Half of all renters in the US make major, long-lasting sacrifices to afford housing. A basic failing of US capitalism. Many millions suffer so a small minority - landlords - profit. The system is the
@profwolff
Half of all renters in the US make major, long-lasting sacrifices to afford housing. A basic failing of US capitalism. Many millions suffer so a small minority - landlords - profit. The system is the problem.
Probably? I'm not familiar with the template source, but this specific cartoon was from a series of posts about "Jahy-sama" I read occasionally on Reddit before I started to really dislike Reddit's policies and left in favor of Lemmy. I think if you search "daily Jahy-sama post" you'll find a lot of them from last year and earlier. I saved some of the ones I liked.
Police brutality sends their regards. Violence to keep the poor in line and out of the rich's sight. Violence to disperse big protests and demonstrations demanding action against them.
“There are men who, through ownership of land, are able to make others pay for the privilege of being allowed to exist and to work. These landowners are idle, and I might therefore be expected to praise them. Unfortunately, their idleness is only rendered possible by the industry of others; indeed their desire for comfortable idleness is historically the source of the whole gospel of work. The last thing they have ever wished is that others should follow their example.”
"Worked an extra job" and "worked a side hustle like uber or lift" are one in the same, add them up and they are second, so we are forced to work 2 jobs for minimum wage (as in minimum to survive). When are we going to dox all the billionaires and burn down their houses?
Good luck. Historically that kind of thing won't happen unless significant numbers of people - say over 50% - are literally starving to death. The rich fuckers are keeping their greed juuuuust enough in check to keep the number of disorganized desperate people from becoming an actual threat.
You know how parcels and or houses are bought or rented from realtors? That realtor is now the city. The city also employs janitors to keep the housing maintained. If you got a problem that needs fixing you call that janitor to get it fixed.
So instead having a private landlord you have a public landlord in the form of the state.
It kinda is? There is public housing IIRC, the issue is the supply of it available and how many people who would be hypothetically eligible that just don't ever try for it, again because supply
I mean, the system is broken, something needs to change, fuck capitalism and all that. But the original stats say "renters or homeowners". It's not just the renters getting fucked by the system, despite Dick Wolff's interpretation. Also, at no point does the data say half of the respondents. I'm thinking a lot the people who fall into any of these categories fall into the others as well.
Countries with government supported housing tend to have drastically lower homelessness, lower crime rates, lower prison population, higher happiness, smaller housing price/rent inflation, lower racial tension and much more. Of course there are a lot of other things those governments tend to do that also affect those same things, but it's not hard to think of reasons why government supported housing would help.
I don't know why Wolff is calling it a failing. Looks like it's operating exactly as designed. Also we need to look at the bright side, shareholders are making a lot of money!
determine the median quarterly rent within a state
Minimum wage is the lowest value rounded to the next highest $100 where that median rent amounts to no more than 35% of it.
people are hired for the week and paid at the end of it, a nominal rate of pay for up to 32 hours of work, 2.5* that is added on for between 32 and 48 hours of work, and between 48 and 64 hours of work earns you an additional sum of 2.5* the overtime rate, meaning overtime is more expensive than staffing appropriately, exponentially so if you're really pushing it
holiday hours count towards the weekly total but working a holiday nets a whole extra week of pay for the worker who came in on that holiday, yes even if they themselves don't observe it personally.
St. Monday is back from the dead! Mondays are now the third weekend day.
Owner occupant credit against residential property taxes, to hold the effective tax rates for homeowners where they are now, or lower it.
Massive increase in property tax rate, which now only affects investors.
Statutory future increases, targeting an owner-occupancy rate of >80%. If fewer than 8 in 10 residential properties are owned by their occupants, the investor tax rate rises to melt their profits. Statutory decreases in investor tax rates if owner-occupancy rate rises above 90%.
This will effectively kill traditional renting, as the taxes will quickly melt any profit a traditional landlord will collect. To maintain their profitability, landlords will have to find a way for their tenants to be named on the deed, making them eligible for the owner-occupant credit.
Land contracts and private mortgages will become commonplace. Commercial lending requirements will become more tolerant. Housing prices will stabilize, because the market will no longer see unsustainable investor influence.
The only properties that will be feasible to rent will be 2-4 unit dwellings, where the landlord lives in one of the units, and can thus claim the owner occupant credit. Apartment complexes will become condominiums.
How about fuck off, if your strategy for revolution is that the poor aren't allowed to have their lives improved by anything except guillotining the billionaires, you're not an ally, your a cynic who's hoping things will get bad enough for guillotines to make a comeback.