DarkBlack
Elite Member
Why do we actually have this problem in the first place?Can you help me out with ideas on where people are supposed to live?
We have a declining birth rate… , yet an increasing population to deal with….

Why do we actually have this problem in the first place?Can you help me out with ideas on where people are supposed to live?
I’ve bought 2 homes with deed restrictions stating no person of mongoloid or negro race may reside on property unless in the capacity of domestic servant… these are 1945 tract homes of 3 bedroom, 1 bath of 1050 square feet near the industrial section in Oakland CA.I believe that they are. They should be part of any deed.
That depends on who you ask. It's kind of like when a city says they need more housing and when you drive through, you see all of the empty abandoned houses that could be used.Why do we actually have this problem in the first place?
We have a declining birth rate… , yet an increasing population to deal with….![]()
Thats a totally different topic; but people dont want to live in a urban center. Its often not worth the trouble of rehabbing(not just repair, modernizing too) 50-70 year old homes; 2nd homes, vacation homes; homes in undersireable areas, immigration, shifting population dynamics, ect. He'll, you want, even down to divorce, and dozens of other reasons.That depends on who you ask. It's kind of like when a city says they need more housing and when you drive through, you see all of the empty abandoned houses that could be used.
You want real solution? People need to get over the 1970s/1980s idea of what manufactured housing is. Still FAR from cheap, but for about $180,000; another $50,000 in land, another $50,000 in well/septic/clearing/driveway; you have nice, functional housing that lasts, for $280k. You got to get past the stigma of a "trailer", and get past idiots like Dave Ramsey (trailers always go down in value...). Plenty of manufactured homes, and modular homes reselling over $400-500k, if nice, on nice property, landscaped, ect; and they do go up in value; maybe not as fast as site build, but they do appreciate.One issue I see for the younger generation is the lack of starter homes. The last place I lived was growing like gangbusters so land was very valuable. A developer won't build modest 2 or 3 bedroom ranches when the same lot can hold a 2 story 3500 sq ft McMansion with a lot higher price and profit margin. There are no homes in the county I just moved out of that my grown children could afford to buy. I don't have a solution either.