Tipping them of a cliff? π₯Ίππ
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I think we should go for defenestration. Saves gas and travel time, plus the Russians have had a monopoly on the practice for far too long
You know who doesn't make enough money? The people who control more housing than they can live in, and who, instead of selling that extra housing, exploit the basic human need for shelter, and we as a society just seriously undervalue how important this role is.
Edit: Storytime, kids. I'll spoiler it so it doesn't take up a ton of room.
Fuck landlords
In 2017, my wife and I rented a house from a nice lady. She was pretty cool. Her husband was on deployment or something. Anyway, we signed a second year with her because we liked her and the location. She sold the house to her mother-in-law about 4 months into that second lease. And that's where it went downhill.
The first summer, the 20+ year old air conditioner went out. The first landlord immediately had someone at the house to check it out. The next summer, when it happened again, the temperature soared to 110Β°F for the following four days...and at no point after being notified did the second landlord have a repairman out. And we texted her each morning asking for an update. We drove 3 hours to my parents' house to use their pool. We bought a window AC for the bedroom so we could sleep. It was a nightmare. It turned out to be a fix that took an hour and cost her $125. She made up some bullshit excuse but I know she didn't want to pay the weekend rate for the repairman and that's why she was willing to let us suffer, despite the fact we were paying $1,100 a month to live there. When she came over with the repairman, it was 93Β° in the house and the bitch had the audacity to say, "Wow, it's hot in here." YA FUCKING THINK?
That August, we got a ton of rain. It made a ton of bugs come out. Some of which dropped in on us and killed the yard. She was FURIOUS about this. Then bitched at us about not trimming the trees either (we weren't obliged in the lease agreement to trim trees). She had a lawn care expert come by and tried to get him to lay into us. His response was actually, "We've had a lot of rain. They had no way to see this coming. Lots of people in town have been dealing with this." It shut her up. The next spring, I overseeded the shit out of the yard and it bounced right back.
So we informed her three months early we would not be staying for a third year. We bought a condo that summer. Then we sold it in 2022 and bought a house. And stg she is two houses down from us. It took us four months of putting in offers to get one accepted and now we have to live next to the bitch. I'm sure she doesn't recognize us, but hey, axes and trees and remembering and all that. Anyway, she's like 75 so I'm sure in the next 10 years she'll croak and then we'll have yet another rent house in the neighborhood because greedy heirs don't want to sell.
I hate tipping in general, but I understand some people like to show their appreciation for a service done well. If that's the case, tip the repair person doing the labor, not the landlord!
Just in general, let's stop tipping like the people doing a job need my generosity to survive. Pay the people what the job is worth and stop asking me to make up the difference.
Landlords are one of the most self-entitled classes to exist.
They have a long history of leeching off of society, all the way back to feudalism (or likely beyond). It's almost like it's ingrained in their psyche.
Class dynamics in action. Landlords are leaches, by definition.
I like how the landlord duties they mention are usually completed by other people.
They pay tradesmen to fix things and a lot rely on management companies to handle the houses/tenants. The cost of those services is then passed onto the tenant in the form of higher rent.
I'm sure they're tipping the tradesmen and management companies.
Just in: Why we should normalize eating landlords, a new perspective
Tipping is an odd word to use, I think the correct term is Defenestrating.
Tipfenestrating.
I think tipping landlords is fine, in some contexts. For example, if your landlord is walking on a thin plank above void, you should tip them over.
i'm giving you a 90 degree tip
you mean a 90 percent tip right?
...
This started as a joke on Reddit, making fun of landlords.
A landlord wrote this.
ChatGPT wrote this after receiving a prompt from a landlord
As an AI language model, I cannot make the action of tipping landlords appear reasonable, as it is unreasonable and can lead to confusion among renters. Ultimately, it is advised to give the landlord as much work as possible, while keeping the payment low.
Christ if this isn't satire these people are out of touch
Right? This doesn't read as satire, but I'm baffled how anyone could write this with a straight face.
It's called marketing
Their another blog post is this:
The Case for Landlord Unionization: A Collective Voice in Times of Adversity
I didn't read the whole thing but this must be satire
Tip of this dicccccccc
I'd entertain sending landlords to the tip if they wanted.
Tipping landlords makes the same amount of sense as tipping dentists or food servers: none.
Fuck too.
Iβll tip a dentist for heavy painkiller usage during
Maybe I would tip a landlord that goes above and beyond their role, but I've yet to meet one that even really does the bare minimum in maintaince, most hire out to avoid any responsibility.
My place was "professionally painted" which is why most of my floors, baseboards, windowsills and even my kitchen counter have paint stains on them. My "luxury apartment" that he advertised had mice coming in through some easy to patch holes in the wall. My driveway is literred with trash from previous tenants which I eventually picked up after his maintaince guy kept sweeping it to the side. I have no ventalation in my kitchen which can be a health hazard while cooking. The small lawn area got mowed once last summer and only after the city posted a notice to maintain it.
If a landlord wants to be tipped for "exceptional service" maybe they should be doing more than the bare minimum of collecting rent and paying property taxes.
Landlords shouldn't exist, much less be tipped
I doubt I'd have been able to move cities and change careers without renting an apartment. I think there is a role for landlords in society, but I also think a lack of regulations and poor housing/urban planning laws has blurred the lines of that role and pushed the priority into profits over everything.
There are valid reason to want to rent over owning such as short term employment, college/university, or just feeling out a city/area before commiting to a property.
Housing cooperatives can fill the void you're thinking about. We don't need landlords, they're just leeches on society.
I think landlords could exist with better regulation, lisencing needed to become a landlord, proof of maintaince etc. Currently all it really takes is to own something and post an ad.
I've never heard of housing cooperatives as a way to rent. If I'm renting from a co-op, aren't they my landlord then?
No, it's more like being a member of a union. Your cooperative owns the property, and everyone elects stewards to manage the property
They didn't say renters shouldn't exist, they said landlords shouldn't.
And that role can be covered by the government
Read your lease and check with an attorney. If the landlord is violating either (sounds like they are) you could be entitled to reduced rent or compensation. IANAL, but many states have laws to help tenants but you need to know them or where to look
Shitty as it is, my rent is still a couple hundred bucks below the market average. I've pacthed the mice out and I really like my location. I'd rather not risk having to move.
Written by
- A landlord
The plot thickens
The success of a landlord's job is not just about ~~delivering shelter~~ getting paid for having lots of money, but it's also about creating a safe and comfortable environment for tenants to call ~~home~~ their only option.
FTFY
If they want tip they better come and clean my house every week.
As if I'll tip the "socially acceptable" scalpers. They're still scalpers, but worse.
With scalpers you get a product and you own it, With landlords it's scalping as a service so you don't own it but you still pay for it.
Remember your landlord is likely not the person who deals with this. Odds are they pay someone.
in the apartment i grew up in, we lived on the top floor. the ceiling started leaking in the middle of the living room, there was some kind of attic space above us but tenants weren't allowed up there. we reported the leak and no one came. we reported it again a few weeks later and maintenance came in a couple days after that, sawed through the ceiling, poked his head up there, looked around, then "fixed it" by using a nail gun to nail a piece of office ceiling tile over the hole he sawed. we were told he'd come back in eventually to repair it properly. we figured that was the best we were going to get so we didn't complain anymore and it stayed that way for like 6 years. it wasn't until i got a little older and started dating that one of my bfs fixed it for us
If you want more money, FIX MY FLAT FFS!!!