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NAR - the Ultimate Wolf in Sheeps Clothing

NAR - the Ultimate Wolf in Sheeps Clothing
Time to Hold NAR Accountable
to Those Code of Ethics
that are Simply Gibberish
they make Newbies Swear to
But have No Intention
or System in Place to
Make this REALLY Happen.

Time For the Truth About
the National Association of Realtors.

the National Association of Realtors is a Hoax.

NAR is NOT of a "Higher Standard" as they Claim to Be.

NAR does not Provide Consumer Protection in ANY way.

The National Association of Realtors NEEDS

you to REALLY buy into the Illusion that they
are the "Voice of Real Estate"
that way you will Simply not know that you can use
a Real Estate Broker that is NOT Part of the
Real Estate Cartel known as
National Association of Realtors.

And You Believe that an NAR Member Offers you
More Protection in your Real Estate Transaction
When In Fact that is a Flat Out Lie.

NAR is so Engrained in your Life that ALL of you Use
the Word "Realtor" for the WordS "Real Estate Agent"
though NAR tells me that is Illegal. Law Books Do it, you Do it
But NAR wants to STOP me from Doing it.

The National Association of Realtors
Violates Anti-Trust Laws, Violates Mortgage Laws,
Violates RESPA Laws, they pay Attorneys to
Advise members at the State Association Level
that is Information Biased on What NAR Needs
to be the Course of Action, to Keep NAR in Business.

Even to the Point of Convincing Members they
are doing something Illegal when they try and
benefit the Real Estate Consumer.

NAR Pushes State Real Estate Governing Agencies
to Make E and O insurance Mandated -
when in FACT this E and O insurance is What Enables
the Realtor to Legally Committ Fraud and
there is nothing you Can do unless you have
BIG Money and a WHOLE lot of Years to Fight.

The National Association of Realtor IS NOT the
Voice Of Real Estate. NO WAY.


From: NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS

To: All REALTORS®
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From: Charles McMillan, 2009 NAR President

Re: NAR meets with government and industry leaders to address critical issues.


Date: Friday, March 20, 2009, 8:02 AM

Dear Fellow REALTOR®,

I have spent the past week in Washington, D.C., in some of the most important meetings to date with top government and industry leaders.

In a special audio edition of my President’s Podcast, I provide details on how NAR is addressing the proposed limitations on the mortgage interest deduction, problems with short sales and REO sales, and the Federal Reserve’s latest announcement that it will purchase more agency mortgage-backed securities.

Please take just a few minutes to listen to the podcast, and forward the link to your colleagues.
http://go-to.realtor.org/r/BM1OAE/ZG8NB/S331J0/HRUBV/LN926/FW/h
Rest assured that NAR continues to work harder than ever, both in the public arena and behind the scenes in Washington, D.C., to stabilize the housing market and address legislative and regulatory issues that impact you.

I will continue to provide you with regular updates on our progress. In the meantime, please visit the Government Affairs page on Realtor.org for more details on our efforts and check the President’s Report for additional updates from your 2009 Leadership Team.

Sincerely,
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Charles McMillan, CIPS, GRI2009 NAR President
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This is a Load of Bull, NAR should Not have this kind of power. Get NAR out of the "behind the scenes at Washington D.C." - they are hurting you more then you may know. Realtors are in a Big Part to Blame for the Housing Crisis but they get a voice on fixing it... Nonsense.
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Remember Charles is so clueless about Internet marketing which is what is best for the consumer, that he does none even own his own dotcom, must not be much or a requirement to be an NAR president, I guess just a warm body.
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On the Side of the Realtor, NAR Member - You Lose

The National Association of Realtors will stop at nothing to make sure that you have to use a member of the National Association of Realtor, hence a “Realtor” in your real estate transaction.

Realtors Lobby in Washington D.C. constantly to keep you down, to make sure they are needed and to ensure that laws are passed that “are in your best interest” only these laws are directly against the real estate consumer for the benefit of the Realtor. They push for laws to make sure they keep their hands in your real estate transaction. They control your data, your sale, have their hands in your mortgage laws and more.

If Realtors, Even Real Estate Agents want to cut real estate costs and to use the power of the Internet to market and sell real estate in a way that makes it cheaper and safer for you, the National Association of Realtors will squeeze them out. Those giving you better service for cheaper money online, and emailing often to keep you involved - the State Boards want them to go away. The Realtors, convince these boards that it is your best interest or force them to change the State Laws by pressure, money and political power.

The National Association of Realtors has convinced the State Lawmakers to make your “Real Estate Brokerage” have an office to be ready to write a contract. With the Internet this is ridiculous but State Law makers such as a letter I just got from the Idaho Real Estate Commission, they are making it Mandatory to be Available in person, ridiculous when the buyers are on the Internet.

But it is simply a way to keep the Big Boys, the Franchise and the National Association of Realtors in business a bit longer until the Real Estate Consumer wakes up and realizes that they have once again been duped.

I Don’t understand how the National Association of Realtors can convince lawmaker to make laws that are no where near “legal” or based on your constitutional rights, but oh well the National Association of Realtors owns your real estate transaction and as long as you use a Realtor, you keep them in business. This stuff affects you and you are left way out of the loop.

Using your State and Federal Laws against you is a favored past time of the National Association of Realtors and they are just getting started on the biggest battle in all this. So you will see new laws and real estate licensing mandates pop up left and right in hope to stop Real Estate Agents like me who charge $50 a year for you to market yourself vs. those National Association of Realtors Offices in your town which charge 6 or 8 percents, treat you badly, have forms for you to sign that protect them and not you and have insurance to protect them from you - even if they lie outright.

What is the definition of being “available” well 24 - 7 on the Internet is not what they have in mind. They want your real estate agent ready to receive and write contracts at any time. This is in no way best for the real estate consumer, they Real Estate Commission, say in Idaho, pretends it is best for buyers and sellers if we have full time staff, but in the world of the Internet it is not best. It costs you more.

You Deserve Better then you are getting. Let you State Real Estate Commission, Board of Realty Regulations or whatever they call the governing body in your state that you won’t stand for this anymore. The National Association of Realtors pushes lawmakers, they have lots of money and they do not information the public or give you a right to choose, and your State and Federal Lawmakers do what Realtors want.
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They do this either to Shut them up or if the National Association of Realtors has actually convinced them that is in the consumers best interest. I have read documents, some are posted at www.SavvyBroker.com that show where E and O Insurance Companies and the National Association of Realtors convince State Boards to make E and O insurance Mandatory, they Flat Out lie at these meetings with states like E and O insurance is, in part to protect the consumer and in part to protect the “Realtor” from “frivolous lawsuits”.
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I have experience with the kind of “frivolous lawsuits” Realtors are protected from and this means that if you lose your home, life savings or have serious issues with your property that they sold you, oh well, they can legally lie and the E and O insurance will protect them.
Even though they pretend to be for consumers as well when at your State Realty Board Meetings, they email me a Broker Owner and Tell me that my E and O insurance is “not intended” to protect my clients.

NAR is gearing up to make sure that you have to use them… they will get laws changed, control your state and federal real estate governing bodies and will be all about creating Revenue for Realtors and not about Protecting you At All as a Real Estate Consumer.

They say that being a NAR member is not mandatory, but they block non-members at every turn in the road. Forms yes, MLS, but also the bigger issues. They want the Dept. of Justice to think that Real Estate Agents can do business without being a Realtor and that we choose to be a NAR member because it is of a higher standard, but this is in No Way True, we have few choices left even as a Broker Owner. And the National Association of Realtors owns and controls your State Real Estate Regulators... You Lose.
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Also ref. a New Idaho Law, More on that Later, where I have to be "Available" for contract writing, not here online but all staffed up, have an Idaho storefront and the whole deal, this is true in Washington as well and is a way to squeeze out the Online Brokerage that are working harder and smarter for you, keeping you more informed, giving you cash back and well treating you with the dignity and respect you deserve.
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Realtor Trademark Violation

Is it a Trademark Violation for ColdwellBanker.com , Foreclosure.com, Century21.com and more to bid in adsense for the term "Realtor" - it should be.

More on Trademark Issues and NAR's Double Standards at

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Getting Away With (Practically) Murder-Garyl Hester CodeFool.org

"What is being lost in all the noise surrounding the mortgage bust are the parties that I believe are truly responsible for the whole thing: real estate agents (Realtor.)

I make no bones about it, I have hired five realtors in my life and will never again, mostly because in my experience they did two - and only two - things:
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1) They listed my house in the MLS database, and
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2) Showed up at closing to collect their check.

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The MLS (Multiple Listing Service) is the national database used by all realtors to list properties for sale and to find properties to buy. When you sell your house the realtor you hire puts your house on the MLS and then another realtor hired by a buyer finds the listing and then shows your house to the buyer.
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If the buyer buys your house, the two realtors split a 6% (nominal) commission based on the selling price of your house. So, in effect, the only function the realtor serves is to put your house in the MLS and then sit back and wait for it to sell. Now, I am oversimplifying the situation a bit - there are good, very hard working realtors that actually earn their commissions.
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In my experience, however, I have a 100% hit rate on a sample size of 5, and this suggests that the overwhelming number of realtors falls into the class of “get-rich-quick-lazy-ass.”
rThis justifies my placing realtors as a whole into the sub-genus of homo sapiens that falls just below lawyers on the list of complete wastes of skin. In fact, they are a blight on humanity - producing nothing yet sculpting the legal system so that they are covered regardless.
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And, as I shall discuss, are the hit-and-run con artists of the information age, and, frankly, need to go away.
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To begin, let’s go over a “common” real estate transaction. The core of the transaction is the transfer of title. In essence, the buyer is buying the title to the property owned by the seller. The title is a document that says who owns the real property.
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Contrary to common belief, the property is the land that the house sits on (the “real” estate) and not the house, which is actually listed as an “improvement” on the land and arguably is temporary, especially in the light of Hurricane Katrina.
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What the buyer is most interested in is receiving a “clear” title. This means that not only does the seller own the property, but has a legal right to sell it, and there are no liens (bank, tax, government, etc.) or other claims to the land (muddy or disputed inheritance, Native American burial grounds, or what have you.)
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The whole purpose of the Title Company is to insure that the title is clear, and so if Sitting Bull shows up at your doorstep one day saying that you are squatting on his land, and you end up leaving or paying a penalty, then the Title Company is on the hook because today - at closing - they are guaranteeing that the title is “clear.”
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You, as the buyer, are paying for that title insurance, but it’s a small price to pay in consideration of what you’re insuring.
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Typically there are five parties to the real estate transaction: The buyer, the seller, the title company, the seller’s realtor and the buyer’s realtor. The title company is impartial - it does not care what the property is selling for, or even if it’s worth what is being paid, they are only there to guarantee clear title and the facilitate the transaction.

Of the remaining four parties - and this is the kicker - three of them have a vested interest in seeing to it that the buyer pays the absolute highest price possible for that property.
Read that last sentence again.
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In other words, 75% of the people involved want the buyer to get screwed. The seller wants the most he can get for his property, certainly. The realtors each receive a percentage of the selling price as a commission. So, when the buyer hires a realtor they cannot expect them to ever say the words “You’re paying too much for this house.”
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Realtors will say they have “experience” and will “guide you through” etc. etc.
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This is in the same meaning as the butcher having experience slaughtering lambs, and guiding the lambs down the primrose path to said slaughter.
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So, let’s examine this fact in light of the current mortgage mess. The basis of it all is that people paid too much for their houses. Period. And did any of those realtors who “guided” those buyers into those transactions ever suggest that they were paying too much?
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Not bloody likely. It’s about as likely as any one of us putting super unleaded into a rental car. So, sure, pay twice what the house is worth or ever will be worth - I’ll take my 6% and go home, and when the world comes crashing down around your ears - I’ll be just fine.
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And I think that’s the crux of this whole mess. The people who caused it - through greed or ignorance - and probably both - have made their money and walked away, leaving the rest of us to clean up - with our tax dollars.
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So, where is Obama with his almighty “accountability” banner? Saying “watch my hand” while he lets the real perpetrators of this mess get off scott-free.
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The fix? As usual it’s obvious but will never be implemented:
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1. Hold realtors accountable. If a “client” ends up in a bad transaction, the realtor should be culpable or at least actionable. Also, every person that is in default on their mortgages now should be given the right to sue their realtor for malfeasance.
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2. Cap real estate prices at 150% of their average assessed values over the prior five years. It’s amazing how home owners will fight to the death to keep their assessed values as low as possible while hyping up the selling price.
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If you insist that your house isn’t worth as much as the market says it is, then the market should adjust its numbers, no?"


Written by Garyl Hester of
www.CodeFool.org
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Link to Original Post
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Note From Crystal: Real Estate Consumers
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It really is time to wake up, the Realtors and the Mortgage Brokers
are cozy-ing up with the "New Administration" to help you.
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This is NOT true, what they want is sales and commission
and Lots of them, at Your Expense.
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When the Money Flood Gates open again Realtors and Mortgage Brokers will be right there to push you into bad real estate transaction whereby they truly have no liability if you lose everything.
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You have to Be in the Know and to Watch Your Own Back.
There is No Insurance, no Title Company, no Real Estate Attorney
that can protect you from lack of knowledge and trusting
a Realtor to Know What is Best for Your Family, Your Future.
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There truly is no Consumer Protection in Real Estate
and No Accountability. Realtors, NAR members are not
of a "Higher Standard" and Realtor Ethics is
the Number One Oxymoron in Business.
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Real Estate Whistleblower

Consumer Advocate in Real Estate

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