In September of 2007, the
city of Windsor, which borders the United States, officially asked for
financial assistance from Ottawa to deal with
American refugees flooding into Canada.
This is proving to be the tip of the iceberg, and only the first wave
of economic refugees that have been created in the United States.
There are now tent cities
being built outside most large metropolitan areas, one of the
largest of which is in Los Angeles.
The
following report from the BBC
highlights the consequence of the US subprime meltdown and the fears that
the crisis is growing.
The homelessness situation
has grown so rapidly in the United States that
certain cities are issuing color-coded wristbands
– blue for those who can stay, “orange for
people who need to provide more documentation, and white for those who
must leave.”
Refugees will no longer be able to stay in one
area, meaning that many towns and cities will now have to be prepared to
receive migrant refugees displaced by local governments from other
districts and States.
Canadians will also need to be prepared for this
influx, especially considering that
the average processing time for a refugee claim in Canada is
currently 14.2 months, “a period during which the
applicant is eligible for financial and other support. A failed claimant
then also has the right to seek leave to appeal his or her rejection to
federal court.” If the American refugee crisis
continues to grow as analysts predict, then the cost to Canadians will be
astronomical.
Aside from tens of thousands of Americans becoming
refugees in their own country, there is another problem. As
The
Atlantic is reporting, “the
subprime crisis is just the tip of the iceberg. Fundamental
changes in American life may turn today’s McMansions into tomorrow’s
tenements.” Over 60% of the homes in certain
communities “were in foreclosure as of late last year. Vandals have kicked
in doors and stripped the copper wire from vacant houses; drug users and
homeless people have furtively moved in.”
“The experience of cities during the 1950s through
the ’80s suggests that the fate of many single-family homes on the
metropolitan fringes will resale, at rock-bottom prices,
to lower-income families—and in all
likelihood, eventual conversion to apartments… much of the future decline
is likely to occur on the fringes, in towns far away from the central
city, not served by rail transit, and lacking any real core.
In other words, some of the worst problems are
likely to be seen in some of the country’s more recently developed
areas—and not only those inhabited by subprime-mortgage borrowers.
Many of these areas will become magnets for poverty,
crime, and social dysfunction.”
All of this is occurring while: the
US government bails out Wall Street;
credit
card companies raise record amounts of money by issuing shares;
the
economic crisis draws comparison to the 1929 stock market crash;
investigation of predatory banks gets killed;
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. prepares for bank failures;
and the Federal
Reserve Bank of Atlanta releases a crisis peparedness video.
And some thought that
Stocking the Root Cellar was only for
conspiracy theorists.
NOTE:
Some Americans are discovering that they are able to keep their homes and
save themselves from becoming refugees by challenging the banks.
All they are doing is asking the courts for proof
that the banks own the mortgage notes that they claim to own. “Judges
in at least five states have stopped foreclosure proceedings because the
banks that pool mortgages into securities and the companies that collect
monthly payments haven't been able to prove they own the mortgages.”
More on this at “Banks
Lose to Deadbeat Homeowners as Loans Sold in Bonds Vanish.”
I personally know what I would be doing if I owned a mortgage in the
United States. Good luck, and remember, according to
the ex-Comptroller
General of the United States, the top accountant for
the United States of America, “deficit spending and
promised benefits for federal entitlement programs have put every man,
woman, and child in the United States on the hook for $175,000”. In
essence,
the United States is bankrupt.