Posted by
Forgive My Patriotism on Saturday, May 30, 2009 7:28:39 PM
The Progressive Socialists are Right.
There's something I never thought I
would hear myself say. But as of today, I am going to say that I
agree with them one hundred percent about one thing. Ever since Marx
and Engels penned their manifesto in the 1800s, socialists have risen
up around the world to decry the gap between the wealthy and the
poor, and denounce the evils of corporate greed. And with these they
declare all men equal and encourage the common man to tear down the
wealthy, take over the corporations and the government, and bring all
under an all powerful one party rule.
Despite whatever has happened under
this set of circumstances, I have to now agree from personal
experience that corporations, at least enough of them for me, are
inherently evil. I've watched them do evil to individuals and whole
populations. Some grow to have economies that are greater than many
nations. And many do this by massaging and milking consumers. They
do, not what is in the best interest of consumers, but whatever
practices ensure the most profits. If by their designs they cause
some of us to utterly fail and crash, without codifying it, their
policy deems it acceptable. Not only acceptable in the sense that
they are willing to sacrifice some of us for their ends, but also in
the sense that they have procedures for mitigating any problems that
may follow sacrifice. Sometimes, a consumer must be dealt with.
Corporations, by practice, have discovered that they can get away
with many things, even while under the immediate view of the legal
system.
I guess I've known of this evil all
along, but my puritanical patriotism has suppressed any willingness
to solidify this into a firmly held position. However, now that I
have been firmly dealt with in this manner by a corporation, at least on
this one subject, I'm willing to stand shoulder to shoulder with
today's socialists, the Progressives, and yell “Power to the
proletariat”.
Following a flyer, I refinanced my home
two years ago and discovered the broker had forged my name to a
different loan. I did what I thought was supposed to be done. I
called everybody. The broker vanished, the district attorney had
them arrested, the title company looked worried, and the mortgage
company ignored me. Not completely though. They said they were
investigating. Meanwhile I made payments on the forged mortgage, and
blinked my eyes in bewilderment that the mortgage company was not
rushing to fix the documents with me as soon as possible. I was told
that “Mortgage companies do not work that way.”
While the investigation ensued, the
return date to my out of state employment was coming, and I began to
think I'd have to delay it in order to ensure that there was a
conviction. But then I got a letter telling me that the mortgage was
being sold. At that point I began to feel a little unloved. Before
this assignment, I called the new note holder, and was told that they
would deal with the forgeries when they received them. Both
companies had me fill out fraud paperwork, and the second requested I
do this nine or ten times. But nothing seemed to come from these.
By now, returning to my employment was
far less important than getting a forgery conviction to be able to
bring the mortgage company to the table. Problem was, I could no
longer afford to pay it, and I stopped. It was then that they
stopped ignoring me. While dealing with their daily calls to get me
to make payments, I pushed and pushed until I got to a resolution
specialists. The first thing he said was “We've got to get these
(forged) documents signed.” He couldn't see me blinking through
the phone. Then he suggested some new numbers. But they differed
only slightly. Meanwhile, I put the DA in touch with him, who
convinced him to provide a fax indicating the specialists own belief
that there were forgeries. Boom, we had a guilty plea!
I started to relax. Surely now they
would sit down to the table and do something to amicably resolve
this. And then I could go through the update training to return to
my employment. I was wrong. At their request, I submitted two loan
applications that they denied. Are you ready for this? Because my
income and my credit, which was damaged by them, disqualified me.
This specialist and then a half dozen other specialists suggested I
conduct a short sale, suggested more bad terms, even suggested I just
submit myself to their full control. But my suggestions that they
revert the loan to the terms I originally signed, and for them to
even take my home, leaving me free and clear didn't even get a curt
review. By now I had made more than eighty calls to them and spoken
to nearly 30 different people.
Then began the foreclosures and the
involvement of the Colorado Attorney General's office. At their
request, I visited Denver to explain my predicament. And under some
'make nice' program, an assistant AG called the loan servicing
company to encourage them to seek solutions. While I was fighting
the third foreclosure, I got a call from an AG attorney who told me
that they were glad I was working things out with the servicing
agent. “Whoa! Stop.” There's nothing being worked out except
the loss of my home. But that's what the servicing agent told them.
It was then that I received a cc of a
letter that was address to the Assistant Attorney General. It read
as though the servicing company was addressing my attorney, and it gave me
instructions to follow. Now, whenever I had spoke to the servicing
agent they would ask if they could record the conversation. This I
discovered rarely actually happened. But I decided this is what I
should have been doing since the beginning of this fiasco. I called
the servicing agent specialist that had sent the letter and had a
most remarkable conversation that he even agreed to allow to be
recorded. In it he said that the assistant AG had told him that he
had been authorized to negotiate loan terms on my behalf. He threw a
few “agreed to” figures around, and then took them away again in
the next breath.
Needless to say, the assistant AG was
unhappy. The AG's website states “The Attorney General does NOT
have the authority to represent individual residents or consumers.”
And it turns out that it is a crime to use the AG's name to
influence a consumer. It's also a crime to possess and attempt to
enforce documents that you may have reason to believe are forged.
They also violated several laws with regard to credit reporting.
I discovered a law that says that
forged documents can be removed from the public record if it can't be
shown that they are not spurious. I filed this on my own and had the
foreclosure put on hold. But it turns out that the forgery artist is
also an escape artist. The subpoena she was served was hand
delivered by a stranger to the court saying they didn't know what it
was.
The court day finally came, and based
on the guilty plea the judge declared the note a forgery. But since
the refinance paid off my previous mortgage, he couldn't declare the
deed of trust a forgery, and the foreclosure was ordered. The
lawyer they got was a word-smithing jackass of course, but he wasn't
able to get away with all of his assertions.
And with this, the mortgage company put
the finishing touches on my financial destruction. They wanted me to
just keep paying the forged mortgage terms, and so they ignored and
attempted to manipulate me so that it forced me to lose my
employment. They ruined my credit, left me with a second mortgage
and no house to live in.
There's a reason we have so many
consumer protection laws. To address the problems that the
socialists complain about. But I'm not ready to become a card
carrying Progressive Socialist because I would just be a one-issue
voter. I hate evil corporations, but I'm not yet willing to give
control of my money, property, children, and my life to people who
want to outlaw wealth and have their fingers deep into everything else in
the universe.
Therefore I'm taking a cue from the
socialists and writing my own manifesto:
Corporations have policies. So should
consumers. Corporations require consumers to follow their rules and
there is no reason an individual consumer's policies shouldn't be
codified, and respected in the market place and in the courts.
A Consumer's Manifesto
Policy 1 – a consumer should never
respond to a corporation's attempt to engage them in commerce.
Consumer's are smart enough to research products and seek them out
themselves.
Policy 2 – out of common sense, a
consumer should never buy something they haven't sought out
themselves. Most adult consumers have been called by a corporation
to offer a service that begins without the consumer even
understanding the policies, immediately charging the consumer's
credit cards, and having the handy feature of being able to be
rescinded in the future. Of course these are no more than milking
programs that play the odds, knowing that people will cancel, but
probably not right away, and probably without even receiving any
services. If a product exists, it can be found by the consumer.
Policy 3 – a consumer should engage
in commerce on their own terms. Dealing fairly, a consumer can
determine what is fair and what they are willing to do and pay.
Policy 4 – corporate invoices are not
any more authoritative than a consumer's notes. Many corporations
illegally practice confusing policies and invoicing, inflating fees
and hiding extra costs among the valid. Cell companies are famous
for this because they have so many customers with constantly changing
figures to regular billings. When the consumers are better
empowered, simplified billing and charges will follow.
Policy 5 – a consumer should not do
business with a corporation that has ambiguous terms and policies.
Policy 6 – corporations cannot be
trusted. And therefore all contracts with them should be written in
terms the common man understands.
Policy 7 – corporations often present
themselves as caring institutions, and some may be. But they do this
largely because corporations do not love consumers, and consumers
know this.
Policy 8 – consumers should deal
honestly with corporations.
Policy 9 – consumers should deal with
corporations in a trustworthy manner.
Policy 10 – consumers should display
loyalty to corporations only as long as corporations deal honestly
and fairly with them.
Policy 11 – boycotting is not drastic
or extreme. It is a natural part of commerce that evokes the desired
changes in markets. Many lists exist on the internet. And the
Better Business Bureau is a prime example of this. We use it to discover who is bad and who is good. It is just not intensively used.
Policy 12 – corporations do not have
a problem wasting consumer's time on telephone hold, in lines, and
waiting rooms. This wasted time calculated with the rates of pay
must be stratospheric. We will never have that time back again. But
our time is valuable, and before being made to wait for a
corporation, it's not inappropriate to inform a corporation of your
rate of pay for waiting.
Policy 13 – it is not illegal to
record conversations as long as one party is aware of it. recording
conversations protects the interests of consumers.
Policy 14 – a consumer's information
is private, and when disclosed, it empowers corporations. Most
transactions and lines of credit do not warrant full access to credit
information.
Policy 15 – consumers should require
corporations to destroy personal and private information of consumers
immediately after it is used for it's authorized purpose. And a
personal information policy should include severe fines for using
such information for other purposes.
Policy 16 - Many industries are, by
default, regulated by those who practice in them. Consumers should
think of this whenever they look at a contract or purchase a product.
Suggestions
The standards for credit that
corporations impose on consumers should be imposed in kind.
Consumers should standardize ratings for the corporations that
consumer laws are supposed to protect us from, but don't.
Consumers should consider saving and
investing money, and not seeking to be in debt. Although various
arguments abound in this, it is still true that a borrower is a slave
to whomever he owes. Our nation's debt is going to drown our
children.
Consumers should codify their practices
into normalized commercial policies to be referred to when dealing
with corporations. Colorado Consumer Policy 4, etc. Therefore it
should be normal practice for a consumer to record a conversation
with a corporation's representative where they are informed of the
consumer policy that the corporation must must oppose if it does not
intend to agree to it.
thanks for letting me rant.>