yeah there's something iffy here, does "future access to investment properties" means buying a single house? can tech bros even afford multiple houses? am i on the second camp if i feel i won't be able to afford a house in the future with a tech salary? i feel like i'm missing something crucial though
For an effective movement we should try and solve the problem of young professionals not being able to own houses and also leverage the support from young professionals to help solve the housing problems of the homeless and other renters
Pre-pandemic only 5 of the engineers I worked with (~10%) owned their homes, all of them were at least mid-30s, were managers, had a partner that also worked in tech or had another comparable high-paying job, and only owned an apartment unit or townhouse unless they lived 1hr+ away commute-distance
A house that doesn't need any work in Kansas, even in the middle of nowhere, is still 2x to 3x that.
Ive got a boomer aunt who lives in a Kansas town with a couple hundred people in it tops, half an hour from anything that technically qualifies as a city - she was telling me about a little house (I mean little, well under 1000sqft) that got sold for like 75k recently, apparently commercial landlords are buying shit up there too
Yeah I didn't mean cosmetic stuff I meant things like new foundation, new roof, new appliances, new bathroom, new septic, new electrical, water damage, etc
Anything as low as 25k is gonna have a lot of big, expensive repair work needed
yeah there's something iffy here, does "future access to investment properties" means buying a single house? can tech bros even afford multiple houses? am i on the second camp if i feel i won't be able to afford a house in the future with a tech salary? i feel like i'm missing something crucial though
For an effective movement we should try and solve the problem of young professionals not being able to own houses and also leverage the support from young professionals to help solve the housing problems of the homeless and other renters
Yeah I bet that's a lot of it
Pre-pandemic only 5 of the engineers I worked with (~10%) owned their homes, all of them were at least mid-30s, were managers, had a partner that also worked in tech or had another comparable high-paying job, and only owned an apartment unit or townhouse unless they lived 1hr+ away commute-distance
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A house that doesn't need any work in Kansas, even in the middle of nowhere, is still 2x to 3x that.
Ive got a boomer aunt who lives in a Kansas town with a couple hundred people in it tops, half an hour from anything that technically qualifies as a city - she was telling me about a little house (I mean little, well under 1000sqft) that got sold for like 75k recently, apparently commercial landlords are buying shit up there too
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Yeah I didn't mean cosmetic stuff I meant things like new foundation, new roof, new appliances, new bathroom, new septic, new electrical, water damage, etc
Anything as low as 25k is gonna have a lot of big, expensive repair work needed