What "true information"? If they didn't know that prices would fall then that's their fault, just like when banks went belly up that was their fault; again, where's personal responsibility?
Yes, banks are destroying the savers alright & you want savers to be destroyed even more by the borrowers as well???

Again, had borrowers acted responsibly & not borrowed so much, banks wouldn't have lent so much so borrowers are hardly the "victims", nobody forced them to take loans, they did it of their own volition; it's the savers who are the victims!
You're the one who wants to continue the failed system of excessive lending & borrowing, I believe people should learn their lessons from this episode & learn to LIVE WITHIN THEIR MEANS!
This mentality of borrowing at the expense of future is what's detrimental to the society & the state of the government & debt only reflects the mentality of the society, government afterall is that which the people are willing to put up with & pardoning the debt will only re-inforce such bad mentality & people won't learn personal responsibility at all
Because that's EXACTLY what you're asking for! Those houses didn't fall from the sky, they were made from the capital & purchasing-power of the savers!
Again, you don't seem to grasp the distant interconnectedness of the economic web! Whether there's honest money or dishonest money, borrowers are always borrowing purchasing-power from savers so it's their responsibility to produce that many goods/services & repay because that way they return the purchasing-power back to the system
Again, every time you borrow, irrespective of the money-system, you're taking purchasing-power from savers, if you don't repay then it costs the savers by way of fewer goods/services, higher prices & lower living-standards while you've gotten stuff at their expense, free or at below market price; banks only get the tiny portion of what you pay them back, most goes back to the savers as increased purchasing-power by reducing the moneysupply which you'd increased when you'd borrowed
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