Does having an AirBNB setup make someone deserving of the guillotine or does that only apply to owners of multiple houses? What about apartments?

Please explain your reasoning as well.

  • CrimeDad@lemmy.crimedad.work
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    3 months ago

    A landlord is a landlord, regardless of the particular lease terms. In general, they aren’t automatically good or bad. They’re just people acting as rationally as anyone else with respect to their material conditions and interests.

    If you’re asking why they get a bad reputation, I think that’s also pretty straight forward:

    • Almost everyone has had or knows someone who’s had to deal with an especially neglectful or difficult landlord;
    • landlords have been engaging in notoriously greedy and abusive behavior since the industrial revolution;
    • landlords aren’t doing themselves any favors they way some of them publicly brag and whine about being landlords;
    • and there’s just something that isn’t right about owning someone else’s home and probably everyone has some faint sense of that.

    Personally, I don’t think that landlords should be guillotined, but housing policy that’s accommodating to them is bad policy. We should be strengthening tenant protections and building new housing to the point that private landlords become practically obsolete.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      3 months ago

      and there’s just something that isn’t right about owning someone else’s home and probably everyone has some faint sense of that.

      That’s kind of an interesting point. To homo economicus a house would be no different than a cargo trailer or a storefront, and could be rented just the same. To homo sapiens there might be some ancient territoriality at play, and you see things like the castle doctrine where trespassing is equated to a physical assault.