darreninthenet
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darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Can I still consider myself a “young woman” after I turn 24? I turn 24 in March (next month).English31·5 months agoWhereas I’m in my late 40s and don’t feel particularly old… if anyone describe me as middle aged I’d assume they were joking around 😂
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Not promoting violence or anything. But stupid quest since Iran has an 80 million bounty on Trumps head. If someone would follow thru do they just go to Iran and be like pay up? Why or why not?English282·7 months agoIs there a Kickstarter I can contribute to?
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•If me and a bunch of my lemmy friends got on a yacht. Went into international waters what could we get away with legally and what would still be illegal?English5·7 months agoInteresting factoid - UK murder law applies to everyone everywhere. Theoretically if an American killed somebody in say Egypt and they later passed through the UK, assuming the UK authorities had the evidence somehow they could choose to arrest AND prosecute the crime (if Egypt didn’t want to for example).
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English11·8 months agoSo let’s say the landlords don’t want to do this and sell up, or at least try to… who can afford to buy now? Yes the prices will come down but that doesn’t remove the need for a deposit/downpayment - yes that will be smaller but how is somebody going to save that money still? Where do they live while doing that? That is still the biggest problem… the UK does have a help to buy scheme where the government owns part of your property (acts as deposit) and you pay the mortgage on the rest, but you also pay some rent to the government for their share.
The whole system needs overhauling to make it work these changes alone won’t sort it out.
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English1·8 months agoI disagree, it’s the details that will bite you on the ass… until those people have haggled over the details we realistically have no idea how many up or downsides there would be.
I agree it’s a problem and I agree the current landlord situation is very likely contributing but removing that component by itself I believe is likely to cause all manner of problems… landlords are currently parasiting (is that a word?) off a system that’s broken… my view is if you fix the system they won’t be able to parasite on it.
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English1·8 months agoBecause people are talking on here like it would the solve the problem… it’s a much more complex and nuanced issue than “landlords making (too much) profit”. The knock-on effects and interconnectedness in (some) economies all need to be thought through and resolved/have a plan to resolve first otherwise you’re just creating other problems.
This whole thread reminds me of Brexit (I’m from the UK) and how leavers were saying how simple it would be to leave… this is such a complex problem.
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English11·8 months agoWhere do these people get their deposits from for the mortgage on the cheaper houses? Where do they live whilst saving up for these cheaper deposits?
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English1·8 months agoI’m not convinced, at least in the UK it’s been a very very long time since mortgages were accessible to the average salary.
I’m not saying there isn’t a problem but I’m not sure this would solve the problem right now. In the UK something like 70% of housing is mortgaged or owned (by the occupier)… most renters say the biggest barrier to getting a home is not the mortgage affordability it’s saving for the deposit. Indeed when I bought my first home 20+ years ago I needed my parents help on that front. Where do people live between leaving education and saving up for that deposit, whatever size it is?
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English1·8 months agoIn the UK? I don’t recall everyone suddenly having affordable mortgages
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English11·8 months agoYou’re assuming said people would be able to obtain a mortgage at those house prices?
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English01·8 months agoThey would but do you believe they’ll be low enough that a bank would be prepared to take the on the risk of loaning the money to basically everyone?
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English11·8 months agoSo let’s say a landlord sells their property and somebody else buys it to live in.
Where do the original renters live now?
Or in a rental property, who is paying to maintain it if the landlord is not charging above their mortgage costs?
Or why would a landlord take on the risk of loaning an expensive asset to somebody at cost knowing they may not get paid? Or the boiler stops working and they have to spend thousands fixing it without any risk to the tenant?
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English2·8 months agoThe argument would be, not saying I agree or disagree as I think it’s more complex and nuanced than this, is that they are taking on the risk of maintaining and loaning a very expensive asset to somebody and hoping they’ll look after it and pay that cost of borrowing it.
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English41·8 months agoIs the implication here that if the landlords hadn’t bought the property, the people renting would be able to buy it?
darreninthenet@lemmy.sdf.orgto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English3·8 months agoI’m not disagreeing with you but I’m curious on how the housing would be freely accessible if the landlord hadn’t bought it… are you saying the renter would have otherwise purchased their home?
You’re probably already keeping a detailed log of every incident, and recording evidence - keep doing it
Go to the local council environmental nuisance team
They provide a noise meter (or sometimes app for your phone) to record proof
After a few incidents they can serve him with a noise abatement order
If for some reason they won’t, as long as you’ve followed the process above you can apply to Magistrate’s Court directly for a noise abatement order and both parties will get summoned to put forward their sides.