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- Report: "Pulling Back the Curtain: The 1% Behind the 2011 Bonuses (1/12)
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- Report: Wall Street Banks and the Growing Housing Crisis (Dec 2011)
- The Wall Street Wrecking Ball: What Foreclosures are Costing our Neighborhoods (Sept 2011)
- Foreclosure: The Cost Communities Pay in SD (July 2011)
- All the Foreclosures Money Can Buy (April 2011)
- Wall Street Homewreckers (March 2011)
- The Win-Win Solution: How Fixing The Housing Crisis Will Create One Million Jobs (8/2011)
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Blog
26 Jan 2012 - 5:28pm
Many of you have heard about or supported Art his campaign to save his home from unfair foreclosure by JP Morgan Chase and Freddie Mac. An ex-Marine, Arturo has lived in the home for about ten years with his wife and four kids. Last month, Art and his family took the courageous step of re-occupying their home after being foreclosed on. Art has always had the income to afford the property, and since moving back in he has publicly asked JP Morgan Chase and Freddie Mac why they won’t accept his money. Read More »
23 Jan 2012 - 6:35pm
Wall Street bankers and the one percent have subverted our democracy to fatten their own paychecks, and the result is jarring. While the rest of us continue to struggle to put food on the table and keep a roof over our head, Wall Street has once again handed out mammoth bonuses in 2011. The nation’s top six banks—Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs—paid out $144 billion in bonuses and compensation this year, making 2011’s payday the second highest on record for these six firms. Read More »
7 Dec 2011 - 4:02pm
Hundreds of Californians were at the forefront of a national campaign launched yesterday to challenge the Wall Street profiteering that created the housing and economic crisis. Kicked-off with actions nationwide on December 6, “Occupy Our Homes,” is building momentum in the fight against foreclosures and evictions and fueling a growing consensus that banks should write down the mortgage principal for underwater homes as an essential step to fix the economy. California has the second-highest foreclosure rate in the country, and widespread mortgage principal reduction would save tens of thousands of California homes, pump $20 billion per year into California’s economy and create 300,000 jobs. Read More »
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