Showing posts with label ACORN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ACORN. Show all posts

Monday, September 10, 2012

Charles Koch On Crony Capitalism

Charles Koch, a man for whom the mere mention of his name sends lefties into an immediate "two minutes of hate," has taken to the WSJ to criticize "crony capitalism" as being practiced in Washington today (and for the past two centuries, but it is getting worse under Obama.) It is an excellent essay, which you can find in toto here. Some of the highlights:

"We didn't build this business—somebody else did."

So reads a sign outside a small roadside craft store in Utah. The message is clearly tongue-in-cheek. But if it hung next to the corporate offices of some of our nation's big financial institutions or auto makers, there would be no irony in the message at all.

. . . Businesses have failed to make the case that government policy—not business greed—has caused many of our current problems. To understand the dreadful condition of our economy, look no further than mandates such as the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac "affordable housing" quotas, directives such as the Community Reinvestment Act, and the Federal Reserve's artificial, below-market interest-rate policy.

Far too many businesses have been all too eager to lobby for maintaining and increasing subsidies and mandates paid by taxpayers and consumers. This growing partnership between business and government is a destructive force, undermining not just our economy and our political system, but the very foundations of our culture.

. . . The role of business is to provide products and services that make people's lives better—while using fewer resources—and to act lawfully and with integrity. Businesses that do this through voluntary exchanges not only benefit through increased profits, they bring better and more competitively priced goods and services to market. This creates a win-win situation for customers and companies alike.

. . . So why isn't economic freedom the "default setting" for our economy? What upsets this productive state of affairs? Trouble begins whenever businesses take their eyes off the needs and wants of consumers—and instead cast longing glances on government and the favors it can bestow. When currying favor with Washington is seen as a much easier way to make money, businesses inevitably begin to compete with rivals in securing government largess, rather than in winning customers.

We have a term for this kind of collusion between business and government. It used to be known as rent-seeking. Now we call it cronyism. Rampant cronyism threatens the economic foundations that have made this the most prosperous country in the world.

We are on dangerous terrain when government picks winners and losers in the economy by subsidizing favored products and industries. There are now businesses and entire industries that exist solely as a result of federal patronage. Profiting from government instead of earning profits in the economy, such businesses can continue to succeed even if they are squandering resources and making products that people wouldn't ordinarily buy.

Because they have the advantage of an uneven playing field, crony businesses can drive their legitimate competitors out of business. But in the longer run, they are unsustainable and unable to compete internationally (unless, of course, the government handouts are big enough). At least the Solyndra boondoggle ended when it went out of business.

By subsidizing and mandating politically favored products in the energy sector (solar, wind and biofuels, some of which benefit Koch Industries), the government is pushing up energy prices for all of us—five times as much in the case of wind-generated electricity. And by putting resources to less-efficient use, cronyism actually kills jobs rather than creating them. Put simply, cronyism is remaking American business to be more like government. It is taking our most productive sectors and making them some of our least.

The effects on government are equally distorting—and corrupting. Instead of protecting our liberty and property, government officials are determining where to send resources based on the political influence of their cronies. In the process, government gains even more power and the ranks of bureaucrats continue to swell.

Subsidies and mandates are just two of the privileges that government can bestow on politically connected friends. Others include grants, loans, tax credits, favorable regulations, bailouts, loan guarantees, targeted tax breaks and no-bid contracts. Government can also grant monopoly status, barriers to entry and protection from foreign competition.

. . . To end cronyism we must end government's ability to dole out favors and rig the market. Far too many well-connected businesses are feeding at the federal trough. By addressing corporate welfare as well as other forms of welfare, we would add a whole new level of understanding to the notion of entitlement reform.

If America re-establishes the proper role of business in society, all kinds of benefits will accrue. Our economy will rebound. Our liberties will be restored. And when President Obama tells an entrepreneur "You didn't build that," everyone will know better.

I couldn't agree more with Koch, but feeding at the government tit is not just a problem with businesses. It is likewise a problem with left wing organizations that are funded by our tax dollars. ACORN was the tip of the iceberg. There are its many clones, and others, such as Planned Parenthood, that are part of a massive web of radical left wing groups that the left has fed with our tax dollars over the past decades. Indeed, part of the Dodd-Frank law provides for the government to fund private organizations that will provide "counciling" for seniors and minorities on various financial matters. It could be called the ACORN Full Employment Act. But just as crony capitalism needs to end, so must this wholly corrupt method by which the far left raids our national purse.







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Wednesday, February 1, 2012

From Our Pockets To Far Left Activist Groups - Democrat Corruption At Work

That stench of corruption you smell is most likely the odor emanating from Obama Administration and Attorney General Eric Holder's Office. At least a portion of what you are smelling is how the Democrats are funneling tax dollars and bank fines to far left community activist organizations - for these organization to then in turn use in support of Democrats. It is as corrupt a practice as you will find in any banana republic.

It works like this. Democrats pass a law, take Dodd Frank for example, which could also reasonably be called the ACORN Full Employment Act. In it, the Democrats specify that a portion of our tax dollars are to be used to fund local organizations, ostensibly to conduct education and counseling of minorities or the elderly on financial matters. The government than enters into a multi-year contract with one of the many far left activist organizations for millions of dollars. A variety of far left organizations wholly survive on our tax dollars through this scam, the most infamous being, until their recent dissolution, ACORN.  It is completely legal.  It is utterly corrupt.  And because of contractual obligations, the Democrats are able to keep this scam going even during periods of Republican control of Congress.

But that is not the only method by which Democrats funnel millions in funds to partisan left wing groups. A variant on the above theme is for the Justice Department to direct that banks owing fines for "race discrimination" have to pay a portion of the fines directly to whatever private radical left organization the Justice Department directs. This too is ostensibly justified on the grounds of educating minorities.  The difference here, as the IBD article below makes clear, is that the left are on far shakier legal grounds when going this route.

Just as an aside, these shakedowns of banks for "racism" in lending practices are precisely what led to our economic meltdown in 2008 by destroying credit standards. Invariably in these cases, no single act of racial discrimination is ever proven to have occurred. Rather a bank is held liable if its lending practices show a disparate impact on minorities. That means that statistically, a bank did not make enough loans to minorities - irrespective of how colorblind the bank's lending standards are, irrespective of its outreach to minorities, and indeed, irrespective of whether it statistically rejected more applications from whites than minorities. It is a travesty. This use of disparate impact theory was held, for all intents and purposes, unlawful by the Supreme Court in the employment context in the pivotal 2010 Ricci v. Destafano case. It should be unlawful in all contexts. There is no place for racism in our society, but the disparate impact theory doesn't punish racism, it punishes institutions for results wholly irrespective of actual racism and thus it deeply distorts our economy.

At any rate, back to the topic at hand. It is the Justice Department funneling fines to left wing organizations that is rearing its ugly head today. This from IBD:

Last week, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith fired off a three-page letter to Attorney General Eric Holder warning that his recent punishment of Bank of America's mortgage unit seemed political. In fact, he may have abused his power.

As IBD first reported Jan. 4, 'BofA Must Pay Excess Settlement Funds To Acorn Clones," the $335 million lending-bias deal requires BofA to fork over a chunk of the payout to leftist groups not connected to the suit.

The unusual term is part of a secret Justice program to redistribute millions in settlement cash to third parties instead of alleged victims.

Critics told IBD it's a "political backdoor" to subsidize Democrat-tied bank shakedown groups. . . .

Under the order, excess funds will be handed to groups that "provide education, counseling and other assistance to low-income and minority borrowers."

The corrupt group, [ACORN,] which has re-emerged under other names after coming under investigation in 2009, continues to receive federal funds. Acorn Housing Corp. got some $700,000 in federal money after changing its name to Affordable Housing Centers of America.

Last year, Holder also ordered two AIG-owned banks to pay a minimum of $1 million to "qualified organizations" that help "African-American borrowers."

More recently, he ordered C&F Mortgage Corp. of Virginia to reward such groups. As of 2010, some $7.6 million was waiting to be handed out from his unsupervised grant program. Recipients aren't restricted in how they use the money. In 2008, Acorn bankrolled get-out-the-vote operations for Obama.

Justice would not provide a complete list of approved nonprofits, but a spokeswoman told IBD the National Urban League and Operation Hope are eligible for cash from the AIG case. Urban League has lobbied to water down credit standards. Operation Hope founder John Bryant serves on Obama's financial advisory council.

Smith demands that Holder furnish a full list of "qualified organizations," along with an audit of payments. Hearings are in order if his response is unsatisfactory.

Hats off to IBD for following up on this like a dog with a bone and getting the Republicans in congress to finally move off their posteriors.  Nothing that I am aware of authorizes the Justice Department to direct that fines otherwise payable to the government be directed to non-party organizations.

I am waiting for the day when a financial institution finally appeals the use of disparate impact theory in lending to the Supreme Court. This is social engineering at its worst, it was the "but for" cause of the 2008 economic crash and our continuing economic woes, and yet the Obama administration and the Holder Justice Department are pushing it harder than ever before. It is setting us on a second course for disaster.

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Friday, February 26, 2010

What, Marx or Lenin Weren't Available?


This really is beyond outrageous. Obama has just appointed SEIU President Andy Stern to his newly minted "deficit reduction commission." This is the same radical joker who was tied at the hip with ACORN and its founder, Wade Rathke. He has a past awash in the politics of left wing radicalism. This is the same man who, less than three months ago, was leading demonstrations in California - a state teetering on the brink of financial collapse - in opposition to any public sector cutbacks or wage freezes. More on this deeply anti-capitalist, deeply socialistic man from Big Government:

We saw their fury throughout 2009: “Capitalism is Dead”, “Kill the Corporation”, “Bust Up Big Banks”, “Greed Kills”, “Bank of America, Bad for America”. The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) led an all-out assault on Wall Street – and on capitalism and corporations – coining words and phrases that have since become common staples in the vocabulary of the bank-bashing craze. That fury hit a fever pitch last March when word of the AIG bonuses went public. It was the SEIU out in front of the protests, at AIG offices, and bussing protestors to the homes of AIG executives.

The months that followed saw more of the same. In April, SEIU hailed the ousting of General Motors CEO Rick Wagoner. That same week, it stepped up its battleplan with the Mother of all Corporate Campaigns against Ken Lewis, Bank of America CEO and Chairman – complete with videos, rolling billboards, smear sites, petition drives, letter campaigns, media blitzes and more, while it placed equal attention on Bank of America, forcing the company to respond with a $40 million image boosting campaign of television and print ads. . . .

As this very fine article also goes on to discuss in detail, SEIU is using its control of employee pension funds to oust anti-unionists from boards and to further the process of unionizing the employees in many of the institutions in which it invests.

And this is the guy Obama wants to decide for America how to fix our economy? You have got to be kidding. I wrote a detailed post recently on the unions, and in particular, public sector unions, discussing this cancer on our society and how they were anti-free market, anti-capitalist, predatory and, at this point, pose a massive threat to our economy and our educational system. The SEIU is major part of problem, not a part of the solution.

Obama's "deficit reduction commission" is a travesty to begin with. He is appointing a commission - weighted towards Democrats - in order to shift his and the Congress's Constitutional responsibilities for the hard questions America faces. It is the opposite of leadership. This is not like the 9-11 Commission where the major issue was findings of fact in a small, discrete area. We are talking here about the government spending and taxation - the most fundamental duties of Congress and the President. And now he is not only shifting the responsibilities, he is giving a major say on the future of our economy to radical union leader Andy Stern. This is utterly beyond belief.

What Republicans should do is explain in detail how this "deficit reduction commission" is a fundamental shirking of the responsibilities of Congress, they should highlight Obama's appointment of Stern, and they should refuse to participate in the Commission.

Virtually everything Obama does leaves my jaw hanging. He is President at a critical moment in history, with our economy in a shambles and major foreign dangers and challegnes staring us in the face. I worry daily that the damage he has done already with his massive spending and his mishandling of foreign policy - and all that he is poised to do - may not be able to be undone.

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Monday, November 30, 2009

Posts of Interest

Some posts of interest that I don't have time to blog about:

AG Eric Holder engages in questionable legal reasoning to ignore Congressional intent and instead rule that ACORN is entitled to be paid under existing contracts. Powerline has the story.

The Cato Institute looks under the knickers of Obamacare and finds the actual price tag to be in the neighborhood of $6,000,000,000,000.00

The trials facing America that are being ignored by Obama could dwarf the problems seen so far. V. D. Hanson has the list. Topping both his - and my - concern is the price of oil.

The Weekly Standard has more on the boondoggle that are ethanol mandates.

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Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Masters Of Disaster Set To Strike Again - Will The Ricci Decision Stop Them


(Picture from Protein Wisdom)

Many of the same people who brought us the current economic collapse - the left generally, with Barney Frank, ACORN and Obama in particular - are at it again. Rather than fixing the problems they created over two decades, each are doubling down. Obama is planning to vastly exand the Community Reivestment Act. Barney Frank is pushing a new version of subprime lending on Fannie Mae. ACORN is out thugging the major mortgage brokers. But a speed bump may now be in their path. The Supreme Court decision in Ricci yesterday might actually be the tool that defangs the racially charged Community Reinvestment Act and curbs some its abuses by the Masters of Disaster.

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We are in the worst recession since the Great Depression because of a catastrophic failure of the mortgage loan market. At the very heart of that failure is the racially charged Community Reinvestment Act. (For an in-depth discussion of the CRA and its impact on our economy, please see Hurricane Subprime, 1977-2000.) Without that, we have no economic collapse.

The CRA was used by the likes of ACORN and Obama to force reduced lending standards. Barney Frank and Chris Dodd pushed Fannie and Freddie to provide a vastly expanded market for these sub-prime and reduced standard loans. There were other significant contributing factors.

There were the bond rating services that inexplicably and wholly misrated mortgage backed securities. There is mark to market accounting rules that require corporation to show mortgages that cannot be sold in the current collapsed market as having no value, irrespective of the fact that they do have value. And we had the derivative market that failed catastrophically when the entire mortgage market failed. All these played ancillary roles in the meltdown that has had a severe domino effect throughout our economy.

But all of that has gone down the memory hole with the left in complete charge of the government. No hearings have been held on the causes of this economic nightmare. If you listen to Barney Frank, he has always been the paragon of fiscal responsiblity. If you listen to Obama, the CRA played no role in the meltdown, it was all the fault of evil capitalist pigs on Wall St. Indeed, instead of fixing any of the above problems, Obama, Frank, and ACORN are busy doubling down.

As to Barney Frank, this from the WSJ documents his latest insanity:

Back when the housing mania was taking off, Massachusetts Congressman Barney Frank famously said he wanted Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to "roll the dice" in the name of affordable housing. That didn't turn out so well, but Mr. Frank has since only accumulated more power. And now he is returning to the scene of the calamity -- with your money. He and New York Representative Anthony Weiner have sent a letter to the heads of Fannie and Freddie exhorting them to lower lending standards for condo buyers.

You read that right. After two years of telling us how lax lending standards drove up the market and led to loans that should never have been made, Mr. Frank wants Fannie and Freddie to take more risk in condo developments with high percentages of unsold units, high delinquency rates or high concentrations of ownership within the development. . . .

Fannie and Freddie have always been political creatures under the best circumstances. But we don't remember anyone electing Mr. Frank underwriter-in-chief of the United States.

Read the whole article. Frank is, I've long maintained, a clear and present danger to the United States.

ACORN, for its part, is out doing what it does best - strong-arming financial institutions. This from the American Spectator:

ACORN, which played a starring role in creating the subprime mortgage crisis, plans to add insult to injury by harassing lenders across the nation with protests tomorrow in an effort to coerce them into supporting President Obama's Making Home Affordable foreclosure-avoidance program.

Austin King, director of ACORN Financial Justice, sent out a press release today advising of the demonstrations that are planned as part of its "Homewrecker 4" campaign. The four financial companies targeted are Goldman Sachs, HomEq Servicing, American Home Mortgage, and OneWest. . . .

ACORN plans to hit Dallas, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, St. Louis, New York City, Wilmington (Del.), Columbus (Ohio), Houston, Little Rock, Boston, Los Angeles, Miami, San Francisco, and Seattle.

But let's not forget that ACORN helped to cause the mortgage bubble by strongarming banks into making loans they shouldn't have. And cheering them on was ACORN's lawyer, Barack Obama, who contributed to the increasingly hostile environment for banks when he represented plaintiffs in the 1995 class action lawsuit Buycks-Roberson v. Citibank. The suit demanded that Citibank grant mortgages to an equal percentage of minority and non-minority mortgage applicants. The bank settled the case three years later and reportedly agreed to beef up its lending to unqualified applicants. . . .

But the worst of the worst is Obama and his plan to put the disasterous Community Reinvestment Act on steroids as part of his 89 page proposal for massive government intervention in our economy, “A New Foundation: Rebuilding Financial Supervision and Regulation.” The CRA uses an analysis precisely like that in a "disparate impact" claim under Title VII to determine whether financial institutions are making enough loans to minorities. As it stands now, banks cannot defend against a finding of insufficient loans to minorities under the CRA by pointing to their individual portfoloio to show that they have not engaged in discrimination, but rather have applied loan standards evenly and without reference to color. The government applies the CRA to require a racially balanced result.

You will recall that yesterday, the Supreme Court decided in Ricci that application of legitimate, race neutral criteria was what Title VII required and that it would be an unlawful act of racism for an institution to throw out the results of a test because it did not provide a racially balanced result. Though decided in the context of Title VII, Ricci provides a general principle of law that should be applicable to the misuse of the CRA by our government to engage in outcome oriented, social engineering. One can only hope that some attorney, somewhere, is polishing the Ricci decision and preparing to use it as the centerpiece against the CRA. That would go a long way to defanging Obama, Frank, and ACORN.







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Saturday, June 13, 2009

The Mad Mullah's Man Wins Again - For Now


Its Ahmedinejad by a landslide. The mad mullahs have announced that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won Iran's Presidential election with 62.63% of the vote while his main opposition, Mir-Hossein Mousavi came in second 33.75% of the vote. CNN is reporting that Ahmedinejad has taken his victory bow and called for calm. Chief Mad Mullah Khamenei has likewise weighed in, telling his country to shut up and move on . . . nothing to see here.

Those results seem more than a tad unbelievable. And indeed, there is rioting in the streets of Iran now and Fox is reporting that cell phone service has been cut off. Whatever may happen in the immediate aftermath, its probably reasonable to conclude that this election will likely have long term reverberations.

As to anectdotal evidence that all is not kosher in mullahland's Presidential election, there are some interesting observations from Juan Cole, looking at some of the logical disconnects in the election reports:

1. It is claimed that Ahmadinejad won the city of Tabriz with 57%. His main opponent, Mir Hossein Mousavi, is an Azeri from Azerbaijan province, of which Tabriz is the capital. Mousavi, according to such polls as exist in Iran and widespread anecdotal evidence, did better in cities and is popular in Azerbaijan. Certainly, his rallies there were very well attended. So for an Azeri urban center to go so heavily for Ahmadinejad just makes no sense. In past elections, Azeris voted disproportionately for even minor presidential candidates who hailed from that province.

2. Ahmadinejad is claimed to have taken Tehran by over 50%. Again, he is not popular in the cities, even, as he claims, in the poor neighborhoods, in part because his policies have produced high inflation and high unemployment. That he should have won Tehran is so unlikely as to raise real questions about these numbers.

3. It is claimed that cleric Mehdi Karoubi, the other reformist candidate, received 320,000 votes, and that he did poorly in Iran's western provinces, even losing in Luristan. He is a Lur and is popular in the west, including in Kurdistan. Karoubi received 17 percent of the vote in the first round of presidential elections in 2005. While it is possible that his support has substantially declined since then, it is hard to believe that he would get less than one percent of the vote. Moreover, he should have at least done well in the west, which he did not. . . .

6. The Electoral Commission is supposed to wait three days before certifying the results of the election, at which point they are to inform Khamenei of the results, and he signs off on the process. The three-day delay is intended to allow charges of irregularities to be adjudicated. In this case, Khamenei immediately approved the alleged results. . . .

You can read his entire commentary here. More specific allegations of fraud come from the Debka File. It would seem that the mad mullahs set up a new system of voting for this election designed to maximize the possibility of voter fraud. They did not require voter identification at many voting centers and, indeed, are accused of running off over a million fake ID's for use by the "bassij" - Iran's thug militia - for use at stations that did requrie such identification. As an interesting aside, all this led Professor Jacobsen at Legal Insurrection to ponder whether ACORN has a branch office in Tehran:

Multiple voting resulting from lack of identification. Sounds like ACORN. More votes than people. Sounds like Minnesota.Voter identification is the key to preventing voter fraud. Which is why the Department of Justice's refusal to allow states, such as Georgia, to implement identification systems based on alleged disparate impact is so damaging to the credibility of elections.

The next few days will be a wait to see what shakes out. A perception of a stolen election has a way of really teeing off an electorate. For but one example, there was Ferdinand Marcos, whose stolen election in the Phillipines from a popular opposition led to a revoultion. That scenario is by no means unique in our world's recent history.

But for anything like that to occur, you have to have an electorate truly mobilized and involved. The Iranian electorate certainly meets that criteria this time around. Voting was, by all counts, very heavy. Official figures put the number of voters at 85% of those eligible. With that type of interest, the regime may well have just grabbed a tiger by the tail.

It has long been suggested that there has not been a counter-revolution in Iran because the middle class simply was too placid and apathetic. But an 85% turn-out suggests that they are apathetic no longer. Whether it was Mousavi's wife, who campaigned for more rights for women, or whether it was growing discontent at conditions inside Iran, something captured the people's imagination. For example, see this Martin Fletcher at UK's the Times:

Whatever the reason, Mr Mousavi's campaign took off. The youth of Tehran and other cities took to the streets in huge numbers. They flocked to Mousavi rallies in their tens of thousands. They turned the capital into a seething sea of green with their ribbons, headscarves, balloons and bandanas. They festooned the city with posters and banners. Until the small hours of each morning they packed squares, blocked junctions and careered around town in cars with horns blaring and pop music blasting.

The Islamic republic has never seen such sights before. It was almost open rebellion, an explosion of pent-up anger after four years in which the fundamentalist President and his morality police cracked down on dissent, human rights groups, and any dress or behaviour deemed unIslamic. “Death to the dictator,” young men and women roared at Mousavi rallies. “Death to the Government. . . .

That can't be good for the mad mullahs. As I wrote in an earlier post, looking at Iran and its recent domestic history:

Remember that it was less than a decade ago that Iran sat on the edge of a counter revolution – the so called Tehran Spring. But Iraq’s reformist president at the time, Imam Khatami, blinked and refused to support the movement. It was brutally repressed.

What has transpired since is near complete domination by hard liners opposed to any reform and who have rigged the elections to ensure their hold on power. The clerics are shifting ever more power to the 125,000 member Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), the clerics’ primary vehicle for maintaining control of their country. The IRGC now control much of the day to day power in the country and are becoming wealthy beyond measure through their economic schemes. While the IRGC and clerics get rich, the economic situation for the 60 million other Iranians, made all the worse by Ahmedinejad, is critical. Inflation is running above 25% and unemployment among a population, the majority of which is under 30, is hitting new double digit highs each month. Food prices are soaring and gas is now being rationed. Iran is, in short, a tinder box.

I would not be surprised at all to find that, when all is said and done, this election lit the fuse to the tinder-box. Whether that fuse is long-burning or short is impossible to tell. The Iranian regime is brutally repressive and I would not take any bets on the fuse being a short one. But this could well mark the beginning of the end of one of the bloodiest regimes of the last half century. And the sooner Ahmedinejad and the mad mullahs are gone, the better, for both Iran and the world.

Related Posts:

Iran Buys Time, Obama Votes Present, Iraq's Status Is Recognized
Heating Up In Iran
Tehran Is Burning; What Will The Iranian Army Do? (Updated)
The Mad Mullah's Man Wins Again - For Now
The Next Moves In An Existential Chess Match (Background On Iran)








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Friday, June 12, 2009

A Descent Into Corruption & Abuse Of Power Is Not The Change For Which We Had Hoped


Unlimited power is apt to corrupt the minds of those who possess it; and this I know, my lords, that where laws end, tyranny begins."

William Pitt The Elder, Speech to the House of Lords, 1770

The Democrats have achieved what amounts to complete power in America. And the far left wing of the Democratic Party, led by Obama, are skirting if not violating the law in order to get their way. Numerous acts of intimidation and abuse of power are showing up everywhere you look. That includes at least two egregious acts that have come to light just this day - the intimidation of a witnesses and Obama's unilateral decision to fire the Inspector General (IG) for Americorps who had recently investigated and received a judgment against a major Obama supporter.

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In the Chrysler and GM bankruptcies, we have seen extortion and strong arming from Obama and his "car czar" to trample on statutory and constitutional rights of secured creditors. With the nations major banks, we have seen the Obama administration refuse to allow repayment of loans and then use their control to influence bank decisions as regards Chrysler and GM. Even now, though allowing repayment, the government is maintaining warrants that they could exercise at any time to take over the effective ownership of every major banking institution in America. We have seen the White House take direct control of the 2010 census and insert the deeply corrupt ACORN into the counting process. We have seen the Obama DOJ make the inexplicable decision not to prosecute voter intimidation by the New Black Panthers. And we have the Obama DOJ ignoring a recent Supreme Court case and making decisions that can only further promote voter fraud.

In the House, Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats repeatedly refused to allow ethics investigations of numerous Democratic lawmakers who are reeking with the stench of corruption. Indeed, even the NYT editorial board is starting to choke on that one. Tax fraud Charlie Rangel and "friend of Angelo" Chris Dodd still not only retain their seats in Congress, but their chairmanships. And we have the left protecting ACORN at every turn, cancelling hearings to investigate their corruption and insuring that all attempts to block robust funding of ACORN on the taxpayer's dime are rebuffed.

And today, there is more. First up are charges of witness intimidation. Democratic Rep. Ed Markey, co-author of the Waxman Cap and Trade bill, sent a letter to Federal Energy Regulatory Commission asking FERC to investigate MidAmerican Energy Holdings on the same day that company’s CEO was set to testify before the energy panel on the dangers of a carbon cap and trade system. In another instance, health care lobbyists were warned by two senior democratic staffers not to meet with the Republican leadership to discuss the proposed health care plan. As they reportedly said, doing so would be a "hostile act."

But by far the worst act is Obama's unilateral decision to fire Gerald Walpin, the Inspector General of AmeriCorps. An inspector generals job is to investigate for waste, fraud or abuse of federal funds. Walpin had recently investigated Kevin Johnson, an Obama supporter, and the nonprofit St. HOPE Academy that Johnson headed. Walpin found six instances of funds being diverted or wrongly used, none of which were disputed by Johnson. Walpin handed his findings over to the DOJ. The DOJ then found sufficient cause to order St. Hope to repay about half of nearly $847,000 in federal grants they had received from AmeriCorps. On the heels of that, not only did Obama act to fire Walpin, but Obama failed to comply with an act he voted for last year meant to protect Inspector Generals from political pressure. That law requires Obama to allow allow thirty days to pass after informing Congress of the intent to fire an IG, and to provide specific reasons for the firing. Obama did neither. Byron York has the definitive postings on this one. He also adds that this situation with Walpin may be the tip of the iceberg, stating that a "number of inspectors general around the government have been expressing concerns to Congress recently about threats to their independence."

On a final note, not included in the bill of particulars above are the highly questionable procedural games that the Democratic majority is playing in Congress. Major bills are not being written in committee. Instead, they are being written in secret by the far left wing of the Democratic party then pushed out with calls for an immediate vote. Nancy Pelosi virtually wrote the porkulus bill behind closed doors, and then referred to Republican complaints about the lack of bipartisanship in drafting the bill as mere "process arguments." And it is not just Republicans. The NYT reported last month "[f]orty-five House Democrats in the party’s moderate-to-conservative wing have protested the secretive process by which party leaders in their chamber are developing legislation to remake the health care system." Then there is Obama's proposal for ramming socialized medicine legislation through by grossly misusing the "budget reconciliation" procedure in the Senate.

Obama and the far left are drunk with power and vastly overreaching. Indeed, any number of Obama's acts to date would have, had they been done by Bush, resulted in substantive calls for impeachment. There is a reason Dafydd ab Hugh of Big Lizards tagged Obama as "Lucky Lefty." But with a press corps that more resembles a smitten school girl - indeed, so much so that one of the editors of the left wing SF Examiner is complaining - utterly none of these tyrannical acts designed to skirt law and democracy are being followed up by the MSM. This is not the hope and change Obama promised - but it is the reality his background clearly foreshadowed.








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Wednesday, June 3, 2009

One Illegal Immigrant Person, One Vote


A little over a year ago, a six member majority of the Supreme Court upheld an Indiana state law requiring voters present a photo i.d. when voting. The court reasoned, rightly, that nothing is more central to a democracy than fair elections devoid of fraud. Once the voting system becomes corrupt, we no longer live in a functioning democracy. Yet the left seems hell bent on insuring that the system is corrupted.

The left has, for years, fought against any sort of identification system to protect the validity of our democratic system. We have Obama enlisting ACORN to take part in the 2010 Census which will determine the number of representatives to which each state will be entitled. We have Obama pulling responsibility for the Census Bureau and putting it directly under Obama's Chief of Staff. It was only a few days ago that Obama's DOJ took the unprecedented step of dropping charges of voter intimidation against three New Black Panther thugs who clearly engaged in precisely that - it was on YouTube for crying out loud. And now the latest, giving the finger to the Supreme Court and their decision mentioned above, Obama's DOJ has rejected Georgia's plan to verify that those who cast ballots are American citizens entitled to vote.

Georgia recently passed a law requiring voters to prove, by documentation or social security number, that when they vote, they are in fact entitled to vote. But because Georgia is still under a Court order dating back to the Voting Rights Act of 1965 for a history of systemic racism, feds must approve of any change to the state's election laws. It matters not that Georgia voted heavilly for Obama in the last election, apparently. And now, Obama's civil rights division has rejected this law, reasoning that making a person prove that they are entitled to cast a vote places "erroneous burdens on the right to register to vote" and disproportionately effects blacks and hispanic voters.

This is just amazing. Secretary of State Karen Handel stated the obvious when she opined that the DOJ's decision "opens the floodgates for non-citizens to vote in the state." No kidding. Read the story here.

Redstate adds the entire statement from the Georgia Sec. of State:

DOJ has thrown open the door for activist organizations such as ACORN to register non-citizens to vote in Georgia’s elections, and the state has no ability to verify an applicant’s citizenship status or whether the individual even exists. DOJ completely disregarded Georgia’s obvious and direct interest in preventing non-citizens from voting, instead siding with the ACLU and MALDEF. Clearly, politics took priority over common sense and good public policy.

This is a travesty. Once something approaching a majority comes to believe that their vote no longer counts because the system is corrupt, then the only way to effect change comes by the gun. That is something the left should ponder as they pull out all stops to make of our country a banana republic with a rigged electoral system that acts as a rubber stamp for their candidates.







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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Corruption, ACORN & The NYT


Though you wouldn't know it from daily scans of the MSM, the left has, as the WSJ puts it, a "corruption problem." In Congress, Chris Dodd still sits as Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee. In the House, Charlie Rangel still holds his post as the Chairmen of the Ways and Means Committee. John Murtha, Jim Moran and Peter Visclosk still hold their seats and committee asignments. And is there any need to mention the bevy of tax cheats appointed to positions of power in the Obama administration. The media has gone silent on all of this, but it sure appears that there is a burgeoning culture of corruption going on in the left.

Indeed, Jonah Goldberg goes one further, surveying the facts and charging that the left is "wallowing in corruption." If there is any doubt about that, there is the left's continuing support and public funding for the Association of Community Organizers Now - ACORN - as corrupt an organization as we have seen in American politics since the days of Boss Tweed and "Tammany Hall Machine."

ACORN has played a very malignant roll in our recent history. For example, at Volokh Conspiracy, there are two posts on the origins of the mortgage meltdown at the heart of our current recession. One discusses how laws were changed by the Clinton Administration to force a lowering of lending standards - ostensibly to combat racist lending policies (only they weren't racist). A second post discusses the central roll played by ACORN - and one of their lawyers, Obama - who used these laws, along with claims of racism and intimidation, to force banks to adopt much looser lending standards. Indeed, it is an arguable point that we would not be eyeball deep in recession without the involvement of ACORN.

But though incredibly destructive, the above described acts of ACORN were not illegal. Where ACORN transgresses into corruption and illegality has been in its efforts to insure the election of left wing democrats, including Obama. This has primarily taken two forms - voter fraud and felony collusion in violation of campaign finance laws. As to the former, in 2008, ACORN registered over 1.3 million new voters in 17 states. As of today, they are under investigation and/or have been prosecuted in at least twelve of those states for voter registration fraud.

The second corrupt practice with which ACORN is suspected is collusion with the Obama campaign to approach donors who had already reached the legal limit of their contributions to his campaign. The story is, according to ACORN whistleblower Anita MonCrief, that the Obama camp supplied ACORN with a donor list for this purpose. If true, this would be a clear violation of campaign finance laws. That is a criminal matter that deserves - but likely will not get - a federal investigation.

But there is another twist. It appears now that, on the eve of the Presidential election, the NYT spiked this story. Michelle Malkin covers it today, as did Powerline the other day. If this is true, and it seems likely, then it is one of the more blatantly unethical acts of a major newspaper in recent history.

Despite blatant corruption, ACORN continues to be protected by the far left in Congress, the left continues to funnel taxpayer money to it, and the Census Bureau has contracted with ACORN to help in the 2010 Census. As to protection, following the story of John Conyers on all of this is instructive. In Oct, 2008, as reported by HuffPo:

In response to news last week that the F.B.I. has launched a secret investigation of alleged voter registration fraud by the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now ("ACORN"), John Conyers, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, has issued a hotly worded press release questioning the professionalism of the F.B.I. and questioning whether the investigation is politically motivated.

That was Conyers's knee jerk reaction to an ACORN investigation on the eve of the election. But, as reported by the American Spectator, Conyers in fact held a hearing in March of this year that touched on ACORN, and "after hearing the testimony of GOP lawyer Heather Heidelbaugh about ACORN's many misdeeds, Conyers said the allegations were "a pretty serious matter."' Indeed, so serious were the bill of particulars that Conyer's scheduled hearings to further investigate ACORN's corrupt practices.

Someone on the far left apparently read Conyers the riot act about protecting ACORN because, just recently, Conyers announced that he was cancelling the hearings, stating: "Based on my review of the information regarding the complaints against ACORN, I have concluded that a hearing on this matter appears unwarranted at this time." He did so on the same day that Nevada charged Acorn and two ACORN employees with 39 felony counts relating to to fraud in voter registration. Conyers now refuses to answer questions about his decision to cancel the hearings. The bottom line of all this, the far left are quite content with ACORN's corrupt practices and they are protecting ACORN to the limit of their ability.

That is horrendous, but it pales when one considers that the far left is not only protecting ACORN, but funnelling vast amounts of taxpayer money to it. During his campaign, Obama transferred almost one million dollars to ACORN to fund its voter registration drive on his behalf. But that was from merely donated funds. The real money comes from tax dollars that the far left has been funnelling to ACORN since 1994. Now that Obama is in power, the left are looking at transferring our tax dollars to ACORN on a massive scale. According to the Washington Examiner:

At least $53 million in federal funds have gone to ACORN activists since 1994, and the controversial group could get up to $8.5 billion more tax dollars despite being under investigation for voter registration fraud in a dozen states.

The economic stimulus bill enacted in February contains $3 billion that the non-profit activist group known more formally as the Association for Community Organizations for Reform Now could receive, and 2010 federal budget contains another $5.5 billion that could also find its way into the group’s coffers. . . .

Indeed, to make this even more nausea inducing, do note that $3 billion dollars is the same amount of funding that Obama cut from our Missile Defense program. This is nothing more than Obama and the far left in Congress inviting ACORN, with our money, to ramp up its corrupt activities to keep the far left in power.

Likewise is the otherwise unexplainable decision to have the Census Bureau team up with ACORN for the 2010 census. The politicization of the 2010 Census began almost as soon as the Obama administration took office. You will recall that when Obama announced that Republican Senator Judd Gregg would be his first choice for the Secretary of Commerce post, Obama simultaneously transferred control of the US Census from the Commerce Department and put it under the direct control of White House Chief of Staff, Rahm Emanuel. And one of the first acts of this newly politicized Census Bureau was to sign up ACORN to assist with the 2010 census.

It is critical that the 2010 Census be conducted accurately. The results of that Census will be used to determine the makeup of the House of Representatives as well as, in some cases, the allocation of federal resources and funds. Does anyone believe that this will happen with ACORN involvement? If you do, you need to get it from the horse's mouth - or more specifically, former organizer Greg Hall who, writing at the Washington Examiner, predicts massive fraud in the census by ACORN.

Having said all of that, if you're waiting for the Republican chorus to start harping on this daily to get and keep it in the news, don't hold your breath. The right is doing nowhere near enough on that front, thus allowing Obama and the left a pass - or, if you like, a "get out of jail free" card - while actually exploiting ACORN even more.

A culture of corruption indeed. We may not be hearing anything about it, but the stench is permeating the air.







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Friday, April 24, 2009

Authors Of Fiscal Meltdown

Our economic meltdown all stems out of the subprime crisis. There were three authors of that meltdown: Bill Clinton, Barney Frank and Chris Dodd. Clinton turned the Community Reinvestment Act into a tool of social engineering. Clinton, along with Frank and Dodd, unleashed Fannie and Freddie to create a huge market for subprime loans and then spread the poison of mortgage backed securities throughout the world economy, and gave groups such as ACORN the keys to the courthouse in an effort to strong-arm banks into making subprime loans. They pushed these programs and protected them at all turns.

Compliments of Hot Air today, here is Barney Frank in action in 2005, claiming that talk of a "housing bubble" was pure fantasy and that he intended to push us further into home ownership morass.



I include below the fold some of the numerous other posts I have done documenting Frank as being at the center of the crisis. One of the great misfortunes of the left taking the reins of power was that this is now the one true area where "we are looking" only "forward and not back." Not only does that mean that those responsible for this fiscal crisis go unpunished, more importantly, it means that the underlying problems have yet to be addressed and groups such as ACORN are funded to the tune of billions of dollars of taxpayer money in order to pursue the same goals. It is obscene. And equally as obscene is Barney Frank today engaging in a full scale rewrite of history:





Previous Posts

Barney Frank In Bed With Fannie Mae

Chris Dodd, Barney Frank & The Subprime Crisis

Barney Frank's Fingerprints

Resolution of the Initial Problems Caused By The Subprime Crisis

A Spotlight On The Left's Subprime Crisis








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Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Hurricane Subprime - Part I (1977 to 2000)


The left claims that the subprime crisis is a failure of capitalism and a consequence of "deregulation" pushed by Republicans. How accurate are those claims?
____________________________________________________

The short answer to the above question - ridiculous. Yes, other things have combined with the subprime crisis to worsen the mess we are in financially. But to point to those things while claiming that the subprime crisis itself is anything other than the alpha and omega of this fiscal catastrophe is pure prevarication.

One way to analogize the financial crisis is to a hurricane, with the left's push of subprime lending as a tool of social engineering being the hurricane gaining strength over the ocean. The deregulation of which the left complains did nothing to cause or strengthen the hurricane. What it did was effect some the levees on land designed to protect the markets.

During the period 1977-2000, most of the elements of our current fiscal crisis were put in place. President Clinton turned a little known law from the Carter-era, the Community Reinvestment Act, into a tool of massive socialist engineering. Color-blind lending standards were eviscerated and new standards were enforced by the police powers of the government and through the enlistment of community organizers and their ilk. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were made the engines of the new social engineering, creating an ever-expanding market for mortgages founded upon the new "innovative" lending standards. All attempts by Republicans to attack this cancer failed. The left deliegitimized and beat back every attempt to reform the CRA by recasting such efforts as racist.

As to the levees designed to protect our economy against such hurricane, some were important, others were meaningless. Possibly the most important but as of yet underreported aspect of the crisis, is how rating agencies of the era vastly underrated the risk of the toxic mortgage backed securities coming out of Fannie Mae. The repeal of Glass-Steagall actually strengthened some of the levees. Credit Default Swaps, which developed unregulated during the Clinton era, have proven to be a failed levee unable to withstand the widescale failure of the underlying mortgages.

As a side note before beginning this, understand that the goal of "affordable housing" was laudable. Looking at this in retrospect, there were and are two ways to approach this issue - one from a capitalist and market based approach and one from a socialist and redistributionist approach. The former would have been a series of programs to repair credit and to assist individuals with amassing savings for a downpayment. The latter, well, that was what the left was able to enact.

1977 – A Tropical Depression Forms Under President Jimmy Carter:

The Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) of 1977 was a well intentioned law pushed by then President Jimmy Carter. In defense of President Carter (and those words pass my lips for the first, and I suspect, last time) this law did nothing more than make "red-lining" illegal. Red-lining was a practice whereby banks would simply refuse to extend credit into the poorer sections in their communities. This grossly unfair practice hit minorities the hardest and it did so without reference to credit history or an individualized assessment of likelihood of repayment. The CRA of 1977 did not mandate any lessening of race and gender neutral lending standards. To the contrary, as the NYT summed up the original intent of the CRA, "the Community Reinvestment Act [was] supposed to be about geography, not race or gender." Looking back in 1994, one Fed boardmember described the law as, up to then, having done "little harm and some good." It waited for the left to turn this law into a cancer by stamping it with identity politics.

As we headed into the brave new world of the 1990’s, mortgage lending standards were well established based on decades of experience. These standards included a credit history with a qualifying score, a verifiable and long-term income stream, and based on that income stream, a 28/36 ratio to gross or net as the cap on the share of monthly income that could be devoted to mortgage payments. Further, a down payment in the range of 20% was the industry standard. Years of experience had shown that individuals with that sizeable a stake in their home were far less likely to go into default.

1992 - The Tropical Depression Becomes A Category I Hurricane

William Jefferson Clinton was elected President in 1992, the same year the Boston Fed published an atrocious study alleging wide-spread racism in mortgage lending. According to the report, "Blacks and Hispanics remained trapped in a lending gap when they tried to buy homes last year in Greater Boston, denied mortgages more than twice as often as whites regardless of income."

The report did not accurately adjust data for credit scores, income steams, etc., which, when later done, showed no racism in lending practices. Nonetheless, this single report was embraced by the left as proof positive of wide spread racism in lending. No further – and surely to be conflicting reports – were deemed necessary before taking action on a national scale. The left used the report as justification not to level what was in reality an already level playing field, nor to justify market based government programs to help raise lower-income minority borrowers to the point that they could meet the lending standards and save for a down payment. Rather, they used the report to entirely gut lending standards on a nationwide scale, forcing lending institutions to take part in a massive redistribution of wealth as part of the most costly bit of social engineering ever undertaken.

The Boston Fed led the way, publishing "Closing the Gap: A Guide to Equal Opportunity Lending" in 1992. The central thesis of this guide was that "[u]nintentional discrimination may be observed when a lender’s underwriting policies contain arbitrary or outdated criteria that effectively disqualify many urban or lower–income minority applicants" (emphasis added).

The "arbitrary and outdated criteria" the Boston Fed had in mind amounted to an attack across the panoply of lending standards. Racially neutral fiscal standards and reality fell to the politics of race (quotes from the Fed publication appear in italics):


Gone were “outdated” debt limits, as obligation ratios were now deemed arbitrary and racist when applied to lower income households:



“Obligation Ratios: . . . Many lower–income households are accustomed to allocating a large percentage of their income toward rent. While it is important to ensure that the borrower is not assuming an unreasonable level of debt, it should be noted that the secondary market is willing to consider ratios above the standard 28/36.”


Gone were credit history and credit scores. And indeed, in what can be called the ACORN Full Employment Act, credit counseling and buyer education programs run by community organizations could ameliorate bad credit history.



“Credit History: Policies regarding applicants with no credit history or problem credit history should be reviewed. Lack of credit history should not be seen as a negative factor. . . For lower–income applicants in particular, unforeseen expenses can have a disproportionate effect on an otherwise positive credit record. In these instances, paying off past bad debts or establishing a regular repayment schedule with creditors may demonstrate a willingness and ability to resolve debts.

Successful participation in credit counseling or buyer education programs is another way that applicants can demonstrate an ability to manage their debts responsibly.


Gone was the requirement for a permanent income source. Now, even temporary sources of income, such as welfare and unemployment benefits, were to be considered without regard to the fact that, while the mortgage would take 30 years, the income streams now being counted were of very limited duration.



“Sources of Income: In addition to primary employment income, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will accept the following as valid income sources: overtime and part–time work, second jobs (including seasonal work), retirement and Social Security income, alimony, child support, Veterans Administration (VA) benefits, welfare payments, and unemployment benefits.”


And in perhaps what has turned out to be the biggest mistake, gone were requirements that the individual borrower personally produce a down payment. Long experience had shown that a significant downpayment made personally by the borrower was perhaps the most significant indicie of stability of mortgages:



Down Payment and Closing Costs: Accumulating enough savings to cover the various costs associated with a mortgage loan is often a significant barrier to homeownership by lower–income applicants. Lenders may wish to allow gifts, grants, or loans from relatives, nonprofit organizations, or municipal agencies to cover part of these costs. Cash–on–hand could also be an acceptable means of payment if borrowers can document its source and demonstrate that they normally pay their bills in cash.


Even appraisal standards were changed for lending in low-income areas - and accompanied by a clear warning that failure to follow these new standards could lead to liability for racism.



Management should be aware that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have issued statements to the effect that they understand urban areas require different appraisal methods. Accordingly, it may be advantageous to use the services of appraisers with experience in conducting appraisals in minority and lower–income neighborhoods. Management should consider having all appraisal reports that would cause an application to be denied reviewed by another experienced appraiser. This can help protect the financial institution as well, as it may be held liable if an appraisal is found to be discriminatory.


Lastly, if the financial institutions did not understand the downside of still using “outdated and arbitrary” lending procedures, then the Boston Fed provided a helpful reminder on the last page.



The federal agencies that regulate financial institutions have authority to enforce Regulation B administratively. Civil suits for unlawful credit discrimination may be brought within two years of the date of the occurrence of the alleged violation. Damages include actual damages and punitive damages of up to $10,000 in individual actions. Punitive damages are limited to the lesser of $500,000 or 1 percent of the creditor’s net worth in class actions.


The damage done by this massive bit of social engineering and protected by the left bled throughout the entire mortgage industry. It, more than anything else, is where responsibiity for the subprime crisis - a crisis that in reality goes far beyond subprime loans - actually lies.

1993 – 2000: The Hurricane Gains Strength To Category II

There were five parts to the Clinton Administration’s single-minded push to drive America’s into the subprime swamp. The first three were directed at forcing financial institutions to dispense with the “outdated and arbitrary” lending criteria. The fourth leg was to create a huge market for these loans. The fifth and last leg was the meme used to forward and defend these “innovations” by Clinton and Democrats. Any challenge to this new plan was invariably recast as racism and race cards were played with wild abandon.

To force these new lending standards on America. Clinton promulgated new regulations under the CRA, turning it from a purely geographical law aimed at red-lining into the nation’s largest affirmative action program. These regulations were enforced by the Justice Dept. and bank regulators on one end, while provisions in the CRA allowed “community groups” on the other end to bring private law suits – something out of which ACORN and other progressive organizations have made a highly profitable cottage industry.

By 1993, Clinton proposed a vast expansion of regulation under the CRA. He did this not through Congress, but through regulators. Once Congress has voted on enabling legislation for regulators, they are empowered, within limits, to craft regulation that passes into law without vote by Congress. This from the NYT in December, 1993:



CLINTON PROPOSES TOUGH NEW RULES ON BIAS BY BANKS

The Clinton Administration proposed tough new tests today that are intended to insure that banks end discrimination in their lending to members of minority groups and to people with low and moderate incomes.

The changes are the latest effort by the Administration to broaden access to credit, financial services and investments. Officials predicted that people and businesses in these groups would gain access that they might not otherwise get to billions of dollars in credit once the proposals take effect in 1995.

The regulations, which set higher standards for banks, for the first time apply objective measurements on three levels. Banks would be tested in several ways to determine if their overall pattern of lending in specific neighborhoods was biased, when compared to their overall lending and those of competitors. They would also be judged on whether they were making investments in a community's growth, like grants for economic redevelopment, and whether they were providing a full array of customer services.

. . . [B]anks could for the first time face sanctions like binding orders or fines to change their practices.

That would give regulators additional power. Now, a bank's poor record in this area can affect whether the Government will permit bank acquisitions or mergers, and institutions that fall short have been sued by community groups or regulators. Lately, Federal regulators have blocked bank acquisitions when they regarded a lending pattern unfavorably.

The proposal is the most important modification of equal-lending enforcement since 1977, when Congress passed the Community Reinvestment Act. That law was intended to force banks to make loans to individuals, businesses and groups in neighborhoods that many large financial institutions had shunned. . . .


There were a few brave souls who unafraid of charges of racisim, spoke out against this change. One group was at the Fed. This from a NYT article in December, 1993:



Members of the Federal Reserve Board today sharply criticized the Clinton Administration's new plan for insuring that banks open branches and make loans in poor and minority neighborhoods. . . . [M]ost of its members expressed reservations about the plan as drafted. . . .

. . . Its reservations about the fair lending plan, which is part of a broad effort by the Administration to spur lending in poorer communities, had been expected. But some members strongly denounced the plan, revealing the depth of the board's opposition for the first time.

. . . The Administration's plan would toughen the tests used to insure that banks comply with the Community Reinvestment Act. For the first time, banks would be tested based on data about their loans and other operations.


And ironically, one of the other vocal and staunch opponents of this new push into subprime lending were minority owned banks that served large urban areas. This from the NYT in September, 1993:



The black bankers said they were concerned about heightened enforcement of the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977, which mandates lending in underserved areas, . . .

Indeed, many black-owned banks have tended to aim at the wealthiest and most creditworthy black customers while turning away poorer applicants for fear of losing money on risky loans.


If that does not tell you how devoid of substance charges of racism were against conservatives and Republicans who challenged Clinton's changes to the CRA, nothing will. Yet that did not stop the left from playing the race cards with abandon in response to any and all efforts to legislatively reign in the CRA. In 1995, House Republicans made a major push to fundamentally change the CRA from the world’s largest affirmative action program into one that assured a level playing field for all.

As reported in the NYT, the proposed legislation would have barred "the Justice Department from relying on statistical patterns of discrimination, forcing it to rely instead on cases of demonstrable bias against specific individuals." In other words, if a minority and a non-minority were on equal footing in terms of lending criteria and both were denied a loan, then there could be no charges of racism. The ratio of loans given to minorities versus non-minorities would be immaterial in the absence of a finding of at least some actual racism. Further, the challenge would have stopped "community activists" – and community organizers - from blocking "banks with bad community-lending records from obtaining regulatory approval for mergers, acquisitions and other transactions." These changes were "strongly opposed" by "House Democrats, community activists and the Clinton Administration." " . . . Democrats as well as consumer and community groups accused Republicans of . . . undermining affirmative action."

The effect of these changes would have created a level playing field with no impetus to adopt fiscally unsound lending policies. The changes would have done nothing to weaken the sound prohibition against red-lining. Nonetheless, the NYT grossly mischaracterized the effect of these provisions as to "eliminate most enforcement of the Federal law that requires banks to lend in poor neighborhoods as well as rich ones." And then, a few days later, the NYT editorial board in June of 1995 played the race card:



. . . Banking legislation working its way through the House would also cause damage, both socially and economically. It would remove the Justice Department's authority to sue bankers and realtors who systematically block blacks and other minorities from renting apartments or getting mortgages. Apparently Justice has been too vigilant fighting discrimination for the G.O.P.'s taste. . . .

The bill . . . would . . . gut the Community Reinvestment Act, which requires banks to lend money in the neighborhoods where they take deposits or else possibly relinquish the right to merge or open and close branch offices.


Again in 1999, Republicans, this time led by Senator Phil Gramm, tried to push through a bill that, as part of a major restructuring of our financial laws, would also have changed the nature of CRA similar to the earlier House plan. As the NYT reported in Oct, 1999:



. . . . Mr. Gramm has repeatedly criticized the way regulators have interpreted the [CRA], saying that the Government should not be in the business of ''reallocating capital'' and that the law imposes unnecessary and burdensome requirements on small banks and savings associations.

His critics say that the Financial Services Act of 1999, as his bill is called, would roll back the Community Reinvestment Act. Those critics include the Congressional Black Caucus, a group that helped save Mr. Clinton's Presidency during the Senate trial proceedings early this year.

There were fresh signs today that Democrats and Republicans were hardening their views. Nine Republicans sent a letter to Mr. Gramm urging him to hold the line and not make any significant concessions on the issue. At the same time, the Rev. Jesse Jackson said in an interview that he was urging the White House to hold firm and that a compromise on the Community Reinvestment Act would undermine the President's commitment to raising capital in poor areas.


President Clinton’s promise "to veto the legislation unless major changes were made on the provisions in the Community Reinvestment Act" won the day. One side note that came out of this is worthy of mention. In order to buttress support for the CRA, the Clinton White House, in 1999, "instructed bank examiners . . . to seek testimonials from bankers about the Community Reinvestment Act." It ultimately came out in a report on this incident that the regulators asking banks for CRA testimonials while conducting CRA compliance inspections – all of which certainly seems a tremendous abuse of power. But even with that "the examiners ultimately did not find any executives to speak on behalf of the Community Reinvestment Act."

The changes worked by the Clinton administration not only provided for stiff civil penalties that could be imposed by the Justice Dept., but also allowed individuals and community groups to bring private law suits claiming discrimination in lending. This served a dual purpose for far left organizations. Against some, they actually filed law suits to force greater lending to minorities, seemingly irrespective of credit worthiness. The second purpose was – and is – as a shakedown vehicle, getting promises of funding in order to refrain from lawsuits or creating bad publicity. Both have been effective. As the NYT described it in 1999:



Critics led by Phil Gramm, . . . argu[e] that [the CRA] imposes unfair regulatory burdens on banks and allows advocacy groups to ''extort'' money from institutions that do not want bad publicity over their lending records.

. . . Consider Bank of America, which estimates that its community lending and investment business . . . Created when Nationsbank acquired BankAmerica last year, the bank . . . pledged a 10-year, $350 billion package of community-development lending and investment to assuage regulators and activists . . .

. . . After Congress passed the law in 1977, many banks ignored it until the early 1990's, when regulators and the Clinton Administration stepped up examinations while community advocates intensified protests of mergers involving banks with spotty records. The law requires periodic reviews of banks to insure that they meet the credit needs of the communities they serve, particularly lower-income neighborhoods. Poor compliance can hurt efforts to expand or acquire other banks, though such setbacks rarely happen.

Nevertheless, figures supplied by both community groups and banking industry officials suggest that the law has been effective over the last decade. Today, 29 percent of home mortgage loans are made to low- and middle-income borrowers, compared with 18 percent nine years ago, according to the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, a nonprofit group made up of 700 community lending organizations.

Some places have experienced far greater changes. In Texas, for instance, the proportion of Nationsbank's home loans to low-income borrowers leapt from 1 percent in 1989 to more than 20 percent over the last decade, Ms. Bessant said.

And lenders have promised more than $1 trillion to future community lending and investment in low-income areas. Nearly all of that has been pledged in the last few years, after regulators changed the compliance rules to focus more on actual dollar amounts, while community groups sought assurances that a spate of recent industry mega-mergers would not hurt loan volumes in poorer neighborhoods. . . .

Senator Gramm has a more specific objection to the law, which, in his view, amounts to a shakedown: He contends that banks that want to merge or expand have to deal with opportunistic advocacy groups who agree to silence their outrage over lending records only after being paid off with grants, consulting fees or other payments. He has sought to require disclosure of details of most of these payments and agreements.

As an example, his committee circulated copies of what he said were secret agreements in which advocacy groups promise to end protests in exchange for money for their organizations. In one such document, in which the names were blacked out, a protester agreed not to object to any bank expansion in return for payments including $7.5 million in grants over 10 years and $200,000 to pay for new offices. . . .


These were the kind of lawsuits ACORN specialized in and which Obama participated as a lawyer. Stanley Kurtz did a detailed article and an interview on community organizer Obama’s efforts to help ACORN and their involvement in pushing subprime lending on Chicago banks. Kurtz has also composed a more recent article at NRO discussing the key role ACORN played in successfully lobbying for the changes to the CRA, the gutting of lending standards, and the creation of a market for such loans through Fannie Mae.

Having created the contagion, the Clinton administration now spread it by using creating immense markets for mortgages based on these "innovative" lending standards. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were the vehicles. Fannie Mae was created in 1938 as part of the New Deal. It was spun off as a Government Sponsored Enterprise in 1968. While technically a private corporation, it was subject to direct federal oversight. As it existed in 1990, HUD exercised authority of Fannie and Freddie through a relatively toothless regulator, OFEHO.

The concept behind Fannie Mae was that it would provide a secondary market for mortgages, thus allowing loan originators to quickly recoup liquidity which in turn allowed them to make more loans. Fannie issued no mortgages directly, but rather purchased mortgages from originators. Fannie kept some of these mortgages for its own portfolio while bundling the majority into "mortgage backed securities" which were sold to investors.

The Clinton Administration pushed Fannie and Freddie into the ‘subprime’ market in a big way. With Jim Johnson at the helm, Fannie announced in 1994 a "$1 trillion dollar initiative" aimed at putting 10 million middle and lower income families into housing through use of "innovative products." As pointed out by the LA Times:



Fannie Mae . . . agreed to buy more loans with very low down payments–or with mortgage payments that represent an unusually high percentage of a buyer’s income. That’s made banks willing to lend to lower-income families they once might have rejected.


And indeed, in 1994, "46 percent of Fannie Mae's total business was in low- and moderate-income mortgages, and 31 percent was in central cities." This was followed in 1995 when the Clinton Administration, under the rubric of affordable housing, established through HUD minimum goals for purchases of subprime mortgages.

ACORN, the organization that Obama so closely associated with in Chicago, was a key player in these and subsequent developments. As Stanley Kurtz writes at the NRO:



By July of 1991, ACORN’s legislative campaign began to bear fruit. As the Chicago Tribune put it, “Housing activists have been pushing hard to improve housing for the poor by extracting greater financial support from the country’s two highly profitable secondary mortgage-market companies. Thanks to the help of sympathetic lawmakers, it appeared...that they may succeed.” The Tribune went on to explain that House Democrat Henry Gonzales had announced that Fannie and Freddie had agreed to commit $3.5 billion to low-income housing in 1992 and 1993, in addition to a just-announced $10 billion “affordable housing loan program” by Fannie Mae. The article emphasizes ACORN pressure and notes that Fannie and Freddie had been fighting against the plan as recently as a week before agreement was reached. Fannie and Freddie gave in only to stave off even more restrictive legislation floated by congressional Democrats.

A mere month later, ACORN Housing Corporation president, George Butts made news by complaining to a House Banking subcommittee that ACORN’s efforts to pressure banks using CRA were still being hamstrung by Fannie and Freddie. Butts also demanded still more data on the race, gender, and income of loan applicants. Many news reports over the ensuing months point to ACORN as the key source of pressure on congress for a further reduction of credit standards at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. As a result of this pressure, ACORN was eventually permitted to redraft many of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s loan guidelines.

. . . With the advent of the Clinton administration, however, ACORN’s fortunes took a positive turn. Clinton Housing Secretary Henry Cisnersos pledged to meet monthly with ACORN representatives. For ACORN, those meetings bore fruit.

Another factor working in ACORN’s favor was that its increasing success with local banks turned those banks into allies in the battle with Fannie and Freddie. Precisely because ACORN’s local pressure tactics were working, banks themselves now wanted Fannie and Freddie to loosen their standards still further, so as to buy up still more of the high-risk loans they’d made at ACORN’s insistence. So by the 1993, a grand alliance of ACORN, national Democrats, and local bankers looking for someone to lessen the risks imposed on them by CRA and ACORN were uniting to pressure Fannie and Freddie to loosen credit standards still further.

At this point, both ACORN and the Clinton administration were working together to impose large numerical targets or “set asides” (really a sort of poor and minority loan quota system) on Fannie and Freddie. ACORN called for at least half of Fannie and Freddie loans to go to low-income customers. At first the Clinton administration offered a set-aside of 30 percent. But eventually ACORN got what it wanted. In early 1994, the Clinton administration floated plans for committing $1 trillion in loans to low- and moderate-income home-buyers, which would amount to about half of Fannie Mae’s business by the end of the decade. Wall Street Analysts attributed Fannie Mae’s willingness to go along with the change to the need to protect itself against still more severe “congressional attack.” News reports also highlighted praise for the change from ACORN’s head lobbyist, Deepak Bhargava.

This sweeping debasement of credit standards was touted by Fannie Mae’s chairman, chief executive officer, and now prominent Obama adviser James A. Johnson. This is also the period when Fannie Mae ramped up its pilot programs and local partnerships with ACORN, all of which became precedents and models for the pattern of risky subprime mortgages at the root of today’s crisis. During these years, Obama’s Chicago ACORN ally, Madeline Talbott, was at the forefront of participation in those pilot programs, and her activities were consistently supported by Obama through both foundation funding and personal leadership training for her top organizers.

Finally, in June of 1995, President Clinton, Vice President Gore, and Secretary Cisneros announced the administration’s comprehensive new strategy for raising home-ownership in America to an all-time high. Representatives from ACORN were guests of honor at the ceremony. In his remarks, Clinton emphasized that: “Out homeownership strategy will not cost the taxpayers one extra cent. It will not require legislation.” Clinton meant that informal partnerships between Fannie and Freddie and groups like ACORN would make mortgages available to customers “who have historically been excluded from homeownership.”


The next expansion into ever more risky mortgages came in 1999 when Fannie Mae CEO Franklin Raines announced an even further loosening of the lending criteria Fannie would accept. As reported by the NYT in 1999 article:



In a move that could help increase home ownership rates among minorities and low-income consumers, the Fannie Mae Corporation is easing the credit requirements on loans that it will purchase from banks and other lenders. The action . . . will encourage those banks to extend home mortgages to individuals whose credit is generally not good enough to qualify for conventional loans.

. . . Fannie Mae, the nation's biggest underwriter of home mortgages, has been under increasing pressure from the Clinton Administration to expand mortgage loans among low and moderate income people and felt pressure from stock holders to maintain its phenomenal growth in profits. . . .

''Fannie Mae has expanded home ownership for millions of families in the 1990's by reducing down payment requirements,'' said Franklin D. Raines, Fannie Mae's chairman and chief executive officer. ''Yet there remain too many borrowers whose credit is just a notch below what our underwriting has required who have been relegated to paying significantly higher mortgage rates in the so-called subprime market.''

Demographic information on these borrowers is sketchy. But at least one study indicates that 18 percent of the loans in the subprime market went to black borrowers, compared to 5 per cent of loans in the conventional loan market. In moving . . . into this new area of lending, Fannie Mae is taking on significantly more risk, which may not pose any difficulties during flush economic times. But the government-subsidized corporation may run into trouble in an economic downturn, . . .


Thus, as 2000 drew to a close, the left had set in motion what was to become the most costly failed engineering/affirmative action project of all time. Their greatest sin was throwing out color-blind lending standards and replacing them with incredibly weak and risky standards based on identity politics. As will be discussed in part II, that has not only lead to risky subprime mortgages, but it has infected all classes of mortgages. When combined with the ever expanding market for such loans by Fannie, a rating system that broke down, and low interest rates in the wake of 9-11, the protection of Fannie by Demorats, and yet another huge expansion by Fannie into the subprime market in 2005, the hurricane went from category two to category five. And it did so under the protection of racial politics played continuously by the left.

But is there anything of the left's claim that the current economic crisis really has nothing to do with their socialist engineering, but rather that it is a failure of capitalism and a direct result of Republican sponsored deregulation? Some of the acts of deregulation occurred after 2000, but some occurred prior to 2000, on the watch of Democrats and Bill Clinton. These were the levees that were supposed to protect against this type financial hurricane. What of these?

1993 – 2000: The Levees

The Glass Steagall Act

The left likes to point to it as an example of deregulation that has caused the current mess. It is not.

Glass Steagall was a New Deal law that, among other things, set up a wall between the activities of investment banks and commercial banks. This was unique to American law, and indeed, banks in Europe and elsewhere in the world have always operated without such separation. Further, it was a wall that "had already been breached over many years, with the approval of regulators. Besides, the first major failures of this crisis, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers, were investment banks that did not go into commercial banking in a big way." And indeed, one of the staunchest defenders of the move to repeal Glass-Steagall was President Clinton. As he notes, the repeal has actually helped to limit some of the major the damage now being done to our financial institutions.

Credit Default Swaps

Credit Default Swaps (CDS) are not the cause of the hurricane. Rather, they are a levee that has been totally overcome by the hurricane's storm surge. Credit Default Swaps were created on the watch of President Clinton, supported by Fed Chairman, Alan Greenspan, and raised no red flags from any Republican or Democrat in Congress.

Newsweek has a good article discussing the creation, purpose and development of CDS’s. These were developed in 1994 by J.P. Morgan as a method for large institutions to spread their risk and free up capital that otherwise had to be held in reserves:



What the bankers hit on was a sort of insurance policy: a third party would assume the risk of [a debt instrument held by the bank] going sour, and in exchange would receive regular payments from the bank, similar to insurance premiums. JPMorgan would then get to remove the risk from its books and free up the reserves. The scheme was called a "credit default swap," and it was a twist on something bankers had been doing for a while to hedge against fluctuations in interest rates and commodity prices.


Dinah Lord, a former trader, has more on CDS. On its face, there is nothing inherently risky in the CDS model. That said, it is now clear that the model fails when the debt instruments underlying the swaps fail catastrophically and in large number. That is what is happening with CDS’s tied to mortgage backed securities today. It must be noted that while CDS’s are failing, this is not creating any new debt obligations. With or without CDS’s, someone would be left holding the downside risk on the failing mortgage backed securities. All CDS’s have done is make the CDS holder, Company A, feel the pinch rather than the mortgage backed security holder, Company B.

That said, there are two downsides of CDS’s. The market for all CDS’s is massive – somewhere in the neighborhood of $50 trillion dollars world wide. They clearly have added a layer of complexity to the financial markets that, because of the mass failure of the underlying mortgages, has introduced a strong measure of uncertainty into the markets. Further, it would seem that some financial institutions have used CDS’s to get around capital reserve requirements. This has heightened the fragility of some of our major institutions, though is clearly not all as some, such as J.P. Morgan and Bank of America – organizations with a strong commercial banking component – are financially sound.

During the first six years of their existence, CDS’s were unregulated. They were deemed a good way to spread risk by virtually all in the financial industry and in government. Indeed, Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan spoke before Congress on the issue, finding no reason for the Fed to regulate CDS’s. No one in Congress disagreed. President Clinton did not disagree. And ultimately, a law was passed in 2000 that held that CDS’s would not be regulated by the Commodity Futures Exchange.

This is not surprising. We regulate to protect against fraud and unfair practices that impact the average investor. For the same reason, we regulate to insure a measure of sound practices. We do not regulate to protect sophisticated investors. That is why, for example, hedge funds, which are vehicles in which sophisticated investors are allowed to take part, operate unregulated.

The role of CDS’s in the subprime crisis will need to be thoroughly dissected in a post mortem. That said, while CDS’s have failed to protect us by efficiently distributing risk, they have not been the cause of the economic meltdown. That still rests squarely with mortgage industry the CDS’s were built upon.


Rating Securities

One of the most questionable aspects of the subprime meltdown is how mortgage backed securities being pumped out by Fannie Mae and others, were vastly underrated as to the actual risk they represented. This is another horror story that centers on the tearing down of "outdated and arbitrary" lending criteria. From the information available today, it appears that, when the old standards were labled "racist" under Clinton, the rating agencies tried to adapt to the new "market innovations" without reliance on old standards. This from Stan Liebowitz of the University of Texas:



[Why were] the rating agencies were willing to give [risky loans] AAA ratings? . . .

[T]he housing price bubble that was caused in part by these relaxed underwriting standards tended to reduced defaults and obscure the impact of the standards while prices were rising because almost no one would default when they could, instead, easily sell the house at a profit. Rating agencies could suggest that these loans were no more risky than the old antiquated loans and provide empirical support for that conclusion, given the still low default rates at the time, although to do so was short sighted to the point of incompetence.

In fact, the rating agencies seemed overly concerned with the trees and lost sight of the forest. For example, a Wall Street Journal article (which is the basis for the following three quotes) reports on rating agencies’ benign treatment of piggyback mortgages (taking out a second mortgage to cover the downpayment required by the first mortgage). In previous decades, mortgage applicants unable to come up with the full downpayment and therefore thought to be more at risk of default, were required to pay ‘mortgage insurance’ which raised the interest rate on the loan. Piggyback loans allowed borrowers to avoid this mechanism, thus presumably making the loan riskier. Nevertheless, the article reports that rating agencies did not consider these loans more risky:



Data provided by lenders showed that loans with piggybacks performed like standard mortgages. The finding was unexpected, wrote S&P credit analyst Michael Stock in a 2000 research note. He nonetheless concluded the loans weren't necessarily very risky.


The finding was unexpected because it contradicted what had generally been known about mortgages by a prior generation of mortgage lenders—that when applicants made smaller downpayments, increasing the loan-to-value ratio, the probability of default increased. This finding contradicted common sense. Further, these measurements were being made at the front end of a housing price bubble (Figure 1 below shows that prices were rising smartly in 2000), likely biasing downward any default statistics. Relaxed lending standards also had a short enough track record that rating agencies could not know how they would perform in the long run or in adverse conditions, meaning that it isn’t clear that sufficient information existed to even rate these securities. So how did the rating agencies defend their counterintuitive ratings?



One money manager, James Kragenbring, says he had five to 10 conversations with S&P and Moody's in late 2005 and 2006, discussing whether they should be tougher because of looser lending standards… Other analysts recall being told that ratings could also be revised if the market deteriorated. Said an S&P spokesman: "The market can go with its gut; we have to go with the facts."


Whether such a myopic view of the “facts” was responsible for all or most of the excessively high ratings I cannot say, but these ratings were consistent with the views of the relaxed lending standards crowd. The real facts, of course, eventually soured the view of the rating agencies:



By 2006, S&P was making its own study of such loans' performance. It singled out 639,981 loans made in 2002 to see if its benign assumptions had held up. They hadn't. Loans with piggybacks were 43% more likely to default than other loans, S&P found.


In spite of their inaccurate ratings, the rating agencies, nevertheless, were making great profits from rating mortgage-backed securities, a quasi-sinecure created by the government which required many financial organizations (e.g., insurance companies and money market funds) to invest only in highly rated securities as certified by government (Security and Exchange Commission) approved rating agencies (NRSROs). There were only three such approved rating agencies for most of the last decade (S&P, Moody’s and Fitch). Given that government-approved rating agencies were protected from free competition, it might be expected that these agencies would not want to create political waves by rocking the mortgage boat, endangering a potential loss of their protected profits.


Summary

The biggest levee that should have stopped the damage of this hurricane - if not prevented the development of the hurricane itself - was the rating system for mortgage backed securities. This needs to be thoroughly investigated. Credit Default Swaps have exacerbated the current fiscal crisis, but their failure is a mere symptom of the mortgage meltdown. Glass-Steagall is a red herrirng.

Any claim that the left is not wholly responsible for this hurricane now pounding our financial markets has no anchor in the formative events that occurred between 1972 and 2000. Part II will look at the final years as this hurricane grew to level 5 under the same protective race umbrella before finally smashing upon our coast. This will also take a look at suspension of the uptick rule, reduction of capital requirements for some of the major trading houses, and introduction of mark to market accounting.









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