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We all must be missing something. This is too obviously the path forward for there not to be some sort of issue with implementing it ASAP.
The issue is that implementing it would basically require an act of God, because the property owners are the ones bribing the lawmakers who would be writing the laws.
When you look at whether a piece of legislation is popular vs whether it’ll be passed, it’s basically no correlation if you’re poor. The graph is basically a flat line, with about a 30% pass rating regardless of how popular it is. Regardless of whether it’s extremely popular or horribly unpopular, the bill has about a 30% chance of getting passed.
But if you look at the graph for people who are rich, the graph looks more like a 1:1 line, where pass rates increase as popularity increases. And conversely, the pass rate decreases as it’s less popular with the rich.
Money talks, and the SCOTUS has legalized bribery. A bill that penalizes landlords would be unpopular with the rich, so it would have a near 0% chance of passing.
The issue is rich people don't want it to happen cause they invest their money in real estate and want the value to keep going up. So they're gonna make sure neither party pushes for anything like that.
You all are missing the fact that the problem existing makes you vote for those who promise to solve it. The problem being solved stops that.