Quote:
Originally Posted by VantageHD
You obviously know nothing about the industry if you think red tape and more government tax isn't causing the affordability crisis. Governments make almost 4 times more then what a builder makes on single-family homes. This is insane!
Lack of regulation and oversight has never in history of industries or economics resulted in lower prices for consumers in any industries and in anything whatsoever.
This quote is laughable. I guess our government should just tax us more eh? I mean it has no affect on consumers right? 
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I'm glad you got a laugh out of it seeing as you couldn't respond to the actual point I made, and then decided to build up a strawman of something I never said (I never at any point intimated that,...
"..... government should just tax us more". That's YOUR question with YOUR words, buddy - NOT mine, so feel free to respond to it as you wish and then come to with whatever nonsensical conclusion you feel like coming to from a question your formed out of a (wrong) conclusion you inferred from what I was saying - without actually addressing when I actually said.), so you could then get a laugh at how ridiculous it is a conclusion you arrived at.
I too would laugh, if my strawman was just as impressive.
I stand by my original point - especially seeing as you neither responded to it nor refuted it.
You don't know what industry I am in nor what I know about it or this industry (of if they're one in the same).
The affordability crisis isn't being caused by (JUST) "red tape", government regulations, or even taxes.
And it's blinkered opinions and views like this and from people who think like this that leads to people ignoring and neglecting the actual causes of the affordability crisis to chase some red herring things they personally care about but which won't solve a single problem.
As a case in point, you're advocating for the removal or lowering of taxes.
One of the acknowledged causes.... or symptoms, of certainly the housing crisis that we're experiencing now is that the cities don't seem to have the infrastructure capacity and housing to support the population increases we have, and in order to make some level of a dent into that we, as a start, have to improve and enhance the infrastructure in our cities and communities to be able to handle more people but also build more housing.
Where do people like you think the money to improve this sort of infrastructure comes from, and what do you think happens to it (the infrastructure) when you get rid of it?
Who's going to pay for all those infrastructure improvements necessary to improve the housing situation?
The private sector and the (profit-driven) development industry? With less government regulation and oversight?
Really?
Who's naive now?