> "bad" contributions is something that's not a part of this discussion
It is, the GP said that renting is a leech and you said "but what if I buy the house with money from my contributions". If doing something is bad (however you define bad) for society, it is bad no matter how many good things you did before.
> buying a property to rent is not a bad contribution
A lot of people have already explained how it can be a bad contribution. People need houses to live, and that's not optional. By buying a house to rent you're taking it out of the market, maybe from a family that wanted it to live in it. That family might need to move to a different, cheaper place (possibly offsetting the housing discount with extra expenses in commuting and transport) or might need to rent and pay money to you instead of investing it in their house. If enough people do the same thing they'll drive prices up in an area, and because they need to recover the investment they'll also put high rent prices, because people need housing and will end up paying increasing rent prices when there's no other option.
> Human rights is a nice buzzword used very loosely and it tends to mean whatever the user considers useful to themself at that moment, I recommend reading some fundamental bills and know what's in it.
I'll just leave you with Article 25, Universal Declaration of Human Rights [1]: Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services.
It is, the GP said that renting is a leech and you said "but what if I buy the house with money from my contributions". If doing something is bad (however you define bad) for society, it is bad no matter how many good things you did before.
> buying a property to rent is not a bad contribution
A lot of people have already explained how it can be a bad contribution. People need houses to live, and that's not optional. By buying a house to rent you're taking it out of the market, maybe from a family that wanted it to live in it. That family might need to move to a different, cheaper place (possibly offsetting the housing discount with extra expenses in commuting and transport) or might need to rent and pay money to you instead of investing it in their house. If enough people do the same thing they'll drive prices up in an area, and because they need to recover the investment they'll also put high rent prices, because people need housing and will end up paying increasing rent prices when there's no other option.
> Human rights is a nice buzzword used very loosely and it tends to mean whatever the user considers useful to themself at that moment, I recommend reading some fundamental bills and know what's in it.
I'll just leave you with Article 25, Universal Declaration of Human Rights [1]: Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services.
1: https://www.un.org/en/about-us/universal-declaration-of-huma...