Alicia Colon Commentary


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ALICIA UNLEASHED

October 20, 2008

The road to this economic hell was paved with the good intentions of the Carter administration. It seemed like a good idea to make sure that people who looked like me could get a mortgage without being discriminated against. Certainly the idea of home ownership was a dream to my family while we lived in a vermin-infested tenement in Spanish Harlem. Even if we could afford to buy we faced the possibility of redlining by banks which only serviced wealthier neighborhoods. The Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 forced banks to provide credit, including home ownership opportunities, to under-served populations, and commercial loans to small businesses.

My sister worked five jobs to reach that dream but that was before the Clinton administration enhanced the CRA in 1995 making it possible to get mortgages you really couldn’t afford. All the qualifications one had to meet were essentially watered down and the housing boom was on. But, but…you may say, it’s the Bush administration that caused the housing crisis. Oh, really?

Remember those no money down, no income verifications, interest only mortgages? The message was, “Why rent? You can own a home now.” Funds were added to buyers’ bank account by corrupt brokers and developers to defraud lenders. A lot of us fell for these practices knowing full well that we might not be able to pay for that balloon mortgage if we lost our job or were struck with illness. My sister lost her job and home when she was stricken with leukemia. We nearly lost the home we had purchased in 1978 when I was laid off in the 1992 recession.

What led to the bubble bursting had nothing to do with good intentions. It was corruption, greed and fraud and the culprits behind the scam are still in office and I’m not talking about the president.

The major villains in this piece are the administrators of Fannie Mae, the government-sponsored enterprise that was supposed to guarantee these tenuous mortgages. From 1991 to 1998, Fannie Mae was headed by James Johnson, a longtime aide to former Democratic vice president Walter Mondale. Johnson’s successor, Franklin Raines, had served as budget director to Bill Clinton. Jamie Gorelick, vice chair of Fannie Mae from 1998 to 2003, served as deputy attorney general in the Clinton administration.

They paid themselves handsome salaries. Johnson earned $21-million in just his last year at Fannie Mae. Raines earned $90-million for five years’ work at Fannie Mae. Gorelick got $26-million.

Everyone in business knew that Fannie Mae was overextending itself in mortgage debt but when the Bush administration tried to regulate it in 2003, Senators like Barney Frank and Chris Dodd argued against reform but considering that they were getting contributions from Fannie Mae, this was a no-brainer. In 2005, John McCain went on the floor of the Senate and warned that we were headed for a fall if Fannie Mae was not reined in but the bill he co-sponsored that would have prevented this crisis never came to a vote.

What we are hearing from Washington are bald-faced lies from politicians who think we’re all stupid. They’re right if voters don’t check out the facts for themselves. Just go to You Tube and check out where Fannie Mae’s biggest campaign contributions went.

Politicians love to play the class envy game because it works. All they have to campaign with are slogans that say “Tax breaks for the Rich,” or “Big Corporations don’t pay tax,” and the mob shouts out in agreement.

As a kid, I used to sit on my fire escape on 110th Street and dream of the future. It was during the Cold war and I had this scary thought. It would just be my luck that when I finally became rich, the communists would take over and take away all my money. I’ll probably never be rich but that scenario is not only scary, it’s become likely.


Déjà Vu in New York

The more I hear comments from my Democrat family and friends about Barack Obama, the more I get an eerie sense of déjà vu. I’ve heard these sentiments about “change” before. “How nice it would be to have a black man in charge,”- only back in 1989 they were talking about David Dinkins. This year it’s Barack Obama and New Yorkers are rhapsodizing about his candidacy just as they did Dinkins’.

In the 1989 race between Dinkins and Rudy Giuliani, Woody Allen was quoted in the NY Times as saying that the Democrat candidate was ''the one hope'' for New York City. Giuliani however warned that Dinkins was not ready to lead. ''He's not a man who can rise to a tough challenge,'' he said.

In 1991, those words were recalled during the Crown Heights riots that followed the traffic accident death of a seven-year old African American child, Gavin Cato. David Dinkins will be forever known as the mayor that allowed a “pogrom” to occur for three days during which blacks roamed the streets shouting “Kill the Jews,” before ordering sufficient police manpower in to quell it. In all fairness, David Dinkins did initiate some positive changes but he simply was not tough enough to govern New York City.

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October 16, 2008

Well, this is all rather confusing. Apparently, everyone that I polled felt that John McCain won the debate. They were astounded by the comments made by a Fox News panel that asserted that Obama won. I confess that I did not watch the debate but relied on the running commentary of registered Ldotters on Lucianne.com who clearly agreed with those I polled.

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October 14, 2008

While many New York Sun readers considered me outspoken, the fact is that many of my columns had my strongest comments edited out. NY Post columnist Cindy Adams called editors “style killers” and I couldn’t agree more.

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Previous Articles

Our Sorry Twin Peaks - September 16, 2008

Iranian president Ahmadinejad, who plans to come to New York City for the opening session of the General Assembly (Sept.18-21), is still spouting ominous nuclear rhetoric- proof positive that this is still a dangerous world. Yet last week’s seventh anniversary of the 9/11 attack on this city clearly showed that many are content to forget the horror of that day and are intent on replacing the majestic twin towers with two gigantic flower-strewn potholes.

I stopped watching the memorial service a few years ago because it was being held in a place that showed no progress of being rebuilt. This is unacceptable in a city where buildings crop up overnight in a blink of an eye. What has been more disturbing is how far removed from reality many New Yorkers have drifted.

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Copyright (c) Alicia Colon 2008