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It used to be everyone with. a pulse could get a loan, but now they need so much fucking bullshit to get a loan. It's like years of tax returns, personal bank statements, etc. Like, the process is super invasive now when it used to be ulra easy not even 10 years ago, its frustrating. Shows the Jews are trying to close all the doors on trying to get people to grow their businesses

It used to be everyone with. a pulse could get a loan, but now they need so much fucking bullshit to get a loan. It's like years of tax returns, personal bank statements, etc. Like, the process is super invasive now when it used to be ulra easy not even 10 years ago, its frustrating. Shows the Jews are trying to close all the doors on trying to get people to grow their businesses

(post is archived)

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After the crash of 2008, it got really really hard to get a loan. The rules loosened a lot as time wore on, so what you're considering ultra-easy 10 years ago is still insane compared to 2004.

In 2004 I walked into my credit union and asked for a loan officer. Told him I needed 5000$ for some stuff around the house. It was a form consisting of the usual stats, and nothing more. No returns, no W2s, no nothing. 2007 I drove a new car off the lot with the promise of "Yeah, we called your credit union and they say it's processing, so no problem. We'll call you in a week." 2012? All kinds of questions about why, when, where, all kinds of financial background, etc. Crazy, took a month for a small home improvement loan.

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Just feels like Jews played the currency roulette, exploited these lenient laws to ther benefits, fucked everything up because they failed to pay, and now the comon pleb is the one stuck holding the bag. Loan rules for you, but not for the chosen parasites

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Yes, it's exactly that. The housing crash of 2008 was caused by joos leveraging recently-removed investment rules and getting burned when the bottom of the pyramid stopped paying (or never started.)

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Consider crypto loans.

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They fuck up the economy and we pay for it....

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You can get away from the banks entirely by building capital within a whole life insurance policy contract and then move the lending function away from the bank and into your own hands. Then that stream of interest payments would go to a company that you co-own rather than to the banking cartel.

I can tell you more about it if you are interested.

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Yeah that sounds super interesting actually

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There's a lot to it if you don't know how whole life insurance works, but basically you can buy a life insurance contract with monthly or annual premiums and the contract itself builds up a "cash surrender value", which is the amount of money the insurance company will give you if you decide you don't want your policy anymore. This cash value is contractually guaranteed to grow over time, and it grows exponentially faster the older you get (i.e., the closer to death you get). You have a contractual right to collateralize this cash value in the form of a policy loan, which the insurance company will make to you and cannot refuse to give it to you upon demand. You can use this money to finance anything you want, though of course it takes time to build up your cash value as you are starting your own "bank" from scratch.

Mutual life insurance companies that offer these policies also pay dividends to their policyholders each year. Those dividends also grow over time (they start off small and get larger each year). When you take these dividends and re-invest them into your policy, you buy more life insurance which increases your cash value and also the amount of dividends you will receive next year. Dividends are not guaranteed to be paid, and the rate at which they are paid is different each year, but many mutual life insurance companies have been around for over 100 years and have paid a dividend each and every year, even during war-time, the Great Depression, the stagflation of the 70s, etc. They are the most financially stable institutions on the planet, with the exception of the banking cartel that can print its own money, I guess.

That was a quick and dirty explanation and I could go on, but I don't want to belabor you with too much text at one time.

I would recommend picking up a copy of Nelson Nash's "Becoming Your Own Banker", which is only 92 pages with large text and several illustrations, so it is a quick read. Despite that, you will find that each time you read it, you learn something new. He despised the banking cartel (he called them the "snakes and dragons") and calling their counterfeiting "evil" (which it is).

I can explain more later if you have questions, but I have to run to an appointment right now.