Financing double garage after completion of single-family house

  • Erstellt am 2021-02-12 08:36:19

ypg

2021-02-13 00:49:18
  • #1

Sure... your own doorstep doesn’t count anymore either. People only compare upwards now - "if ‘they’ can’t manage it, I don’t have to do anything either - I’ll take what I’m entitled to. I stopped thinking a long time ago."
And next year people will get upset between the monthly construction child benefit payments that taxes are being raised.
No one ever takes the initiative and refrains, right? ... Oldtimer... tzzz....
 

icandoit

2021-02-13 07:46:59
  • #2

In home construction, that is called monument protection.
 

HilfeHilfe

2021-02-13 07:47:26
  • #3
Well, come on. You certainly took everything you could. Who refuses gifted money because it is spent misguidedly. And the vintage car was inherited as I understand it. There is always a little envy debate here.
 

ypg

2021-02-13 09:59:22
  • #4
Not everything. And yes, we really needed it ;) It went straight into the house. You really can’t accuse me of envy.
 

BackSteinGotik

2021-02-13 11:20:59
  • #5
And now the house is located in a metropolitan region and has gained considerable value. A couple in a comparable situation to yours today - certainly no chance, right? Both financially and in terms of building regulations - new development areas are almost like the new Castor transports. Are you ready to financially erode your virtual profit through significantly higher property taxes so that your present-day alter ego can still achieve what you did?
 

rdwlnts

2021-02-13 12:06:04
  • #6
If it’s not envy, then what is it? Malice? The OP clearly wrote that he has no money for a garage. Who then claims that it’s about greed and more and more possessing? An inheritance also has an emotional value and a classic car doesn’t have to be worth much. No idea how anyone can derive an accusation from that. It’s simply a blatant assumption that the classic car is valuable, that the OP doesn’t really care, that it’s easily sellable, etc., and therefore he would have no right to anything even though the law says otherwise. Hence envy.
 
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