This reminds me of an unfortunate part of history.<p>When Roosevelt signed the G.I. Bill in 1944, a lot of soldiers who returned from the war were able to claim benefits in the form of tuition assistance, low-cost mortgages and low-interest loans. Soldiers coming home from overseas had the choice of pursuing higher education, purchasing a home, or starting a business. Another result of the G.I. Bill were Levittowns, newly sprouting suburban neighborhoods offering low-cost housing to these returned soldiers ($8,000 in 1950, approximately $80,000 in 2015). With the help of the expanding auto industry and the joining of highways, people began to move out into the suburbs and build new communities.<p>The unfortunate bit is that while the G.I. Bill didn't advocate discrimination, it was interpreted differently for people according to their race. For example; of the 67,000 mortgages insured by the G.I. Bill, fewer than 100 were taken out by non-whites.<p>Now, the heavily-inflated value (example; houses in Levittown, NY are selling for approximately $350,000) of these post-WWII homes are passed down and borrowed against or leveraged to send the grandchildren of those veterans to private schools and expensive universities, while many black families struggle financially in urban sectors. The racial discrimination of WWII veterans has been cited as a reason for the increased economic inequality and racial tensions being experienced today in the United States.