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Authorities Cannot Shut Down 'Fake Appraiser Operations' in Chicago


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2006 Jun 8, 4:17am   12,175 views  229 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Chicago appraisers

We've discussed garden variety "hit the numbers" appraisal (and mortgage) fraud here in numerous threads. I'm also well aware that appraisers didn't CAUSE the bubble, nor are they even on the top 10 list of bubble causes --see "Housing Bubble Pre-Flight Checklist" thread. Even so, this article (thanks to Ben Jones for first posting it) has to take the cake for most egregious, "in your face" fraud I've seen to date.

Apparently, you don't need to have appraiser credentials of any kind in Illinois, nor can you even be prosecuted for practising without a license or committing fraud. Wow.

Appraisals Part of All Fraud Loans
by Lew Sichelman

"...Emblematic of the scope of the mortgage fraud problem throughout the country is what's going on in Illinois, where three out of ten appraisals are found to be forged, according to Robert Gorman, an East Hazel Crest, Ill., appraiser. "That's a significant number," he told the meeting. "And that's only the ones we know of. Who knows what we don't know?"

Gorman said in some cases, appraisers who have had their licenses lifted continue to make valuations using someone else's identification. They swipe the names from class rosters, loan files, and even industry websites, he said.

In other instances, he also said, the "appraisers" were never licensed at all, and are part of a larger scheme to fleece lenders.

Gorman told of one crew of 13 fake appraisers who are working out of a factory on Chicago's South side. The authorities would like to shut down this appraisal factory, he said, but they can't. "They're not licensed, so there's nothing we can do," he said. "So they are still there."

Discuss, enjoy...
HARM

#housing

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123   Different Sean   2006 Jun 9, 6:34pm  

DinOR Says:
Randy H,
Yeah, that’s pretty much the place and period I was thinking about. It just struck other midwesterners as so odd that off all places Youngstown, OH became a hot bed of crime.

hee, my mortgage broker mate in DC grew up in youngstown - she doesn't talk about it much for some reason... :P

newsfreak Says:
Muzzle Anne Coulter!!
Anne Coulter looks like she needs to eat a 2 lb steak or a big plate of sushi.

My diagnosis is that it's nothing a good *** once in a while wouldn't fix, she would become a sunny liberal with flowers in her hair in no time...

Amnesty Yes! We must have amnesty, we have no choice.
yes, but don't forget the mexican-american war, Anglo-Saxons claiming their 'manifest destiny', hmm:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican_War#War_in_California

The Spanish Empire's just getting its land back, by degrees...

124   Different Sean   2006 Jun 9, 6:44pm  

is there anything like that there?

I recommend just sending a box of dog shit

heh, ru-uff justice.

125   DinOR   2006 Jun 9, 11:42pm  

LILLL,

I'm just ill about your earnest money. Really, I am. The cost of doing business is painful enough. PAYING for a transaction that never took place is criminal. Period. Who do these people think they are! Trust me, they've already spent the money. Here's yet another example of how realtors exempt themselves from fair trade.

In my arena, I would firstly have to be at the very least somewhat familiar with your "tolerance for risk" meaning if the investment headed south to the tune of 5%+ are you O.K with that? If you harbor designs for a 20% upside are you willing to "stomach" a 40% downside? Do hold other assets elsewhere? If this company goes "de-listed" will it affect your retirement date? If so, perhaps we should reconsider. Have you ever traded on "margin" before? Are you familiar w/options? (which is really what you bought, and THE most riskiest of propositions). Let's set all of that aside for just a minute O.K. From a more rudimentary perspective have you so much as ever set foot in North Carolina? Are you aware that b/c said move would be strictly for a "change of scenery" that said moving expenses would NOT be tax deductible? And a million other things!

Since we all know that real estate is always a good investment for everybody all the time I guess NONE of these things are an issue. Nor will they ever be. This is how they operate. I'm fully aware that there are those among us that will shout from the rooftops that LILLL is her own gal and this is a free country and she can do as she (and her husband) pleases! Oh, I'm all for that! However; when I take someone's money (and I do every day) I must first exercise "the prudent man rule". I know, it doesn't get talked about nearly enough these days, but it still exists! It is still the law. If it were my money, would I be doing this? Is this financial suicide? Can I "cover" a margin call? Would this be a good investment for my mother? If I wouldn't do it, why would any other fool? Why, why, why, why why? John Haverty, you're an engineer. Isn't that what engineers ask any time they implement a change? Why X 5? If you still get a YES after the 5th query THEN make the change? Why is this "deal" better than your current deal? Why is this "new" asset" better than your current asset?

People, these are questions we need to be asking ourselves! LILLL, It's not my intent to get on a soapbox and preach here but at any point did anyone in NC so much as ask you how your husband (entertainment anchored) would be able practice his craft on the opposite coast? Did anyone challenge you as to just how you would be able continue your business 3,000 miles away? Or is it just assumed that you are a "California Lottery Winner" without the economic realities that tether the rest of us. Get your money back kid. This is wrong. This ain't right.

126   DinOR   2006 Jun 10, 12:04am  

DS,

"it's sat morning grumpy hangover time"

Ahem, (clears throat second time)

Hangovers, my dear sir are a time honored tradition in the DinOR family! Each and every one is "special". Precious I might add. It is (in my twisted mind anyway) the best part of drinking. One must take extra special care to be "most pleasant" after a bender (lest mom pull the plug). Go on about your day with extra kindness and an unending need to please others. Savor every moment and always remember "just because you've had a few drinks doesn't mean you can't be a gentlemen". Right about now my eyes look like two "piss holes in the snow". Please excuse me now as I have to fix breakfast for my wife.

127   Peter P   2006 Jun 10, 4:41am  

I have to work in San Jose. I hate it. Buying houses in there make me shudder. Anyone shelling out 1M+ to live in anything associated with Crud Jose is a maniac.

I live in Downtown San Jose. OMG. It is horrible!

128   Peter P   2006 Jun 10, 12:05pm  

My apartment complex is very well-managed though. It has the best managers I have ever seen. That said, I am moving to Sunnyvale in two weeks. The area is too bad.

Having lived in SJ for a year, I have become a strong supporter for:

1. Prohibition (at least no alcohol in public)
2. Death Penalty
3. Mandatory military/social service for youngsters

129   Peter P   2006 Jun 10, 12:07pm  

Young people should spend more time in the library, not bars. If they have ego or emotional issues, they should channel the excess energy in serving their communities.

God, we need religion in the class room.

130   Peter P   2006 Jun 10, 12:10pm  

LILL , if someone can blow away someone over bar seating, then I would think it is certainly justifiable to threaten to blow away someone for stealing your money.

Killing people over stupid things is the worst. We need to bring back public execution. Such people should be hanged high outside the city hall.

131   Michael Holliday   2006 Jun 10, 12:57pm  

I grew up in southwest San Jose near the foothills. I'm part of the history of that place. It'll always be my home. There were great times and a golden era there. I now reside in Phoenix.

But, they've raped it. They've turned it into an overpriced third world shit hole.

I weep for San Jose, and admit that's it's time stick a fork in its ass and turn it over, it's done!

San Jose is over, barring any sort of renaissance. What have they done to San Jose? It's like Rosemary's baby! Its eyes...its a possessed baby!
god damn you evil bastards!

132   Michael Holliday   2006 Jun 10, 1:39pm  

Hey Rat:

ST (Santa Teresa High) class of 1984. What a friggen' great year!

The 80's rocked. 1981 was fricken' sublime!

133   Michael Holliday   2006 Jun 10, 1:40pm  

Actually, the late seventies had some cool Cali stuff going on.

My cousins were seventies kids. Graduated in Sunnyvale.

134   surfer-x   2006 Jun 10, 3:22pm  

I went to James Lick High, eastside San Jose…lovely place…looked like a factory.

LILLL went to James Lick MyBalls? ahahahaha, funny, me? Independence.

M. holiday how is Phoenix? Tempe? Good or bad or indifferent.

LILLL, wow amazing. Sort of same hood. Never figured you for an Alum Rocker.

135   surfer-x   2006 Jun 10, 4:20pm  

LILLL, Independence HS in San Hosebag, hence the origin of my loathing.

136   surfer-x   2006 Jun 10, 4:31pm  

X- you having a party on the 4th?

Possibly, you in?

137   OO   2006 Jun 10, 5:01pm  

Saying that the entire San Jose is sh*thole is really an over-generalization. I personally find Almaden, parts of Santa Teresa, and particularly somewhere south of San Jose quite charming. Small pockets still retain the rural feel of the past.

The scary parts are East San Jose and the parts next to the airport. Evergreen is just too plastic. Anywhere along the western foothill is good all the way down from the peninsula, if you just ignore price for a minute. Price will correct itself, but geography hardly changes. I'd say if you keep yourself anywhere along the western foothill, you can't go wrong, even if you have to go as south as Gilroy.

I have a general dislike for East Bay for the lack of vegetation except for patches of brown grass 9 months out of a year.

138   surfer-x   2006 Jun 10, 5:32pm  

There are no redeeming qualities to San Hosebag. I personally find Almaden, parts of Santa Teresa That pretty much nails why San Hosebag bites so much fucking ass, Almaden? Where exactly is that? If I were to mail a letter to Almaden where would I send it San Fucking HoseBag. Santa Teresa, where is that again, in San Fucking Hosebag. Ahhh the pretense, "I live in Almaden". Fuckers go to fucking hell. My ex syphilitic whore girl friend is frome "Almaden" thats funny you vapid cunt, where is that again?

139   Different Sean   2006 Jun 10, 5:34pm  

Tonight I saw the film’The Big Buy’ about Tom Delay…

I have to make a long list of these films to catch up on...

140   Unalloyed   2006 Jun 10, 6:32pm  

...and Sacto State…and Chico…and yes, UCDavis….etc.

LILLL,

I thought you might like this story from Sac State. There was an exchange between Sac State and a university in England. They swapped statistics professors, so a CSUS math professor taught in England, and an Englishman was teaching statistics courses a Sac State. Prompted by the foreign accent, one of my fellow students said, "I want to complement you on how well you've learned English." Ah, when people generously share their idiocy.

141   Unalloyed   2006 Jun 10, 6:34pm  

And I shared my own idiocy by managing to italicize everything.

142   Different Sean   2006 Jun 10, 6:36pm  

bloody hell.

John Haverty Says:
[...]
Another thing hippies do is ride bikes and block traffic. The metal on the bike took tons of energy to make the metal from ore. The tires are rubber and are a petroleum product. The grease on the chain is a petroleum product, the batteries that charge their bullhorns were charged by evil oil energy.

how much metal goes into a Humvee 2 for the little woman to take down to the shops by herself for a carton of milk, all the while burning non-renewable fossil fuels, emitting toxic pollution and carbon gases, and remaining obese and under-exercised, at risk of diabetes and heart disease?

how much does it cost to register and insure and service the Humvee every year? How much oil does it go through? How much gas does it burn? How much lubrication of its many moving parts does it need? It's a question of degree, not kind, in this case -- the 'hippy' is reducing their environmental footprint by a factor of 1 000 compared to the Humvee queen. More than 1 000, as far as emissions go. how long would world oil reserves last if you only had to oil a bike chain once in a while? how much middle east turmoil would there be, and how much would 'america lose it's addiction to oil imports'? (© GW Bush Group, trading as Carlyle Group)

it takes 7 GALLONS of oil to make a single car tyre.

i thought bicycles WERE traffic, with the same rights to use the road. but which also highlights the need for dedicated cycle lanes.

i recommend aeroriders for everyone. DinOr likes these so much, he told me he's going to buy 2... www.aerorider.com

143   FormerAptBroker   2006 Jun 11, 12:08am  

John Haverty Says:

> Another thing hippies do is ride bikes and block traffic.
> The metal on the bike took tons of energy to make the
> metal from ore. The tires are rubber and are a petroleum
> product. The grease on the chain is a petroleum product,
> the batteries that charge their bullhorns were charged
> by evil oil energy.

Then Different Sean Says:

> bloody hell.

I still have a hard time believing that he is really Australian since 99% of what he says sounds like the party line from the thousands of self hating rich hypocritical Matt Gonzalez fans living in the Mission District riding around on vintage Bontrager mtn bikes with bar top shifters and fixed gear track bikes with vintage Campy parts…

> how much metal goes into a Humvee 2 for the little woman to
> take down to the shops by herself for a carton of milk, all
> the while burning non-renewable fossil fuels, emitting toxic
> pollution and carbon gases, and remaining obese and under-
> exercised, at risk of diabetes and heart disease?

Sure the Hummer 2 (the Humvee is the military version and there is just one of them) uses a lot of gas and most have so much bling that I want to walk over and tell the drivers that they are not “pretty fly for a white guy”, but they use less gas than the F350s that harvest the green bud in Mendocino County that the Green party hipsters smoke before they ride around blocking traffic. I can out run, out ride and out swim 99% of the Mission District hipsters who are half my age since they are not riding to stay healthy, they are riding to block traffic and piss people off (and look cool with their $3,000 vintage track bike sitting next to them when they smoke cloves and drink coffee at one of the cool indy (non Starbucks) shops). I think John’s point was that hippies use petroleum products and it is hypocritical to want to ban something if you use it (or do it) at all. A hippie that wants to ban oil drilling is like a casual body builder that uses steroids a couple times a year but goes to protests trying to ban them in baseball and when someone points out he is a hypocrite he says that he is not since he does not use as many steroids as Barry Bonds…

> i recommend aeroriders for everyone.
>DinOr likes these so much, he told me
> he’s going to buy 2… www.aerorider.com

When I was a kid my Dad (who took us on 40 mile rides on our one speed 20” bikes in the early 70’s) used to say “everyone that rides a recumbent bike is nuts”. All these years later I have never met a recumbent rider (or person who called themselves an “activist”) who was not totally nuts… http://tinyurl.com/e1t1

I’m glad I got that out of my system since I’m leaving to drive my girlfriend to Mill Valley to run the Dipsea and I’ll be waiting for her in West Marin (lets hope the West Marin nutballs don’t burn the SUV)…

144   Michael Holliday   2006 Jun 11, 12:30am  

Surfer-x:

I grew up in the west foothills/Santa Teresa Blvd. area of San Jose.
I agree with the other poster, it has its charm.

I went back to my old street last year, it was four years since I was back, and it looked very charming. The folliage had grown in. It looked kinda like parts of Los Gatos. It's aging nice in some parts & like shit in other.

Over all around the downtown area it looked LA-ish: Ramshackle, overdeveloped, dumpy. But, then again, when I took my friend from the East Coast, who got his MBA from Columbia, to Stanford University, he thought Stanford looked like shit. He said, "I'll show you some real brick university architecture."

I tried to explain that all the stucco buildings were because of earthquakes & that brick is not as safe. I explained all the overgrown with weeds foliage was because Californians are into the "natural" look, etc.

As far as Phoenix and Tempe. This place takes a calling. This is the badlands my friend. If you are from the coastal area, you will probably run like hell from here as fast as you can, after one month of our hell-on-earth summers.

My affinity for Arizona came as a child. We used to visit my uncle in Scottsdale in the '70s, so I came to like the desert. I did attend two military intelligence schools at Ft. Huachuca, in southern Arizona back in the late '80's and early '90s.

Now as for Phoenix, it's like San Jose in a lot of ways. In otherwords it's quite a mixed bag of different experiences based on your income level/sophistication. California it is definitely NOT.

IF you are a desert dweller, Phoenix has something for everyone. There's a lot of shithole neighorhoods here, but if you go around the block a very nice neighborhood pops out of nowhere for no rhyme or reason.

It' all niched-out, with pockets of really nice desert dwellings and then East-Side San Jose-type ghetto-ass dumps, etc.

I live in the northwest valley, in Phoenix near Glendale and Peoria. If you draw a straight line East and go about 15-20 miles, you run right into the nice parts of Scottsdale, which is considered affluent. So, in essence, for half the house price, I'm basically getting the Scottsdale-type lifestyle without double the price. Scottsdale is a cut above. Paradise Valley, near Scottsdale is VERY desert pimped-out...celebrities, etc.

South Scottsdale is the dumpy/old/ghettoish side, but money's starting to go into there tojazz it up.

Tempe? Well I just got off a contract at Honeywell in Tempe and may get hired full-time, hopefully, by next week. I'm not holding my breath.

Anyway, Tempe isn't really my cup of tea. The west side near the Ahwatukee foothills is nice. Just too flat & bland for me...

This place either grows on you like a fungus or you hate the hell out of it.

Definitey, it's worth going at least to Scottsdale in the winter because the weather's so nice.

Personally, I love the mountains and the desert austere beauty, while trying to avoid the shithole areas.

For me, the desert reveals itself and gives up it's secrets to those who are patient and pioneering. Otherwise, stay the F*** away from this place.

145   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 2:51am  

self hating rich hypocritical Matt Gonzalez fans living in the Mission District riding around on vintage Bontrager mtn bikes with bar top shifters and fixed gear track bikes with vintage Campy parts…

hmm, they sound like typical hippies to me. yuppy hippies. at least they get from A to B without burning fossil fuels and polluting the air...

I think John’s point was that hippies use petroleum products and it is hypocritical to want to ban something if you use it (or do it) at all.

but do they want to ban it, or just reduce usage? let's not get carried away with untested assumptions and false polarising stereotypes. has he asked every so-called 'hippie' riding a bike he sees whether they want to 'ban oil drilling everywhere'?

A hippie that wants to ban oil drilling is like a casual body builder that uses steroids a couple times a year but goes to protests trying to ban them in baseball and when someone points out he is a hypocrite he says that he is not since he does not use as many steroids as Barry Bonds…

i see. it's a strange old world, isn't it?

When I was a kid my Dad (who took us on 40 mile rides on our one speed 20” bikes in the early 70’s) used to say “everyone that rides a recumbent bike is nuts”. All these years later I have never met a recumbent rider (or person who called themselves an “activist”) who was not totally nuts… tinyurl.com/e1t1

well, dads are always right, especially FAB Srs. never mind that recumbents go faster than uprights, and were setting speed records in the 1930s, before they were written out of the rules. Wind resistance slows upright riders down significantly. The Aerorider tops out at about 4' tall, which is the height of a sports car, so can't really be missed by motorists. It can't fall over, and is well protected against accidents. Sounds reasonable to me. The tiny url link you posted recommends recumbents. The seats are more comfortable, too.

146   Peter P   2006 Jun 11, 4:05am  

This POS just sold for $790,000.

The structure may be POS but the land...

147   Peter P   2006 Jun 11, 4:08am  

hmm, maybe you should consider Oz after all, Peter P. no guns, no suspicious cars, and can be quite boring in areas, but very scenic. english speaking, plenty of work opportunities still, and the US$ will still buy AUD$1.25. depends what occupation you’re in as to settlement decision.

I have been to Oz many years ago. I liked it.

Astrology works differently though (north vs south hemisphere).

148   Peter P   2006 Jun 11, 4:08am  

Feng Shui works differently also. But I will visit Oz again soon. Thanks.

149   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 4:28am  

Peter P
Astrology works differently though (north vs south hemisphere).
Feng Shui works differently also.

hmm, tricky. there is sushi tho.

150   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 4:32am  

this invention looks quite cool - a very light magnesium alloy engine -
http://www.solve.csiro.au/1104/article1.htm

151   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 4:34am  

and an ultra lightweight car from the University of Queensland -
http://www.uq.edu.au/news/index.html?article=6948

curse the 1 link limit

152   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 4:38am  

The feng shui works differently in Oz? How so?

not sure, but trust me, there are very many authentic feng shui experts living here now...

sun is always to the north, so changes the orientation of houses.
and many northern star constellations are not visible, etc.
sounds like ethno-geo-centrism to me...

153   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 5:29am  

i think simple physics would tell us we have to eventually run out of something we are combusting.

tar sand mining is a little tricky, and very environmentally destructive.

hummers are silly. what do they weigh? are they a suitable suburban getabout vehicle? they are just trying to meet someone's esteem needs in a society where that sort of quasi-military vehicle is admired for all the wrong reasons. the irony of fuelling them up in civilian life and simultaneously using them to invade oil-rich middle eastern countries should not be lost. there are 2 of them here in the whole country, both owned by drug dealers.

154   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 5:40am  

i'm not terrifically anti-nuclear, although it's not very clean. the sun is still our only fusion reactor, of course. the world has huge reserves of coal still, and there are many coal-fired power stations. hydro is reasonably good.

One thing lawmakers could try to do to make this stuff come to fruition it to research why these things, including the awesome magnesium engine you showed me, are not coming to market, identify if it is because of “milking” (coming out with technology incrementally to ensure obsolescence) or oil mafia influence (oil Mafiosi like Exxon buying patents and shelving them), and if the feasibility study says “go!,” then force the carmakers to make the stuff.

Also, I believe that intellectual property that isn’t implemented, like the ceramic engine, should be sizeable if it is shelved. I am under the impression Exxon or some other ass company like that bought the ceramic engine patent and shelved it. This should be punished with prison time.

the irony is that it's only going to be less apathetic public involvement in politics, and greener types who will research and argue for this and raise public awareness... maybe even matt gonzalez... do you think big business and the republicans will jail their own? or at least force the development and use of new technologies... altho GM and Ford etc are looking at the magnesium engine -- and they increasingly realise they need to operate and exist into the future too...

155   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 5:45am  

John Haverty Says:
the kero will run out, sooner or later…
Never. Peak oil and doom wont get people to stop burning. Tar sands first, then using fusion to get massive amounts of energy to create kerosone out of “stuff”

hmm, hope that's being wry, that's probably what they were saying on easter island shortly before they starved and turned to cannibalism...

http://www.primitivism.com/easter-island.htm

156   FormerAptBroker   2006 Jun 11, 6:05am  

I just got back from West Marin and happened to see the front page of the Marin paper while I was over there.

The headline was “A puzzling legacy” Why do more than half the kids from the South Marin public schools drop out before graduation and have the lowest test schools in the county?

I thought to myself “It’s not puzzling, stupid kids with stupid parents will always have high drop out rates and low test scores”…

Maybe we need to spend more money since we are “only” spending $22,232 per student and the “average” teacher “only” makes $70,981 per year (about the same amount per hour as someone making one HaHa in the private sector)…

See the link below I’m not making these numbers up:
http://www.marinij.com/ci_3925333

P.S. The schools in South Marin are so bad that a friend and his wife sold their nice big view home in Sausalito (with low property taxes) for $1mm a couple years ago and bought a crappy little home in Belvedere (for $1.2mm) since the bigger mortgage and higher taxes was still cheaper than staying in Sausalito paying for private school for their three kids…

157   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 6:11am  

Mentioning the republicans without chastizing the democrats is showing a bias that doesnt belong in scientific arguments.

oh, i don't know about that... let's scientifically analyse the KNOWN corruption by common report... e.g. relative numbers exposed by the jack abramoff affair, and links to big business... altho the US case is unusual in that both parties are business-oriented...

This has to do with corruption and money.

that has a lot to do with left and right... altho the 2 parties are right and further right - and bill clinton made a great republican president...

158   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 6:19am  

Also, I recall humanity existing before fossil fuels.

yes, with low populations, and lower standards of living, and only burning wood and coal and animal dung. there might still be some cannibalism and die-back...

The availability of wood was a boolean on Easter Island. One day it was all gone. ON|OFF. Oil’s peak production will trail off but wont just suddenly run out.

it will run out once it's all been burnt. not sure about boolean on easter island -- i think they had a steadily diminishing resources also. forward planning would have meant they had a SUSTAINABLE REPLANTING PROGRAM, not that they had to use the whole resource for silly ends anyhow, just as we do with NASCAR and monster trucks...

Alarmism is not going to get people motivated for change.

i think it might. they should show 'Mad Max' and 'Water World' reruns on television day and night, all channels...

159   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 6:24am  

This was a war by ideologues (a trait you seem to show at times) about ideological gunk.

yeah, right. i'm as stupid as a washington neocon now. thanks.

and believing that 'market demand' dictates all is not an ideological mantra? come on.

160   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 6:26am  

not sure whether people confuse 'ideological' with 'idealistic' on here. that would explain something else someone said...

161   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 6:34am  

and believing that ‘market demand’ dictates all is not an ideological mantra? come on.

It doesnt? Pray tell!

there, you see, you should have done social sciences as well as newtonian calculus. markets are an abstraction, and that argument is a 'discourse' or 'grand metanarrative' - leave you to research the rest...

162   Different Sean   2006 Jun 11, 6:48am  

focus, man, focus...

Mad Max is an Australian apocalyptic science fiction film starring Mel Gibson. The film is set in a dystopian near-future Australia. The beginning of the film only hints that the story takes place "a few years from now" but it is obviously set in a society that is suffering from a prolonged fuel shortage which has resulted in a breakdown of civil order. (The sequel, Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior, opens with a far more elaborate presentation of a back story describing a global disaster involving conflict over oil.)

i don't remember the scantily clad women at all :(

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