SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : Beat The Street With SI Traders -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stuffbug who wrote (233772)10/29/2025 12:14:16 PM
From: longz1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Rocket Red

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 233783
 
Grok says other wise===>> THANKS ELON!
No this statement is not true—it's a common misconception rooted in a misunderstanding of property ownership, mortgages, and legal title.Here’s the truth in clear point form:
  • Legal ownership begins at purchase: When you buy a home (even with a mortgage), you receive legal title to the property. You are the owner from day one.
  • Mortgage = a loan secured by the property, not co-ownership by the bank. The lender has a link (a legal claim) on the property until the loan is paid off, but you still own it.
  • You have full rights of ownership:
    • You can live in it, rent it, renovate it, or sell it (subject to paying off the mortgage at sale).
    • You pay property taxes, insurance, and maintenance—not the bank.
    • You benefit from any increase in value.
  • "Never really owned" is false rhetoric: Saying someone doesn’t "really" own their home until the mortgage is paid is like saying you don’t "really" own your car if you’re still making car payments. Legally and practically, you do.
  • 50-year mortgage myth: Almost no one has a 50-year mortgage. Even 30-year terms are long. After 50 years, the mortgage is long paid off unless refinanced multiple times or payments were deferred (rare).
  • Allodial title vs. fee simple: In Canada and most common-law countries, true "allodial" (absolute) ownership doesn’t exist for private citizens—land is held in fee simple, subject to government laws (taxes, zoning, eminent domain). But this applies whether you have a mortgage or not.
Bottom line:
Yes, he legally and fully owns his home—mortgage or not.
The mortgage is debt, not shared ownership.
Once paid off, the lien is removed—but ownership was real the whole time.

The idea that "you don’t own it until it’s paid off" is emotionally charged but legally false.



To: stuffbug who wrote (233772)10/29/2025 4:09:20 PM
From: VisionsOfSugarplums  Respond to of 233783
 
aptnnews.ca

No surprise the banks are quick to make things difficult though, instead of working with the landholder, maybe they'll pick up his property cheap...