Transcript
TRCuH5nOY28 • The Harsh Truth About Mamdani's Housing Plan
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Kind: captions Language: en Let's now break down one of Mam Dani's proposals to make housing more affordable. >> We'll have to go beyond the market. We can establish community land trusts to gradually buy up housing on the private market and convert it to community ownership. >> Possibly go wrong. >> We can give tenants a right of first refusal to buy out their landlords when buildings go up for sale. And we can fully commit to a new era of social housing, ending subsidies for luxury housing development and using our wealth to build beautiful, highquality social housing projects. It's so easy to make terrible ideas sound good. The problem is it it really doesn't work out like this because you think that people are away other than they actually are and you're giving them this incredibly valuable thing. Some percentage of people are going to be like, "Oh my god, this is the first valuable thing I've ever had. I'm going to protect this with my life. It's going to be incredible." But that isn't going to be the normal response. They end up being crimeridden, terrible. They never go well. So, I know what people want to happen when you give people something for free, but it isn't what actually happens. And then they also forget that people won't create these things for free. And so, they think, well, we're just going to go take the money from the people that are already winning and then we're just going to give it to the people and it doesn't work. Is there a way to make it sustainable? Like, how? That's where I think a lot of people are like, "No, we have this money. If we just start from here, we can set it to be sustainable so we don't make the mistakes that happened in the past." What am I missing that that's not enough money to make it? >> You're going to hate the answer. The only reason that we have tax dollars in the first place is entrepreneurship. I want to let people sit with that for a second. There is nothing else. People think there's some other thing. There is no other thing. The reason the government has taxable revenue is because of entrepreneurs. Full stop. Period. End of story. An entrepreneur is somebody that looks at the world and sees problems and goes, I'm going to go solve that problem in a way where I do this incredible miracle. Even though I have to pay people to help me to build the thing, create the thing, provide the service, whatever, I'm good enough at problem solving that I can solve that problem in a way where the output of the system creates something more valuable than the inputs, the people working, the cost of the raw materials and all that. that is so hard to do that a vanishingly small number of humans are ever able to do it well. >> And society rides on the back of that, not 90%, it rides on the back of that 100%. Now, you've got a whole system that's predicated on a very simple idea that people despise. And that very simple idea is that you need a filter for who is able to add more value with their time than the next person. We call that filter money. Nice things go to the people that can afford it. These are the people that are able to exchange their time for more value than other people because humans despise at a cellular level inequality. They look at that and they get mad that there are people that are pulling ahead of them. I get it. People are going to look at me and say, "Well, yeah, but you're so rich." And I'll say I'm way closer to a homeless person than I am to Elon Musk in terms of wealth. I'm never going to be Elon Musk. I've had 50 years to to try and I haven't been able to do it. I'm not mad about that. I just go had I believed that I couldn't get better when I was younger, then I would still be the kid scrging into couch cushions to find change, to put gas in my car. But I believed, oh, this is totally my responsibility to get better. This is about a value exchange. I have to be able to create value with my time. Let me go acquire a bunch of skills because that's how you add more value for your time. If that were the message that people were pushing, I'd be like, "Yeah." So, people should be saying, "Oh, we broke the economy for reasons I've explained ad nauseium. We have done evil things to our economy that are putting kids behind the eightball." Unfortunately, that whole thing that I just said about value and it acting as a filter will never go away. You can look at history to find that that just is true. So the example that everybody wants to use is China. China said, "I don't want to keep starving my people to death." Okay? Ma dies and people go [ __ ] finally because this man was a tyrant who said he was giving things for free to people and all that, but what he was actually doing was starving them to death because he did not have a filter for who is able to add more value with their time. This is horrifying. We've killed approximately 45 million people. we want to immediately stop. How did they immediately stop? By introducing capitalism. I don't know how that's lost on people. Now, when capitalism is mutated, betrayed, whatever word you want to use by oligarchs or regulatory capture, that's terrible. The system that we have right now is evil. But it isn't evil because of capitalism. It's evil because people don't understand fiat money. Now once you actually understand how the system works, you stop being bamboozled by the headline to bring it all back around. When you do not have a filter for who can add value with their time and you just start giving things away to people for free, >> you don't have a way to incentivize the people to make the thing that you're giving away for free. So it's already trash. Then you don't have a way to say who gets it and who doesn't. So you're going to get a whole lot of lowest common denominator. And so inevitably you're going to get violence. You're going to get people that use might instead of intellect or trying to add value and it just becomes total chaos. You get the inner cities. And then if on top of all that you have a corrupt system which you will have by definition when it's an authoritarian system because what people do not understand is even when you're going to give things away for free. People will not agree on what things to give away, how to build the things to give away, who to give them away, where they should be put. They won't agree on any of that. So what you realize very quickly is, oh, I have to enforce compliance. And then to enforce the compliance, you pull out a gun. And then you realize, whoa, some people won't back off until I kill a few. And so then you start killing. And this is exactly how you end up with a dictatorship. And I think the perfect analogy of a dictatorship is it is like riding in a car without a seat belt. Everything is fine when you're driving smooth. When you get in an accident though, and the accident is that dictator breaks bad, everyone dies. We just have examples of this over and over and over and over and over and over and over. The one thing I need people to just recognize about human nature is you will never get people to agree on what free thing to give, >> who's going to get it, where to place it, who's going to build it, what materials to make it out of. How are you going to get them on the same page? You will get them on the same page with the threat of violence. That's why people say capitalism is the worst system except for all the other systems. Capitalism says, "I know I can trust you [ __ ] to be selfish and so go be selfish and I'm going to put a couple constraints because you will also go evil if I let you. And so I'm going to put borders on this so you can't go evil, but I'm going to let you be selfish." And when you let people be selfish, you yank people out of poverty so fast that you dislocate their shoulder. It's wild.