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Obama wanted more children for the American taxpayer to support but the court stopped him. Good, I'm already tapped out supporting the children of all ages that we already have to support.
Hopefully you support sex education and birth control.
And WHO does the GOP want to appoint to SCOTUS? Justices who won't let Obama's EOs favoring illegal immigration stand.
If you want to provide anything that counters the fact that they funded the program, feel free to. As you can't, as that is what they did, keep on posting what you are.
This is why Trump is winning and Boehner was tossed and Ryan no longer has a future.
Those in your article aren't costing the taxpayers anything.
What makes you think $2 Trillion in "created" money doesn't carry with it interest costs on that newly created money? The Federal Reserve had to PAY for that $2 Trillion worth of GSE-issued MBS somehow.
Also, what makes you think another $2 Trillion injected into the economy doesn't devalue the dollar?
What makes you think $2 Trillion in "created" money doesn't carry with it interest costs on that newly created money? The Federal Reserve had to PAY for that $2 Trillion worth of GSE-issued MBS somehow.
Also, what makes you think another $2 Trillion injected into the economy doesn't devalue the dollar?
"In September, Susan Rodolfi celebrated an unusual anniversary: five years of missed mortgage payments.
She is like a ghost of the housing market’s painful past, one of thousands of Americans who have skipped years of mortgage payments and are still living in their homes.
Now a legal quirk could bring a surreal ending to her foreclosure case and many others around the country: They may get to keep their homes without ever having to pay another dime.
The reason, lawyers for homeowners argue, is that the cases have dragged on too long.
There are tens of thousands of homeowners who have missed more than five years of mortgage payments, many of them clustered in states like Florida, New Jersey, and New York, where lenders must get judges to sign off on foreclosures.
However, in a growing number of foreclosure cases filed when home prices collapsed during the financial crisis, lenders may never be able to seize the homes because the state statutes of limitations have been exceeded"
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