FREE WHITEWATER

The Mortgage Meltdown, Robo-Signing, and Foreclosures

Over at Freedom Watch, Judge Napolitano and his panel discuss an expanding robo-signing scandal (along with the separate topic of the IMF’s insatiable need for more money).

I’ve written often about the recession, but seldom about the mortgage meltdown.

Like many lay people, I thought that the recession would be deep, and that recovery would be slow. There was nothing special in seeing as much. Like other libertarians, I’ve doubted that the kind of remedies on offer near the end of the Bush and into the Obama Administrations would be of much value. Again, that’s a common view.

What some people did see early, however, and that I came to see only later, is that the Great Recession has been of a more serious degree precisely because has been of a different kind. As a financial downturn, it has been more like the Great Depression than subsequent declines since then. It never would have occurred to me that so many homes would be at risk, with so many homeowners being underwater. They’re not underwater, of course, merely because of robo-signing. Some homeowners are at greater risk, however, because of that practice.

(There’s a relationship between faster foreclosures through robo-signing and prices in the housing market, but foreclosure practices are hardly the only influence on home prices.)

A man who’s already ill (sometimes blamelessly, other times culpably by his own lack of a proper diet, for example) can bear only so many new maladies.

In defense of traditional lenders, I’ll note that many have never been part of robo-signing, and are often unfairly demonized. As the embedded clip ably describes, this has been a controversial practice not merely of some private lenders, but of government entities, too.

Daily Bread for 9.29

Good morning.

It’s a day of scattered thunderstorms and a high of sixty-seven ahead for Whitewater.

The Wisconsin Historical Society notes that on this day in 1957,

1957 – Packers Dedicate New Stadium

On this date the Green Bay Packers dedicated City Stadium, now known as Lambeau Field, and defeated the Chicago Bears, 21-17. In the capacity crowd of 32,132 was Vice president Richard Nixon. [Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]

Institute for Justice takes on the Milwaukee Taxi Cartel

Here’s a question, in times of struggling businesses and high unemployment, that should concern everyone: What to do about oppressive regulations and crony capitalism in Milwaukee?

The IJ describes what’s at issue:

Should the city of Milwaukee be allowed to outlaw competition in the taxi market, causing permits to rise in price from $85 to a staggering $150,000?

That is the question to be answered by a major lawsuit filed today by the Institute for Justice (IJ) – national public interest law firm – and three Milwaukee taxi drivers: Ghaleb Ibrahim, Jatinder Cheema and Amitpal Singh….

‘In the classic story of entrepreneurship, someone starts a taxi business in order to save up enough money to buy a house,’ said IJ Staff Attorney Anthony Sanders, lead counsel in today’s lawsuit. ‘In Milwaukee, you need to save up enough money to buy a house just to start a taxi business.’

In 1991, the city of Milwaukee prohibited any new entrepreneurs from entering the taxi market. The city council imposed a hard cap of 321 taxis for the entire city, and made it so that the only way to get a taxi permit was to purchase one from an existing permit holder.

As a result, today the city has just one taxi for every 1,850 residents (compared to 1 in 90 for Washington DC and 1 in 480 for Denver) and taxi permits have risen in price from $85 to $150,000 – more than the average cost of a house in Milwaukee.

An Institute for Justice study, entitled Unhappy Days for Milwaukee Entrepreneurs, reveals that the Milwaukee’s taxi law is effectively a scheme to benefit a small group of entrenched businesses at the expense of entrepreneurs, who lose out on opportunities, and at the expense of consumers, who face poor service and long wait times.

How bad is it? This bad:

One taxi owner, Milwaukee County Supervisor Joe Sanfelippo, owns almost half the city’s taxi permits. His brother Mike runs one of the city’s biggest taxicab companies, American United.

Should you be surprised, really?

For more about the lawsuit, see www.ij.org/MKETaxis.

Daily Bread for 9.28

Good morning.

It’s a day of showers with a high temperature in the mid-sixties for Whitewater.

On this day in 1925, Wisconsin native

Seymour R. Cray was born in Chippewa Falls. Cray received a BS in Electrical Engineering from the University of Minnesota. He established himself in the field of large-scale computer design through his work for Engineering Associates, Remington Rand, UNIVAC, and Control Data Corporation. In 1957, Cray built the first computer to use radio transistors instead of vacuum tubes. This allowed for the miniaturization of components which enhanced the performance of desktop computers.

In the 1960s, he designed the world’s first supercomputer at Control Data. In 1972 he founded Cray Research in his hometown of Chippewa Falls where he established the standard for supercomputers with CRAY-1 (1976) and CRAY-2 (1985). He resigned from the company in 1981 to devote himself to computer design in the areas of vector register technology and cooling systems. Cray died in a automobile accident on October 5, 1996. [Source: MIT and Cray Company]

Via Wisconsin Historical Society.



Cray-2

Bob Strauss on Jimmy Carter

Not long after Jimmy Carter was elected, things began to go sour for his administration. Just about everything, including opposition from both Republicans and sometimes even the Democratic majority in Congress, bedeviled him.

Carter called longtime Democratic politician Bob Strauss into the Oval Office, after the Bert Lance scandal broke. Carter found the change in fortune puzzling, after a successful election campaign the year before.

Strauss told Carter: “You know what your problem is? You used up all your damn luck getting here.”

Yes.

Daily Bread for 9.27

Good morning.

It’s a rainy day for Whitewater, with a high temperature of about sixty. The days are growing shorter by a small amount; today is about three minutes darker than yesterday.

Common Council meets tonight at 6 p.m. The meeting agenda is available online.

Scientists in Switzerland have found a way to design and program small autonomous flying robots to flock like birds, an achievement that may make mapping or surveillance easier:

The swarming behavior is based on a three-dimensional algorithm that represents the movements of schools of fish and flocks of birds. The algorithm, developed in 1986 by Craig Reynolds, was first used as a computer graphics tool. In the algorithm, as in real flocks, the individual agents behave simply. They respond to their close neighbors without considering the movements of the group. Yet out of the noise, larger patterns emerge, coherent and beautiful.

“Flocking requires three things. You need to move with the same speed and direction as your neighbors, you need to avoid hitting them and you need to stay close,” said Hauert, who is now a post-doctoral student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. When programming the robots, Hauert and Floreano added in a fourth ability: migration. With this ability, the robot swarm can travel to a set location, making them more useful as search and surveillance tools.

See, Autonomous Flying Robots Flock Like Birds.

Any yet, still farther to go to match this flock –

Banned Books Week, 9.24 – 10.1

It’s Banned Books Week, from September 24th to October 1st:

During the last week of September every year, hundreds of libraries and bookstores around the country draw attention to the problem of censorship by mounting displays of challenged books and hosting a variety of events.

The 2011 celebration of Banned Books Week will be held from September 24 through October 1. Banned Books Week is the only national celebration of the freedom to read. It was launched in 1982 in response to a sudden surge in the number of challenges to books in schools, bookstores and libraries.

More than 11,000 books have been challenged since 1982.

Here is the arrogance of the state: it taxes from the privately productive, depriving them of their earnings, builds public institutions, and then tells those very same taxpayers what is, or is not, appropriate for reading at those institutions.

Their money was good enough to take in taxes, but their choice of books in publicly-funded schools and libraries? Oh, no, some middling bureaucrat, some starched scold, and more abercrombies than one could shake a stick at – they’ll decide what’s right.

Daily Bread for 9.26

Good morning.

It’s rain and thunder today with a high of sixty-three for the Whippet City.

The Community Development Authority meets today at 4:30. The meeting agenda is available online.

At Item 11, one sees that the meeting will go into closed, executive session to

  • Adjourn to closed session at approximately 6:00PM to reconvene at approximately 6:15PM per Wisconsin State Statutes 19.85(1)(c) “considering employment, promotion, compensation or performance evaluation data of any public employee over which the governmental body has jurisdiction or exercises responsibility”
  • a. Pay for the Executive Director Position

    Members of the Authority may set any salary they want, but nothing they say changes the sensible conclusion that the proper level of compensation for anyone currently connected to the Tax Incremental District 4 fiasco is between $1.29 and $1.37 annually.

    If they were deliberating generally – without thinking of a particular prospect now connected to that shameful mess – then the proper level of compensation would be in a range between $1,097,241 and $1,238,876 annually.  The higher compensation for an executive director who’d be an outsider not connected to past, serial failures would be fair compensation for all the Maalox and aspirin a normal person would need to purchase upon realizing what he’d stepped into.