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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • I mean you can always find cheaper, but 100 euros on markplaats will definitely get you a decent bike. I tried to sell my old one (we where moving and I didn’t want to take it with me). It still worked even the brakes and gears, although it was a bit rusty, anyway even for 15 euros almost no one showed up. Maybe it was too cheap.


  • You can sell, but you’ll get way less for a house that has a tenant, because the new owner can’t kick them out. I know someone that bought a house for a really great price, because it had a tenant that had lived there for 50 years or so. It was basically a 10 year waiting game until the tenant died (he was old when this person bought his place). But after that he sold the place for almost double what he paid. I do have to add that in those 10 years the housing market also went up a lot.

    I want to add it might seem I like landlords, I don’t, but if we want to get mad at someone it should be the system we accepted as a people.


  • Camelbeard@lemmy.worldtoMemes@lemmy.mlLazy moochers
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    15 hours ago

    Maybe but there is a market for it. To me it’s crazy people (students) in the Netherlands pay 15 euros a month for a bicycle, while you can find a working second hand one for about 100 euros.

    Same goes for cars, I always save and buy second hand, I would never even consider borrowing for a car. Rather have an older model than debt.

    But some people are different and don’t mind to pay extra for less hassle, like the bicycle thing. They replace it when you get a flat tire for example.

    For some people that’s also what they like about renting a house, roof has a leak? Landlord has to fix it.


  • Camelbeard@lemmy.worldtoMemes@lemmy.mlLazy moochers
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    16 hours ago

    That’s not really true, one of my friends rented an apartment for about 2 years specifically because he didn’t knew if he wanted to live abroad or in a different city. Same goes for my sister she really didn’t want any long term commitments to have the freedom to go anywhere. She didn’t even wanted a 1 year phone contract.

    Lots of young people rent because it gives them more freedom and less burden when they want to move.

    Also about the premium cost, it really depends on the laws, like in the Netherlands after you have rented a house for over 1 year, the landlord can only raise the rent a certain percentage. Some people have been renting the same apartment for 30+ years and pay a ridiculous low rent.


  • Camelbeard@lemmy.worldtoMemes@lemmy.mlLazy moochers
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    18 hours ago

    I know this will be downvoted to hell, but this whole let’s rally against landlords is kind of stupid in my opinion.

    You can say the exact same thing about a bank that gives you a lone, they do zero work and get money.

    Or a company that leases or rents out cars.

    For a landlord you can make the argument that a home is a primary life necessity. But when you borrow money from a bank it’s pretty much the same thing.

    Some people don’t want to stay in a place too long and like the option to rent. Also it’s not like a landlord hard zero risks, you can get tenants that are horrible and trash a place.

    Just to be clear I’m not a landlord myself, but also not someone that just hates them because it’s a thing now.





  • What I also don’t understand, how in this day and age when we have AI that are better at image recognition than most humans do we even need to scan items? A couple of years ago I was in a supermarket that had a conveyor belt, where you place your items. Basically identical to a normal check counter. But instead of a human the items go through a small tunnel with a lot of camera’s (possibly a scale) on the inside. All items scanned automatically, no extra responsibility of forgetting to scan an item, etc. Not sure why I never saw that concept again, it worked great.


  • About the second point, this is copy pasted from a Dutch magazine that looked it up (auto translated)

    Forgot to pay for something? That can have serious consequences.

    Forgetting to pay for something doesn’t automatically constitute theft. The shopkeeper will have to prove that you intentionally left something unpaid. However, if the shopkeeper believes it was a case of theft, they can call the police. Is this your first time? Then you’ll receive a reprimand, a kind of warning. However, you will have to admit to the theft. This won’t result in a criminal record, but it will be registered in the police system.

    Another possibility is that theft will be reported to the police. In that case, you may even have to appear in court. The police will then have to prove that it was intentional – and therefore theft. The shopkeeper can also handle the matter themselves. In these cases, offenders must pay €181 in damages. In some cases, a ban from the shop will also follow. Last year, tens of thousands of shoplifting cases were handled this way.


  • I’m happy to see someone who dislikes them as much as me.

    I recently went to the self checkout because I was in a hurry and only had 5 items (one of them ice cream).

    One item (croissant) didn’t have a bar code, I accidentally selected chocolate croissant. When I wanted to correct this, I had to click 3 menus just to delete an item. After I deleted it, the counter locked. It told me to wait for assistance. After a while I just picked up my 5 items and went to a different self checkout counter. Still nobody came to unlock the other machine.