To: All
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2088389/posts I believe a former investigative reporter for Atlantas daily newspaper likely pitched the snowball that grew into the avalanche and buried our leading mortgage institutions. Bill Dedman in 1989 produced a series called The Color of Money that exposed the practice of redlining by banks that routinely declined risky home loans in low-income neighborhoods. Dedman wound up with a Pulitzer Prize and supporters for his cause within the federal bureaucracy. Sadly, most who initially benefited from his story have wound up with foreclosure notices. To understand what transpired following Dedmans series, everyone should read two important commentaries. One was published on Feb. 5 in the New York Post and the other on Sept. 15 in Investors Business Daily.
They reached similar conclusions: We are paying today for policies and practices born and pushed early in the Bill Clinton administration that forced lending institutions to make housing loans to otherwise unqualified buyers. ~snip~ (From the Arkansas-Democrat-Gazette)
11 posted on
09/23/2008 5:38:19 AM PDT by
SE Mom
(Proud mom of an Iraq war combat vet-McCain/Palin 08)
To: SE Mom
13 posted on
09/23/2008 5:40:15 AM PDT by
SE Mom
(Proud mom of an Iraq war combat vet-McCain/Palin 08)
To: SE Mom
They reached similar conclusions: We are paying today for policies and practices born and pushed early in the Bill Clinton administration that forced lending institutions to make housing loans to otherwise unqualified buyers. We are paying the price for the Clinton Admin in more ways than financially. If Clinton and his doves had every chance to really go after Bin-Laden's band of Islamo-Fascists while they were still just street punks. How a leftwing Democratic party still exists after the Carter and Clinton disasters truly confounds me.
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