Is
There a Right to Live Where You Choose?
by
Laurence
M. Vance
Future
of Freedom Foundation
Recently
by Laurence M. Vance: Why
They Died in Vain
In addition
to certain days being designated as holidays, the federal government
and various organizations have also singled out certain days, weeks,
and months as times to emphasize a particular issue or commemorate
a group or event.
Some of these
are well known, like Earth Day (April 22) and Black History Month
(February); others are fairly obscure, like National Cancer Survivors
Day (June 1) and National Missing Childrens Day (May 1).
In addition
to being Poetry Month, Dental Health Month, National Cancer Control
Month, Parkinson Awareness Month, and Irritable Bowel Syndrome Awareness
Month, the month of April is also National Fair Housing Month.
April is the
month that the Fair Housing Act (FHA) was passed in 1968 as Title
VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968. Along with Medicare, Medicaid,
and Head Start, the FHA was one of the key parts of Lyndon Johnsons
Great Society.
The FHA prohibited
discriminatory acts regarding the sale, rental, and financing of
housing based on race, color, religion, and national origin. It
has since been amended, adding to the prohibition list discrimination
based on sex, disability, and familial status, and its enforcement
mechanism strengthened. And although it is not part of the official
list, housing discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender
identity is now also being targeted.
The Office
of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity (FHEO) administers and enforces
federal laws relating to housing discrimination. It maintains a
housing discrimination hotline and a website where one can report
housing discrimination in English, Spanish, Arabic, Cambodian, Chinese,
Korean, Russian, and Vietnamese.
To commemorate
National Fair Housing Month, the Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD), which has the primary authority for enforcing
the FHA, has launched a national
media campaign using newspaper and magazine ads and social networking
sites to increase the Departments efforts to educate
the public and housing providers about their fair housing rights
and responsibilities.
The campaign
is called Live
Free. One of its more controversial print advertisements
features a Latino worker looking into the horizon with a caption
reading: You Have the Right to Live Where You Choose.
Is that so?
Is there a right to live where you choose?
First of all,
no sane person would take the Live Free campaign statement at face
value. No one would say that there is a right to live in the White
House, in the middle of an interstate highway, in the Sears Tower,
or in the local public library. No one would say that there is a
right to live in Bill Gates mansion, Donald Trumps apartment,
your house, or my house. And, of course, there is no right to live
anywhere that you cannot pay for, although some liberals and progressives
might think otherwise and want the federal government to subsidize
housing.
What HUD and
the Office of FHEO are concerned about is the practice of discrimination
in the sale and rental of housing. One Fair
Housing document on the HUD website, the front page of
which reads: You have the right to choose where to live!,
says that in the sale and rental of housing, no one may take any
of the following actions based on race, color, religion, gender,
disability, familial status, or national origin:
- Refuse
to rent or sell housing
- Refuse
to negotiate for housing
- Make housing
unavailable
- Deny a
dwelling
- Set different
terms, conditions or privileges for sale or rental of a dwelling
- Provide
different housing services or facilities
- Falsely
deny that housing is available for inspection, sale or rental
- For profit,
persuade, or try to persuade homeowners to sell or rent dwellings
by suggesting that people of a particular race, etc. have moved,
or are about to move into the neighborhood (blockbusting) or
- Deny any
person access to, or membership or participation in, any organization,
facility or service (such as a multiple listing service) related
to the sale or rental of dwellings, or discriminate against any
person in the terms or conditions of such access, membership or
participation.
Second, although
it is an established principle of our age that we must never discriminate,
there is in fact nothing wrong with discriminating. Discrimination
is not a dirty word. We used to laud a man for having discriminating
taste. Discrimination involves choosing between or among options.
When you eat a hamburger, fries, and a coke at a fast-food restaurant
you discriminate consciously or unconsciously against
chicken sandwiches, onion rings, and water. This doesnt necessarily
mean that you hate chicken sandwiches, onion rings, and water. It
just means that on that particular day and under a particular set
of circumstances you prefer a hamburger, fries, and a coke. But,
it is argued, people are not food. Agreed, but it works the same
way, and usually on a larger scale. When a man proposes marriage
to his sweetheart, he discriminates against every other woman in
the world. When a couple adopts a child, they discriminate against
every other child in world. When you pick your friends, you discriminate
against the ones you reject. We cant go through the day without
discriminating.
Third, how
does the government know for sure that someone was denied housing
because of discrimination due to his race, color, religion, national
origin, sex, disability, or familial status instead of his credit
score, income, debt-to-income ratio, criminal record, immigration
status, employment history, or references? Can government bureaucrats
and social workers read minds and judge motives? One Recent cases
investigated by HUD include
a New Hampshire woman who was discriminated against and insulted
by her landlord because she was married to a Hispanic man and
Black and Latino tenants in the state of Washington being charged
higher rents for the same units.
But the state
is not even sure of its own anti-discrimination laws. In the Live
Free ad campaign, there are two print advertisements that feature
a parent with a child. They both say: Refusing to rent to
persons because they have children is almost always against the
law. Why is it almost always against the law?
Does this mean that discrimination against people with children
is sometimes okay? Apparently so. But I thought all discrimination
was bad. Discrimination laws are based on the false notion that
society rooted in conflict and that a central authority is necessary
to bring about social peace and justice.
Fourth, there
may in fact be good, reasonable, and rational reasons to discriminate
in the sale or rental of housing. A religious person may not wish
to rent his house or apartment to an unmarried or same-sex couple
because he feels he would be providing the means for them to live
in sin. A landlord may want to charge college students a higher
security deposit or not rent to them at all because of a well-founded
fear that the students will disturb the neighbors with loud parties
or damage the residence. The owner of an apartment complex may prefer
a relatively homogeneous clientele to avoid potential racial or
ethnic conflicts among the tenants.
Fifth, and
most important, even if the housing discrimination is not
deserved, reasonable, and rational, and is in fact undeserved, unreasonable,
and irrational, as well as bigoted, racist, and xenophobic
there should be no federal laws against it. If I as a homeowner
forbid another family of any race, creed, color, or national
origin from moving into my house with my family for
any price then no one bats an eye. And if I as a homeowner
allow another family even one that looks and speaks exactly
like my family to move into my house with my family
for a price or not then there is still no objection. But
if I vacate my house and decide to rent it once again selectively
deciding who shall live there then I face potential lawsuits
and fines for housing discrimination if and only if
I rent to the family that looks and speaks like my family. This
is ludicrous. Just as there is a right to live where you choose
if you own the property, so there is no right to live where you
choose if you dont own the property. Housing discrimination
laws are an attack on private property, freedom of association,
and a free society.
The other
relevant point here concerns the very existence of not only laws
like the FHA, but of HUD itself.
This federal
Department was created in 1965. It now has over 10,000 employees
and a budget of over $45 billion. Other agencies under the HUD umbrella
include the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and the Government
National Mortgage Association (GNMA). HUD redistributes the income
of taxpayers to over 4.5 million families through HUDs rental
programs like Tenant-Based Rental Assistance (TBRA), Project-Based
Rental Assistance (PBRA), and Public Housing. According to a HUD
press release, HUD recently awarded nearly $41 million
to 108 fair housing organizations and non-profit agencies across
the country to educate the public and combat housing and lending
discrimination. According to another HUD
press release, $100 million in new grants was just awarded
to 45 regional areas to support more livable and sustainable
communities across the country and to build economic
competitiveness by connecting housing with good jobs, quality schools
and transportation.
The stated
mission of HUD is to
create strong,
sustainable, inclusive communities and quality affordable homes
for all. HUD is working to strengthen the housing market to bolster
the economy and protect consumers; meet the need for quality affordable
rental homes: utilize housing as a platform for improving quality
of life; build inclusive and sustainable communities free from
discrimination; and transform the way HUD does business.
However noble
these goals are, there is one big problem. There is nothing in the
Constitution that authorizes the existence of a government department
termed HUD or something else to achieve them.
It is simply
not the job of government to provide public housing, subsidize housing,
ensure that housing is affordable, regulate the lending or housing
market, strengthen the housing market, provide mortgages, guarantee
mortgages, or stamp out discrimination.
Republicans
in Congress who claim to want to cut the budget, rein in federal
spending, and adhere to the Constitution should be calling for the
wholesale elimination of HUD. Why arent they?
Reprinted
from The Future of Freedom Foundation.
April
29, 2011
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
writes from central Florida. He is the author of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State, The
Revolution that Wasn't, and Rethinking
the Good War. His latest book is The
Quatercentenary of the King James Bible. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Future of Freedom Foundation
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