Take This Job and Shove It
Take this job and shove it was the title of an unhappy workers anthem. Nowadays when someone is singing “I ain’t working here no more” it’s because they’re sipping a drink in a karaoke bar or they just got laid off.
We have never lived in a time when we have heard so many people say they are just grateful to have job. These are the days when Johnny is happy to have a paycheck.
An average of six applications for every job and about one-third of the 15 million unemployed have been jobless for over 6 months. How many Sandpoint foreclosures were due to unemployment instead of a sub prime loan?
How many Sandpoint foreclosures were due to an expensive medical catastrophe?
How many bread winners got behind on their mortgage payments and ended up with their address on the Sandpoint foreclosures list because they were cut back, laid off, or terminated?
The jobless percentage in America is 9.7% and headed for 10 percent. Why is there a delay in DC to extend unemployment benefits?
The folks touting the “road to recovery” fail to point out that the Beatles might have sang about it under a more appropriate name: “The Long and Winding Road”.
If you have gone from a Notice of Default to the Sandpoint foreclosures list then you know that there is a time to let go. Many people have walked away from their foreclosures across the country. There’s also a time to fight.
Others have tried loan modification and failed. Some folks achieved a lower mortgage payment and are still in trouble.
Sandpoint foreclosures are being held by a variety of out of town note holders.
The best way to battle back is to arm yourself with all facts associated with this challenging subject. Gather the facts as they pertain to your situation and fight foreclosure.
Tags: cut back, jobless, laid off, terminated







