How is it not true? Like you said they wanted to get 'on the property ladder' not buy a home for life. They openly admitted they planned to stay two years then get a house.
How do you think they thought they'd do that?
And whats wrong with being smug? Were the speculators/buyers not smug at the time - telling us over dinner how their house has gone up €10k since last Friday. Shoe and other foot spring to mind.
Why should resposible individuals who didnt hop on the so called ladder during the boom because they didnt think they could afford it using proper economic fundamentals such as times salary pay even higher taxes (again) to help out these people.
Whats worse is there is many who bought in 2005,2006 and 2007 who were warned on here and the Pin and Boards about not doing so yet wouldnt listen/didnt care.
I'd argue that the people most upset are those who have been stung but are coping.
It would be bad enough to have stayed out of the property frenzy and end up paying for it, but you don't want to end up paying for both your own mistake and the mistakes of others in the same position as you who won't make an honest effort.
A person could be in a situation where their savings are gone and half their earnings are gone in mortgage repayments. It's a tough situation but you can plough through, not beat yourself up about it and try get on with living life. It's tougher to see others in the same situation moaning about it and looking for a free handout because (a) despite coping it still prevents you from moving on your own mistake and (b) you know the handout they are looking for can only come from your pocket in the form of higher taxes.
We're all hard pressed. Bailing out 10,000 people with no hope of paying their debts is manageable. Attempting to bailout 200,000 people whose high expectations of life have been hit by falling property prices would destroy us all.
Some were lucky, some were wise. Not everyone who is against debt forgiveness is sitting pretty. Some people see it as an ethical issue.
Frankly, I don't believe that such people exist. The country is fool of spoofers right now pontificating about how they didn't get involved in the property frenzy during the early to mid 2000s. In my view, they are complete spoofers. They probably already had a suitable home.
No offence to anyone here but the only people talking an universal debt forgiveness are people here ranting against debt forgiveness and some lunatic organisations that have been set up around the place
Maybe you should look at other sites, there are many who openly admitted they were selling a family homes because they thought prices had got crazy and were going to rent for a while. I'm not saying the country was full of them but there were plenty.
As was mentioned earlier on this thread another site spawned up as negative comments on the property market werent welcom here. This was being discussed by some in 2004 and 2005 long before phrases like negative equity were even coined. So you can believe what you want.
We've no problem with society helping the less well off even though many of them "messed around" while the rest of us studied hard. Why is it so different with helping distressed property owners? We're primarily a society and if our fellow citizens need our help then we should give it to them without the pious and smug attitude.
Take that couple from Clonee. Their apartment is not fit for purpose and they need to move to a house. There's no point in them approaching their bank with a common sense proposal to square the above circle. An objective agency needs to examine the proposition and have the power to compel the bank to act.
A few anonymous posters claiming to be short selling hardly constitutes "plenty".
We've no problem with society helping the less well off even though many of them "messed around" while the rest of us studied hard. Why is it so different with helping distressed property owners? We're primarily a society and if our fellow citizens need our help then we should give it to them without the pious and smug attitude.
Good point. Giving child benefit, medical card, pension to someone that doesn't need it is more ridiculous to me than helping someone who is honestly struggling to pay their mortgage and yet no one is ranting against that.
This is prob the most incredible post i ve ever read - do you not see the difference between helping the most vulnerable - children and OAP's,feeding them and putting clothes on their back as against helping someone who took a calculated risk and got it wrong?
Do be honest i ll bow out now with how rapidly downhill this is going. we?
Why don't you read my post again before vanishing into a pit of despair? My argument is against universal benefits. Do you know how much we spend giving child benefit, state pensions and medical cards to people who do not need it?
I have no problem giving money to people who need help but I dont see the difference between someone honestly struggling to pay their mortgage and someone who keeps getting pregnant and expects the state to support them. (and sorry for using that as an example but you get my point).
I hadnt finished my post as you ll see, i hit submit by accident, then edited it immediately. Well then campaign against benefits and fraud then. The reason i think this is going downhill is because its a) going off topic and b) more importantly descending into a 'they get it why don't i type thread'
I saw the programme.
She wasn't happy at having a bank employee give her grief over spending €50 per week on work related grooming. The question is not whether €50 a week is excessive. I think when you analyse it, it's not excessive but it's certainly inflammatory in a discussion such as this.
I do not think it's appropriate for the bank employee to give the woman grief over that level of spending.
The point is that she looks like she cannot pay her mortgage after 2012.
I'm not smug about it but it puts her current concerns into perspective.
I am not in anyway in favour of debt forgiveness by the way but we have a problem and we have to deal with it. Allow people to go bankrupt, pay what they can but allow them to start again is the cleanest, simplest and most effective way of dealing with this. That does not mean you should be allowed to rack up debt, declare yourself bankrupt and forget about it.
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