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  • Its not a matter of having to search for housing types. By referencing apartments, condos, duplexes, you're referencing multi dwelling units with extra steps. I see no point in making the distinction between them. In each case, either one or none of the families in those types of residences own the actual building. Even with a condo, where you do not make a monthly payment on the dwelling itself, you still owe rent, maintenance, HOA fees, whatever you want to call it... to the evil building owner.

    On that page, as you say, most of the businesses nationalized in western countries are railways and utilities. You'll find that at least most of these businesses were nationalized because the business itself was failing. Amtrak is a key example of this. US passenger rail lines were going out of business, and the government offered to BUY all the passenger services in the country so the rail lines could focus on more profitable cargo. The end result was Amtrak. What I don't see on that list, are any western countries that nationalized a business because it was making too much money.

    When I think of my internal biases against countries like Venezuela, China, and Russia... No, I don't think I will.

    Forbes is not a good source? I would ask you to justify that, but I don't really care. I don't care about Forbes either. They are allegedly as center-biased as Reuters, AP, and the BBC though. Perhaps you might want to reconsider your internal biases? Feel free to offer up your own article explaining why the nationwide housing market is in the state it's in.

    Your argument was about housing affordability and price gouging, and then referenced that 15 million vacant homes statistic to make your point. My counterpoint is that many of those vacant homes are affordable, people just don't want to live in them for a variety of reasons. Perhaps you should find a statistic that talks about vacant homes in places where people want to live. Or, perhaps you could find a statistic that actually makes your point such as how many homes are available for purchase vs for rent where people actually want to live.

    Housing vouchers... So you want to take government money and give that to the landlords rather than do something about the cost or availability of housing?

    If you want to end the conversation, you're welcome to not respond.

  • Agreed that the current administration is a dumpster fire and they will likely just burn HUD to the ground.

    There are really only two options for housing. Either a single family home or a multiple dwelling unit.. apartments/duplexes and the like. I'm not sure what alternatives you're thinking of. For a MDU, someone has to own the property, and they will be responsible for its upkeep and any financial obligations. Perhaps a co-op might work, but there is nothing stopping anyone from doing that now, and almost no one does it.

    Suggesting the government nationalize a property rental corporation is insane. It sounds like a good way to ruin our society when businesses flee for fear of being nationalized as well. If you think that sounds like a good idea, look at countries that have done this and ask yourself if YOU would want to live there. Any other anti-trust action would be much more appropriate. Certainly, it won't happen in the next four years, but if we have another election, taking down rental conglomerates would probably be insanely popular.

    As for the 15 million vacant homes, read this: https://www.forbes.com/sites/brendarichardson/2022/03/07/16-million-homes-lie-empty-and-these-states-are-the-vacancy-hot-spots/

    The majority of homes that remain vacant over long periods of time tend to be undesirable and cheaper. A question you could ask is, why don't people move to where the affordable homes are? Because they don't want to live there. They want to have affordable housing in the same place everybody else wants to live. People compete to live in more desirable areas, driving the prices up. Now housing is too expensive for people of lower incomes. How would you suggest we lower property costs in places like New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco?

  • While there is obviously a lot of military restricted airspace around Nellis, China Lake, and Irwin, the planned route takes the flight 100s of miles further south than necessary.

    They are following charted airway routes designated by the FAA. These routes exist to help manage air traffic, ensure accurate navigation, and avoid collisions. Few if any direct routes exist between airports.