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Greed has poisoned men's souls, has barricaded the world with hate, has goose-stepped us into

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misery and bloodshed. We have developed speed, but we have shut ourselves in. Machinery that

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gives abundance has left us in want. Our knowledge has made us cynical, our cleverness hard and

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unkind. We think too much and feel too little. More than machinery, we need humanity. More

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than cleverness, we need kindness and gentleness. Without these qualities, life will be violent.

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Welcome to Rabble Rants. I'm Santiago Gelo Quintero, and alongside Jess McLean, we're going to unpack

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the stories that have us most riled up and challenge the narratives around them. Last week Trudeau

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in another pre-budget announcement made some promises around tenant rights, which if you've

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been listening to the show is something we've been talking about quite a bit. As always,

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I look at these announcements with… Perhaps an unhealthy level of skepticism, but I'll

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do my best to break it down with as much of Santiago's hopefulness as possible because

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he's not with me today. But before I go over the actual details of the announcement and

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give my two cents, I'd like to ask you to share the episode with a comrade or two. Our content

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is for the masses, so your boosts absolutely make a difference in getting the word out there.

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Be sure to tag us at BP of disruption so we can brag about it. All right, back to the liberals.

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I'll give them a bright spot before I tear apart the details of their appeal to renters. One

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thing this announcement and all the talk around it does is give a nod to very pressing issues

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for renters. Things like high rent, run evictions, and abusive landlords. To have the prime minister

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get up there on his platform and say those terms even, renovations and abusive landlords, I

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mean, he doesn't just acknowledge their issues that face a lot of people, but he also implies

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by his actions and his words that it's the government's role to intervene. Now, how much he can actually

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intervene is yet to be tested. There are provincial jurisdiction issues around the feds. implementing

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this, but it surely is a standard to set that to say out loud in his position that the exploitive

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housing market isn't going to fix itself. That being said, it also isn't going to be fixed

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by these changes either. Nor do I think he's being sincere in what he's doing, but that

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will become obvious to you as I go through this. Now, I know most folks probably are aware of

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high rents, that they exist. 30% of people here in Ontario rent and rent, they've just skyrocketed

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over the past four years in particular. The issue has been covered extensively, but rent

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evictions hasn't nearly gotten enough attention. We did an episode in March with organizers

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from Acorn Ottawa and Hamilton on exactly this. Their report that Acorn Ontario just right

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before that interview is eye-opening. And it only shows a portion of the picture. They pulled

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all their data, like most folks do, from the records that are available. But they made sure

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to note over and over that the reality is many landlords don't have to or won't register with

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any kind of authority. Most landlord-tenant relationships are what you would call off the

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books. And so the situation is... always worse than what the data will show. That relationship

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also makes the implementation of a lot of suggested policies very difficult. Either way, rent eviction

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rates in places like Ottawa have gone up over like 500%. This is a trend that's seen right

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across the country. Ottawa is in particularly bad, but all urban centers are suffering from

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this. And it's trends like these that pave the way for extremely high rent. To get an idea

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of the impact that they have and how folks are organizing against rent evictions, be sure

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to listen to that interview. We called the episode, Fighting Rent Evictions Locally with Ontario

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Acorn. And another thing that they talked about in that interview was the need for legal advice

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when folks are being served with an eviction notice or harassed by landlords. And that brings

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us to the first detail. We don't get many details of this liberal announcement that we're talking

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about. the renter's rights announcement. The liberals have promised $15 million in a tenant

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protection fund. This has been earmarked in the spring budget, which we are expecting on

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April 15th. What that $15 million is supposed to do is be dispersed throughout their country

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and fund legal aid organizations. The kind of organizations that would help tenants in their

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fight against rent evictions and abusive landlords and through their hearings at the landlord

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tenant boards and stuff like that. You know, rights aren't worth much if you can't defend

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them. All those rights that we have secured on paper in all of the charters and all of

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the legislation that has been passed, we can only protect them to the extent that we can

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challenge their violations in court. And as you know, this costs money, even for legal

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aid, even for pro bono lawyers, like they need to be funded in some sort of way. And as you

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can expect, their services are in high demand and in desperate need of funding. Folks fighting

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bad landlords typically can't afford lawyers. The same can't be said about their opponent.

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Many of these landlords aren't mom and pop operations. We debunked that in that episode with Ricardo

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Tranjen, the tenant class. Many of those landlords are actually huge corporations, which makes

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going up in legal battles against them very difficult. More often than not, folks just

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walk away, they get evicted, unless they're organizing well. But even still, that $15 million

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isn't... shit is what I'm trying to say. This is $15 million again. It's across the entire

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country. And just to give you a picture of the deficit that exists within the legal aid. In

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2019, the Ontario premier Doug Ford cut $113 million from their funding of legal aid. That

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was like 30% of their funding. So they need a lot of money. Under austerity measures, these

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are one of the first services to go because they actually weaken our ability to fight back

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against the cuts and the violations of human rights that will occur because of those cuts.

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And so strategically, these services have been cut across Canada for some time. Sharing $15

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million. I mean, I'm sure it's welcome. When you're desperate for crumbs, you will take

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anything people offer you. So it's not unwanted. But for them to stand up there and say that

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they're creating some sort of fund and it's groundbreaking, it's not. Not at all. This

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is actually peanuts. But at least it's in the budget. That's more than you can say about

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the pharmacare. I'm sure that $50 million will be gobbled up quite quickly because these legal

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funds will surely be used trying to secure the next Liberal Promise. We have no idea what

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it'll look like, but the Liberals are promising to craft a Canadian renter's Bill of Rights.

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I love all these pre-budget announcements that totally lack any details, but we're all supposed

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to give them a lot of credibility for it. Either way, what we do know about it is it's supposed

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to create some sort of national standard lease agreement. I think, again, it's important to

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mention here that many landlords aren't registered with any kind of authority at the moment. Not

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the municipality, not the province. Some of them might be declaring it as income, but...

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As you know, many will not be. It's not a group that has been, you know, registered in a way

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that they can be held to the kind of standards that he's suggesting at the moment. So and

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that's not even with the whole provincial jurisdiction problem, even in jurisdictions where it is

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required for landlords to register or get some sort of credit nation. they will sidestep it,

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right? Like just like bad bosses. And so I'm unsure exactly how a standardized lease agreement

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is going to help anyone. They don't really have any authority to have this be a binding lease

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agreement. They can't prevent people from making modifications to a lease agreement. I think

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it's, they're really relying on people not understanding the details around a lot of these announcements.

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And so at face value, they seem like, okay, well it's something, but it's not. What are

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they going to do? Decide on the best model for a lease agreement and upload a PDF to one of

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their websites? I'm not sure. But another thing that they want to add into this Bill of Rights

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is the requirement for landlords to disclose the rental history. How much did the person

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in that unit pay before you? I got to link Trudeau's video to the show notes here so you folks can

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see just how ridiculous he's approaching this point, how out of touch this man and his handlers

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are to think that people are able to negotiate with their landlords just simply because they

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knew how much the unit was going for before them. And this does nothing to address renovations,

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especially because the whole premise is like, hey, we upgraded the unit. And so now this

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is what it's worth. the market determines something's value. I know a lot of folks, again, it's one

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of these things that you're looking at it, it looks like it should be a good thing, it's

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something, it might be a tool. I don't, but I don't think anyone's as naive as Trudeau

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in thinking that just because you know how much the unit might have been worth, that that's

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some sort of ace up the sleeve. He's trying to play off that folks will be able to have

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leverage or he's addressing some sort of power imbalance. And you can't bargain fairly with

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someone that controls the rental rates and access to all of these units. Anybody who's applied

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to rent anywhere will know that. Sure, by law, they can't discriminate against people who

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are on ODSP or who have multiple children or pets. But the reality is they do. They don't

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need to give a reason why you didn't get the apartment when the supply is what it's at.

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And so if there's a competition, they simply just get to pick their best fit. And it's not

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first come first serve. There's no rules around it. So there's no negotiations that are able

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to take place. Jesus Christ, there's bidding wars going on for rental units. So there's

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the first person that tries to say to that. Landlord. Oh, yeah. Well, I know this unit

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was worth $500 less last month is off of the bidding war list Like they're not even going

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to be considered They can even have many vacant units in a building Especially the larger buildings

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and not be losing any money But if they started to lower rent simply based on the negotiating

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skills of prospective renters Surely that would start a trend. They don't want to start so

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Yes, that knowledge would be a good thing. You might feel validated in being angry in having

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to pay $700 more two years later. But I don't see that actually being able to lower our rents.

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This brings us to the last and my most objectionable detail of the announcement made by the liberals

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last week in terms of renters rights. Trudeau says our rent should count towards a whole

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lot more than just like the roof over our heads, I suppose. He thinks it should count towards

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things like our credit scores. All right. Now, credit scores are something that banks and

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other money lenders use to determine if you're worthy of a loan. This includes a mortgage,

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but also other things like car loans. And if you pay your rent on time, the liberals are

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suggesting they want the bank to be able to reward you with a better credit score. And

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again, on the surface, this might sound great. The people in the credit score commercials

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certainly looked smug as hell when their credit scores were higher than that of their friends.

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But let's just take a closer look at this. I'm sure there's a lot of renters out there that

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aspire to be homeowners, but renters aren't being denied mortgages because of their credit

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scores. People can't afford their rent in record numbers right now, let alone being able to

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pay the down payment on a house. and the costs that come with home ownership. This is on top

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of your mortgage. This affordability crisis has drained all of our bank accounts, which

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were, well, abysmal to start with, right? I don't care how good your credit score is. Have

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you seen the interest rates the Bank of Canada has set? The barrier to home ownership does

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not lay in the credit score system, okay? The credit score system sucks. I'm not gonna unpack

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it all here. It reinforces racial economic inequality. It is lacks any nuance and it's simply there

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to punish the poorest more. And the way that Trudeau sold this announcement, this part of

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the announcement, he made it seem like, oh, well, people who pay mortgages, they get to

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better their credit scores. Well, those same people who are missing their mortgage payments

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will tell you. that it also lowers their credit scores. People who rent apartments have other

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ways to raise their credit score if that's what they're worried about, if they can, right?

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This requires a lot of money either way. But he's trying to imply that people with mortgages

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all have really great credit scores and we know that that's not the case. And that's also to

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point out that presumably this tying to the credit score... goes both ways. Late payments

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would also count against your score. I can't see them setting up a system that didn't have

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penalties alongside of these so-called rewards. Participating banks will surely insist folks

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that are in arrears be punished. This is never going to be just a one-way system. That never

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works that way. And so what does the flip side mean for people? It means the poorest are going

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to suffer. Again, folks unable to pay on time will find themselves in deeper and deeper holes.

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I mean, that is what the credit score is designed to do, right? It's there to distinguish the

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classes based on their ability to pay. And let's also remember that banks are not the only ones

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using credit scores. Employers are also now using them to weed through prospective employees.

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Credit scores are bullshit. So you could be denied employment, denied a way to improve

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your credit score because this is a life goal now, right? Because you have a bad credit score,

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it's a cycle and it's meant to be. And this is just one more tool. It's just one more power

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imbalance that'll exist, especially for folks who can't or maybe won't pay their rent, right?

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What does this mean for the tenants that are out there trying to fight back against bad

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landlords? Folks like the York Southwestern Tenants Union who have people on rent strikes.

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These are situations where people have horrible landlords, slumlords, companies trying to squeeze

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as much profit out of property as possible. And so as a means of last resort, rent strikes

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are happening where people are withholding their rent in order to press the situation. Like

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withholding your labor, sometimes it's the only card you have. When we spoke to Bruno, from

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the York Southwest and Tenants Union, he talked about the work that went in to getting as many

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people as possible to sign up. First, just with a Tenants Union, but then when it came to that

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time where it was time for a rent strike, although most people agreed that there was no other

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tool at their disposal and they had tried everything else, that's still an uphill battle to try

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to convince people. to withhold their rent. The folks at Acorn Ottawa and Hamilton also

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told us how almost half of tenants simply leave when they're issued an N13. There's this real

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deference to authority that exists in everybody inherently the way that we're brought up, right?

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Actually, not inherent, but it's from the environment that we're brought up in. And so tenants will

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always be a little bit hesitant, at least until we empower folks, right? Until we empower ourselves

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to understand what we hold. there will be hesitation, hesitation to push back against landlords.

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They control your shelter. I mean, it's getting done, but it's a struggle because that power

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imbalance exists. The fear of reprisal is real and the difficulty in staying housed weighs

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on people's minds. So adding another point of leverage to landlords in this situation of

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a rent strike, you can then use this credit score penalties as a viable threat. I imagine

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them sending a leaflet to every door explaining what a credit score is and how a bad one can

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harm you and how withholding your rent even for one month can be detrimental to the future

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of your family. And they wouldn't be all that wrong. So I think of people who are waging

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rent strikes now across the country, the elites must have to respond to that. When we're advocating

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for tenant rights, like organizing rights, like the right to negotiate as a collective. We're

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getting... policies that want to break tenants down into individuals and actually really hamper

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one of the only tools that they have. Now I'll tell you, I went over this with Santiago and

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he was much more hopeful here. He believed that, and I hope that he's right, that people faced

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with the conditions that they're faced with that are on rent strike or that are facing

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slumlords organizing around that. that they won't be daunted that the victories that they're

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fighting for are too important to be scared off by the threat of a credit score. And to

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further that point, the political conditions under which these housing announcements are

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being made tells us that this is a response from the wealthy trying to control the situation

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beneath them. This is just another political game by the folks paid to string us along.

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keep us in line. It's also a move against Trudeau's biggest opponent right now, right, who will

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surely offer nothing to renters at all, despite the fact that conservatives have been making

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housing one of their points of interest. They've made Trudeau a real target here, but that's

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an easy game for them. Trudeau has been in power for a long time and in those years renters

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have seen increases we have never seen before. Whether they're his fault or not, nobody cares.

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At this point, nobody cares who implemented what 12 years ago under Harper. You can't use

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that. How folks starting to vote now weren't even born when Harper took power. Playing the

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blame game here just isn't going to work. Young folks are particularly disillusioned. And those

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are the voters Trudeau is trying to appeal to here. The federal liberals have been bleeding

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voters from the younger generations and they have been losing them mostly to the conservatives.

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They aren't hiding their approach to this at all. Not in the slightest. Their press release,

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the government said, this is about protecting renters, but this is also about generational

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fairness. Making sure millennials and Gen Z, who are most likely to rank at a level playing

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field in the rental market. This inequality he's alluding to is based on the accumulation

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of wealth, especially property, land. That economic imbalance will continue to exist, which makes

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any type of these negotiations, he refers to, laughable. We're talking about a market where

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real estate investors are buying up 90% of the new units being built when they are built,

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and they're unaffordable to begin with. It's always this huge oversell by liberals for all

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of their policies. And frankly, the NDP have called these half measures, and that critique,

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as usual, doesn't go far enough. But one of these things that the announcement is also

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in response to, in my opinion, is the leaked RCMP report. And it really doesn't tell us

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anything we haven't already been feeling, but I imagine it was a bit of a wake-up call for

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the elites in Ottawa. I mean, it was more than bleak, though, saying it explicitly says in

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there that folks under 35 won't likely ever own a home. And young people know this. They

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know this to be true. This is their lived experience. I saw another one of those happiness index

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surveys showed younger people, I think 35 ish was the age range there ranked us at 56th ranked

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Canada 56th in happiness. Again, I roll but you know, that was exceptionally lower than

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their boomer counterparts was the point and that was evidenced in another section the RCMP

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aptly titled popular resentment. They go and say, the coming period of recession will accelerate

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the decline in living standards that the younger generations have already witnessed compared

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to earlier generations. Meaning we can see that there was a certain level of living standard

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and it is declining and rapidly declining without any hope for it turning around. And this decline

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in living standards, they say, will be exasperated by the fact that the difference between the

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extremes of wealth is greater now in developed countries than it has been any time in several

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generations. I'm sure we were all meant to read that report in the end, and I can only imagine

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that folks that make decisions read it long before us. I see real promise in that report

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that might sound strange, but I guess not if you've been listening, right? We also do a

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podcast called Blueprints of Disruption. And to know that people are getting to a point

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where they might be willing to risk a little bit more or at least understand their power

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and the need to push back and a sense of urgency. We always wanted to talk about how it wouldn't

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take. getting to a certain point, right? So we wouldn't have to experience such oppression

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and turmoil in order to fight back, that we could perhaps look at other examples before

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we got to that point. But I think the reality is, people do need to experience more people.

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It has to be a critical mass of kind of lived experience of poverty and oppression in order

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to convince people that the systems are not working for them. And we're seeing this. And

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Trudeau thinks he can address this generational economic gap with these measly measures. He

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is largely underestimating the same youth he's appealing to. He's underestimating their ability

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to recognize this for what it is. And the RCMP are predicting civil unrest from it all. Thankfully,

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you know, we are actually seeing this play out in real time with things like rent strikes,

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clashes with police. and a breakdown of trust in the systems they need us to believe in order

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to better control us. So not only have the police cracked down in response to this, but their

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authority over us is eroding. The tighter the fist, the more that falls through and the more

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they show their violence and illegitimacy, the more people resent their place of power. It's

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why their budgets are up too. They know what's coming. But it's the left's job to make sure

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that all of that action is directed in the right way, that we're pointing up. Because if the

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conservatives are able to harness this angst that the RCMP can even smell, then that's not

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going to be good. And it's going to take measures that go far beyond any kind of renter's bill

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of rights to tame that. Because we know the ultimate goal of the liberals is not actually

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to address the economic gaps that exist. They are there to exasperate it. They are here for

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wealth accumulation, but they are also here to maintain the systems. And the systems won't

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continue to exist if the imbalance is too great. And they know this. It's this dancing game.

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And so just like Keynesian politics where... Some concessions are made and implementations

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are made by the capitalist class, but they're not really. They're not really. They usually

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chain us even more so. And that's exactly what this legislation aims to do. Much of it isn't

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even legislation yet. And so the liberals in true liberal fashion package something up real

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pretty, and they're selling it to Canadians as a solution to their problems. In the end,

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the only way to properly secure tenant rights in the way that would address the power imbalance

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that exists, you know, short of seizing the means of production and ending private property

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is tenant organizing. That means organizations like the York Southwest and Tenants Union,

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like Acorn Canada, they have branches right across the country. I will link you to these

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people in the show notes, but this is not an exhaustive list. One, because I don't know

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everybody doing everything. And two, because you have not yet created the connections yet.

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This is a growing trend. More and more people are starting to build communities within their

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apartment buildings, within their streets, within the networks of buildings and units owned by

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the same corporation. So you may not have a tenant union in your building, but I bet the

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big company... that owns your building has pissed off enough people that they've come together

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in some sort of capacity to push back. If they haven't, that's what you need to do. I've said

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it a few times. I'll say it again. I truly believe tenant and community organizing holds the key

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to the political revolution we need. Have a great day. That is a wrap on another episode

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of Blueprints of Disruption. Thank you for joining us. Also, a very big thank you to the producer

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of our show, Santiago Helu-Quintero. Blueprints of Disruption is an independent production

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operated cooperatively. You can follow us on Twitter at BPofDisruption. If you'd like to

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help us continue disrupting the status quo, please share our content. And if you have the

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means, consider becoming a patron. Not only does our support come from the progressive

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community, so does our content. So reach out to us and let us know what or who we should

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be amplifying. So until next time, keep disrupting.