The world must be ending, because I keep agreeing with Glynor.
IMO, this is the high and low irony of it all: If mortgage defaults are the root problem, buy up all the empty homes and let unemployed bankers live in them. As most know, there is a scarcity value to real estate, which worthless pieces of paper just don't have. Yet the discussion has always centered on buying up worthless pieces of paper, the only questions have been how much and what kind.
I can't help thinking of Roger Smith restructuring GM to compete with Toyota, etc. He spent more to close plants than it would have cost to buy Toyota outright. He got rid of a lot of wasted capacity, but did nothing to prepare GM to compete.
Now that we're faced with a housing freefall, don't forget that housing has yet to fall as far or as fast as it rose--and nobody complained on the way up. Well, spending $700 billion anywhere, even on "good" policy, means that there's $1400 billion less to drive housing prices back up where everybody (who already owns a house) wants them.
Funny, in all this discussion, nobody seems to mind that health care, college aid, new home buyer aid, etc, etc, etc, will all be drained to pay for this.