Originally posted by Richard Barrett
View Post
Housing
Collapse
X
-
amateur51
-
amateur51
Originally posted by jean View PostI agree with you. But if I didn't own the building I live in, I would have very little left after I'd paid the rent to whoever did own it.
So I succumb, and behave in a deeply antisocial manner.
Comment
-
Richard Barrett
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostAgreed jean hence my opposition to private renting, which I am forced to do at 2.5 times the social housing rent. Of course the Housing Benefit bill is out of control when it is subject to the 'laws' of supply & demand as implemented by private landlords. My council pays £1,000 every four weeks to a private landlord to house me in a flat that it used to own - crazy!
Comment
-
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIndeed - the way housing is organised in the UK is a total swindle compared with most places in Europe.
Because that would be good.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
Comment
-
-
amateur51
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostSo are there things that the EU can teach us about good housing provision?
Because that would be good.
These data need some crunching
Latest publications, blog posts and multimedia from the European Parliamentary Research Service, an in-house research department and think tank of the European Parliament.
Joseph Rowntree Foundation has a long-term interest in these issues, possibly this is a good starter (though 12 years old):
Comment
-
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostSo are there things that the EU can teach us about good housing provision?
Because that would be good.Last edited by Beef Oven!; 21-06-14, 20:37.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostEurope and Europeans might teach us things, but not an "undemocratic bosses' club like the EU which promotes neoliberal ideology, austerity measures that protect the financial institutions which make themselves richer on the back of a "crisis" they created; policies that have eroded workers' rights and promoted privatisation of public services, and so on". How is the EU going to teach us anything on housing!!?
But your comments about financial institutions are spot on. This is where the real issues are.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThey're quoted from one of my posts!
My question about the EU and housing was a bit tongue in cheek and optimistic, but , as I said, you never know......I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
Comment
-
-
Richard Barrett
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostMy question about the EU and housing was a bit tongue in cheek and optimistic, but , as I said, you never know......
Comment
-
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThat isn't quite so, however: there was a time in human (pre)history before ownership of homes, at least if we're to accept the implications of the structure of some of the earliest cities like Çatalhöyük in present-day Turkey, which "had no apparent social classes, as no houses with distinctive features (belonging to royalty or religious hierarchy, for example) have been found so far. The most recent investigations also reveal little social distinction based on gender, with men and women receiving equivalent nutrition and seeming to have equal social status" - I've always thought that the argument that people are and always have been greedy and selfish would rather make the origin of things like urban life and agriculture rather improbable, since both depend so crucially on cooperation and collective planning.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI've never seen the point of owning the building one lives in.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ahinton View Post"There was a time", indeed - but would you not agree that so very much of what's happened since has altered that kind of perspective irrevocably? It seems to me that developments in science, travel and heaven knows what else have indirectly give rise to greater risk of hierarchical structures although, as they've occurred, few until relatively recently have perhaps thought that this might brings with it its own dangers and problems. Also, even "the argument that people are and always have been greedy and selfish" is not usually paraded as though to imply that these are all people's only or abiding characteristics.
Something of the kind started to happen, I believe, in the 1960s, with the coming together of the developing edge of ecological science and influences from Buddhism and Taoism: not just on the Beatles, who were influenced as much as influencing, but from a percipient foresight among some of the best-read of that generation in the "free West" that happiness did not reside in consumerism, and consumerism was the new version of capitalism that would win the working class from enacting damaging, anti-competitive behaviour through industrial action. The rich & powerful couldn't have that happening, for goodness' sakes: where would it all end? with everyone dropping out, turning on and getting unproductively creative?
And many would agree, especially those who live in apartments; that, however, doesn't mean that other people might want to own their homes and pehaps can see points in so doing, even if only for them - comparative security of tenure and greater control over maintenance and repairs, for starters (provided that those owners can afford to buy and maintain in the first place, of course). Moreover, if everyone saw no point in owning his/her own home, wouldn't there then arise the risk of divisivness between those who own property and those who occupy it? Someone always has to own the property, whether or not they live in it themselves.
Comment
-
Comment