• Steve@communick.news
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    1 month ago

    Treating the symptom.
    Okay I guess. I’ll get excited when I see a plan to treat the disease.

    • disguy_ovahea@lemmy.world
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      There’s no reason to get excited at all. Biden can call for it, but Congress has to write and pass the legislation. Republican House majority won’t let that happen.

      Vote in November.

    • SirDerpy@lemmy.world
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      Not even. Can’t charge more for rent when it’s already max out against income. It’s a placebo that’ll have zero effect. Don’t get too excited about a “plan”. This is the plan.

      • njm1314@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        What world are you living in when they can’t raise rates too high for your income level? Not the one the rest of us are living in.

        • SirDerpy@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          The vast majority of individuals must be able to afford to house, feed, and cloth themselves, as well as travel to and from work. If not they will riot. This is bad for economic growth, the mandate of capitalism. It’s particularly bad when the market is still significantly inflated relative the economy.

          It’ll never be written into law. However, Biden’s proposed rent caps under projected inflation, signifying rent has fully saturated its allocation of income. Housing began balancing systemically naturally, human sellers drying up. Landlords have no obstacles.

          I live in a world of nuance. The rent sucks.

          • njm1314@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Historically that’s actually not what causes people to riot. The slow chipping away actually almost never causes riots. It’s the immediate stripping of a right or privilege. Look back at history that’s how it Works nearly every single time. You’re basically making the same argument people who you sanctions as a political tool make. That if you keep making life shittier and shittier and shittier slowly the people will riot. Doesn’t work.

            Furthermore capitalism does not possess the capacity to change in that manner. It does not possess the capacity to adjust to the needs of the masses. Thinking capitalism will fix this is insane.

            • SirDerpy@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              If you look at history, the last half century is far from “slow chipping away”.

              • njm1314@lemmy.world
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                1 month ago

                The last half century of political sanctions? What does that even mean? I feel like you were trying to be clever and you lost the point somewhere. If you ever had one.

                • SirDerpy@lemmy.world
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                  1 month ago

                  I responded to the part that wasn’t strawman with a response of equivalent quality, simple clarification of the point of disagreement.

                  Why do you expect more than you give?

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    1 month ago

    Cool, my rent is still 70% of what I make in a month. It’s almost like it’s already too late, but I’m too poor and uneducated to be an expert. Got any other ideas?

  • psycho_driver@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    5% is crazy talk when workers wages are going up 2.5% per year. Landlords need at least 20% more every year.

    • coolteathatisgreen@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      But if it pass, then it is first win. I fear that landlord are not going to let it happen without a fight

      • dan@upvote.au
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        1 month ago

        This is what happened in California. The statewide rent control is 5% plus inflation per year, capped at 10% per year. There’s a bunch of exclusions too, like the property has to be at least 15 years old, and single-family homes that aren’t owned by a corporation are excluded too. I think the builders and landlords had quite a bit of a say in it, hence the limit being so high above inflation (assuming inflation of <=5%).

        Still a lot better than it used to be. It applies to month-to-month rentals too, so you can get the flexibility of a month-to-month rental while still having a limit on the rent increase per year. Evictions also need to have just cause and there’s a notice period of 60 days if the tenant has lived there for longer than a year.

    • vxx@lemmy.world
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      Is 5% really that crazy when the current rate is 20% as you describe?

  • njm1314@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Man this entire thread is just a perfect encapsulation of the perfect being the enemy of the good. What a bunch of useless chuds.

    • BleatingZombie@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I’m not sure I’ve ever heard that phrase. Do you mind explaining what you mean? (Just to be clear, I’m not trying to be combative. I just have no idea how to read that)

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              1 month ago

              …then the original saying doesn’t apply, does it?

              And that’s the million dollar question. I’m not arguing the perfect should be the enemy of the good. I’m questioning how much “good” I get by aligning myself with a fundamentally bad dude. Biden’s played this bait-and-switch game before, and there’s a real reason to believe 2025 Joe Biden won’t be willing or able to deliver on his 5% rent cap promise. In exchange, what is he asking you to give up?

              An hour of your life in line to vote on election day? A small recurring donation to his campaign? A week block-walking your neighborhood to canvas for him? Three months volunteering to work for his reelection campaign?

              Presidential elections aren’t cheap. I have to wonder what would happen if all the money and manpower pouring into Biden’s coffers was simply directed towards Habitat For Humanity instead. Would we get more bang for our bucks?

              • sigmaklimgrindset@sopuli.xyz
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                1 month ago

                Dawg, I’m not even the OP. I was just explaining an idiom, and you expect me to answer a humanist philosophical question as if I’m the greatest thinker of our generation 😭

                I can’t help you decide what extent you’re willing to compromise to vote Biden/democrats. I can’t even vote in the US.

      • TotesIllegit@lemmy.world
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        “Don’t make perfect the enemy of good” essentially says that it’s better to do what you can in the short term to reduce harm or make positive change than to wait for the perfect solution and do nothing in the meantime. The idea is that the good is still going to help some people while we wait for the perfect solution to the problem- which, crucially, may never come, or come too late for a whole bunch of people.

        One example would be letting a parent having their kid eat fast food instead of a perfectly healthy diet because their parents live in a food desert; not ideal, but it’ll keep the kid fed and alive.

    • abracaDavid@lemmy.today
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      1 month ago

      We want actual change.

      Not this half-assed thing of “oh shit Biden isn’t polling well. Quick, do something popular!”.

      Seeing this honestly frustrates me more because we all know they could do better than this.

    • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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      1 month ago

      What BS. This is like arguing that “trickle down economics” is good because money eventually trickles down to us plebs. We’re in a sinking boat filled with holes and you’re trying to argue that we should be happy that 1 of 1000 holes got patched up even though there isn’t time to patch the other 999 holes before the ship sinks because the crew would rather sit on their ass and drink martinis.

      • njm1314@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        No this is like y’all getting mad at someone working on patching a hole because he’s not simultaneously patching every hole in the exact same instance. All why you sit there and don’t work on anything. Get a mallet get some wood get to work or shut up.

        • BallsandBayonets@lemmings.world
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          1 month ago

          Cheap vodka comes in plastic bottles and landlords are faceless corporate entities on the other side of the country (if they’re in the country at all). So my ability to help is limited.

      • Aux@lemmynsfw.com
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        Except that you’re not in a sinking boat and you’re in the top 5% of the richest people in the world.

    • orcrist@lemm.ee
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      Interesting. We all have the same feeling about you. The sad part is that you might actually know something. Maybe you could say something constructive, if only you cared to do so.

      You could have made an argument about how aiming for perfection is a bad strategy here. But you didn’t, so let me show how you’re wrong. The proposed solution doesn’t address the underlying problem, and it adds complexity. Rent can only go up by 5%, sure, but what happens if you sell the property you move into it or other exceptional circumstances happen? Then you can raise the price. Or perhaps you rent it through Airbnb, so the rules don’t apply either. It doesn’t really matter what the special cases are, because finance folk love complicated solutions. They’re always going to find ways to game the system at our expense.

      But let’s suppose the 5% solution is somehow good. If it’s good for rent then it should be good for other things too, right? You can’t let electricity or gas prices go up faster, or people won’t be able to heat their homes. You can’t let food prices go up faster, or people won’t be able to eat. Oh, and you certainly need minimum wage to be going up 5%, for any of that to make sense.

      So if we consider all of that, and we find the aforementioned proposal slightly lacking, maybe it’s not because we’re seeking perfection. Maybe it’s because you have no idea what problems we are trying to solve.

      • njm1314@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I stand corrected, this is the perfect encapsulation.

        Also you are a disgrace to that username.

        • UnpluggedFridge@lemmy.world
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          Lol it’s like you summoned the ancient spirit of not understanding incremental improvement, who then wrote a short essay to explain to you just how much they don’t understand the concept.

        • orcrist@lemm.ee
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          I also stand corrected. I thought you might actually know something. But then you double down with a witty empty response: two sentences with zero information. What good is that? Grandstanding is boring and pointless.

          And then you want to trash talk my username? Jesus. Have fun with that.

          Some people are here to learn, some people are here to teach, some people are here to share, some people are here to build community. You’re not doing any of those things. Meh.

  • cheers_queers@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    we have several lifetimes worth of policies to change to fix the mess we are in. this is exactly what Biden should be doing, passing policy after policy in the next few months that have obvious positive results for the common voter. he’s not gonna run out of stuff to do if he’s re-elected, so he needs to stop holding onto this shit like it’s his last wild card of all time.

      • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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        It’s not about that. It’s about building momentum for the idea. If it passes great, if not then it’s out there. People know it’s possible and it will never stop haunting the elites who the government actually serves.

    • SirDerpy@lemmy.world
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      If Democrats kept their promises we’d have codified Roe, have free healthcare for all, and literally no one would carry student debt but those that haven’t yet had time to graduate.

      • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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        If Republicans kept theirs, we’d be living in a christofascist, ultra-capitalist, white ethnostate.

        We’ve got this instead. Behold the power of compromise.

        • SirDerpy@lemmy.world
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          It’s not compromise. It’s only turning right. They’re just arguing about how fast and which corporations should get the money.

  • Cagi@lemmy.ca
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    1 month ago

    Where I live we’ve had a 4% cap for a long time. It just means tenants get evicted to increase the price. It’s illegal, but the procedure to after landlords cheating the system is so grueling and adversarial, it puts justice beyond the reach of many victims. I can only imagine this being even worse in the US.

    • phdepressed@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      If this caps rent even if the tenant changes it’d be something. I don’t see how this passes an R house or gets through the “moderate” Dems in the senate.

      • Cagi@lemmy.ca
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        It’s certainly an essential piece of the puzzle, but without the other puzzle pieces it is only going to have a minimal effect and is easy to abuse. Better than nothing nothing though, it won’t be a wasted effort if it passes, it just won’t fix anything or curb rent prices on the whole. But it will help people out here and there.

        • phdepressed@sh.itjust.works
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          It’s not a cap on rent it’s a cap on raising it. Not much different than setting interest rates imo. I don’t know enough law about it but at least it’s an attempt? There’s a lot of talk here about how it doesn’t solve the underlying problem but I don’t see people providing another solution.

          I’d like to see property taxes increased with more single family homes owned. Let businesses keep the apartments let homes become a place to live and not an investment though.

          • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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            The problem is rent isn’t interstate commerce. There isn’t a way to justify that there is a national mandate for this, it’s a matter left to states.

            As for property taxes, many states already do this with exemptions for a primary residence that reduces taxes.

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              I’m talking about increased taxes for each additional home so that owning more than 2 or 3 homes becomes financially unviable. This causes an incentive to sell if you own a lot and prevents someone wanting to own a lot in the first place.

    • chilicheeselies@lemmy.world
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      We have rent stabilization in nyc (for some buildings). It caps the increases, and landlords are obligated to renew your lease if you want to unless you violated it in some serious way. In returnfor haveing a building stabalized, the landlord gets tax incentives.

  • HootinNHollerin@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    That’s great!!!

    Need to stop corporations buying houses next, and tamper foreigners buying up houses too (almost every country I’ve traveled to won’t let me buy so why not do the same?)

    • Asifall@lemmy.world
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      I feel like banning corporations from owning housing isn’t the panacea people expect it to be. It’s pretty impractical when you start talking about larger buildings and mixed use housing, and I’m not convinced it’s really a big driver of the problem.

      I think a steep land value tax is a more workable solution. It incentivizes anyone who holds non-productive property (vacant homes in this case) to either make better use of the land or sell it. This also has the benefit of impacting individuals who own second homes or have mostly empty airbnbs.

      Property taxes are insufficient for this purpose because they are generally based on the value of the home rather than just the land, so not only are they easier to game, but it disincentivizes improving the property.

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        Crazy idea.

        How about instead of corporations owning the unit, maybe the person who lives in the unit gets to own part of it.

        I know crazy.

        • Asifall@lemmy.world
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          Owning part of a larger building is actually much more complicated than simply owning a house. I’m not sure everyone would actually want that even if they could buy the unit they live in at a low price.

          • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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            I almost bought a condo in a multi-story building a couple of years ago and I’m glad as hell I didn’t. It was a one-bedroom unit for $125K, which is fine except that the monthly condo fees are $1000 (which includes utilities, at least), property taxes plus insurance are another $400, and the last three consecutive years residents have been hit with a special assessment of about $10K - which means I would have been paying around $2500 a month to live in a one-bedroom apartment that I’d already paid $125K for.

      • PriorityMotif@lemmy.world
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        The biggest issue with corporations owning low income multifamily housing is that they act like slumlords. When you have nowhere else to go and the landlord won’t fix major issues then it takes a toll on you. When a kid sees this growing up, then it leads to antisocial behavior. Investors think that “passive investment” means no input at all when it requires a great deal of active management if contracts are being followed. They just know that the residents have no reasonable way to enforce the contract.

      • psycho_driver@lemmy.world
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        I agree about taxes. Tax the ever loving bejesus out of vacant rentals or speculative residential real estate. That will keep them from buying in the first place or deeply incentivize them to keep them rented out.

      • postmateDumbass@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I disagree. No need to force development to destroy natural landscapes just to avoid a tax. Simply tax multiple residential properties somewhat exponemtially.

        100%, 133%, 200%, 350%, 500% or something

        • Asifall@lemmy.world
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          Generally it’s not destroying undeveloped land, but fixing up dilapidated houses so that they are livable.

          Having a progressive tax based on number of homes owned may work, but you would need to rewrite quite a bit of real estate law to make it actually effective. Obviously corporations would not be allowed to own houses to avoid people owning through shell companies, but you would also have to draw a line so corporations could own larger apartment complexes and mixed use buildings. You also do want builders to be able to temporarily own houses for the purpose of building and selling them as well as corporate flippers.

          Frankly, I think it’s too complicated to expect on a national level.

        • evatronic@lemm.ee
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          Right.

          Owning one or two residential properties is fine, more is problematic.

          I say “two” to handle the very common case of children putting their parents’ homes in their own name because Medicare clawback rules will take the home after they die if you don’t do it early enough.

          • BallsandBayonets@lemmings.world
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            The Medicare clawback crap is why we can’t expect to fix one issue with capitalism without addressing all the issues simultaneously. Can’t just raise minimum wage because landleeches will raise rents. Can’t just have universal healthcare because a lot of people would become unemployed when the insurance industry dies its overdue painful death.

            Universal healthcare, student loan cancellation (and free state university), UBI, and the elimination of for-profit housing. All within one president’s term to have a chance of sticking past four years.

      • dan@upvote.au
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        Some countries have a large yearly tax if you leave a house vacant for longer than 6 months or a year without a valid reason. More countries need to do this.

        Not sure about the USA, but it’s a big problem in Australia. Foreign investors (that don’t live in Australia nor have any intent of moving to Australia) buy properties then just hold them as speculative assets. They don’t want tenants, because they don’t want to go through all that effort. All they want to do is hold them and watch the value go up, in the same way you’d hold stock or Bitcoin.

        • Asifall@lemmy.world
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          Yeah, that does feel like it could help reduce housing prices. There is no such tax in most parts of the US, but San Francisco passed a vacancy tax that just went into effect this year. If that works out hopefully other municipalities look into a similar scheme.

    • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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      Strong disagree. Can you imagine what red states will do with the power to demand proof of citizenship to own property? Or all the hell couples where one is a Permanent Resident the other a Citizen will go through?

      You should be terrified of someone like Jeff Session or Kris Kobach able to just veto any random person from owning land. You can see it now in your head

      • Them drafting letters on government stationary to real estate agents demanding paperwork from anyone with a Latino or Chinese name. Effectively making agents terrified of dealing with minorities.

      • Random spot checks, having deputies show up to open houses asking for papers or waiting until after closing then interrogation of the family

      • Activists courts arguing that all members of the household must be citizens based on vague feelings

      • New rules that state that the entire inheritance path must all be citizens

      • Non-citizens being forced to sell at a 1/10th the value

      • The lawsuits from groups like the ACLU pointing out that it is a obvious violation of the civil rights act, which goes to the Supreme Court who then declares the Bill of Rights only applies to citizens

      If you are interested the experiment has been run already. Go read up what Kris Kobach did when he got a town to pass a law requiring citizenship tests to rent. He not only near bankrupted the town due to lawsuits he personally sent threatening letters to Latinos who lived there.

      ve traveled to won’t let me buy so why not do the same?

      The standard is good behavior, not other people.

      • HootinNHollerin@lemmy.world
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        Have you traveled much? More countries do this than don’t. The trump nazis will abuse everything yes. But people not being able to afford a place to live is also giving us trump nazis in the first place

        • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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          Have you traveled much?

          Again

          The standard is good behavior, not other people.

          Must I repeat it again?

          The trump nazis will abuse everything yes.

          And yet you want to give them more? You don’t hand a gun to a person who went to jail repeatedly for using a gun.

          But people not being able to afford a place to live is also giving us trump nazis in the first place

          Assertion, please demonstrate it. Also demonstrate that your method of handing Nazis more power will make them less powerful. Lastly compare the US grabbling with fascists to other nations who have rules like you are advocating for and how they are also grappling with fascists.

          It’s a little thing but I kinda want you to acknowledge that the one time this idea was tried in diet form in the US it not only didn’t work it also legalized racism. You are suggesting an idea that we tried and it not only failed in the task it was meant to perform it also created a host of new problems.

            • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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              I really didn’t mention a word about anything you are saying to me now. I am pro-development anti-nimby and admit I haven’t studied the issues of corporate housing enough to weight in on it.

              • Shadywack@lemmy.world
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                My apologies if that came across as challenging your point with the nimby stuff. It’s like a fuselight, it wasn’t for you but just directed out in the open. Retracting the comment. Housing is something that’s sensitive to me because we just lost a family member to suicide, and while not solely that person’s rationale, among many factors housing was a significant one.

                Housing and healthcare on the trajectory it’s pointed at today, robs our youth of their hope, and signifies quite loudly that we as a society do not love or value the futures of our children, however people may feel internally.

                My only message for NIMBY people is that of hate and revulsion.

                • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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                  Right but I am on your side about this. I want everyone to have housing that is awesome and within their price range. I just don’t agree that finding ways to punish immigrants and minorities is the best way to go about it. There is a difference between me saying “I want X and don’t think Y is the best way to get X” and me saying “fuck your family, I hate Y and lets do X to hurt them”. Me discussing how to solve a problem is not me denying the problem exists or should not be solved.

                  Also you and me are good. I am sorry for your loss. I imagine I would be very sensitive to this subject in your situation.

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        It should be reciprocal IMO for each country. The ones I’ve looked at buying in I couldn’t because I’m not a citizen

      • BallsandBayonets@lemmings.world
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        1 month ago

        All those cases are clear. Is a person (not a corporation) buying a residence to live in, that is be physically present in for a minimum of 70% of the year? If so, they can buy. If not, they can’t buy. I’d rather a million unauthorized immigrants buying houses they live in than one overseas corporate entity buying a house to rent out.

  • sentientity@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    A sensible, too-little-too-late rule, probably full of carveouts and exceptions, that I nonetheless feel really relieved to see. Delayed and watery regulation is better than none, I suppose.

  • Kroxx@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    3 years of absurd rent prices and we are just now seeing legislation, wonder why…

  • masterofn001@lemmy.ca
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    1 month ago

    In my province the cap for increase was usually around 1.5 - 2% for existing tenants/renewing lease.

    The conservative gov went ahead and fucked everything up and said this doesn’t apply to anything built after 2005, or new builds - that means any new anything in an existing building.

    New basement rooms? No cap. (No cap) But, if the basement had rooms 35 years ago, and you ‘build’ “new” rooms, it isn’t new and falls under the older more tenant friendly laws.

    However, between tenants, a landlord can do whatever the fuck they want to prices.

    Shitty rooms went from 375 to 700 I’m 5 years.

    • whoisearth@lemmy.ca
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      Hello fellow Ontarians. I feel your pain. It may be little solace but know I bought a house with a basement tenant 3 years ago. Their rent was $1100 a month for a 1 bedroom 3 years ago and it’s 1100$ a month now. I don’t need the money. Fuck landholding pariahs taking advantage of renters.

  • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I suppose he has to do something to signal to voters that he’s going to try to fix the housing affordability crisis, but this is pretty meaningless. But, what can he say? The truth? That the housing crisis is an extremely complex problem that will take decades to fix? Probably not going to go over very well.

    • 4am@lemm.ee
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      Not allowing landlords to drive people into homeless on speculation and greed is a good first step to solving the very complex problem that will take decades.

      • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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        Well, for one, it almost certainly won’t pass. So the chances of it becoming law in the first place are pretty low. But even if it were passed, I think it would be difficult to enforce. Even if it were enforced, landlords would just hike the rent 4.99% every year.

        • njm1314@lemmy.world
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          4.99% is way better than the 50% my previous landlord tried. You can always vote Republican if you want. See what they’re going to do for you.

        • WanderingVentra@lemm.ee
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          1 month ago

          Not to mention that unless wages also rise by 5% per year, which mine haven’t recently not sure about others, then it’s still unsustainable for renters.

    • nifty@lemmy.world
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      That the housing crisis is an extremely complex problem that will take decades to fix?

      No? There’s currently no cap on single housing investments, and at the very least private equity needs to be banned from buying housing in any form.

  • robocall@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Let’s build a million new homes and sell them to people that don’t currently own any homes.

    • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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      Let’s build seize a million new homes and sell them to people that don’t currently own any homes.

      FTFY

      Fuck these ogres hoarding real estate.

    • boonhet@lemm.ee
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      There’s no shortage of homes in the US. They’re just being hoarded for their increasing value.

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        I don’t believe that is the case. There is no value in letting a property sit empty accumulating value, when it could be doing exactly that while pulling in a hefty monthly rent.

        It may well be the case that there’s enough homes empty to house everyone, but only if they’re happy to move somewhere they don’t want to be, and where there’s no jobs to pay for them.

    • fishpen0@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Eliminate zoning and force cities to build up. Nobody wants a house in the middle of nowhere

        • fishpen0@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Please expand on what you mean.

          For context, I live in greater Boston. The state here has actually forced towns and cities in the inner belt around Boston to remove their zoning laws anywhere within a mile of a train or subway stop. Thousands of additional condos and apartments have been (and are being) built as a side effect and we will have dozens of new squares with shops and businesses on the ground floor and tens of thousands of new residences surrounding our transit hubs.

          It’s not been smooth. Some towns are suing the state and doing other random bullshit to slow the process. Pushing these rules to the federal level would actually help states and metro areas consisting of multiple connected cities address the issues more efficiently.

          • sunzu@kbin.run
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            “Crime” is code word for boomers and nimbys to block proper development

    • Aurelian@lemmy.ml
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      Doesn’t help if there is housing available but it’s 3 hours from where my work is :/

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    Hasn’t rent control been shown to be ineffective at making everyone play nice? I feel like it’s much more effective to put your finger on the supply/demand balance by subsidizing the supply side.

    And not by just giving handouts to corporate landlords, either.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      Hasn’t rent control been shown to be ineffective at making everyone play nice?

      It’s proven effective at causing landlords to scream and cry and publish 10,000 word Op-Eds about how they’re going to do a capital strike if the rules aren’t changed.

      But, when paired with new investment in public housing, its incredibly effective at keeping rental costs stable long term.

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        Just like with unions, you know it’s good for the common people, because the business and property owners speak out against it so strongly. If it’s pointless, they could just let it happen. But instead, they rally against it. So you know they’re lying when they say it won’t matter.

        It will matter.

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      Yeah. It has but stuff like this plays well in the echo chamber. Like most attempts at price controls it has a lot of unintended consequences such as fewer apartments built and rented out, landlords charging obscene amounts to a new renter knowing they cannot raise the prices as needed later on, landlords raising prices whether they need to or not because they can’t hike them quickly when needed, worse maintenance.

      • Sami@lemmy.zip
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        No one is proposing rent control in a vaccum. Arguing against that idea is disingenuous and is how you end up with the status quo of “rent control is actually bad for renters” that gets parroted in economics circles. State intervention is necessary for markets to exist in the first place and they have overwhelming power in shaping them.

        Building large scale affordable public housing, incentive structures that promote the building of affordable high density private housing, banning corporate ownership of single family homes and short term rentals like AirBnB, limiting corporate ownership within apartment complexes, reworking zoning laws to better suit current needs, more robust mechanisms for tenant disputes and transparency for historical rental prices to prevent abuse.

        All of that is possible if the political will was there.

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        Okay then let’s just drop an anchor into the market. Have the federal government commit to buying and managing 50,000 units in every major city. They’re available on the open market at cost plus 100 dollars a month. The 100 dollars goes into a fund and the city with the highest rents gets more federally owned apartments.

        We just keep dropping anchors until developers provide reasonable housing at reasonable prices or housing is no longer a private market.

        Government has a really big damn stick. If people’s needs don’t start getting met then those developers are going to feel it, right in their profits.

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      I think the problem is that once the government subsidizes anything it becomes all hands on deck peak business interest to exploit and steal said subsidies.

      Some sort of enforced regulation might work, but the government doesn’t really like to do that.

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      That last sentence is all that ever happens in supply side economics. It’s the entire handbook.

      They’ve had enough carrot. It’s time for the stick.

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      Not giving handouts to corporate lawyers? Impossible. Next you’ll tell me that we should ease zoning restrictions and ignore NIMBYs that are afraid of black people moving in?