Gimme a break. Like I care if “poor” John Doe is having trouble covering the sub-prime mortgage payment on the $417,000 home he bought, but can’t afford?
Dubya is touched (in more ways than one). He proposes that FHA, historically a New Deal agency charged with helping low- to moderate-income first-time homebuyers, should be “reformed” to allow refinancing of these loans. Scratch that pesky 3% down payment requirement and raise loan limits to $417,000 in pricier locales. They’re suffering in Gettysvue!
Oh yeah, and he thinks that a temporary change in tax law is in order, too. These homeowners should get to avoid taxes on forgiven debt.
Sez Peter Wallison of the American Enterprise Institute, “If we’re going to allow (lenders) to be refinanced out, what we’re doing is saving them from their own greed...It might be good politics, but it’s very bad policy.”
I couldn't agree more, Pete.
(Trouble with link, but see (link...), page A-1)
|
|
Discussing:
- Are Chat bots a waste of time? (1 reply)
- Smith & Wesson noise problem (1 reply)
- Musicians dropping out of President's Freedom Concert Series (1 reply)
- It's time for new blood in Congress, Barnett in - Burchett out (1 reply)
- Burning Down The House... (2 replies)
- Behind Lege Lies (1 reply)
- Peace (1 reply)
- Speak your truth, fight and believe. (1 reply)
- Large banks have too much AI data center debt? (1 reply)
- GOP misleading on federal health care funding (1 reply)
- Feds indict civil rights group (3 replies)
- Georgia issues burn ban, first time in state history (2 replies)
TN Progressive
- Smith & Wesson not a good fit for Blount County (BlountViews)
- Pellissippi Parkway extension delayed again (BlountViews)
- Blount County early voting record turnout (BlountViews)
- Louisville, TN, town center coming soon? (BlountViews)
- WATCH THIS SPACE. (Left Wing Cracker)
- America As It Is Right Now (RoaneViews)
- A friend sent this: From Captain McElwee's Tall Tales of Roane County (RoaneViews)
- The Meidas Touch (RoaneViews)
- Massive Security Breach Analysis (RoaneViews)
- (Whitescreek Journal)
- My choices in the August election (Left Wing Cracker)
- July 4, 2024 - aka The Twilight Zone (Joe Powell)
TN Politics
- Local election officials reel over ‘logistical nightmare’ of Trump’s vote-by-mail order (TN Lookout)
- Shelby County Clerk Tami Sawyer indicted by U.S. DOJ for using $44k in public funds for personal use (TN Lookout)
- After One Big Beautiful Bill Act, 100,000 Tennesseans’ lose SNAP food aid (TN Lookout)
- Trousdale Turner guards to wear body cameras at privately-run prison (TN Lookout)
- Kennedy Center facade blocked from public view by tarp after Trump’s name removed (TN Lookout)
- Will Tennessee Republicans’ next move be to purge Democrats entirely? (TN Lookout)
Knox TN Today
- Fort Sanders, rewound (Knox TN Today)
- The Book Whisperer suggests special novels for June (Knox TN Today)
- The Johnsons (Knox TN Today)
- Mama said…“ Don’t burn your bridges.” (Knox TN Today)
- TSSAA Board of Control approves full implementation of shot clock into high school basketball by 2029-30 season (Knox TN Today)
- Young Reader’s Shelf: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe (Knox TN Today)
- Wesley House Community Center invites the community to Friends of Wesley Breakfast (Knox TN Today)
- 6/17 HEADLINES: News and events from Knox, World, USA, Tennessee & Historic Notes (Knox TN Today)
- Applications now open for 2026 STRIVE veteran entrepreneurship cohort (Knox TN Today)
- Youth Scoop: Activities for all ages in Knox & area (Knox TN Today)
- War time drive at Knoxville High School (Knox TN Today)
- TDOT outperforms on Alcoa Highway; Snowden new director (Knox TN Today)
Local TV News
- Repaving of Alcoa's Diverging Diamond Interchange to impact traffic (WATE)
- Knoxville nonprofit CareCuts expands services with free telehealth clinic (WATE)
- Knoxville to commemorate Juneteenth with parade and festival (WATE)
- Knoxville pro golfer tees up for sixth straight Women's PGA Championship (WATE)
- University of Tennessee professor fired over Charlie Kirk comments amends lawsuit (WATE)
- 'Great relief' Cocke County receives $1 million reimbursement from FEMA as Helene recovery continues (WATE)
News Sentinel
State News
- Amazon to create 300 new jobs with new Chattanooga delivery station - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Lawyer Meredith Mochel launches campaign for Red Bank city judge - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Teen charged in connection with disappearance of Collegedale man - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Vols’ new strength coach may play key role in Baylor star DGG’s decision - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
Wire Reports
- Stock futures are higher as Wall Street gears up for Federal Reserve rate decision: Live updates - CNBC (Business)
- Flight tracking data shows B-52 took sharp turn before crashing, killing all 8 on board - AP News (US News)
- Oil Selloff Deepens as Iran Deal Spurs Brent’s Fifth Daily Loss - Yahoo Finance (Business)
- System expected to strengthen into Tropical Storm Arthur nears Texas coast - WDSU (US News)
- Trump administration seeks to halt air pollution lawsuit against xAI - Al Jazeera (Business)
- Billionaire Rick Jackson defeats Trump-backed Burt Jones in Georgia governor race - Politico (US News)
- Ohio man among 5 arrested in alleged attack plot on White House UFC event - WLWT (US News)
- Trump-endorsed Rep. Barry Moore wins GOP primary runoff in Alabama Senate race - NBC News (US News)
- Trump-backed Rep. Mike Collins projected to win Georgia GOP Senate primary runoff, setting up race against Ossoff - CBS News (US News)
- US asset managers file for first ETFs targeting Wall Street's new obsession, AI and the 'MANGOS' - Reuters (Business)
- Federal Judge Blocks Idaho Law Criminalizing Transgender Bathroom Use - The New York Times (US News)
- Anthropic Ban Stirs Concerns at OpenAI and Beyond of Crackdown on Foreign AI Talent - The Information (Business)
- SpaceX valuation balloons to $2.6T, briefly passes Amazon - TechCrunch (Business)
- One-year-old killed and another person injured after Mississippi police shot at car - The Guardian (US News)
- Lockheed, GM announce partnership to bolster production for munitions and more - Breaking Defense (Business)
Local Media
Lost Medicaid Funding
Search and Archives
TN Progressive
Nearby:
- Blount Dems
- Herston TN Family Law
- Inside of Knoxville
- Instapundit
- Jack Lail
- Jim Stovall
- Knox Dems
- MoxCarm Blue Streak
- Outdoor Knoxville
- Pittman Properties
- Reality Me
- Stop Alcoa Parkway
Beyond:
- Nashville Scene
- Nashville Post
- Smart City Memphis
- TN Dems
- TN Journal
- TN Lookout
- Bob Stepno
- Facing South

Babies and bath water
It's bad for everyone if the housing sector goes completely in the dumpster. Sometimes helping everyone helps a few undeserving people - of course, that claim is Duhbya's stock in trade. In this case, it's true.
Give owner-occupants easy terms guaranteed by the FHA. Most of the subprime market is people with poorer credit, not yuppies living above their means. For investors and house-flippers, sorry, you took the risk; pay the price.
But please let's not repeat the 1920s and 30s, when banks foreclosed vast swaths of property and turned people out of their homes. The foreclosed housing stock then produced no revenue for the banks at all, and that contributed to them failing, which might have been their just desserts but pulled the rest of the people down, hence FDR's attempts to help even the banks.
Duhbya probably is talking about saving the "poor" Gettysvue residents from their own bad decisions, but up here in Massachusetts a $400,000 house can be quite modest in some communities. If the local test of a housing market is wide enough, a high limit can be good policy. California and New York need it, too, at least in their cities.
Liberty and justice for all.
My new home
"Poor" lenders, too?
Personally, lovable, I have little concern for the "poor" lenders in this mess, either.
Surely they can cover their losses with the spread they earn on the credit card accounts they extend, and if the market becomes saturated with homes for sale, maybe folks in your neck of the woods can buy a "modest" home for less than $400,000?!
Any way you slice it, Dubya's thought to preserve this "zero down" notion isn't justifiable. Someone with zippo to put down on a home, any home, isn't ready to become a homeowner.
As concerns the folks you and I care most about, let's look for the policies that allow them to accumulate that down payment, not deny that a down payment is needed.
Someone with zippo to put
Someone with zippo to put down on a home, any home, isn't ready to become a homeowner.
When I graduated from law school, I had student loans to contend with and was certainly in no position to put 20% down on a house (or any down payment, for that matter). Thank goodness I was able to receive an FHA loan that did not require me to make any down payment.
www.herstonlaw.com
Band aid
What LL said.
I hope you'll re-read the terms of this proposal
(link...)
it won't finance homes in Gettysvue, there's no way Knoxville will be designated a high cost market. Homeowners will have to have 3% equity and they have to have a history of good payments before their mortgage reset. This is not a program for the flippers or the $40K earners living in a $400K home. It's for my friend A who was told she could only get a variable rate loan because her credit wasn't perfect.
This program may just be PR and it's kind of like putting a band-aid on a gushing wound but it will at least help 800,000 homeowners who were duped into a variable loan or told that was the only kind available. Of course the key will be in the installation ... I mean implementation.
I understand your frustration about the mrtgage and RE industry running amok. Believe me, plenty of hedge fundies (and unfortunately pensioners) will be in a world of hurt with or without this program. And there's not enough money in the treasury to really bail out this debacle.
P.S. Back when I was an agent, I sold a lot of homes to perfectly fine, upstanding responsible people who only had the 3% down. Some of them got the money from their parents - many a "gift letter" had to be signed. The down payment on my first house was a gift (bribe). IIRC, the land under your house came from family. It bothers me to see you looking down on people who don't have 20% or even 10% down. The real estate industry worked fine for years with 3% down FHA money and 5% conventional. The difference back them was buyers had to qualify for the loan and income was verified.
____________________________________
Less is the new More - Karrie Jacobs
There are several good points made here
There are several good points made here from both sides. The help provided in this program shouldn't be for those who speculated on the housing market by either planning to flip or living in houses beyond their means (based on the market they live in.) The focus needs to be to stop or slow the domino effect this will have on OUR economy. And last, once again we need educate each other. This time it is on the basic math around personal financial decisions. I remember a class I had in high school that taught basic economics of runnning a household. It wasn't home ec. It was a sociology class on life skills. Some might say those skills should be taught at home. If the parents were not taught those skills how can they teach their children. So this becomes a vicious circle of bad decisions and poor choices.
That's why education is the solution.