• Chivera@lemmy.world
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    1 hour ago

    And then they raise rent. For what? They haven’t upgraded anything. They haven’t added any of that value to the property. Every year the house gets older. Cars lose value every year even if you maintain it perfectly.

    • Sylvartas@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      9 minutes ago

      And then they try to fuck you over when you leave the place by pinning all the costs of normal dilapidation on you. Fortunately where I live the law forbids it but it doesn’t stop them from trying every time.

      • killingspark@feddit.org
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        2 hours ago

        I swear my uncle is a good landlord. Keeps prices low, I swear he doesn’t rip off his renters. He would never do that.

        If there were as many good landlords as I have heard this story we wouldn’t have any problems Kyle, sit the fuck back down.

        • Dessalines@lemmy.mlOP
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          2 hours ago

          Assuming this comment isn’t ironic: there is no such thing as a good landlord. Landlords are parasitic middlemen who live by leeching off the value created by workers. They contribute no value whatsoever.

          This is admitted even in mainstream economics, its termed rent-seeking.

          • mspencer712@programming.dev
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            1 hour ago

            Suppose a person owns an apartment building. What’s the process they should follow to behave as a good person should?

            • Dessalines@lemmy.mlOP
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              29 minutes ago

              No ones acquires an entire apartment building in the first place with the purpose of living in it. They do it to become rent-seeking parasites.

              But to your hypothetical, they could create a co-op as @queermunist@lemmy.ml mentioned.

            • Grerkol@leminal.space
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              46 minutes ago

              Well obviously the most moral thing would be to live in it themselves or give it away to someone who actually wants to live in it. I accept that practically nobody is gonna be virtuous enough to just give away a free apartment to a homeless person, but selling it for a (at least somewhat) reasonable price is probably what I’d realistically do (assuming no close friend or family member wanted it).

              Renting it out is still inherently exploiting the person living there.

              Also consider that no “good person” simply owns a residential property that they don’t live in.

              I know I’m not who you’re replying to and other people might disagree with parts of this, but can anyone seriously not agree that all landlords are scum?

            • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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              56 minutes ago

              This has nothing to do with being a “good” person.

              That said.

              They could create a housing cooperative where all the tenants are owner-members and share the property collectively. If they live in the building too they can also be an equal owner-member. If they live somewhere else, they have to give up ownership.

    • Björn Tantau@swg-empire.de
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      4 minutes ago

      I just found an article (from 1955) by my grandma where she argued that she prefers renting over building a house because she has more freedom that way. She can move more easily because she doesn’t have to find a buyer for her house, she doesn’t have to worry about something breaking because that’s on the landlord to fix and she doesn’t have to go into debt to live somewhere.

      As far as I know she never owned a home, always rented. But all her kids bought houses.

      • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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        56 minutes ago

        I had a coworker liked that. He enjoyed renting because it meant having fewer responsibilities.

        I disagreed, and countered that renting means being more dependent on somebody else. Some landlords are excellent at responding to repair calls, but there are so many more that will leave you hanging for an indetermined amount of time, while leaks continue or appliances break. Personally, I’d rather not have the quality of life in my own home be dependent on someone who doesn’t really care about me.

        Sadly, I don’t have much of a choice. I would prefer being able to pick my own repair people or just fix simple things myself. Alas, like so many others, I work full time but remain stuck in the rent trap. So much for freedom.

  • godlessworm [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    3 hours ago

    lazy moocher doesnt even begin to describe what this class of parasitic pieces of dog shit are. there are no words to even describe them. they’re a cancer, a plague, they need to be eradicated.

    i can not imagine thinking in my brain that i should just get a free house that someone else has to pay for by getting a real job just because i was able to secure a loan and they werent

  • lemmyseizethemeans@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 hours ago

    Dostoyevsky crime and punishment! Kills the landlord. Blind boy podcast on private equity becoming a massive corporate landlord? End it.

    Mao? Let’s actually be serious