tsf
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- Oct 23, 2024
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Ok cool, let's make it 30x worseCrime is already up
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Sign Up Now!Ok cool, let's make it 30x worseCrime is already up
This sort of long term thinking is not for everyone.I was reading something in the local free paper they stick in your letterbox that there has been a spate of burglaries and car thefts in my middle class bayside suburb of Brisbane this year. Police are onto it....apparently.
Now I reckon that if you had a good look on google or asked Copilot who knows everything about everything and everywhere, that there's a study out there that looks at the correlation between neighbourhood crime and home ownership.
And it no doubt will say that areas with higher homeownership rates tend to have lower crime rates, including property and other localised crimes.
Why?
Homeowners are often more invested in their neighborhoods, leading to greater social connectedness and trust among residents, which I'm sure can help deter crime.
And not just homeowners. If you give people who will never be able to buy their own property at least a good reliable long term rental or social housing property such as Housing Commission homes then they will become invested stakeholders in the neighbourhood and local community....
I'm agreeing with youOk cool, let's make it 30x worse
I'm not exactly young like the ones in the article but my very good friend has is definitely left yet we just don't talk about politics. We agree and disagree on certain matters civilly. Funnily when matters of school selection or going into town come up I ask 'why don't you want your child to attend that school?' the response is that there's a massive migrant child rate there. Meanwhile they don't go to the city because it's like little Istanbul. Yet they support and campaign for the exact source of these issues or deny it's a problem unless it affects them personally.![]()
Young people most likely to see political views as dealbreaker for friendship
A new poll found young people are more likely than their older counterparts to believe they could not be friends with people who hold differing political views.www.theage.com.au
Hey pal. Nobody agrees with me. Not even my self. Watch your stepI'm agreeing with you
Oh, I wonder if you would be open to a cap on how many commercial properties one person can own? I mean, it will prevent greedy investors from hoarding commercial space and allow smaller business an entry point into owning their own premises.... All for the good of the nation and all?I sponsor people from overseas. And short term rentals helped as one girl who works for me could rent a house for a month, then get to inspections for property easier. Actually a few have done that.
I don’t have all the answers but I’m against negative gearing now. We need a new strategy.
In the bright side my commercial property has nearly doubled in 5 years![]()
My argument isn’t about greed or morals. For example, I couldn’t give a fuck if someone invests in weapons companies etc.Oh, I wonder if you would be open to a cap on how many commercial properties one person can own? I mean, it will prevent greedy investors from hoarding commercial space and allow smaller business an entry point into owning their own premises.... All for the good of the nation and all?
My argument isn’t about greed or morals. For example, I couldn’t give a fuck if someone invests in weapons companies etc.
I just think if we don’t reform housing we will be up shit creek. It’s a bad policy. People need homes to live in.
In ten years when we have cunts all over the street (the way it’s going), the same people will just blame the left
australianpropertyupdate.com.au
The focus on existing properties underscores the difficulty of boosting housing supply, even as population growth and affordability challenges mount.Investment loans in residential are now 6 times the rate of owner home loans.
That's fucked and no post hoc justification makes it ok.
You made money, set your kids up, good. That doesn't mean bad policy should be not subject to change.
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Property investors drive home loan demand
Investor lending leads Australia's home loan recovery with significant growth, while owner-occupier demand lags. Explore state-by-state trends.australianpropertyupdate.com.au
Read that article and with a straight face tell me this isn't a problem.
The focus on existing properties underscores the difficulty of boosting housing supply, even as population growth and affordability challenges mount.
Claiming something is the ONLY problem is what I have an issue with...
I was reading somewhere recently that a 2% wealth tax on individuals with more than $5 million in assets (excluding the family home) could generate an estimated $70 billion annually...
Well I'd be happy if that was implemented if some of the incoming money was used to build desperately needed social housing. Unfortunately I doubt that any Government would even attempt to try get something like that done. For a start it would affect many of those sitting MP's on both sides of the political divide.
Edit) Yeah I know I'm sounding like a communist.....![]()
So reducing the demand is going to increase the supply? Shit, thats some next level economics right there...You know what would help with supply? Investors being locked out.
So reducing the demand is going to increase the supply? Shit, thats some next level economics right there...

If there are 10 houses that cost a million bucks to build and investors aren't able to buy them, how many more will be built the following month do you think?Are you serious? If there are 10 houses and 9 would be bought by investors and they can't buy them who do you think they're going to go to?
10 years ago the fear mongering was we would soon resemble Hong Kong, nows its London and New York eh? Fascinating.
ABS data also revealed a historically high number of new investment loans, while home ownership rates continue to fall.
Investor loans in the state were up by 12 per cent as of June 2025, new investment loans rose by 3.5 per cent in the June quarter while new owner-occupier loans rose 0.9 per cent.
Mr Palise said asset inflation is pushing property prices further away from wage growth, leaving future generations locked out of homeownership.
According to Mr Palise, if this trend continues, Australia’s capital cities will soon resemble New York or London, dominated by investors and out of reach for people on ordinary wages.
If there are 10 houses that cost a million bucks to build and investors aren't able to buy them, how many more will be built the following month do you think?
10 years ago the fear mongering was we would soon resemble Hong Kong, nows its London and New York eh? Fascinating.