highlandsflyer":375wog5m said:
A ‘home’ is a commodity now more than ever before. The status of a dwelling as a family home, to be “passed through the generations”, has massively diminished over the past few decades.
Capitalism determined this trend, and dictates it must continue.
The level of property related indebtedness in Britain resulted from propaganda and the organised abuse of the credit system.
That cannot be a good thing for this society, yet it is continuing, with those who govern complicit in that.
The erosion of communities has accelerated in tandem with home ownership over these past few decades. No co-incidence.
I can see how the over-encouragement of house buying and market economy for council and community housing may have had a negative impact - but I'm far from sure I buy all of this, has it's root cause in the desire to own property. After all, we are largely hard-wired towards that.
highlandsflyer":375wog5m said:
The relatively enormous resources people are putting into property could often be better directed at developing small businesses.
Bogus - not everyone can or should be involved in business.
However, property - as a medium-to-long-term investment, is reasonably sound. Sometimes there's bubbles, sometimes there's some boom and bust, but for most that want a home, and something to show a ways down the line, home-ownership is not the pariah that many - including you - are making it out to be.
highlandsflyer":375wog5m said:
The tunnel vision imposed by the prima facie profitability of property ownership stifles other avenues of entrepreneurship.
It's a crock to assume that most would be better served by small business or speculation.
highlandsflyer":375wog5m said:
Have you bought and sold property?
Yes - merely one at a time.
You didn't answer my question - do you
own property?