• Polar
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    171 year ago

    Exactly. It’s rare and valuable. So a single person shouldn’t be allowed to own 12 houses and price gouge them.

    Everyone should be allowed 1. If you have a reason to need a second one, you should have to be approved and provide a really good reason.

    But nah. Let’s let one person own 12 because they were there first.

    • @Syrc
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      11 year ago

      My take is everyone should be entitled to one, then do whatever you want with what’s left.

      • Polar
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        11 year ago

        That’s the problem, there isn’t even enough for everyone to have one. There are no left overs.

        This is why pretty much everyone I know at 25-32 years old, now live at home with their parents. Not only is it unaffordable thanks to landlords profiting off them, but there aren’t enough to even go around.

        • @Syrc
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          21 year ago

          That’s why the “then” was key.

          I’m just talking because there’s probably no realistic way to make it possible at this point, but assuming countries could “buy back” houses from landlords until they have enough for everyone, I wouldn’t mind people having more than one house as long as everyone has at least one.

    • PatFusty
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      -61 year ago

      That doesnt even make sense. Its rare and valuable, so we should only be allowed to own 1?

      • Polar
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        81 year ago

        Ya, because there’s not enough to go around.

        How doesn’t that make sense?

        It’s literally the same concept of stores only allowing 1 item to be purchased, to prevent someone from coming in and buying all of them. Limit 1 per customer.

      • @jagungal
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        51 year ago

        It’s rare and valuable and necessary, that’s why we should only be allowed one.

      • @DillyDaily
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        21 year ago

        Because if no one was paying rent, (eg: under a theoretical system of universal basic shelter) what would be the benefit of hoarding more than what you could use?

        It’s valuable and precious the same way air and oxygen are valuable and precious, and while we charge a little bit for water, we don’t charge >50% of someone’s income for them to have access to water, then remove their water if we arbitrarily decide they’re not drinking it properly, and make them submit a 7 page document and provide 4 references to get a cup.