Mobile homes an American thing?

It keeps you mobile- doesn't tie you down- they're less expensive and minimalist-

it's not as bad as some people insist-

it could be seen as adapting- we (and other species as well as the planet) have been doing it since forever-
 
The tradition of owning a home is growing diverse as are lifestyles. Not a bad thing in any way.
 
That’s why we are working on small, portable systems that a person can own, and not be depenbdent on any real-estate pimp, includikng the cocksucker known as a “landlord.” Democrat violence leaves Homo sapiens (nowhere to be [italics], outside of the protection-racket shelters of organized religion. Screw the Pimp.
 
What kind of a mobile home do you mean? It sounds like you really mean an RV. Technically, a mobile home isn't really very mobile at all. I know of some that are two story.
 
More and more people are buying trailers and travelling upon retirement. It's probably great being free, having no roots.
 
#7: When you’re told to move, you’ll be leaving that reasoning behind. Chief Seattle. Was he white or Indian?
 
“Having no roots” is a different concept than screwing the Pimp because you refuse to give money to a cocksucker that charges you to (inhabit space [italics]).
 
Matthew Desmond said “Home ownership is a profoundly American idea.” (Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City)
 
Just watching a docu camping in the Arizona desert they sell their house to do that opinions?

In Europe they are more commonly known as "caravans" but the lifestyle is just as common there as it is in America. I live in a manufactured home that is NOT an RV or trailer. It was built in another location but delivered to the property I own in a beautiful California beach town. From here it will never move again, eventually, someone will choose to replace it. Some of the homes in this park are 50 years old. Ours is 14 years old and looks almost like it is brand new. These homes are considered to be better construction than standard homes because everything is pre-designed and pre-cut to perfect dimensions to be assembled by professionals who do the same job for years.

We have Cable TV, high-speed Internet, AC, gas heat, washer/dryer, 2 big-screen TVs, dishwasher, side by side fridge, etc. Our park is a "condo-like" organization where we own our land and homes and hence do not pay rent. Our total monthly cost to live here is usually around $500 and that includes Cable TV, Internet, electricity, gas, and water. The actual HOA fee is part of that $500 (about $200) and that covers the groundskeeping; pool, jacuzzi, clubhouse, and more. We are 10 minutes from the beach and live in one of the nicest cities in San Diego county.
 
American tiny homes will evolve, as will micro-mobility. Badger’s micro-studio pulls behind an ebike. The system is equipped with solar panels for recharging, either stopped or on the go. The micro-studio unfolds into a quasi-geodesic form, because the frame is (hinged [italics]). This system can also be placed in a storage unit at night, locked safe from marauding baboons, and has its own forced-air heating system.
 
P.S. Anti-baboon facilities of the future for micro-mobility will have multiple tiny-home villages, recharging stations with security cams, and will help to evolve America’s first EV interstate which includes ebikes. The recharging stations on the EV interstate, equipped with solar panels, will vend pre-charged, standardized batteries that fit most EVs, so there will not be much waiting, as in traditional filling stations.

In this way, the real estate pimp will become obsolete, because the money that once went for the inhabiting of the pimp’s space will be used for the (appreciating [italics]) equity in the substance, that is to say, the owner’s own structure.
 

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