Shot in the Dark

Please Sir, I Want Some More

1977:  Home ownership should be increased via government incentives and if necessary penalties for those that don’t lend money to people that can’t pay it back.

Result:  The Great Recession.

2009: Access to banking services should be increased via government incentives and if necessary penalties for those that don’t offer banking services to people that don’t have any money.

Result:  [insanity]It’ll be different this time folks.[/insanity]

A report from the (coincidentally insolvent) FDIC:

Consider defining a national shared government-industry
goal
to lower the number of unbanked and/or underbanked
individuals and households…

There are people that have never been banked?

Do you know anyone that is “underbanked”

“[There is] an imperative for government and industry to expand financial access to the substantial number of households that have never been banked,”

…or “unbanked” (!!!!!!!!!!!)?

A push to extend basic services such as accounts to poorer communities with patchy credit histories would be especially sensitive because of the role of the subprime mortgage crisis in sparking the recent turmoil.

Ya think?

Not having enough money to need an account was the most common reason cited for staying outside the banking system. One third of households that no longer had accounts said they closed them because of the cost of maintaining them, such as minimum balance requirements, service charges and overdrafts.

“As a society, we should make banks cover these people.”

That’ll have a positive outcome.

But wait! We already have a solution here in the Twin Cities…it’s called Twin Cities Federal*. $50 for opening up a free checking account; $25 for referring your friends, open 7 days a week.

The bank for the underbanked…no TARP required, thank you.

*Johnny Roosh does not endorse Twin City Federal and was not paid a fee to mention them. Yet.


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5 responses to “Please Sir, I Want Some More”

  1. angryclown Avatar
    angryclown

    Haha! 1977 straight to 2009, eh Johnny Doosh? Nothing really happened in between, eh? IT’S ALL JIMMY CARTER’S FAULT!!!!!

    You’re a parody of yourself, Johnny Doosh. Flash has it right. Posts like this are turning this blog into Shot in the Onion.

  2. nate Avatar
    nate

    Lots happened between then, AC. Actually, it’s mostly Barak Obama’s fault. Him, and people like him, who set up the disaster.

    1977 CRA was enacted but not vigorously enforced.

    1980-1992 adults controlled the government.

    1992-2000 Redistributionist ideologues sued banks to force them to make more bad loans to people who couldn’t repay; see for example, Buycks-Roberson v. Citibank Fed. Sav. Bank Fair Housing/Lending/Insurance
    Docket / Court 94 C 4094 ( N.D. Ill. ) FH-IL-0011
    State/Territory Illinois (lead counsel BARAK OBAMA).

    2000-2008 adults were in control again, trying to mitigate the damage done in earlier years but blocked by Barney Frank and Chris Dodd, et. al. insisting that there was no problem with sub-prime loans.

    2008 – applying Mark to Market to loan portfolios revealed the extent of the sham and started bringing down lenders and their insurers.

    Instead of arguing that it’s not their fault, Liberals should be arguing that crashing lenders is a feature, not a bug. Look at how many people got to (temporarily) own homes who otherwise wouldn’t have. Plus they also get foreclosed, evicted and file bankruptcy, which will spread the experience so widely that the stigma formerly attached thereto will be diluted and eventually forgotten, just like having a child out of wedlock is no longer a matter of shame but a matter of course in Progressive circles.

    Take a bow, AC, this whole mess is on your head. Yours, and The One’s.

    .

  3. nate Avatar
    nate

    Here’s the logic behind CRA:

    “Just because people are poor is no reason they shouldn’t own a house.”

    Read it again. It’s mind-blowing. And it’s the same rationale for the current banking madness:

    “Just because people have no money doesn’t mean they shouldn’t have a bank account.”

    Three words: W. T. F?

    .

  4. Terry Avatar
    Terry

    I’m waiting for penigma to show up in high dudgeon and claim that JRoosh is blaming poor people for the financial crisis when he should be blaming greedy banks for borrowing poor people money that they knew the poor people couldn’t pay back.

  5. Loren Avatar
    Loren

    he should be blaming greedy banks for borrowing lending poor people money that they knew the poor people couldn’t pay back.

    My deceased English teacher mother and grand-mother’s voices were just screeching in my mind over that word choice.

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