• MrsDoyle@sh.itjust.works
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        18 days ago

        My sister moved house and noticed a weird smell from the kitchen sink. Plumber found a mini fatberg down the drain. The old bloke they bought the house from had been tipping everything down the plughole. For years.

      • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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        17 days ago

        How does this happen? Is it more for things like bacon grease rather than cooking oil? Because cooking oils are usually (not always, coconut oil for example) liquid to lower temperatures than water.

    • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      Also if you stay in the same place too long, you’ll have explain what the fuck happened to the sink to your landlord

        • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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          17 days ago

          No, they’ll just tell the landlord. You don’t rent, do you?

          It’s the landlords responsibly to repair the sink. A place being rented full-time to different people can’t be blamed on any one tenant even if this wasn’t the case.

      • 3DMVR@lemm.ee
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        18 days ago

        that implies you get a functioning sink when you move in and it doesnt already have issues they just covered up temporarily

    • Gnugit@aussie.zone
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      18 days ago

      I live in an area without public sewerage though. All our sewage goes into a series of septic tanks underground in our backyard.

      It’s a bit of a pain really because in summer when all the grass is brown the septic tank area still requires attention.

    • space_iio@sopuli.xyz
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      18 days ago

      This is a popular myth. It’s only a problem if public infra wasn’t properly designed

      • BussyCat@lemmy.world
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        18 days ago

        Public infrastructure can be built to handle it but it is significantly more expensive, and since a lot of public infrastructure is incredibly old you are damaging pipes and causing bills to go up for everyone in your area

      • Fredthefishlord
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        17 days ago

        Less than 50% of voters voted for fascism so I’m gonna clog all the drains in my area (???)

  • taxiiiii@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    This is a classic case of: I find this pretty funny, but some people will take it seriously if it gets upvoted enough.

    • ameancow@lemmy.world
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      17 days ago

      One one hand, I don’t like how easily people attach to validation for destructive or harmful behavior.

      On the other hand, landlords.

      • Fredthefishlord
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        17 days ago

        On the other hand, it clogs the city drain pipes as well. It’s your tax dollars it takes, not just the landlord’s $.

          • Wahots@pawb.social
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            16 days ago

            Yes. And unless your sewer systems use incinerators, people have to do manual removal.

            According to one of my buddies who works in municipal waste, the incinerators are completely self-sustaining once lit, due to the fat content in our waste. We spent five hours talking about his job and all the insane stuff that happens down there. (People getting high on shrooms and scaling the walls to jump into cesspools, serial clothing flushers who clog the sewer lines, hospitals illegally dumping radioactive waste through incinerators, the benefits of incinerators over landfills, but the optics of incinerators looking worse politically, the NIMBYS blocking new sewer infrastructure from being built and funded, despite it saving their own toilets from backing up during storms, climate change affecting and causing pump stations to flood, etc.)

      • boonhet@lemm.ee
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        17 days ago

        Not every apartment in the building might be a rental unit. If it’s a single-family home, however…

    • COASTER1921@lemmy.ml
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      17 days ago

      Ya I don’t know about other people’s maintenance teams but I avoid calling mine whenever possible. They always get mud and dirt on the carpet after they enter, but more importantly I don’t like people I don’t know entering my apartment while I’m not there.

  • werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    And this is why being a landlord is not a good thing for you. I used to rent a house that I had purchased with all my savings from my first 10 years of work. Just imagine doing that…here bank, here’s 10 years of my hard earned cash! Give me a piece of shit runned down house, I’ll fix it for an asshole to destroy that and my investment.

    I rented it for exactly the mortgage, taxes and such.

    Now the question is, who fucks who? Did I screw the tenants over because they were paying rent to me and I made a profit when I sold the house? Or did they screw me over because I was basically enslaved by their constant broken this broken that attitude?

    Was I providing a house that they couldn’t afford to buy (clearly they could pay for the mortgage) or was I abusing my exclusive advantage by reportedly giving up a shit ton of my money for over a decade the the bank so that someone else could actually get into a house they could afford?

    The fix? Let people buy the god dammed houses! Why the need for 20% down? Why not just let them live in the house and get your mortgage? How about some sort of mortgage thing where part of it goes to the principle and part of it is held for repairs as the 20% insurance? Basically the house is really never owned by anyone other than the bank and they are the ones making a shit ton of profit while the rest of us go broke due to the ever increasing prices…inflation. And remember, once you retire the economy keeps it’s inflation. You’ll become poor in no time without an income. That is why some people become landlords, just for keeping up with inflation …but on someone else’s back. The problem is mostly the banks and the housing prospectors… Hmmm I could make a ton of money from this building! Individual landlords like I was just get screwed with bad renters who want to damage your investment on purpose because they want to get back at the system. Those people should go burn banks. That’s where the problem is. And if the banks don’t like it, hey then don’t profitize from everyone’s life so much. Like make enough for a living so all the employees get paid (that’s us too) but don’t make billionaires from our money.

    • pelespirit@sh.itjust.worksOPM
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      17 days ago

      You’re not a slum landlord and you’re not a corporate landlord. When people say they hate landlords, it’s usually the corporations that everyone hates. At least, that’s who it should be.

      Having 1 or 2 properties isn’t really the problem and not causing a housing crisis. It’s the landlords that price fix and keep them empty to keep the “riff raff” out that should be banned. It’s the landlords that buy up all of the housing in an area and then convert them to airbnbs that are a problem. I agree with you that it’s also the banks that are taking on loans that the homeowners can’t afford so they can sell these properties to the corporations (see above). The banks might even be a part of the corporations buying up all of the housing.

    • Wanpieserino@lemm.ee
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      17 days ago

      The 20% is there because we had the financial crisis due to people buying houses that they couldn’t afford.

      Using the bank in order to get money for a purchase is a good idea, as long as you invest the money.

      Even if you can buy the house outright, it’s better to borrow money with the house as collateral and invest the rest in market weighted ETFs.