October 09, 2008

How Obama Helped Create the Mortgage Crisis.

Pretty directly, in fact.

Barack H. Obama is running around telling everyone that the housing mortgage market collapsed primarily because of some vaguely described "deregulation" that took place sometime under George Bush--or maybe under Clinton; I'm not clear on that. I'm not sure he is.

Whatever his claim is, it's a lie.

The reality is that the housing market collapsed in large part because a coalition of race-baiting bullies brought very heavy pressure to bear on the banks to make more subprime loans on properties in low-income communities. Those who didn't approve the risky subprime loans were accused of "redlining"--i.e., refusing to make loans on properties in those neighborhoods.

Who were these bullies?

Some of the bullies were out in Washington pounding the tables and screaming at bank executives about "redlining".

At the same time, other bullies were stalking big city courthouses, filing frivolous and extortinate lawsuits against banks based on novel "disparate impact" theories of what might be held to constitute "redlining." In other words, even banks which [sic] were making lots of loans in low-income communities were being sued if they weren't approving just as many loans in low-income communities as they were in high-income communities.

Who were these mortgage extortionists?

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Yes, that "Barack H. Obama."

. . . . . . . . . . .

[H]ere's the thing: according to Obama's legal team, FIFTY-EIGHT PERCENT of a certain class of loan applicants living in 80%+ minority neighborhoods were approved for a loan. Far from being automatically denied, most of these applicants were approved. Also according to Obama's team, EIGHTY-ONE PERCENT of similar loan applicants living in 90%+ "white" (defined as European and Asian) neighborhoods were approved--and this is the source of the theory of harm put forth by the legal team.

Under the theory put forward, it wasn't enough, apparently, that most of the identified mortgage applicants in the minority neighborhoods were approved. The theory demanded parity in the statistics, despite the fact that properties in very different neighborhoods necessarily present very different risk situations. In other words, the lawyers sued Citibank because Citibank was, on balance, somewhat more likely to approve a loan for a property in a predominantly white neighborhood than on one in a predominantly black neighborhood. Given that predominantly black neighborhoods tend to be low-income neighborhoods characterized by low property values, was this phenomenon evidence of evil racism or just reasonable risk avoidance? I'll leave that to your judgment.


Yeah, it's one of Ragnar's entries. Read the whole thing anyway; he's right about this. It was exactly this type of legal pressure on mortgage companies that led to the economic challenges we're coping with right now.

Posted by: Attila Girl at 11:10 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
Post contains 479 words, total size 3 kb.

1 There is a lot more. Democrats are hoping to consolidate their power absolutely to head off any official inquiries--the types with jail sentences attached. Let's see if the public gets duped by the phony polls to give them the get out of jail card they need. There is a trail now. But you have seen how quickly electronic footprints disappear. Ask Democrats--or both parties--to disclose their positions in the stock market from Oct. 2007 to Oct. 2008. They can do it by percentages of net worth, or any other similar method which would not give away any personal secrets. The Democrats have been in power for almost two years now. Ask them to tell you which bills they presented that would have headed off this crisis. Did it get voted down? Fine. That will help their case. But you will find they did nothing with their majorities. They only opposed Bush's plans. What plans do they have for the future? More taxes? Will that help? More programs? Will that help? If they did plan to take down the economy as their October surprise, my guess is that they themselves have gotten out of the market with their money. Your money? That's the price of change.

Posted by: Darrell at October 10, 2008 12:46 AM (gjY1a)

Hide Comments | Add Comment

Comments are disabled. Post is locked.
25kb generated in CPU 0.0711, elapsed 0.1925 seconds.
208 queries taking 0.1728 seconds, 427 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.