It’s not racist to say some places are safer than others

Opinion
It’s not racist to say some places are safer than others
Opinion
It’s not racist to say some places are safer than others
AP Investigation Tracked
The buildings and business along 79th Street on Chicago’s south side have seen better days, with pealing paint and weeds growing in empty lots on Friday, Aug. 13, 2021, in Chicago.

It is not
racist
, nor should it be
illegal
, to say that some areas are sketchy or dangerous.

Bureaucrats at the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau think otherwise. Thanks to the CFPB,
Illinois
-based mortgage lender Townstone Financial has been subjected to a federal investigation since 2017 for comments its personnel made on its radio show dating back to 2014. 


BIDEN’S CLIMATE AGENDA DREAMS COLLIDE WITH MILITARY REALITIES

The investigation is part of an 
ongoing
 federal court case over whether the commentary about the dangers of living in the South Side of Chicago or certain south suburbs would dissuade black people from taking out mortgages with the company.

The CFPB accused Townstone’s commentary of “discourag[ing] on a prohibited basis an applicant or prospective applicant from applying for credit,” according to a 2020 federal complaint 
filed
 by the agency. 

Yet all the comments were normal commentary on the dangers of living in certain parts of Chicago and the surrounding suburbs. 

The CFPB alleged Townstone Financial’s comments on its sponsored radio show would “discourage prospective applicants living in majority- or high-African-American neighborhoods from applying for mortgage loans, or making or pursuing an application, including from Townstone” and would also discourage people from moving to those areas.

The offending comments would not raise an eyebrow for people familiar with the south suburbs, but they ruffled some feathers among Washington bureaucrats. One Townstone personality said to “drive very fast through Markham,” which is objectively good advice given that the suburb is one of the 
most dangerous
 in the entire country. Referring to the South Side of Chicago as a “war zone” also caught the eye of federal regulators.

Oddly, another offending comment was to tell someone to “take down the Confederate flag” when selling their house. The Washington Free Beacon 
noted
 that this advice “reflects the 
official policy
 of the National Association of Realtors, which says displaying a Confederate flag may violate housing discrimination law.”

A consultant’s 
report
 found that no African Americans who heard the ads were actually offended. If criticizing crime-ridden areas is racist, then there are a lot of people who need to apologize.

Former President Barack Obama 
said
 in 2015 that it was “too easy for criminals to buy guns” and police officers had a “dangerous” job trying to keep crime down in the South Side, where he used to live. In 2012, 
he talked
 about “murders” happening just down the block from where he lived.

Reporter Ammer Madhani
referred
to the neighborhood where Obama once worked as a community organizer in Chicago as “violence-plagued” in a 2013 article for USA Today.

In 2019, then-Chicago Mayor 
Lori Lightfoot
 herself used the “war zone” comparison. “People cannot and should not live in neighborhoods that resemble a war zone,”  
she said
. “Enough of the shootings. Enough of the guns. Enough of the violence.”

Even Tina Fey and Amy Poehler would have to be canceled for being racist since a joke in the movie
Mean Girls
is that the principal compares the violence he left in the South Side to the riot of teenage girls due to gossiping. “Hell no, I did not leave the South Side for this,” he says after getting kicked by a student. 

At issue here is not just the First Amendment right to make on-air comments about crime but the detachment Washington elites have from the rest of America. People should not be punished for giving their honest opinion about the desirability of certain areas.


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Matt Lamb is a contributor to the Washington Examiner’s Beltway Confidential blog. He is an associate editor for the College Fix and has previously worked for Students for Life of America and Turning Point USA.

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