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32 points
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Just another example of a disconnected politician that use the plight of the people for their thin veiled arguments in their circle jerk of “we care about the people but not enough to actually be productive in finding an appropriate solution”.

Wild that Poilevre has never come across one of these houses considering they line the Lakeshore corridor and are an important part of our pre/post war history.

“Grew up a house similar” to this one but describes it as a shack. So which is it? Is it a shack or the home that’s in the real-estate listing (which clearly isnt a shack) cause those are very different descriptions.

And this isn’t just Poilevre, all three parties do the same shit. These people don’t care about the average Canadian just what makes them look good in the moment.

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12 points

PP trying to frame income/property-value disparity as a purely Canadian problem that has only happened under Trudeau is just pure fallacy. It’s happening in countries all over the world and it has been growing under every government in Canada for decades.

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1 point

Damn right, the real-estate bubble got started under Harper and kept going steadily under Trudeau, probably because so many politicians are also landlords or in cahoots with developers/investors (including the NDP).

Canada is eyes-deep into the “fuck you, I got mine” nightmare mentality across the entire political spectrum.

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10 points

And this isn’t just Poilevre, all three parties do the same shit. These people don’t care about the average Canadian just what makes them look good in the moment.

Yup. And none of them offer any solutions, like limiting how many housing units any single entity can own.

Rampant unfettered capitalism has bought and paid for damn near every politician and we pay for it in the end … fuck 'em all.

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3 points

limiting how many housing units any single entity can own.

This would obviously make it cheaper to buy a home, but what would the impact be to the rental market?

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7 points

Two ways:

  • It’d stop landlords from hoarding housing. A large part of the issue is that we have a newly-minted class of investor-dudebro that’s snapping up housing and redlining rent to maximize profit.
  • Because people could (hopefully) buy into the market instead of renting, it’d minimize the number of people in the rental market out of necessity instead of choice.

I’m in the latter camp: would love to buy, but got kicked out of the market via divorce and I can’t see a path back in ever.

You’re correct that it might see a net-negative number of available rentals, but that’s a solveable problem (via purpose-built rentals and public housing).

Both solutions, though, require government intervention, curtailing of the accumulation of wealth, and deliberate policy decisions. Both Team Red and Team Blue are allergic to stuff like that.

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