• @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    USA has roughly 15 million vacant homes currently. If this company manages to fill some of them with people, that means there’ll be fewer vacant homes. Obvious net benefit for all.

    edit I guess you guys enjoy that there are homeless people then

    • @[email protected]
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      271 year ago

      Oh look… a capitalist shill using homeless people as a propaganda prop to do apologetics for the capitalists that caused all the homelessness.

      Yawn.

    • @[email protected]
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      261 year ago

      The reason those houses are vacant is because companies bought them and are now pricing them out of the reach of most consumers

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        How do you think businesses work? By pricing the things they are selling out of reach of consumers?

        How much money does a corporation make by just owning a house? I think it’s not as much as renting it.

        • @[email protected]
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          71 year ago

          Free market can work in fields where competition is plenty and entering is cheap.

          When the amount of “players” in the market is so small they can collude to keep prices high it all falls apart.

          • prole
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            1 year ago

            No, free market never works, because all people cannot be experts on all subjects at all times.

            Because of that, you end up with people dying as “collateral damage” while the free market “corrects itself.” Things like: “Well they should have done their research and known that brand of car has faulty brakes, and went to a different company instead, so it’s kind of their own fault.” Or, “this is just part of the process. Now everyone will know (lol right) that this company makes cars with faulty brakes and stop buying their products,” while completely ignoring that these are fucking people that are dying. That’s not ok.

            And what if a company decides to hide things about their product from the public? What happens when that very product ends up giving people mesothelioma, but because that’s an illness that can take decades to manifest after exposure, there’s no clear causal link to the regular consumer. How does the free market correct that one? Or do we just let people suffer and die horrible deaths so that we can keep using the cheaper kind of insulation and save a few bucks?

            Sorry but the loss of human lives is not ever acceptable “collateral damage”. Especially not when the loss is 100% unnecessary.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              That’s not price regulation though, it’s more about quality control. I’m assuming there’s already laws in place that prevent glaringly faulty products from being sold (…unless the lobbyists start messing with stuff, but regulations wouldn’t really solve that either).

              It was more about the “free market keeps prices low” argument. It does if we’re talking about easy-to-access markets, but it falls apart if the entry barrier is so high and the only parties can easily collude.

        • prole
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          11 year ago

          Do you know that real estate investment exists? A house is an asset, and unless the entire economy crashes (like in 2008), then owning homes (even if empty) will make you easy money. It’s an appreciating asset. I could be wrong, but I also believe it’s very good for laundering money.

          Wealthier Chinese nationals have been doing this for years in the US and Canada (look at what Chinese real estate investment has done to the housing market in Vancouver, for example).

    • @[email protected]
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      221 year ago

      Hol up. Lolololol.

      Are you saying that the rich fucks who are buying up housing stock will make them accessible to the houseless population of America?

      • @[email protected]
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        -101 year ago

        Are you saying that the rich fucks who are buying up housing stock will make them accessible to the houseless population of America?

        No, that’s not what I’m saying.

          • prole
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            1 year ago

            They don’t know. Look at their comment above, the book they recommended to everyone was “the basics of economics” or something.

            I really hope it’s a troll, because holy shit the narcissism it takes to read an Econ 100 level (if even that) book, and think you’re an expert on the subject. Wild.

        • @[email protected]
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          101 year ago

          And please explain the economic theory behind your post. We have history as far back as the start of capitalism. It shows your post to be completely out of touch with reality. If you have proof evidence or a functioning theory of why your post would lead to Las vacancies and more accessible housing for people, I am very interested in seeing it.

          I’ve got a feeling though that you don’t have an adequate response or you would have posted it. So if you’re going to reply without a response, maybe all you need to do is post an apology…

    • I Cast Fist
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      71 year ago

      A surplus of homes does not equal less homeless people. If their prices, either as rentals or for buying, is too high, it can actually increase the number of homeless people.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      so, you think the reason that the homeless people don’t live in these homes is because… they wouldn’t be able to pay rich people money if they did?

      how high do you have to be to make the statement “look I would love to not freeze to death, but only if I get to pay half my income to Amazon” seem reasonable?

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      If there are 15 million vacant homes now, then a company made up of wealthy investors buying up heaps of them at the current inflated prices isn’t going to change anything. Those houses won’t become living spaces for poor and homeless people - they’ll sit vacant until someone comes along who’s willing to pay the exorbitant rent.