Big Mike,
You say this could not be foreseen, but actually many did. My wife was a real estate agent for a short time a few years ago. I was one for a couple of years before Y2K when the computer consulting rates became so stupid high that I went back into it.
One of the main reasons my wife got out was when she saw lending institution increase the "percentage of income" for a house payment to 50%. There was no doubt in our minds that it would flood the market with buyers and drain rentals, for everyone KNOWS the american dream is to own your own home.
Meanwhile, my wife and I, after owning for 20 years, started renting and now pay approximately 1/3 what it would cost to own the home we occupy. And I can bicycle commute the 8.4 miles to my office in Bellevue.
We also knew that this would certainly result in increased foreclosures down the road and a lot of hurt people. Little could we imagine that this was just the beginning of the "creative" steps that would be taken to inflate a credit bubble that would eventually bring down the economy of the entire industrialized world - along with a lot of wanna-be nations.
Yeah, I'm speaking of the near future there.
I, and several others were saying, back in Spring of 2006, that it was "possible" that this thing could be as bad or worse than the great depression. We were, of course, villified. We didn't necessarily believe it ourselves, but we knew that it was, in fact, a real risk. Well, now a day does not seem to go by where some statistic is quoted as "worst since the great depression". It is not just a bunch of spinners saying this. It is simply true and should not be ignored.
We are living in interesting times, but they are gonna get "interestinger".