I wrote to you previously (Meet Barry Obama, 'Fair Housing' Lawyer) about
the Community Reinvestment Act, a law which compels banks to make home loans
in minority neighborhoods to people who were poor credit risks. Although the
CRA is well known in the financial industry, political pundits and reporters
often know very little about finance and so have missed this extremely
important aspect of the story. Ignorance of economics doesn't help much
either. The political class seems blissfully unaware of the concept of
unintended consequences which is the idea that laws which are designed to
make our lives better often make our lives worse.
On a recent edition of Kudlow and Company, I debated Vermont Senator Bernie
Sanders on precisely this point. He seemed not only to disagree with my
point that if congress compels banks to make Subprime loans, then they share
responsibility for the crisis that results when the borrowers default; he
seemed not to understand it. For him once we identify the target group as
bankers, nothing else matters - they're bad and he's good, no more reasoning
is necessary.
It's not just Congress that's responsible. Yes, they forged the weapons, but
some army needed to wield them. That's where guys like Barry Obama came in
to the picture. When Barry (who was gradually changing his name to Barack
around this time) graduated from Columbia, he took a brief stint as a
researcher writing for a corporate consulting firm. According to his memoirs
he thought of himself as 'a spy' who was dropped 'behind enemy lines'.
Shortly thereafter, he left the enemy territory of corporate America and
moved to a job about which he could feel proud - he went to work for the New
York branch of the Public Interest Research Group. PIRG is one of those left
of center activist groups who, among other things, uses the legitimate
concept of 'fair housing' to force banks into making bad loans. PIRG has
actively lobbied for a stronger (yes, you guessed it) Community Reinvestment
Act.
According to his bio, and accounts from friends, Obama became an expert in
real estate law and fair housing while working as a community organizer and
public interest lawyer. This is especially the case during his Chicago
period. After graduating from law school Barack worked for various community
groups which were attempting to get black churches politically involved in
left-of-center causes. He was hired because the Developing Communities Project, which was
headed by two older Jewish gentlemen, was having trouble making headway in
the black community. By then, the name change to Barack was complete and so
was the shift to an Afro-centric identity. Barack was a natural. He was able
to play upon crowds' sense of racial identity, castigating black audiences
for their failure to embrace the right policies, but offering hope to them
in the form of his own leadership. He joined a prominent Afro-centric church
at this time, headed by Rev. Jeremiah Wright.
Eventually Barack joined the civil rights law firm, Miner, Ballard and
Galland, where he specialized in fair housing. That's where he did work for
the (now indicted) Syrian-born entrepreneur Tony Rezko. Rezko was a very
powerful and politically connected urban real estate developer who did quite
a lot of business with the government. Rezko helped Barack go from public
interest lawyer to State Senator. And Rezko didn't just help Barack into the
upper legislative house, he helped him into his family house as well. One
wonders to what degree Rezko was helped by
low-income-sub-prime-lending-fair-housing-industrial complex of urban
Chicago. For all the details we may need to wait for the Rezko trial.
One thing, however, is perfectly clear already. Obama spent his pre-elected
career working right in the middle of the complex of law firms and activist
groups which use law and regulations to push banks into vastly increasing
their lending to Subprime borrowers right in the middle of the golden age of
the expansion of the Subprime industry.
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