Because you might get mad at some Karen and nuke a town!Well. Also. If you can own nuclear weapons safely, why not?
You're correct, to a point. However, with the example given, there is no real, honest way to justify another person or group of people having more freedom to pick the color of a neighbor's house than that neighbor does. IMO, freedom ends at the property line. Seeking to control a property that doesn't actually belong to you is hardly different than trespassing in my opinion. Forming a group of similar minded individuals and wrapping it in the trappings of an officialdom with an HOA doesn't lessen the trespass either. Also, while garish paint schemes, maintenance, etc. may be the reasons given for the formation of an HOA, it never ends there. There is always mission expansion as some members discover that they enjoy the control. "The issue is never the issue, the issue is always control."“butt” when you cause others issue with your actions in some fashion you are going outside the lines.
My freedoms stop where yours start. Easy to twist this up and yes I get it’s but I would never do this to my neighbors.
Just because you “CAN” does not mean it’s OK to **** up every one else.
this can be discussed in both sides of the fence. Kind of iffy.
You're correct, to a point. However, with the example given, there is no real, honest way to justify another person or group of people having more freedom to pick the color of a neighbor's house than that neighbor does. IMO, freedom ends at the property line. Seeking to control a property that doesn't actually belong to you is hardly different than trespassing in my opinion. Forming a group of similar minded individuals and wrapping it in the trappings of an officialdom with an HOA doesn't lessen the trespass either. Also, while garish paint schemes, maintenance, etc. may be the reasons given for the formation of an HOA, it never ends there. There is always mission expansion as some members discover that they enjoy the control. "The issue is never the issue, the issue is always control."
One should also know the covenants and bylaws backward and forward so as to flout and confound them at every turn while staying within the rules. Make holding the chains far more onerous than wearing them.Everyone who is subject to an HOA who doesn't like the HOA should run for a position on the board. It should be your life mission to neuter the HOA as much as possible for as long as you live in that neighborhood. Be an anti-Karen.
What most find when they get on the board is it is a thankless undertaking. They get the calls about those breaking the covenants from other property owners. They have to resolve disputes between homeowners. Most are not petty tyrants I have ever seen. That is why I said homeowners must get involved and keep the HOA what they want it to be.Everyone who is subject to an HOA who doesn't like the HOA should run for a position on the board. It should be your life mission to neuter the HOA as much as possible for as long as you live in that neighborhood.
Compared to the millions of HOA’s in this country the number of articles and first hand accounts is very low. If HOA’s were that big of an issue to folks Rafael Sanchez and his ilk would be all over it every day.In compliance with the thread title I tell @Ingomike HOAs are very awful. Many examples given in this thread.
I say again, HOAs are horrible.
No, HOAs are perfect in everyway, if it weren’t for them who would think of the children.In compliance with the thread title I tell @Ingomike HOAs are very awful. Many examples given in this thread.
I say again, HOAs are horrible.
So 51% Karens?What most find when they get on the board is it is a thankless undertaking. They get the calls about those breaking the covenants from other property owners. They have to resolve disputes between homeowners. Most are not petty tyrants I have ever seen. That is why I said homeowners must get involved and keep the HOA what they want it to be.
You know there are reasons for the covenants and the questions, the same people complaining about the trees that need cut are usually the one that are late paying or don’t pay their fees.I had a job in a run down part of Prestwick a few years ago, in Avon. I kid you not, I no sooner backed my dump trailer in this guys driveway and the HOA Karen showed up. Asking me if I planned to leave trailer overnight and what I was doing. I replied that I doubt it, I am building a deck, but then I asked who she was? She said she was the HOA President...imagine her shock when I then walked her to this guys back yard. I politely asked her where the HOA property started and the homeowners ended. She very quickly showed me where his new deck could not intrude and the property lines. I then asked her when they planned on having dead trees on HOA common property removed and start maintaining it? She asked what I meant? I then explained to her the homeowners' insurance company was requiring him to remove dead tree branches over his house, at a cost of $6000!
I told her he would be happy to know that it was an HOA maintenance issue and he can save $6000 since he now knows who owns the land. She was pissed. The homeowner ended up suing the HOA and forcing them to have the trees removed, and not just the few over his house......but all the dead trees that was dropping branches on his fence and property.
I just laughed....bet that nosey Karen wish she had minded her own business that day.
Ultimately signing the deed is signing the HOA agreement.If you sign an HOA agreement then you agreed to be bound by it. But I do think HOA’s should be limited in what it can require.
Lived in HOA neighborhoods for too long to remember. Truly never met what you call a Karen…So 51% Karens?
This is very true, when we moved in years ago we were told a lot of dont's by the builders rep on the property (no work trucks, no parking on the street, no hot tubs among a few things). As people moved in they were all told the same thing and it became accepted. We find out years later as the residents recently took ownership of the HOA that many things we were told really weren't in the covenants but just what the builder wanted to promote.One should also know the covenants and bylaws backward and forward so as to flout and confound them at every turn while staying within the rules. Make holding the chains far more onerous than wearing them.
They do that a lot. They print up HOA rules that are not actually in the covenants. Seen neighborhoods live years and years following the printed rules that were not actually covenants because of that printed list of rules. LOLThis is very true, when we moved in years ago we were told a lot of dont's by the builders rep on the property (no work trucks, no parking on the street, no hot tubs among a few things). As people moved in they were all told the same thing and it became accepted. We find out years later as the residents recently took ownership of the HOA that many things we were told really weren't in the covenants but just what the builder wanted to promote.