[North-NV-Greens] Fwd: What the Bankruptcy Bill Could Do to You
Paul Etxeberri
eusko at greens.org
Sat Apr 2 00:26:03 PST 2005
>
>Debt Slavery: What the Bankruptcy Bill Could Do to You
>By David Swanson
>Guest Commentator - Black Commentator
>
>http://www.blackcommentator.com/132/132_guest_bankruptcy_bill.html
>
>The U.S. Senate has passed a dream bill for credit
>card and financial service companies that, if passed by
>the House, will land millions of American families in
>debt slavery. Rather than being able to file for
>Chapter 7 bankruptcy and make a difficult new start,
>families and individuals will be placed on long-term
>payment plans to credit card companies, companies that
>will take their houses, their cars, their
>child-support payments, and their paychecks.
>
>If you think you're unlikely to land yourself a
>share-cropping position in this new feudal system, ask
>yourself if you can be sure that no one in your family
>will get sick, be injured, die, lose a job, or get
>divorced. More than one in every 100 adults in
>America files for bankruptcy each year. If you're a
>child, the chances of your family filing for
>bankruptcy are about twice that. (Kids cost money.)
>These rates have doubled in the past decade. The basic
>reason that bankruptcies have increased is that
>personal debt has increased. In fact, in proportion
>to debt, bankruptcies are actually down.
>
>About 50 percent of all families who are forced to
>file for bankruptcy do so as the result of medical
>expenses. And three quarters of those have health
>insurance. Another 40 percent have suffered a death
>in the family, lost their job, or gotten divorced, or
>suffered some combination of these factors and medical
>costs. Almost everyone who files for bankruptcy does
>so as a last resort. Sixty-one percent of those who
>do so have gone without medical care that they needed
>but could not afford. Fifty percent have failed to get
>prescriptions filled. A third have had their
>utilities shut off. Twenty-one percent have gone
>without food. Seven percent have moved their elderly
>parents to cheaper care facilities.
>
>The satirical magazine, The Onion, posted fictional
>comments on the bankruptcy bill from people in the
>street, one of which said "Well, there goes my
>foolproof get-bankrupt-quick scheme!" Only in the mind
>of a comic or a Republican do people try to go
>bankrupt. But some Democrats (see below) seem not to
>be grasping this concept either.
>
>After filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you're required
>to liquidate some assets and pay off what you can. But
> you are then able to write off the rest of your debt
>and start over, albeit with a credit record that will
>make it harder to borrow and sometimes harder to find
>work. Under the current system, if a judge finds that
>you have significant assets or income, you can be
>denied Chapter 7 and be required to enter into Chapter
>13 bankruptcy, in which you pay off your debt over a
>number of years. This current "means test" is
>conducted by a judge who is able to look at actual
>income and expenses, as well as to distinguish between
>someone whose child has diabetes and someone who's
>been going on reckless shopping sprees.
>
>The bill that is coming up for a vote in the House
>would create a new means test that would forbid making
>any such distinctions. It would even forbid comparing
>what someone actually earns with what they actually
>have to pay for rent and basic expenses. A court would
>be forced to use standard government figures for
>expenses, regardless of what you're actually having to
>pay. It would base your income on your last six
>months of income, even if you just got laid off. If
>your income is below the median, it would spare you
>the means test but require that you purchase credit
>counseling, even if you have no money to pay for it
>and it isn't offered anywhere near your home. It
>would also require significant new legal expenses and
>paperwork.
>
>But wait, there's more
>
>The problems with this bill could fill an
>encyclopedia. In fact, the thing is 500 pages of
>convoluted changes to current law. But, before
>looking at a few of the details, let's stop and think
>about the basic idea.
>
>Credit card companies, like most lenders, charge
>interest rates based on the risk they see of each
>borrower failing to pay back the loan. Some people
>pay 9 percent on their credit card and others pay 29
>percent. The higher rate is supposed to cover the
>losses the lender will suffer when some of the riskier
>borrowers default. This system has been bringing in
>massive record profits for the credit card companies:
>$30 billion last year.
>
>"Here's what's so strange," writes Corinne Cooper, a
>retired law professor in Arizona, "The credit card
>companies collect this risk premium, year in and year
>out. But when the risk actually happens and the
>borrower cannot pay, the lenders want the Federal
>government to intervene to force the debtor to pay, by
>passing a law prohibiting them from filing bankruptcy
>and discharging the debts. It's as if a life insurance
>company took premium payments for years and then asked
>the government to pass a law prohibiting death!
>Bankruptcy is credit death, and if this bill passes,
>the courts will be clogged with credit 'zombies' -
>consumers who can never pay back their debt, and never
>get rid of it. Why, then, shouldn't the debtor be
>able to recover all that extra interest paid to cover
>risk?"
>
>So, here we have an extremely profitable industry and
>a legal system that's basically working. And yet, as
>with Social Security, a corporate lobby group and their
>servants in Congress have tried to manufacture a
>"crisis." In this case, the imaginary crisis is fraud
>in bankruptcies. As with Social Security, there's a
>grain of truth that can be found if you dig for it,
>but the largest problems are being entirely ignored, as
>are real unrelated crises (such as health care, war,
>trade, wages, pensions, voting rights, the deficit,
>etc.). Estimates of cases of abuse of bankruptcy law
>range from 3 to 10 percent. The non-partisan American
>Bankruptcy Institute estimates that at most 3 percent
>of filers - and almost certainly less - are able to
>discharge debts they could actually pay. But few
>analysts see this bill (HR 685) as a useful way to go
>after those abuses. Several have referred to it with
>such metaphors as "shooting a gnat with an elephant
>gun."
>
>In fact, an elephant gun would have been useful if
>someone had known which way to aim it. Corporations
>have a very easy time filing bankruptcy. CEOs are
>able to squirrel away fortunes while canceling
>employees' pensions. Millionaires can file for
>bankruptcy and keep unlimited amounts of money out of
>reach in "asset protection trusts" as well as in
>super-expensive houses. The press secretary for the
>bill's primary sponsor, Senator Charles Grassley, told
>the New York Times that "the senator's staff was
>unaware of the trusts and the loophole for the wealthy
>that they represented." Uh-huh.
>
>These loopholes need not be exploited offshore, as in
>the olden days. There are a number of states that
>allow them, regardless of whether the robber baron
>lives in the state. But the legal costs of setting up
>"asset protection trusts" place them beyond the reach
>of most people. Oh, and corporations are allowed to
>shop for friendly judges from state to state, a right
>that Congress recently took away from the victims of
>corporate practices who try to file class action
>suits. The current bankruptcy bill leaves these
>millionaires' loopholes in place, although it requires
>that pirates of industry have purchased their mansions
>three and a third years prior to bankruptcy if they
>intend to keep them through the homestead exemption.
>
>To watch a spokesperson for this abomination of a bill
>get taken down by a knowledgeable opponent on CNN,
>click here.
>
>In this interchange, George Mason University's Todd
>Zywicki is no match for Elizabeth Warren, Leo Gottlieb
>Professor of Law at Harvard University. These two
>also testified to the Senate Judiciary Committee,
>which found Zywicki more convincing. You'll notice,
>though, that he argues that there is massive fraud
>without providing any evidence, and at the end is
>reduced to claiming that it is 10 percent. He starts
>out trying to use as evidence of fraud simply the fact
>that bankruptcies are up, combined with a bizarre
>claim that we're living through an age of widespread
>prosperity. Excuse me? He points to the stock market
>as a sign of prosperity, apparently unaware of how many
>people own little or no stock. Then he points to
>housing prices having shot through the roof. Zywicki
>also cites low interest rates. I don't know about
>you, but my paycheck stretches farther with low
>interest rates. Sometimes I just pay half the tab at
>the grocery store. "It's OK," I tell them, "interest
>rates are low!" Zywicki also mentions low
>unemployment, which would be relevant if it were true.
>
>The hypocrisy
>
>The Republicans (and the corporate Democrats) have
>outdone their usual level of hypocrisy this time. This
>bankruptcy bill would make it very difficult for a
>family like Terri Schiavo's to ever get out of debt.
>It would deny bankruptcy protection to the families of
>soldiers killed in Iraq or sent to Iraq and away from
>their jobs and incomes. It would make it very
>difficult for small business owners who take risks and
>fail to start over. And it would impose on
>individuals a standard of fiscal responsibility to
>which the White House and Congress, not to mention the
>credit card companies, do not even pretend.
>
>Columnist Robert Scheer notes that Grassley, the
>bill's sponsor in the Senate, in another bit of
>hypocrisy "actively opposes abortion and same-sex
>marriage on biblical grounds yet believes the Good
>Book's clear definition and condemnation of usury is
>irrelevant. The Old Testament, revered by Jews,
>Muslims and Christians alike, mandates debt forgiveness
>after seven years, as was pointed out earlier this
>month by an organization of Christian lawyers in a
>letter to Grassley. 'I can't listen to Christian
>lawyers,' said the senator, 'because I would be
>imposing the Bible on a diverse population.'"
>
>This would be funny if this bill were going to be
>easily defeated. It can be defeated in the House if we
>put our minds to it, and - if need be - put our bodies
>on the line for it in nonviolent civil disobedience.
>But this fight won't be easy. Corporate America has
>been pushing this bill for eight years. It passed
>both houses of Congress once before and then was vetoed
>by President Clinton. Two years ago, it passed the
>Senate, but the House voted it down because the Senate
>had attached an amendment that would have prevented
>violent anti-abortion demonstrators from avoiding
>paying damages to clinics. This time around, the
>Senate and the Senate Judiciary Committee voted down
>that amendment and numerous other amendments aimed at
>making this bill less than utterly disgusting.
>
>David Swanson is a board member of Progressive
>Democrats of America.
>See http://www.debtslavery.org
><http://www.debtslavery.org/> .
>
>_______________________________________________________
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--
Paul Etxeberri
"Forests precede civilizations and deserts follow" ---Chateaubriand
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