Some More News - SMN: Why Is Housing So Expensive?
Episode Date: January 25, 2023Hi. In today's episode, we look at the very simple but also impossibly complex causes of the U.S. housing crisis, and what we might be able to do about it. Sources: https://docs.g...oogle.com/document/d/1etS0yIDMGhfkAxK-A6mmpJfO1BKQc0v8sgAT6mQ3u6Y/edit?usp=sharing Please fill out our SURVEY: https://kastmedia.com/survey/ Support us on our PATREON: http://patreon.com/somemorenews Check out our MERCH STORE: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews?ref_id=9949 SUBSCRIBE to SOME MORE NEWS: https://tinyurl.com/ybfx89rh  Subscribe to the Even More News and SMN audio podcasts here: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/even-more-news Follow us on social media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenews Make CBD a part of reaching your full potential with NextEvo Naturals. Go to https://NextEvo.com/podcast and use promo code MORENEWS to get 20% off your first order of $40 or more.Support the show!: http://patreon.com.com/somemorenewsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Good golly, Miss Molly, it's news.
Some more of it to be exact and to be even more exact,
some more news about housing
and why it's like hard and rough out there
or rather in here in my home,
which if you've been paying attention
is now owned by Katie to whom I owe rent,
which she is garnishing from my wages and taunting me
by sending me actual garnish in the mail,
like parsley and stuff.
She's like Carrot Top, but sinister.
Anyway, here is some news.
If you live here in the United States of Molly, America,
you may be having the same problem.
It is becoming way too expensive
just to have a place to live and eat and make love.
Rents are through the roof
and about 36% of American households are rented.
So that means 36% of households
are through this aforementioned roof,
which probably has a bunch of leaks in it
that someone keeps saying
they will get around to fixing.
Things have gotten so bad that many renters
have resorted to costly bidding wars
just for the privilege of living in Joe's apartment.
Remember that film?
That came out in 1996, the same year rent
in New York's Upper East Side was averaging
at about $1,300 for a studio.
Hey, I wonder how much that would cost today.
Meanwhile, people who have saved up money
and felt like they were in a position to buy a home
are being shut out of the market
by sky-high home prices and mortgage rates.
Those who have managed to become first-time homebuyers
are statistically older than they have ever been
and make up only 26% of home buyers overall,
the lowest percentage on record.
And even those first time home buyers
are finding new problems once they move in,
in the form of electrical discharges,
flaming ovens, bathtub floor crashes,
and Tom Hanks laughing like a seal syndrome.
Oh, dang.
Remember that film from 1986 where Tom Hanks and Shelley Long
buy a so-called million dollar mansion for $200,000?
Fun fact, the actual $1 million house
they filmed that movie in
went on sale for $5.9 million back in 2018.
The point is, home renting and home buying
are both Steven Spielberg Presents the Money Pit situations.
Even as late 2022 saw prices start to finally cool off,
this was still a cooling off from record highs.
So it's kind of like being on the cool side of Venus,
a chilly heat.
So we're going to take a look at the housing market today.
Why costs are so high and what potential solutions
there might be to change that.
It's actually a very simple,
complex web of interconnected economic forces,
supply chains, profit incentives, and government regulations.
Sounds like a blast.
Why is housing so expensive?
I probably don't need to prove that housing is bad now,
but here are some numbers.
Between 2010 and 2019,
the average rent in the US increased by 36%,
while the median income only rose by 27%. This effect was
more pronounced in major cities. An average of 19 U.S. cities had a rent increase of more than 58%
during the 2010s, while median income increased only 39%. That disparity between income growth
and rent means that a higher share of renters are cost burdened, defined as when someone has to commit more than 30%
of their income to housing costs.
By the end of 2020, 46% of renters were cost burdened,
which meant they had less money to spend
on other essentials like food, healthcare, transportation,
and Blu-ray editions of Steven Spielberg
presents the money pit.
Again, these numbers are even worse in big cities. In Los Angeles, an estimated 73% of
renting households are cost burdened, and 48% spend more than half of their total income on
rent and utilities. And of course, black and brown communities tend to be hit harder by housing costs
than other races. Race, of course, being a fake thing we made up.
We should really just have a standing asterisk
across this entire episode.
Whatever I'm talking about,
it's safe to say that the situation is probably even worse
for black and brown people due to racism,
a system of oppression based on a fake thing
that we made up.
You will notice that those numbers are from before
the start of the pandemic,
which of course exacerbated this problem.
Even with all that wonderful stimulus that has so many of us living high on the hog,
nearly half of American workers in 2021 didn't earn enough money to rent the median one-bedroom
apartment.
Half.
And 14% of renters fell behind on rent payments during the pandemic, double the pre-pandemic rate, double.
This is likely a contributing factor to why,
in the first year of COVID,
the number of people moving increased.
Many of these people were out of work
and could no longer afford rent
and thus moved in with their parents or other family
or looked for something cheaper.
Others moved out of dense cities and into the suburbs
or to less populated states at higher rates than usual,
either to look for something more affordable
or potentially because they were able to work from home.
Maybe some of them were offered money in exchange
for spending a night in a haunted house.
We don't know for sure, but it's exciting to think about.
Regardless of the reason, this temporary increase
in movement pushed rents and home prices even higher.
But at least, you might say, at least people were protected
from eviction during the pandemic
because of the federal eviction moratorium.
You might say that because you forgot
that this country values the rights of landlords
more than the rights of people who'd rather not sleep in the rain. It happens. I forget stuff myself sometimes. That's
why I'm covered in reminder tattoos, brush teeth, eat teeth, et cetera. Just as a refresher though,
the Supreme Court struck down the CDC's moratorium on evictions in 2021. And landlords were still finding ways to evict people anyway,
often by citing a non-COVID related reason for doing so.
And remember the asterisk,
black and brown families were the most likely Americans
to be evicted.
So yeah, it's bad out there.
Unless you're literally stuck in the floor,
it's incredibly difficult to get real housing stability.
Landlords will just evict the floor too.
So hey, G's and crackers now, what the fuck happened?
Why were your parents or grandparents able
to buy a four bedroom house for a goat and a smile
while you're out here shelling out $2,600 a month
for the Harry Potter room under the stairs,
owl shit and all.
A major reason is one we've already mentioned,
that home prices and rents have both grown at higher rates than income over the past 60 years,
a trend which got worse in the first decade of this century.
But another reason is that the US government
used to actually help some prospective home buyers.
Some, it's a big word there.
Let's start with the New Deal. Not the Green New Deal when socialists try some prospective home buyers. Some is a big word there.
Let's start with the New Deal.
Not the green New Deal when socialists try
to make us gay Mary soy burgers, but the one before that.
During the Great Depression,
President Franklin Roosevelt and Congress
passed the National Housing Act of 1934,
which created the Federal Housing Administration
and provided insurance for the banking
and mortgage industry.
This was designed to slow down housing foreclosures
and encourage new construction.
In 1937, the government created
the United States Housing Authority,
which provided funds to bolster construction
in low-income neighborhoods,
resulting in hundreds of thousands of new units
in which tenants were only expected to pay half the rent.
Unfortunately, there was some uncomfortable language
in there which contributed to some of the problems
we still have today.
And by uncomfortable language, I of course mean racism.
Jeez, it's always racism with this country.
Heck, it's like Spectre in those Bond films.
And that's where the sum comes into play, you see.
It's from this era that we get the
process of redlining, whereby the homeowners loan corporation gave color-coded grades to
neighborhoods based on their risk for mortgage lenders. The public reasoning for this was to
give the banks and other lenders an incentive to get on board, to tell them that expansion of
homeownership wouldn't set them up for risky bets. Of course, the Federal Housing Administration
just assumed, racially, that places where black people lived
or lived near would have lower property values
and be risky bets.
And those were exactly the neighborhoods
which got the yellow, definitely declining,
and red, hazardous labels.
This trend continued after World War II
when the GI Bill pumped $95 billion
into programs for returning veterans,
but whose benefits like housing and business loans
were routinely denied to black service members.
The GI Bill, which President Bill Clinton called
the best deal ever made by Uncle Sam,
was actually deliberately designed to accommodate Jim Crow,
according to political scientist Ira Katznelson.
Also, sometimes when black and brown people
lived in desirable areas,
the local governments there would simply kick them out.
Like literally just make them leave.
This was the case with a piece of land
called Section 14 in Palm Springs, California.
From 1954 to 1966, when Palm Springs was emerging
as a popular vacation destination,
the city started mass evictions of black families.
People would often come home at night
to find their homes were gone,
as in bulldozed or burnt to the ground.
Can't stress it enough, they just fucking booted them out.
So again, some, the word some is very important
when talking about this era of housing.
But for much of white America,
New Deal programs were game changers,
creating a level of housing affordability
that allowed the suburbs to expand
and white home ownership to surge.
In 1947, President Truman signed legislation
capping rents at $80 a month
and new home prices at $10,000, which helped everyone,
but it was rescinded a few months later.
If only the strict cap had stayed in place
and those other federal benefits were applied to everyone
and not just white people,
this video might be a lot shorter
or heck, might even be about something else.
Like the Dilbert guy, that'd be fun, right?
Your tone implies you already know it wouldn't.
See, we're sorting through two issues here.
One is a state sponsored system of segregation
that institutionalized the idea that proximity
to people of color decreases property values.
And the other is a very real solution to housing
that sadly was only applied to white people.
But obviously those two ideas are intertwined.
It's very important to recognize how racist policies
result in negative outcomes for the majority of people,
regardless of race.
Not that white people should be anti-racist
only if they are personally affected for the love of God.
There's a whole other video we could do
about racist housing policies of old
and the very real ripple effect they cause today,
long after the practices were banned
because everything I've just said,
the red lining, the temporary surge of home construction,
the way we built and maintain our cities
sets the stage for the historic housing affordability crisis
happening right now.
And also it goes without saying that the good,
not racist parts of the new deal
are things we probably needed to continue doing.
Stuff like pumping billions into veteran support
and funding low income neighborhoods.
This is exactly why your grandparents could afford a house.
But again, we should more specifically say
your white grandparents, elder honkies,
stale crackers, et cetera.
But instead of making these advances less racist,
we just got rid of them.
And that's the problem.
We excluded certain people from great benefits
and then just got rid of the benefits for everyone
instead of making them more inclusive.
Because of course we did.
It's not surprising, but it's still disappointing.
Like every time Kevin Sorbo is trending.
Anyway, we're going to explore the simple, right?
Impossibly complex tangle of varying factors
that are currently making renting and buying homes
so expensive right now.
Right now, meaning after these ads,
which are happening right now. Right now, meaning after these ads, which are happening right now.
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So, given our troubled history of housing development,
what is driving housing costs to unprecedented levels at this moment?
One of the primary reasons, though not the only reason,
is the same reason that strawberries get more expensive
during a drought, supply and demand.
The supply of housing has simply not kept up
with the demand for it.
But the demand for housing, unlike strawberries,
is directly correlated with the number of people alive.
You don't need strawberries to live.
I mean, if you call that living.
But if you're alive, you absolutely need housing,
shelter, et cetera.
Supply hasn't kept up and demand is maybe artificially
higher than it needs to be.
We will get to that shortly.
The supply aspect goes back to the great recession
of the late 2000s, which was caused largely
by the collapse of the housing market. I mean, you could argue that the scary movie franchise switching
hands from the Wayans to David Zucker had something to do with it as well, but there's not as much
evidence of that. Anyway, not to re-litigate this subprime mortgage crisis, or litigate it,
I guess, for the first time since nobody ever went to jail for it. But decades of deregulation and a market
that encouraged the bundling and selling of subprime loans
led to a housing crisis and recession.
Basically, the price of houses inflated,
like an inflating sphere of some kind
because of loose standards for things like credit checks
and mortgage rates until that inflated sphere burst,
like some kind of, like a bursting sphere
that had been inflated.
Also, Brad Pitt's there, but he has weird hair.
Putting aside the dubious ethical actions
that allowed Wall Street executives
to put our economy in that position,
the market collapse and plummeting prices
spooked developers spooky.
This meant that many builders went out of business
and new home construction dropped off significantly
and it still hasn't caught up.
This is by the way, exactly what the Center for Economic
and Policy Research said would happen
in their housing bubble fact sheet paper from July, 2005.
So first of all, bubble is the word I was thinking of,
but also I guess a point, you know,
on the board for think tanks, I guess.
Just this once, the fallen home construction
understandably hampered supply right at a time
when a large cohort of Americans
of the millennial persuasion were graduating from college, getting jobs,
and might have, in another era,
been in the market to buy houses or condos or love shacks
or igloos, huts, or lean-tos or geodesic domes.
The Great Recession kind of fucked up the whole plan
for them for a few decades,
saddling them with lower incomes,
making them live with their parents,
and as a result, forcing them to watch just fucking
hours and hours of blue bloods.
That chart we just showed about home construction
ends at July, 2020.
And you can see a lot of volatility right there
at the beginning of the pandemic,
where construction plummeted
as the COVID-19 outbreak started.
And then bounced back in the summer
when everyone was like,
well, I guess we'll just keep doing stuff
even though people are dying.
Had that chart continued,
you'd see it continue to be volatile
as supply chain issues kept even adamant builders
from starting new projects.
The supply over the last 15 years essentially stagnated,
but the number of people didn't.
There are more than 26 million more people
in the United States than there were in 2009,
a mixture of both births outpacing deaths and immigration.
And to be clear, overpopulation is not the problem,
nor is the immigration the problem.
We just need to give people places to live.
And no, they can't and shouldn't all live
like Charlie Bucket's grandparents or the Beatles in Help.
So while the supply side of this problem
is difficult to address, it is pretty easy to identify.
Relatively low supply exists while there's high demand,
i.e. basic human need for shelter.
And that demand side of things
is where this all gets even more complicated
because it's not just that there are lots of people
looking for places to live.
Those aforementioned millennials
may have closed the income gap with prior generations,
but their parents overall still have way more wealth.
And though it's not a competition,
it's kind of a competition
because downsizing seniors have more money
to play around with
and are going to scoop up
the starter homes and two bedroom apartments
that are supposed to go to young people.
You know, hence the word starter home.
And while I'm sure a lot, if not most of you
couldn't actually give a half slice of a ghost's fart
about these poor people who are financially able
to consider buying a home,
it should be stressed that in our current system,
we should want people to buy homes if they're able to.
If they can't buy a home,
guess what they'll be doing instead?
They will be filling up the rental market,
using their wealth to afford more than most renters can
and pushing up the cost of rent,
which is what's happening right now.
So all of this stuff has kind of a,
what do you call it?
Like an effect where it trickles down,
but not in the good way where good things trickle down,
in the bad way where the thing trickling down is like,
it's pee and spittle and other unsolicited fluids.
Everyone is a notch lower than where they should be,
making the people at the very bottom homeless.
Demand is also being artificially pushed even higher
by a series of economic forces
that are largely speculative.
Again, demand in the economic sense is very high for housing
because shelter is not like an iPad.
In the hierarchy of needs,
it slots in right between food and sleep.
So we should want to avoid a situation
where housing is being intentionally withheld for profit.
Right?
Now, none of these things I'm about to talk about
are by themselves the cause of high housing costs,
but they add up.
The first is the phenomenon of landlords
intentionally keeping housing off the market. Vacancy rates well into the double digits housing costs, but they add up. The first is the phenomenon of landlords intentionally
keeping housing off the market. Vacancy rates well into the double digits in cities all across
the Bay Area, but not all landlords are willing to drop their rent prices to meet the demand.
It stings hard already and it's gonna sting harder the longer it goes.
Jeff Zell says turnover at his properties in Mountain View is constant. But if at all possible, Jeff and Jim won't drop the monthly rent.
The reasoning the landlords give here is that movement during the pandemic turned housing
briefly into a renter's market and that local rent control laws would force them to keep units below
prior monthly rents potentially for years. And I'm trying to have a response to that other than,
okay, oh wait, so what works too?
There's no requirement that investments
always have to provide a great return.
And property ownership,
if it's a home you're not going to personally be living in
is just that, an investment.
We saw lots of stories like this in 2020 and 2021,
the mom and pop landlords decrying the eviction moratorium
or other renter protections,
given that they didn't receive the same benefits.
But of course, it's incredibly dubious to describe rent
as a landlord's only source of income,
as it is not really income in the traditional sense
of the word
as no labor was exchanged to get it.
For landlords who turn hefty profits,
it's more like a dividend,
something you get to keep after expenses,
which for most landlords would be property taxes
and maintenance.
And of course that renter's market
dissipated shortly thereafter
and rents continued to break records.
But to defend these poor, small, helpless mom and pop
landlords for a moment, even this guy holding a sign
reading moratoriumism is discrimination
against property owners, why wouldn't they act this way?
Why wouldn't they be motivated to turn their investment
into as much money as they possibly can?
Goodwill toward their fellow human?
Who are they, Santa Claus?
I mean, this guy looks a little like him
if Santa only gave people typewriters for Christmas,
but come on now.
They've become property owners in a society
that values their ownership of property
more than it values people who earn a living
through actually working.
Hell, Steve Bannon even thinks they're the only ones
who should be allowed to vote.
And you've got to think a lot of people agree with him
and just aren't saying it.
You know, like those slave owners who founded the country.
The takeaway from this isn't that landlords are assholes.
It's that we've created a society where being an asshole
is highly incentivized,
which in turn makes a lot of landlords assholes.
Not all, I know some very nice landlords
who don't care about the lingering weed smell
or the lingering knee smell,
but a lot of them are assholes,
even the ones being discriminated against.
No justice, no bleeps.
Fortunately for these, it says here assholes,
it's really hard to get solid data
on how many units nationwide
are being kept intentionally empty.
A 2019 report from San Francisco's
Budget and Legislative Analyst's Office
estimated that 10% of all housing stock
in the city was vacant.
But some of these might be for good reasons,
like renovations, or if the unit has
been rented but the new tenant hasn't moved in yet, or if the property is part of some sort of
ongoing litigation, or it's a 1408 situation where the room is just super mega haunted to the max.
And then there are a few other broad categories potentially involving more than half of all
vacant units, which are classified in the report as sold, not occupied, or other vacant.
These include landlords that may be holding out
for a better rental market,
plus Airbnb and other speculators,
including private equity firms.
It's really difficult to know exactly
how much that kind of speculation
impacts the housing market overall.
The number of vacant units in the US
has decreased since 2012,
but that's partially because the supply hasn't increased
and more units are getting scooped up.
And Wall Street owners don't exactly want any of us
to know how many empty properties they own in major cities,
as that would justifiably single them out
as earning record profits
while the unhoused population increases.
However, according to an analysis by Redfin,
one out of every seven homes sold in a major city in 2021
was purchased by an investor or investment group,
AKA people who have no intention of living
in the unit they just bought.
And wouldn't you know it,
black neighborhoods in the South are disproportionately affected. And wouldn't you know it, black neighborhoods in the South
are disproportionately affected.
Remember the asterisk.
To defend small landlords a bit more,
and gosh, I'm real sorry I have to keep doing that,
they're less likely than corporate landlords
and far less likely than landlords backed by private equity
to evict tenants.
Now there has been backlash to the assertion
that private equity investors like BlackRock
buying all the homes are the cause of increased prices.
And what those groups are basically saying is,
well, it's not our fault that supply is so low.
Don't blame us when you could simply be building
way more homes than we can scoop up
in our little money talons.
After all, the argument goes,
investors go where the yield is, which kind
of makes me think there shouldn't be a yield, the term referring to how much income an investment
generates. So like, there are more than half a million unhoused people in the US, so it seems
like we shouldn't have housing be this lucrative market until we perhaps don't have people dying
the street.
But also, even considering the argument investors like BlackRock are making,
they're clearly part of the problem.
Like, of course they are.
In certain zip codes in Atlanta in the early 2010s,
for example, a Blackstone spinoff called Invitation Homes
accounted for 90% of all home purchases.
And yes, there are two different investment companies
with black plus mineral names,
like the evil CIA entity in a Bourne film,
the Bourne Residential.
And they're not purchasing $140 million
Bel Air mansions with sub-zero vodka rooms either.
They're purchasing the very homes middle-income people
would be buying to live in and build wealth.
So sure, BlackRock and Blackstone
and other Flintstones era corporations
buying all the homes isn't the only problem nationwide,
but when they suddenly hold 90%
of all the recently sold homes in your neighborhood,
and when they are taking ownership of new homes
that are built exclusively to be rented,
it's gonna have an impact.
And you might want to fill their Christmas stockings with black rocks or black stones
or something else that might be unwanted in a stocking.
Also, the corporatization and private equitization
and techifying of landlords
has really helped them turn from regular,
everyday societal parasites
into fully engorged,
Peter Green wearing the mask level monstrosities. You're probably wondering just what in the ungodly hell you just watched. Well, this company, RealPage, has a software called YieldStar that uses data from 13 million
apartment units to recommend rents on the higher end of what the market will allow.
Essentially, it tells landlords that some other landlord was able to charge $2,800 a
month for a one-bedroom piece of shit in the same neighborhood where you own a one-bedroom
piece of shit. You can raise the rent and available tenants won't have better options.
So the software says. Executives at RealPage have credited their software as a primary driver of
increased rent in the United States and are helping landlords get around that pesky emotion known as empathy.
According to one testimonial from a real estate company,
"'The beauty of Yieldstar is that it pushes you
"'to go places that you wouldn't have gone
"'if you weren't using it.
"'That place being, of course, straight to hell.'"
RealPage also hosts an annual conference
where large property owners meet to,
I don't know, share salmon recipes.
Well, coordinate pricing strategies and then share salmon recipes.
It's no different than how all the airlines
got together about 15 years ago
and decided that checked bags
weren't going to be free anymore.
And they're the ones who control the planes,
so there isn't a sweaty little thing you can do about it.
The one difference being that the Department of Justice
is investigating RealPage,
since forming a cartel to artificially inflate rents
is one of those trusts that the United States
is in theory anti.
Plus a number of class action lawsuits
have been filed against RealPage.
So there's actual hope that landlords
might have to go back to the good old fashioned methods
of screwing over their tenants.
Analog screwing, like our grandparents did with just some twine and an apple core.
The other good news is that the iBuying industry
is beginning to scale back.
iBuying being a way to use algorithms to flip homes,
often by large companies.
See, we haven't mentioned yet
that some of those prominent home marketplaces
like Zillow and Redfin spent the pandemic paying cash for homes and then selling them for a profit.
Just a quick money-making scheme from the websites where you fantasize about moving into a charming three-bedroom, two-bath in Vermont, getting out of the rat race, you know?
Maybe taking up hiking or running model trains or starting a bakery called Cody's Dodies.
Anyway, those particular vultures got royally fucked
by their house flipping scheme,
with Zillow losing almost $900 million
on the venture in 2021
and shutting down its iBuying program in 2022.
Redfin also closed its iBuying operation
and house flipping company Open Door
might not last much longer.
Of course, it's worth noting that the reason
these companies are getting out of the home flipping game
is not because it can't be profitable,
but because supply chain and labor issues mean
they can't renovate and flip them fast enough.
They would love to keep buying all the houses
and then selling them back to people at
an elevated price. But wouldn't you know it, it's that pesky labor market again, refusing to let
corporations magically duplicate money. Workers are so selfish like that. We need more robots.
So to review, we've looked at what the problem is, ever increasing housing costs, and analyzed why
it's happening,
including a hindered stockpile of housing
and the way landlords and corporate interests
have conspired to move housing costs higher.
And we're going to do something a little different now.
We're going to dedicate the rest of this episode
to looking at the myriad solutions presented
for how we can address the problem
and why they're so hard to put into practice.
Right after, I address another supply issue,
the previously low supply of ads.
Yes, the demand for ads is ever ascending
and we're gonna crank up that ad supply.
No need to thank us,
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well, I should have bought stuff.
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Back to the show.
We're back and we're beautiful.
And I'm just about to solve the housing and renters crisis
with my big bearded brain.
But I want to highlight that this entire problem
is only really a problem if you're a renter
or don't have housing.
The US home ownership rate is about 65%.
And for people who are part of that group,
the rising cost of housing is financially good.
It means their home is more valuable now
than when they bought it.
And while there are definite reasons for them
to want home prices to decline,
after all, homelessness hurts tourism
and the sensibilities of our valued private jet owners.
And it's also bad for the homeless people.
Those incentives still tend to take a back seat
to seeing the value of one's home increase.
It's a very difficult motivation to get through.
A motivation which is often enhanced by outright racism,
given that white people are disproportionately represented
among the ownership class.
I mean, just look at how the media talks
about declining home prices.
When Redfin doesn't meet its Q3 earnings expectations,
that's the housing market getting worse.
Here's a woe is them article about how it sucks
that home prices are declining for the people
who bought a house while prices were at the peak.
It's not enough that they got the condo they wanted.
They need to see their investment rise
in value every three months,
like it's a Star Wars figurine.
And of course they do.
We've designed everything around financial worth
and the idea that as things age, they get more valuable.
That's of course, thanks to the dangerous deep state cabal
that is Antiques Roadshow.
Tell me my Elan Sleazebagano figure is worthless.
I will show you worthless.
You are worthless.
My Sleazebagano is priceless.
My favorite character from movies.
Now, the perfect solution to the housing crisis
would address all of these things.
The financial incentives many Americans have
to keep housing scarce,
the cruelty of making a profitable industry
out of something that everyone needs to survive,
and the racism that made our system so unequal
in the first place.
Surely there are some kinds of solutions
we can look at there.
Like, I don't know,
can we sell dirt blocks to poor people?
My reply guy, Elon Musk, seems to think so.
Bless his heart for doing that thing
that he never actually ended up doing.
Probably because actual architects don't think it could work.
I mean, you can't even really put wiring in dirt blocks.
Seems like that Elon Musk guy isn't very serious.
I don't know, haven't really looked into him that much.
Another idea floated by weird online randos
is to, I guess, move homeless people out into the desert,
like internment camps.
Yeah, yeah, that wouldn't help.
Can you imagine if we did that?
Were you ever within the city limits?
Yeah.
And why did you move out here?
Pretty much told by law enforcement
that the only way not to be messed with
are camps ransacked or bulldozed or even burnt down,
it would be to move north of G,
which G is that street right there.
Oh, ha, well that's bleak and unsurprising.
I guess cops really are just kicking people
into the Mojave Desert, a place super notable for habitability
instead of doing anything to help them.
And these are really the solutions we came up with.
Oh, right, there's also a startup
in the San Francisco Bay Area
that offers $800 a month fart pods
that come with a built-in fan, electrical lighting,
a fold-down desk and charger for electrical gadgets.
But don't worry about
feeling vulnerable. They all come with curtains that close for privacy. Jesus fucking Christ.
Capitalism, you are exhausting, sir or madam. It's almost like we should come up with solutions
that aren't also designed to hurt the most vulnerable people or enrich some tech company
through the misery of others.
Just a thought, write it down,
send it to the president or whatever.
Let's actually look at some actual solutions
people are floating.
Starting with number one, build more housing.
Yes, great, let's do it.
Are we doing it?
Why aren't we?
Okay, I'm not seeing anything about us building more housing
now that I said that we should do that.
Okay, well, turns out that it's not that simple
and there are a lot of conflicting forces
preventing it from being simple.
We're talking NIMBYs versus YIMBYs
versus left NIMBYs versus QUIMBYs
versus FIMBYs versus DWIMBYs
versus all the people who don't have backyards at all
and so aren't invited into one of the clubs.
The build more housing rallying cry gets very complicated
when you start talking about what kind of housing
you're building and where.
To break it all down, we've got to start back at that supply and demand issue from earlier.
Remember, housing construction has significantly slowed since the Great Recession, even as the population continues to increase. So in a vacuum, building more housing should address the supply
side of the issue and provide more options for everyone while reducing costs. People of means
will move into market rate units, thus easing pressure on the low cost housing for low income
people and reducing rents overall. A number of recent studies provide support for this argument,
but also it really doesn't seem like people would just move accordingly like worker ants.
Also, the studies seem to be missing a lot of nuance.
For example, this Upjohn Institute study from 2019 found
that new market rate housing in major cities
generally lowers nearby rents by five to 7%.
That's good, right?
But the fear from housing supply skeptics
who have been pejoratively dubbed left NIMBYs
is that opening up historically black
and brown neighborhoods
to wealthy developers without firm regulations
will result in further gentrification,
the destruction of historic neighborhoods,
and ultimately higher housing costs over time.
Plus that study is only looking at new market rate housing
and only in low income neighborhoods.
Market rate housing is basically another word
for the average amount an apartment
or house goes for in that area.
So while in theory, a rising tide that lifts all boats,
why not just also build housing for lower income people?
You know, since those are the people
who are really in danger of losing their housing
and account for the nearly 1 million
US evictions every year.
These studies never seem to look at the effect
of new housing in Birmingham, Michigan,
Brentwood, California, or Palm Beach, Florida.
So while creating more housing options is a good idea
and we need to do it in general,
it seems that the push is always for market rate housing
in low income neighborhoods
and forcing at least some level of gentrification
on those areas.
Even if the worst fears of displacement tend to be overblown,
an influx of wealthier residents
will always make the overall neighborhood more expensive.
Again, the owners of the homes in the neighborhoods
might want that change
way more than the people living there
who don't necessarily own their homes.
At the same time, it's a little unreasonable
to expect people to just not move to New York City
or San Francisco or Los Angeles or Chicago
if they have the money and want to.
Maybe President AOC will make it illegal
for rich white people to move to Brooklyn,
but I kind of doubt it.
Big, exciting cities in blue states
will continue to be attractive places to live,
what with all the big, shiny buildings. So there need to be new housing options that don't put all the burden
squarely on low income neighborhoods. But if you try to put affordable housing developments close
to wealthy or middle class neighborhoods, that's when you butt heads with the real NIMBYs of this
whole problem. You know, like the residents of Beverly Hills who didn't even want a subway system going through their neighborhood, citing safety concerns. Or even the small town of Dexter,
Michigan, where some residents spontaneously sprouted pearls to clutch when an affordable
housing development was proposed near an elementary school. It's not a safe place to have people
that can't control their behavior across the street from our schools.
What a delightful lack of specificity there.
People who can't control their behavior
are in this case veterans and people with disabilities
who have experienced homelessness.
The concerned citizens in this story
distributed pamphlets with misleading information,
suggesting that the housing development itself
would distribute needles and devices
to make smoking crack safer,
as if that's a bad thing to do.
The good news in this story is that the development
eventually went through and welcomed
its first residents last year.
But the years long fights that arise
from situations like this all over the country
make the process painstaking and slow.
Even when a city's leaders fundamentally agree
on zoning changes and placing an emphasis
on more dense housing,
it can still face challenges from unlikely sources.
Take what's been happening in Minneapolis
over the last several years.
In late 2018, the city council voted 12 to one
in favor of the Minneapolis 2040 plan,
which would allow duplexes and triplexes
in every neighborhood across the city and parking minimums for developments and allow more dense
mid-rise residential buildings along major traffic corridors. The city said it wanted to take this
step to end historical housing segregation and also because of anticipated population increases
over the coming decades.
However, a Hennepin County district judge
blocked the plan last year,
following a lawsuit from a group called
Smart Growth Minneapolis
and a pair of environmental groups,
the Audubon Society and the Minnesota Citizens
for the Protection of Migratory Birds.
The lawsuit argued that the plan for increased density
did not take into account
potential environmental impacts. That ruling was recently upheld, and the city says it will
further appeal to the Minnesota Supreme Court. And while I'm not arguing we should scrap
environmental reviews and pave over swamps and build strip malls from baby bird bones,
this resistance doesn't seem entirely in good faith.
And what I mean is Smart Growth Minneapolis
seems to not have existed
before the Minneapolis City Council approved this plan
and formed, at least based on the earliest iteration
of their website, exclusively to oppose the plan
and upzoning in general.
As Strong Towns, a nonprofit advocacy group
for a more dense development points out,
Smart Growth Minneapolis provides no alternative
to the city's plan.
And it looks like preserving the status quo
is their only goal.
It's a cynical NIMBY move,
using environmental laws to its benefit
and successfully delaying any potential re-imagining
of urban development.
Also, one of this lawsuit's main arguments
is that the growth of population in Minneapolis
is its primary reason for environmental concern.
But like, that's gonna happen
no matter if they build the project or not, right?
The good news is that despite
the overall Minneapolis 2040 plan being blocked,
the city has been making incremental progress
in building more dense, affordable housing,
and rents in the city have started to decline
while they're increasing in most of the country.
So that's good.
Really, the only downside is that you have to live
in Minneapolis.
Boom!
Ah, ha, ha, ha!
Took you down, you Twin City fucks.
How do you like them, Minneapolis?
Hell yeah!
Roasting Minneapolis for having better housing.
But examples like that are why this conversation
gets so muddled, because left NIMBYs,
who are concerned about gentrification and the environment
and whether or not the housing projects
will actually be affordable,
definitely have a point.
But these types of concerns can easily be hijacked
by anyone who just doesn't want more housing.
They also make these individual situations
far more complicated.
For example, in New York City,
a council member named Tiffany Caban put her support behind
a 1,300 unit housing development in Astoria, Queens.
Before approving the project,
Caban and local community groups negotiated
with the developer to guarantee that 25% of all the units
would be considered affordable housing,
and that 10% would be earmarked for families
earning less than 30% of the neighborhood's median income.
Nevertheless, the DSA Queens Housing Working Group
called the proposal an insult
to nearby public housing tenants
who would not be able to afford
even the cheapest units in development.
But Caban defended the project,
saying that the lot was currently
a vacant environmental hazard,
and that the developers agreed to pay $16 million
to clean it up and create additional park
and community space.
Further, she argued the alternative would be
to either leave it vacant or allow it to become, quote,
a facility where some massive corporation like Amazon
would pay our neighbors garbage wages
for nonstop backbreaking work
that would clog our neighborhood streets
with dangerous pollution heavy delivery vehicles.
She's essentially saying, I hear you.
This isn't ideal, but in our current system,
the alternatives are even worse.
Conversely, some people would rather have nothing
if it's not actually affordable housing.
New York City Council Member Kristen Richardson Jordan
helped block a proposal for a complex
that would have brought 915 new units
to Harlem.
She argued that many black residents had already been
displaced from the neighborhood and that those people
would not be prioritized to return under the proposal.
Though half of all those units were to be considered
affordable housing, Jordan said this would be based
on the area median income and included the income of wealthier neighbors
from nearby Westchester.
So as a result, the affordable housing options
were not really going to be affordable
to people who actually lived in Harlem,
where the median income is much lower.
To quote one of the area tenants.
We keep saying the word affordable, affordable, affordable,
yet everyone on this call understands
that low income and affordable
are two very separate and different things.
Right, so the argument there
is that approving that development
would actually increase displacement.
Ultimately, that development was killed
and is set to become an also very unpopular truck depot.
So yeah, it's frustrating.
Nobody's happy.
It's easy enough to blame the greedy developers.
You know what, actually?
Let's blame them for a minute.
Fuck them right in the toes and eyes and other places.
I would like them to eat my shoes and pants.
But also in our current system
where housing is a commodity
used by organizations to turn a profit,
there's simply no incentive from the private sector
to build truly affordable housing in Harlem, Queens,
Los Angeles, the Detroit suburbs, or anywhere else.
Especially while the cost of construction is so high
that developers either need huge subsidies
from local governments or higher rents
in order to turn the profit they require
to do anything at all,
even with all the epic sauce dirt bricks.
So what if we change the laws
to make some of this work better?
To protect tenants through rent control
or find landlords who keep units empty?
I feel another segment coming on.
Deep in my loins.
Number two, more regulation.
Finally, we're at the horny part of the episode.
I get so horny about regulation that we can only film
these parts in one minute increments with hour long breaks
in between.
Every episode takes months to film.
You guys excited for Thor 4?
Yeah, it looks good.
Now to start, there are a bunch of simple regulations that cities in the midst of a housing
crisis should probably do immediately to alleviate pressure, even if they won't solve the whole
problem. Patrick Range McDonald, a journalist, activist, and consultant for the AIDS Healthcare
Foundation, criticizes local governments for their development-first approaches to new housing,
and details a few of these regulations
using what housing justice advocates call the three Ps.
And no, that doesn't stand for some kind of penis-cadora.
Why would you even think that?
That's really weird of you to think of.
No, it stands for protect renters
by strengthening tenant protections,
preserve existing affordable housing
such as rent-controlled units,
and produce affordable housing.
Currently, only five states have rent control laws
on the books, and yet 31 states have laws
preventing local municipalities from putting them in place.
Boy, we really hate poor people.
When I say rent control, what I really mean though
is rent stabilization, policies whereby landlords
can raise the rent, but only by a certain amount every year.
True rent control, which placed strict caps on rent,
was common in the first half of the 20th century,
but was dismissed by economists
since they reduce incentives for developers and landlords
to build and maintain housing and ultimately create
higher rents for people without rent control.
More modern rent stabilization policies have been found
to prevent evictions and increase stability
in a neighborhood, though results are mixed
on whether they prevent gentrification
and racial disparities.
Rent stabilization laws without a subsequent rise
in development and new housing, however,
could still have the effect of raising other rents
for new units given limited supply.
Nevertheless, with housing costs astronomical
for existing renters right now,
voters in many local municipalities
have approved rent stabilization ordinances,
even in states where they are currently banned.
It's a good idea, this rent control.
So good that this advocacy group for property owners
is fearing a threat for more rent control initiatives
in 2023, because of course, there are going to be
powerful people spending millions of dollars
to defeat progressive initiatives such as this.
And of course, there are going to be politicians who want to please those powerful people.
Tonight, there is a legal fight to get a rent control measure off the November ballot.
Last week, Orange County commissioners approved the ordinance in a narrow vote,
but now a realtor group and an apartment association are suing,
saying it will have unintended consequences.
This legal challenge is why
leaders in St. Petersburg struck down a similar measure and why the mayor of Orange County is
strongly against it. Fun follow-up, that Florida measure for rent control was approved by voters
by a wide margin, and yet it still won't go through until the litigation between the county
and the suing realty and rent companies ends, which is wild when you think about it.
Basically, a couple of companies didn't like
that an ordinance would hurt their business
and tried to stop people from being able to vote for it.
And when they did vote for it,
they were able to gunk up the courts
enough for it to not matter.
Then there's vacancy taxes,
which are aimed at landlords like dusty hipster Santa
who intentionally keep units
empty for a certain amount of time. Another good idea, and there has been movement to put more of
them into place around the country. San Francisco voters just approved one, which will go into place
in 2024, though single family homes and duplexes will be exempt. Los Angeles has been considering one, given estimates that
there are up to 100,000 vacant units in the city. Even Toronto, a city I'm told is America adjacent,
is levying a tax on vacant property owners equivalent to 1% of the home's current value
assessment. These are all good moves in the right direction, but are unlikely to fully address the problem
given that overall vacancy rates in the US at least
are at their lowest levels in 40 years.
Here's another no-brainer for all you no-brains out there,
expanded renter's tax credits.
You see, if you own property and are thus a better person,
you get to deduct some or all of your property taxes
and mortgage interest.
But renters can only claim a portion of their rent
if they use their home for business,
and only for the portion of their home
that's engaged in that business, and only in some states.
An expanded renter's tax credit would address economic
and racial inequality since renters are much less likely
to be white than homeowners, and it could specifically target the most rent-burdened households by allowing
an additional deduction for everything over 30% of one's income paid in rent.
Joe Biden referenced this specific proposal in the housing section of his campaign page,
alongside an expansion of Section 8 housing vouchers
and expanded housing benefits
for people like educators and EMTs.
So, you know, vote for him, I guess,
if you want those things to be part
of his campaign platform three years ago and nothing else,
because it never happened.
The proposed expansion of a renter's tax credit
that was actually introduced in the Senate in 2021,
though not passed,
would have given that tax benefit
to the owners of the property
who agreed to reduce rent for low-income tenants.
Way to go, Democrats.
The almost not really doing the right thing party.
And finally, there's zoning.
We covered single-family zoning in an episode last year
and how ending it is one of the simplest things
America's slimy mutant leaders or government
could do to make people's lives better.
Minneapolis, that podunk we already mentioned,
took steps to end single family zoning
and allow more dense and mixed use housing.
California followed suit in
2021, and more neighborhoods across America are considering it. This is a good step and should be
followed by efforts to establish more inclusionary zoning, which requires new and updated developments
to include units affordable to those with low incomes. None of that including Westchester
bullshit either. True inclusionary zoning should provide significant
below market housing to the existing community,
preventing gentrification and a surge in prices.
11 states still place limits on
or outright ban local municipalities
from zoning for inclusion.
Because again, people just hate the poor
or at the very least seeing the poor.
Unfortunately, even inclusionary zoning policies
with good intentions are still dependent
on private companies,
and thus they still need profit incentives.
It's how you get failed inclusionary zoning laws,
like the one in Baltimore,
where the city just ended up giving developers waivers
to build without affordable housing options.
It's also how you get situations like this, where a 212 unit apartment building in DC was purchased by a
nonprofit with plans to convert 75% of the units into affordable housing, but is reliant on funding
from Amazon and another investment firm. Amazon's $2 billion housing equity fund has been criticized
for ignoring the poorest renters in communities. And the fund equity fund has been criticized for ignoring
the poorest renters in communities.
And the fund's response has been that it isn't their job
to fix the housing crisis single-handedly,
which is, I'll admit begrudgingly, a fair point,
except also seems like the kind of excuse
any $2 billion fund can give
to dismiss legitimate criticism.
Hey, you should let your employees take bathroom breaks.
What are we, God of toilets?
Still, $2 billion is of course a drop in the bucket
for Jeff Bezos' e-commerce side project,
and they're clearly just looking for some quick PR
and reinforcements for their dwindling workforce.
If we are relying on Amazon and other conglomerates
to approve the changes needed to fix the problem,
we're going to
be waiting a long time. You know, until the free-floating space colonies for worker drones
get blasted into orbit. Oh, maybe they'll be constructed with dirt blocks. Okay, so further
regulations and attempts to push the housing market in a more equitable direction would definitely
help, but they aren't going to solve the housing crisis
themselves. And the reason why is the thing we've been circling around and also outright saying this
entire time, that when housing is treated like a commodity to be sold and traded and profited from,
that means that everyone from single mothers with five kids to unhoused people literally ushered
into the desert by cops is stuck being a part
of this economic system.
We can't really capitalism our way out of this.
And that's why the solution we're about to explore
is a tad bit outside of the profit driven box.
Dare I say, a little socialist.
Number three, completely rethink public housing.
If you live in the United States,
the phrase public housing probably brings
a very specific image to mind.
We're talking about subsidized housing
in low income communities,
frequently referred to as the projects.
Public housing in the US is underfunded.
Living conditions are lower than elsewhere by expectation,
and they aren't the most aesthetically pleasing places
to live either.
This image is likely to blame for the difficulty
in building new public housing.
Because while a majority of Americans support it,
they just don't want it around where they live.
And even when money is allocated to provide crucial repairs
to public housing,
something a strong majority of Americans also support,
a big chunk of that money ends up going to repair the disaster damaged houses of millionaires. That's the result of an
administrative technicality, also known as an oopsie shiddle sticks a poo poo, and also also
known as the way this system was apparently designed to work. Anyway, what if, what if we rethought public housing and made a major investment in it
as a country? The FIMBY movement, which stands for public housing in my backyard,
wants to add significant numbers of public housing units nationwide, as well as strengthen
tenant protections and rent control. The good of this plan is that it directly benefits the people who need it the most
and doesn't rely on market forces
to lower the cost of housing over time
while still allowing wealthy developers to make a profit.
Nothing is trickling down or not trickling down.
Nobody needs to be displaced or made homeless
while the invisible hand of housing Sauron does its work.
Unfortunately, support for public housing
at the federal level has declined in deference
to short-term housing vouchers and rental assistance,
which is essentially just a fund for landlords.
That means states and local municipalities
have to pick up the slack.
There was originally $150 billion allocated for housing
in the Inflation Reduction Act,
but it, of course, all got scrapped.
As of 2016, 1.6 million people
were still on public housing waiting lists nationwide.
So there's a demand for public housing,
which means the government just needs to make with a supply,
but it would most likely require rebranding public housing to purge those images
of the dilapidated housing projects
where so many candy men lurk.
And that's very possible.
The same way Old Spice rebranded
as the hip, funky deodorant and soap company,
and Peyton Manning rebranded from weird sexual harasser
to two-time Super Bowl champion and jovial guy
willing to spend three hours a week
talking with Eli.
If not all movies, we watch sports too.
I don't actually watch sports.
Now Americans really hate doing this,
but we might want to look to other countries
as a model for our own public housing revamp.
One place to look would be Austria,
where the nation's robust social policy
provides high quality public housing, including access to open spaces, playgrounds, and fitness centers.
They're such nice places to live that even rich Austrian celebrities often opt to live there.
60% of the residents of the capital Vienna live in some form of subsidized housing, and the Vienna City Council is the largest property owner in Europe.
The housing is so nice and the system has worked so well
that it's driven down rent throughout the city.
So even those who don't live in subsidized housing
pay far lower for housing than elsewhere in Europe.
Although important to note,
Austria kind of had to hit rock bottom to get there,
which kind of works for us, actually.
Give it a few years, you know?
See, after World War I, Austria was devastated,
as countries that are on the losing side of wars with world in the title tend to be.
A quarter of Vienna's population was homeless.
So in 1923, a bunch of socialists
built 25,000 new public housing units
and paid for it by taxing things like champagne,
fancy restaurants, horse racing, cars, and sex work,
which is generally legal in Austria, don't you know?
Now you know.
A bunch of stuff obviously has happened since then,
but the Vienna of today is largely inspired
by this active choice to improve living conditions
100 years ago.
Yes, many Austrians pay 50% of their income in taxes,
but for that money, they get much lower housing costs
and an attractive network of public housing options,
which don't all look gray and gross
since every new public development
is subject to an architectural competition
to determine its design.
The people who live in public housing
also get free opera tickets, music festivals,
outdoor movie nights, and access to this ridiculous
Art Deco indoor swimming pool.
And notably, there's no social stigma to living there.
And honestly, I know this sounds a little pie in the sky.
Can you imagine the United States
giving public housing residents tickets to the fucking opera?
Opera's a bad example,
because opera's kind of, you know, snoozer.
But okay, imagine if it were tickets to see all those
avatars or a monster truck show.
You know those shows are fixed.
Anyway, other nations have adopted these principles
into their own countries.
Finland had rampant homelessness for decades,
decided this was unacceptable for some silly reason,
and started giving people homes without condition.
The capital Helsinki owns most of the land in the city
and neighborhoods are integrated
because of social housing quotas.
I can't emphasize enough that these are things
that groups of people really did over time.
They saw that a better future was possible,
if not also extremely necessary.
That displacement and homelessness and exorbitant rent were policy choices instead of inevitable
conclusions. And they did something about it. And that's, in a way, the whole ballgame.
All that other stuff we talked about, while potentially beneficial, it's really just
comparing what size bandits should be put on this festering wound of
a system. An increase in market rate housing is relying on the market to reduce costs and
make neighborhoods livable and vibrant. The eviction moratorium and direct payments from
earlier in the pandemic helped a lot, but they went away. And they were always just intended to
keep the already broken system going. We need something radical and tubular and bodacious
to upend this system,
to stop us from competing against each other
just for a place to call home,
to prevent boxes of cilantro
from being delivered to my door as a word play taunt.
Whether it's a reinvestment in public housing
or a New Deal style reboot,
but like without the racism, please.
New Deal Zero with 40% less racism.
Can't even make it 100%, what an embarrassment.
Of course, this isn't something any of our politicians
are likely to solve anytime soon.
It's not a Democrat or a Republican problem,
though Democrats probably offer more and bigger bandages.
The problems are the incentives that property owners,
landlords, and other NIMBYs have to perpetuate this system.
As long as housing is a commodity,
it's going to continue to be attractive
for people who already have wealth to become landlords,
because being a landlord is much easier than having a job.
Remember that profit series we did last year,
where we pointed out the perverse incentives
in the prison, healthcare, and energy
industries, and how the people running those industries were more motivated to make money
than to do the thing their industry is ostensibly there to do. Well, this is sort of a fourth
installment of that, except the people with the perverse incentives are most of the people in this
country. The second we become homeowners, our incentives change. It immediately becomes to
our benefit for property values to go higher and for supply to tighten because it will make our
resale value soar and secure our own retirements. And that's, it's a real fucking shame that
solidarity with our fellow human beings who are seeking the same security and stability as anyone else goes out the window
once we become part of a slightly more privileged class. It's why any candidate who floats things
like collective ownership and community land trust gets attacked in the media. This is the system we
have designed, where housing is not guaranteed but rather a commodity to be hoarded and traded,
and it's seemingly the only way to establish
any kind of financial security.
And for most people, changing that system for good,
which means reversing the stranglehold
that property ownership holds over our society,
probably looks terrifying and dystopian,
where we're all assigned a concrete block to live in,
like in 1984, which I've recently found out
is a book and film adaptation,
and not just a four digit number for conservatives
to reference for things they don't like.
So given that reality,
housing is likely to be tied to capitalism
for a long, long time.
And as long as that's the case,
there just won't be any perfect solution.
And so for the time being,
we are all stuck in our own personal
Steven Spielberg presents the money pit.
The promise of owning your own home is a facade
that looks great, but then you get inside
and realize that there are holes in the floor
and you're going to get attacked by vicious raccoons.
The only thing you can try to do is fix it up
as best you can and sell it at a profit,
thus roping some other poor diluted sucker
into the same cycle.
Plus your wife used to be married
to fucking Carl from Die Hard.
That's gotta be intimidating.
The Money Pit in theaters 37 years ago.
Check it out.
Does anybody get the references to the money pit?
Joe versus the volcano.
Anyone leave a comment that says you're not old, you're spry,
and your references are fresh.
Because they are.
Gonna go get tickets to Thor 4.
Ah, I didn't see you stay.
Hi, thanks for watching the video.
Make sure to like the video,
subscribe to the channel the video was published on,
and leave a comment, as I said, like 30 seconds ago,
about how cool I am.
We've got a podcast called Even More News
you can listen to.
We've got this show as a podcast.
It's called Some More News, where the podcasts are.
We've got merch in a store for merch stuff,
and we have a patreon.com slash some more news
where you can support us elsewise.
And there's no fun bit here.
So sorry to make you stick around.
But, oh wait no
it's a Thor reference
end of the credits
and you open on
a good movie
I don't know