Kushner-Linked Firm and Gig Economy Set to Reap Huge Profits as Mass Evictions Begin
Feature photo | File photo | Jessie Wardarski | AP
SEPTEMBER 28, 2020 GEOPOLITICS
Raul Diego is a MintPress News Staff Writer, independent photojournalist, researcher, writer and documentary filmmaker.
With threats of homelessness and bankruptcy in the air as the eviction moratoriums subside, both renters and small landlords are getting pinched by predatory tech capitalism as the gig-economy hits the real estate market.
In 2014, former Blackstone and Goldman Sachs investment banker Ryan Williams got together with his âcollege buddy,â Joshua Kushner â Jaredâs brother â to form a real estate investment platform they called Cadre.
Cadre sought to disrupt the real estate industry in the wake of the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis by tinderizing property deals through a tech platform that brought investors and sellers together.
According to Williams, whose other investors include George Soros and Peter Theil, Cadreâs mission is âto level the playing field in an industry that is often tilted toward the biggest playersâ by taking an âofflineâ industry online and making it âtransparent.â
A pre-Covid initiative to capitalize on its platform came in the form of the so-called âopportunity zones,â that Jared Kushner directly lobbied for inclusion in Trumpâs 2017 Tax Cut and Jobs Act, billed as a funding mechanism to help poor and distressed communities, which turned into a multi-billion-dollar land heist by the wealthiest Americans, like the Kushner family. The pandemic lockdown protocols forced Cadre to downsize, laying off 25 percent of its workforce in March.
But now, the company is restarting its predatory engines as the home eviction wave forming on the horizon signals potential windfalls for companies like Cadre, that are in a position to profit. It is doing so by launching a pop-up banking operation called âCadre Cash,â which will try to lure deposits from âinvestorsâ by offering a three percent annualized ârewardâ to finance a new round of land-grabs as millions of Americans teeter on the edge of homelessness and landlords look to unload un-rentable properties.
Another company, Civvl, is tackling a different side of the burgeoning housing crisis in America with its on-demand service model for eviction crews. Just like Uber, the Civvl app lets âfrustrated property owners and banks secure foreclosed residential propertiesâ by connecting haulers and the rentier class.
Civvlâs parent company, OnQall, specializes in mobile app platforms that monetize side-hustles like moving, cleaning and lawn care services. The eviction crew app has, predictably, drawn a storm of criticism since Motherboardâs article on Civvl this past Monday.
âItâs fucked up that there will be struggling working-class people who will be drawn to gigs like furniture-hauling or process-serving,â exclaimed housing activist Helena Duncan, who also pointed out the clear dystopian contours evident in a scenario where working class people are paid to wage economic warfare on fellow working class people.
Civvl puts up a disingenuous defense against the earned invectives, comparing itself to Monster.com. âTheyâre not evicting anyone,â a Civvl spokesperson told Motherboard, âtheyâre just the help.â
Both Cadre and Civvl are poised to make a killing as eviction moratoriums abate across the country and millions find themselves on one side or another of evictions â tenants forced onto the streets by small landlords who will have little choice but to sell in a depressed market.
Only the CDCâs national eviction moratorium, issued three weeks ago, stands in the way of the avalanche of displacement and dispossession at our doorstep. But, even the risks of fines and jail time doesnât seem to be discouraging companies like OnQall or landlords, in general.
Ridiculous loopholes
Cadre, in particular, is at the head of the pack of âdisruptiveâ real estate tech platforms mostly due to the favor it enjoys in the halls of the Trump administration. âJared was one of the key people early on. And his contributions were critical,â says Cadre CEO Ryan Williams of Jared Kushner, whose stake is worth over $50 Million, according to 2018 SEC filings.
Despite claims that Kushner sold a âsubstantial portionâ of his shares in the company and that the presidentâs son-in-law has no role in the business endeavor, recent history surrounding the so-called âopportunity zonesâ of Trumpâs Tax bill revealed Cadreâs and Kushnerâs central role in a multi-billion dollar land heist by the wealthiest Americans, like the Kushner family.
Paying lip service to the same âdiversityâ principles Cadreâs African American founder asserts underlie his companyâs vision, the more than 200 federally-designated âopportunity zonesâ for disadvantaged communities that resulted from the legislation, Cadreâs machine-learning and processed census data was simply serving to make a âridiculous loopholeâ available to wealthy investors to buy up land at a serious discount.
The bulk of the opportunity zone funding, some of which was set up by Williamâs former employer and Cadre investor, Goldman Sachs, went to high-end real estate development projects in affluent areas, retail developments and luxury hotels, such as Richard Bransonâs 225-room hotel in Williamâs home state of Louisiana, less than two miles away from one of the poorest parts of New Orleans.
The project had been announced by Branson a year before the tax-cut legislation was signed into law, but nevertheless qualified to participate in the opportunity zone program.
Picking up the bodies
The housing catastrophe in the United States is barley gathering steam, and while many landlords and property owners still face legal challenges in cases where eviction moratoriums remain in place, the loose patchwork of laws governing property rights across the nation â not to mention foundational ideology â gives companies like Civvl and Cadre the chance to circumvent these and rely on naked power to drive people away from their homes or convince them to sell it to massive real estate concerns, like CBRE or Kushnerâs rich buddies.
Civvl is confident that they can take advantage of peopleâs lack of knowledge about their rights to make money as the eviction middle man.
Indeed, the company is betting that municipal and federal authorities will see things their way. âThis is something that has to be done,â says a company spokesman. âListen,â he continued, âif someone is killed on the street, someone needs to go pick their body up.â
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WHO and WHAT is behind it all ? : >
The bottom line is for the people to regain their original, moral principles, which have intentionally been watered out over the past generations by our press, TV, and other media owned by the Illuminati/Bilderberger Group, corrupting our morals by making misbehaviour acceptable to our society. Only in this way shall we conquer this oncoming wave of evil.
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