• pyre@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    it’s easy to talk shit like that but you don’t know how hard it is to live without contributing anything to the world.

  • A7thStone@lemmy.world
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    24 hours ago

    Maybe the landlord should try living within their means. They should be buying fewer rotisserie chickens and instead get a piece of chicken, a piece of broccoli, a corn tortilla and one other thing.

    • cøre@leminal.space
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      16 hours ago

      They shouldn’t be buying food st all, the should be investing in the stock market. The Dows not going to go up by itself.

    • PolarKraken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      22 hours ago

      At least they finally moved on from the crippling avocado toast. What an indulgence, is no one doing the math to find out - how much did rents go up en masse, by all these indulgent landlords splurging on produce on bread?

      Even warming it, some say toasting, for sheer enjoyment?

      Landlords need to get real and live within their means. Surely there’s a purpose-built WSJ article to reference here, gimme a minute…

    • merdaverse@lemmy.zip
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      21 hours ago

      I’ve only had one decent landlord, ever. He was so decent in fact, that he stopped being a landlord, because he inherited it, but came to realize it was unethical.

      • mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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        3 hours ago

        I’ve had one decent landlord, too. one was just okay, but on principle I disagree with him because he owned like 20 properties and was a realtor. the other four just sucked.

        but the decent landlord, holy shit were they ever good. cheap af rent on a long since paid off shitty little house for student housing. actually mowed the lawn. renovated the kitchen one year, like, actually well. not fancy, just well done. pretty sure it was just his last house that they upsized from, so no large portfolio or anything. I’m okay with that.

      • tmyakal@infosec.pub
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        13 hours ago

        I was having this conversation with a co-worker recently. He was buying a second home with the intention of renting it to his brother “at cost.” Which is to say, his brother is paying the mortgage while he gets the equity. When I pointed out how fucked up that was, he agreed and bought the house anyway.

          • tmyakal@infosec.pub
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            3 hours ago

            That is very region-specific in the US. Around me, rent prices have absolutely exploded while the housing market has very slightly softened vs 2 years ago.

  • lemmydividebyzero@reddthat.com
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    23 hours ago

    Don’t you have a different word for landlord?

    That word sounds crazy.

    In Germany, we call that person “Vermieter”, which is closer to “the person who offers you to rent”.

    • Seefra 1@lemmy.zip
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      21 hours ago

      I love the word “landlord”, it shows, without shame, exactly what that scum is, lords of the land.

      But you’re right, I prefer landleech.

    • qevlarr@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      In German, the word prostitute is worded slightly differently from other languages I know, as “someone who is being prostituted”. A passive word, similar to “enslaved person” instead of “slave”. They are victims of circumstance and exploitation.

      We should use a similar words for victims of rent

      • lemmydividebyzero@reddthat.com
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        22 hours ago

        I don’t know that word in dept, but there are alternatives that became more popular in recent years, like “sex worker” (Sexarbeiterinnen).

    • PolarKraken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      22 hours ago

      “Landlord” sounds much more accurate to me. German identifications may not apply very well, over here lol.

      I can’t find any specific “friction” with the word “landlord”, and how that role is performed here. What bothers you about it?

      • LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        “Landlord” is too respectful of a title. Read the OOP again. Landlords are unemployed moochers living off their tenants’ hard work & paychecks. The tenants have real jobs. The tenants are the ones who are out in the world using the culmination of all their education to contribute to society by working honest productive 9-5 jobs.

        • Spice Hoarder@lemmy.zip
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          16 hours ago

          Erm, I think you should pushes glasses up read the title again folds hands [ the whole room stood up and applauded ]

          Be so fuckin for real. Feudal terminology is not endearing.

        • PolarKraken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          21 hours ago

          I don’t need your help with this idea. I’m engaging with the word (in this thread), where people are at, and pushing for the same understanding you are.

          Offer info, that’s great. Why are you telling me to read something…? The fundamental point about which I’ve been littering the thread with comments?

      • lemmydividebyzero@reddthat.com
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        22 hours ago

        To me, it sounds like an alternative word for slave owner. Probably because of the “lord” part in the word… Gives me feudal vibes, too.

        • PolarKraken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          21 hours ago

          That’s because of the way that word is, ya see.

          It’s not the same. As slavery or feudalism. Or indentured servitude. Or sharecropping. Or company towns and scrip. Or union-busting, “off-shoring”, easy payday loans, easy credit, permanent basement minimum wages.

          But here, and now? And surely, more clearly all the time, not just here, not just “for now” -

          It’s a new shape of boot, one of a few really, that look like the old boots, but a little different. And now with sparkling added (modern) effervescence ™.

  • mudkip@lemdro.id
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    2 days ago

    I can’t think of any better way to express the sheer absurdity of capitalism in a single meme than this.

    • atcorebcor@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      This is more of a critique of private landlords than of capitalism. So it’s more of a Georgist than socialist argument.

      • Riverside@reddthat.com
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        5 hours ago

        Number of socialist revolutions that eliminated landlordism: several

        Number of georgist revolutions that eliminated landlordism: none

        Seems to me like this is more of a socialist argument

        • atcorebcor@sh.itjust.works
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          17 hours ago

          Henry George saw that land is fixed in supply and because of this any profits in companies and wages from workers get swallowed up by rents. If people start making more money, rents will rise. If businesses start making more profit, rents for them will rise. The beneficiaries of all progress and investment, including public infrastructure, are landlords.

          This is not the case for capitalists if there is competition (unless they are also landlords, which many are).

          The matter is that all landlords extract rent, but only capitalists with market power or land extract rent.

          This doesn’t mean we don’t need antitrust and public ownership of natural monopolies, but it illustrates our severe undermining of land. Land makes up almost 50% of all wealth. It’s much more efficient to tax than capital and much harder to evade. It will likely increase housing affordability, reduce urban sprawl, limit impact of housing bubbles, increase investment in innovation (instead of land), and reduce inequality. It also has support from scholars in both ends of the political spectrum.

        • MrMakabar@slrpnk.net
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          20 hours ago

          Georgism tries to fix the issue of contrived priviliges, which block competition. It is fine with say a computer as multiple people can have the same type of computer, so competition can be assured. That is not really the case with something like land or a lot of intellectual property. Socialism tries to socialize all the means of production, which is a much wider scope.

      • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        Shouldn’t be blaming the private landlord for an economic system that leaves homes in a state of such unaffordibilty that you need to split the costs to have one.

        • atcorebcor@sh.itjust.works
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          17 hours ago

          The problem isn’t landlords, it’s private landownership. Landlords are just actors within a system that is flawed.

        • PolarKraken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          22 hours ago

          How about we see some private landlords start to organize together and work against the corporate hellscape landlording, for the benefit of themselves and their renters, maybe see if that engenders some sympathy for the poor souls stuck landlording, eh?

          • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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            13 hours ago

            We need to let them know the rich are the true enemy of all of us.

            It’s failed messaging when they work to defend the corpolandlord.

  • pimpampoom@lemmy.zip
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    12 hours ago

    I mean the landlord provides a place to live and it’s part of his income. Makes sense to me, idk?

    • mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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      3 hours ago

      The landlord provides a place to live the same way that ticket scalpers provide tickets

    • Riverside@reddthat.com
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      5 hours ago

      The landlord doesn’t provide a place to live, they paywall it. The construction of housing provides places to live, landlordism only leeches off the poor classes who can’t afford to buy housing.

  • foodandart@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    NGL, that’s the situation for a ton of landlords that have a handful of rental properties.

    When I got out of school and into my first apartment, the woman that owned the apartment building I lived in lost her other rental building because she’d been on razor thin margins with it.

    Also, the guys that lived there had apparently damaged the hell out of it and she couldn’t manage the repairs, so she had the bank take it back.

    The family that owns the property that my husband and I have been living in actually own the buildings outright… and we’ve been absolutely lucky in being able to stay in the same space for decades, which we love.

    If you find landlords that are good people that don’t jack the rent sky-high, take care of the space and be good to it.

      • bluesheep@sh.itjust.works
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        24 hours ago

        The apt I started renting in the middle of COVID started at ~850 bucks. Which was at least 100 bucks higher than the previous renter (i talked to her and she paid less than 800, most likely around 700 bucks). At some point they sent me a letter saying, "we didn’t increase rent during COVID but our expenses require us to do it right now so this is your new rent. At least in my country they are capped at the rent increase, but I was thinking like, what the fuck are you on about. You made at least a 100eu increase profit in rent in comparison with the previous renter since i started living here, and you have the fucking audacity to say you didnt increase rent because of COVID? Go fucking hang yourselves. Landlords are parasites and parasites should be eradicated.

        • Zorcron@piefed.zip
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          1 day ago

          I wonder what fraction of the damage caused by that would be felt by the landlord and not felt by you more immediately. Like it needs to be in the part of the sewer lines that affect their property, but preferably not just the ones that affect your apartment, or you inconvenience yourself more than them. And if it goes further, could contribute to problems for your municipality to handle.

          • ashenone@lemmy.ml
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            1 day ago

            I always just rinse my greasy pan with hot water to make sure it doesn’t solidify in my apartment pipes

    • Honytawk@feddit.nl
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      1 day ago

      They could, you know, actually do work for once?

      Like improve society, instead of being a parasite?

      • Crash@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        I mean, I rent the upstairs of my house, and I work and my fiance works. I raise the rent when I have to and don’t when I don’t. I’ve found that regardless of how good I try to be to my tenant, there will always be people that call me a leech.

        I wanted a house. I bought a house. A big one, for a really good price. I’ve put work into it, building it’s value. As stated, I work to pay bills, as well. But, the extra money from my extra resources (livable, maintained space with working amenities), is earned and I do work for it.

        That said, it would, also, be silly to think that I would let a stranger live in the house that I am working to pay for, for free.

        • CamilleMellom@jlai.lu
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          21 hours ago

          the value is not earn because the rent you can extract (the value) correspond to no labour of your own, it is instead decided by the location and the quality of the place (the city/neighborhood, not the house) you live in, in terms of jobs, public amenities, … This value is created and increased thanks to everyone else work (creating new jobs, paying taxes from labor, providing labors …) but not by your “job” has a landlord.

          Hence the rent you get is not earned, it is extracted from land prices. If you want to learn more, read “the wealth of nations” by Adam Smith :).

            • CamilleMellom@jlai.lu
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              14 hours ago

              It does and it can be quantified. I can guarantee you that it is not as high as the price asked. Most of the price comes from the land price.

              Moreover, your house price depreciate in reality but rent and buying price increase? That doesn’t make any sense, unless the land price are increasing. And this increase is due to other people’s work, not the landlord.

              Old house should be cheap, labor is cheap, yet people pay 30%+ of their salary in rent. Imagine the same with a car instead of a house, that could never happen, so what is the difference ;)? The land.

              • CannonFodder@lemmy.world
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                6 hours ago

                Labor isn’t really cheap. As a home owner, I can tell you that getting a plumber, electrician, sewer guy, appliance repair guy, roof repair guy, squirrel trapper guy, eavestrough guy, etc, etc. are all very expensive and it adds up. Plus property taxes, major stuff like roof replacement every 10 years, grass cutting, painting.
                But yes, it’s also property values that go up - and that makes it more expensive to buy land because more people want to use that land. And as a result, the value of renting goes up. You could rent on the outskirts of town for much less; but you want to live in a nice spot just like everyone else. So how else do we proportions out the land except by attributing value to it and doing trades?

                • CamilleMellom@jlai.lu
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                  5 hours ago

                  when I say labor is cheap I mostly mean the landlord “labor” since this is virtually nothing. It’s not that expensive. It’s never 30%+ of your paycheck, most houses need nothing most of the time. Most of the rent/buying process of housing is land (aka dirt) value.

                  It’s not so much that you want to live in a nice place, it’s more than one must. We need to bring land prices down it would be better for the economy, for future generations, and for social equality… We can:

                  1. tax the hell out of the land value to finance what give land its value (public transport…)
                  2. Build publicly owned rent controlled flats
                  3. do aggressive rent control on part of the local housing stock.

                  Look up how Vienna does it, or in the US, the rezoning associated with rent controlled guarantees (without those guarantees rezoning increases land price)

      • foodandart@lemmy.zip
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        1 day ago

        They do… they run a small grocery store that actually has whole foods with fresh fruits and vegetables and modestly priced meats that isn’t horribly expensive and maintain the most affordable apartments in the entire city.

        Right downtown.

        In what is now an overpriced retirement ghetto filled with million dollar starter homes owned by insufferably stuffed old shirts and 3.5k per month apartments rented to Boston commuters.

        They work their asses off to build an actual community of native residents.

        Pretty much everyone they rent to has local resident ties here to what used to be a working class, working port city.

        Your cynicism is noted, but you make some incorrect assumptions. It’s not ALL as bad as you think out there. Find those gems, they do exist.

        • fracture@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          11 hours ago

          happy for you, but “find those gems” is a crazy thing to say when there are like four gems among millions of people who need a place to live

          • foodandart@lemmy.zip
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            11 hours ago

            It’s crazy to suggest looking isn’t worth it. It’s not trite sentimentality.

            It’s luck, and one may never get lucky if they don’t look in the first place.

            Not everyone will be as blessed, yes… absolutely true.

            Never will I deny that but in the end, we have to look out for our selves first before we can help others. This is one thing you may want to look for, if you want to get a stable footing underneath you.

            Big cities and metropolitan areas are becoming increasingly toxic to stay in if you’re starting out or have an average level of hustle. You gotta be some sort of capitalistic superman and most people aren’t. God knows, I’m not.

            However it’s despairing when the sentiment is framed which says there is no good in owning a rental, because people are not good.

            Not every property owner in a capitalist society is a capitalist pig.

            Find places where you can be part of a local community where people network and live and work together and have a shared history that goes back decades.

            The thing I’ve notcied is that rootlessness, that is, constantly moving from place to place as our society encourages, turns every new person that moves into an area into a stranger, and that is the crux of the matter. (I grew up homeless in the 1970’s and lived in the back of a VW bus, so I understand this perfectly) It’s how you keep millions of people poor. We’re driven by capitalism and it’s handmaiden of consumerism to cut ourselves loose, and in doing so, lose the anchors of community that allow people to stay in one place and save.

            Oh no… we can’t have that!

            I’d say the larger argument everyone should pivot on is how the homeless problem and the unaffordability issue - for EVERYONRE not a millionaire - (and that’s most of us) comes directly down to the trillions of dollars worth of untaxed investment wealth being put into private real estate equity.

            It’s got to get to the breaking point where the middle class is finally turfed and joins the rest of us.

            This is coming like a slow-motion tidal wave and for sure Trump has accelerated the slide with his corruption and crminality.

            Beautifully so. The bourgeois get salty when their comforts are pinched.

            I expect you’ll hear the air raid sirens of financial petulance coming from that comfy, fat middle in a handful of years, if the economy continues on its current trajectory.

    • 4am@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      My landlord was like this until she saw housing prices increasing. Decided to divorce her husband and take over the property we were living in. Because of the state we live in and that she had not signed a paper lease with us that year (and we did not bring it up for fear of rent increases), she kicked us out with 30 days notice, after never missing a payment for nearly 10 years. She did move in but now the place is rented out again.

      We anded up buying a house by crushing all our savings and overbidding with inspection waived in a market full of house flippers and corporations at the highest prices of all time. We make high salaries and our housing costs tripled, just in time for Trump 2.0 so now all of our other costs are doubled. We are house poor and living like we used to when we had a shitty apartment right after my wife graduated college, when we made less than a third what we do now.

      All the progress just to be backstabbed by a landlord. No, I don’t trust them, I don’t trust any of them. Mao was right.

      • kameecoding@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        Why didn’t you rent someplace else or go with a cheaper house?

        I mean all’s fair for calling out the shitty behavior of the landlord but then your actions after that seem rather self-inflicted, you could have just downsized if you couldn’t afford the place you are in and not become house poor.

        I want to drive a fucking porsche, but I can’t afford it without going broke so I drive my 12 year old Hyundai.

        Edit: I see personal responsibility is not a big thing for lemmings, sure Op got screwed by their landlord by putting him on the street with 30 days notice, but then the landlord didn’t hold a gun to their head to buy a home they can’t afford and make him and wife house poor, that was all on them…

        • diffaldo@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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          19 hours ago

          Finding fault with the good renter who did everything by the book is deplorable.

          As you know we are in housing crisis and finding affordable house is extremely difficult. Maybe they couldnt find an available house in their area. You dont know their situation.

            • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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              13 hours ago

              Housing isn’t a luxury, you can’t just decide “prices are too high right now, I’m not going to buy / rent any of these places.” What are they going to do, live out of their car until prices come down?

    • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      When I got out of school and into my first apartment, the woman that owned the apartment building I lived in lost her other rental building because she’d been on razor thin margins with it.

      Also, the guys that lived there had apparently damaged the hell out of it and she couldn’t manage the repairs, so she had the bank take it back.

      I swear to fuck, you’re screwed either way. You rent, the landlord takes too much cash, gives you a shitty place to stay. You have renters, they destroy your property and don’t pay on time. Fuck sake.

  • lbfgs@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    Doesn’t mean he’s living paycheck to paycheck. People often don’t leave a lot of money in checking accounts from which they pay mortgages because checking accounts often offer 0% interest. So if the landlord usually has close to 0 money in his checking account expecting rent to come ahead of the mortgage paynent despite having millions in a brokerage account he’ll still go into overdraft.

    • vithigar@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      Not keeping a buffer that covers any upcoming bills in an account from which bills are automatically paid is deranged behaviour. I don’t care how much interest you may or may not get on that money.

      • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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        14 hours ago

        Yeah its even bad landlording practice. You budget in a 20% buffer in the requested rent payment over the costs to own the rental property in case of late/missed rent payments and for ongoing repairs. If you as a landlord have expenses bouncing you’re doing something very wrong!

      • PolarKraken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        22 hours ago

        People who inherit things and don’t understand what it took (from themselves and worse, from others…) to build those things -

        These people have, definitionally and usually irrevocably, deranged behavior.

        Accordingly, among all the other things they do, these people often do hilariously (except for the real costs) stupid things with what they inherit.

  • dangling_cat@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    12 hours ago

    Don’t pay rent and let him sue. It takes at least 6 months to the court, but he will be bankrupt way before then :3

    If he wants housing to be an investment, he has to take the risk too.

    Edit: then offer to buy the house at auction price with the down payment you saved from the rent!

    • Taldan@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      This is a great lifehack to get a mega-corp landlord

      As an added benefit, they’ll squeeze you for every extra penny they can, which is great if you’re into financial domination. Best part is that you will be helping support extreme wealth inequality

      Or at least I assume those are the reasons. IDK, I support small landlords over mega-corporations

    • Carnelian@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Keep in mind having the eviction on your record will make it significantly harder to rent another place in the future

      • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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        1 day ago

        Only do this after buying your own home then

        Or idk, probably just don’t do it at all I guess. The landlord here is an asshole, but he’s a symptom of a systemic issue, not the cause of it. He goes bankrupt and the house gets bought by the next opportunistic asshole who probably will charge the next tenant even more rent, especially if he doesn’t get as good a deal on the mortgage (interests are up compared to 7-8 years ago after all). And you’ll have a permanent mark on your record.

        Now of course if this was done by millions of tenants at once… That would really be something. Probably crash the housing market altogether, make houses affordable again

  • slothrop@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    The banks make money whilst its slaves point fingers amongst themselves.

    • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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      1 day ago

      Yeah, the landlord here is nothing more but another wage slave looking for a way to be less dependent on his wage/salary when the mortgage of his rental property is finally paid off. A symptom of a larger issue, maybe an asshole, but probably just trying to provide for his own family like we all are. Doesn’t sound like a millionaire.

        • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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          1 day ago

          I mean yeah exactly, the corporate ones are the bigger problem. This is just one guy. The corporate landlords are pricing even the private landlords out of the market, let alone first-time homebuyers.

          Blackstone’s real estate divison in particular should be disbanded and its’ assets sold at auction to private individuals ONLY. Everyone (not here, but in general) talks about Blackrock, a company that mostly focuses on providing ETFs and other financial instruments, while Blackstone is literally out there buying up America’s single family homes and people barely talk about them.

          • for_some_delta@beehaw.org
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            17 hours ago

            Privatizing housing is the system that created the problem. Under the current system, housing is a commodity that can be bought and sold. Like any commodity, cornering the market leads to monopoly by which the only supplier is a cartel of a few private entities. Cartel because they work together to fix prices to their benefit.

            • What is the primary difference between just one guy and Blackstone?
            • Why does just one guy seem legitimate?
            • Why should we define property in a way that allows landlords to exist?
            • kameecoding@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              You are FREE to live in a homeless shelter.

              Who will build houses for FREE? Who will pay for the materials?

              It’s a nice idea in concept, but a fucking moronic when it meets real life.

              I am all for social housing and rent-controlled housing owned by towns and cities.

              But all housing being FREE is stupid…

              • _‌_反いじめ戦隊@ani.social
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                24 hours ago

                shelter

                Housing

                I didn’t stutter.

                Who will build houses
                pay for the materials?

                Same way we already collect resources for roads, infrastructure, and government buildings:
                we build housing anyways.
                You think the White House was built for free?

                Maintenance, same way.

                • kameecoding@lemmy.world
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                  15 hours ago

                  By the way if you are in the US the allocation if resources for infrastructure like roads is already misallocated as fuck, if you live in an urban city center you are subsidizing the road infrastructure for the suburbanites, so that you can enjoy their smog being blown in your face as they commute to the city center from their cosy single family houses.

                  Look up strongtowns, they did plenty of studies showing this effect across various huge US cities.

                  The nice thing about capitalism is that it kind of solves allocation of resources without having a central control that’s prone to abuse and mismanagement.

                  You can’t afford to live where you want because it’s a popular place, you have to go elsewhere, and companies will build houses there because there is demand.

                  Now there are a few issues ofc like private companies being allowed to own housing, which needs to be banned. The other one being the over regulation and single family house zoning that has racist origins in the Us and absolutely fucked shit up, another reason why government regulation is bad and can be abused.

                  I live in a “commie block” in Europe that was planned so that everything is in walking distance, so not all government control is bad, but I believe this can be achieved without having to have tight control over what is built where, with more control over public transit.

                  i say let the market solve the housing problem, and let cities/towns provide affordable housing locally for the community.

                  In my city we have a homeless shelter for people who need housing in rough times, we have social housing that’s more long term and stable and costs like 30 euros a month for an apartment and we also recently opened rent-controlled flats that are owned by the city and are rented out at cost.

                  And this is in a central european country with nowhere near the resources and richness of the US…

                • kameecoding@lemmy.world
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                  20 hours ago

                  Okay, can I just take my European ass and move into a malibu beach house for free then?

                  Who will decide who gets the free house where?

  • aeration1217@lemmy.org
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    1 day ago

    I keep this in mind after selling my home and going back to renting, it was obvious which landlords needed the money. I have no issue telling somebody I’ll move in a month if rent would be changing or any other fuckery.

    I may be renting currently, but I am financially stable and have always made above median family income for my areas. I have owned homes, I know what it entails and the finances look like, and I have enough for a down payment on a home as needed, I am evaluating life on more temporary terms currently.