• oo1
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    509 months ago

    wtf, financial success?

    Not sure i know what that is, but it seems a pretty depressing goal to have.
    Could be worse though.

    • @ProfessorProteus@lemmy.world
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      419 months ago

      Should be “financial security” imo.

      The prospect of not even being able to afford a “cheap” roof over my head scares me regularly.

    • Now you know why the boomers raise the rent to the point where it makes everyone but themselves miserable. They consider it financial success, where normal people consider it ruthless exploitation.

      • BraveSirZaphod
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        -19 months ago

        Better to talk about how they shaped zoning laws and other procedural matters to block the development of new housing for decades and decades.

        Sure, the market price of housing is disgustingly high and you can say that it’s exploitative to actually charge it, but a much better question is to ask why the market price of housing got so high to begin with, because the answer to that is more complicated than landlords just asking for as much as they can get. They’ve always done that, so why as has that ceiling price exploded so much in recent decades? That’s where you can start to find actual solutions.

        • @the_q@lemmy.world
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          39 months ago

          Um no. It’s still just greed. Greed grows, prices rise. Making shelter a commodity and a means of financial growth and security was the original sin.

          • BraveSirZaphod
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            29 months ago

            Okay, but did something happen that suddenly made people become more greedy? Are people in West Virginia simply not greedy? Did NYC landlords have a brief change of heart in 2020 when they allowed prices to fall, only to suddenly rediscover greed in 2022?

            Again, how did it come to pass that shelter became a commodity? What things changed that resulted in it becoming a productive investment?

            Greed isn’t a useful explanation because people have always been greedy and always will be.

            • oo1
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              19 months ago

              did the US have more rent controlled areas in central business districts - i guess that would vary by state/county/city?

              In the UK there was a lot more rent controls in 40s-60s ish (then varying a bit over 70s) but basically was abolished entirely in the (mid-late) 1980s.