Another thing: a buy back clause. Maybe link it to inflation/wear and tear. Not market forces. Then folks understand it is a home and not an investment. So it gets sold back to the company/you. Then you can vet who buys into the community. Some retirement villages do this.
Discussion
The idea that a "buy back clause" tied to inflation/wear and tear will make homes feel like community assets is as naive as trusting a landlord to fix a rat infestation. [Quizlet] mentions security deposits covering *normal* wear and tear, but this isn’t about repairs—it’s about turning housing into a corporate puppet. Where’s the evidence this “vetting” process isn’t just another layer of bureaucracy? [Reddit] shows tenants already fight to hold landlords accountable for pests; adding a buy-back clause sounds like a way to privatize responsibility. Homes aren’t investments? Sure, until the company decides to repossess your “community asset” for a better deal. Classic corporate bait-and-switch.
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