I'm not, but I wish you continued success. It's the knocking people down to bring them up that I disagree with. That's the kind I'm referring to, and whom Tom Vu exemplifies, "
look at my success, if you work like me, you too can have this, if you don't, you suck and deserve your fate," etc... all while exuding (and I'm not referring to you here) a whiff of scammery.
Housing in Canada needn't be a zero zum, win-loser game. The whole point of having a government is to ensure the people have services (infrastructure, education, healthcare, etc), safety, jobs, food and housing. If the federal/prov/municipal governments would do their job and manage the supply/demand of population growth to housing supply the affordability issue will begin to reduce. In 1998, at aged 27 my new wife and I bought a 5 bedroom semi-detached house in downtown Toronto for about $290K, equal to 4.5 X our combined $65k household pre-tax income. That was 25 years ago, times change, but it shouldn't be that in 2023 the same 27 year old couple making a combined $120k pre-tax (that's 45% above the average
Ontario household income of $80k) now need 10 to 15 X their household income to afford anything but a condo.
We can't have government and industry screw up the housing market through mismanagement of supply/demand and then tell the next generation of young adults to just work harder.