"You trust your parents. This is not what they should be doing to their children."
When Axton Betz-Hamilton set up her first utility bill at college, she soon realized something was very, very wrong.
It turned out she’d been a victim of identity theft—and it had destroyed her credit rating.
In 2001, when she was a 19-year-old student, Betz-Hamilton’s new utility provider demanded a $100 security deposit to turn on her service, citing her credit score.
“I thought it was because I didn’t have enough credit,” she told Fortune. But when a copy of her credit report turned up in her mailbox six weeks later, she learned the opposite was true.
When she disputed the file with credit bureaus, parts were removed simply because certain creditors had gone out of business. Others, however, didn’t get scrubbed from her history until they aged off—which typically takes around seven years.
Because it's a hell of a lot easier to hold poor people liable for other people's bullshit than it is to hold rich people liable for not honoring fraud reports. One can afford a lawyer, and knows the other can't.
Because credit agencies aren't related to the government. They're literally just companies that made up arbitrary systems and convinced banks to go along with it