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8910273 t1_jb8090b wrote

LOL big copium here

>my bank account my tenants' bank accounts had to cover the charges

Say it correctly. You don't pay for shit, your tenants do. Everything. You would not choose to be a landlord if you did not make a profit, and as a landlord you have no revenue source other than your tenants' rent. Therefore all expenditures for maintenance and mortgage are paid for by your tenants' money, not yours.

Quite frankly, I think when they've paid the entire amount of the landlord's mortgage (and they have certainly seen rent increases over 25 years) and they don't even get the house, the landlord should be their bitch and let them do what they want in the house.

>A lot of small landlords do it to help pay their retirement

Most people fill up their 401k's and other retirement by working and not simply taking from other people's retirement who did work. You should get a job and cut back on those starbucks lattes, McMansions, or whatever you're blowing your tenants' money on that's causing you to not have retirement money.

>Without them, people new to this country or just starting out would have no stable place to live

Lots of countries have public housing for this purpose lol. The houses are already built, which you didn't have a part in. You just make it harder for the people starting out by taking as much of their income as you can get away with to enrich yourself. You make all housing more expensive by hoarding huge amounts of supply and creating artificial scarcity, which increases the rent you can extort but makes it harder for them to ever buy a house. You aren't doing them any favors either when you're always raising rents to ""market rate,"" a euphamistic phrase for a made up number set by landlords that increases every year for no reason other than that you can. Of course, you know all this.

Also, you and I both know these people haven't been "starting out" for 25 years unless what you really mean is "private landlord has been holding them down for 25 years." You also know you aren't helping anyone nor are you trying to. You said it yourself that it's purely a business, one that's appealing because it's one of the few businesses where you make money not doing anything productive or producing products or services of value. It's pure laziness and greed while profiting off a business model that has as much legitimacy as that of ticket scalping.

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No-Example1376 t1_jb9jd6v wrote

I didn't read your entire post, but you seem to be making this personal? I don't know why nor do I care why you can't see both sides of the issue.

I have no skin in this game.

I rented.

I had a cat.

It never had a problem until the poor thing did.

It happened to me which is why the post caught my eye.

I was lucky according to MY lawyer - a friend that didn't charge me- I had a landlord that didn't throw me and my cat out of my butt when the estimates to fix it came in or find a way to do so later on.

I don't begrudge other people for owning houses.

I don't begrudge people for renting and wanting pets.

I begrudge anyone that makes a legal agreement, decides they want to change it for their whims and then gets all upset because the other person puts conditions on it.

The way I see it - having been there - the landlord already consulted a lawyer, the laws, and other landlords.

They are not interested in evicting a nice family that apparently is paying on time, but if the renters are going to put the landlord's property in jeopardy of being damaged, then he's going to charge for it.

The fact that it is higher than others is a BIG RED FLASHING SIGN that the landlord is not happy about it and doesn't really want to say yes.

The reality is, the only reason it isn't a hard 'no' is because the landlord is trying to 'work with' the renters probably because they're good payers.

Meanwhile, the renters here are not saying, 'Thank you for giving us a way to have a cat when it's not part of the lease agreement.' They complaining that they should that the pet payment should not reflect what the actual homeowner feels the risk is worth.

There are plenty of ways a landlord can find to get renters out. I liked where I lived and I did/paid what I had to stay there. My landlord was older and was cool as long ad I paid to fix it.

It's called: don't poop where you eat.

You don't have to like it or agree, but those are the facts.

If you want to argue further, go right ahead, so I guess... you.... win?

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8910273 t1_jb9ldlq wrote

Are you serious? There's nothing personal about this, I'm telling you why there is no "both sides" to this, and I don't care about winning arguments. Is that all you ever try to do?

It seems like you make arguments personal by trying to offer stories I'm supposed to sob about or something

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