Boortz: The Rest of the Meltdown Story

2008-09-19 Thread Keith In Tampa
 In a nutshell, in simplified terms, this is exactly what happened, and it
can be traced to the Kinder, Gentler, Tree Hugging Faction of this Nation:

The Rest of the Meltdown Story
by Neal Boortz

What in the world is going on here?

You've seen the headlines, and you heard of the failures and buyouts. Lehman
Brothers, Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, AIG; all big names and all in big
trouble. Then those mysterious quasi-government agencies with names like
Freddie and Fannie become wards of the state and you learn that you and your
fellow taxpayers are potentially on the hook for tens of billions of
dollars. At the end of the week Washington Mutual is looking for a buyer,
and you start to wonder about the security of your own bank and your own
savings account. Let's change that ad copy to WaMu -- boo hoo.

Somewhere in the back of your mind you understand that this is all tied
somehow to bad mortgages. If you start reading a bit further to enhance your
understanding you run into terms like Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS) and
credit-default swaps, whatever in the world those are. Read further and you
find out that a combination of falling home prices and mortgage defaults
have put many investment banks and other financial institutions in deep
puddin'. All this reading, all this watching the talking heads on TV, and
you still don't really know what in the world is going on here.

Fear not. I'm here to help. I know … I'm just another talk show host; but
the fact is that when the stage was being set for the problems we're seeing
today I was making most of my money as a real estate lawyer .. closing loans
for some of the very institutions that are the tank today. This rather
unique combination – closing lawyer and radio talk show host – gave me a
front row seat to the politicization of mortgage loans that led us to
today's headlines.

OK .. so we all know that a lot of really bad real estate loans were made.
The political class would sure love for us to believe that the blame here
rests squarely on greedy (try to define that word) mortgage brokers and
lenders. The truth is that most of the blame rests on political meddling in
the credit decisions of these mortgage lenders.

Twenty years ago the buzz-word in the media was redlining. Newspapers
across the country were filled with hard-hitting investigative reports about
evil and racist mortgage lenders refusing to make real estate loans to
various minorities and to applicants who lived in lower-income
neighborhoods. There I was closing these loans in the afternoons, and in the
mornings offering a counter-argument on the radio to these absurd
redlining claims. Frankly, the claims that evil mortgage lenders were
systematically denying loans to blacks and other minorities were a lot
sexier on the radio than my claims that when credit histories, job
stability, loan-to-value ratios and income levels were considered there was
no evident racial discrimination.

Political correctness won the day. Washington made it clear to banks and
other lending institutions that if they did not do something .. and fast ..
to bring more minorities and low-income Americans into the world of home
ownership there would be a heavy price to pay. Congress set up processes
(Research the Community Redevelopment Act) whereby community activist groups
and organizers could effectively stop a bank's efforts to grow if that bank
didn't make loans to unqualified borrowers. Enter, stage left, the
subprime mortgage. These lenders knew that a very high percentage of these
loans would turn to garbage – but it was a price that had to be paid if the
bank was to expand and grow. We should note that among the community groups
browbeating banks into making these bad loans was an outfit called ACORN.
There is one certain presidential candidate that did a lot of community
organizing for ACORN. I won't mention his name so as to avoid politicizing
this column.

These garbage loans to unqualified borrowers were then bundled up and sold.
The expectation was that the loans would be eventually paid off when rising
home values led some borrowers to access their equity through re-financing
and others to sell and move on up the ladder. Oops.

Right now this crisis is being sold to the American public by the left as
evidence the failure of the free market and capitalism. Not so. What we're
seeing is the inevitable result of political interference in free market
economics. Acme bank didn't want to loan money to Joe Homebuyer because Joe
had a spotty job history, owed too much money on his credit cards, and
wasn't all that good at making payments on time. The politicians told Acme
Bank to figure out a way to make that loan, because, after all, Joe is a
bona-fide minority-American, or forget about opening that new branch office
on the Southside. The loan was made under politicial pressure; the loan,
with millions like it, failed – and now we are left to enjoy today's
headlines.

So … why aren't you reading the whole story 

Re: Boortz: The Rest of the Meltdown Story

2008-09-19 Thread PoliticalAmazon

What a neocon loon.  It is the lack of oversight that developed this
crisis, and all the neocon spinning in the world won't chang it.

I'm just surprised that there are so many gullible GOP voters who buy
this load of horseshit, proof that Simple Jack started out as a
character in Tropic Thunder, but soon became a conservative
movement.

---

On Sep 19, 10:30 am, Keith In Tampa [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  In a nutshell, in simplified terms, this is exactly what happened, and it
 can be traced to the Kinder, Gentler, Tree Hugging Faction of this Nation:

 The Rest of the Meltdown Story
 by Neal Boortz

 What in the world is going on here?

 You've seen the headlines, and you heard of the failures and buyouts. Lehman
 Brothers, Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, AIG; all big names and all in big
 trouble. Then those mysterious quasi-government agencies with names like
 Freddie and Fannie become wards of the state and you learn that you and your
 fellow taxpayers are potentially on the hook for tens of billions of
 dollars. At the end of the week Washington Mutual is looking for a buyer,
 and you start to wonder about the security of your own bank and your own
 savings account. Let's change that ad copy to WaMu -- boo hoo.

 Somewhere in the back of your mind you understand that this is all tied
 somehow to bad mortgages. If you start reading a bit further to enhance your
 understanding you run into terms like Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS) and
 credit-default swaps, whatever in the world those are. Read further and you
 find out that a combination of falling home prices and mortgage defaults
 have put many investment banks and other financial institutions in deep
 puddin'. All this reading, all this watching the talking heads on TV, and
 you still don't really know what in the world is going on here.

 Fear not. I'm here to help. I know … I'm just another talk show host; but
 the fact is that when the stage was being set for the problems we're seeing
 today I was making most of my money as a real estate lawyer .. closing loans
 for some of the very institutions that are the tank today. This rather
 unique combination – closing lawyer and radio talk show host – gave me a
 front row seat to the politicization of mortgage loans that led us to
 today's headlines.

 OK .. so we all know that a lot of really bad real estate loans were made.
 The political class would sure love for us to believe that the blame here
 rests squarely on greedy (try to define that word) mortgage brokers and
 lenders. The truth is that most of the blame rests on political meddling in
 the credit decisions of these mortgage lenders.

 Twenty years ago the buzz-word in the media was redlining. Newspapers
 across the country were filled with hard-hitting investigative reports about
 evil and racist mortgage lenders refusing to make real estate loans to
 various minorities and to applicants who lived in lower-income
 neighborhoods. There I was closing these loans in the afternoons, and in the
 mornings offering a counter-argument on the radio to these absurd
 redlining claims. Frankly, the claims that evil mortgage lenders were
 systematically denying loans to blacks and other minorities were a lot
 sexier on the radio than my claims that when credit histories, job
 stability, loan-to-value ratios and income levels were considered there was
 no evident racial discrimination.

 Political correctness won the day. Washington made it clear to banks and
 other lending institutions that if they did not do something .. and fast ..
 to bring more minorities and low-income Americans into the world of home
 ownership there would be a heavy price to pay. Congress set up processes
 (Research the Community Redevelopment Act) whereby community activist groups
 and organizers could effectively stop a bank's efforts to grow if that bank
 didn't make loans to unqualified borrowers. Enter, stage left, the
 subprime mortgage. These lenders knew that a very high percentage of these
 loans would turn to garbage – but it was a price that had to be paid if the
 bank was to expand and grow. We should note that among the community groups
 browbeating banks into making these bad loans was an outfit called ACORN.
 There is one certain presidential candidate that did a lot of community
 organizing for ACORN. I won't mention his name so as to avoid politicizing
 this column.

 These garbage loans to unqualified borrowers were then bundled up and sold.
 The expectation was that the loans would be eventually paid off when rising
 home values led some borrowers to access their equity through re-financing
 and others to sell and move on up the ladder. Oops.

 Right now this crisis is being sold to the American public by the left as
 evidence the failure of the free market and capitalism. Not so. What we're
 seeing is the inevitable result of political interference in free market
 economics. Acme bank didn't want to loan money to Joe Homebuyer because Joe
 had a spotty job