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by lotsofpulp
1311 days ago
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>And yes, housing SHOULD be a right. This is easy to say. Can you elaborate how to implement this “right”? Do 330M people in the US have a “right” to live on the California coastline? It is doable, can always downsize to Hong Kong style living. Perhaps Hong Kong size abodes are too small. Then how much space do you propose per person and per family? |
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Or, in other words: "housing is a human right" does not need to be construed as a positive obligation.
Even if we decided on positive-freedom housing rights, it doesn't mean giving everyone a California beachfront property. This is the thing a lot of Americans don't get about positive rights in other countries: when they exist, it just means that the country is going to use tax money to pay for and provide that good. This works for the same reason that welfare programs work: the existence of a large buyer, even one that's lowballing, provides price stability to suppliers.
California beachfront property can remain expensive, but the houses behind it should be allowed to build up to whatever density that the market will support.