UncleBuck
Well-Known Member
noare you kidding me this whole time..?
Bugeye makes it all up as he goes
noare you kidding me this whole time..?
he used the thought of a woman in his life to soften his edges; make me like him almost seemed human.no
Bugeye makes it all up as he goes
Yesterday was yellow with ash snow, today is slightly betterhe used the thought of a woman in his life to soften his edges; make me like him almost seemed human.
i'm scared..is it really yellow at your house with ashes snowing?..the sun is really red and can hardly be seen..it looks like looking through a yellow filter out there.
i need to vape- i'm getting anxious.
it's like night up here now..went from bright yellow to this really weird gray with big chunks of ash.Yesterday was yellow with ash snow, today is slightly better
what if there is a floatilla and everyone forgot their Trump* flag after their ship sunk..?What if Trump wins and everyone supporting Biden burns down their own homes in protest? I think that would make a powerful statement.
smart move to push a topic that Biden leads trump onWhat if...in those violent cities run by democrats the politics were different?
What If, in Those Violent Cities Run by Democrats, the Politics Were Different? | RealClearPolitics
Do you want to play a game? It's politics with a twist. That game ofwww.realclearpolitics.com
What if those now Democratic ran cities were not redlined into a unnaturally low tax base by Republicans and rich racist assholes like Trump into the issues that we have today?What if...in those violent cities run by democrats the politics were different?
What If, in Those Violent Cities Run by Democrats, the Politics Were Different? | RealClearPolitics
Do you want to play a game? It's politics with a twist. That game ofwww.realclearpolitics.com
But he does as he please every day- no one tells the Toddler King 'no'..the fear of the Tweet is great within them.What if a sitting president had no immunity from criminal prosecution? Wouldn’t that be cool?
did you miss the bags of USPS mail dumped in a parking lot by contractor? the blue boxes collected and stacked? the sorting machines unassembled sitting in the rain rendered useless?What if those now Democratic ran cities were not redlined into a unnaturally low tax base by Republicans and rich racist assholes like Trump into the issues that we have today?
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"Redlining" just sounds like an an old-timey term, a practice that exists only in history and our re-tellings of it. The word has particular roots in the 1930s, when the government-sponsored Home Owner's Loan Corporation first drafted maps of American communities to sort through which ones were worthy of mortgage lending. Neighborhoods were ranked and color-coded, and the D-rated ones — shunned for their "inharmonious" racial groups — were typically outlined in red.
This government practice was swiftly adopted by private banks, too, during an era of massive homeownership expansion in the U.S. And the visual language of the maps became a verb: To redline a community was to cut it off from essential capital. To be redlined was something even worse.
The federal government eventually retreated from the practice, and it was outlawed by the Fair Housing Act in 1968. But black communities have warned that it still exists in subtler and changed forms, in bank tactics that have targeted these same neighborhoods for predatory lending, or in new patterns like "retail redlining." Some of the persistent redlining, though, still looks an awful lot like the original.
Case in point: This week the Department of Housing and Urban Development settled with the largest bank headquartered in Wisconsin over claims that it discriminated from 2008-2010 against black and Hispanic borrowers in Wisconsin, Illinois and Minnesota. The bank, Associated Bank, denies wrongdoing in the settlement, but HUD itself is declaring victory in "one of the largest redlining complaints" ever brought by the federal government against a mortgage lender.
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HUD's analysis of Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data concluded that the bank disproportionately denied qualified loan applicants in predominantly minority neighborhoods in Chicago, Milwaukee, and Minneapolis, compared to other lenders operating in these same communities. Now Associated Bank has agreed to a long list of actions to make amends over the next three years: It must finance nearly $200 million in home loans in majority-minority census tracts within these cities, and pay nearly $10 million in down payment assistance to borrowers or in lower interest rates. It must also open four new offices in minority neighborhoods in Chicago and Milwaukee, and invest $1.4 million in marketing loans in many of these same underserved communities.
The case is not about doling out mortgages to minority households that wouldn't otherwise qualify for them — it's about offering equal access to families that look just as eligible on paper as white homeowners nearby.
It is, however, a reality that historic redlining makes homeownership beyond reach for many families in these communities today, regardless of how big banks behave now. If your family was denied a mortgage in the 1930s, or the 1950s, or the 1970s, then you may not have the family wealth or down payment help to become a homeowner today. In that way, the consequences of past redlining transcend time, even as new forms of it continue.
I saw you posted that about the mail being dumped, not the other stuff yet. Is that in Florida?did you miss the bags of USPS mail dumped in a parking lot by contractor? the blue boxes collected and stacked? the sorting machines unassembled sitting in the rain rendered useless?
the other stuff was a week or two ago.I saw you posted that about the mail being dumped, not the other stuff yet. Is that in Florida?
Im sorry thought you meant something more recent. Yeah around the time of the Dejoy hearing and now looks like he might get nailed for lying to congress.the other stuff was a week or two ago.
What if MAGATS found relevance in information sources offering investigative journalism, rather than false narratives and propaganda?What if...in those violent cities run by democrats the politics were different?
What If, in Those Violent Cities Run by Democrats, the Politics Were Different? | RealClearPolitics
Do you want to play a game? It's politics with a twist. That game ofwww.realclearpolitics.com