
you Google “ICELAND FORGIVES ENTIRE POPULATION OF MORTGAGE DEBT” you will get
‘About 359,000 Results’. Not one of them is a Media Outlet in the US. Not one
single Major or Minor news outlet in America has mentioned a single word about
this story.
This
is TOTAL MEDIA CENSORSHIP and a TOTAL MEDIA BLACKOUT, and it should tell you who
owns and runs the Media in America.
BANKERS.
Foreign Bankers.
We
are allowed to see a tortured, bleeding, dying Gaddafi anywhere, but we are not
allowed to know about Debt Forgiveness.
If
you Google “DEBT FORGIVENESS” About 1 million 850 results. Not one of them talks
about forgiving debt. Okay, 1 does.
But still, out of over a million and a half results.
But still, out of over a million and a half results.
The
MAINSTREAM MEDIA totally censors anything to do with Debt
Forgiveness.
The
government of Iceland has forgiven the mortgage debt for much of its population.
This nation chose a very different way of stopping the crisis from the rest of
European countries. It decided to hear the requests of the population and to put
politicians and bankers on the bench of the accused three years after their
financial excesses would sank one of the most prosperous economies in
2008.
Iceland
Forgives Mortgage Debt for the Population. Putting Bankers and Politicians on
“Bench of Accused”
This is awesome. It shows when the people DO STAND UP they have more power and win against the corrupt bankers and politicians of a country. Iceland is forgiving and erasing the mortgage debt of the population.
This is awesome. It shows when the people DO STAND UP they have more power and win against the corrupt bankers and politicians of a country. Iceland is forgiving and erasing the mortgage debt of the population.
They
are putting the bankers and politicians on the “Bench of the Accused.” Which
means I assume they are putting them on trial for corruption.
Now
the rest of people of the world need to start doing the same thing. We all need
to stand up and against all the corruption and fraud of the banks and
politicians that are puppets of the banks and corporations.
The
beauty of it is that they will have a load of cash to circulate into the economy
and into service industries etc…instead of feeding it to the parasite bankers
and out of the economy, great idea. If it was warmer I’d move to
Iceland.
For
Whom The Bell Tolls:
This
could very well be the first chime of many to signal the Death of the World
Banking System headed by our ‘good’ friends the Rothschild’s.
Iceland
Strikes the First Major Blow Against the World Banking (Fraud) Cartel. This is
what can immediately put money into the hands of many
American’s.
The
US Government through Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and FHA own 96% of all bad housing
loans. Many have stated, that in effect,
“The US Government is Foreclosing on itself.” This is the very definition of Insanity. It is a form of Suicide.
“The US Government is Foreclosing on itself.” This is the very definition of Insanity. It is a form of Suicide.
Major
Banks only hold 3% of bad housing loans, 3%!
This
is not a banking problem, it is a Government problem, they hold the
loans!
We
were just about to do a story on America foreclosing on itself when this article
came across our computer.
Times
have just gotten brighter.
This
is Awesome, News!
The
Title says it all:
The
True Democracy Party now calls for Nation-Wide Mortgage Debt
Forgiveness!
“Who
is with US?!”
Endgame:
When Debt Is Fraud, Debt Forgiveness Is the Last and Only Remedy
Charles
Hugh-Smith from Of Two Minds.
Today
I present an important guest essay by long-time contributor Zeus Yiamouyiannis,
who suggests that when debt is essentially fraudulent, then debt forgiveness is
both the logical and the only remedy.
Endgame:
When Debt is Fraud, Debt Forgiveness is the last and Only Remedy, by Zeus
Yiamouyiannis, Ph.D., copyright 2011.
Introduction
Finally
serious economists are considering a position I have been maintaining and
writing about since the 2008 financial meltdown. Whatever its name— erasure,
repudiation, abolishment, cancellation, jubilee—debt forgiveness, will have to
eventually emerge forefront in global efforts to solve an ongoing systemic
financial crisis.
“On
a grand scale the only way to erase counterfeit money and (counterfeit) assets
of hundreds of trillions of dollars is to erase the debts associated with those
fake assets. (Let me underscore again, these are not “toxic” assets, they are
fake assets.)… Forgiveness in general, and forgiveness of debt in particular,
stand as virtues if they free us up to acknowledge, address, and learn from our
culpability, start anew, and create forward.” (The Big Squeeze, Part 3: The
Quiet Rebellion: Civil Disobedience, Local Markets, and Debt Erasure (January
29, 2011)
Debt forgiveness, therefore, accomplishes two important things. It eliminates the increasing and outsized portion of productive enterprise to pay off unproductive obligations, and it clears the ground for new opportunities, new thinking, invention, and entrepreneurialism. This is why the ability to declare bankruptcy is so essential in the pursuit of both happiness and innovation.
Debt forgiveness, therefore, accomplishes two important things. It eliminates the increasing and outsized portion of productive enterprise to pay off unproductive obligations, and it clears the ground for new opportunities, new thinking, invention, and entrepreneurialism. This is why the ability to declare bankruptcy is so essential in the pursuit of both happiness and innovation.
Currently
we are mired in a “new normal” and calls for “austerity” which are nothing more
than the delusional efforts of a status quo to avoid the consequences of its own
error and fraud and to profit evermore. So bedazzled by the false wealth created
by debt multiplication and its concomitant fantasy of ever-higher returns, this
status quo continues to be stupidly amazed that people are not spending and that
the economy is not picking up. But how could it be otherwise?
Productive
wealth has been trapped in a web of parasitic theft, counterfeiting, liability
evasion, non-regulation, and prosecutorial non-accountability. All the
fundamental attributes of a functioning exchange economy have been warped to
reward creative criminals. I spoke extensively about this in my posts from 2008.
(Imaginary Worth, Empire of Debt: How Modern Finance Created Its Own Downfall
(October 15, 2008)
The
unsustainable nature of debt
Two
observations: 1) Fabricated/parasitic so-called “wealth” destroys value by
diluting the value of productive wealth. 2) Debt/credit that cannot be paid back
is never an asset and is always a hot-potato liability (needing to be foisted to
a greater fool to garner “profit” and transaction fees):
“The
models [modern debt are] based upon had no contact with reality. They assumed
unlimited growth and ability to pay. When matched against the reality of people
paying ten times their salary for mortgages that actually added more money owed
to their principal (i.e. with negative amortization), required no money down,
and set up “balloon payments,” large step-ups in payments after a few years)
there is no possible way they could NOT default in a predictable span of time.”
(Part II: How the Credit Default Swap Scam Works (October 13,
2008)
Systemically, all debt that charges a percentage (“usury”) originates in delusion. Debt grows exponentially indefinitely, growth (income and otherwise) cannot. This leads to a widening condition where the fruits of productive “growth” devoted to interest payments increase until those fruits are entirely consumed. (The Elephant In The Room: Debt Grows Exponentially, While Economies Only Grow In An S-Curve (Washington’s Blog)
Systemically, all debt that charges a percentage (“usury”) originates in delusion. Debt grows exponentially indefinitely, growth (income and otherwise) cannot. This leads to a widening condition where the fruits of productive “growth” devoted to interest payments increase until those fruits are entirely consumed. (The Elephant In The Room: Debt Grows Exponentially, While Economies Only Grow In An S-Curve (Washington’s Blog)
Once
this happens, stores of wealth (hard assets) begin to be cannibalized to make up
for the difference. You see this in Greece with its sale of public assets to
private companies, and in middle-class America where people are liquidating
retirement accounts to pay for their cost of living.
This
problem is compounded by a private Federal Reserve that lends money into
circulation at interest, and then allows the multiplication of this consumer
debt-money liability through fractional reserve banking. The money in
circulation today could pay only a small fraction of the total private and
public debt. That fact alone is evidence of a kind of systemic fraud. “If you
just work hard enough, save, and make sensible decisions, you can get out of
debt” could only physically work for a bare fraction of the population, given
the money-to-debt ratio. The rest would have to simply default to clear the
boards.
This
is why debt forgiveness makes not only moral but rational, mathematical sense.
Finances require balancing to be coherent. There must be some way to redress
systemic imbalance. One has to be able to “zero the scales” to get an accurate
weight of value and to re-establish healthy value creation.
Voices
in the debate
Some
analysts are beginning to see the forest through the trees in terms of debt
forgiveness. Steve Keen, Australian economist and current deflationist, and
Michael Hudson, American economic contrarian and prescient essayist, are both
using clear-sighted reality-based financial analysis to debunk accounting games
that obscure the untenable debt situation and to call for debt
forgiveness.
How
can selling sovereign assets and imposing austerity on Greek citizens (taking
money out of their hands through higher taxes and lower benefits) do anything
other than hollow out value and contract the Greek economy in the face of a deep
global recession? Michael Hudson: It can’t. Greece’s debt needs to be written
off.
“It
seems unreasonable and unrealistic to expect that large sectors of the New
European population can be made subject to salary garnishment throughout their
lives, reducing them to a lifetime of debt peonage… (T)he only way to resolve it
is to negotiate a debt write-off…” (The Coming European Debt Wars: EU Countries
sinking into Depression (Michael Hudson, Global Research, April 9,
2010)
(“[We’ll Have] a Never-Ending Depression Unless We Repudiate the Debt, Which Never Should Have Been Extended In The First Place” (Washington’s Blog)
Why isn’t “quantitative easing” and flooding the U.S. economy with
debt-money working to prime borrowing and lending? Steve Keen: Because the money
is going into deleveraging in a time of overextension:
“Bernanke
is throwing (a) trillion dollars into the system. Rather than that leading to
ten trillion dollars of additional credit money, creating the inflation people
are expecting, that trillion dollars is all that goes in, and people
deleveraging actually reduce their level of spending by more than a trillion
dollars by trying to pay their debt down, and it cancels out what the government
is trying to do… We need a 21st century jubilee.” (On the Edge with . . . Steve
Keen (Max Keiser, video)
Other well-known commentators are not seeing the debt forest at all. In their contentious debates over deflation and inflation, neither Rick Ackerman nor Gonzalo Lira seem to be aware of the overwhelmingly fraudulent nature of present global debt– including the 600 to 1,000 trillion dollars of fabricated notional wealth represented by the derivatives markets, fraudclosure, and a host of other sources.
Rick
Ackerman: “’Ultimately, every penny of every debt must be paid — if not by the
borrower, then by the lender.’ Inflationists and deflationists implicitly agree
on this point… and we differ only on the question of who, borrower or lender,
will take the hit.” (Let’s Think This Through Together….)
I
posted a pithy response in the comment section:
“Both
Rick and Gonzalo left out the obvious third way–debt forgiveness. No… debt does
not have to be paid by someone; it can be absolved, especially debt created upon
fraudulent and/or counterfeit-ridden practice… (D)erivatives are not real
wealth, and neither was the ostensible climb in the values of housing resting in
large part on those phony-wealth derivatives.
The only “real wealth” here revolves around ability to produce real and needed goods (to allow us to survive), and the ability to create something that increases one’s quality of life (to promote our thriving). Precious little of the present global economy involves either one of these. Yeah, if we use FASB standards and Goldman Sachs accounting, we can pretend our worthless junk is all really simply very rare, “unique condition” collectibles worth trillions of dollars.
I’ve got a better idea. Take our financial junk out of the global attic in boxes, put them out on the front lawn, and see if anyone wants to pay a few bucks for the various items, give away the leftovers to anyone interested passing on the sidewalk, and recycle, donate, or dispose of the rest. It’s a moving sale, and if our economy is going to get moving, maybe we ought to have one.” (Zeus Yiamouyiannis April 6, 2011 at 4:11 pm)
This
subtle debt extortion creates a system of never-ending debt-slavery for a vast
majority of the population. When this “manageable” slavery is aggravated by a
desire to use hardship to extort ever greater assets from the overburdened at
ever cheaper prices (what Naomi Klein calls “disaster capitalism”), by open and
unapologetic widespread fraud, and by the unjust offloading of risk and
liability to taxpayers who had nothing to do with poor decisions of private
banks, then the systemic abuse is revealed in the daily lives of
citizens.
Debt
creates scarcity, which stimulates fear, which drives manic competition, which
favors opportunism, collusion, and concentrations of power, which translates to
abuse, which results in a collapse of legitimacy for the economic system.
Overreach causes a breaking point, and we are getting close to it. Will the
response be warfare, taxpayer revolt, political upheaval, mass default, debt
forgiveness, something other, some combination? I have predicted pockets of
violence would be mixed with some softer combination of taxpayer revolt, mass
default, political upheaval, and debt forgiveness, along with a return to
community exchange to meet basic needs. (The Big Squeeze, Part 3: The Quiet
Rebellion: Civil Disobedience, Local Markets, and Debt Erasure (January 29,
2011)
This
possibility of epic reprisal may very well compel banks to come to the table
around debt forgiveness to avoid violent backlash and criminal prosecution, even
over preserving their gravy train companies. The bitter irony of these companies
and their galloping greed is that they ended up victimizing each other by
selling junk to each other and extracting all the real value in salary and
bonuses. Their assets rest on notional values, that when unmasked would drive
each into immediate insolvency. They have simply been scam artists, producing
little value and extracting mountains of money.
What
might this look like? Looking at present trends and using the very useful
framework of Kubler-Ross’s stages of grief, it might go something like
this…
Average
debtor:
1)
Denial: Liquidate savings to pay for over-priced house and cost of living.
2) Anger and fear: Exhaust resources, experience want, compounded by austerity measures.
3) Bargaining: Attempt to negotiate with bank through HAMP and
other mechanisms to lower payments. Banks don‘t bite and even have incentives to
foreclose.
4) Depression: Lose/default on the house and move in with family
or cheap rental.
5) Find out life is better without being a debt slave and
spend more time with community and the ones you love.
Bankers:
1)
Denial: Collect 144 billion in bonuses after financial collapse and laugh as not
a single trading day loss arises for zombie TBTF banks completely subsidized by
governments.
2) Anger: Express false righteousness, indignation, and hubris
over even modest/toothless demands/regulations attempted to be placed on them by
governments. Exhibit sadistic zeal at being able to simply claim you own and
liquidate properties they have no clear title to.
3) Bargaining: Experience
dawning awareness that may have just cooked your own gooses as strategic
defaults skyrocket, populist demands to prosecute fraudclosure gain traction,
and quantitative easing ad infinitum dwindles and fails to keep stock prices
artificially aloft. Improvise panicked attempts to “be reasonable” and actually
negotiate, once the asset and money flow well runs dry.
4) Depression:
Contemplate and realize possible bankruptcy by big banks. Retreat to the
Hamptons to hire criminal defense lawyers, contemplate empty life, and shoulder
the abuse of media and contempt of a global citizenry.
5) Acceptance: Trying
to regain “good guy” status and avoid criminal prosecution by agreeing to be
part of debt forgiveness.
Once
defaults happen in increasing numbers and certain asset prices plunge (i.e. real
estate), what will initially look like a bonanza for capitalist parasites could
easily get out of hand, with people either unable or unwilling to buy inventory
even at greatly reduced prices. Profits would tank at banks, liabilities would
skyrocket even with most of it transferred to government guarantee. Because no
one plays the game anymore, banks could go under as well, as people rise to vote
out bank-friendly politicians and simply refuse to pay. This unraveling could
easily force exposure of the notional value of derivatives in banks as
worthless, meaning they are as bankrupt as the people they exploited. At this
point, there will be a common desire and need to simply “forgive” the debts and
try to find some way to distribute these empty homes.
Conclusion
Debt
forgiveness simply calls out either the inherent systemic inability to make good
on debts or the recognition that debt was produced through fraudulent means. In
the present situation, both conditions obtain. There has likely been no point in
world history where debt forgiveness has been so comprehensively merited. The
only speculation from my point (barring world-wide global feudalism and external
debt slavery) is whether we will initiate such forgiveness or be forced into
it.
Thank
you, Zeus, for this prescient and insightful analysis of debt and debt
renunciation. The Kondratieff Cycle can only turn to spring after debt
renunciation completes the winter cycle. Let’s stop pretending we’re still in
summer, and that the Fed’s puny “quantitative easing” and monetary cargo-cult
machinations can reverse the seasons.
HAS THE TRUE DEMOCRACY PARTY BEEN “BLACKLISTED”?
OMG!
HOW COOL IS THAT!!!
*******MEDIA
BLACKLIST*******
Posts
Tagged ‘media blackout’
-IMF
urges authorities to consider debt forgiveness to restore growth
Monday, April 16th, 2012
Monday, April 16th, 2012
The IMF said the lessons showed that “policies can help
avert self-reinforcing cycles of household defaults, further house price
declines, and additional contractions in output” and made a case “for government
involvement to lower the cost of restructuring debt, facilitate the writing down
of household debt, and help prevent foreclosures”.
***Source: wordpress.com***
-ICELAND
FORGIVES ENTIRE POPULATION OF MORTGAGE DEBT: And So Can We! “TDP Calls for
Nation
[...] The government of Iceland has forgiven the mortgage debt for
much of its population. This nation chose a very different way of stopping the
crisis from the rest of European countries. It decided to hear the requests of
the population and to put politicians and bankers on the bench of the accused
three years after their financial excesses would sank one of the most prosperous
economies in 2008.Source: truedemocracyparty.net
[...]
***Source: truedemocracyparty.net***
-Mortgage
Debt Forgiveness by Howard Knight
Since the housing bust of 2007, many homes
in various parts of the country are upside down on their loans. This happens
when owners owe more debt than what the house can be sold for. This forces
owners to stay and try to recover their paper loss over time or sell it at a
loss and pay the remaining mortgage balance to the bank. Some people have
restructured their mortgage loans which forgives part of their debt. And others
have turned in their keys to the bank and walked out of their mortgage
crisis.
***Source: deafnetwork.com***
-The
Tax Consequences of Debt Forgiveness
Let’ s say the Smiths, like so many
American homeowners, find themselves unable to afford their mortgage. They reach
out to their lender and after jumping through numerous hoops, filling out
countless forms and getting a buyer on the hook, the bank agrees to release its
lien and approve their short sale. The Smiths owed $500,000 on their mortgage
but the bank agreed to accept a sale price of $400,000 and forgive the remaining
$100,000 balance. Great news right? Yes and no. Of course, it’s positive that
the Smiths were able to avoid foreclosure and move on with their lives, but
thanks to the 1099-C and the IRS, they have a surprise waiting when tax time
comes around. Their taxable income just increased $100,000 (the amount forgiven
by the bank). Even though the Smiths never pocketed this money, despite the fact
that the loan proceeds were used entirely to finance the purchase of their home,
the tax man will count the forgiven debt as income and send a
bill.
***Source: yourcpapartners.com***
-Mortgage
Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007 to Expire Soon.
Once an escrow has been
opened there are several phases of the title company’s involvement in the
transaction. The first step is the issuance of the PR which is submitted to the
buyer for review and approval. Many buyers have no idea what to look for in a
Preliminary Report and will look to their real estate agent for guidance. The
items set forth in the PR can be divided into: (1) normal items such as taxes,
encumbrances which the seller is going to pay off, CC&R’s if applicable, and
public utility easements; and (2) “red flag” items such as abstracts of
judgment, tax liens, child support orders, private easements, and covenants
regarding public improvements. As to all questionable items, copies of the
underlying documents should be ordered from the title company. Real estate
agents should not hold themselves out as authorities on complex title issues and
should refer the client to the title officer to answer questions regarding the
PR and should urge the client to consult a private attorney if any questions
have not been answered to their satisfaction. The next step in the process is to
“clean up” the title if necessary. This involves getting appropriate assurances
that any liens, judgments or other monetary encumbrances will be removed prior
to the close of escrow. Sometimes the seller is “upside down” and the monetary
encumbrances exceed the seller’s equity in the property. It is imperative that a
seller who knows that there is insufficient equity include a short pay
contingency in the RPA-CA by incorporating a Short Sale Addendum (“SSA”). This
provision is designed for sellers who are “upside down” in the property to the
extent that the proceeds of the sale will be inadequate to pay off existing
encumbrances. This clause makes the close of escrow contingent upon the lien
holders agreeing to reduce their pay off requirements enough to allow the seller
to close without bringing money into escrow and without reducing the costs of
sale including real estate commissions. Thus this clause protects brokers as
well as the seller. Without a “short pay” contingency a seller who cannot
persuade his lenders to reduce their demands will be in breach of the RPA-CA by
virtue of his inability to deliver clear title free and clear of all monetary
encumbrances. As long as the property is being sold for fair market value the
lender will usually agree to the short pay since the alternative is to foreclose
and perhaps end up with the property on their books which is very
disadvantageous from a banking standpoint. Sellers finding themselves in this
position need to consult with a tax professional since, among other things, the
forgiveness of any debt by a lender may be deemed to be taxable income. They may
qualify for relief from any tax consequences under the Debt Relief Act of 2007
or the insolvency provisions of Section 108 of the Internal Revenue Code,
however these provisions may apply to any given situation and it is imperative
that they get professional advice from a qualified tax expert and under no
circumstance should a real estate agent give such advice.
***Source: masterpiecerealtyassociates.com***
-Nonprofit
grassroots movement seeks student loan debt forgiveness
“Forgiving student
loan debt would have an immediate stimulating effect on the economy,” Applebaum
said. “Responsible people who did nothing other than pursue a higher education
would have hundreds, if not thousands of extra dollars per month to spend,
fueling the economy now. Those extra dollars being pumped into the economy would
have a multiplying effect, unlike many of the provisions of the new stimulus
package. As a result, tax revenues would go up, the credit markets will unfreeze
and jobs will be created.”
***Source: unews.com***
-Mortgage
Debt Forgiveness
We have to do something to stop the foreclosures from
continuing. The more the foreclosures, the lower the housing prices will be and
the longer this mess continues. It is a moral dilemma. Lessening the principle
amount on mortgages that are far higher than what the home is now worth will
help stabilize the housing market and keep foreclosures at bay. This whole
economic mess was started because of the governmental regulations that were
shoved down everyone’s throat, that all American’s deserve a home of their own
whether they could pay for it or not. These toxic loans were the impetus that
threw our economy into a tailspin. No matter how the government tries to put all
the blame on Wall Street, the major blame is on the liberal democrats of the
early 90′s and their socialistic goals. But, putting the blame game aside, we
are all in this mess and something has to be done. I would like to hear about
what the other methods to take care of this problem are. Or maybe, we will all
have to bite the bullet and give “Principle Forgiveness” to every homeowner
whose home is underwater and modify their loans. Of course, then the banks will
be clamoring for more bailouts. You would think with all these so-called
“economic and financial experts” they would be able to come up with some way to
get us back on track. One way I am sure will work is to never elect an OBAMA
like President again. We elected someone who knew NOTHING about finances,
running a country, foreign affairs, the importance of using our own natural
energy resources, about being a President to ALL Americans, how to be a real
leader and take responsibility for the Country and his decisions, instead of
continually blaming someone else, how to get Americans to work again, and
basically to be the Leader of the Free World. His only qualifications were to
get and retain people on the reliance of the government and poking at the great
wound of our Country by rekindling a race war. It is time to get someone who
knows how to put people to work, who knows about finances and who has had a real
job and been quite successful at it. We need a new Senate that can actually pass
a budget – and we wonder why the government is so far in debt?! This November,
ask yourself, “Are you really better off than 4 years ago? Is our Country better
off than it was 4 years ago?”
***Source: firedream.com***
-Debt
Forgiveness and Mortgages
There are a significant number of options for
people who are dealing with credit card debt and require alternative options
beyond standard payment plans because of a drastic change in their financial
strength and many consumers have been impacted severely as well by issues of
high mortgage payments, underwater mortgages and exorbitant interest rates. For
the most part people who have sought debt relief have had a few options but one
of the biggest issues for many people as the economy has struggled to recover is
a persistent problem regarding a mortgage.
***Source: philadelphiadailyphoto.com***
-DeMarco
Warns of the Dangers of Large
Comments are subject to approval and
moderation. We remind everyone that The Heritage Foundation promotes a civil
society where ideas and debate flourish. Please be respectful of each other and
the subjects of any criticism. While we may not always agree on policy, we
should all agree that being appropriately informed is everyone’s intention
visiting this site. Profanity, lewdness, personal attacks, and other forms of
incivility will not be tolerated. Please keep your thoughts brief and avoid ALL
CAPS. While we respect your first amendment rights, we are obligated to our
readers to maintain these standards. Thanks for joining the
conversation.
***Source: heritage.org***
-Tax
Tips: 10 Tips for Mortgage Debt Forgiveness
10. Examine the Form 1099-C
carefully. Notify the lender immediately if any of the information shown is
incorrect. You should pay particular attention to the amount of debt forgiven in
Box 2 as well as the value listed for your home in Box 7.
***Source: patch.com***
No comments:
Post a Comment