Because getting permission to live there is arguibly harder than becoming rich.
I followed PewDiePie and even for him it took massive effort and many years.
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Because getting permission to live there is arguibly harder than becoming rich.
I followed PewDiePie and even for him it took massive effort and many years.
I'm an atheist, ghosts scare me about as much as gods do. I would use the money I spend on rent now to build a geodesic dome house. They are easy to build. Put some solar panels on it and get grid electricity for backup. If there's a house, there is probably a well on the property already. I have permanent residency in Japan. I don't care if the neighbors are racist assholes. I don't interact with my neighbors in Tokyo; I wouldn't interact with the neighbors there either. Where can I find more houses like this? I want one.
https://www.akiya-mart.com/explore
Let us know if you end up doing something like this, I'm sure I'm not the only one who would be interested in how it turns out.
Because you have to pay taxes including the very incredibly expensive purchase tax and annual property tax. And you lack a visa.
The Japanese government and culture hates foreigner. Unless you or your parents have Japanese citizenship, you're going to have a hard time.
My experience as a tourist with Japanese friends...
Foreigners (like me) have a chip on our shoulders. That whole attitude of "Well guess they don't want my money" isn't really big there. Outside of Tokyo, foreigners get kicked out of places all the time. Often it's done politely to avoid embarrassment.
And a foreigner swinging around cash going, "Why can't I buy this" will quickly get a polite "It is not our way as Japanese", which really means "fuck off".
Yeah, it's probably the sense of entitlement. Be respectful and you won't have issues.
Because Japanese visa will never allow for you to live there
You can get 180 days total per year in two sets of 90 so to live in this house you'd have to:
This is no way sustainable not to mention as a tourist you wouldn't have access to anything that requires full residency which is very complicated.
You can get long term visa like education or business investment or work permit etc but those are really expensive and can be very hard to get.
If you think it's a good deal, You could've bought one in Detroit for $1
Well spank my monkey.
There's a 4bd, 2bath with 2500sqft for nearing the price of the shed in Ops picture. https://www.zillow.com/detroit-mi/under-10000
That's a 3.5k shed with no utilities is probably why. Running power, gas and plumbing to that place would cost more than a town of houses.
A lot of homeless people would love for there to be more "sheds" on the market. US citizens just seem to think it's better to have no home at all, than one that isn't up to snuff, so they make sure cheap sheds are not up to code.
I highly doubt homeless people would want this home, based largely on location. Getting between there and town would suck...
Yeah squatters are so picky. Not much is better than pavement and fresh air.
What they need is housing in urban or suburban areas, not abandoned structures in the middle of nowhere.
No apparently what they need is absolutely nothing. Because that's what you wise motherfuckers have concluded they should have.