Despicable vehemently anti-landlord Guardian article

Despicable vehemently anti-landlord Guardian article

8:42 AM, 17th April 2018, About 6 years ago 94

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The Guardian has sunk to new lows this week with the publication of the most vehemently anti-landlord article, by Rhik Samadder (such an expert in the field that none of us have ever heard of him), that I have ever seen published by a national newspaper. The title alone is shocking:

‘Landlords are social parasites. They’re the last people we should be honouring.’

It then goes from bad to worse, when Samadder declares that:

‘Most buy-to-let opportunists make their tenants’ lives hell – giving them a prize is like giving Stalin a humanitarian award.’
He might think he’s being funny but my question is: Since when was it okay to compare an entire occupational group to an evil communist dictator who was responsible for the deaths of around 20 million of his own people and decades of misery under communism? How can a mainstream British newspaper publish such a disgusting claim?

The role of the private rented sector in supplying and servicing essential accommodation for millions of mobile workers, young professionals, students, migrants, families, the low-paid and those on benefits – amongst other things, filling the gap left by successive governments’ sell-off of council housing and also forming part of the economy’s critical infrastructure – is ignored. Other simple, sober facts, such as that tenants in the private sector express greater satisfaction with their properties than those in the social sector, are invisible in this narrative.

Instead, we get:

‘The fact is, they’re all rogue. Whether your landlord is a genial profiteer or an actual psychopath is the luck of the draw.’

The dictionary defines ‘psychopath‘ as: ‘a person suffering from chronic mental disorder with abnormal or violent social behaviour.’

I would like to see Samadder’s evidence for this assertion. If he hasn’t got any, then he can withdraw the comment and apologise.

As for his claim that landlords are ‘social parasites’ because they make a living out of renting out housing, the clear implication is that landlords should not be allowed to make any profit from their businesses because housing is a human necessity. Why, then, is the author not saying that all supermarket owners and share-holders are parasites, as they are making money out of people’s need to eat? Presumably, the journalist accepts no money for his work either and lives on fresh air. Perhaps he also thinks that writing hate-filled diatribes is more productive than providing a roof over people’s heads.

He further shows his ignorance, when he mentions the termination of short-term contracts as the main cause of homelessness. As I have to repeat practically every month ad nauseum to various ill-informed people, this is patent nonsense. It is the private rented sector which provides this housing in the first place. What’s more, landlords – unless they are supremely stupid – don’t evict for no reason – the most common reason is arrears and damage.

It is pure tautology then to say that the loss of the home ‘caused’ the homelessness. When an employee loses his job for stealing, who caused the loss of the job; the employer or employee?

He then mentions ‘revenge evictions.’ I believe these were a very rare occurrence in the past and have now also been outlawed, so why is he suggesting that they are still a problem, when tenants have legal protection against them? Perhaps he didn’t mention it because he doesn’t know about it; so-called journalists who do a tiny bit of research on a complicated subject often think that makes them an expert on it.

The next part is completely off the scale of the decency and objectivity which one would expect to find in a national newspaper:

‘Just sit on a damp mattress and cough up the cash. All so they can keep expanding, squatting over lives like feudal incubi. If you’re one of these people, you can shove your property portfolio up your arse.’

Incubi are evil spirits ‘supposed to descend upon and have sexual intercourse with women as they sleep.’

It is hard to know how to take this dreadful and libelous condemnation of our profession. The Guardian’s readership has been shrinking over recent years, with it standing at about a tenth of that of the Daily Mail – so they may be deliberately publishing hugely offensive material in a last-ditch attempt to gain more readers. But that’s still no excuse.

Needless to say, landlords have been completely taken aback and been commenting on social media about this. Landlord Owen O’Neill said of the author ‘He does seem to have a lot of opinions supported by no facts and an axe to grind. And if you swapped ‘landlord’ for any religion it would be hate speech and he’d be in prison.’ Another landlord, Terri Nash: called it a ‘totally disgraceful article’.

Yet another said:

‘Isn’t it strange that it’s OK for this person to label every landlord a parasite. I assume using his logic it’s also OK to brand every Muslim a terrorist, Every Black person a gang member, everyone from Ireland a thieving gypsy. I wonder what would happen if he published that.’

There is a more general issue which this article throws up and that is the implications of wholesale condemnation of occupational groups. This is not a new phenomenon; groups targeted in this way over the years have included: traffic wardens, bankers, teachers, social workers, MPs, estate agents and so on. And whilst groups with ‘protected characteristics,’ such as women and/or black people are able to take legal action when faced with such discriminatory attacks, occupational groups have no such protection.

If this hate writing is allowed to continue, it is only a matter of time before it leads to outright physical attacks on landlords; indeed, it is implicitly an incitement to violence.

One can speculate on the motivation for such vehement anti-landlord sentiment, of course and one landlord hit the nail on the head when he said:

‘He probably missed the boat and is upset that he isn’t a landlord.’

It is a given in psychology that hatred is often fueled by jealousy.

Nevertheless, regardless of his perverse and personal motives for making this attack, it is dangerous and as such I say to the editor of the Guardian: If any landlords are physically targeted after the publication of these articles, then the blame will lie squarely with yourselves for stigmatising a whole occupational group. I am also sure landlords will fund a legal case for anyone affected to bring those who incite such violence to justice.


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Comments

10:11 AM, 21st April 2018, About 6 years ago

One of my tenants posted on social media she had the best landlord in the world. I send them all a Thorntons hamper annually. They love it. Costs me very little makes them feel like we care, which we really do.

Dennis Leverett

10:29 AM, 21st April 2018, About 6 years ago

Quite frankly guys and girls I wouldn't give him the pleasure of knowing he's wound us up. I was very angry for about one minute but only other idiots would take him seriously. Ignoring him totally would seriously upset him. My tenants are more than happy and that's all that matters. He's the parasite not us. Don't give him time or satisfaction, tough I know.

Jamie M

11:23 AM, 21st April 2018, About 6 years ago

Re “giving him satisfaction”
It’s a daily activity to bash landlords and we are becoming ever more ridiculed and blamed for a plethora of evils. So much so that the mob within the govt, charities, councils et al know it’s open season and we are defenceless and have no leadership to fight our corner. Doing nothing is the last thing we should be doing.

Dennis Leverett

11:51 AM, 21st April 2018, About 6 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Jamie M at 21/04/2018 - 11:23
I agree with you mostly, but not this one, it's to ridiculous for words. I would love to meet him personally for a "proper discussion". He is a very, very sad person and I actually feel sorry for him, he desperately needs help with his mental health. I can imagine Corbyn rubbing his hands together in a jointly disillusioned way. I'm sorry but I can't just take him or anything the Guardian says seriously.

rob david

15:12 PM, 21st April 2018, About 6 years ago

The irony - communist Corbyn supporting Gardian - Starlin.

rob david

15:13 PM, 21st April 2018, About 6 years ago

The irony - communist Corbyn supporting Gardian - Starlin. Make yer mind up !

Mark Leach

20:27 PM, 21st April 2018, About 6 years ago

There's only one way to deal with this crap journalism and scum reporters like Sammader, don't buy the Guardian news rag it's a traitorous paper anyway and supports giving our secrets the those that wish us harm. Don't support them by buying there paper then they will not exist. They are already have the begging bowl out due to lack of sales.

Mandy Thomson

15:58 PM, 22nd April 2018, About 6 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Yvonne Francis at 19/04/2018 - 12:27
Sorry, I just couldn't resist, so I've written a rebuttal of Samadder's "piece" putting the case against journalists. Just like in his article, I have not acknowledged any good done by members of his profession whatsoever"

The British Journalism awards will be announced on 10 December this year, bestowed by the Press Gazette. Journalism often gets a bad rap, so says Boise Weekly, The Guardian, Granite Bay Today, The Independent, The Huffington Post, The Observer, The Columbia Journalism Review, CNN and the world and his dog. Jounalism and journalists in particular clearly deserve a much worse rap.

When journalists are themselves in the news, you already know the story. When fat cat journalists drag THEIR sorry arses into Parliament, it’s not only to answer for the failings of their profession in general, but their personal failings.
This includes but is not limited to gross intrusion into people’s personal lives, trial by media, false allegations in general, sexist, racist and anti Semitic “reporting” plus countless other slurs and unfounded, biased and unevidenced slurs against whatever group or individual has happened to offend the little darlings at the time, especially when Editor is on their case to produce a story by the deadline. All this so they can scrounge their undeserved “pay” for the misery they inflict on their victims.

So who will be the journalist of the year? Someone who actually takes the time to back their story up with facts and evidence, although I know it’s too much ask that those facts won’t be misrepresented to backup the writer’s viewpoint and the facts that support the opposing or even a neutral viewpoint will be buried or ignored altogether. Will it be a journalist who simply uses subtly coded terms to put members of groups they dislike in their “place” (for example, “flamboyant North London Businessman” to denigrate a successful businessman because he is Jewish or “blonde” as code for air headed bimbo), as opposed to total gutter “Opinion” based “journalism”?

So what is meant by a “good” journalist? Someone who isn’t Katie Hopkins? If you are an old school journalist doing factual reporting for a small local paper, I’m sure you’re fine, but it’s the journalists and reporters (the vast majority) who put a juicy story ahead of the truth who are the real vampires, as countless victims, including several parents of missing children found to their cost; the Princess of Wales paying the ultimate cost. These people are so profit driven they have completely lost all sense of humanity and compassion, assuming they had any in the first place.

The notion of journalism as a money spinning machine has completely killed off any sense of journalist integrity, with fair but boring factual reporting replaced by opinion driven, spin riddled garbage, and particularly in the Guardian, a newspaper that purports to be a quality broadsheet, but is in fact the worst of the tabloids which pitches for inexperienced and ill informed young readers, and acts as a platform for extremists who support anti Semitism and communism.

Journalists: get a proper job.

Dr Rosalind Beck

16:09 PM, 22nd April 2018, About 6 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Mandy Thomson at 22/04/2018 - 15:58
Well done, Mandy. If you do a word count of Samadder's article and make sure yours is simIlar, you could send this to the Guardian, explaining how it is inspired by Samadder's piece and asking if they will be brave enough to publish your 'opinion' as they did his. You never know. If they don't then that is another mark against them.

Mandy Thomson

16:29 PM, 22nd April 2018, About 6 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Dr Rosalind Beck at 22/04/2018 - 16:09
Sorry, Ros - even I couldn't match it for word (or should that be something that rhymes with "word" 🙂 ) count as unlike Mr Samadder I have a life to get on with and also unlike him, it's not my "job" and I'm not paid for it but I believe I have countered everything he said using fewer words.

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