Friday, September 26, 2008

Wamu - gone . . . Senator Martinez (FL)

Today you will learn that Wamu has now joined the list of financial institutions to disappear. Did that happen last night because yesterday afternoon Paulson, and co didn't get their way so by making things appear more urgent today they are hoping to be given unprecedented and unnecessary funding and authority with no recourse? hmmm

Below is a response I received yesterday from Senator Mel Martinez notice the phrase "a financial crisis perhaps bigger than the Great Depression." Perhaps? no perhaps, reality is this is far bigger than the great depression, making it the Greater Depression! We are not alone in this, Canada and Europe will soon follow, Asia will only be a few years behind them.

In times of rapid and significant changes we find monumental opportunities. do you know what they are or where to find them? if not email "help" to info@trgcoaching.com




Financial Rescue Plan
Speech to the U.S. Senate
U.S. Senator Mel Martinez
Wednesday, September 24, 2008

This Congress is about to consider the most important legislation affecting our financial markets – certainly for a generation – possibly in our country’s history.

The American people must understand exactly what is at stake as we begin consideration.

What has happened is that the credit markets have quit functioning. Credit cards, car loans, home equity loans, home mortgages, business loans.

Business loans to keep large and small businesses operating have ceased to exist. The financial markets are not functioning putting in jeopardy our entire economy.

Without timely government intervention, the financial system as we know it will no longer exist.

This isn’t a Wall Street versus Main Street argument. This is about every American’s ability to pursue his or her American Dream. Without liquidity in the marketplace, financial transactions come to a halt – and that will create a complete collapse of the financial system.
So the need to act has become clear. Treasury Secretary Paulson has asked for the authority to purchase illiquid assets from financial institutions in an attempt to get the markets functioning again.

But with that authority, comes great responsibility and Congress has an obligation to the US taxpayer to ensure that any program is crafted and carried out with appropriate oversight.

Congress should consider limiting executive compensation in any package we discuss.

Congress will have to engage in active oversight of Treasury as they implement whatever plan we approve. So there should be no blank check. There will be no blank check.

Let me also mention I am pleased to learn of ongoing investigations into the activities of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, AIG, and Lehman Brothers. This is the worst financial crisis that our country has encountered in recent history and we owe it to taxpayers to get to the bottom of any wrong doing that occurred.

We need to prosecute any inappropriate behavior on the part of these companies to the fullest extent of the law. If we are going to have to fix this problem, those that created need to be held accountable.

After the dust clears, Congress cannot lose sight of one of the main reasons why we are so heavily encumbered by this crisis – why our financial system is so deeply troubled at this moment in time.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were huge contributors to the problem because of their thin capitalization, ever-expanding portfolios and risky practices.

They fueled and funneled the risky securities that Wall Street bought and sold and made lots of money while ignoring the systemic risk their moves posed to the financial system.

In 2003, when I was HUD secretary, I came before this Congress with Treasury Secretary Snow and warned of the loose regulation of the GSEs and the risk posed by their undercapitalization.

We asked Congress to create a world class regulator to properly provide oversight to these financial entities that had become so large that they had an implied government guarantee and they were deemed too big to fail.

In 2005, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told Congress how urgent it was for it to act in the clearest possible terms: If Fannie and Freddie, “…continue to grow, continue to have the low capital that they have, continue to engage in the dynamic hedging of their portfolios, which they need to do for interest rate risk aversion, they potentially create ever-growing potential systemic risk down the road.”

We are now at the end of that road.

As we go forward, not only will Congress have to determine the future role of these entities, we need to take a very close look at the practices that brought us to this place.

Throughout all of this work, we cannot lose sight of the root cause of this financial debacle – the housing crisis.

Floridians are among the hardest hit in the nation.

Housing prices continue to fall; inventories continue to rise; and a growing number of homeowners are facing their own personal foreclosure crisis.
To find the bottom of the housing crisis, to stabilize prices, we need to act. Congress can approve home buying incentives. Congress can approve a tax credit for down payments. That would at least encourage people to enter the marketplace, would reduce housing inventories, and get the money flowing back into the market.

As Congress debates this package, let’s remember who we work for – the American taxpayer. Our priority should be making decisions that serve their best interest. No blank check. Strict oversight. Accountability. Taxpayer recourse.

It is in every American’s best interest that we act. I look forward to creating the right legislation that averts a financial crisis that will affect every American – a financial crisis perhaps bigger than the Great Depression.

It is a time for responsible leadership. It is not a time for an easy out or a pulpit for populist rhetoric. We need to rise to this moment – for the good of our country.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Rich Dad speaks . . .

for those of you who are familiar with the "Rich Dad" series, Robert Kiyosaki recently penned this for yahoo.com so simple, so sad, yet so true!

As we all know, the world changed drastically on Sept. 11, 2001, when the twin towers of the World Trade Center fell.
This year, on the eve of Sept. 11, the twin towers of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac crumbled. Then, on Sept. 15, Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch disappeared. Actually, that was a triple-tower collapse if you count AIG.
In a few years, the biggest pair of towers will collapse: Social Security and Medicare. Even today, they're looking shaky. How many ground zeros can we as people, a nation, and a world withstand before we admit something is very wrong with our global financial systems? What will it take to wake us up?
Government Can't Fix It
Personally, I believe the biggest it's a problem that so many Americans are looking to this year's presidential candidates, Barack Obama and John McCain, to save our financial system. How did we become so financially weak that we surrender our economic independence to politicians? Where does it say in the Constitution that the government should solve our financial problems?
And why have so many people throughout the world come to expect financial life-support from their political leaders? It seems most people will vote for anyone who promises a chicken in every pot and a guaranteed mortgage payment.
We're in the midst of a problem neither candidate can solve: A lack of comprehensive financial education in our school systems. What else explains the economic blunders committed by our political and financial leaders? Or why so many consumers are in debt up to their eyeballs? Or why millions of people expect a quick government fix of some kind?
Under Water
A few months ago, a friend of mine from Hawaii asked me if I wanted to buy his new powerboat with twin motors. Apparently, in late 2007, he purchased it brand new for approximately $85,000. His plan was to refinance his house when it appreciated in value and use the difference to pay for the boat.
Failing to obtain new financing, he called to ask me if I would buy the boat from him -- just take over the payments and it was mine. I passed, and the bank eventually repossessed his boat. Later, his wife called to tell me he's now having problems making his mortgage payments. Apparently, my friend planned to pay for his house the same way he planned on paying for the boat, by refinancing his debt.
I mention this story because it illustrates the problem Obama or McCain face: Limited financial education and diminished financial common sense. Apparently, my and the nation's business leaders all went to same school of finance.
A Cynical Aside
If you want to know why the towers of American capitalism are crumbling, I recommend reading "
The Creature from Jekyll Island" by G. Edward Griffin. It's not an easy book to find, but once you start reading it's to put down. In fact, in many ways it's a murder mystery about the financial "murder" of the middle class.
A very important lesson in the book is how political leaders use financial spin to deceive the public. The very, very rich use the system to legally steal from the rest of us by appealing to our sense of patriotism. When our leaders say, "We're bailing out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac because we want to protect the American people," they really mean "We're saving our rich friends."
All the bankers and politicians have to do is wave the red, white, and blue, play a few bars of "Yankee Doodle," and the masses get teary-eyed and pledge greater allegiance to legalized robbery. Yes, it's true that ignorance is bliss -- but ignorance is also expensive, and it cost us our freedom.
Freedom at Peril
A bailout can be different things. First, printing more money is a kind of bailout that leads to higher inflation. Rather than protecting people, it makes life for the poor and middle class more expensive. The other kind of bailout is protection for our rich and incompetent friends. If you or I fail at business, we fail. If we cheat and fail, we go to jail. But if you're rich and politically connected, your incompetence may be protected by a government bailout.
As a former Marine and a Vietnam War veteran, it saddens me to see some of the freedoms I thought I went to war to protect being stolen from us by bankers and politicians. Unfortunately, few Americans know the difference between the words "nationalize" and "socialize." Socialize means we turn more of our personal powers over to Big Brother, not free enterprise. It means we as a people grow weaker and need a higher power -- the same power that got us into this mess -- to protect us.
In short, when the towers of Fannie, Freddie, Merrill, Lehman, and AIG came crashing down, more came down than just money. What we're losing is the very freedom this country was founded on, and what most of the world yearns for.



Are you doing anything to improve your personal situation? If not start today by contacting: www.MooreHelpTrust.com

and if you are looking for help growing your business email the word "Help" to info@trgcoaching.com

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Ask your elected officials to PLEASE . . .

DO NOT allow Band-Aids to be produced and continuously applied to our economy, as it is the burden on our future generations appears to be almost insurmountable. PLEASE DO NOT allow Sec Paulson to make the situation worse. Allow free market forces to run their course. There will absolutely be pain; it will be incurred by those who have also received the pleasure. NO ONE should be in a position as he has recently requested:

Sec. 8. Review. Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency

if not because it is the right thing to do, please do it for our children!

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Top 10 Lessons being taught by our government . . .

#10 our elected officials aren’t really in control or making decisions, they want to be re elected so they delegate responsibility for difficult choices to non elected officials (Paulson, Bernanke, et al)

#9 create the perception of stability at any cost immediately prior to elections – how else could you maintain your extreme lifestyle without providing anything of value to our society?

#8 Promise whatever you feel like promising knowing that in a few months it will be someone else’s headache and the buddies you helped to make a fortune by putting on a band aid will certainly reward you with a cushy private sector position as a consultant or advisor

#7 if you want to keep up with The Joneses we will encourage you to lie about your income and assets so you can get in over your head financially, and then we will look for ways to relieve you of your responsibilities

#6 Why think for yourself or learn to be fiscally responsible at home, your leaders certainly don’t

#5 Creative accounting (aka lying, cheating and stealing) is acceptable behavior and if you do enough of it, thereby screwing lots of people in the process we will support your receiving a bonus as you are removed from your post.

#4 you don’t need to consider the consequences of your actions, encouraging and supporting a housing and credit bubble was great when everyone thought they were better off and now we had no way to know it was going to happen (Why have my clients known it since 2004?)

#3 if you want someone to take care of you, and you feel entitled to public assistance, scream loud enough and someone will throw money at you just to make you go away

#2 No need to worry about tomorrow, our kids are smart let them figure it out (oh wait we have dropped educationally in almost each of the last 40 years when compared to other countries) maybe my priorities are faulty but if we spent less than $80 Billion on education last year and we just threw $85 Billion at AIG, what message are our actions clearly sending?

And the #1 lesson being taught by our government . . .

if you are completely irresponsible on a big enough scale we will not only look the other way, we will step in and spend tax payer dollars to bail you out! (See AIG, Fannie/Freddie/Bear Stearns, etc)

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Goodbye to Lehman, Merrill Lynch and Wamu . . .

There will be more to come, but here are two more from our entry “How do the dominoes fall?” which was added last month. Sorry we didn’t included Merrill, mistake on our part, but if we were to include all the banks and financial companies (oh yeah builders too watch as those dominoes begin their tumbling act) who will soon be read their last rights the list would simply be too long to comprehend. Buckle up the ride starts to move faster in the very near future.

Below are lists we first started sharing with clients about 18 months ago, sometimes right on, sometimes not so much . . . at least not yet :)


Positive things ahead for:
pawn shops
paycheck advance stores/check cashing
consignment shops
medical (more sick people coming but long term govt caps this area)
solid small and regional banks
Target
Wal-Mart
silver
"green" technology
Toyota
Mc Donald's
Chik fil a
Home depot
Hemcon
smart creative non risk adverse people
smaller more agile companies
Blockbuster
fast food
alcohol
tobacco
vices of any sort
medical providers
funeral homes
cemeteries

Negative things ahead for:
most large financial service companies
mortgage companies
Starbucks
most insurance companies of any sort
high end retailers
builders
construction related fields
developers
most prop mgmnt companies
domestic auto
real estate related companies
idiots, those who can't think or refuse to do so
big slow to maneuver entities
movie theaters
amusement parks
high end restaurants

Enjoy the week – learn something to improve yourself and your life and then share it with others!

Thursday, September 11, 2008

It really is simple . . .

Lehman is following Fannie and Freddie (yeah, I know they claim to have saved the day with these two, it’s just a band aid that will hopefully be pulled off by whomever takes office after the election as it is ludicrous and unsustainable. If they don’t pull it off and instead replace it with another band aid the suffering will be even worse) Fannie and Freddie followed Indy Mac who was following Bear Stearns. Get used to it; many, many more are already dead and just waiting to topple. Bank and other financial institutions will fail lots and lots of them. People will loose jobs, loose homes, loose families, lots and lots and lots of them. It really is already done. Everything being proposed now is akin to closing the proverbial barn door after the horses have run off.

Accept it, don’t be that big flightless bird that when threatened buries its head in the sand! Picture that bird for a minute, what part of its body is sticking up in the air when it buries its head? For the entire world to come along and kick!?! You have choices. The time to make wise choices is now. You can bury your head and hope that your government will, for the first time in history, address a problem without making it worse. Or you could put down the crack pipe and realize that the only one looking out for you and your loved ones is you. So do it. Get yourself as financially solid as you can (www.moorehelptrust.com) and then work to maximize your human potential – be the best you can in order to help others who simply don’t yet get it! Put a note in your calendar to check www.allthebluewhales.com in about 10 days, it’s not out there yet, but from what I hear it will be dedicated to helping those who want to help themselves and then once you have helped yourselves you will be able to help others.

PS anyone willing to bet that we see Dow 8,500 before we see Dow 12,000 again?

Monday, September 8, 2008

Thomas Jefferson hundreds of years ago.

"It is incumbent on every generation to pay its own debts as it goes. A principle which if acted on would save one-half the wars of the world."

yeah, what did he know? I mean why pay today what you can ignore or avoid and leave for someone else tomorrow? U.S. economy + U.S. balance sheet + U.S. housing mess + global credit crisis + very little real leadership worldwide capable of making hard choices = _____________
(fill in the blank.)

Friday, September 5, 2008

Peter G. Peterson Foundation

I came across the following article while reviewing postings on the Peter G. Peterson Foundation website (pgpf.org) Pete Peterson and David Walker, the foundation’s President and CEO, run this foundation that has the following mission:

We are dedicated to increasing public awareness of the nature and urgency of several key challenges threatening America's future, and to accelerating action on them. To address these challenges successfully, we will work to bring Americans together to find sensible, long-term solutions that transcend age, party lines and ideological divides in order to achieve real results.

Sounds pretty good to me!

This quote has been attributed to several different folks in the 19th Century, but it says it all.

The average age of the world's greatest civilizations from the beginning of history, has been about 200 years. During those 200 years, these nations always progressed through the following sequence:
From bondage to spiritual faith;
From spiritual faith to great courage;
From courage to liberty;
From liberty to abundance;
From abundance to complacency;
From complacency to apathy;
From apathy to dependence;
From dependency back into bondage

In my estimation, the shift from abundance to complacency took place about 25 +/- years ago. Since then we have, as a nation, been guilty of apathy. If we look at the average age of the world’s greatest civilizations (approx 200 years) and we look at the fact they go through these 7 phases, would it make sense that each phase is probably 25-30 years? Following that logic it appears obvious it’s time for us to become dependent . . . or wait, maybe we are already there.

Ross Perot charts economic reality

You thought the last entry on home ownership was a nightmare? Watch the presentation at http://perotcharts.com/ (Thanks to Lee Taylor in Atlanta for sharing this site with us) and realize how real the prospects for our nation’s economic collapse are. Negative - no. Doom and Gloom - not. Realistic slap in the face – sure. As a nation we have become lazy, ignorant and apathetic. If that statement no longer applies to you congratulations! Now how many people can you help today? If you aren’t going to help can you realistically expect to be rewarded as the rate of changes realized by our country accelerates? Ready to make a difference by being more fiscally responsible; start by talking to the guys at The Moore Help Trust. Ready to maximize your human potential and assist other in doing the same? Email “Help me to make a difference” to info@trgcoaching.com Whom did you help today?

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

The American Dream? Try Nightmare! Questions to consider if you own real estate today.

I have been an active investor for almost 30 years and have owned hundreds of properties during the majority of that time. I have been a real estate broker in multiple states for many years and have made a large portion of my income by coaching, speaking and training people in real estate and related industries, please consider this as you ask yourself the following questions . . .

Who decided that “The American Dream” is/was home ownership?
Was it the National Association of Realtors?
Any agenda there?
Do they EVER tell the public the truth?
If in most parts of the country today you can live in and enjoy a home for a fraction of the cost of owning why wouldn’t you?
What will happen to real estate taxes as the revenue received by our state and local governments continues to shrink from fewer real estate transfers, lower market values, less builder and developer profits to tax, higher defaults where taxes aren’t being paid etc?
Will our governments some how start operating on less?
Will they actually cut back?
Will they attempt to raise taxes?
How will that impact demand?
How about insurance . . . as more and more premiums aren’t being paid for homes in default, what will happen to the rates being charged to those who are actually paying?
As more and more home owners find themselves in trouble, or simply choose to walk away from properties they are struggling to keep, or that they are just upside down in . . . what will happen to the supply of “distressed properties” on the market?
How will that impact prices?
As lenders continue to be forced to tighten standards and credit continues to more and more difficult to find, what will continue to happen to demand?
As supply goes up, and demand continues to stay low, or perhaps lowers further . . . what will happen to prices?
If you don’t believe in, or want to acknowledge, the law of gravity and you jump out of a tree . . . what happens?
Does that happen because the law of gravity applies whether you want it to or not?
Have you ever heard of the law of supply and demand?
Does that law care what you want to believe?
Realistically, which do you see happening first – supply somehow magically disappearing or demand miraculously reappearing without credit being available?
Do you think lenders can go on indefinitely not receiving income on loans that have been made, or do you think that foreclosures are going to have to increase significantly over the next several years?
Did you know that in most parts of the U.S. today that even if demand increased to the insane levels we saw at the peak of the market, current supply numbers would still grow as even that level of demand would not be enough to absorb the supply?
Can you say “too many rooftops?”
What can you do today about that fact that the number of dwelling units in the US was permitted to grow at a pace far in excess of the number of households?
How do you get rid of supply?
Are there options other than natural disaster or allowing the time to pass to absorb the supply?
Could you just burn it down or demolish it?
Do you think that’s a realistic option?
How long do you think it will be before supply is absorbed?
How long do you think it will be before demand returns?
Do you think the media will let us soon forget the pain of millions of distressed homeowners?
How will that impact demand over the next decade, or more?
What if you don’t live in a market where prices appreciated in a ridiculous manner, are you immune to this correction?
Or do the people buying US mortgage backed securities simply say “I’ve had enough and am not willing to provide more capital to buy paper that has a value far less than I was promised and for which I can’t collect on the so called insurance I was promised?”
When the capital goes away and credit is no longer available does it only impact the high appreciation markets or does it impact all non cash buyers in all parts of the country (and eventually Canada, the UK, the balance of Europe and in about 5 years or so most of Asia?)
What will the buyers who have come into the market over the past 1-3 years with little or no money out of their pockets, do when they realize that the $250k debt they have is costing them $2500+/mo for something that is only worth $150k?
What are they likely to do when they realize they could live in the same type of property in the same neighborhood for $1000/mo?
What about the people who bought into the negative amortization loans, you know where the amount they owe grows each month while the underlying asset value declines . . . what will happen to those loans as the majority of them convert to huge fully amortized payments peaking around 2012?
Will there be a few more defaults across the country between now and then?
Is there a realistic, logical possibility other than market forces, supply and demand etc working themselves out, such that we see a bottom around 2015 +/- and then we regroup?
If you answered yes to that last question – what are you smoking?
What if after booms we always see busts which take us back to, or perhaps below the 100 level on the Shiller index? Would that mean that if we peaked at 199, without adjusting for inflation, we would most likely see an adjustment to prices in the range of 50-70%??? If you knew the 2005 value of your home may well drop by 50-70% before a bottom is reached . . . what different decisions would you make?
Want to see the charts? Thank you Alex!
http://www.thedigeratilife.com/blog/index.php/2007/07/09/historical-financial-charts-are-you-invested-in-these-markets/

I live in Naples FL; I reside in a home that at the peak was near $1,000,000. Today I could buy it for under $600k; it will bottom in another 7 years or so under $400k. If I can live in this home for $1500/mo, not have any capital at risk, not worry about real estate taxes and insurance escalating rapidly, not have to mess with repairs, etc . . . how would owning be a dream?
When you dream about hundreds of thousands of dollars disappearing in equity, and paying monthly expenses 4 times what you need to be paying . . . what do you call that type of dream?
American dream or nightmare?
Is this all doom and gloom super negative stuff?
Or do you have the ability to see the opportunities and possibilities in this?
Did you know that the greatest opportunities to make a real difference occur when people are hurting?
Do you think that 95%+ of Americans will be worse off financially tomorrow than they are today, and worse still in a month, even more so in a year and far more so in a decade, or two?
Are you going to be one of them?
Can you help any of them?
Would you like to?
What if you focused on maximizing your human potential? Visit www.iLearningGlobal.biz/theresultsgroup
What if you focused on becoming more financially responsible? Visit http://www.moorehelptrust.com/
Want to learn to see the beauty in all of this? The possibilities and the opportunities to truly help others? Email “help me to see” to info@trgcoaching.com

The government we allowed to exist . . .

"By the time we are finished with this tragic period in U.S. economic history, capitalism will be on its knees, laid low by poor policy decisions and the nationalization of bad assets." - Joshua Rosner - Financial Times

"Throughout the 12 months of the crisis, it is difficult to avoid the impression that the Fed is too close to the financial markets and leading financial institutions, and too responsive to their special pleadings, to make the right decisions for the economy as a whole." - Wilhelm Buiter, a former member of the Bank of England's monetary policy committee.

I guess the silver lining is any day now we will start seeing local, and eventually state, governments, file for bankruptcy protection. When you rely on tax revenue from real estate transactions, profitability of financial institutions, builders, developers and the like, and then that profit dries up . . . what happens to your tax revenue? when your tax revenue disappears what choice do you have other than to cut expenses (the public won't mind) or raise taxes (oh that's ok we are all so well off right now that we can afford to pick up the slack!)

write this down - Today, September 2, 2008 things are better financially for 95% of Americans than they will be at any point over the next 20+ years. 19 out of every 20 people you know will suffer more and more financially over the upcoming months and years. What will happen to their mental and physical health as they go through this? How about their family and spiritual well being?

Monday, September 1, 2008

E mail of the year from Brian Vee Thomas in OK City

E-Mail of the Year!!WOULDN'T IT BE GREAT TO TURN ON THE TV AND HEAR ANY U.S. PRESIDENT, DEMOCRAT OR REPUBLICAN GIVE THE FOLLOWING SPEECH?'My Fellow Americans: As you all know, the defeat of the Iraq regime has been completed.Since congress does not want to spend any more money on this war, our mission in Iraq is complete.This morning I gave the order for a complete removal of all American forces from Iraq This action will be complete within 30 days. It is now time to begin the reckoning.Before me, I have two lists. One list contains the names of countries which have stood by our side during the Iraq conflict. This list is short. The United Kingdom, Spain, Bulgaria, Australia, and Poland are some of the countries listed there.The other list contains every one not on the first list. Most of the world's nations are on that list. My press secretary will be distributing copies of both lists later this evening.Let me start by saying that effective immediately, foreign aid to those nations on List 2 ceases immediately and indefinitely. The money saved during the first year alone will pretty much pay for the costs of the Iraqi war. THEN EVERY YEAR THERE AFTER IT'LL GO TO OUR SOCIAL SECURITY SYSTEM SO IT WON’T GO BROKE IN 20 YEARS.The American people are no longer going to pour money into third world Hell holes and watch those government leaders grow fat on corruption.Need help with a famine? Wrestling with an epidemic? Call France.In the future, together with Congress, I will work to redirect this money toward solving the vexing social problems we still have at home. On that note, a word to terrorist organizations. Screw with us and we will hunt you down and eliminate you and all your friends from the face of the earth.Thirsting for a gutsy country to terrorize? Try France or maybe China... I am ordering the immediate severing of diplomatic relations with France, Germany, and Russia. Thanks for all your help, comrades. We are retiring from NATO as well.Bonne chance, mezamies.I have instructed the Mayor of New York City to begin towing the many UN diplomatic vehicles located in Manhattan with more than two unpaid parking tickets to sites where those vehicles will be stripped, shredded and crushed. I don't care about whatever treaty pertains to this. You creeps have tens of thousands of unpaid tickets. Pay those tickets tomorrow or watch your precious Benzes, Beamers and limos be turned over to some of the finest chop shops in the world.I love New YorkA special note to our neighbors. Canada is on List 2. Since we are likely to be seeing a lot more of each other, you folks might want to try not pissing us off for a change.Mexico is also on List 2 its president and his entire corrupt government really need an attitude adjustment. I will have a couple extra thousand tanks and infantry divisions sitting around. Guess where I am going to put'em? Yep, border security.Oh, by the way, the United States is abrogating the NAFTA treaty - starting now.We are tired of the one-way highway. Immediately, we'll be drilling for oil in Alaska - which will take care of this country's oil needs for decades to come. If you're an environmentalist who opposes this decision, I refer you to List 2 above: pick a country and move there.It is time for America to focus on its own welfare and its own citizens. Some will accuse us of isolationism.I answer them by saying, 'darn tootin.'Nearly a century of trying to help folks live a decent life around the world has only earned us the undying enmity of just about everyone on the planet. It is time to eliminate hunger in America It is time to eliminate homelessness in America. To the nations on List 1, a final thought. Thank you guys. We owe you and we won't forget.To the nations on List 2, a final thought: You might want to learn to speak Arabic.God bless America ... Thank you and good night.'If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you are reading it in English, thank a soldier