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If you can't afford a house in Dublin, move!

13

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,476 ✭✭✭✭Ush1


    cournioni wrote: »
    Don't see the point either OP. Paying €1600 a month for a barely habitable dump in an over crowded environment isn't all that inviting.

    Would rather have superior accommodation for a reasonable price with a nice bit of space and less crowded.

    Even living in a reasonable sized town where you have all of the amenities that you need (if that's what you're after) would be more inviting.

    Could never understand the mentality of people who would live in the likes of Tallaght, Rathfarnham or wherever "just to be in Dublin". The commute is often even worse than some of the places outside of Dublin but you're paying Dublin prices for inferior accommodation.

    Where are these places outside Dublin that have a shorter commute? Anywhere that is outside Dublin but a reasonable commute is as expensive as Dublin. Look at Maynooth, Leixslip, Bray, etc...


  • Registered Users Posts: 163 ✭✭bananabread12


    There is too much entitlement in this country...

    On what planet would you get to turn down free accommodation because the kitchen is too small or the garden doesn't have a swing set for the annual popped out kids the taxpayers are supporting?

    If the housing crisis is ever to be solved once and for all we need to abolish the welfare system immediately.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,549 ✭✭✭maryishere


    myshirt wrote: »
    Why is it that Berlin can fit the whole population of Ireland into the same space as Dublin and still service them well. And I mean really well.

    Because as a country we are arguably not capable of self-governance.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,095 ✭✭✭Wurly


    On what planet would you get to turn down free accommodation because the kitchen is too small or the garden doesn't have a swing set for the annual popped out kids the taxpayers are supporting?

    Can I ask, where did this happen?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,593 ✭✭✭Wheeliebin30


    How many would love to live in dun laoighaire but can't afford it?

    Well social housing refusal is 37% there.

    Think about that. People been offered a house for 40 euro a week turning it down.

    Yet people paying mortgages of 1000 a month can't afford to live there and have to move away.

    Unfair society is right.

    It's for the people who couldn't be arsed contributing and against the people who work to keep the country afloat and these wasters in the life they are accustomed too. Choosing where they want live.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,021 ✭✭✭Arcade_Tryer


    Liamario wrote: »
    I'm not trying to sell anything though. If you can't afford Dublin, move. It's that simple. It sucks, but that's the way it is.
    People are acting like Dublin its an inescapable island in the middle of some vast ocean.
    You do realise the market, if allowed to, could change the fact that more and more people are finding it impossible to buy in Dublin, by increasing the supply? Or is this just an absolute truth you're spouting, that a dysfunctional market is just the way it is? No questions asked, and certainly no answers posited. That's it. Forever. Just so you get your sound bite about how it sucks but that's just the way it is, so you appear lived and experienced, and wise to the way of the world, as opposed to the moaners and the complainers. Good for you.
    The only thing that drives me mad about this is when people have kids and they talk about their poor little kids being in hotels and them having a horrible childhood because of the state but then they go off and get pregnant again. If they were religious and married I'd understand and didn't believe in contraception I'd be fine about it but they come across that way.
    Ah, so it's ok if they were religious or married. But the uneducated deserve no sympathy whatsoever; it's their fault for being less educated!
    MarcusP12 wrote: »
    In general I'm certainly not lacking in sympathy or empathy for people who can't afford to live in Dublin but I have found myself being slightly irritated by some people I have connections to, e.g. friends or family or friends of friends, who say they cannot afford to buy a house in Dublin when I know they have good jobs.....there is a difference between not being able to afford a house in Dublin, as is the case with a lot of people who don't earn a lot for whatever reason, and not being able to afford to buy where they want. I heard this recently about my brother in law's wife's sister who recently married (she has a good job and he's in finance) and I just laughed to myself......there are some situations which deserve sympathy and others which don't.....availability of houses in affordable areas is a separate issue but just because you are priced out of the market in more desirable areas, doesn't mean you can't afford to live in Dublin....
    This is a very valid point. There is a multitude of areas in Dublin where they could buy, but most likely only a very select few where they would even consider.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,549 ✭✭✭maryishere


    People all over the world commute to work. Some of them for quite long distances.

    Some Irish people of a certain generation do have a real problem accepting some of the downsides of living in a modern economy (while being quite happy with the pluses naturally) and think everybody has a inalienable right to live in a decent house within walking or cycling distance of their job.

    Our government abandoned and indeed reversed its policy of decentralisation about 9 years ago and the people of Ireland are paying the price.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,095 ✭✭✭Wurly


    Well social housing refusal is 37% there.

    Think about that. People been offered a house for 40 euro a week turning it down.

    Yet people paying mortgages of 1000 a month can't afford to live there and have to move away.

    Unfair society is right.
    .

    Hey there - i'd be interested to read more about refusal rates etc and the issue you highlighted above. Can you point me in the right direction with the stuff you've read? Thanks.


  • Registered Users Posts: 163 ✭✭bananabread12


    Building more social housing is NOT the answer...

    Do these proponents live in some fantasy ideological land? You're delusional. Does anyone really want a repeat of Ballymun? Does anyone really want a repeat of the rundown areas where social housing was constructed during the 50's/60's/70's?

    Social housing contributes to ghetto-ization. It encourages anti-social behaviour and is rife with criminality. They have become a festering generational mess and the public roads have allowed the problems of these areas to traverse the rest of the city.

    The only way forward is to destroy these social housing areas, NOT erect more of them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 234 ✭✭Mach 3


    How about we send skangers and junkies who contribute nothing to the country somewhere instead and keep the EE who work and pay taxes.

    How about a compromise? Get the lot of them too build a wall around Dublin and then get rid of all of them.#trump


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,593 ✭✭✭Wheeliebin30


    Wurly wrote: »
    Hey there - i'd be interested to read more about refusal rates etc and the issue you highlighted above. Can you point me in the right direction with the stuff you've read? Thanks.

    https://www.google.ie/amp/s/amp.independent.ie/business/personal-finance/property-mortgages/families-turn-down-social-housing-due-to-lack-of-space-garden-or-parking-34359743.html


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,570 ✭✭✭Ulysses Gaze


    Mach 3 wrote: »
    How about a compromise? Get the lot of them too build a wall around Dublin and then get rid of all of them.#trump

    If it's a solar wall, you have my vote....

    donald-trump-short-fingered-vulgarian-fingers-bruce-handy-ss13.jpg


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,676 ✭✭✭✭Galwayguy35


    Why can't we start building up like they do in other countries instead of out all the time.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,570 ✭✭✭Ulysses Gaze


    Why can't we start building up like they do in other countries instead of out all the time.

    After what has happened at Grenfell, you will have even more people saying no chance.

    The cowboy builders/developers in this country would just throw them up with little regard for fire safety.

    Look at Longboat Quay which was a supposed "quality" development. With serious fire defects.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,021 ✭✭✭Arcade_Tryer


    Why can't we start building up like they do in other countries instead of out all the time.
    Heritage. An Taisce. In that order. You cannot win in this country when middle class sensibilities and hobbies take precedence over people's lives and practical social planning and policy.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,095 ✭✭✭Wurly



    Thank you. I'm not being facetious here but have you anything more recent that you've read? This is from Jan 2016 and I would have thought that this would be less of a problem considering how bad the housing crisis is almost 2 years later.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,095 ✭✭✭Wurly


    Building more social housing is NOT the answer...

    Do these proponents live in some fantasy ideological land? You're delusional. Does anyone really want a repeat of Ballymun? Does anyone really want a repeat of the rundown areas where social housing was constructed during the 50's/60's/70's?

    Social housing contributes to ghetto-ization. It encourages anti-social behaviour and is rife with criminality. They have become a festering generational mess and the public roads have allowed the problems of these areas to traverse the rest of the city.

    The only way forward is to destroy these social housing areas, NOT erect more of them.

    Ok so in order to do that, we must fix other problems that are rife in these areas.

    - Education and opportunities to access it.
    - Personal debt
    - Jobs where you can earn enough to pay rent in the private sector
    - Mental health services

    Do you have any ideas on how we might get started?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,307 ✭✭✭✭VinLieger


    Wurly wrote: »
    Thank you. I'm not being facetious here but have you anything more recent that you've read? This is from Jan 2016 and I would have thought that this would be less of a problem considering how bad the housing crisis is almost 2 years later.

    May this year, in several local authorities its gotten worse according to the article

    http://www.irishexaminer.com/breakingnews/ireland/3000-social-housing-offers-turned-down-in-past-two-years-790644.html


  • Registered Users Posts: 163 ✭✭bananabread12


    Wurly wrote: »
    Ok so in order to do that, we must fix other problems that are rife in these areas.

    - Education and opportunities to access it.
    - Personal debt
    - Jobs where you can earn enough to pay rent in the private sector
    - Mental health services

    Do you have any ideas on how we might get started?

    Since when did it become the responsibility of society to guarantee high paying jobs for low skilled workers? That's not how the world works. If it didn't work like this then why would people bother going to university, getting an education in order to up their marketability to prospective employers and merit higher wages for their contributions? If you're cleaning toilets for a living you shouldn't expect to reside in a five bedroom mansion in Dalkey. We've fostered an entitlement culture in this country where people think they should have everything handed to them.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,095 ✭✭✭Wurly


    VinLieger wrote: »
    May this year, in several local authorities its gotten worse according to the article

    http://www.irishexaminer.com/breakingnews/ireland/3000-social-housing-offers-turned-down-in-past-two-years-790644.html

    Yeah, that certainly seems shocking alright.

    But i'm wondering if we're seeing the full picture? I'm not denying that this is happening but maybe if we were exposed to all reasons behind the crisis, this would make more sense?

    On paper, this justifiably sounds absolutely crazy..... But we don't know the individual cases involved. It's very easy to sensationalise this.... And I fear this is what has happened.

    I'm suspicious of the media. I'm also suspicious when they try to pit one group against another. Divide and conquer tactics. And they LOVE a class war. Even better now that we're all competing for somewhere to live. Can you see how easy it is to manipulate opinion through this?

    We may not like the actions of our neighbour, but going to war on them is not the answer.

    There are reasons behind everything. And maybe people just don't have the capabilities to think like you, for whatever reasons. If we find ourselves justifiably jarred by the actions of another, then we don't understand the actions of the other....

    So... why can't we actually figure out why this is happening? Reacting all the time and nothing else just causes chaos.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,802 ✭✭✭thegills


    NIMAN wrote:
    You picked me up wrong, I wasn't in any way slagging Dublin, but maybe Government policy should try to locate some big businesses, people, homes etc elsehwere?


    I can see how that conversation went. Facebook: we plan to hire 1000 staff with an average age of 25. Looking for somewhere that would appeal to them. Government: we have the perfect location for you, Mullingar.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,095 ✭✭✭Wurly


    Since when did it become the responsibility of society to guarantee high paying jobs for low skilled workers?

    I said there was a need for jobs paying a certain level so that people can afford rent.

    You said to abolish social housing.

    Whether you like it or not, we have a portion of the population who do not have the education to get the high paying jobs needed to pay the high rents.

    So where do those people go?

    And let's say they have debt. Because as any poor person can attest, falling behind on even one utility bill can cause MASSIVE problems down the line when you've so little money coming in.

    So how do they get access to the education?

    And let's say they have addiction issues, literacy issues or mental health problems.

    How do we take care of those things so that these people are able to participate in the workforce?

    I'm not attributing the responsibility to anyone.

    I'm asking you for your opinion. You said that social housing should be abolished? Right so... How do we solve the other problems that are factually there after we abolish the social housing?

    I'm actually looking for your opinions.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,453 ✭✭✭Ray Palmer


    myshirt wrote: »
    Why is it that Berlin can fit the whole population of Ireland into the same space as Dublin and still service them well. And I mean really well. Look at the like for like average commuting time comparisons for a sample of journeys. Make sure you have a stiff whiskey by your side. Look at the cost of living, look at how much is within touching distance no matter where you are. Look at their healthcare costs. If we could replicate, we could double the healthcare impact on a lot more Irish lives, and for half the cost we currently incur via the HSE. COE's.

    Well Berlin was the capital of a much much bigger country than Ireland with massive amount more money for well over a 100 years. This gave them the ability to build much more expensive infrastructure.
    Then there was a massive war which destroyed huge chunks of the city. Both sides of the city got massive investment and they also didn't have to deal with private ownership at this point as they had sweeping laws. The communist side could do exactly as they liked. They put large families in 2 bed apartments without washing facilities etc...
    Then when the wall came down they had massive amounts of land in the heart of the city to build on.
    So to answer your question massive amounts of money pumped into the city for a very long time, laws that seized land, ignored building regulation and free land. After WWII Ireland was broke and landowners kept the property they owned and let it deteriorate. You might as well be asking why Clonakilty isn't like Dublin


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,593 ✭✭✭Wheeliebin30


    "The exact number of the homeless people is still unknown, as Germany, unlike many other European countries does not have the related statistical data to this phenomena. However, a support organization for the homeless has approximate numbers. According to this estimate, roughly 335.000 people had no homes in 2014, among which around 39.000 people live entirely on the streets. In addition, the number of homeless people is expected to be increasing. The number of people coming from various European countries with the hope of a better life and jobs and the insufficiency of housing opportunities also lead to the increase in the number of homeless people"

    What's this lads?

    Nearly 40 times as many homeless in Germany than Ireland?

    Yeah but Ireland is a ****hole and the Gubberment don't care about its citizens.

    Now Germany on the other hand. What a utopia.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,768 ✭✭✭✭tomwaterford


    "The exact number of the homeless people is still unknown, as Germany, unlike many other European countries does not have the related statistical data to this phenomena. However, a support organization for the homeless has approximate numbers. According to this estimate, roughly 335.000 people had no homes in 2014, among which around 39.000 people live entirely on the streets. In addition, the number of homeless people is expected to be increasing. The number of people coming from various European countries with the hope of a better life and jobs and the insufficiency of housing opportunities also lead to the increase in the number of homeless people"

    What's this lads?

    Nearly 40 times as many homeless in Germany than Ireland?

    Yeah but Ireland is a ****hole and the Gubberment don't care about its citizens.

    Now Germany on the other hand. What a utopia.

    This makes homelessness in Ireland ok? :confused:


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,593 ✭✭✭Wheeliebin30


    This makes homelessness in Ireland ok? :confused:

    Good one.

    No someone is advocating Berlin as some utopia and Ireland as some ****hole.

    Bit of perspective is needed.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,245 ✭✭✭myshirt


    ^^^^^^^

    Yes, I take your point, but don't forget all the money that Helmut Kohl gave to Ireland.

    I'm not saying let's be Berlin. I'm saying to quote Boris Johnson that 'it is not beyond the wit of man' for us to do better. We have enough brains in this country to do better. It's time for Ireland to grow up and stop this Mickey mouse paw out parish pump culture we have.

    Stop start stop start infrastructural programmes, current expenditure over capital, paying public servants more money, bending over to the unions, ignoring blatant piss poor public sector performance, rewarding blatant piss poor public sector performance, all need to go if Ireland is to grow up.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,564 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    myshirt wrote: »
    Why is it that Berlin can fit the whole population of Ireland into the same space as Dublin and still service them well. And I mean really well.

    It's because they're not governed by a bunch of hicks whose mission in life is to do their capital down.

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,564 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Liamario wrote: »
    People outside Dublin pay taxes too believe it or not, they're also seeing less of the benefit.

    Not even remotely true. The taxes of Dubliners subsidise the rest of the country.

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users Posts: 163 ✭✭bananabread12


    Wurly wrote: »
    I said there was a need for jobs paying a certain level so that people can afford rent.

    So you're suggesting that we throw the law of economics out the window altogether by centrally planning wage rates? Do you think low-skilled jobs should be paid beyond their societal and economic contribution?
    Whether you like it or not, we have a portion of the population who do not have the education to get the high paying jobs needed to pay the high rents.

    It's not a case of whether I like it or not, the reality is that it isn't the responsibility of society to guarantee everyone that wants to live in Dublin a property. If you can't afford to live in Dublin, you look for accommodation elsewhere. It's as simple as that really.
    So where do those people go?

    Down the country or to places that are more suitable to their income.
    And let's say they have debt. Because as any poor person can attest, falling behind on even one utility bill can cause MASSIVE problems down the line when you've so little money coming in.

    The thing is they do have money coming in. Nobody goes hungry in this country - no one. We live in a system that pays those out of employment nearly 200 Euro a week. If you have popped out a few kids, the taxpayers support you with even more. If you've no home, you get put up in a hotel while awaiting a free home you'll pay a few quid a week on - all on the public purse.

    The problem is not having little money coming in, the problem is that some people expect to live at the same standard of employed persons while being a net drain on society. They want cars, 50 inch televisions, the newest mobile phones, the latest clothes, a subscription to Sky, Netflix ect. Money for a piss-up weekend, gamble money, daily cigarettes ect ect. They expect to live at the same standard.....that is utterly insane. Anywhere else in the world - if you don't work, you don't get to enjoy the benefits of it. Simple.
    So how do they get access to the education?

    There are many opportunities available for those who wish to pursue an education or to up-skill. The problem is that they don't see the benefit of doing so because they get everything handed to them. It's a vicious cycle too because what message are we sending to their kids? A whole generation has grown up devoid of the values and ideals that make people successful in life - education, a work ethic, independence, ambition, employment.
    And let's say they have addiction issues, literacy issues or mental health problems.

    There are many people with addiction and mental health problems - that is not an issue restricted or exclusive to the groups we're discussing.
    How do we take care of those things so that these people are able to participate in the workforce?

    It's not the responsibility of society to hold the hands of adults through life. A fully grown adult needs to learn to take some personal responsibility for themselves. If you cannot afford to have kids or support a child, don't have one. If your income does not warrant or justify living in a highly sought after area of Dublin city, move somewhere more suitable. When are fully grown adults going to be treated like adults in this country and not like children who are in need of nursing from cradle to grave?
    I'm not attributing the responsibility to anyone.

    You are though - your questions all start with "How do we", "What do we do" ect..
    You think it is our problem to sort out every single little issue. I don't believe it is fair that someone who has made the right decisions in life (regardless of where they are from) needs to be punished by having to support the fecklessness of others. If anything, these successful people need to be treated as role models whose actions, values and ideals are to be mimicked, followed, recreated.

    When a child asks "daddy, how does that man live in that big house?". The proper response should be "he went to university and got a great job, son", not "come on, ye little bollox, down to the dole office that the man who lives in there props up".
    I'm asking you for your opinion. You said that social housing should be abolished? Right so... How do we solve the other problems that are factually there after we abolish the social housing?

    If you abolish the social housing then you stop the ghetto-isation and the creation of an anti-social, criminal and destructive culture that festers in these areas, that has become a serious inter-generational problem, and that can only recede through the curbing of the welfare state. The number one concept in economics is that if you subsidise something, you get more of it. If you pay people not to work, you get more unemployment. If you pay people to have kids, you'll get more kids. If you give free housing to people, the demand for free housing will go up.

    Stop supporting childbirth and the birthrate will fall. Single women will seek employment, gain experience and may pursue education instead of having children early.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,786 ✭✭✭wakka12


    "The exact number of the homeless people is still unknown, as Germany, unlike many other European countries does not have the related statistical data to this phenomena. However, a support organization for the homeless has approximate numbers. According to this estimate, roughly 335.000 people had no homes in 2014, among which around 39.000 people live entirely on the streets. In addition, the number of homeless people is expected to be increasing. The number of people coming from various European countries with the hope of a better life and jobs and the insufficiency of housing opportunities also lead to the increase in the number of homeless people"

    What's this lads?

    Nearly 40 times as many homeless in Germany than Ireland?

    Yeah but Ireland is a ****hole and the Gubberment don't care about its citizens.

    Now Germany on the other hand. What a utopia.

    Germanys population is nearly twenty times that of Ireland, firstly
    But yes I agree, people completely blinded to the fact that Ireland has among the highest quality of life in the world for 99.9% of it's population and that the homelessness situation is only roughly the same as other western nations if not a lot better in a lot of cases (compared to canada and usa for example)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,593 ✭✭✭Wheeliebin30


    wakka12 wrote: »
    Germanys population is nearly twenty times that of Ireland, firstly
    But yes I agree, people completely blinded to the fact that Ireland has among the highest quality of life in the world for 99.9% of it's population and that the homelessness situation is only roughly the same as other western nations if not a lot better in a lot of cases (compared to canada and usa for example)

    What?


    So the population of a country determines how many homeless it has?

    Utter nonsense.

    I agree with the rest though.

    I think irish people have been so spoiled and looked after through the years that they suddenly think Ireland is the only country with homeless people because it's a new phenomenon in this country or health problems
    for example.

    Simple fact is these issues have been here in every country going right back.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,453 ✭✭✭Ray Palmer


    myshirt wrote: »
    ^^^^^^^

    Yes, I take your point, but don't forget all the money that Helmut Kohl gave to Ireland.

    I'm not saying let's be Berlin. I'm saying to quote Boris Johnson that 'it is not beyond the wit of man' for us to do better. We have enough brains in this country to do better. It's time for Ireland to grow up and stop this Mickey mouse paw out parish pump culture we have.

    Stop start stop start infrastructural programmes, current expenditure over capital, paying public servants more money, bending over to the unions, ignoring blatant piss poor public sector performance, rewarding blatant piss poor public sector performance, all need to go if Ireland is to grow up.

    For Ireland to grow up people like yourself need to understand the basic principle of history. You can't just double the heat in an oven to cook a chicken quicker. Dublin doesn't have the infrastructure of other places because it didn't build them decades or a century ago. To build it now would cost more than it did back then and will cost much more now. Laws now stop some of the down right theft of rights and property to do it.

    The money pumped into other countries after WWII was huge and unprecedented requiring rationing to continue. We were on our knees. You can go into politics of it but essentially pride overrode sensible financial decisions which is common in post colonial countries.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,549 ✭✭✭maryishere


    thegills wrote: »
    I can see how that conversation went. Facebook: we plan to hire 1000 staff with an average age of 25. Looking for somewhere that would appeal to them. Government: we have the perfect location for you, Mullingar.

    If facebook want a place they should move to somewhere along the Wild Atlantic Way. Somewhere where their employees could have a high quality of life, go surfing, walking on beaches and on the mountains etc. Plus accommodation costs, building costs, even the pint of Guinness is cheaper there. Plus less traffic and pollution. Simples.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,307 ✭✭✭✭VinLieger


    maryishere wrote: »
    If facebook want a place they should move to somewhere along the Wild Atlantic Way. Somewhere where their employees could have a high quality of life, go surfing, walking on beaches and on the mountains etc. Plus accommodation costs, building costs, even the pint of Guinness is cheaper there. Plus less traffic and pollution. Simples.

    Building costs are more in remote places your describing due to transport, they locate to cities cus the infrastructure is available to support their large operations, your suggestions show your clueless to the requirements of operations the size of facebooks ireland office


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,676 ✭✭✭✭Galwayguy35


    Wurly wrote: »
    I said there was a need for jobs paying a certain level so that people can afford rent.

    You said to abolish social housing.

    Whether you like it or not, we have a portion of the population who do not have the education to get the high paying jobs needed to pay the high rents.

    So where do those people go?

    And let's say they have debt. Because as any poor person can attest, falling behind on even one utility bill can cause MASSIVE problems down the line when you've so little money coming in.

    So how do they get access to the education?

    And let's say they have addiction issues, literacy issues or mental health problems.

    How do we take care of those things so that these people are able to participate in the workforce?

    I'm not attributing the responsibility to anyone.

    I'm asking you for your opinion. You said that social housing should be abolished? Right so... How do we solve the other problems that are factually there after we abolish the social housing?

    I'm actually looking for your opinions.

    They go where they can afford to live same as the rest of us did, life isn't a bed of roses and we have to adapt and deal with the various situations that arise from time to time.

    As for education, the tools are there but if people refuse to learn because they are not interested not much can be done.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,676 ✭✭✭✭Galwayguy35


    Not even remotely true. The taxes of Dubliners subsidise the rest of the country.

    How exactly is a Dubliners taxes subsiding me?

    I'm entitled to nothing and pay of everything.


  • Registered Users Posts: 52 ✭✭Brioscai


    The government need to invest in building, apartments where permitted and lower density housing on the outskirts of cities. Estates and blocks should be mixed tendencies, social, affordable and market rate... with decent facilities.

    The government have created a situation whereby you go on the housing list and if wait long enough, you can get a house at a hugely discounted rate through tenant purchase schemes. People refuse apartments on this basis.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Nettle Soup


    maryishere wrote: »
    If facebook want a place they should move to somewhere along the Wild Atlantic Way. Somewhere where their employees could have a high quality of life, go surfing, walking on beaches and on the mountains etc. Plus accommodation costs, building costs, even the pint of Guinness is cheaper there. Plus less traffic and pollution. Simples.

    Exactly. Having worked in Dublin for too many years, I reckon it should be awful easy to persuade people to move west provided the jobs are there. The quality of life between Dublin and the west coast are incomparable. Only true Dubliners want to live in Dublin.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,564 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    How exactly is a Dubliners taxes subsiding me?

    I'm entitled to nothing and pay of everything.

    Dublin, and IIRC Cork, are the only counties where the government collects more than it spends.

    Scrap the cap!



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,564 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    maryishere wrote: »
    Somewhere where their employees could have a high quality of life, go surfing, walking on beaches and on the mountains etc.

    You can do all of those things in Dublin. Well, windsurfing instead of surfing, if you want to be picky.
    less pollution. Simples.

    Not water pollution though, Dublin's water is the cleanest in the country.

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,564 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    The quality of life between Dublin and the west coast are incomparable. Only true Dubliners want to live in Dublin.

    I live in Dublin and my family has a great quality of life, thanks.

    What would really improve the city would be if all the whingers did us a favour and went back to their rural idylls :rolleyes:

    Scrap the cap!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,195 ✭✭✭✭end of the road


    It's not a case of whether I like it or not, the reality is that it isn't the responsibility of society to guarantee everyone that wants to live in Dublin a property.

    it is if the alternative will cost me more, as in i have to have my taxes implementing resources that don't exist outside dublin.
    If you can't afford to live in Dublin, you look for accommodation elsewhere. It's as simple as that really.

    wrong. it's not as simple as that at all. dublin is where the most jobs and resources are and that is where the people will want to be.
    Down the country or to places that are more suitable to their income.

    not financially viable or cost effective for the tax payer.
    The thing is they do have money coming in. Nobody goes hungry in this country - no one. We live in a system that pays those out of employment nearly 200 Euro a week. If you have popped out a few kids, the taxpayers support you with even more. If you've no home, you get put up in a hotel while awaiting a free home you'll pay a few quid a week on - all on the public purse.

    we may have supports in place but that doesn't get away from the fact our housing rents are going to become among the most expensive in europe if we don't clamp down now.
    The problem is not having little money coming in, the problem is that some people expect to live at the same standard of employed persons while being a net drain on society. They want cars, 50 inch televisions, the newest mobile phones, the latest clothes, a subscription to Sky, Netflix ect. Money for a piss-up weekend, gamble money, daily cigarettes ect ect. They expect to live at the same standard.....that is utterly insane.

    yeah sure they do. a small minority maybe but not the majority.
    Anywhere else in the world - if you don't work, you don't get to enjoy the benefits of it. Simple.

    you do. simple. work only entitles you to a wage, nothing else.

    I'm very highly educated. I know words, i have the best words, nobody has better words then me.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,195 ✭✭✭✭end of the road


    There are many opportunities available for those who wish to pursue an education or to up-skill.

    not always.
    The problem is that they don't see the benefit of doing so because they get everything handed to them.

    they don't get everything handed to them.
    It's a vicious cycle too because what message are we sending to their kids? A whole generation has grown up devoid of the values and ideals that make people successful in life - education, a work ethic, independence, ambition, employment.

    it's not our job to send a message.
    It's not the responsibility of society to hold the hands of adults through life. A fully grown adult needs to learn to take some personal responsibility for themselves.

    most do, but that won't stop issues from happening beyond people's control.
    If you cannot afford to have kids or support a child, don't have one.

    not going to happen so your simplistic statements mean nothing.
    If your income does not warrant or justify living in a highly sought after area of Dublin city, move somewhere more suitable.

    no, they must stay in dublin if they are from dublin and work in dublin as it keeps over all expence for the tax payer low. income warrenting or justifying is no longer relevant as it breathes self entitlement.

    I'm very highly educated. I know words, i have the best words, nobody has better words then me.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,195 ✭✭✭✭end of the road


    When are fully grown adults going to be treated like adults in this country and not like children who are in need of nursing from cradle to grave?

    they all ready are. of course the reality doesn't meet your hard done by and let them eat grass agenda.
    You think it is our problem to sort out every single little issue. I don't believe it is fair that someone who has made the right decisions in life (regardless of where they are from) needs to be punished by having to support the fecklessness of others.

    we aren't being punished, and it's very fair that as a society we are obligated to support those in need.
    If anything, these successful people need to be treated as role models whose actions, values and ideals are to be mimicked, followed, recreated.

    we are. but it's not going to always work and you will have to suck it up.
    When a child asks "daddy, how does that man live in that big house?". The proper response should be "he went to university and got a great job, son", not "come on, ye little bollox, down to the dole office that the man who lives in there props up".

    no point as much of university doesn't even guarantee you a job now.
    If you abolish the social housing then you stop the ghetto-isation and the creation of an anti-social, criminal and destructive culture that festers in these areas, that has become a serious inter-generational problem, and that can only recede through the curbing of the welfare state.

    wrong, this has been proven false. the wellfare state has to stay to support those who are unemployable, and it's removal would lead to even more crime.
    The number one concept in economics is that if you subsidise something, you get more of it. If you pay people not to work, you get more unemployment. If you pay people to have kids, you'll get more kids. If you give free housing to people, the demand for free housing will go up.

    there is no evidence for that.
    Stop supporting childbirth and the birthrate will fall. Single women will seek employment, gain experience and may pursue education instead of having children early.

    delusianel i'm afraid. this has also been proven false. i used to believe the same nonsense as you but then i finally discovered the reality. look wishful thinking and latching on to simplistic nonsense to solve problems is nice, but unfortunately we have to live in the real world and the real world is not one bit simplistic.

    I'm very highly educated. I know words, i have the best words, nobody has better words then me.



  • Registered Users Posts: 163 ✭✭bananabread12


    ^^ You have contributed literally nothing to the discussion over the last three posts apart from parrot the same old tired tidbits...."not going to happen", "can't do that", "that's not reality"....

    Why don't you come back when you're in a position to present a thoroughly researched argument as to why an individual that cannot afford to live in an area be supplied a property from the State free of charge? It's this same anti-intellectual theoretical and pseudoreligious drivel that is entirely devoid of any remote scientific empiricism. The market is scientific, your ideology is not.

    I want to live in a penthouse apartment in NYC and holiday in my villa in Monaco....have you any idea why I don't live in my penthouse suite in NYC or holiday in my Monaco villa? Because I can't afford to own a penthouse apartment in NYC or maintain a holiday villa in Monaco. We all want things in life, it's precisely why we labour out of bed every pissing morning....

    And of course we have evidence that subsidisation leads to increases in whatever it is we're subsidising. This isn't an opinion, it isn't subjective. This is an economic concept every undergraduate economics student learns in his/her first week at university. Again with your anti-intellectualism. You're an anti-science ideologue.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,195 ✭✭✭✭end of the road


    ^^ You have contributed literally nothing to the discussion over the last three posts apart from parrot the same old tired tidbits...."not going to happen", "can't do that", "that's not reality"....

    Why don't you come back when you're in a position to present a thoroughly researched argument as to why an individual that cannot afford to live in an area be supplied a property from the State free of charge? It's this same anti-intellectual theoretical and pseudoreligious drivel that is entirely devoid of any remote scientific empiricism. The market is scientific, your ideology is not.

    I want to live in a penthouse apartment in NYC and holiday in my villa in Monaco....have you any idea why I don't live in my penthouse suite in NYC or holiday in my Monaco villa? Because I can't afford to own a penthouse apartment in NYC or maintain a holiday villa in Monaco. We all want things in life, it's precisely why we labour out of bed every pissing morning....

    And of course we have evidence that subsidisation leads to increases in whatever it is we're subsidising. This isn't an opinion, it isn't subjective. This is an economic concept every undergraduate economics student learns in his/her first week at university. Again with your anti-intellectualism. You're an anti-science ideologue.


    the state does not supply properties free of charge. tenants in social housing are required to pay rent on a per term basis as per their contract. usually an amount per week. we have no evidence that subsidisation leads to increases in whatever it is we're subsidising.

    I'm very highly educated. I know words, i have the best words, nobody has better words then me.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 651 ✭✭✭Nika Bolokov


    How about we send skangers and junkies who contribute nothing to the country somewhere instead and keep the EE who work and pay taxes.

    I hear Mullingar has room ?


  • Registered Users Posts: 163 ✭✭bananabread12


    the state does not supply properties free of charge. tenants in social housing are required to pay rent on a per term basis as per their contract. usually an amount per week. we have no evidence that subsidisation leads to increases in whatever it is we're subsidising.

    FFS.

    Subsidy.png

    I understand that simple scientific concepts like supply and demand diagrams are antithetical to your pseudoreligion but as you can see the market equilibrium resides at Q. Subsidising pushes the supply curve RIGHT and thus gives us a new artificial equilibrium of Q1. When you subsidise something, you get more of it - it doesn't matter whether it's apples, buses, grass, unemployment or houses. This is a scientific fact and an economic law.

    How good of the State to give options for housing wherever one wishes to live. Pure fantasy.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,073 ✭✭✭MarcusP12


    maryishere wrote: »
    thegills wrote: »
    I can see how that conversation went. Facebook: we plan to hire 1000 staff with an average age of 25. Looking for somewhere that would appeal to them. Government: we have the perfect location for you, Mullingar.

    If facebook want a place they should move to somewhere along the Wild Atlantic Way. Somewhere where their employees could have a high quality of life, go surfing, walking on beaches and on the mountains etc. Plus accommodation costs, building costs, even the pint of Guinness is cheaper there. Plus less traffic and pollution. Simples.

    I doubt accommodation costs, building costs, traffic and pollution would magically stay the same if big employers suddenly decided to locate west....


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