This is an interesting take on that Housing Bill that Trump is refusing to sign.
Hannibal999
@Hannibal9972485
You guys are being TRICKED and its all a LIE ‼️‼️this BILL does not ban corporate landlords. It protects them. It enforces an oligopoly.🚨🚨🚨
News says “The legislation bans institutional investors from buying new homes if they own 350 or more units.”⬅️⬅️
This is the trick 👌 Who owns 350 homes? Only the Big Guys (Blackstone, Invitation Homes, Progress Residential). These are the firms who already bought up the neighborhood.
Who is trying to buy 350 homes today? Small competitors (Private equity firms trying to expand, regional investors).
So by setting the cap at 350, the government has effectively banned any new competitors from entering the market to challenge the giants.
The “350 Club” has been sealed. Blackstone can keep the 50,000 homes they already own. They are safe. But if a new try-hard private equity firm wants to grow to 351 units to compete with them they can’t.
This is not a restriction; it is a License to Exist as a Monopoly. It freezes the current power structure in place. It prevents new Wall Street giants from destroying the old Wall Street giants. The incumbents wrote this rule to kill their future rivals.🚨🚨🚨🚨
2. BUILD-TO-RENT” LOOPHOLE: THE 7-YEAR EXECUTION
The bill creates an exception for “build-to-rent” projects.⚠️
This ensures there are only new homes built specifically for rent.”
An earlier version of the bill required these “build-to-rent” homes to be sold to individual homeowners after seven years. This was designed to eventually turn rentals back into owned homes.🚨🚨🚨
Congress removed the seven-year sell-by provision in the final bill.
Reality? 🚨🚨🚨
Wall Street can now build massive subdivisions of starter homes and rent them out forever. They never have to sell. They just got permission to become “Feudal Lords” on newly built land, instead of just buying up old neighborhoods. The government just incentivized the creation of permanent renter-classes on brand-new land.⚠️⚠️⚠️
—-
3. THE REGULATORY STRIP-MINE
The bill “streamlines environmental reviews” and expands the “Community Development Block Grant.”
The Hidden Intent?⚠️
This is the “Bribe to Big Business” hidden inside the populist packaging.
Developers have been blocked for years by water rights, zoning, and NEPA reviews.
• This bill weakens those barriers.
The Exchange: The “Left” gets to say they punished Wall Street (the 350-cap). The “Right” gives the Developers what they really want: the ability to bypass environmental laws and penalties to build cheap, fast houses without oversight.
🚨🚨🚨
——
4. THE “CBDC” STEALTH BAN
Section 1001 prohibits the Federal Reserve from creating a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) until 2030.🚨
The Logic ?
What does banning digital currency have to do with housing?
Nothing. It is a completely unrelated subject.
But The Hidden Driver?⚠️
The “Anti-CBDC” lobbyists used this massive housing bill as a “Must Pass” vehicle to kill digital currency surveillance.
Because If a digital dollar existed, the government could track every rent payment.
Hedge funds and landlords want privacy. They attached their pet project to the “Housing Relief” bill so no politician would dare vote against it.⚠️🚨
So By passing the “Housing Bill,” Trump also signed the death warrant for Fed-issued cryptocurrency. The “Housing” title was a disguise for a financial coup against the Treasury.🚨
WHO WINS?
The Loser:
• New Startups: Private equity firms trying to enter the market are killed by the 350 cap.
• The Renters: They face a permanent future where “build-to-rent” is the norm because the law incentivizes corporations to build rental empires rather than sell to families.
@RepThomasMassie
bipartisanpolicy.org/explainer/what…
forbes.com/sites/zacharyf…
cnbc.com/2026/06/22/aff…
https://x.com/Hannibal9972485/status/2069641861942128691
Hannibal999
@Hannibal9972485
Replying to @Hannibal9972485
The Winner:
• The Incumbents (The 350 Club): Blackstone and its ilk.
• They get to keep their 50,000-home portfolios (protected by the ban on new entrants).
• They get to build new empires without selling (the build-to-rent loophole).
• They get to build faster without environmental reviews (streamlined regulation).
THE TRUTH:
This is not a bill to stop corporate landlords. It is a bill to stop new corporate landlords from challenging the old ones. It is a government-sanctioned cartel act signed into law under the disguise of “affordability.”
4:41 AM · Jun 24, 2026
https://x.com/Hannibal9972485/status/2069641989289615504
Hannibal999
@Hannibal9972485
Replying to @Hannibal9972485
The bill has an exception. If a corporation builds new homes specifically to rent them, the 350-cap does not apply.
An earlier version of the bill said these newly built rental homes had to be sold to individual families after seven years. Congress removed that requirement.
That means a corporation can now build 5,000 new homes, rent them out, and never sell them. Ever. The law just created a permanent pathway for corporations to build entire cities of renter-occupied housing with no obligation to ever let families buy them.
The politicians told you this bill helps families buy homes. The bill actually guarantees that new subdivisions can be owned by corporations forever.
4:48 AM · Jun 24, 2026
https://x.com/Hannibal9972485/status/2069643837878800672
Hannibal999
@Hannibal9972485
Replying to @Hannibal9972485
The bill says no corporation can own more than 350 single-family homes.
Here is the problem. The corporations that already own 10,000, 20,000, or 50,000 homes get to keep them. The law does not force them to sell. It only stops future buying.
That means Blackstone, Invitation Homes, and Progress Residential are locked in as the permanent owners of the rental market. No new competitor can ever grow large enough to challenge them because the law caps growth at 350.
4:59 AM · Jun 24, 2026
https://x.com/Hannibal9972485/status/2069646524963803162
Hannibal999
@Hannibal9972485
Replying to @Hannibal9972485
The bill expands manufactured housing production.
Manufactured housing is mobile homes and factory-built homes. These are the cheapest form of housing in America. The bill is not expanding luxury home construction. It is expanding the cheapest possible housing stock.
That tells you the real plan. The government is not trying to build middle-class neighborhoods. They are building cheap, mass-produced housing for a population that can no longer afford traditional homes. The standard of living is being lowered, and the bill calls it “affordability.”
And the bill permanently authorizes a major disaster recovery program.
This sounds like help for hurricane victims. But permanent authorization means the government expects disasters to keep happening at a frequency that requires a permanent federal program. They are not planning to prevent disasters. They are planning to manage them permanently.
5:02 AM · Jun 24, 2026
https://x.com/Hannibal9972485/status/2069647264247652623
Just some food for thought. Brings up points.