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The Senate Opens Fire on U.S. Consumers 3-9-05


From: "Dave Farber" <dave () farber net>
Date: Wed, 9 Mar 2005 17:14:56 -0800



_______________ Original message _______________
Subject:        Re: [IP] The Senate Opens Fire on U.S. Consumers 3-9-05
Author: hal () halstucker com
Date:           09th March 2005 8:6:8  PM

Dear Prof. Farber:

Interestingly enough, herewith a quote from today's New York
Times reporting on the bill's passage in the Senate. 
Regarding those who might be hardest hit by this legislation:

"In a letter to Congress two weeks ago, 104 bankruptcy law
professors predicted that "the deepest hardship" would "be
felt in the heartland," where the filing rates are highest -
Utah, Tennessee, Georgia, Nevada, Indiana, Alabama, Arkansas,
Ohio, Mississippi and Idaho."

Those are, um, red states, aren't they?  As the old saying
goes, never give a sucker an even break.

Best,
HS



---- Original message ----
Date: Wed,  9 Mar 2005 15:21:41 -0800
From: "Dave Farber" <dave () farber net>  
Subject: [IP] The Senate Opens Fire on U.S. Consumers 3-9-05  
To: "ip" <ip () v2 listbox com>

   
   
  _______________ Original message _______________
  Subject: The Senate Opens Fire on U.S. Consumers
  3-9-05
  Author: Arianna Huffington
  <arianna () ariannaonline com>
  Date: 09th March 2005 3:9:15 PM
   
  THE SENATE OPENS FIRE ON U.S. CONSUMERS

  By Arianna Huffington

  U.S. consumers and freed Italian hostage Giuliana
  Sgrena found themselves in the same position this
  week: under fire from those put in place to protect
  them.

  For Sgrena, the bloody barrage came from jittery
  U.S. soldiers. For consumers, it was jaded U.S.
  senators who pulled the trigger, about to pass a
  bankruptcy bill so hostile to ordinary American
  families that it could only have come about in a
  place as corrupt, cynical and unmoored from reality
  as Washington, D.C.

  In a normal world, those elected to represent the
  interests of the people would have fought for
  bankruptcy legislation that would, well, represent
  the interests of the people. But not in Beltway
  Bizarroland. Instead of cracking down on predatory
  lending practices, closing loopholes that favor the
  wealthy, and strengthening the safety net for
  working people, single mothers and elderly Americans
  struggling to recover from a financial setback, the
  Senate put together a nasty little bill that reads
  like a credit industry wish list. Rubbing salt in
  the wound, Sen. Charles Grassley, the bill's chief
  sponsor, labeled it the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention
  and Consumer Protection Act of 2005--even though it
  does nothing to prevent bankruptcy abuse or protect
  consumers.
  So what does the bill do? It makes it harder for
  average people to file for bankruptcy protection; it
  makes it easier for landlords to evict a bankrupt
  tenant; it endangers child support payments by
  giving a wider array of creditors a shot at
  post-bankruptcy income; it allows millionaires to
  shield an unlimited amount of value in homes and
  asset protection trusts; it makes it more difficult
  for small businesses to reorganize, while opening
  new loopholes for the Enrons of the world; it allows
  creditors to provide misleading information; and it
  does nothing to reign in lending abuses that
  frequently turn manageable debt into unmanageable
  crises. Even in failure, ordinary Americans do not
  get a level playing field.

  Credit card companies have been feverishly lobbying
  for this legislation for nearly a decade--and it
  looks like the $34 million the finance and credit
  industries have contributed to political campaigns
  since 1996 is finally about to pay off. On Tuesday,
  the cloture vote on the bill was 69 to 31. The House
  passed similar legislation last year and GOP leaders
  are hoping to bypass the conference committee
  deadlocks that have derailed similar measures in the
  past and have the bill on President Bush's desk in
  short order. The president, well aware that credit
  card giant MBNA is one of the Republican Party's
  largest donors, has promised to sign the bill as
  soon as someone hands him a pen.

  Make no mistake, the inequitable nature of the
  bill--bending over backwards to help the credit card
  industry while sticking it to American working
  people who fall on hard times--is no accident. Time
  and again over the last week, the Senate shot down
  amendments that would have made the bill a bit less
  mean-spirited. They denied proposals that would have
  made it easier for military veterans, the sick and
  the elderly to qualify for bankruptcy protection.
  They even rejected an amendment that would have put
  a 30 percent ceiling on the interest rates credit
  card companies can charge. Thirty percent--that's
  more than Paulie Walnuts charges. But 74 U.S.
  senators--including John Kerry, Harry Reid, Barack
  Obama and Dick Durbin--clearly thought that wasn't
  high enough. Quick, somebody send those guys a Bible
  bookmarked to Deuteronomy 23:19: "Thou shalt not
  lend upon usury to thy brother."

  For years, credit-card companies have been claiming
  that tougher laws are needed to reign in high-flying
  customers using bankruptcy to game the system. But
  the truth is that the vast majority of people who
  file for bankruptcy are middle-class folks who can't
  pay their bills because they've lost their jobs or
  been hit with high medical bills or gone through a
  divorce.

  Indeed, a recent study by Harvard University found
  that half of last year's 1.6 million bankruptcies
  were the result of crushing medical bills. Put
  another way: Every 30 seconds, someone in this
  country files for bankruptcy in the wake of a
  serious illness. How's that for a shocking stat?
  Here's another: Three-quarters of the so-called
  medically bankrupt had health insurance. It just
  wasn't enough to cover the dramatic rise in
  health-care costs.
  But instead of adapting to this harsh new reality,
  where hardworking, college-educated, middle-class
  folks can be financially destroyed by a sudden
  illness, the Senate is about to approve a
  one-size-fits-all law that treats a family man who
  has sunk into debt because of a heart attack the
  same as a con artist who maxes out his MasterCard,
  then refuses to pay up.

  Worst of all, the bill does absolutely nothing to
  protect consumers from the aggressive tactics
  credit-card companies have devised in recent
  years--tactics that have proven hugely profitable.
  Along with sending out over 5 billion solicitations
  a year, they are constantly developing new ways to
  stick it to the people they've already lured into
  the tent. For instance, companies now routinely jack
  up a cardholder's interest rate when their payment
  is late--and, presto, a "fixed" 7 percent APR is
  suddenly transformed into a cash-gobbling 30 percent
  loan.

  There has also been an explosion in the fees that
  credit card companies charge: late fees, balance
  transfer fees, cash-advance fees, over-the-limit
  fees. Such fees bring in billions and are partly
  responsible for the fact that, even as personal
  bankruptcies in America have steadily increased, so
  have the profits of credit card companies--which
  reached a whopping $30 billion last year.

  So tell me again: Just who is gaming the system?

  It's one thing for credit card companies to exact
  their pound of flesh even as their profits soar. But
  shouldn't we hold our elected officials to a higher
  standard? The bankruptcy bill is morally bankrupt.
  And so is any senator who votes for it.
  © 2005 ARIANNA HUFFINGTON.
  DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

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