#fuck landlords

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The pandemic garden on my building’s roof before our landlords went door to door telling us to disassemble it.

All of these handmade, premade embroidery pieces are only £1! One freaking pound! $1.40 for reference.

They are all made with love.

They are £5 if you would like them hooped (keep the hoop)

I ship internationally!

And i also do commissions

Message me to discuss. Please reblog!

huffylemon:

I love this so much

huffylemon:

I love this so much

ultranos: fem-fatalist:protego-et-servio:afraidofamericans:internetdumpsterfires:Landlord finding an

ultranos:

fem-fatalist:

protego-et-servio:

afraidofamericans:

internetdumpsterfires:

Landlord finding any reason not to give a security deposit back

I had a landlord try to pull this shit with me over a $2600 deposit. I took over 200 pictures of the house on move out, so anything she said was broken i had a picture ready to prove her wrong. My roommates were cowards and wanted me to back down. I ended up sending her a certified letter threatening to sue her for treble damages if she didn’t return the deposit.

I ended up getting the full deposit back

Do not be a doormat for these bastards. You have rights. Fight them and you can win

Carpets usually only last 5 - 7 years in rental units, due to general wear. Usually, landlords cannot charge you if your carpet is 5+ years old. (I don’t know if this differs from state to state, so check it yourself.)

You can also ask for an itemized invoice for each individual thing they want you to pay for, especially if you moved out years ago and collections is pursuing you.

Apartment complexes often change property management companies and their standing staff is usually incompetent. So it’s probably likely they will be unable to itemize or provide an invoice.

^^ good tip here

Stay savvy my friends

Check your state rental laws, because otherwise I would not have known how very strong tenant rights are here. In some places, a landlord legally cannot withhold a security deposit without them providing itemized proof. And the penalty for failure to return the security deposit can be a few times the value of the deposit. The law can be very much on your side, and the landlords are pretty much hoping you don’t know that. How much can they be on your side? Let me tell you the tale of my Two Roommates vs. Shithead Landlord.

A few years ago, my roommates and I moved out of an apartment we had been living in for almost 7 years. The landlord was already a dick, and essentially kicking us out by massively jacking up the rent. Needless to say, we already weren’t parting on good terms.

Guy tried to hold back a $4k security deposit, citing that the floors were worn. Again, after sevenyears of at least five people living in the place. Oh, and also because he had found dust in a corner.

I shit you not. He tried to hold back the security deposit because he found dust in a corner.

This, my friends, is what we would like to call “some fresh bullshit”.

So two of my roommates looked at the state law, and discovered the wonderful section on tenants’ rights. Then one went and grabbed lunch with someone from Legal where he worked and asked a few questions. He also got them to write a “friendly” letter. The landlord then received said “friendly letter” from a lawyer at a Major Software Corporation, informing him of the relevant state law and that should he pursue this, we would take him to court and with the law very much saying he couldn’t do what he was doing, how did “triple damages” sound?

Meaning: was he prepared to owe us not only the $4k security deposit, but an additional $12k for being a dick?

We got the deposit back.

Check your state laws.


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unorthodoxica:

only-tiktoks:

Transcript:

Person 1: “Landlords are leeches.” Okay, why don’t you move out then. Where you gonna go?

Person 2: You made a video making fun of people saying landlords are leeches by saying they have no other option but to rent.

That is literally why landlords are leeches. In the U.S. we have a surplus of housing. We have seventeen million empty homes, and six hundred thousand homeless people. So why aren’t those homes being filled?

It’s because 80 percent of workers live paycheck to paycheck. 80 percent of the American populous can’t save money, and even if they can save a little they definitely can’t save enough for a downpayment.

Most of them probably don’t have great credit, so when they apply for a monthly payment for a mortgage that’s cheaper than their rent, they’re gonna get rejected. But people who have a lot of money can get those loans easily! And they can buy hundreds of houses if they want to.

They don’t need the houses, but if they buy them and rent them out to someone much poorer than them? Then the person they’re renting to will pay off their mortgage while they do no work. You know, leeching off of the people’s income. And that’s why landlords are leeches.

@artifactseeker-myr99

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