Friday, June 12, 2015

WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS?!?!?

This could bring real trouble. A real fight. This is not the government's business. This is the equivalent of quotas for neighborhoods.

The Hill:

Obama making bid to diversify wealthy neighborhoods

The Obama administration is moving forward with regulations designed to help diversify America’s wealthier neighborhoods, drawing fire from critics who decry the proposal as executive overreach in search of an “unrealistic utopia.”
A final Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) rule due out this month is aimed at ending decades of deep-rooted segregation around the country.
The regulations would use grant money as an incentive for communities to build affordable housing in more affluent areas while also taking steps to upgrade poorer areas with better schools, parks, libraries, grocery stores and transportation routes as part of a gentrification of those communities.
“HUD is working with communities across the country to fulfill the promise of equal opportunity for all,” a HUD spokeswoman said. “The proposed policy seeks to break down barriers to access to opportunity in communities supported by HUD funds.”
It’s a tough sell for some conservatives. Among them is Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.), who argued that the administration “shouldn’t be holding hostage grant monies aimed at community improvement based on its unrealistic utopian ideas of what every community should resemble.”
“American citizens and communities should be free to choose where they would like to live and not be subject to federal neighborhood engineering at the behest of an overreaching federal government,” said Gosar, who is leading an effort in the House to block the regulations.
Civil rights advocates, meanwhile, are praising the plan, arguing that it is needed to break through decades-old barriers that keep poor and minority families trapped in hardscrabble neighborhoods.
“We have a history of putting affordable housing in poor communities,” said Debby Goldberg, vice president at the National Fair Housing Alliance.
HUD says it is obligated to take the action under the Fair Housing Act of 1968, which prohibited direct and intentional housing discrimination, such as a real estate agent not showing a home in a wealthy neighborhood to a black family or a bank not providing a loan based on someone’s race.
The agency is also looking to root out more subtle forms of discrimination that take shape in local government policies that unintentionally harm minority communities, known as “disparate impact.”
“This rule is not about forcing anyone to live anywhere they don’t want to,” said Margery Turner, senior vice president at the left-leaning Urban Institute. “It’s really about addressing long-standing practices that prevent people from living where they want to.”
“In our country, decades of public policies and institutional practices have built deeply segregated and unequal neighborhoods,” Turner said.
Children growing up in poor communities have less of a chance of succeeding in life, because they face greater exposure to violence and crime, and less access to quality education and health facilities, Turner suggested.
“Segregation is clearly a problem that is blocking upward mobility for children growing up today,” she said.
To qualify for certain funds under the regulations, cities would be required to examine patterns of segregation in neighborhoods and develop plans to address it. Those that don’t could see the funds they use to improve blighted neighborhoods disappear, critics of the rule say.
The regulations would apply to roughly 1,250 local governments.
Hans von Spakovsky, a fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, called the Obama administration “too race conscious.”
“It’s a sign that this administration seems to take race into account on everything,” Spakovsky said.
Republicans are trying to block the Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing rule. Before passing HUD’s funding bill this week, the GOP-led House approved Gosar’s amendment prohibiting the agency from following through with the rule.
Though segregationist policies were outlawed long ago, civil rights advocates say housing discrimination persists.
HUD is looking to break down many barriers, but Gosar suggested the regulation would have negative repercussions.
“Instead of living with neighbors you like and choose, this breaks up the core fabric of how we start to look at communities,” Gosar said. “That just brings unease to everyone in that area.”
“People have to feel comfortable where they live,” he added. “If I don’t feel comfortable in my own backyard, where do I feel comfortable?”
Critics of the rule say it would allow HUD to assert authority over local zoning laws. The agency could dictate what types of homes are built where and who can live in those homes, said Gosar, who believes local communities should make those decisions for themselves rather than relying on the federal government.
If enacted, the rule could depress property values as cheaper homes crop up in wealthy neighborhoods and raise taxes, Gosar warned.
It could also tilt the balance of political power as more minorities are funneled into Republican-leaning neighborhoods, he suggested.
The Supreme Court is expected to weigh in on housing discrimination in a related case in the coming weeks. At issue is whether government policies that unintentionally create a disparate impact for minority communities violate federal laws against segregation.
The Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs is facing accusations that it makes low-income housing funds more readily available in minority neighborhoods than in white neighborhoods. This promotes segregation, critics argue, by encouraging minorities to continue living in poor communities where government assistance is available.
Court observers say the case could have a profound impact on HUD’s rule.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

By "wealthier" they mean middle class. The neighborhoods of people with sufficient disposable incomes to contribute to Democratic Party candidates will not be affected.

Pastorius said...

When I read this article yesterday, my first thought was, "Wait a minute, what do they mean, "Obama plans" to do this.

This has been happening in the area in which I live almost the entire duration of his Presidency.

My neighborhood has gone from Middle Class mix of Asian, Hispanic, and White,

to a mix of Middle Class and Lower Middle Class Asian, Hispanic, Black, White, and Middle Eastern, plus many Pakistanis, Bangladshis, and some Indians.

Yay for us, huh?

You see people walking around here now who look like they are only a few months removed from the third world.

Now, thing is, there have always been people like that. This is America, after all. We are a land of immigrants.

What I am talking about here though is an absolute transformation of our city.

We are more like a big city now. Now a small city in the middle of al Conservative area.

I don't like it. But what am I going to do about it.

These decisions were clearly made at the Federal, State, and local level because they built the housing before they moved the people in.

Oh, by the way, the city doesn't bother taking care of our fucking roads, or cleaning any shit up anymore, either.

It looks like shit and the roads are a hazard to car tires and suspensions.

Ciccio said...

He must have learned the lesson of South Africa. Post apartheid caused a massive housing boom. Hillbrow, Johannesburg, densely populated with no houses, just block after block of residential apartments. If you were young and hip, you lived there. No blacks allowed during apartheid, the first place opened up for blacks, whites abandoned the place within a few years and built a new town outside the city.

swimologist said...

Stanley Kurtz wrote a book about this in 2012: Kurtz's new book, entitled Spreading the Wealth: How Obama is Robbing the Suburbs to Pay for the Cities, warns that Obama, driven by a community organizer's disdain for "white flight" from poor urban neighborhoods to suburbia, has aligned with like-minded community organizers -- e.g., Mike Kruglik and Kruglik's organization "Building One America" -- in a move to redistribute wealth from the suburbs to the inner city

Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/08/obamas_three-tiered_wealth_redistribution_plan_individual_regional_and_global.html#ixzz3cu6vvQkU

Kid said...

Yea, this is exporting/importing crime into your neighborhood.

I'll be staying away from the wealthy neighborhoods. Can you see the wealthy people co-opting some neighborhood security and ultimately 'thinning the ranks' as the little punks think they can act the same ?

Redneck Texan said...

Interesting moral dilemma.

Do you have the right to economically segregate yourself?

Is this payback for white flight?

When push came to shove in the civil rights era ..... whites ceded territory. In my local area whites abandoned Dallas for the suburbs. The city of Dallas as a whole is a virtual cesspool today. The public schools are violent and under-performing. Sending a white kid to one would be child abuse. Violent crime is an accepted norm of daily life.

Now, in the last 25 years the closer in middle class suburbs are meeting the same fate as the urban core. Thanks in part to government housing and public transportation, along with gentrification.

The price of segregation has reached a point where only the upper class can afford it..... and even their private pools are under attack.

There's not too many places left to fly to anymore.

Time to accept our fate? Or will our fight or flight instincts point us towards the violence option?

I'd go with acceptance and the decline in standards of living that will accompany it. Maybe they'll be kind enough to put us on a reservation once they consolidate their political clout.





Tim said...

WE ALL HEARD THE MAN SAY BEFORE THE ELECTION....WE ARE FIVE DAYS AWAY FROM FUNDAMENTALLY TRANSFORMING THE UNITED STATES OF UMMURIKA! AND THE SHEEP WENT WILD WITH ENTHUSIASM.....UGH