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Originally posted by Iron7
Have you apologized for being white yet today?
Originally posted by Kastogere
Originally posted by Iron7
Have you apologized for being white yet today?
No, but the days not over yet.....Im sure there wil be at least one I'll have to apologize to. Standing in awe of the blackness...I am not worthy....then again Im not white either.....
honestly folks...consider that the whole senerio reeks of democrats, and it very well could be Clintons fault not Obamas. Although Obama most certainly carried it forward.
The banks are just greedy, they want money...doesnt matter how you come up with it...or if you even have it. As long as you can sign yer soul for a loan..there you go.
Originally posted by dawnstar
it's my understanding that it wasn't so much weather or not the person applying for the loan was credit worthy or not, it was more the location of the home they wished to buy. some areas are more prone to foreclosures as others. they have more foreclosures than normal. so the banks didn't want to give mortgages for those areas. and well, weather it was racist or just hard data, it was found to be affecting african americans looking for loans more than the white race.
so, those who are blaming the housing crisis on this one little aspect, got to ask you something here...
there are probably whole cities that have foreclosure ratings much higher than the rates that were causing the banks to decide not to lend in those areas back then!! maybe even you city!! do you believe it would be fair to automatically cut you off from a loan simply because you want to buy a home in your city???
Originally posted by Crakeur
Obama is many things but he did not cause the banking crisis.
The Buycks-Roberson lawsuit was just one small part of national campaign by progressives to force banks to increase their lending in poor African-Americans neighborhoods. Chicago was an early battleground in that campaign because it had an influential community of progressive lawyers, community organizers, developers and politicians working on housing issues.
This community had emerged from the urban wreckage caused by 1970s federal housing regulations, which rewarded real-estate “blockbusting” practices that encouraged white, affluent homeowners to sell their properties at a loss after poor people of color bought homes in middle-class neighborhoods.
Whenever poor buyers defaulted, average home prices declined — spurring additional purchases by low-income buyers.
Chicago activists believed more federal regulation would cure the blockbusting problem by boosting lending to African-Americans within so-called “redlines” drawn — often literally – on maps around poor African-American neighborhoods. A redlined city district was one where banks had made a categorical decision not to invest.