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IPFS News Link • Housing

BlackRocking . . .

• https://www.ericpetersautos.com, By eric

The millions of people on the cusp of being evicted from the places they rent.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, there are some 6.7 million of these people – who've had their rents increase by $250 per month, on average. The majority of these people earn less than $25,000 annually – and all of them have had the buying power of whatever they earn reduced by about 15 percent, via what is styled "inflation," in order to make the victims of it think that the things they need to buy or pay for (like rent) cost more. In fact, their money just buys – and pays for – less.

Many of these renters have had their rent subsidized as part of what was styled "pandemic" relief," an odd way of putting it since the "pandemic" didn't force anyone to stop working (or hiring workers).

Rather, it was the government that did it.

The same government also told landlords they could not evict renters who weren't paying rent. Which meant that landlords were being forced by the government to pay their rent – via the cost of paying the property taxes the government didn't hold in abeyance, as well as all the associated carrying costs of owning a rental property – including the monthly mortgage payment.

That is coming to an end – along with the paying of people not to work.

But how will millions of these renters pay their rent with money they haven't got – or which buys (and pays for) 15 percent less than it did before the "pandemic" devalued it by that amount?


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