{snips}
> Still no employment. Gonna loose the house soon if something doesn't
turn up.
> --KT
First, thanks so much for your posts; you must be helping sales of 2 TB
HDs for the USENET news sites!
OT, re the house:
Good grief; best of luck! What a horrid situation. There was a recent
news story (iirc in the Huffington Post) about a judge who canceled a
mortgage for something like $450K or so; turns out that the documentation
for selling that mortgage to another financial institution was so poorly
done that the judge ruled in favor of the house owner. It's quite a long
shot, but just conceivably, if your mortgage was sold, it would be worth
finding out whether the documents are shipshape; if not, you might have a
case. (You might even have trouble finding out who owns the mortgage!)
For people who could afford their mortgages and have paid properly, these
foreclosures amount to cruelty -- mass social vandalism, to be polite.
Not that many years ago, when the Brit. economy tanked, mortgage holders
arranged for residents to rent in lieu (?) of making payments; you don't
hear much about that.
Risking being a PITA, but hoping to help:
Just in case it might make a diff. someday, check into "lose" vs.
"loose". The verb "loose" means "release", and rhymes with "deuce". I
think of the expressions "loose the dogs of war", or "loose the mooring
lines". Fwiw, "choose" rhymes with "lose"; one more instance of
inconsistent English. Spelling "(phonetic) luze" with two "o's" is so
commonplace, however, that the less-common verb "loose" will be in
trouble in a few decades. I won't be around, then, though; I'm retired.
Again, best of luck to you!
--
[e]
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