Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is crazy. If one has never had a contract with the owner and has never made a payment to the owner, one should not have any rights over a property. The fact that someone can claim rights is insane.
Unfortunately blue local jurisdictions and courts have become far leftified. Far left people view the world as oppressors versus oppressed.
Landlords are oppressors because they have capital and charge rent for what they view as a “basic human right” — even though the grocery store charges for food, and the utility company charges for water, somehow landlords are extra oppressive.
According to far left people, criminals are oppressed because everyone is born as a blank slate, so if someone commits crimes it’s because of poverty. What causes poverty according to them? Again, according to blank slate theory, it has to be a systemic issue and not their personality or other traits, so it’s ideas like the imperfections of capitalism, systemic racism, etc.
Hope this helps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This happens in every jurisdiction that has laws to protect legitimate tenants from predatory landlords. There also needs to be a legal recourse against predatory tenants! Surely it can't be that complicated... politicians lack the incentive to work at it, I suppose.
I'm from a European country and was just watching a news segment about a similar situation in my home country.
Blue areas tend to have very pro squatter policies
Virginia is moving that way by recently making it more difficult for landlords to evict tenants who don't pay rent or who violate the terms of their leases.
Anonymous wrote:Apparently it’s emptied and locked now?
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DUn7gGrjo8Q/?igsh=MTVhNDF6eHlvZmZlcg==
Anonymous wrote:You get what you vote for!
Liberal paradise!!!!
Anonymous wrote:Just get some security cameras so that you can monitor your house remotely. If you’re consistently away for long periods of time, you should already have done this. The MAGA hysteria in this thread is funny but not really generalizable beyond the derelict bank that owns this particular property.
Anonymous wrote:My friend rented her basement to someone. He stopped paying rent. When she had enough of the nonsense she gathered all his stuff, threw it outside, and changed the lock on the basement entrance. End of story.
I guess it's not always that simple, but it certainly worked for her. She didn't bother with niceties, such as a polite letter telling him to get out. That was 25 years ago before the entire area turned progressive with legal requirements adding a layer to what used to be a no-nonsense approach to these things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who is paying the tax bill? That's the owner.
The squatter is not claiming ownership. They are claiming tenancy rights.
Can they show anyone a signed contract between the owner and themselves?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This happens in every jurisdiction that has laws to protect legitimate tenants from predatory landlords. There also needs to be a legal recourse against predatory tenants! Surely it can't be that complicated... politicians lack the incentive to work at it, I suppose.
I'm from a European country and was just watching a news segment about a similar situation in my home country.
Blue areas tend to have very pro squatter policies
Virginia is moving that way by recently making it more difficult for landlords to evict tenants who don't pay rent or who violate the terms of their leases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone explain why there are “squatters rights”? Or for that matter why there should be tenant’s rights if tenants refuse to pay their rent? I don’t mean tenant’s rights with regards to protecting tenants from abuse, fraud, inhabitable conditions, etc.; I mean why are there rights when tenants simply refuse to pay their rent.
A lot of these things have very long historical antecedents. Imagine you’re a person in 16th century Europe and come upon an abandoned house. So you move in and fix it up. No one ever comes around to tell you it’s theirs and the original owner maybe died of plague or killed in battle or whatever. That’s the concept behind eminent domain and it makes a lot of sense.
It looks to me like the blame here rests mostly on the bank which is an absentee landlord. If the squatter is causing issues, the neighbors should threaten to sue the bank for creating a public nuisance by failing to maintain/secure th property.