From affording a house to hardly affording to rent. What went wrong?

This picture sums up the struggle of many:

The few who are still able to purchase property have to pay a hefty loan for the rest of their lives. Then you die, and what would you have done for all your entire life? You would have paid a loan for a house, which now you are leaving behind. Actually, you were not paying a loan. You were being robbed by banks whose loan system reminds me of the Jewish money lender in Shakespeare’s comic-tragedy, ‘The Merchant of Venice’, Shylock. Shylock was Jewish, and he used to earn his living by lending money but charging a lot of interest on the amount lent.

But what did go wrong in the property industry for the working class and the middle class?

There was the removal of the Bretton Woods Agreement that destroyed our currency, which is getting adequately raped by politicians. The Bretton Woods Agreement and System created a collective international currency exchange regime that lasted from the mid-1940s to the early 1970s. The Bretton Woods System required a currency peg to the U.S. dollar, which was in turn pegged to the price of gold.

Then we had globalization and uncontrollable immigration through the Kalergi plan.

We also had the destruction of monolithic societies, while those that imposed all the shit on us are enjoying ethno-nationalism and a homogenous society in their homeland.

Then we have the finance industry as a whole. This is a topic that is too vast to tackle, but it is part of the problem that is making it difficult for people to buy property.

Last but not least, we must point fingers at postmodern liberalism.

Many Maltese people have become third-country nationals in their own country. And the same is happening to other worldwide natives in their own homelands.

We thank globalism, capitalism, communism, and Zionism.

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