Tag Archive | "Marion Sandler"

60 Minutes’ “World of Trouble” Profiles Herb and Marion Sandler


The actions of Herb and Marion Sandler, founders of the Center for Responsible Lending, were discussed in a segment on 60 Minutes last night.

Both the transcript and full video segment are available online.

An excerpt:

In fact, Herb and Marion Sandler were legendary. In 1963, they started Golden West Financial and grew to 285 branches under the name World Savings. The Sandlers’ were known for careful, conservative lending. They’ve given away millions of dollars to charity and started an advocacy group for low income borrowers called the Center for Responsible Lending.

In 2006, just before the housing crash, the Sandlers sold their bank to Wachovia and pocketed $2.3 billion.

Trouble is, some of their money came from people like Betty Townes, who is financially ruined after being sold a series of World Savings mortgages she couldn’t afford.

Reminds me of an old Alanis Morissette song.

Posted in Center for Responsible Lending, Herb SandlerComments (0)

The Deceiver Blog weighs in on the Center for Responsible Lending


From the blog…

Here’s the Deceiver-worthy part: While Herbert Sandler is ripping off the poor, he’s giving gajillions of dollars to nonprofit groups that crusade against just this sort of thing. One of them is the Center for Responsible Lending, which he and his wife helped found.

Responsible Lending?

Sandler gave the group $5.2 million in 2005, and another $7 million in 2007. Sounds like a weak-ass effort at conscience scrubbing to me.

Responsible Lending. Responsible Lending. Responsible Lending. If you say it enough times, it loses all meaning. Maybe that’s how Sandler did it too…

Maybe the point is that if he funds them, he controls them. So they can criticize everybody but him.

Posted in Center for Responsible LendingComments (0)

More on the founders of the Center for Responsible Lending…


A National Review article looks at the financial donations by Herb and Marion Sandler…

Topping all these groups, however, is the Center for Responsible Lending. Through the middle of last year, the Sandler Foundation had given nearly $20 million to the CRL, whose idea of “responsible lending” does not include loans that make economic sense for banks and their investors, but rather loans that fulfill the Left’s notion of social justice. The CRL is a professional grievance organization that concentrates on accusations of racial redlining. In recent weeks, its main project has been to defend the Community Reinvestment Act, which encouraged subprime lending, against charges that it played any role in Wall Street’s financial crisis. “These are the very people who have destroyed the American credit system,” says Jerry Bowyer, the chief economist at BenchMark Financial Network

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Philathropy Action weighs in on Herb and Marion Sandler, Center for Responsible Lending founders


 

From the article:

The Center for Responsible Lending is an interesting place to hover for a minute. The organization markets itself as a resource for “predatory lending opponents”, and it is taking on such practices as sub-prime lending, pay-day lending, overdraft loans and refund anticipation loans, among other things.

 In the Times Magazine piece about the Sandler’s philanthropic activity, they said:
“It starts with outrage,” said Herb. “You go a little crazy when power takes advantage of those without power. It could be political corruption — ”
“Or subprime lending,” Marion interrupted.
“The story of subprime is worse than anyone has written so far,” Herb said, shaking his head in dismay.
“It is,” Marion said, nodding in agreement.

So where’s the outrage, Mr. and Mrs. Sandler, at the way in which your own Pick-a-Pay invention has allowed thousands of people to acquire more debt than they could reasonably pay off? It doesn’t matter that they started out with good credit. Allowing a person with a solid credit rating and a $130,000 annual household income buy a home he cannot afford is just as irresponsible and exploitative as allowing someone with bad credit and $30,000 a year in income buy a home he can’t afford.

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