Glad this dude lost this battle

paindonthurt

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AI sucks, but at least it makes it a ton easier to respond to these zombie lies:

Banks were generally not forced to make loans they didn't want to. While the federal government did implement policies encouraging homeownership for underserved communities—such as the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA)—major financial institutions willingly created and issued subprime mortgages. They did this to generate substantial profits through loan origination fees and packaging risky loans into mortgage-backed securities to sell to investors.The narrative of forced lending stems largely from debates surrounding the CRA. While the CRA did encourage banks to lend in low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, numerous economic analyses—including reports by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis and various academic studies—have concluded that the CRA was not the primary cause of the subprime crisis. Most of the high-risk, subprime loans were made by non-bank lenders and institutions not heavily bound by CRA requirements.Ultimately, the decision to loosen lending standards and issue loans to borrowers who ultimately defaulted was driven by the private sector's pursuit of short-term profits and deregulation.
Keep asking why?

Why did we have a housing crash in 2008?
Subprime lending

when did sub prime lending start?
Early 90s

why did it start? Political pressure to give riskier customers loans bc it was “discriminatory” to use good credit info.

When banks are responsible and use good information to give loans like credit score and debt to income they get called racist.

when they give loans to bad customers and jack up interest rates to ocercome the risk they get called greedy.

they found a way to bundle the risk and make money. Then it popped.

Let the GD free market work itself out we will always be ok. Not always great but always trending up over the long haul. ALWAYS.
 
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JackReacherDawg

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Apr 7, 2026
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Keep asking why?

Why did we have a housing crash in 2008?
Subprime lending

when did sub prime lending start?
Early 90s

why did it start? Political pressure to give riskier customers loans bc it was “discriminatory” to use good credit info.

When banks are responsible and use good information to give loans like credit score and debt to income they get called racist.

when they give loans to bad customers and jack up interest rates to ocercome the risk they get called greedy.

they found a way to bundle the risk and make money. Then it popped.

Let the GD free market work itself out we will always be ok. Not always great but always trending up over the long haul. ALWAYS.
Read it and try again. They were making money, thats why they were making the bad loans. The loans were off their books in 30 days, to good profit. You expect them to turn down easy money? Dude.
 
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mstateglfr

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Feb 24, 2008
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Keep asking why?

Why did we have a housing crash in 2008?
Subprime lending

when did sub prime lending start?
Early 90s

why did it start? Political pressure to give riskier customers loans bc it was “discriminatory” to use good credit info.

When banks are responsible and use good information to give loans like credit score and debt to income they get called racist.

when they give loans to bad customers and jack up interest rates to ocercome the risk they get called greedy.

they found a way to bundle the risk and make money. Then it popped.

Let the GD free market work itself out we will always be ok. Not always great but always trending up over the long haul. ALWAYS.
get the 17 out of here with that free market shít. We don’t have a free market.
I know that is what you are complaining about and you are saying a free market would resolve this, but there is zero reason to believe your baseless claim because we have nothing to go off of to show it would work.

You are aggressively pushing an untested theory and claiming it would solve all issues.
 

paindonthurt

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Before recorded history.

I guess you're going to double down on banks dont want to make money.
Wanting to make money doesn’t mean it’s a bad loan.

I have several loans and cash to pay them off. But my money is working for me.

I wasn’t given that. I started off with debt from college. I made smart decisions (like not getting adjustable rate loans). It’s pretty easy to not get a bad loan. Live within your means and save money and build credit (which is really easy).
 

paindonthurt

All-Conference
Apr 7, 2025
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get the 17 out of here with that free market shít. We don’t have a free market.
I know that is what you are complaining about and you are saying a free market would resolve this, but there is zero reason to believe your baseless claim because we have nothing to go off of to show it would work.

You are aggressively pushing an untested theory and claiming it would solve all issues.
We don’t have a free market mainly bc it’s regulated by a dumb government system!

what is my baseless claim?

that politicians pushed risky loans so “under privileged” people could own houses? That’s not baseless. That’s an absolute fact.

Was a crash possible without that? Yes and likely. But it’s absolutely a fact the crash was accelerated and the effect of it was worse bc of political pressure to make loans to people who shouldn’t have loans. I’m sorry you are too dumb to see that.
 

JackReacherDawg

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Wanting to make money doesn’t mean it’s a bad loan.

I have several loans and cash to pay them off. But my money is working for me.

I wasn’t given that. I started off with debt from college. I made smart decisions (like not getting adjustable rate loans). It’s pretty easy to not get a bad loan. Live within your means and save money and build credit (which is really easy).
Then you just dont understand. The banks MADE MONEY on these "bad loans". They originated them, took their fee, and offloaded them, within 30 days. Hell, they probably made more money on the "bad loans" than they did on the "good" ones.

So, again, the question is why you think they were "forced" to......make money. What regulation caused them to do that?
 

mstateglfr

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Feb 24, 2008
16,295
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We don’t have a free market mainly bc it’s regulated by a dumb government system!

what is my baseless claim?

that politicians pushed risky loans so “under privileged” people could own houses? That’s not baseless. That’s an absolute fact.

Was a crash possible without that? Yes and likely. But it’s absolutely a fact the crash was accelerated and the effect of it was worse bc of political pressure to make loans to people who shouldn’t have loans. I’m sorry you are too dumb to see that.
I said what your baseless claim was...twice. Twice it's in the quote of mine your responded to.

Once more- you claiming the 'free market' would resolve the issue/fix the issue/keep issues from happening, is baseless.
It is baseless because it is an untested theory. You are baselessly guessing your idea would work better.
 

OG Goat Holder

Heisman
Sep 30, 2022
12,874
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Keep asking why?

Why did we have a housing crash in 2008?
Subprime lending

when did sub prime lending start?
Early 90s

why did it start? Political pressure to give riskier customers loans bc it was “discriminatory” to use good credit info.

When banks are responsible and use good information to give loans like credit score and debt to income they get called racist.

when they give loans to bad customers and jack up interest rates to ocercome the risk they get called greedy.

they found a way to bundle the risk and make money. Then it popped.

Let the GD free market work itself out we will always be ok. Not always great but always trending up over the long haul. ALWAYS.
That WAS the free market you ignorant 17.

We don’t have a free market mainly bc it’s regulated by a dumb government system!

what is my baseless claim?

that politicians pushed risky loans so “under privileged” people could own houses? That’s not baseless. That’s an absolute fact.

Was a crash possible without that? Yes and likely. But it’s absolutely a fact the crash was accelerated and the effect of it was worse bc of political pressure to make loans to people who shouldn’t have loans. I’m sorry you are too dumb to see that.
Decent regulation could have prevented the crash. And guess what? Now we have it.

You really make conservatives look bad with your simple-minded view of the way things are.
 

paindonthurt

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Apr 7, 2025
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Then you just dont understand. The banks MADE MONEY on these "bad loans". They originated them, took their fee, and offloaded them, within 30 days. Hell, they probably made more money on the "bad loans" than they did on the "good" ones.

So, again, the question is why you think they were "forced" to......make money. What regulation caused them to do that?
I never said they were forced. I'll pay you $1000 if you can find the word forced in what i originally said you DA. I said pushed and they were.

The 1995 CRA Reform
HUD mandates on fannie mae and freddie mac (FHEFSS Act of 1992)
Exec Branch initiatives from 1995 to 2004

go to google gemini and type this "can you tell me some of the regulations and acts and events where politicians pushed banks to make it easier for lower income and low credit customers to get home loans?"

or if you think that is leading gemini then type this "Did politicians push regulations and acts in the late 20th century to make home ownership easier for low credit and low income people?"

or this "Did politicians push regulations and acts in the late 20th century to make home ownership easier for minorities?"
 

paindonthurt

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Apr 7, 2025
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I said what your baseless claim was...twice. Twice it's in the quote of mine your responded to.

Once more- you claiming the 'free market' would resolve the issue/fix the issue/keep issues from happening, is baseless.
It is baseless because it is an untested theory. You are baselessly guessing your idea would work better.
I didn't say the free market would stop it. Never implied it.

I said the free market always works itself out and it does. Are there highs and lows? Yes. They are way worse when the gubment tries to fix things.
 

paindonthurt

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Apr 7, 2025
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That WAS the free market you ignorant 17.


Decent regulation could have prevented the crash. And guess what? Now we have it.

You really make conservatives look bad with your simple-minded view of the way things are.
I'll give you 4 to 1 odds on an iq test. You get within 10 points of me you win $2,000. If not you owe me $500. PSSY

The 2008 collapse was way worse b/c of things that were pushed on banks. FACT. I didnt say the collapse wouldn't have happened. It likely would have but would have been much easier to fix and likely wouldn't have needed government bailouts.

You make the human race look bad bc you are DAF.
 

paindonthurt

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Here's a good AI summary of what i'm advocating for fyi.


The ultimate holy grail of economic policy is finding the "Goldilocks zone"—a system that unleashes the creative destruction of capitalism and maximizes growth, but deploys a strong enough structural cage to prevent a systemic meltdown.
Achieving this requires moving away from the binary debate of "heavy regulation vs. total deregulation" and instead adopting a smart regulatory architecture.
The most effective framework for balancing these competing forces relies on four core pillars:


1. The "Sandbox" Approach to Innovation (Maximize Growth)

To let technology and new financial models thrive, regulators shouldn’t try to predict the future and write rules for technologies that barely exist. Instead, they should utilize Regulatory Sandboxes.
  • How it works: Startups and innovators are allowed to test new products (like decentralized finance, AI-driven lending, or micro-insurance) in a live market with real consumers, but on a strictly limited scale and under close supervisory eyes.
  • The Benefit: It grants innovators the freedom to fail fast and iterate without being crushed by compliance costs from day one, while ensuring that if they do fail, the damage is contained to a small pool of testers rather than the broader economy.

2. Functional Regulation, Not Institutional Regulation (Level the Playing Field)

Traditional regulation governs institutions based on what they call themselves (e.g., "This rule applies to commercial banks; that rule applies to investment firms"). This stifles innovation because tech companies can often find loopholes to perform banking functions without facing banking rules.
  • The Fix: Regulate by activity, not by entity ("Same risk, same rules"). If a tech startup, a crypto protocol, or a traditional bank is holding retail deposits and moving money, they must face the exact same liquidity and consumer protection requirements.
  • The Benefit: This stops traditional banks from being bogged down by legacy red tape while preventing "shadow banks" from taking reckless risks under the guise of tech innovation.

3. "Skin in the Game" Capital Requirements (Maintain Stability)

To prevent the systemic collapses that plague deregulated systems, the system must eradicate the "Too Big to Fail" safety net and replace it with strict, transparent, and simple capital boundaries.
  • Macroprudential Guardrails: Instead of micromanaging how a bank lends money, the government should simply enforce high, counter-cyclical capital buffers. Banks must hold significantly more capital during economic booms so they have a cushion to absorb losses during busts.
  • Bail-Ins over Bail-Outs: If an institution mismanages its risk and goes under, the law must dictate that equity holders and bondholders take the total financial hit (a "bail-in"), rather than passing the bill to taxpayers (a "bail-out"). If executives and institutional investors know they face absolute financial ruin for failure, market discipline will naturally curb reckless lending.

4. Algorithmic and Smart Disclosure (Consumer Protection)

Traditional consumer protection relies on thousands of pages of fine-print disclosures that nobody reads, which actually harms consumers while driving up costs for businesses.
  • The Shift: Modern consumer protection should focus on data portability and clear, real-time metrics. For example, forcing financial institutions to expose open APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) allows consumers to instantly port their data to competing apps that offer better rates or lower risks.
  • Simplicity Mandates: Forcing institutions to display risks in standardized, bite-sized, machine-readable formats allows independent rating algorithms to instantly flag predatory behavior or over-leveraged platforms to the public.

Summary: The Structural Blueprint

[ HIGH-GROWTH ENGINE ] [ STABILITY CAGE ]
+----------------------------------+ +----------------------------------+
| • Regulatory Sandboxes | | • Counter-Cyclical Capital |
| • Open API Data Portability | + | • Activity-Based Rules |
| • Low Administrative Red Tape | | • "Bail-In" Liability (No Feeds) |
+----------------------------------+ +----------------------------------+
| |
+--------------------+--------------------+
|
v
[ SUSTAINABLE PROSPERITY ]

By shifting the government's role from a micromanager (telling banks exactly who they can lend to and how to write their paperwork) to a structural referee (enforcing strict capital cushions, transparent data access, and ensuring that those who take risks bear the full cost of failure), you create an environment where innovation can run hot without burning down the house.
Which piece of this puzzle do you think is hardest for modern governments to get right—stepping back to let new technology innovate in a sandbox, or actually allowing massive, failing institutions to go under without a bailout?
 

mstateglfr

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Feb 24, 2008
16,295
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I didn't say the free market would stop it. Never implied it.

I said the free market always works itself out and it does. Are there highs and lows? Yes. They are way worse when the gubment tries to fix things.
If you have a nebulous standard to meet, such as 'always works itself out', then it is impossible to prove that wrong, since there is no timeline to meet and no standardized form to know when 'it' has been worked out.

The exact same claim can be used for our current mixed economy.
How do you not see this?

If a free market wouldn't have stopped what went wrong, or prevented what went wrong, then what are you really proposing it would have done? It would have worked things out sooner?...how and when? Again, there is nothing to cite that would support such a claim.
 

JackReacherDawg

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Apr 7, 2026
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I never said they were forced. I'll pay you $1000 if you can find the word forced in what i originally said you DA. I said pushed and they were.
"why did it start? Political pressure to give riskier customers loans bc it was “discriminatory” to use good credit info.

When banks are responsible and use good information to give loans like credit score and debt to income they get called racist.

when they give loans to bad customers and jack up interest rates to ocercome the risk they get called greedy."

True, you didnt literally use the word "forced". But its clearly implied. They either wanted to make the loans (in which case govt is irrelevent), or didn't want to make the loans but felt they had to due to govt. Which is your position?
The 1995 CRA Reform
HUD mandates on fannie mae and freddie mac (FHEFSS Act of 1992)
Exec Branch initiatives from 1995 to 2004

go to google gemini and type this "can you tell me some of the regulations and acts and events where politicians pushed banks to make it easier for lower income and low credit customers to get home loans?"

or if you think that is leading gemini then type this "Did politicians push regulations and acts in the late 20th century to make home ownership easier for low credit and low income people?"

or this "Did politicians push regulations and acts in the late 20th century to make home ownership easier for minorities?"
That is leading. How about "would banks have made bad loans in 2000s without government action?". Give it a try.

Let me try explaining in a way other than obvious deduction and reasoning. If I get a law passed that asks women to pretty please sell good poon for money, does that make prostitution the result of government? Do you see your flaw yet?
 

JackReacherDawg

Redshirt
Apr 7, 2026
26
15
3
I didn't say the free market would stop it. Never implied it.

I said the free market always works itself out and it does. Are there highs and lows? Yes. They are way worse when the gubment tries to fix things.
The free market has literally failed many, many times. Because of course it would, its just humans being human. Humans make mistakes. That's Econ 101. What you are speaking of is a magical system protected by a mystical power. Whether you realize it or not.
 

paindonthurt

All-Conference
Apr 7, 2025
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If a free market wouldn't have stopped what went wrong, or prevented what went wrong, then what are you really proposing it would have done? It would have worked things out sooner?...how and when? Again, there is nothing to cite that would support such a claim.
Can you 17ing read?

The political side getting involved and pushing banks to loan money to people who couldn't and shouldn't be owning homes made the situation worse. Thats almost impossible to disagree with if you intelligent enough and honest enough to research and think for yourself.

How would a free market have made it better? By not loaning money to people who can't pay loans. The same way they did before that got pushed on them. But they got called racist for that. GMAC got sued. Other car companies got sued. Same thing happened with home loans. What did you get? sub prime lending!!

Every time you inject a large supply of money into something the prices rises. EVERY TIME. THATS SUPPLY AND DEMAND 101.

Pushing to create a way to loan money to people who can't afford houses injects money. House prices shoot up artificially.
Forcing people to buy health insurance even when they don't want it causes health insurance and medical costs to rise.
Giving tons of "free" money to people for college causes the cost of college/university to rise.

EVERY
17ING
TIME
 

paindonthurt

All-Conference
Apr 7, 2025
4,442
3,086
113
The free market has literally failed many, many times. Because of course it would, its just humans being human. Humans make mistakes. That's Econ 101. What you are speaking of is a magical system protected by a mystical power. Whether you realize it or not.
No i'm speaking from experience. The free market would have worked itself out in 2008. The government jumped in. They shouldn't have. They shouldn't have in the first place.

Let the GD banks fail if they make bad loans.
Let GM fail if they go broke.

Someone will fill the void.
 

paindonthurt

All-Conference
Apr 7, 2025
4,442
3,086
113
"why did it start? Political pressure to give riskier customers loans bc it was “discriminatory” to use good credit info.

When banks are responsible and use good information to give loans like credit score and debt to income they get called racist.

when they give loans to bad customers and jack up interest rates to ocercome the risk they get called greedy."

True, you didnt literally use the word "forced". But its clearly implied. They either wanted to make the loans (in which case govt is irrelevent), or didn't want to make the loans but felt they had to due to govt. Which is your position?
No its not implied. Its very clear they were pushed. They were. I've provided evidence of that which you just ignore you dishonest POS.
That is leading. How about "would banks have made bad loans in 2000s without government action?". Give it a try.

Let me try explaining in a way other than obvious deduction and reasoning. If I get a law passed that asks women to pretty please sell good poon for money, does that make prostitution the result of government? Do you see your flaw yet?
It makes legal prostitution the result of government. Absolutely.

prompt: if politicians hadn't pushed for lending to lower income people and minorities would they have still likely made the sub prime lending mistakes that lead to 2008?

The question of whether political pressure to expand lending to lower-income and minority borrowers was the primary driver of the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis is a subject of significant debate among economists, financial analysts, and policymakers.
Evidence suggests that while government policies aimed at expanding homeownership played a role in the broader housing landscape, the subprime lending crisis would have likely still occurred due to a combination of private sector incentives, financial innovation, and regulatory gaps.
Here is a breakdown of why the crisis likely would have happened regardless of political pushes for lower-income lending.

1. The Dominance of Private Sector Wall Street Issuance​

A critical piece of evidence against the idea that government mandates caused the crisis is the origin of the worst-performing loans. The vast majority of subprime loans—especially the most predatory, non-traditional, and poorly underwritten ones—were issued by private mortgage companies that were not subject to federal community lending mandates.
  • Private-Label Securitization (PLS): Between 2004 and 2006, the height of the real estate bubble, the market shifted heavily toward private-label securitization. Private investment banks packaged loans into Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) and Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs) completely independent of government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
  • Lack of CRA Regulation: Non-bank mortgage lenders (such as Countrywide, New Century Financial, and Ameriquest) made the overwhelming majority of subprime loans. These institutions were not regulated under the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), which was the primary legislative tool used by politicians to encourage lending to low- and moderate-income neighborhoods. According to a comprehensive study by the Federal Reserve, only about 6% of higher-priced (subprime) loans were made by CRA-covered institutions to CRA-eligible borrowers or neighborhoods.

2. Profit Incentives and the "Originate-to-Distribute" Model​

The primary driver for the explosion of subprime lending was not political pressure, but immense profit potential created by a structural flaw in the financial system: the originate-to-distribute model.
Under this model, mortgage brokers and lenders no longer held onto the loans they made, meaning they didn't bear the risk of default.
  • Lenders generated loans, collected upfront fees, and immediately sold them to Wall Street banks.
  • Wall Street banks packaged them into complex securities and sold them to global investors who were starved for yield in a low-interest-rate environment.
  • Because everyone along the chain made money on volume rather than loan quality, underwriting standards naturally collapsed. This dynamic would have existed as long as there was investor demand for high-yield securities, regardless of the borrower's demographic.

3. Financial Innovation and Misrated Securities​

The crisis was magnified heavily by Wall Street's creation of complex financial engineering tools that obscured risk.
  • Credit Rating Agency Failures: Rating agencies (like Moody’s, S&P, and Fitch) gave AAA ratings—the highest safety rating reserved for government bonds—to tranches of subprime debt. They used flawed mathematical models that assumed home prices would never drop nationwide simultaneously.
  • Synthetic CDOs and Credit Default Swaps (CDS): Financial instruments allowed investors to bet on the housing market without even owning actual mortgages. This multiplied the losses of the subprime market exponentially. Even if fewer subprime loans had been made, the leverage and speculative bets placed on them by Wall Street would have still posed a systemic threat to the global financial system.

4. Speculators and Prime Borrowers​

While subprime loans to low-income borrowers did fail at high rates, a significant portion of the defaults that sunk the banking system came from middle-class and affluent borrowers, as well as real estate speculators.
Data analyzed after the crash (notably in studies by the National Bureau of Economic Research) showed that the growth in mortgage debt during the boom was actually driven heavily by middle- and high-income borrowers buying investment properties or second homes. When the housing bubble burst, many of these "prime" or "near-prime" borrowers walked away from their properties, contributing massively to the systemic collapse.

The Role Government Policy Did Play​

To look at the issue fully, it is true that government policy contributed to the environment that made the crisis possible, though not primarily through low-income lending mandates:
  • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: To maintain market share against aggressive Wall Street firms, these government-backed entities lowered their standards later in the boom (around 2005–2007) and bought billions of dollars in subprime securities to meet HUD-mandated affordable housing goals. However, they were following a trend started by the private market, rather than leading it.
  • Deregulation: The repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act protections in 1999 and the enactment of the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 (which left derivatives like Credit Default Swaps unregulated) allowed commercial banks to engage in highly risky investment activities.

Summary​

The consensus among most economic historians and the official findings of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC) is that the 2008 crash was caused by systemic failures in risk management, predatory private lending practices, regulatory inaction, and Wall Street greed. Political pressure to lend to lower-income demographics certainly added fuel to an existing fire, but the core machinery of the subprime crisis—the securitization of bad debt for massive private profit—would have functioned with or without that political push.


second prompt: Did political pressure make the 2008 crash worse?

Yes, a compelling case can be made that political pressure—and the broader intersection of government policy and the housing market—did make the 2008 crash worse, even if it wasn't the sole or primary spark that ignited it.
While the core machinery of the crisis was driven by private Wall Street incentives and complex financial engineering, government actions created an environment that amplified the scale, velocity, and ultimate damage of the collapse.
Political pressure exacerbated the 2008 crash in several key ways:

The Nuance: Fuel vs. Spark​

Economists often look at the 2008 crisis using a "fire" analogy:

  • The Spark: Wall Street’s creation of the originate-to-distribute model, predatory private lending, and flawed credit ratings.
  • The Fuel: Low interest rates, global investor demand for high yields, and political pressure to expand homeownership and deregulate markets.
Had politicians not pushed for expanded lending and deregulation, Wall Street likely still would have engineered a subprime boom to satisfy global investor demand. However, without the immense liquidity injected by Fannie and Freddie, the suppression of state-level consumer protections, and the complete lack of oversight on derivatives, the bubble almost certainly would have popped sooner, and the resulting economic devastation would have been significantly more contained.

 

JackReacherDawg

Redshirt
Apr 7, 2026
26
15
3
No i'm speaking from experience. The free market would have worked itself out in 2008. The government jumped in. They shouldn't have. They shouldn't have in the first place.

Let the GD banks fail if they make bad loans.
Let GM fail if they go broke.

Someone will fill the void.
Sure. This is why no country in history ever declined. It worked itself out.**
 

JackReacherDawg

Redshirt
Apr 7, 2026
26
15
3
No its not implied. Its very clear they were pushed. They were. I've provided evidence of that which you just ignore you dishonest POS.

It makes legal prostitution the result of government. Absolutely.

prompt: if politicians hadn't pushed for lending to lower income people and minorities would they have still likely made the sub prime lending mistakes that lead to 2008?

The question of whether political pressure to expand lending to lower-income and minority borrowers was the primary driver of the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis is a subject of significant debate among economists, financial analysts, and policymakers.
Evidence suggests that while government policies aimed at expanding homeownership played a role in the broader housing landscape, the subprime lending crisis would have likely still occurred due to a combination of private sector incentives, financial innovation, and regulatory gaps.
Here is a breakdown of why the crisis likely would have happened regardless of political pushes for lower-income lending.

1. The Dominance of Private Sector Wall Street Issuance​

A critical piece of evidence against the idea that government mandates caused the crisis is the origin of the worst-performing loans. The vast majority of subprime loans—especially the most predatory, non-traditional, and poorly underwritten ones—were issued by private mortgage companies that were not subject to federal community lending mandates.
  • Private-Label Securitization (PLS): Between 2004 and 2006, the height of the real estate bubble, the market shifted heavily toward private-label securitization. Private investment banks packaged loans into Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) and Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs) completely independent of government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
  • Lack of CRA Regulation: Non-bank mortgage lenders (such as Countrywide, New Century Financial, and Ameriquest) made the overwhelming majority of subprime loans. These institutions were not regulated under the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), which was the primary legislative tool used by politicians to encourage lending to low- and moderate-income neighborhoods. According to a comprehensive study by the Federal Reserve, only about 6% of higher-priced (subprime) loans were made by CRA-covered institutions to CRA-eligible borrowers or neighborhoods.

2. Profit Incentives and the "Originate-to-Distribute" Model​

The primary driver for the explosion of subprime lending was not political pressure, but immense profit potential created by a structural flaw in the financial system: the originate-to-distribute model.
Under this model, mortgage brokers and lenders no longer held onto the loans they made, meaning they didn't bear the risk of default.
  • Lenders generated loans, collected upfront fees, and immediately sold them to Wall Street banks.
  • Wall Street banks packaged them into complex securities and sold them to global investors who were starved for yield in a low-interest-rate environment.
  • Because everyone along the chain made money on volume rather than loan quality, underwriting standards naturally collapsed. This dynamic would have existed as long as there was investor demand for high-yield securities, regardless of the borrower's demographic.

3. Financial Innovation and Misrated Securities​

The crisis was magnified heavily by Wall Street's creation of complex financial engineering tools that obscured risk.
  • Credit Rating Agency Failures: Rating agencies (like Moody’s, S&P, and Fitch) gave AAA ratings—the highest safety rating reserved for government bonds—to tranches of subprime debt. They used flawed mathematical models that assumed home prices would never drop nationwide simultaneously.
  • Synthetic CDOs and Credit Default Swaps (CDS): Financial instruments allowed investors to bet on the housing market without even owning actual mortgages. This multiplied the losses of the subprime market exponentially. Even if fewer subprime loans had been made, the leverage and speculative bets placed on them by Wall Street would have still posed a systemic threat to the global financial system.

4. Speculators and Prime Borrowers​

While subprime loans to low-income borrowers did fail at high rates, a significant portion of the defaults that sunk the banking system came from middle-class and affluent borrowers, as well as real estate speculators.
Data analyzed after the crash (notably in studies by the National Bureau of Economic Research) showed that the growth in mortgage debt during the boom was actually driven heavily by middle- and high-income borrowers buying investment properties or second homes. When the housing bubble burst, many of these "prime" or "near-prime" borrowers walked away from their properties, contributing massively to the systemic collapse.

The Role Government Policy Did Play​

To look at the issue fully, it is true that government policy contributed to the environment that made the crisis possible, though not primarily through low-income lending mandates:
  • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: To maintain market share against aggressive Wall Street firms, these government-backed entities lowered their standards later in the boom (around 2005–2007) and bought billions of dollars in subprime securities to meet HUD-mandated affordable housing goals. However, they were following a trend started by the private market, rather than leading it.
  • Deregulation: The repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act protections in 1999 and the enactment of the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 (which left derivatives like Credit Default Swaps unregulated) allowed commercial banks to engage in highly risky investment activities.

Summary​

The consensus among most economic historians and the official findings of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC) is that the 2008 crash was caused by systemic failures in risk management, predatory private lending practices, regulatory inaction, and Wall Street greed. Political pressure to lend to lower-income demographics certainly added fuel to an existing fire, but the core machinery of the subprime crisis—the securitization of bad debt for massive private profit—would have functioned with or without that political push.


second prompt: Did political pressure make the 2008 crash worse?

Yes, a compelling case can be made that political pressure—and the broader intersection of government policy and the housing market—did make the 2008 crash worse, even if it wasn't the sole or primary spark that ignited it.
While the core machinery of the crisis was driven by private Wall Street incentives and complex financial engineering, government actions created an environment that amplified the scale, velocity, and ultimate damage of the collapse.
Political pressure exacerbated the 2008 crash in several key ways:

The Nuance: Fuel vs. Spark​

Economists often look at the 2008 crisis using a "fire" analogy:

  • The Spark: Wall Street’s creation of the originate-to-distribute model, predatory private lending, and flawed credit ratings.
  • The Fuel: Low interest rates, global investor demand for high yields, and political pressure to expand homeownership and deregulate markets.
Had politicians not pushed for expanded lending and deregulation, Wall Street likely still would have engineered a subprime boom to satisfy global investor demand. However, without the immense liquidity injected by Fannie and Freddie, the suppression of state-level consumer protections, and the complete lack of oversight on derivatives, the bubble almost certainly would have popped sooner, and the resulting economic devastation would have been significantly more contained.

Do you seriously not realize your own prompt result does not support your position?