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<title>Debt Relief Programs</title>
<link>http://www.creditcarddebtdetective.com/debt-relief/debt-relief-programs/</link>
<description>Debt relief programs involve more complicated measures - and a tougher fight to survive - than you might think. Read on and learn what it's like in the trenches. </description>
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<pubDate>Sat, 26 Jul 2008 15:00:00 EDT</pubDate>
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	<title>Debt Relief Programs</title>
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My job is to help consumers with debt relief programs
What people don't realize about debt relief programs is that you don't just get the job done with one polite phone conversation. You need to pinpoint the source, find any possible moles, take out any opposition and above all else, watch your back. It's not an easy job, by any means, this debt relief. But it has to be done, and you have to be able to think on your feet. It's outside-the-box thinking and the fight for survival on the streets that defines my debt relief program business.

Sometimes you have to do what you have to do. This old cliche is tired and essentially pointless, but when it comes to making sure my debt help programs are successful, I can't let anything stand in the way. My name is Milton. Ed Milton. I'm a Credit Card Debt Detective. I make a living running debt relief programs for consumers who come to be for help. They want to be free of their nagging, excruciating debts, and I oblige. I make just over $50,000 a year. Considering my opponent, I earn every cent.

Debt relief programs and the problem of staying alive
Do what needs to be done and don't get killed. Those are the only two goals for a Detective in my line of work. Unfortunately, they often do not go hand in hand. When you start working on a debt help program, the big-time creditors don't take kindly to you. It's like fighting a highly-organized group with unlimited finances, who could make you disappear in a heartbeat. It seems like a lot to go through for simple debt relief programs for simple consumers sometimes, I will admit. But it has to be done.

I feel a calling to do this. It's not a religious sort of calling, just a sense that I have to do what's right. That's the reason I put it all on the line every day for my debt relief company, and more importantly for the consumers who depend on me. It is just not right, the things you see in this job. Creditors forcing ordinary people into debt through all sorts of tactics just so they can make money off interest is just unethical. Someone needs to take the side of the little man. 

It means putting myself in harm's way, but you know what? You only live once. You do not get a second crack at this thing called life. Some of us will leave this world knowing they have fought the good fight, while others simply try to exploit their fellow humans.  I'm Ed Milton, and I'm here to fight the good fight. That's what debt relief programs mean to me.
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	<pubDate>Sat, 26 Jul 2008 15:00:00 EDT</pubDate>
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