The number of foreclosures and people with debt up to their ears are so large in USA that it is a national problem. Someway and somehow they have to be helped out.
Norwegian law is very clear on this matter; it's the bank's responsibility. They are the professionals that shall evaluate how realistic it is that certain creditors to have finances strong enough to carry a certain debt burden. If they havn't done this job thoroughly the deal is illegal. And it is the bank's and it's shareholders responsibility.
'To indept people' is a smart new (well, old actually) way of enslavement. Look up the 'emerging economies' - like China, Thailand, India etc., and you will find an 'inferno of debt' to ordinary people indebted to banks in hair-raising deals which would be obviously illegal in a civilized country (excuse my expression, 'financial civilization', at least)
Sub prime loans has been big business in USA. The financial world of USA has prospered enormously from this trade, selling 'packages' of these loans on to banks all over the world. It has now come to that banks elsewhere won't take more 'american papers' and the dollar has halved is value in three years and a M8 cost the double of what it normally should. - So, you ordinary americans should have already picked up the bill. At least a part of it.
While millions of US households are struggling with unmanagable mortgage payments, falling house values, Wall Street excecutives are awarding themselves record high bonuses for 2007. Here you find the guys who should really take the responsibility for the deep trouble of these house owners - and the whole of USA, eventually. But that will never happen, it seems to. Because they are politically protected by two political parties that both seems unwilling to send the bill to one of their best beneficiaries of political finance contribution.
It is not small potatoes these excecutives are raking in. Only the four largest investment firms on Wall Street, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers and Bear Sterns have payed out nearly 30 billion US $ to their excecutives (a few hundred people). 30 billion dollars! That is six times the norwegian defense budget. Including all the investment firms on Wall Street and the bonuses is at least up 14% since 2006 and ends at 50 billion dollars. (Compare this to: The entire budget for The City of New York with 250.000 employees are some 57 billion dollars).
That's the sort of pay a few people get to put a whole nation into economical jeopardy. How they can be brought to, at least, contribute to picking up the bill should have been an issue in the forecoming presidential election, but it isn't.