All landlords are monsters that profit off of the poor and should be nuked to hell where they belong

  • SexUnderSocialism [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    8 months ago

    Mao didn’t order any mass killings of landlords though. This is a common misconception. After the Agrarian Reform Law, Mao supported the rights of peasants to confront and punish their former landlords, such as the Speak Bitterness campaigns. They could then be put on trial at People’s Courts, which were set up by Red Guards. If the peasant’s grievances were severe, these landlords would then be found guilty, and either be beaten or executed. based-department

    • KobaCumTribute [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      8 months ago

      It was also a very regionalized thing: in places where landlords lived in the same general area as their properties they tended to be put on trial and punished, but in places where they instead lived in cities and delegated management of the property to others it was their cronies who were punished while the landlords were allowed to either flee the country or cut a deal to peacefully hand over their properties and receive a job as a bureaucrat in return on account of the dire need for literate workers (a category that pre-revolution was systemically restricted to the rich and some skilled professionals).

      • 420blazeit69 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        8 months ago

        I also thought I heard (maybe I’m getting this from Fanshen) that plenty of more-or-less OK landlords maybe had their rental properties confiscated, but were otherwise allowed to go on as before.

        The landlords who received harsher penalties, including death, were acting more as feudal lords (with all the direct violence and depravity that comes with) than as some guy renting a second home at market rate. The latter is not something they should be allowed to do, but apparently Chinese peasants in the 50s weren’t calling for blood over it.

        • alcoholicorn
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          8 months ago

          Probably from section of the report I just linked.

          “Crowning” the landlords and parading them through the villages. This sort of thing is very common. A tall paper-hat is stuck on the head of one of the local tyrants or evil gentry, bearing the words “Local tyrant so-and-so” or “So-and-so of the evil gentry”. He is led by a rope and escorted with big crowds in front and behind. Sometimes brass gongs are beaten and flags waved to attract people’s attention. This form of punishment more than any other makes the local tyrants and evil gentry tremble. Anyone who has once been crowned with a tall paper-hat loses face altogether and can never again hold up his head. Hence many of the rich prefer being fined to wearing the tall hat. But wear it they must, if the peasants insist.

          One ingenious township peasant association arrested an obnoxious member of the gentry and announced that he was to be crowned that very day. The man turned blue with fear. Then the association decided not to crown him that day. They argued that if he were crowned right away, he would become case-hardened and no longer afraid, and that it would be better to let him go home and crown him some other day. Not knowing when he would be crowned, the man was in daily suspense, unable to sit down or sleep at ease.

      • macerated_baby_presidents [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        8 months ago

        The execution of one such big landlord reverberates through a whole county and is very effective in eradicating the remaining evils of feudalism. Every county has these major tyrants, some as many as several dozen and others at least a few, and the only effective way of suppressing the reactionaries is to execute at least a few in each county who are guilty of the most heinous crimes. When the local tyrants and evil gentry were at the height of their power, they literally slaughtered peasants without batting an eyelid. Ho Maichuan, for ten years head of the defence corps in the town of Hsinkang, Changsha County, was personally responsible for killing almost a thousand poverty-stricken peasants, which he euphemistically described as “executing bandits”. In my native county of Hsiangtan, Tang Chun-yen and Lo Shu-lin who headed the defence corps in the town of Yintien have killed more than fifty people and buried four alive in the fourteen years since 1913. Of the more than fifty they murdered, the first two were perfectly innocent beggars. Tang Chunyen said, “Let me make a start by killing a couple of beggars!” and so these two lives were snuffed out. Such was the cruelty of the local tyrants and evil gentry in former days, such was the White terror they created in the countryside, and now that the peasants have risen and shot a few and created just a little terror in suppressing the counter-revolutionaries, is there any reason for saying they should not do so?

        jesus. I think we forget that Mao’s landlords were feudal landlords. our landlords do their killing much less directly

    • D61 [any]@hexbear.net
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      8 months ago

      mao-wave “Heya, fam! So, like, I’m not going to tell you how to take care of your business but if something happens while I’m over there checking on the grain harvests… Its not like I saw anything…”

  • queermunist she/her
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    8 months ago

    I disagree.

    Death is a waste! Landlords should be forced to pay back their debt to society. Make them build housing and clean dwellings.

  • DavidGarcia@feddit.nl
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    8 months ago

    what do you mean it’s perfectly fair that poor people spend half their lifetime to pay off my loan without getting anything for it. my hard labor of applying for a loan is definitely worth 500k.

  • Had to listen to my mother in law’s boyfriend talk about how he’s eyeballing a multi tenant property today. His back of the napkin math came out to be ~$13k per month profit (that’s net, after mortgage), and he’s got the money to do it. Tells us that Joe Byron is the problem with the country and young people just need to boot strap it up… Meanwhile my brother in law has a good paying job and plenty of cash on hand, he can’t afford a fucking shack.

    The fucker doesn’t pay a goddamn dime to my MIL for the mortgage while living in her house, and he owns two other properties - one for fun and he rents the other one to a family member. He buys that shit and we won’t be speaking to him again.

  • BakedBeanEnjoyer@hexbear.net
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    8 months ago

    Theoretically, am I a landlord if a rent out a room below market value in my current residence?

    It’s either that or just let it sit empty apart from the 2 days a year I have a guest over.

    • Justice@lemmygrad.ml
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      8 months ago

      The simple answer is yes

      The nuanced answer is yes, but this person isn’t really the problem. They are still profiting, ultimately, off the labor of another just by owning “capital” (quotes because a personal home isn’t really capital, but it’s sort of transformed into this specific case… it’s weird). However in terms of scale and intent, it’s different.

      Scale obviously if you rent one or two rooms that’s the limitation of exploitation you can participate in unless you become a full fledged capitalist and buy more homes to rent.

      And intent is obviously a gray area, but looking at it in the least cynical way, the owner in this case might be struggling for whatever reason, electricity rates are high as fuck, inflation generally is up, and they might legitimately need say $400/month more income to just stay in the home. In this case that would be cheap as fuck to most people to then be able to live in a full house with a private room. This intent, in my view, is as ethical as possible for this situation. If the owner is otherwise doing fine and just wants to pocket $400/month, well, that’s essentially just being a normal landlord, although still a little different since the home wasn’t originally purchased with the sole purpose of profiting from renting it… so there’s a lot to analyze there and my end thought is basically “this person isn’t worth the time to care about even if their intentions are the worst possible case.” Basically because there are much larger fish to fry. That doesn’t mean I have to support it, but also hyper-focusing on some dude/family renting one room out is… not a good use of time, imo.

      This still benefits the homeowner of course because they, and they alone, gain equity in the home as they pay off the mortgage more and more. If a tenant lives there for 5 years, $400/month, and moves out, the homeowner has effectively stolen $24000 from the tenant. Obviously some of that went to, perhaps, paint for walls, upkeep from increased wear and tear, but let’s be honest it wasn’t $24000 worth unless the tenant collapsed the fucking roof. This is why it’s exploitation and the only real way around this is some sort of legal agreement that the tenant will receive their full portion of the equity if they move out. Maybe if the owner is elderly putting them in the will would be a way to do it. There’s a bunch of scenarios, but if the tenant just lives there, pays, and moves one day, the owner directly benefited from someone’s labor, so, still exploitation. Although this comes back to my above answer of “this is so small that it’s hardly worth focusing on.”

        • HamManBad [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          8 months ago

          Ideally, no one will be killed by the revolution except for two specific circumstances:

          1. You took up arms against the revolution either in battle or as a terrorist against the workers’ Republic. Obviously the revolutionary war itself will have the most casualties

          2. You held a position of authority under capitalism and the people impacted by your authority democratically decide that you deserve the death penalty. Oil executives are probably the top of that list, and we should make a spectacle of it

          Anything beyond that is an excess, in my opinion

      • BakedBeanEnjoyer@hexbear.net
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        8 months ago

        The nuanced answer is yes, but this person isn’t really the problem.

        Thank god, now I can rest easy in my 8 story luxury apartment complex that my grandfather bought me.

        • Justice@lemmygrad.ml
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          8 months ago

          Oh damn it looks like the clerk accidentally filed your plea for mercy under the written confessions section… your execution has been expedited. Oh no…

      • JohnBrownNote [comrade/them, des/pair]@hexbear.net
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        8 months ago

        if BakedBeanEnjoyer is charging exactly break even or at a loss for wear and tear on the appliances and carpet and that rent money isn’t a net contribution to a mortgage taking depreciation into account then i don’t think it would qualify as landlordism. I’d be surprised if that’s the case, but one could hope.

    • FanonFan [comrade/them, any]@hexbear.net
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      8 months ago

      Morally speaking I don’t think it matters in and of itself. There’s a power imbalance that needs to be critically engaged with so it doesn’t become a problem, and there’s a small to medium influence on your material interests that may color your perspective on things if you aren’t ideologically disciplined.

      Treating people well and being nice and trying not to exploit people is basic, individual morality, trying to be good.

      Leftism however is about trying to understand and change society. It isn’t about lifestylism or poverty or personal purity.


      Categorically speaking I wouldn’t consider you a landlord. Your material interests likely don’t align with the landlord class, assuming you still have to sell your labor to survive. Of course you (or others in your material position) might adopt an aspirational consciousness that aligns with landlord ideology-- I’ve even seen that from people with no private property whatsoever, nothing at all with which to rentseek. Temporarily embarrassed millionaire types.

      • BakedBeanEnjoyer@hexbear.net
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        8 months ago

        At that point why not let them live there for free?

        Selling equity would cost me money as the house values goes up and I’d have to buy it back. Also, they would be able to sell their equity and thus right to live in the house without my approval. Then I could get someone moving in that I’ve never met or vetted before.

        • JohnBrownNote [comrade/them, des/pair]@hexbear.net
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          8 months ago

          if they’re paying into your mortgage then you’re profiting anything they give you above utilities and wear and tear. you’re small potatoes but if you want to do the right thing you can’t be building equity or profiting on their rent.

  • Eldritch [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    8 months ago

    I’m a hair away from taking my landlord to the tenant’s court so after weeks of dealing with that gaslighting kulak piece of shit, I feel this post 😂

  • stalin_but_trans [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    8 months ago

    Currently arguing with my old landlord about damage that was there when we moved in that they’re now trying to pin on us, hope this piece of shit dies in a fire.