So sorry if you thought this post was about the title. It's more a question, and how to achieve such a thing.
I grew up on about over an acre of land. We had an orchard in the back of our yard, apples mostly. I yearn for the days of my youth. I make a good living, by most standards, I'm above average. So why can I not buy a house like in my youth? The divide seems so very large. By most measures I was in poverty in my youth. Yet I cannot even afford that lifestyle. Why is that? Why is housing so damn expensive?
Learn the term "Debt slavery" if you want your answer. Inflation is their backdoor into making us all their slave. Destroy the central banking system and people would realize their true wealth.
If you want your answer abolish the Fed, the IRS and well....honestly abolish it all. I got lucky and purchased my home on over an acre well over a decade ago. I will also inherit my parents home and inlaws home which will ultimately be given to my 2 kids considering they both work full time jobs making well over 40K a year, and in our area that was great money 10 years ago, and neither of them can afford a home. It really is disgusting how much we work for and all our money is wasted by a tyrannical government that hates us all.
After the SCOTUS ruling on the EPA I think all the 3 letter agencies are going by by. Congress makes the laws not these idiots. Most, if not all of them came about through EO's
The Fed is not a government agency - it's a privately owned bank that our congress passed legislation specifically so they could abdicate their responsibility for our money to a non-government controlled bank. Read the book when you have the time but here is a short synopsis)Sorry for the Wiki link):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Case_Against_the_Fed
I believe we can all thank Woodrow Wilson for selling us down the river. If memory serves me right he gave control to the banksters on Christmas Eve. Please correct me if I'm wrong. I am getting to be an old fart. The 3 letter agencies I was refering
https://slate.com/business/2021/06/blackrock-invitation-houses-investment-firms-real-estate.html
I am certainly on board with what you're saying. Man I really hope this Q plan is what people think it is, I still don't know whether it is to pacify or free us all! Am I really being held back because of "them"? or am I just another "victim"?
I saw a video on here just a couple days ago that put the debt/inflation thing into perspective. I think they used 1960 prices/income vs today. Average house in 1960 cost $12,500 and average household income was around $7000 per year - meaning your house cost a little less than 2 years worth of income. Now: Average household income is around $50,000 per year but average home price is around $450,000, meaning it takes around 9 years worth of income to pay for the average house. The breakdown for vehicles was way worse too.
That is absolutely crazy. But I can totally believe it. I think my childhood house was around $150K.. quite expensive for the time, but compared to now, an absolute pittance!