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As the housing market continues to sag and foreclosures increase, there has been a rush by politicians, most especially Democrats, to point fingers. Foremost among them has been Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-NY, who has fed into the "predatory lending" rhetoric emanating from Congress, as well as self-appointed black leaders like Jesse Jackson.
It makes it no less painful for a homeowner, even a recent one who was, in a sense, speculating on the market, to lose their home but for politicians to twist that outcome into the self-serving notion that insolvent borrowers are "victims" because they made and lost a large bet is not only wrong but hypocritical.
One of the major unheralded (at the time) initiatives of President Bill Clinton's first term was a significant increase in the homeownership rate, which measures the percentage of occupied housing units being occupied by the unit's owner.
In 1992, the homeownership rate stood at 64.1% according to the U.S. Census Bureau. By 2000, Clinton's last full year in office, the rate stood at 67.8% and peaked at 69% in 2004.
Many factors contributed to that increase but policies introduced by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the mid-19990 played a major role. Fannie and Freddie, the two government-sponsored entities (GSEs) authorized by Congress to make loan guarantees in order to make it easier for Americans to get mortgages, largely dictate the terms on which commercial lenders operate.
In response to political pressure at the time, the GSEs took steps to make homeownership more affordable for lower-income Americans and those with a poor credit history. Particular emphasis was placed on the needs of African-American borrowers as a way to address the effects of past "red-lining" – the practice of refusing mortgages in areas where blacks lived.
Red-lining denied millions of black families the opportunity to create wealth through home ownership, develop experience with managing credit and, most importantly, passing accumulated real estate wealth on to children, thereby giving them the funds needed to make down payments on their own homes.
The GSEs did three things: First, they created new ways for those with little or no credit history to qualify for "conforming" loans by presenting utility bills, a particular boon to many low-income African-American borrowers; second, they loosened restrictions on debt-to-equity ratios to decrease down payments from the traditional 20% to as little as five percent or even zero down; (3) sought to lower initial payments by encouraging commercial lenders to offer various forms of back-end loaded mortgages including floating rate loans with low-interest "teaser" rates.
The new policies worked and homeownership rates rose steadily, especially among African-Americans. Many first-time homeowners began accumulating equity in their home as housing prices soared. So long as housing prices rose, and equity-levels increased, all was well. Lenders were more than happy to take fees to flip borrowers from floating to fixed rate loans because they were no longer securing the loans against the borrowers credit history but rather the equity value of the house.
When home prices began to decline, home equity began to evaporate and, in some cases, disappear altogether. What happened next was entirely predictable ? a two-step price decline followed by a dramatic increase in foreclosures.
The first step was the normal cooling off of what had been an overheated housing market. The second step, currently underway, has been driven primarily by the inability of new homeowners to swap from floating to fixed rate loans as teaser rates expired and homes were, in many cases, worth less than the amount of the mortgage.
The response of politicians has been equally predictable. Rather than consider the role of Congress and the Executive Branch in encouraging lenders to extend credit to borrowers with little or no credit history to purchase homes with little or no money down at artificially low interest rates they've run to the nearest microphone to denounce predatory lenders."
Are there such lenders out there? Sure but history has always shown that any overheated market invariably brings out vultures looking to exploit inexperienced investors. The fact is, however, that people who invested in the real estate market with little of their own money were less "homeowners" and more "speculators" and when a financial bubble bursts speculators take the hit.
Likewise, history has shown that when politicians cause a mess like the so-called "mortgage crisis," they are the first to point the finger in any direction except their own.
Robert Cox is president of the Media Bloggers Association.



Comments from Examiner Readers
3:08 PM MST on Tue., Mar. 25, 2008 re: "Is the welcome mat really welcome?"
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Examiner Reader said:
Hey to all reactionary idiots: how about you move NORTH of the mexican border? You know, the one that runs through 2 california, along n mexico and arizona, and down throu east texas? and lets not forget the hispanic carribean nation on florida. how is it puerto rico is "u.s." but other central americans are "illegals"?
2 agree | 3 disagree
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dan of steele said:
So in simple terms, the republican stance is that telecoms are to be allowed to break the law without consequence and that the government should be allowed to continue to spy on us without a warrant. all the crap about terrorists is just smoke....right?
88 agree | 84 disagree
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lorin mccann said:
Wonder what happends when the computer goes down???
101 agree | 79 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Anyone who understands how government operates can foresee how REAL ID will be used against law-abiding citizens instead of terrorists. Recall that the Social Security Number was never intended to be used as an all-purpose identifier. The Federal income tax was originally going to apply only to the super-rich, and take less than 10 percent. Give government an inch and they take a mile. Ms. Scarborough has it exactly right. The government scares people and claims it needs this new infringement on privacy to fight the trrists, but eventually the REAL ID will be used to, as she says, "ground" adults over child support or library fines. That sounds like Orwellian hell to me. Did we really fight a World War against the Nazis, and a Cold War against the Soviets, only to adopt the kind of police-state people control mechanism that made us hate and fear totalitarian societies? Frankly, that scares me a lot more than the slim possibility of terrorism.
106 agree | 71 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
I totally agree with this article. History keeps repeating itself. Having to show papers or be tracked is against everything America stands for - individual rights and liberties.
102 agree | 65 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
With IHS (Intelligent Highway System) your current RFID drivers license and RFID inspection stickers are read as you drive down the highways. Watch for two hexagons cut into each line like at stop lights and a metal box usually on a pole at the side of the road. They have fiber, telephone and radio relay of data.
106 agree | 74 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
I totally agree with this article...I'm glad to see this info. being disseminated in mainstream venues. As for "tired's" rant, this law should be examined in a historical context and to minimize the similarities that exist between the beginnings of Nazi Germany and what is going on now is naive at best, fascist propaganda at worst.
93 agree | 85 disagree
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USN said:
Welcome to Amerika?? That's about as far as I got with your article. It’s childish and it’s usually leftists who do this.
97 agree | 107 disagree
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TERRY AGHEE said:
And tell us Melanie, just how are you going to keep our children and our grandkids safe? What exactly is your plan? You see to think that there is absolutely no difficulty with terrorists anymore - does that mean that you will just forget about illegal aliens and armed therrorists? Will you sleep well now?
95 agree | 77 disagree
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Tired of all the ACLU lies about REAL ID said:
Your columnist either hasn't done her homework (read the final Rule or the Driver Privacy Protection Act--fed. law) or she's bought into that bunch of lies being circulated by the ACLU. REAL ID will require background checks on all DMV employees-getting rid of the bad apples up front will increase privacy protections, not decrease them.And as for the info. encoded on the mag stripe/barcode--check your facts,MD and a lot of other states do that already.The info is the same as on the face of the DL-its a security feature against tampering.It's no diff. than copying the info off the front of a DL-same info. Anyone who has a commercial DL knows the DMV already checks to see if you have a CDL in any other state. It's a pointer system--what REAL ID will have--not an open database. REAL ID is far from perfect but it's not the privacy monster the ACLU wants us to believe.Oh, & fed. law lets states suspend DLs of deadbeats who don't pay child support. Do you have a problem w/that too, Mel
102 agree | 89 disagree
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David of NM said:
What a great article. It is somewhat encouraging to me that more people seem to be getting wise to the dangerous REAL ID Act. The writer wrote mostly about privacy,security and expansion concerns and not so much about cost concerns. The real problems with REAL ID are not cost related. I keep writing my representatives, asking for repeal, but I get a canned Republican National Committee instead. The Republicans are largely the drivers of REAL ID. Rep. Sensenbrenner R-WI seized on the 9/11 Commission report that called for more secure licenses. He authored the abomination called the REAL ID Act of 2005 so he could come out of obscurity and be a legislative superstar. Today, Sensenbrenner refers to REAL ID as "his baby". DIGIMARC Corp. of Oregon has contributed much money to be used for grants to States for the purpose of softening opposition to REAL ID. DIGIMARC, a worldwide company selling National ID card making equipment and related services stands to make millions off REAL ID
115 agree | 79 disagree
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an irate citizen because of an irate citizen said:
Yeah this country was founded by immigrants, and the only reason why there is such an outcry to stop it, is because now we're getting the kind we don't want. The kind with brown skin. Stolen social security benefits? I don't think so. If an immigrant used a stolen social security number to get a job, they're paying taxes too and rarely if ever redeem benefits for fear of getting caught. Cockroaches (usually a racial slur),shoot to kill? Wow,let me know how the next klan meeting goes.
187 agree | 177 disagree
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reader said:
"even the best national policies won't work if local governments undermine them. And for years, some governments have been doing all they could to thwart federal immigration policy." - No duh...
179 agree | 210 disagree
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An Irate Citizen said:
This Country was started by immigrants from the United Kingdom and Europe and has subsequently always welcomed legal immigration. However, in our recent history we have been beseiged by people who simply crawl over our borders like cockroaches. These borders should be patrolled by soldiers who have the authority to shoot to kill anyone who tries to enter the country illegally. Also those who are here and who are not here legally should be rounded up and immediately deported. No "ifs, ands or buts" about it. Amongst other things, the illegals are stealing our social security benefits and ruining our health care system. It can not continue. I plead with all of you to contact your representatives in Congress and any presidential candidate you're supporting and tell them you want action and that you want action now. Please do this today if you love your family and you love your country.
209 agree | 223 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
When Spitzer was AG of New York he carefully target his prosecutions of Wall Street and the Insurance industry. Those not targeted soon got the message that they were to pay up campaign contributions or else. Spitzer ran the New York AG's office like a gangster and it seems he runs the governor's office like a gangster too.
271 agree | 285 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
FWIW, the Neighborhood Preservation PAF is the rent stabilized apartment owners PAC many of whom *hate* Spitzer.
265 agree | 273 disagree
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