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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

'Catastrophic Times' for Black America

By Max Fraser, The Nation. Posted January 15, 2008.


Shockingly little attention has been paid to the mortgage crisis on the campaign trail.
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"I am not a pessimist," said Sheila Jackson-Lee, the progressive Texas Congresswoman, midway through a panel on "The State of Black America" at the annual Wall Street Project Economic Summit. For Jackson-Lee, a Democrat who has endorsed Hillary Clinton but whose stances on issues like the Iraq War and immigration often put her well to the left of the party, encouragement came from the diversity of the Democratic field. "I am not unhappy about an Hispanic, a populist, an African-American and a woman running for the presidency," she explained.

Yet pessimism was hard to avoid during the early sessions of this latest economic summit, convened January 5-9 in New York City by the Rev. Jesse Jackson's Rainbow/PUSH Coalition. The summit's theme, Jackson reiterated time and again, was the "structural inequality" that has persisted in American society long after the end of legal segregation. The main item on the opening day's agenda was the subprime mortgage implosion, its impact on black communities and its larger ramifications for a national economy barreling toward recession. Black homeowners have been hit particularly hard by the mortgage crisis, largely because predatory lenders have been steering them toward subprime loans for years, even when they could afford prime rates. According to Valerie Rawlston Wilson of the Urban League, home equity accounts for nearly 90 percent of black homeowners' total net worth. So as the housing market collapses, much of the trumpeted new wealth that has accumulated in black communities in recent decades will go with it.

"There is no question that a black or Latino family is twice as likely to receive a subprime loan as a white family," fumed Lewis Fidler, a white New York City Councilman who participated in the day's second panel, "The State of Home Foreclosures." "If that's not a civil rights issue, I don't know what is."

Alongside Fidler was Eugene Grant, mayor of Seat Pleasant in Prince George's County, Maryland--recently one of the wealthiest majority-black suburbs in the nation but now home to a foreclosure rate twice that of any other county in the state. Throughout the country, the effects of the mortgage crisis have been most painfully apparent on the local level. On one block of West Madison Street in Jackson's hometown of Chicago, Rainbow/PUSH found that every single homeowner was in default on his or her mortgage. In neighborhoods across Chicago, foreclosure rates are topping fifty homes per square mile. Nationally, "the homeownership rate for African-Americans is falling like a rock," said Jim Carr of the National Community Reinvestment Commission.

Shockingly little attention has been paid to the mortgage crisis on the campaign trail. The collapse of the housing market, and with it much of the equity ordinary Americans have built up since the 1990s, combined with soaring gasoline prices, a flat-lining dollar and the worst unemployment figures in two years, all suggest that the country is speeding toward its most serious recession in some time. "The subprime crisis is sinking America's economic boat like the Titanic," Jackson warned. "But if you're having a debate and nobody brings up mortgage foreclosures or predatory lending, then the issue just isn't part of the discussion."


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Joe B
Posted by: Joe B on Jan 16, 2008 1:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our Loan Compliance Advisory Group is committed to helping "Protect The American Dream." We are dedicated to helping Homeowners Nationwide, that may be victims of Deceptive Lending Practices.We are open for any suggestions on how we can help. Please contact Joseph Bisogno at (800) 529-7184 or visit our web site at www.loancomplianceadvisorygroup.com

Several members of our Loan Compliance Advisory Group attended the "March on Wall Street." We support the "Save Our Homes/Restructure Loans" important message that Rev. Jackson and his dedicated coalition members are spreading across America. The December 10, 2007 rally, one of several recently held across the United States, sponsored by Rev. Jessie Jackson's Rainbow PUSH Coalition, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Urban League, was a magnificent well planned informative event.

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So I should vote by my race and gender?
Posted by: Sociallibertarian on Jan 16, 2008 3:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is very interesting that it is completely OK to advocate that you vote for a woman if you are a woman and advocate that you shoudl vote for a black or Latino if you are a black or a Latino. But if I am a white middle class male I am a racist and a chauvinist i I advocate the same things. i.e that you as a white middle class male shoudl vote for a white middle class male?

In my opinion you should be aware of your biases and be very careful when considering candidates.

Do I dislike Hillary Clinton because she is a woman or would I have disliked a man holding her views?

Do I like Barack Obama because of his politics or because of reverse racism issues?

Do I like John McCain because he is white male or because of his integrity?

Racial and gender supremacist are equally bad be the white, black, male or female!

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I have a hard time with the Subprime Debacle
Posted by: HistArch on Jan 16, 2008 11:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Recently, I was looking to buy a home/condo/townhouse and realized that because of the financial situation of my fiance and myself we were unable to qualify for a fixed rate loan with a good interest rate. Initially, the only products offered to us were ARMs with varying increase dates. While we could have accepted one of these loans, we were holding out for someone to offer us a fixed rate loan and in the meanwhile this whole Subprime Debacle exploded.

The Subprime situation strikes at the core of Americanist Values advertised on every street corner across the country. These "Values" are attached to an idea that possessions=people, more/bigger=better, buying stuff=American Citizenship. With a 24-7 onslaught of advertising reaffirming these characteristics, people are stretching further and further to live up to media-based "expectations." People buy more house than they can afford because loansharks/brokers tell them that serial homeownership is ideal. The idea that a house is just another commodity instead of a home is completely crazy and goes against everything that cultures and societies should stand for.

Basically, I have little sympathy for people who took out these ARMs and can't pay them back. I know this is going to destroy families and businesses for generations, but I'm sorry. I won't cry a single tear over this because anyone who puts money in front of their emotions, believes their home is an asset, or believes that a mortgage broker (who they don't even know) is working in their best interest is obviously misguided. The worst economic depression in American history changed the economic paradigm of two generations of American society. It reaffirmed frugality and financial fortitude as a way of life for 50 years. It took three decades (from the 1950s until the 1980s) to completely erode this paradigm. Maybe the currrent recession will make people realize that their home is not something that can be measured in dollars.

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Mortgage Loan Comparison Worksheet
Posted by: tjanusz on Jan 19, 2008 6:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With horror stories like this, what are potential mortgage borrowers now supposed to do? They are scared to death that they will be the next victims of predatory lending!



I am a former senior loan officer for a regional mortgage bank. It made me sick to see how we took advantage of consumers for thousands of extra dollars. Sometimes these were smart people who simply didn't know any better. So I developed this simple Mortgage Loan Comparison Worksheet. If borrowers just used this easy tool when shopping for a mortgage, predatory lending in this country could virtually be eradicated:



linked text



Problem is, most borrowers only make a decision once every seven years, so how would they even know what to look for? As a loan officer, my mission was not to educate, but to get a signature on the bottom line, at any cost.



As my "penance" I wrote a book entitled Kickback: Confessions of a Mortgage Salesman, now one of the best-selling books on mortgages on Amazon.com.


In my book, I list the Top 10 Mistakes Mortgage Borrowers Make:



1. Not knowing which mortgage fees the borrower can -- and cannot -- negotiate.



2. Choosing and trusting the first loan officer the borrower interviews.



3. Using an interest-only or "payment option" adjustable-rate loan primarily to qualify for a more expensive house than the borrower could normally afford.



4. Thinking the interest rate is always the main thing.



5. Not comparing the final fees listed on the closing documents to the up-front estimates to avoid the lender "packing the loan" with added-on fees without the borrower's knowledge.



6. Not knowing if the mortgage has a pre-payment penalty - until it's too late.



7. Thinking that renting is always just throwing money away.



8. The borrower does not know if he or she is paying a back-end yield spread or Service Release Premium.



9. Paying for mortgage life insurance, credit insurance or other expensive lender add-ons to increase the amount of kickbacks the lender can receive from various vendors.



10. Paying hundreds of dollars to have a company set up a biweekly mortgage payment plan, something the borrower can generally do for herself or himself -- for free.

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