i think the left would benefit from a stronger analysis of the real estate industry, it’s component parts, those who benefit from the existing property rights’ regime
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Replying to @ceaweaver
also would benefit from analyzing state glorification of homeownership
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Replying to @loud_socialist
That’s kind of my point. Sometimes I think homeowners are a bigger structural barrier to “social housing” (whatever the f that means) than REBNY.
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Replying to @ceaweaver @loud_socialist
Entrenched, exclusionary homeowners are the most powerful force in local politics, everywhere. They keep out the poor, POCs, immigrants, & domestic migrants from their neighborhoods with their hold over local politicians & institutions. Basically a local mob
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Replying to @JakeGeorge1839 @loud_socialist
Well like it’s a structural barrier but there is another one which is that the US working class kind of relies on homeownership given the weak to non existent welfare state. We can’t just …ignore homeowners as a constituency that matters to organize. Overwhelming imo
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Replying to @ceaweaver @loud_socialist
Does the working class really rely on home ownership for $ security? My sense is working class folks don’t make enough to afford buying. Whatever people can put as down payment could be invested in a stock index fund, which is lower risk but similar returns as buying 1 house
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Even when they do most are close to underwater these days and the benefits once again go primarily to the wealthy.
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Absolutely. More than half of the country owns and people use their home to pay for healthcare, college for their kids, retirement, etc. There are also a lot of cash poor homeowners. Obviously the homeownership system works best for rich white folks in the suburbs...
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...but that doesn't mean that cash poor homeowners in distressed and/or working class neighborhoods who have seen their property values go down or costs have gone up don't exist.
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