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Quote by Richard Rothstein

“To solve the inability of middle-class renters to purchase single-family homes for the first time, Congress and President Roosevelt created the Federal Housing Administration in 1934. The FHA insured bank mortgages that covered 80 percent of purchase prices, had terms of twenty years, and were fully amortized. To be eligible for such insurance, the FHA insisted on doing its own appraisal of the property to make certain that the loan had a low risk of default. Because the FHA's appraisal standards included a whites-only requirement, racial segregation now became an official requirement of the federal mortgage insurance program. The FHA judged that properties would probably be too risky for insurance if they were in racially mixed neighborhoods or even in white neighborhoods near black ones that might possibly integrate in the future. When a bank applied to the FHA for insurance on a prospective loan, the agency conducted a property appraisal, which was also likely performed by a local real estate agent hired by the agency. as the volume of applications increased, the agency hired its own appraisers, usually from the ranks of the private real estate agents who had previously been working as contractors for the FHA. To guide their work, the FHA provided them with an Underwriting Manual. The first, issued in 1935, gave this instruction: 'If a neighborhood is to retain stability it is necessary that properties shall continue to be occupied by the same social and racial classes. A change in social or racial occupancy generally leads to instability and a reduction in values.' Appraisers were told to give higher ratings where '[p]rotection against some adverse influences is obtained,' and that '[i]mportant among adverse influences . . . are infiltration of inharmonious racial or nationality groups.' The manual concluded that '[a]ll mortgages on properties protected against [such] unfavorable influences, to the extent such protection is possible, will obtain a high rating.' The FHA discouraged banks from making any loans at all in urban neighborhoods rather than newly built suburbs; according to the Underwriting Manual, 'older properties . . . have a tendency to accelerate the rate of transition to lower class occupancy.' The FHA favored mortgages in areas where boulevards or highways served to separate African American families from whites, stating that '[n]atural or artificially established barriers will prove effective in protecting a neighborhood and the locations within it from adverse influences, . . . includ[ing] prevention of the infiltration of . . . lower class occupancy, and inharmonious racial groups.”

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Richard Rothstein

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“L'excès est le point de départ incontestable. Le surplus ne peut être investi dès le moment où l'extension n'est plus possible. Ceci implique a priori que de grandes quantités d'énergie furent disponibles à l'usage de qui eut la force de les gaspiller. Un avantage certain fut donné de la sorte aux bêtes de proie. Les carnassiers des diverses classes animales m'avaient pas seulement sur les herbivores un privilège de situation: ceux-ci répondaient mal aux nécessités d'un système excluant la croissance indéfinie. Un monde d'herbivores où le développement n'eût trouvé d'obstacle que la disette est inconcevable. La disette à l'état permanent ne peut résulter d'une surabondance. Et sous forme de chair l'excès était donné à qui voulait. A condition toutefois qu'il le gaspille. Si les animaux carnivores avaient été économiquement constitués, s'ils avaient au maximum utilisé l'énergie dont ils s'emparaient, lui faisant rendre en volume la même quantité qu'eussent produite, en assimilant une même quantité d'énergie, les animaux mangés, l'effet eût été faible. A la longue toutefois il est clair que les gaspillages des dévorateurs nu pouvaient suffire: même se reproduisant lentement, ils ne pouvaient sans fin subvenir au besoin qu'a le globe-vivant de dispenser et de perdre tout ce qu'il ne peut contenir.”

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