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Topic: Can a bank you have no business with at all raid your home? No criminal Charges? (Read 2043 times)

sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
The cows however might consider you an abomination.

Cows ≠ people.
legendary
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!
Is what you're saying that it's okay to kill a living baby and take it's heart, kidney, liver or any other part because some rich family has a sick kid they want to heal by any means possible ?


The bank did not do this on purpose.

The guy who killed my grandparents while drunk driving said exactly the same thing; "I didn't wreck into them on purpose".


I'm not saying they are not responsible, just that this is a mistake.
IMO, There is nothing evil about harvesting and selling baby organs for a profit. The motive is profit, not producing suffering. It is awful, but I think of evil as trying to produce suffering even at your expense. The afore mentioned baby organ seller would just as gladly make funny faces for babies to enjoy if there were any money in it.
The balance to banks taking everything from us used to be government. Now they are just a wholly owned division of Wall St. It's up to us now. If you have a bank account close it and move to a credit union; if you have a credit card cancel it and stop using credit. (credit is a sin and considered evil by Christianity and Islam). Next get your credit score to "unscoreable". Unless you do these things, you are the reason that evil exists in banking.
I am playing devils advocate. But consider that you might have a baby animal killed for a pair of shoes. I don't think you hate cows or want them to suffer, and I would not call you evil for wearing leather shoes. The cows however might consider you an abomination.
hero member
Activity: 868
Merit: 1000

Why is the amounts involved so small ?

Quote
An hour later, the bank had written a check for $5,772.88.

Quote
That started 18 months of frustrating phone calls, paperwork and court hearings.

Seems like a lot of trouble for little money ? I liked the attitude of the attorney though. Must have been awesome to get there with the moving truck and a
moving truck and sheriff's deputies who had a judge's permission to seize the furniture if necessary.

I would've loved to see that from a first hand perspective. Smiley
hero member
Activity: 868
Merit: 1000
Is what you're saying that it's okay to kill a living baby and take it's heart, kidney, liver or any other part because some rich family has a sick kid they want to heal by any means possible ?


The bank did not do this on purpose.

The guy who killed my grandparents while drunk driving said exactly the same thing; "I didn't wreck into them on purpose".


I'm not saying they are not responsible, just that this is a mistake.
IMO, There is nothing evil about harvesting and selling baby organs for a profit. The motive is profit, not producing suffering. It is awful, but I think of evil as trying to produce suffering even at your expense. The afore mentioned baby organ seller would just as gladly make funny faces for babies to enjoy if there were any money in it.
The balance to banks taking everything from us used to be government. Now they are just a wholly owned division of Wall St. It's up to us now. If you have a bank account close it and move to a credit union; if you have a credit card cancel it and stop using credit. (credit is a sin and considered evil by Christianity and Islam). Next get your credit score to "unscoreable". Unless you do these things, you are the reason that evil exists in banking.
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
There's some other kind of bank?

I was speaking hypothetically. Smiley
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
"Mistake" implies innocence.

A bank that keeps making the same mistake more than once is either criminal or completely incompetent. There are no other options.
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
I'm not saying they are not responsible, just that this is a mistake.

"Mistake" implies innocence.

The bank created the condition.  The bank caused the loss.  The bank is responsible just like the drunk driver regardless of mal intent.




legendary
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!
The bank did not do this on purpose.

The guy who killed my grandparents while drunk driving said exactly the same thing; "I didn't wreck into them on purpose".


I'm not saying they are not responsible, just that this is a mistake.
IMO, There is nothing evil about harvesting and selling baby organs for a profit. The motive is profit, not producing suffering. It is awful, but I think of evil as trying to produce suffering even at your expense. The afore mentioned baby organ seller would just as gladly make funny faces for babies to enjoy if there were any money in it.
The balance to banks taking everything from us used to be government. Now they are just a wholly owned division of Wall St. It's up to us now. If you have a bank account close it and move to a credit union; if you have a credit card cancel it and stop using credit. (credit is a sin and considered evil by Christianity and Islam). Next get your credit score to "unscoreable". Unless you do these things, you are the reason that evil exists in banking.
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250

The guy who killed my grandparents while drunk driving said exactly the same thing; "I didn't wreck into them on purpose".

Every criminal tries to blame something or someone else for their actions.
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
Banks are not evil

At this point, they are. Forged documents, fraudulent methods and criminal tactics used to claim ownership of large numbers of houses while dispossessing millions of people of their homes and their livelihoods is just plain ol' evil.
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
The bank did not do this on purpose.

The guy who killed my grandparents while drunk driving said exactly the same thing; "I didn't wreck into them on purpose".

legendary
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!
This was not the evil banks being evil

It's a prime example. What are you smoking?
The bank did not do this on purpose. Banks are not evil, they are heartless and act in the interest of profitability. This will cost money and the mistake was not even made by the bank. Or are you guys arguing that despite the waste of time and money the bank did this just to be mean?
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
This was not the evil banks being evil

It's a prime example. What are you smoking?
sr. member
Activity: 288
Merit: 251
The answer is, of course, no. This was a mistake and the bank's representatives were acting illegally. Had the owner been home he/she could have denied entry until the sheriff came. At that time they would have figured it out. This was not the evil banks being evil, a simple mistake which the bank is responsible for fixing.

A simple mistake of breaking into someone's home and clearing out someone's private possessions twice? Really?  Roll Eyes
legendary
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!
The answer is, of course, no. This was a mistake and the bank's representatives were acting illegally. Had the owner been home he/she could have denied entry until the sheriff came. At that time they would have figured it out. This was not the evil banks being evil, a simple mistake which the bank is responsible for fixing.
legendary
Activity: 1386
Merit: 1004
Did anybody hear that story a little while ago about a bank that mistakingly foreclosed on the wrong house?

If I remember correctly, the couple then successfully sued the bank and the bank refused to pay up, so
they hired a company to foreclose on the bank. It was quite funny actually.

Let me see if I can dig up the article for more accurate details

I remember that as well but no link.  They actually got to the point of a sheriffs order to take goods from the bank for auction but the bank paid then on the spot. 
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
Hopefully this couple will receive a multi-million dollar payout from Wells Fargo.  Perhaps the company might feel less confident raiding homes after that.

Quote
A crew broke into Alvin and Pat Tjosaas’ desert home and took everything after being directed by Wells Fargo to secure the structure.

Why was this "crew" not shot in the act of trespassing and theft?
sr. member
Activity: 354
Merit: 250
Did anybody hear that story a little while ago about a bank that mistakingly foreclosed on the wrong house?

If I remember correctly, the couple then successfully sued the bank and the bank refused to pay up, so
they hired a company to foreclose on the bank. It was quite funny actually.

Let me see if I can dig up the article for more accurate details
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
If American media lived in reality, Wells Fargo would be denounced as the the brains behind a burglary ring manned with "contractors" rather than soft-pedaling the crimes as mistakes.
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