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Reason: None provided.

I think in some places living with parents or being unemployed isn't always something you can judge. In the UK there are no new houses just more and more immigrants with every residence filled to the brim and every piece of spare room converted to ever shrinking living space.

It's highly offensive here to now judge someone's living conditions when we're no longer in an era of prosperity. Children have nowhere to move out into half the time because immigrants have already moved in or you have to pay exorbitant rent to someone doing nothing for a tiny room which will make people complaining about tax seem fussy. You'll be squeezed for every bit of disposable income when house prices are up several times more than wages. People can't afford to buy property in the millions, really an entire generation where what the previous generation had access to simply isn't widely available.

I think in the past couple of decades around ten percent of the population or actually around half if not more of the population entering into the work force simply wont be able to ever afford to own their own property at their wage level. It is actually turning into a society where you won't own anything, rent / wage slave your entire life. What the world economic forum described isn't just a plot to reshape society but actually a trend, that's the shape it's taking. It's already well underway.

I've lost my job because of COVID-19 which destroyed the small business/startup I was working for and realistically I can't get back into work until lockdown stops, though I have sufficient savings. I'm not entirely happy however because this is going to put a dent in my saving for a house through both spending savings and lost income.

If someone is going to give a random stranger a 50% to 90% cut of their salary (often $750 to $2000) just to avoid the social stigma of living with family instead living with often unpleasant strangers you don't want anything to do with having only a small room to yourself plus five to ten to a kitchen when they could be putting that into saving for a house at a time when you have no chance of buying a house paying rent then they're retarded.

Regardless of all of that, I'm confident that if you ran this survey again you would find too many of those unemployed are chronically unemployed and then one things leads to another such as never getting on the housing ladder regardless of whether that's affordable where they are or not.

53 days ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

I think in some places living with parents or being unemployed isn't always something you can judge. In the UK there are no new houses just more and more immigrants with every residence filled to the brim and every piece of spare room converted to ever shrinking living space.

It's highly offensive here to now judge someone's living conditions when we're no longer in an era of prosperity. Children have nowhere to move out into half the time because immigrants have already moved in or you have to pay exorbitant rent to someone doing nothing for a tiny room which will make people complaining about tax seem fussy. You'll be squeezed for every bit of disposable income when house prices are up several times more than wages. People can't afford to buy property in the millions, really an entire generation where what the previous generation had access to simply isn't widely available.

I think in the past couple of decades around ten percent of the population or actually around half if not more of the population entering into the work force simply wont be able to ever afford to own their own property at their wage level. It is actually turning into a society where you won't own anything, rent / wage slave your entire life. What the world economic forum described isn't just a plot to reshape society but actually a trend, that's the shape it's taking. It's already well underway.

I've lost my job because of COVID-19 which destroyed the small business/startup I was working for and realistically I can't get back into work until lockdown stops, though I have sufficient savings. I'm not entirely happy however because this is going to put a dent in my saving for a house through both spending savings and lost income.

If someone is going to give a random stranger each month a 50% to 90% cut of their salary (often $750 to $2000) just to avoid the social stigma of living with family when they could be putting that into saving for a house at a time when you have no chance of buying a house paying rent then they're retarded.

Regardless of all of that, I'm confident that if you ran this survey again you would find too many of those unemployed are chronically unemployed and then one things leads to another such as never getting on the housing ladder regardless of whether that's affordable where they are or not.

53 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

I think in some places living with parents or being unemployed isn't always something you can judge. In the UK there are no new houses just more and more immigrants with every residence filled to the brim and every piece of spare room converted to ever shrinking living space.

It's highly offensive here to now judge someone's living conditions when we're no longer in an era of prosperity. Children have nowhere to move out into half the time because immigrants have already moved in or you have to pay exorbitant rent to someone doing nothing for a tiny room which will make people complaining about tax seem fussy. You'll be squeezed for every bit of disposable income when house prices are up several times more than wages. People can't afford to buy property in the millions, really an entire generation where what the previous generation had access to simply isn't widely available.

I think in the past couple of decades around ten percent of the population or actually around half if not more of the population entering into the work force simply wont be able to ever afford to own their own property at their wage level. It is actually turning into a society where you won't own anything, rent / wage slave your entire life. What the world economic forum described isn't just a plot to reshape society but actually a trend, that's the shape it's taking. It's already well underway.

I've lost my job because of COVID-19 which destroyed the small business/startup I was working for and realistically I can't get back into work until lockdown stops, though I have sufficient savings. I'm not entirely happy however because this is going to put a dent in my saving for a house through both spending savings and lost income.

If someone is going to give a random stranger a 50% to 90% cut of their salary (often $750 to $2000) just to avoid the social stigma of living with family when they could be putting that into saving for a house at a time when you have no chance of buying a house paying rent then they're retarded.

Regardless of all of that, I'm confident that if you ran this survey again you would find too many of those unemployed are chronically unemployed and then one things leads to another such as never getting on the housing ladder regardless of whether that's affordable where they are or not.

53 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

I think in some places living with parents or being unemployed isn't always something you can judge. In the UK there are no new houses just more and more immigrants with every residence filled to the brim and every piece of spare room converted to ever shrinking living space.

It's highly offensive here to now judge someone's living conditions when we're no longer in an era of prosperity. Children have nowhere to move out into half the time because immigrants have already moved in or you have to pay exorbitant rent to someone doing nothing for a tiny room which will make people complaining about tax seem fussy. You'll be squeezed for every bit of disposable income when house prices are up several times more than wages. People can't afford to buy property in the millions, really an entire generation where what the previous generation had access to simply isn't widely available.

I think in the past couple of decades around ten percent of the population or actually around half if not more of the population entering into the work force simply wont be able to ever afford to own their own property at their wage level. It is actually turning into a society where you won't own anything, rent / wage slave your entire life. What the world economic forum described isn't just a plot to reshape society but actually a trend, that's the shape it's taking. It's already well underway.

I've lost my job because of COVID-19 which destroyed the small business/startup I was working for and realistically I can't get back into work until lockdown stops, though I have sufficient savings. I'm not entirely happy however because this is going to put a dent in my saving for a house through both spending savings and lost income.

Regardless of all of that, I'm confident that if you ran this survey again you would find too many of those unemployed are chronically unemployed and then one things leads to another such as never getting on the housing ladder regardless of whether that's affordable where they are or not.

53 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

I think in some places living with parents or being unemployed isn't always something you can judge. In the UK there are no new houses just more and more immigrants with every residence filled to the brim and every piece of spare room converted to ever shrinking living space.

It's highly offensive here to now judge someone's living conditions when we're no longer in an era of prosperity. Children have nowhere to move out into half the time because immigrants have already moved in or you have to pay exorbitant rent to someone doing nothing for a tiny room which will make people complaining about tax seem fussy. You'll be squeezed for every bit of disposable income when house prices are up several times more than wages. People can't afford to buy property in the millions, really an entire generation where what the previous generation had access to simply isn't widely available.

I think in the past couple of decades around ten percent of the population or actually around half if not more of the population entering into the work force simply wont be able to ever afford to own their own property at their wage level. It is actually turning into a society where you won't own anything, rent / wage slave your entire life. What the world economic forum described isn't just a plot to reshape society but actually a trend, that's the shape it's taking. It's already well underway.

I've lost my job because of COVID-19 which destroyed the small business/startup I was working for and realistically I can't get back into work until lockdown stops, though I have sufficient savings. I'm not entirely happy however because this is going to put a dent in my saving for a house through both spending savings and lost income.

Regardless of all of that, I'm confident that if you ran this survey again you would find too many of those unemployed are chronically unemployed and then one things leads to another such as never getting on the housing ladder regardless of whether that's affordable where they are or not.

53 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

I think in some places living with parents or being unemployed isn't always something you can judge. In the UK there are no new houses just more and more immigrants with every residence filled to the brim and every piece of spare room converted to ever shrinking living space.

It's highly offensive here to now judge someone's living conditions when we're no longer in an era of prosperity. Children have nowhere to move out into half the time because immigrants have already moved in or you have to pay exorbitant rent to someone doing nothing for a tiny room which will make people complaining about tax seem fussy. You'll be squeezed for every bit of disposable income when house prices are up several times more than wages. People can't afford to buy property in the millions, really an entire generation where what the previous generation had access to simply isn't widely available.

I think in the past couple of decades around ten percent of the population or actually around half if not more of the population entering into the work force simply wont be able to ever afford to own their own property at their wage level. It is actually turning into a society where you won't own anything, rent / wage slave your entire life. What the world economic forum described isn't just a plot to reshape society but actually a trend, that's the shape it's taking. It's already well underway.

I've lost my job because of COVID-19 which destroyed the small business/startup I was working for and realistically I can't get back into work until lockdown stops, though I have sufficient savings.

Regardless of all of that, I'm confident that if you ran this survey again you would find too many of those unemployed are chronically unemployed and then one things leads to another such as never getting on the housing ladder regardless of whether that's affordable where they are or not.

53 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

I think in some places living with parents or being unemployed isn't always something you can judge. In the UK there are no new houses just more and more immigrants with every residence filled to the brim and every piece of spare room converted to ever shrinking living space.

It's highly offensive here to now judge someone's living conditions when we're no longer in an era of prosperity. Children have nowhere to move out into half the time because immigrants have already moved in or you have to pay exorbitant rent to someone doing nothing for a tiny room which will make people complaining about tax seem fussy. You'll be squeezed for every bit of disposable income when house prices are up several times more than wages. People can't afford to buy property in the millions, really an entire generation where what the previous generation had access to simply isn't widely available.

I think in the past couple of decades around ten percent of the population or actually around half if not more of the population entering into the work force simply wont be able to ever afford to own their own property at their wage level. It is actually turning into a society where you won't own anything, rent / wage slave your entire life. What the world economic forum described isn't just a plot to reshape society but actually a trend, that's the shape it's taking.

I've lost my job because of COVID-19 which destroyed the small business/startup I was working for and realistically I can't get back into work until lockdown stops, though I have sufficient savings.

Regardless of all of that, I'm confident that if you ran this survey again you would find too many of those unemployed are chronically unemployed and then one things leads to another such as never getting on the housing ladder regardless of whether that's affordable where they are or not.

53 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

I think in some places living with parents or being unemployed isn't always something you can judge. In the UK there are no new houses just more and more immigrants with every residence filled to the brim and every piece of spare room converted to ever shrinking living space.

It's highly offensive here to now judge someone's living conditions when we're no longer in an era of prosperity. Children have nowhere to move out into half the time because immigrants have already moved in or you have to pay exorbitant rent to someone doing nothing for a tiny room which will make people complaining about tax seem fussy. You'll be squeezed for every bit of disposable income when house prices are up several times more than wages. People can't afford to buy property in the millions, really an entire generation where what the previous generation had access to simply isn't widely available.

I think in the past couple of decades around ten percent of the population or actually around half if not more of the population entering into the work force simply wont be able to ever afford to own their own property at their wage level. It is actually turning into a society where you won't own anything, rent / wage slave your entire life.

I've lost my job because of COVID-19 which destroyed the small business/startup I was working for and realistically I can't get back into work until lockdown stops, though I have sufficient savings.

Regardless of all of that, I'm confident that if you ran this survey again you would find too many of those unemployed are chronically unemployed and then one things leads to another such as never getting on the housing ladder regardless of whether that's affordable where they are or not.

53 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

I think in some places living with parents or being unemployed isn't always something you can judge. In the UK there are no new houses just more and more immigrants with every residence filled to the brim and every piece of spare room converted to ever shrinking living space.

It's highly offensive here to now judge someone's living conditions when we're no longer in an era of prosperity. Children have nowhere to move out into half the time because immigrants have already moved in or you have to pay exorbitant rent to someone doing nothing for a tiny room which will make people complaining about tax seem fussy. You'll be squeezed for every bit of disposable income when house prices are up several times more than wages. People can't afford to buy property in the millions, really an entire generation where what the previous generation had access to simply isn't widely available.

I think in the past couple of decades around ten percent of the population or actually around half if not more of the population entering into the work force simply wont be able to ever afford to own their own property at their wage level. It is actually turning into a society where you won't own anything, rent / wage slave your entire life.

I've lost my job because of COVID-19 which destroyed the small business/startup I was working for and realistically I can't get back into work until lockdown stops, though I have sufficient savings.

Regardless of all of that, I'm confident that if you ran this survey again you would find too many of those unemployed are chronically unemployed and then one things leads to another such as never getting on the housing ladder regardless of whether that's affordable where they are or not.

53 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

I think in some places living with parents or being unemployed isn't always something you can judge. In the UK there are no new houses just more and more immigrants with every residence filled to the brim and every piece of spare room converted to ever shrinking living space.

It's highly offensive here to now judge someone's living conditions when we're no longer in an era of prosperity. Children have nowhere to move out into half the time because immigrants have already moved in or you have to pay exorbitant rent to someone doing nothing for a tiny room which will make people complaining about tax seem fussy. You'll be squeezed for every bit of disposable income when house prices are up several times more than wages. People can't afford to buy property in the millions, really an entire generation where what the previous generation had access to simply isn't widely available.

I think in the past couple of decades around ten percent of the population or actually around half if not more of the working age population simply wont be able to ever afford to own their own property at their wage level.

I've lost my job because of COVID-19 which destroyed the small business/startup I was working for and realistically I can't get back into work until lockdown stops, though I have sufficient savings.

Regardless of all of that, I'm confident that if you ran this survey again you would find too many of those unemployed are chronically unemployed and then one things leads to another such as never getting on the housing ladder regardless of whether that's affordable where they are or not.

53 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

I think in some places living with parents or being unemployed isn't always something you can judge. In the UK there are no new houses just more and more immigrants with every residence filled to the brim and every piece of spare room converted to ever shrinking living space.

It's highly offensive here to now judge someone's living conditions when we're no longer in an era of prosperity. Children have nowhere to move out into half the time because immigrants have already moved in or you have to pay exorbitant rent to someone doing nothing for a tiny room which will make people complaining about tax seem fussy. You'll be squeezed for every bit of disposable income when house prices are up several times more than wages. People can't afford to buy property in the millions, really an entire generation where what the previous generation had access to simply isn't widely available.

I've lost my job because of COVID-19 which destroyed the small business/startup I was working for and realistically I can't get back into work until lockdown stops, though I have sufficient savings.

Regardless of all of that, I'm confident that if you ran this survey again you would find too many of those unemployed are chronically unemployed and then one things leads to another such as never getting on the housing ladder regardless of whether that's affordable where they are or not.

53 days ago
1 score