this post was submitted on 19 Jan 2024
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I'm trying to picture what this looks like. Who do we rent from if we can't afford to buy a house in this alternate vision of the future? There is no way that 20-year-old me working at servos had the capital to buy a house. I had zero savings and a low income.
I see you invoking the Maoist uprising in another comment, but I'll be honest - the years following that uprising were hard for a huge swathe of the population (not to mention fatal for Millions more). I would not want to live through a Chairman Mao. Modern China happened despite Mao. Not because of him.
You literally cannot conceive of a reality wherein a home does not have to be rented from a parasitic landlord?
You cannot conceive a future wherein you don't have to afford a home?
Also Mao is a beloved figure for many because he lifted millions out of poverty and ended the brutal feudal system that preceeded him. He also famously said "no investigation no right to speak" and you clearly need to do some investigating.
This is akin to a freed slave asking "who do I serve then?"
I can't conceive the land not belonging to someone, no. That's not how our society works. And before you break that, I'd want to take a good look at what you'd replace it with. Because the objective facts are that this system is the best thing tried so far.
Mao did none of those things. He was a destroyer, not a builder. He dabbled and experimented through the Cultural Revolution, and was directly responsible for millions of deaths as a result. After killing everyone with an education he could get his hands on, he used Soviet know-how to start moving from an agricultral to Industrial nation. Forgetting in the process that those agricultural practices were feedign his population. Whoops!
I have no idea why he has such a following. Is it because he tore the whole system down? Is it because he wrote some essays? China didn't start developing until years after Mao left office.
This is just basically like saying "I do not know anything about history".
The land used to be called "the commons". It was owned by nobody. It was everyone's land.
It was taken over by a system called Enclosure, in which the common land was stolen from the people and "Enclosed" by a small few people who took over.
The average lifespan in China was 33 when Mao launched the revolution. It rose DURING the revolution, during civil war conditions simulteously alongside a literal fascist exterminationist invasion by the Japanese. The life expectancy during this period rose despite war because the communists were improving the conditions of the people immediately.
The life expectancy upon Mao's death was 64. It rose further after his death.
Life expectancy does not rise when people's lives are getting worse. He certainly made some mistakes, but you are making an utterly fatal mistake here by looking at "x number of people died" in isolation instead of looking at it in comparison to what existed before.
And if none of that is enough for you I leave you with this:
The ending of footbinding alone justifies Mao as a positive thing all by itself. Without ever having to discuss literally anything else. It was a horrific practice. There's plenty more to use as justification, but footbinding by itself is singlehandedly enough to justify it all.
Everyone the Maoist revolution killed fucking deserved it. And I am not talking about the environmental causes of the famine that coincidentally happened afterward. But everyone the Maoist revolutionaries killed fucking deserved it.
Honestly a lot more deserved it over footbinding being absolutely fucking vile but then you'd be at like half the population.
This Quokka cracker is making me so fuckin mad lol. Fight me IRL nerd.
Wow an aussie not respecting indigenous land stewardship practices? I'm shocked.
Man go fuck off back to wherever your european colonizer ancestors came from.
You honestly better hope we never meet. Because if we do it's
If you think it was hard to live under Mao, you should see what it was like before him.
I don't think China was better under Mao than it was at any point before him. And it was worse under Mao than at several previous points.
He literally doubled the country's life expectancy
You're just racist.
What was it like to live in China before 1949 compared to after 1949? Please support your assertions with relevant statistics.
I don't know what your point is. China was a shitshow. Both before and during Mao's time. I don't live in such a place though. And I absolutely would not want to go from where I am now to being under Mao. He'd kill me for being an "intellectual" for a start.
Don't worry mate. There is 0% chance of anyone anywhere mistaking you for an intellectual.
Mao: peasants dont have to pay rent anymore
me, an intellectual: nooo, i cant foresee a world where my wages arent siphoned by a passive landowner!
Considering you are confidently politically and historically illiterate I don't think you need to worry about being executed for being an "intellectual".
The practice of "renting" needs to die in a goddamn fire. Single family homes should never be "rented". Temporary (6-month to 5-year) occupancy of a single family home should be done under a "land contract".
Basically, the occupant starts making mortgage payments (principal, interest, taxes, insurance) but title stays with the landlord. The landlord receives only the "interest" part of the payment. The "principal" part of the payment is held in escrow, in an interest-bearing account. This is the occupant's equity in the home.
If the occupant stays through the term of the contract, title transfers to the occupant, the escrowed principal payments transfer to the landlord, and the contract converts to a private mortgage. If the occupant leaves before the term of the contract, the principal payments are returned to them.
Land contracts build tenant wealth and drive people toward home ownership. 20-year-old you, with no capital and working a minimum wage job, should be able to enter into a land contract and start building wealth.
To drive us toward such a system, we can provide significant property tax advantages to owner-occupants. Investors can only get those advantages by getting the occupant of a property to qualify as an "owner". A renter would not qualify, but a tenant under a land contract would.
Basically, we phase in an increase in property taxes, and a commensurate (or greater) owner occupant credit. Current owner-occupants will pay the same (or less) than they currently do. Investors who adapt, and convert their "tenants" to "buyers", will also pay the same (or less) than they currently do. Investors who refuse to convert will pay higher property taxes, while also serving a smaller pool of tenants with better options.
I'm sort-of following the idea here - and I appreciate that there has been actual thought behind it.
I'm missing a couple of points though:
The simplest answer is that the landowner could expect a higher ROI from issuing a land contract or private mortgage than from selling outright. If they do decide to sell, it's going to be to an owner-occupant, or another investor willing to "partner" with a tenant/buyer to secure that owner-occupant credit. The Non-occupant "penalty" should be high enough to kill the traditional landlord's ROI.
I don't think I am taking away the deposit. Where are you getting that?
The landowner is "gambling" just as much with a land contract as they would be with a traditional rental.
The private mortgagee can insist on a 20% down payment from the mortgager, just like a conventional mortgagee.
20-year-old me had no capital, remember? The shabby apartment I lived in back in the 90's was worth less than $100k, but 20% of whatever that number was would still have been well beyond my means.
A land contract does not typically require a down payment. It usually just requires monthly payments. If there is an initial deposit, it's more comparable to a security deposit than a down payment.
If 20-year-old you had sufficient capital to rent, you had sufficient capital to enter into a land contract.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-08-04/vienna-s-social-housing-and-low-rent-strategy/102639674
Good quality, cheap housing.
Meanwhile the roof in my kitchen has almost fallen out (huge hole in it) and when I reported it to my landlord they instead arranged for a “routine” house inspection next week.
get the CAV to have a peep and watch the hilarity unfold
The government. Also if the 10% of homes that were empty on the night of the last census were suddenly dropped onto the market it would cause a massive drop in prices so more people could afford homes.