Give Me Credit

Give Me Credit Episode 38

32 min · 5. maj 2026
episode Give Me Credit Episode 38 cover

Description

Most people think credit is just a number sitting quietly in the background of their lives. A tool that measures behavior and spits out a score. But the more time you spend inside this system, the harder it is to pretend it is passive. Credit does not just observe. It tracks patterns, records decisions, and then shapes what happens next. It influences where someone can live, what they will pay, and whether they move forward or get stopped without a clear explanation. That shift, from measurement to influence, is where this conversation begins. In this episode of Give Me Credit, we step away from the mechanics of credit and move into something deeper. Ethics. We are joined by Professor Neil Tift, who has spent nearly four decades teaching and working in applied ethics across universities and professional environments. His work focuses on how decisions are actually made inside systems, where incentives, structure, and pressure often drive outcomes long before a person believes they are making a choice. What makes this conversation worth your time is not theory. It is how quickly the discussion turns practical. Once you stop looking at credit as a simple score and start seeing it as a system, the questions change. We talk about what is lost when human lives are reduced to data points, and whether it is fair to judge someone’s future based on past behavior without context. We dig into accountability and ask a question that never seems to have a clean answer. When an algorithm makes a decision, and no one can clearly explain it, who is responsible for the outcome? We also spend time on the part of the system that most people only experience when something goes wrong. Errors. Millions of credit reports contain them, yet the burden to fix those mistakes almost always falls on the individual. When access to housing or employment is impacted, that is no longer a technical issue. It becomes a real-world consequence with ethical weight. There is also a broader question running underneath all of this. If a system is built on historical data that reflects inequality, can it ever truly operate neutrally? Or does neutrality become a convenient way to avoid responsibility for the outcomes it produces? This episode is not about improving a score or finding a quick strategy. It is about understanding the system that sits behind the score and the role it plays in shaping behavior, opportunity, and accountability in ways most people never stop to question. I would really like to hear your perspective on this one. Where do you think the line is between a financial tool and something that carries ethical responsibility? At what point should a system like this be held accountable for its impact? Hit reply and tell me what you think. I read every response. Get full access to Mortgage Lending Explained at jswhaldo.substack.com/subscribe [https://jswhaldo.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Give Me Credit community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

45 episodes

episode Give Me Credit Episode 45 artwork

Give Me Credit Episode 45

Experian, Credit Scores and the Hidden Business Behind Consumer Data Are credit bureaus really neutral? In Episode 45 of Give Me Credit, hosts JS Whaldo and John Mackey examine how Experian evolved from a credit reporting agency into a powerful marketing platform that profits from consumer financial behavior. This episode explores the relationship between credit bureaus, credit scores, consumer data, and targeted lending offers. We discuss how pre-approved credit cards, personal loans, debt consolidation offers, and credit monitoring services generate revenue while using predictive analytics and behavioral data to encourage borrowing. Topics include: Experian credit reports and credit scores Credit bureau business models Free credit monitoring services Credit card marketing and pre-approved offers Personal loan advertising Consumer data privacy Surveillance capitalism Behavioral economics and financial psychology Predictive credit modeling Credit score education FICO scores and credit reporting How lenders use consumer information Why consumers are targeted with financial products Credit bureau conflicts of interest Debt cycles and financial literacy Many consumers believe credit bureaus simply collect and report information. This episode explores why companies like Experian have become major players in financial marketing and how consumer data has become one of the most valuable products in modern finance. Whether you're trying to improve your credit score, understand how credit reports work, avoid debt traps, or simply become a smarter consumer, this episode offers an eye-opening look at the business behind the credit industry. Get full access to Mortgage Lending Explained at jswhaldo.substack.com/subscribe [https://jswhaldo.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

23. juni 202616 min
episode Give Me Credit Episode 44 artwork

Give Me Credit Episode 44

Attorney David Cox of Two Rivers Law returns to Give Me Credit for a second conversation with hosts JS Whaldo and John Mackey. This episode dives into the realities of legal judgments and debt collection. Winning a lawsuit may establish who owes money, but collecting that money can be expensive, difficult, and time-consuming. Topics include: Why a judgment doesn't guarantee payment Writs of execution and bank levies What assets creditors can pursue Protections for primary residences and essential property Why collecting debts is often a business decision Negotiating settlements outside the courtroom Practical considerations for both creditors and consumers Attorney David Cox explains why debt recovery often comes down to leverage, negotiation, and realistic expectations. Get full access to Mortgage Lending Explained at jswhaldo.substack.com/subscribe [https://jswhaldo.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

16. juni 202634 min
episode Give Me Credit Episode 43 artwork

Give Me Credit Episode 43

Most people think a home appraisal is just another box to check during the mortgage process. It is not. In our latest episode of Give Me Credit, we break down what an appraisal actually is and why it can completely change the direction of a real estate deal. We talk about: • Why appraisals are legal, data-driven arguments• The difference between appraisals, inspections, and tax assessments• Why listing prices do not determine value• How market evidence drives lending decisions• Why emotions often lose when the numbers hit the table• The growing role of regulations and third-party oversight This conversation pulls back the curtain on one of the least understood parts of home buying and refinancing. If you have ever wondered why a deal falls apart even when everyone “feels” the price is right, this episode explains it clearly. Listen now and share it with someone buying, selling, refinancing, or working in real estate. Get full access to Mortgage Lending Explained at jswhaldo.substack.com/subscribe [https://jswhaldo.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

9. juni 202632 min
episode Give Me Credit Episode 42 artwork

Give Me Credit Episode 42

What happens when credit systems stop seeing people and start seeing patterns? In this latest episode of Give Me Credit, John Mackey and I welcome ethics professor Neil Tift back to the podcast for a deeper discussion about algorithmic credit systems and the growing power imbalance inside modern lending. We talk about: • How predictive data can override human context• Why financial hardship often gets treated like personal failure• The ethical responsibility of lenders and system designers• Capitalism with a conscience• What happens when algorithms quietly manage opportunity This conversation goes beyond credit scores. It touches on fairness, accountability, and the real lives affected by automated decision-making. It may be one of our most important conversations yet. Listen now and tell us your thoughts. Get full access to Mortgage Lending Explained at jswhaldo.substack.com/subscribe [https://jswhaldo.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

2. juni 202634 min