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Pastimes : Laughter is the Best Medicine - Tell us a joke -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Barney who wrote (14702)5/24/2000 8:53:00 AM
From: John Carragher  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 62554
 
Hi Mr. & Mrs. Clinton. Please come in and sit down.

So you want to buy the old Rye Brook place for $ 2.2 million and with
the customary 20% down-that's $440,000, you would have a mortgage of $
1,700,000.
Now, let's have a look at your financial statements. Let's see, Mr.
Clinton, you are president of the United States, of course, and your
salary is $ 200,000 a year.
We recommend buying a house that costs no more than two and a half times
your annual salary. That means you should be looking for something
around $ 500,000, perhaps a nice brick rancher?
And I see here that you'll be out of a job in 8 months or so. What will
you do then? Open a library? In Little Rock? Arkansas? Wow. I bet
that'll be some kind of moneymaker.
Mrs. Clinton, you're running for Senate, right? Senators are paid
$130,000 a year-assuming of course, you are elected-so even with your
pension you're still looking at a house in the $825,000 range. Maybe a
nice center hall colonial.
Mrs. Clinton, you haven't worked outside the house since 1991? But you
did some volunteer work, I see. You tried to overhaul the entire
national health care system? I see. But no one was interested? But you
have other experience?
Yes, I see you had several business ventures back in Arkansas. How about
this Whitewater Development Corporation? It went bankrupt, huh? And
Madison Guaranty? Bankrupt too. And Castle Grande? Bankrupt also. You
actually did go to Yale you claim?
A little bad luck with the law, too, I see. Three of your business
partners went to jail.
This is embarrassing, I know, but we have to ask because it does affect
your ability to pay.
Any problems with your marriage? No. Fine.
Let's look at your assets:
You owe $4.5 million Mr. Clinton? How do you expect to pay that off?
You're hoping people will donate to a special fund?
So basically you're relying on the kindness of strangers. You also have
some serious expenses. A kid at Stanford has got to be setting you back
$30,000 to $35,000 a year, probably more with the air fares. And she
wants to go to medical school.
Any legal problems? I see a $90,000 fine for perjury. I guess that rules
out putting your law degree to work. Say, how do we know you're not
lying on your loan application? Of course, it would look a lot better if
you WERE lying.
Are there any other legal matters we should know about? Mrs. Clinton?
You don't think you will get hit with a perjury or obstruction of
justice rap. But we're not totally sure, are we?
That means there's a remote possibility-note that I said "remote"-that
you could be trying to pay off a $1.7 million mortgage while making 12
cents an hour stitching mail bags for the feds while Mr. Clinton is
trying to make a go of a library in Little Rock.
Well, let's review the situation. One of you is now unemployed and the
other soon will be. Your business partners are in jail.
You have debts equivalent to over 22 times your annual income that
you're hoping someone is going to come along and pay. And a looming
criminal indictment. It seems your tangible assets consist of an old
Ford car.

We'll give you a call.

First National Bank