this post was submitted on 04 Aug 2025
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I mean I guess if it takes you most of your life saving up to buy a house to rent out, but thats not really what we have now we have all these equity firms and stuff
More like you spend most of your life savings to buy a house, but you can only afford it in a rural area, and the mortgage is so high that you require to rent a room out for like $3000 to even it out, and nobody is willing to pay that much for a room.
In Madras fucking Oregon houses in town are going for $500k. What insanity is this?
This is the real problem. People on Lemmy like to lump “landlords” into this one big group. If someone buys a second house as an investment property and rents it out to cover the mortgage and if fair and responsible to the tenants, I don’t see why that’s a problem. They could have put the money in a brokerage account in stocks. Then some equity firm buys the house instead. The renter rents either way. But in the first scenario the property still belongs to members of the working class. In the second scenario it belongs to the equity firm, slowly eroding middle class residential ownership, and if that continues soon all property will belong to corporations rather than individuals.
Also no one person owns a large scale apartment complex. Pretty sure those are all owned by corporations.
And that’s really why people should be upset. Not uncle Bob renting out his in-law unit so he can make a few extra bucks. (What’s he supposed to do, let it sit unoccupied when that’s housing someone could use?)
Letting it sit unoccupied? How about not hoarding basic necessities and at the very least sell it instead of letting it "sit unoccupied" because he can't make a quick buck over the backs of the working class?
You don’t know what an in-law unit is.
Yet another person who wants to be a part of the conversation but doesn’t know what the words mean.