Cavemonster
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 28, 2008
- Messages
- 6,701
Once the landlord/tenant contracts have been entered into, the landlord has no right to unilaterally change the terms.
He can if a process for changing the terms is stipulated in the contract itself and that process is followed.
He can not arbitrarily change the rents, the rules of the apartments or the trade stands. If a landlord or tenant wants changes to an existing contract, they need to negotiate then sign off on the changes. If the negotiations are not successful then the existing contract stands.
We have all kinds of contracts that allow for terms to be changed without a new contact being signed. As long as both parties agree to the process, the contract is valid.
Children born in the complex have no obligation to the landlord - they are solely the responsibility of their parents. When a child reaches the age of majority the landlord would have to negotiate a separate set of contracts with that child if it is his hope that the child will remain in the complex.
What's this "negotiate"? In the majority of businesses in America, there is no haggling. If you want a MacDonald's hamburger you don't negotiate a new contract, you either engage in the standard contract they offer, or you get your hamburger somewhere else.
Similarly, if a child does not want to sign the standard apartment lease, he can move out. If you don't want to abide by the laws of this country, you can leave. In what way are the situations not analogous? In what way are they coercive?
Contrast this with government. Governments constantly make up new rules (laws) or change existing laws (if they weren't constantly fiddling with the laws then we wouldn't need so many politicians). Governments are constantly making up new taxes and changing existing taxes - all despite what the public thinks about it. If anybody doesn't like it then the politicians sneer and say, "so what are you going to do about it? Vote for the other mob?"
Again, when you agree to live in this country, you agree that the terms may be changed by a certain process. You can leave the country whenever you want, which is much more freedom than you have with an apartment lease.
And if you think the government has no right to tell you how to raise your children, try doing something innocent like home-schooling them (that's right - you can only home school your children if the government lets you and then only if they approve of your curriculum). Government actually tend to believe that they own your children. If they don't like the way you are raising your children (or you are a thorn in their side in some other way) then they will take your children off you and put them in some institution that will do the job properly.
If you don't like any of the terms of living in the apartment building, you can move out.