• @Syrc
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    01 year ago

    What are you even talking about? Portugal’s economy has been great under the so-called “communist” government, and although it was far from perfect in other aspects, the economy has been the least concern from what I understood.

    And what do environmental policies even have to do with communism? I don’t think Marx even knew what global warming was. Modern countries that label themselves as communists are among the least environment-friendly. Again, literally every policy backed by left-wingers = communism?

    • @TCB13
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      1 year ago

      What are you even talking about? Portugal’s economy has been great under the so-called “communist” government, and although it was far from perfect in other aspects, the economy has been the least concern from what I understood.

      That’s what the mainstream media (controlled by the govt) sells. However people never payed the amount of taxes they’re paying now. Its like a 1.5% increase in salaries and a 15% increase in taxes. Let alone an housing crisis (across Europe) where people aren’t unable to buy or rent anymore. https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/07/europes-housing-crisis-portugal-turkey-and-luxembourg-struggle-to-find-solutions and https://www.france24.com/en/europe/20231003-inflated-rents-high-interest-rates-and-lack-of-supply-create-european-housing-crisis and obviously there’s the crazy ass inflation https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/30/business/eurozone-inflation.html

      And now as I said it’s about people losing their ability to own cars something that should be a basic right.

      The increase in IUC in diesel vehicles prior to July 2007 could reach 1746%. In gasoline cars, the increase is more modest. However, the tax cannot rise by more than 25 euros per year. But there are situations in which the tax increase exceeds 1000% , as happens with many SUVs and jeeps. This is the case of the Land Rover Discovery 2.7, the Nissan Terrano II 2.7 TDI , the Audi Q7 3.0 TDI and the Volkswagen Touareg 3.0 TDI , which will stop paying 70.5 euros in IUC in 2023 and start paying 776.56 euros, around 11 times more. However, it is important to note that the increase in tax on old cars will not be fully reflected in 2024.

      Source (translated) for you here.

      And what do environmental policies even have to do with communism?

      We’re talking about countries that enact policies that end up taking cars, houses and people’s ability to own stuff. Ins’ that communism, even if you sell them as “making the environment better”?

      This thing with the cars its total bullshit, they’re making older card that payed 50 or 100€/year in taxes to suddenly pay 500 or 700€. Let me ask you, do you even think that people should even have to pay a tax to be able to drive a car that they already bought?

      • @Syrc
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        11 year ago

        Let alone an housing crisis (across Europe) where people aren’t unable to buy or rent anymore. (…) and obviously there’s the crazy ass inflation

        And is it that different from the housing crisis and inflation in the US? To me it seems like a pretty universal issue.

        We’re talking about countries that enact policies that end up taking cars, houses and people’s ability to own stuff. Ins’ that communism, even if you sell them as “making the environment better”?

        Uh, no…? Communism was about taking stuff from the rich, not from the ones that are already poor. And so far I only saw taxes, mind linking to these alleged house seizings? I don’t know laws all across Europe, but from what I’ve seen and read this seems pretty exaggerated.

        • @TCB13
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          1 year ago

          Uh, no…? Communism was about taking stuff from the rich, not from the ones that are already poor.

          Nowadays communism in Europe is about obliterating what’s left of the middle class turning everyone into poor people. After all communism is about equality, and equally poor we all shall be.

          In the past years there were multiple attacks on home ownership and private property, the most notorious were the legal changed during the COVID time I told you about (no media fuzz but can be found as a law that I wont translate), the insolation issue and the last one was that about the forced rentals.

          One example, forced rentals: https://www.theportugalnews.com/news/2023-04-01/forced-rental-to-go-ahead-for-vacant-homes/76271

          Here is the other example: https://www.idealista.pt/en/news/legal-advice-in-portugal/2021/11/08/4731-can-portuguese-municipalities-compel-owners-to-carry-out-renovation-works-and#The+risks+of+non-compliance 

          All properties in Portugal must be properly maintained. We explain when and how municipalities can intervene in this process. If the owner does not comply with the obligation to rehabilitate the property, does not initiate the urbanistic operations determined by the municipality, or does not complete the urbanistic operations within the established deadlines, the municipal council can take administrative possession of the buildings and immediately execute the determined works.

          What more proof do you need?

          There’s an housing crisis yes, and guess what you can’t even build new houses, the govt will make it really hard or next to impossible with a shit show of required licenses, projects, inspections and taxes.

          • @Syrc
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            1 year ago

            Nowadays communism in Europe is about obliterating what’s left of the middle class turning everyone into poor people. After all communism is about equality, and equally poor we all shall be.

            You’re literally making up the definition as you go. That’s not communism, that’s what the right wing thinks is communism.

            What more proof do you need?

            Those links literally specify it’s for unkept houses that haven’t been occupied in the past 2 years. It even excludes Vacation homes and homes of people that can’t physically occupy them.

            Doesn’t really add up that “they don’t have good houses because they’re poor”, poor people barely paid for their own house, let alone having two.

            I also read you can get the renovation expenses paid by the government and pay them back with income generated by the house, that seems a helpful procedure for everyone who isn’t just a space hoarder.

            Tell me if I misunderstood anything, because right now those two links definitely don’t prove that European governments are “obliterating the middle class”, unless you count neighborhood-controlling landlords as middle class.