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story worker

@violetmadder @Daojoan I for one am certainly glad that my landlords own the home I am renting from them, it has been by far the best rental experience I have ever had. It is clear that they have absolutely no desire to make profit from my need to rent, their desire is to allow me to have a roof over my head.

103 comments
HeavenlyPossum

@storyworker @violetmadder @Daojoan

But they are profiting from your rent. That’s what rent is.

story worker

@HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan so who am I to rent from? I can definitely not afford to own my own house, nor do I ever really want to - I am quite content to rent, as are many people. Sure - there are plenty of incredibly greedy property owners, who completely want to rip renters off, but that is not always the case. Who is to provide rent to those who prefer to rent - if not somebody who owns a property, but does not live in it?

HeavenlyPossum

@Daojoan @violetmadder @storyworker

Passively accepting one’s role in an unjust status quo is a perfectly reasonable survival strategy, but it doesn’t make that status quo good or just.

Your landlord isn’t providing you with housing. You are providing your landlord with housing. If landlords did not hoard more housing than they could personally use to collect feudal rents from tenants like you, then housing costs would be dramatically lower, all else being equal.

story worker

@HeavenlyPossum @Daojoan @violetmadder that doesn't answer my question- from whom am I to rent?
Sorry, but your statement about my landlord "not providing me housing" is unreasonable. They have provided me more than housing - they have provided me a home, one where I have been able to dramatically rebuild what was a pretty awful life.
So..are 6iu able to answer *my* question? A question with an emotional and experienced basis in *my* life. Talk to me - not concepts.

Luke Kanies

@storyworker @HeavenlyPossum @Daojoan @violetmadder the state, in the current model. Many cities in Europe — with Vienna being the canonical example — own a huge chunk of the rental properties, and it works very well for everyone.

HeavenlyPossum

@violetmadder @lkanies @Daojoan @storyworker

That’s just trading an individual landlord for a corporate landlord.

Luke Kanies

@HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan @storyworker but at least it’s an answer, and one that does not start with recreating the universe.

Luke Kanies replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum @storyworker @Daojoan @violetmadder I’m speaking to the limits of my imagination, not yours.

Luke Kanies replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum fwiw I was genuinely not trying to be offensive. I’ve learned a lot from you and others, and in some cases I can use that to imagine how a different world might work. But in many others — like this one — I can’t quite. And I learned long ago not to let a better solution be blocked by the vague possibility of a perfect one.

I assume you have a more complete picture of how things could work. But I’m just having to muddle through, and usually do quite poorly here.

Luke Kanies

@HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan @storyworker I’d love a world where housing existed that did not need to be purchased but also did not need to be rented from… someone.

But I honestly cannot imagine how to create such a world, or how it would work. In the meantime, I can at least imagine there being a lot of public housing, and while that world is still flawed, it’s far less so than the one we live in now

Shannon

@lkanies @HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan @storyworker
I think co-ops are a great stepping stone where one is not required to take on the full responsibility of homeownership but also is not being exploited by others

story worker replied to Shannon

@shamogan @lkanies @HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan That is something I have pondered for my own future, especially in the context of a living/working arrangement. This is something that needs to be happening more, building more, over time.

HeavenlyPossum

@storyworker @violetmadder @Daojoan

> “from whom am I to rent?”

Landlords, of course, in the same way that feudal peasants would have received the same answer to the same question.

I’m not telling you that you’re doing anything wrong. “The system in which we’re forced to live is unjust” doesn’t mean you’ve done anything wrong by renting. I too am a renter.

> “They have provided me more than housing - they have provided me a home, one where I have been able to dramatically rebuild what was a pretty awful life.”

No, they are using their control of a scarce resource to extract rents from you. Unless they’re renting to you at a loss, your rent is paying for the capital costs on the house—the mortgage, upkeep, etc. *You* finance their ownership of the house in which you live, with no ownership rights despite paying those capital costs.

You might also be paying them wages on top of buying them a house, if your rent is greater than those capital costs.

@storyworker @violetmadder @Daojoan

> “from whom am I to rent?”

Landlords, of course, in the same way that feudal peasants would have received the same answer to the same question.

I’m not telling you that you’re doing anything wrong. “The system in which we’re forced to live is unjust” doesn’t mean you’ve done anything wrong by renting. I too am a renter.

story worker

@HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan this is the problem with so much discourse these days - I've offered you a personal and heartfelt reflection of my own experience as a renter, and you've remained lost on a labyrinth of words and concepts. Life is an experience between people, not concepts and word play. Your need to remain cynical is yours alone.

HeavenlyPossum

@Daojoan @storyworker @violetmadder

I am not describing a labyrinth of words and concepts. You are purchasing housing for your landlord, and possibly paying them a salary in the process.

That doesn’t mean you can’t feel gratitude that you are housed. I am immensely grateful that I am housed. That doesn’t mean you can’t have a positive interpersonal relationship with your landlord. I’m not questioning your personal experience.

I would like people to be able to see things for how they really are, and landlording really is a feudal holdover.

@Daojoan @storyworker @violetmadder

I am not describing a labyrinth of words and concepts. You are purchasing housing for your landlord, and possibly paying them a salary in the process.

That doesn’t mean you can’t feel gratitude that you are housed. I am immensely grateful that I am housed. That doesn’t mean you can’t have a positive interpersonal relationship with your landlord. I’m not questioning your personal experience.

story worker

@HeavenlyPossum @Daojoan @violetmadder "seeing things for how they really are" is a very treacherous path to walk. What that statement really means is - "seeing things as I see them". In my estimation of how things really are - this vast and incomprehensible universe has provided me with a roof over my head, and a bed in which to lay at night, and this has manifested through what we commonly know as "landlords". Feel free to state your position, but don't burden it as being "things as they are"

HeavenlyPossum replied to story

@storyworker @Daojoan @violetmadder

Medieval serfs were also taught to believe that their feudal lord had provided them the homes that those serfs had built and the farms that those serfs worked.

story worker replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum @Daojoan @violetmadder I'm not a medieval serf. I am just someone who believes that the universe has given me a roof over my head right now, manifested through what I know as my landlord. Is my experience of reality sound? probably not, is it valid? probably not. Is it my experience of my reality ? yes it is. So for me, it is sound, and it is valid.

HeavenlyPossum replied to story

@violetmadder @Daojoan @storyworker

The universe did not give you a roof over your head. A builder constructed it and you are financing its costs and upkeep.

story worker replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan You telling me my experience of this life is wrong? Wrong for me or wrong for you? Give me some clarity here.

HeavenlyPossum replied to story

@Daojoan @violetmadder @storyworker

Your claim is false. “The universe” did not provide you with a roof over your head. It did not suddenly appear. It did not congeal through magic. It did not accrete through natural processes. Someone made it (a builder) and someone financed it (you).

Landlords merely interject themselves into that process to collect rents—a toll, a private tax—off your need for housing.

story worker replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum @Daojoan @violetmadder Are you really telling me my experience of reality is false? Seems a bit of a rude thing to do. Just admit it - it's just your own opinion, don't try to hook that one on me.

HeavenlyPossum replied to story

@violetmadder @storyworker @Daojoan

Yes, I am making the claim that “the universe provided it” is a nicely poetical metaphor but it doesn’t change the reality of how houses are built or financed.

Are you telling me that no one built your house and no one pays for it?

story worker replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan I'm a buddhist, but I won't get into how "no one" might be regarded. Why does it have to be a poetical metaphor? Why so dismissive of another persons experience of reality? i know that my house was built, and is payed for, but that's none of my business. It allows me to do the work that I need to do. I'll pay the karmic debt for that at some point in this journey, no doubt.

HeavenlyPossum replied to story

@violetmadder @Daojoan @storyworker

It is your business because it is your home and you are financing its costs through your rent while accruing no ownership over it.

HeavenlyPossum replied to HeavenlyPossum

@Daojoan @storyworker @violetmadder

“Feudal exploitation is ok because the self is an illusion” is a hell of a take but it would go a long way towards explaining the survival of feudal landlording by Buddhists in Buddhist societies in which people are ostensibly eschewing the accumulation of material wealth.

story worker replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan No it is none of my business. I don't wish to own this building. It is my home and it is allowing me to do the work that I need to do, beyond that - it is none of my business. Keep telling me that it is, but that's none of my business either. I'm not even sure if the work I am doing is any of my business. It's just there to be done.

HeavenlyPossum replied to story

@violetmadder @Daojoan @storyworker

I’m sorry that this has upset you so much, to hear how landlording actually works

HeavenlyPossum replied to HeavenlyPossum

@storyworker @Daojoan @violetmadder

“I don't wish to own this building”

That’s good because men with guns will prevent you from doing so, even though you are financing it yourself.

story worker replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan who said i am upset? It's rather condescending and arrogant to presume that my offering of my own perspective, as much as it differs from your own, comes from place of ignorance of what it is that you are trying to say. Are you able to hold a different viewpoint AND comprehend other viewpoints???

story worker replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan then you can assume that i also have that ability.
I'm not here by mistake.

HeavenlyPossum replied to story

@storyworker @Daojoan @violetmadder

Are you unfamiliar with the concept of being wrong?

story worker replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum @Daojoan @violetmadder yes of course I am. Are you?
Are you familiar with the concept of subjectivity?

Panda Cab replied to story

@storyworker

You say that it is your home. Isn't it by default your business? If the current owner decides to kick you out, wouldn't that be an issue? A direct impact on your life? I still can't understand your resistance to the idea of owning your home?

@HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan

story worker replied to Panda

@FrenchPanda @HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan well darnit. I'm just a complex human being - surely you've encountered that before? Just because you see it differently to me, it doesn't mean I'm wrong. You able to let that land in you somewhere?

Panda Cab replied to story

@storyworker

Okay then. You don't care about whatever happens to you and your living place. I cannot even fathom that, and I don't understand your "complexity" but okay.

Less complex people tend to not like not having control over the place they live in. They don't like to be faced with the options of paying more and more money each year or be homeless. They would actually like being able to be sure that their home is actually their home.

@HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan

HeavenlyPossum replied to Panda

@Daojoan @violetmadder @storyworker @FrenchPanda

Or if not “owning one’s own home,” maybe more simply “dwelling in a home without paying a toll to someone who merely owns a tollbooth guarded by a cop with a gun.”

Housing is structured in capitalist societies as, generally, a choice between *renting* and *owning,* and owning comes with its own financial and cognitive burdens. It makes sense for a lot of people to reject home ownership in the sense of capitalist hegemony in a way that wouldn’t make sense absent that structure.

@Daojoan @violetmadder @storyworker @FrenchPanda

Or if not “owning one’s own home,” maybe more simply “dwelling in a home without paying a toll to someone who merely owns a tollbooth guarded by a cop with a gun.”

Housing is structured in capitalist societies as, generally, a choice between *renting* and *owning,* and owning comes with its own financial and cognitive burdens. It makes sense for a lot of people to reject home ownership in the sense of capitalist hegemony in a way that wouldn’t make...

story worker replied to Panda

@FrenchPanda @HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan it is my home. You can see it how you want to, but I'm the one who lives here, so, I get to decide.

HeavenlyPossum replied to story

@FrenchPanda @violetmadder @Daojoan @storyworker

You don’t at all get to decide—your landlord owns the home, with all the coercive state authority that comes with that particular legal institution.

story worker replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum @FrenchPanda @violetmadder @Daojoan ok this has been intriguing. But once you start delving into thinking that you have more right to determine how it is that another person experiences and defines their own reality, I'm pretty disinclined to continue engaging. Ideological dogma is ugly and dangerous - no matter what colour hat it wears. Cheers. Seeya.

HeavenlyPossum replied to story

@Daojoan @violetmadder @storyworker @FrenchPanda

It’s easier to dismiss a new and uncomfortable idea as “ideological dogma” than actually consider that your understanding is incorrect. I get that! Cheers.

Panda Cab replied to story

@storyworker

If your landlord says that you have to move at the end of the month, what exactly can you do? To which extent can you actually decide?

@HeavenlyPossum @violetmadder @Daojoan

story worker

@HeavenlyPossum @Daojoan @violetmadder With respect, and apologies - after nearly 3 years in the social work academic space, I have become somewhat adverse to blanket statements, such as "No one should be allowed to own a residence where they do not actually reside." - These issues always merit nuance, and invite complexity.

HeavenlyPossum replied to story

@Daojoan @storyworker @violetmadder

The only way that people can own things that they don’t personally use or occupy is through either a) the consent of everyone involved or b) institutional violence.

Landlords do not have everyone’s consent. What they do have is institutional violence—cops who will hurt you if you don’t pay a toll for living in your home, the same as medieval lords.

Remove that institutional violence and all that’s left for them is consent or, better, living in their home while you live in yours.

@Daojoan @storyworker @violetmadder

The only way that people can own things that they don’t personally use or occupy is through either a) the consent of everyone involved or b) institutional violence.

Landlords do not have everyone’s consent. What they do have is institutional violence—cops who will hurt you if you don’t pay a toll for living in your home, the same as medieval lords.

story worker replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum @Daojoan @violetmadder My landlords have my consent to rent me their home. I'm ok with it. I get it that you are not, but I hope you are also able to be ok with the fact that I am ok with it, and that there are plenty of people who are also quite content to remain as renters - and without the current arrangement, as it is, that would not be possible. Historical contexts are always lovely, and there is so much academic discourse to be had here, but at the end of the day . I'm home

HeavenlyPossum replied to story

@Daojoan @storyworker @violetmadder

I have quite explicitly told you that I am not criticizing you for your choices.

Consent given under duress, however, is not freely given.

story worker replied to HeavenlyPossum

@HeavenlyPossum @Daojoan @violetmadder Sorry - here sits just a fleeting space time event, currently known as "me", dancing through an eternal space time field - not sure how it is that you can say that I am under duress - because I am certainly not. You can, of course, assert to me that I am under duress, but you would need to do that - under duress.

HeavenlyPossum replied to story

@storyworker @violetmadder @Daojoan

People who do not pay landlords or banks for housing are typically under threat of being violently made unhoused, with all of the harms that come along with that.

Fabio G.

@storyworker

This is a nice sentiment to share, but i'm confused because of the post it's written in response to.

It sounds vaguely like you're saying that, if no one were allowed to own a residence where they do not actually live, then you could not enjoy living in a residence owned by someone whose desire is to allow you a roof over your head instead of profiting from your need to rent.

That's probably not how you intended it, but is it?

@violetmadder @Daojoan

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