The Joe Rogan Experience - #2268 - Rick Caruso
Episode Date: February 5, 2025Rick Caruso is a businessman, civic leader, and philanthropist. He is the owner and executive chairman of Caruso, one of the largest privately held real estate companies in the world, and founder... of Steadfast LA: a nonprofit focused on private-sector involvement in rebuilding wildfire-affected communities. www.steadfastla.com This episode is brought to you by AG1. Take ownership of your health with AG1 and get a FREE bottle of Vitamin D3+K2 AND 5 free Travel Packs with your first subscription. Go to drinkag1.com/joerogan Don’t miss out on all the action this week at DraftKings! Download the DraftKings app today! Sign-up using dkng.co/rogan or through my promo code ROGAN. GAMBLING PROBLEM? CALL 1-800-GAMBLER, (800) 327-5050 or visit gamblinghelplinema.org (MA). Call 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY). Please Gamble Responsibly. 888-789-7777/visit ccpg.org (CT) or visit www.mdgamblinghelp.org (MD).21+ and present in most states. (18+ DC/KY/NH/WY). Void in ONT/OR/NH. Eligibility restrictions apply. On behalf of Boot Hill Casino & Resort (KS). 1 per new customer. Min. $5 deposit. Min. $5 bet. Max. $200 issued as non-withdrawable Bonus Bets that expire in 7 days (168 hours). Stake removed from payout. Terms: dkng.co/dk-offer-terms. Ends 2/9/25 at 11:59 PM ET. Sponsored by DK. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Trained by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
Good to see you, sir.
Thanks for having me.
It's great to be here.
My pleasure.
Thanks for being here.
It is a terrible time for Los Angeles, and unfortunately, you did not win.
I wanted you to win.
Thank you. I was rooting for you did not win. I wanted you to win.
I was rooting for you.
It's just the politics in LA are, it's almost like watching people who are in a cult who
are being confronted by the cult experts who are telling them, hey, this is all crazy and
fake and you're ruining your life.
And they're like, no, no, no, I think it's going to work out.
Yeah. Well, there's a lot of things that aren't working out.
Yeah.
There's a lot of things that are.
I mean, listen, I know like you,
spending time and living in LA, it's an amazing city.
It's amazing.
And when I ran for office, as much as I loved LA,
I actually fell in love with it more,
because I got to see places that I wouldn't normally see.
And so it was really amazing and people and the diversity
and the dearness of so many neighborhoods and people.
But what's happened to LA over the last decade
is just tragic and people are paying huge consequences
for it and it's sad to watch.
So if you get to the heart of it, like if you did,
if you won and you became the mayor of LA, what could you do to try to turn this
battleship around? Because it's a big battleship. It's a big battleship and
people argue that the mayor of LA doesn't have a lot of authority like
other mayors. You know I learned a lot Joe. I worked for three mayors. I worked for
Tom Bradley when I was in my mid-20s as a commissioner. I was the head of Department
of Water and Power. I worked for Dick Riordan. He brought me back into head of DWP during
the energy crisis. The department was under a lot of financial strain. And then I worked
for Jim Hunt, who brought me in to turn around LAPD and I was the police commissioner, the head of the police
commission. So I've seen really good leadership. And honestly what we've had
in the last two mayors is not good leadership and we're paying a price for
it. So you may not have a lot of power, but actually I think the most powerful
thing you can have that I learned as a police commissioner,
if you're not worried about getting re-elected or re-appointed, it's really amazing what
can happen.
Because you can make decisions that are actually in the best interest of the people.
And I believe that career politicians are always worried about getting re-elected.
They are scared to death of getting a real job. They've never had to sign the front of a check, only the back.
So it's very difficult for them to even think about being out of office. So they
just circulate. You know, they go from the city council to the state assembly to
the state Senate. And we end up with the same sort of look and feel of leadership,
which is pretty weak. I think
Dick Rudin was a good example of a guy who came in and did a lot of great stuff. I actually
think Jimmy Hahn did a lot of great stuff as mayor. So I would go in there with some
strong leadership. I would certainly go in there and reach across the aisle and find
common ground and all of those things you need to do to move forward.
But I would certainly plant some really strong goals that everybody knew we were working
towards because I believe that either lead, follow, or get out of the way.
And I really admire people who lead.
And I wouldn't mind being a little bit controversial if it's in the interest of doing what's in the best interest of the residents.
Well, that's what I enjoyed about your campaign.
And that's what I was really hopeful about
is that it seemed like you were not running for mayor
because you wanted to be the mayor.
You were running for mayor because you're a businessman.
And you realized that this was not being run
like a successful business.
You knew how to run a successful business.
You knew the difference. And LA is just constantly
plagued by this crony political movement. This does these the same people,
same type of people, shuffling in and out and it just nothing ever changes.
Yeah and again to give you a little bit of background, I am so indebted to LA. It sounds a little bit corny, but, you know,
my paternal and maternal grandparents, they were both immigrants.
My grandfather, paternal grandfather was a gardener in Los Angeles.
He lived in Boyle Heights. He started as a coal miner.
He actually probably had one of the worst jobs you could ever have in life.
When he immigrated here to a little town called Uniontown, Pennsylvania, he was the dynamiter.
He was the guy that had to go in the lead. Oh, boy. Yeah, set the dynamite and get the
hell out in time. And his brother who immigrated with him said, come to LA. It's sunny. My
dad was actually born in a coal mining camp outside the coal mine. But anyway,
he was a gardener out here and we actually grew up in his truck as he would go around
and had they had this small little home they rented in Boyle Heights. And I think about
what LA gave to my grandparents, to my dad, to me, my family,
the opportunity to build a business.
And so running for mayor, the motivation was,
I want to give back to the city that gave me so much.
And by the way, all the problems that we've got,
you can fix them with a little bit of backbone,
a little bit of smarts.
If you're equipped right,
bring together some really smart people.
You can fix everything. And to your point, what happened when I was tied
at the end of the race and actually a little bit ahead? You know, Biden flies into campaign,
Kamala flies into campaign, Pelosi, Bernie, and at the end of the day when we're 10 days before election day, they
finally convinced Obama to do a message.
And so the system is so, it's a closed loop, right?
And the idea that somebody was going to come in the tent that's an outsider was horrifying
to them. And, you know, we would laugh about it as a family it's like you might as
well just load up Air Force One all at one time and bring everybody out right
but I loved every minute of it and you know I hope at some point that system is
changing and I think people are getting more frustrated lately and they're
looking for people who are competent rather than just people who may share
ideology. All right it's February and by now 80% of people have probably abandoned
their New Year's resolutions and it makes sense. Life can get crazy and all the
sudden you don't have the time but one easy habit to stick with is AG1. It's an
easy realistic habit that you can make to easy habit to stick with is AG1. It's an easy, realistic
habit that you can make to benefit your whole body health. AG1 makes hard to get micronutrients
easy to get and replaces multiple vitamins and supplements with just one scoop. You just
mix it in some cold water, take a nice moment in the morning to do your body right. And
honestly, it tastes pretty good. It's not easy to pack this many high quality ingredients with this much nutrient density but AG1 makes it
happen without added sugars or artificial sweeteners ever. AG1 is a
great way to invest in your health now and in the long run which is why I've
partnered with them for so long. Try AG1 and get a free bottle of vitamin D3, K2
and five free AG1 travel packs with your first
subscription at drinkag1.com slash joe rogan.
That's a $76 value gift for free when you go to drinkag1.com slash joe rogan.
Check it out.
Well, you saw the difference in the California electoral map, right?
Yeah, for sure.
In the difference between 2020 and 2024, how many different counties went red that were blue historically?
So let's break down the problems with LA and what could be done to fix it.
What do you see as like the primary issues of LA right now?
Well, you know, you got a homeless problem that continues to grow.
So let's talk about that.
OK, 70,000 people in LA County.
One of the things we've covered on that is it's at least 70,000.
I mean, I don't know if they have a real accurate count.
But the real question is why?
And why is so much money spent on it and no results?
We've covered it on this podcast that there's people that are bureaucrats that work for this
Yeah department of homelessness and they're making quarter million dollars a year
Yeah, and they have no incentive whatsoever to make anything better because it doesn't hurt them
They're not paid based on whether or not they clean up the homeless issue. They're just paid
So the longer the homeless issue goes on the more they keep their job and it's a profitable job
Yeah, and they just rant on and on about we need job and it's a profitable job. Yeah. And they just
rant on and on about we need housing like that's not the problem. But you know
I had a plan and I'm confident my plan would have worked. Let's talk about
housing for a minute. LA and LA County they put in a tax called HHH to build 10,000 units.
At least about a year ago,
I think they had maybe short of a thousand units built.
And I-
That's amazing.
Over 10 years.
Over 10 years.
I'm amazed they built one.
Yeah, I know.
But you know what they built them for?
800,000 a unit.
That was the cost of it.
If you go to the sector, the
nonprofit sector that's actually doing amazing work with the homeless, like down
on Skid Row, ground zero, they're building on average 300,000 a unit. But
what happens in the city, in the government, there's so many layers of
waste on top of waste on top of waste. It's ridiculous. So yeah, you're right
Very little is happening. Almost no housing is being built by the government even though they have massive taxes
We got another tax called ULA when you sell your home. You have to pay another five percent over five million dollars
so there's taxes on top of taxes there's
There is a solution to the homeless. So let's give just give you an example
There is a solution to the homeless. So let's give, I'll just give you an example.
There's a company called Boxable outside of Vegas,
and they're building units that are five, 600 square feet.
On average, they're about 60, 70,000 a unit.
This young guy figured out how to build up,
basically, a production line to knock these things out.
And when I was campaigning, I said to him,
when I win, I'm going to give you a contract for 30,000 units.
And there's so much open space, Joe, in and around Los Angeles
that's controlled by the city.
And we're going to start getting people in homes,
getting them taken care of, giving them the service they need.
But the other thing we need to do,
you can't have open drug dealing on the streets. We welcome it. And if you look around MacArthur Park, the great old
Langer's Deli, and the poor owner Norm Langer's who basically said after 70
years I got to close my restaurant. It's terrible. Terrible. Amazing old place. And
then you know Mayor Bass promised I'm gonna be down there, I'm gonna clean it
up, we're gonna fix it. Hasn't changed in six months since she said that.
It can be cleaned up.
It can be fixed.
You got to have some backbone.
It's a lot of it is a mental health issue, correct?
Very much so.
Probably half.
And drug addiction.
Drug addiction, a lot of that comes from mental health issues as well, right?
Yes.
So what could be done?
I mean, you're dealing with an enormous population of people that have this issue.
It's probably closer to 100,000 in L.A. County.
Maybe.
I mean, that's the high estimates, right?
So let's say 70,000 to 100,000 people.
You have a lot of people.
What could be done to have some sort of a large program that gets real results with
helping these people with their mental health results with helping these people with their mental health issues
and helping these people with their drug addiction issues.
I think you start first by enforcing the law
and don't allow the sale of drugs on the street
and holding the drug dealers accountable.
Not just the sale, but the open use.
I mean, cooking meth right out in front of everybody.
You're right, all the above.
I mean, literally in downtown, there's tents that are run by
the drug dealers where everybody knows to go to get their drugs. So you got to start
there. But I'm a big believer that government alone can't solve major problems, right? And
you've got organizations downtown that are really doing great stuff. Downtown Women's
Center is doing great stuff. Union Rescue Mission, great stuff. Downtown Women's Center is doing great stuff.
Union Rescue Mission, great stuff.
And they're bringing people in, they're giving them
the help and the treatment they need for drug addiction
and mental health care, and they're giving them housing.
Scale those people up.
Take the dollars we're spending and wasting on the city
trying to do it, and start pushing dollars to organizations
that have a proven track record of success.
And their success, Joe, is like a 90% success rate.
And scale it.
Why go reinvent a model that's already working well?
And there's probably a dozen organizations downtown that are doing a good job.
And what are they doing?
And you do it at a fraction of the cost.
I already interrupted you.
Do it at a fraction of the cost.
So no, please. These people that are being successful, how are they doing it And they do it at a fraction of the cost. I already interrupted you. Do it at a fraction of the cost. So no, please.
With these people that are being successful, how are they doing it?
What's their method?
You know, it's like I'm not the expert in it, but when I went down there and spent time
during the campaign and since then, because we've been supportive of their efforts as
a family, they actually welcome people as they are.
No judgment.
Downtown Women's Center.
Tonight in Los Angeles, there'll be about
20,000 women that will go to sleep on the street, and the majority of those women will
in some form or fashion be abused, sexually abused. Right? It's terrible that we allow
this. It's a crime we allow this. But an example of Downtown Women's Center, they accept them
the way they are, mental health condition, drug addiction condition, they have embedded services downtown in their facility, they have housing their form, and they give them the treatment.
And it's happening in real time. And they're very effective doing it. Like I said, they've got about a 90% success rate. So they have highly educated,
skilled workers that know how to react and deal with the people on the street. That's
what we need more of. I don't think you need to build new big institutions. What I do think
you need to do is cut all the red tape, start building quickly, funding these organizations,
and fund them quickly.
If you talk to Downtown Women's Center,
it will take them an average of six years
to build new housing.
Six years.
That's crazy.
It's crazy, and it's in Skid Row.
It's not like you're building
in a sensitive environmental area.
Right. Right?
Right.
Give the damn permits and say go.
I first encountered Skid Row when we used to film
Fear Factor downtown.
Oh.
And I, you know, I'd heard of it, I had no idea.
And we were driving, we had done a bunch of the
Fear Factor stunts in abandoned buildings.
It makes good backdrops.
Sure.
Creepy.
And when I went there, one time I took a wrong turn.
And I went like right into the meat of everything. And I was like, one time I took a wrong turn. And I went right into the meat of everything.
And I was like, this is insanity.
And this was 2004, 2003?
So this is 20 years ago, 22 years ago.
And even back then, it was bananas.
Come see it now.
Oh, I've heard.
Well, we watched that documentary.
Is it the Carlisle Hotel, Jamie?
One of the documentaries on the,
one of the old downtown hotels.
And it went into the history of Skid Row.
And what Skid Row was, they would take people,
they would arrest them for being vagrants somewhere else,
and they'd bring them to Skid Row
and just leave them there and basically box them in
and leave them in this area.
And they had, you know had soup kitchens and places
where they could get food and they were allowed
to just sleep on the street.
And so they just stayed there.
And so they essentially, instead of fixing this problem
of homeless people and mentally ill people,
they just pushed them into this one area
and they said, let's just, we got a spot,
we could just stick them.
Let's just take it here.
And then of course, every business
in that area got devastated.
All those hotels is glorious old
Classic hotels. I mean in fact the Morrison Hotel just caught fire because vagrants were living in it and it's gone now. Yeah
so
These methods that these people are using that are successful. What are they? What are they doing?
Well, what they're doing is they're giving him the treatment they need. Now, Union Rescue Mission is a different approach.
Union Rescue Mission, you know, that's a faith-based organization.
Okay.
It's hugely successful.
It's overflowing.
They can't accommodate everybody.
They need a lot more funding.
But they don't allow anybody to use drugs or alcohol the minute they check in and they
get an apartment.
The other organizations that I'm aware of allow them to continue that but
they're required to go on programs
to get off the drugs
to get the mental health care that they need so they have skilled workers they
are still literally
daily classes there's protocols
there's requirements of the residents of what they can do what they can't do to
give them structure they give a structure that's right to get that's a of the residents on what they can do and what they can't do. To give them structure.
They give them structure, that's right.
That's a great word, you're exactly right.
They give them structure, they give them training, they give them hope.
And they give them a path forward.
I've always said this, let's assume your number's right.
There's a hundred thousand homeless on the streets in LA County, whatever the number
is.
People say you can't solve the whole problem.
Why don't we start with solving half of it?
Yeah, that'd be nice.
Yeah.
Let's start with, let's solve for the group of people that for whatever reason are down
and out, lost their job, lost their apartment.
You've got more families on the streets now, Joe, than ever
before.
Let's start with that group and let's help them very quickly.
Give them training, give them a job, give them a path forward.
And then you sort of work through the system, but we're not even doing that.
Right?
And so, and now you've had the fires, the estimate is there's another 180,000 people in LA that are homeless.
Is that insane to think about?
The 180,000 though, a lot of them, it's just because they're trying to find a place, but they're not destitute.
A lot of these people are people that had some money, you know, who knows what's going to happen with insurance, right?
Right, but see, that's the problem.
Unfortunately, the fire insurance issue in Los Angeles is kind of insane.
It's terrible.
Where, you know, we were talking in the lobby before I was evacuated three times when I
lived in LA.
Two of my neighbors lost their homes, you know, and watching those folks cry in front
of the rubble.
Yeah.
Where they lived, it's just horrible.
You know?
But they kept their lives.
And, you know, this was 2018.
And, you know, they rebuilt some of them.
Two of the houses are still gone in my old neighborhood.
They never rebuilt.
Sorry to hear about that.
They just pulled out.
It's like, what am I going to do?
They lose everything. Mel Gibson hear about that. They just pull out. It's like, what am I going to do?
They lose everything.
Mel Gibson lost books from the 1600s.
Mel is a very religious man.
He collects these ancient, irreplaceable books.
And then, of course, the loss of lives is horrifying.
That issue is an issue that has plagued
LA and California forever.
So a big point of contention during the election and even during the first Trump administration was the use of water.
And that water was being funneled into the Pacific Ocean and now apparently you could tell me more, you probably know more than I do.
What has been done about that water? Because it seems like Trump has changed that.
Well, I think what Trump did a good job of, first of all, I'm grateful for the fact that
he flew out, had a meeting, and I'm grateful.
And, you know, I have my differences at time to time on some issues with him, but he sat
down and he was forceful in a very strong way of holding the elected officials
accountable like get the people back in their homes now.
So the fact that in this tragedy we've got a president who's also a builder who understands
what needs to be done I think is great.
And I hope he continues to hold all the elected officials accountable.
He can make a big difference and we need it. On the water issue, listen, I headed
up Department of Water and Power like I said for 10 years. I have a pretty good
understanding of the water issues. What's happening in the north really has not as
much of an impact as happening down in Southern California in terms of how
the water gets transferred around. It doesn't mean we should be pouring water into the ocean.
We should not be. We should be doing a lot of things. We should be collecting water.
We should be holding water. We should be recycling water. We should be doing a lot of things.
What happened in Los Angeles, which is just close to negligence, if not negligence,
so the fire hydrants ran out.
We evacuated our home and we're in Brentwood,
so you know the area, we're 15 minutes in the Palisades
where the fire started.
And it was my birthday, We were having family dinner.
From the second floor, we saw the flames.
We said, we're going to have to get out of here.
The power went off. We said, we're out.
Gathered the family. We moved down to a home we have in Newport Beach.
And I get a call from one of my senior executives who sort of embedded in with the fire command post.
And my heart dropped. He said, we just lost your daughter's home. And I said, oh my god,
Bannon, how the hell did that happen? You know, he said, you can't believe it. The hoses ran dry.
And the whole neighborhood went up.
And I was so angry
that I
Fox 11, the local Fox station was on with Alex Michaelson, and I texted him
because they were reporting live. This is about 1030 at night. I said, are you getting reports that they've run out of water?
He said not at all. And I said you need to report this. He said, do you want to come on live? I said, yeah,
hook me up. And I went on, he couldn't believe it. And some of the media was trying to spin
it. I saw that. Like it's not true. Yeah. And then they went right to the firemen. Right
to the firemen, right? Yeah. Firemen said, yeah, we're standing there empty hoses. How in
God's name, the second largest city in the country, can you have a water system
that runs out of water in a fire? And you knew the fire, you knew this was coming,
right? They gave warnings of catastrophic winds. The reservoir is
empty over, I think it was 1.7 million gallons.
I think it's 11 million.
Maybe 11 million, probably right.
It's empty during fire season?
Yeah.
You've got brush that hasn't been cleared for 40 years.
There was a whole bunch of us raising hell about that after the fire in Brentwood six
years ago.
Yeah.
Nothing was done. The fire department wasn't pre-deployed,
so there weren't engines staffed in different areas.
You've got a fire department that's underfunded,
and you've got fire equipment that's mothballed.
And then the mayor flies to Ghana.
And the mayor's out of town.
So what should have been done, and who's responsible?
Well, I think the leadership is responsible at every level.
I think the mayor is responsible for not being better prepared.
I think she's certainly responsible for not staying in town.
It's a lack of judgment.
If you want to be a leader, the first thing you have to do is be present.
I don't know what all the meetings that she had beforehand to make sure everybody was
prepared, but years ago, the brush should have been cleared. Yes, right
And if you probably couldn't have prevented the fire, maybe you couldn't have prevented the fire
I only God knows well, we don't really could have mitigated it
We don't really know the source of the fire yet and we do know there was quite a bit of arson
That's that's true. That's true. And there was a fire, to your point, there was a fire on New Year's Eve
from fireworks. And there's some talk that it may have been in that same area that this
sparked up again, or maybe it was another arson that went up there.
But it seems like there were several fires that started very close to each other.
It seems like highly unlikely.
Could be.
That there was just three
accidents that took place at the same time as these catastrophic winds. Could
be. The most sinister version of it is that somebody wanted this
to happen, maybe some mentally ill person. I know they did it. It's a sickness.
Yeah, it is a sickness. Arsonists are, they're really sick people. Yeah. And it's a
known psychological illness. There's a guy that they arrested that was a known arsonist
Several times arrested who had a fake fire truck and drove down
Yeah drove down from Oregon to do who knows what can you imagine? Yeah? Well, there's you got to be really there's some
So I was out there. Yeah, there's some real sick people out there
There's some weird people also that enjoy watching other people lose everything.
It's very strange.
Yeah.
But I guess people who feel like they have nothing and they feel like the world has screwed them over and they haven't got the breaks they deserve, they literally want to watch.
And there's this entitled culture that we live in that kind of tells people that the reason why other people are successful is because they've stolen from you.
Right.
Which is just the craziest thing to say in America.
But it gives them an excuse.
It gives them an excuse.
And it also gives them a pathway to vent their anger and instead point it productively at
their own lives.
Like why am I in this position right now?
What could I have done differently?
What personal responsibility do I have for the way I live right now?
Instead of that it's like no no these rich people, they fucked you over.
That's right.
They took advantage of us.
So the water, what is the explanation
for why that enormous reservoir that
provides the palisades with water was empty?
Well, the explanation that's been said is it's out of service
because the cover on it needed to be repaired.
Oh, the cover?
The cover.
Because we're very sensitive in LA that bad things don't get in our water,
so they have to keep all these reservoirs covered, which in general I get.
I get the safety of that.
But how about this?
You know that you have catastrophic winds coming.
Start pumping water in it because nobody gives a shit about what's in the water when
you need it in your fire hydrant.
That could have been done in probably a couple of weeks.
Whatever it took.
Yeah.
And it's not like we don't know.
LA has fire season.
I remember every year because where I used to live in Belle Canyon is about 35 minutes
from LA and it gets rough out there.
It's like a lot of big rolling hills,
and it gets all filled with grass.
And if it catches and the winds start whipping
through those canyons, the winds in California,
for people who don't know,
every year we get the Santa Ana winds.
And they're crazy.
If you never, some of them were 100 miles an hour this year.
That is just, if you ever been out there for that,
that's nuts.
And if there's fires blowing, boy.
No, it's a terrible combination. I mean, the early settlers called them the devil winds.
They've been there forever.
Forever.
To your point, they've been there forever. So just think about, you know, had the brush
been cleared, had the reservoirs been full, had the fire trucks been stationed, had there been a whole series of protocols in place, again.
We could have saved some houses.
It could have saved a lot of lives, a lot of houses, a lot of jobs, a lot of pain.
A lot of pain.
Yeah.
Yeah. So that's just incompetence. There's no way you could say,
oh, I see why they didn't do that. Oh, I see why they didn't have the resources. Oh, it's not their fault. No, there's none of that there. No one's saying that.
That's right.
Everyone is saying it's a failure.
It's a failure because they're not equipped to deal with the leadership they needed.
Even the spin masters, even the greatest of gas lighters have nothing. There's not one
person who's tried to pass the buck. I've not seen one Successful person go on the air and say everything was done that could have been done. We have amazing leadership
We're really proud of them. We're really lucky. We have them not
One you're right not one, but that's kind of crazy
It is kind of crazy because they gaslight everything no matter what it is everything safe and effective everybody's fine
Everything's great. He's the sharpest attack everything they gaslight the, no matter what it is. Everything's safe and effective, everybody's fine, everything's great, he's sharp as a tack,
everything, they gaslight the shit out of you
with everything, but with this one, they're like,
there's nothing you could say.
I agree with that, because the facts are the facts.
The facts are the facts.
You just can't argue around the facts.
And also, there's a thing that happens
when an area bigger than Manhattan
that's filled with the most liberal people.
They're the most liberal people.
They're the most liberal.
They're the most blue no matter who, the most compassionate, kind people that view being
a Democrat and being a liberal as being the ultimate expression of being a good person.
And they're getting slapped in the face by the reality.
I think the politics have changed it's a big weekend get in on the action of the big
game and UFC 312 at DraftKings Sportsbook the official sports betting
partner of the UFC the men's middleweight and women's straw weight
titles will be on the line in the co-main events of UFC 312.
And of course, pro football is crowning a champion at the big game.
Just getting started, pick a fighter or a team to win this weekend.
Go to DraftKings app and make your pick.
That's all there is to it.
And if you're new to DraftKings, listen up.
New customers can bet $5 to get $200 in bonus bets instantly. Download the DraftKings Sportsbook
app now and use the code ROGON. That's code ROGON for new customers to get $200 in bonus
bets when you bet just five bucks. It's a big weekend only on DraftKings. The crown
is yours. problem call 1-800-GAMBLER. In New York call 877-8-HOPE-N-Y or text HOPE-N-Y 467-369.
In Connecticut help is available for problem gambling call 888-789-7777 or
visit ccpg.org. Please play responsibly. On behalf of Boothill Casino and Resort
in Kansas, 21 and over, age and eligibility varies by jurisdiction. Void in
Ontario, new customers only, bonus beds expire 168 hours after issuance. For additional terms and responsible gaming resources,
see dkng.co.au.
I think the reality has set in, honestly,
and it's unfortunate it's taken this,
but the reality really has set in
that you've gotta have competent leadership.
Yes.
And what happened at DWP,
because I was there for 13 years,
10 of which I was president,
close to 10, is the head of that department got politicized. Years ago under Bradley and
under Reardon, under Hahn, the general manager of Department of Water and Power was always
somebody who came through the ranks, who was just this exceptional engineer.
And that department was regarded as best in class in the country as a utility bar none.
The best financial rating, the best engineers wanted to work there.
It built some of the most amazing projects in history, including Hoover Dam.
So let's just start with that one, right?
Then what happened?
Politics creeped into who was the general manager.
That destroys an organization.
This is an organization that's not in the business of being necessarily doing what's
politically important at the time.
It's in the business of delivering water and power.
And the failure is also there. I don't understand how the current general manager of the department
– I don't know what she did and didn't do – but the kind of failure that's on
her desk where the buck stops, she needs to resign. She needs to be fired, in my opinion, by the mayor
and be held accountable for whoever made bad decisions,
including herself, but we're allowing this.
And so the minute you allow that,
that continues this creep of incompetence is tolerated.
And it shouldn't be tolerated because people
lost their lives they lost their homes right well am I right about you're
100% right and I think you're 100% right about politics and the problem with
politics is that people want to preserve the structure that pays them they want
to preserve the entity that they're invested in, that
they have their time in, they have all their connections, and this is the
weird world of politics versus the world of business. And you know what's
fascinating right now is we're getting a chance to see what happens when you take
a business approach to the government in the White House. We're seeing right now
with this whole USAID thing where they're uncovering massive amounts
of corruption and waste and just a lot of weird shady shit with NGOs and where an enormous
amount of money is going.
And you're seeing someone look at this thing that is incredibly efficient almost by design and
Instead of saying like well, this is just how it is and this is how these politicians get funded So let's just keep this thing going the same way it is and make some incremental changes to try to make people happy
So we still get elected right instead of that you're seeing a
politician a president who's coming in who can't get reelected so he's just going ham and
He's just cleaning out everything and people are freaking out the same people
that say we need radical change we need radical change we've got corruption we
need radical change okay well here's your radical change we don't need this
but you do the government does they need oversight and they haven't had that and
because of that you're seeing this, not just waste,
you could call it waste, but it's deeper.
It's deeper than waste.
It's corruption.
And you're seeing that corruption get weeded out.
I am hoping that this is successful
and that it yields a benefit to the American people,
to the working class people, to everybody,
where they recognize, like, hey,
we can't just be spending all our fuckin' money on nonsense and it all should be done with
a real clear understanding of getting results right if that happens and that's
that idea spreads across the country because ideas spread and people change
their minds and you know and sometimes it happens one guy in the neighborhood
ago you know what fuck this I'm fed up and then everybody yeah I've been kind And people change their minds. And sometimes it happens, one guy in the neighborhood
will go, you know what, fuck this, I'm fed up.
And then everybody's like, yeah, I've
been kind of thinking that too.
I just didn't want to say it.
And then people start talking.
And then it's not a scary thing to discuss anymore.
It opens the door 100%.
And you're seeing that now.
I feel it in LA.
You're seeing that now.
Like I said, it's terrible that it took this kind of tragedy
to have people saying it
I'm a big believer it can change. I'm a big believer that LA can turn around. I'm a big believer we can fix the problems I'm a big believer we can fix the problems in
California I really am and
I think we have started to turn this corner where people are saying you know what whether you're Democrat or Republican to me
Sort of doesn't matter.
Are you competent?
Do you have experience?
Are you gonna make decisions for the right reason?
When I was the president of the police commission,
it was the most amazing experience
because Jim Hahn's mayor, we have a police department
that was failing miserably after the Rodney King riots.
The police department was under a federal consent decree.
A federal judge was overseeing it.
We had Bernie Parks, who was the chief of police.
I don't know if you remember Bernie Parks.
He was probably there when you were living there.
He came out of central casting, very handsome, proud black man and wore the
uniform beautifully, rose through the ranks. Super nice guy. We were friends. Jim Hong
calls me and says, Hey, I want to appoint you as a president of the police commission.
And I said, Mr. Mayor, I really appreciate it, but I don't want the job because I knew
what the job was going to entail,entially having to fire a very, very popular chief of
police.
And he's two or three times called back.
I finally did it.
So glad I did, because I learned so much from the
experience.
At the end of the day, decided we needed to move on and have a
different chief of police.
What was wrong? What was he doing?
What he was doing, Joe, is he had put in
procedures, disciplined procedures,
that were so onerous on the officers
that one officers were leaving,
but more importantly, the bad guys,
particularly the gangs, were very smart that they would
start filing complaints in certain areas that they wanted to control around the city.
And so the officers started getting all these complaints on their record, and once they
did it held up any kind of promotion or transfer.
So what did the cops start doing?
They started saying,
I'm just not going to go to that area. And the minute they abandoned that area, the gangs
controlled it. And crime was going crazy. How clever. Yeah, right. Yeah. So I would
go to the chief and say, Come on, you got to change the discipline process. Nope, not
changing a thing. Very stubborn guy. He had all the answers but and and i don't mean that
it i've i'm it's facetious he didn't have all the answers obviously but
so that was a main problem so
if you had an area the city
the border delhi county
l a city crime was rising l a
county
was going down because the sheriffs are actually proactively
and not in an abusive way proactively policing it
LAPD was retreating cops were upset cops were leaving the Academy is empty all of these things were happening
had to change leadership I
Had people burning me an effigy
Literally, my wife would call me and say oh my god. They're burning you outside a City Hall, they're marching. It was crazy to put pressure on me to keep Bernie Parks. Not
because Bernie Parks was the best chief of police, because it was politically
correct to do that. And I remember calling Jimmy Hahn, the mayor, and I said,
I'm gonna make a recommendation and you're probably not gonna like it because
it's you're gonna come under a lot of heat and to his credit he said
just do what's right I'll take the heat and I recommended we hire Bill Bratton
and we brought this guy in to LA his Boston accent and all best cop in the country, built a team around them. We got crime down to levels
not seen since 1950, doing all the right things, engaging the community, senior lead officers,
walking the beat, getting to know the neighborhoods, started hiring. People wanted to be a member
of LAPD. There was now back a pride in it. Completely turned it around within a couple of years. But that all came
and then Jimmy lost reelection because the black community unfortunately abandoned him
because of not keeping Bernie Parks. It's one of the reasons.
But he did the right thing.
He didn't care about his political future.
He cared about the city.
He never gets enough credit for this.
And I just learned that lesson,
which I talked about earlier.
If you've got the freedom to make a decision
without worrying about getting reelected,
it's probably where the president's head is.
I'm just gonna do what I think is right.
It really is amazing what can happen.
So let's get more people like that who just understand, let's do what's right for people.
I'm in public service.
Serve the damn people.
It almost seems like at this point you need someone who's outside of politics to run for office.
I think you do.
Because everybody—
I know that sounds self-serving, but I think you do.
Of course, it would sound self-serving coming from someone who wants to be—you're outside
of it and want to be the mayor.
But it's—I think that's the correct response because the people that are in it are just
too tied in.
You're just—they're too tied in to—
They're too beholding. They're too beholding. It're just they're too tied in to the two beholding.
They're too beholding. It's just it's entwined.
The octopus has many tentacles.
Yeah, it's wrapped around everything and it just stalls all progress and change.
And no, no real radical change can ever be met.
No one wants to go with it because it's going to disrupt all their different ideas
and businesses and people are going gonna look like they're responsible
or incompetent so they don't want change,
they wanna pretend that this is the only way to go forward.
And then if someone does come along
and changes things radically,
I mean, it makes them all look terrible
and it's dangerous.
It's dangerous for business.
They're not in the business of helping people,
they're in the business of keeping their job.
100%.
Yeah, and that's what's gross.
It is really gross.
It's gross, and it seems like the only way
that that ever gets resolved is you have to bring in
someone who's a businessman or a businesswoman,
someone who understands business,
who's outside of this political system and says,
I've studied this for years,
there's a lot of things that could be fixed,
and they're not being done and we could do it.
Yeah, and you know the issue with that is it's such a tough system. There's so much
that gets thrown at you.
Yeah, like the whole entire party of Democrats came to go after you.
I know. I'm a Democrat. I'm very moderate. I'm fiscally very conservative. I'm very moderate. You know, I'm fiscally very conservative. I'm socially liberal.
But they were, so you know, what gives the incentive
to the person on the outside to do it?
Right, nothing.
And that's what we've gotta figure out.
Listen, I've got high hopes for San Francisco
with their new mayor.
Again, an outsider came in and won.
I think that's great.
I hope he does great. I hope he does great.
He changes the city.
That place was amazing at one point, Tom.
I used to love going to San Francisco.
I haven't gone in years.
It's just too crazy.
No, it's terrible.
It's a dump.
It's unbelievable that one of the greatest cities
in the country has just completely fallen.
But no course correction until now.
I'm hopeful for this new mayor as well.
And I'm also hopeful that a lot of the new young tech people
are fed up.
I think the new people who grew up with the internet
understand the corruption and the bullshit,
whereas the old people from a couple decades ago
were really just spoon-fed bullshit
from the mainstream media.
And they thought that this is the only way to be.
We're the kind, intelligent, well-read,
progressive people on the West Coast.
It's our responsibility to be compassionate, you know,
and to be the most charitable people possible.
And they just didn't realize, like,
you're not doing anybody a service
by letting them camp out in front of your house
and smoke meth.
That's not, none of that's good.
That's right.
It's all real bad for them,
it's all real bad for your kids.
Yep, and all those businesses moved out.
Yes, all those businesses moved out.
San Francisco just became insane
watching all these enormous chains just pull out
and then people get angry and cry racism
when they pull out like, what are you doing?
You're not, how do you not?
It's just from the outside.
It's like moving to Texas was such an eye opener too. I'm jealous with every, you know? It's just from the outside. It's like moving to Texas was such an eye-opener, too.
I'm jealous.
Being here in Austin today, all the new buildings going up.
Yes.
I said to my wife, oh my god, look at this.
It's booming.
It's booming.
Freedom.
Go to a restaurant last night, and people
are happy, having a great time.
And there's new buildings going up and high rises.
And the city's clean everywhere
I drove around last night today just immaculate but it's also you know I talked to Stephen Adler
who was the former mayor of Austin great guy and you know he was explaining to me the homeless
situation we had a long talk about it because it really boomed during COVID yeah and he was saying
look LA's too big I think I can fix the problem in Austin. And they did an enormous job.
They did a fantastic job.
They bought a bunch of hotels.
They put people up.
They started programs.
They put a lot of effort into it.
But they were only dealing with a few thousand homeless people.
They had like 3,000.
Like that's enough.
And this is what Steven Adler was saying.
He was saying, you could fix that.
You can't fix it when it gets to 80,000, 90,000.
He's like, it just gets too big with the bureaucratic process.
Like, as government functions today,
without the outsider coming in and making radical change,
the way it functions today, he's like, it's just too big.
He goes, I think I can fix Austin.
I think I can fix Austin before I get out.
I think he did a great job.
I mean, there's still problems.
You're always gonna have problems.
You have cities.
You're gonna have mentally ill people.
You're gonna have drug addicts.
You're gonna have people that have just been abused
their whole life and they're just destroyed mentally
and then they're out and then you have schizophrenia
and all these other.
It's very sad.
It's very sad.
We clearly need better mental health institutions
set up in this country to deal with a lot of these people
because that's what a lot of it.
And a lot of it happened during the Reagan administration
when they changed the.
They closed them down.
Yes, they closed down mental health institutes
and just said, you're on your own
and just let these people loose on the street.
And then on top of that, you have the crack epidemic
that comes around at the same time.
It's like chaos, just full chaos.
And you saw, like I saw the changes in the cities.
I saw the changes in the news.
I saw, you know, and people were recognizing
that this is like a new problem.
But it's never been like Los Angeles
where you're driving on the street.
You just see blocks and blocks of tents.
It's just like how is this not fixed?
You're not even allowed to litter.
So if you're not allowed to litter, how are you allowed to do that?
There's definitely a couple of standards that are different.
I'm not giving up that it can be fixed though.
And I understand there's a big difference with solving for 3,000 versus 80,000 whatever the number is but
it can be fixed because it has to be fixed. I think it has to be fixed by an
outsider is what Steve Atterly's point was ultimately really. Yeah. It's like you know
being in the system. I agree with that. There's no doubt it has to and it's and again somebody
that's willing to risk their political career by doing the right thing
for the people on the street.
These are human beings that have a right
to be given a chance to have a better life.
And a lot of people are there, you know,
just because everything went wrong in their life.
And God bless them.
And you gotta try to fix it.
And the waste of the money in doing it is a crime.
Anyway, we've talked about it, but I'm still hopeful.
I know I run overly optimistic in life,
but I think it can be done.
Well, it's worked out well for you.
Well, I've been pretty fortunate and blessed in my life.
No complaints.
Working hard and being overly optimistic
actually works out sometimes, a lot of times.
Okay, so let's talk about law and order.
That's a giant issue in Los Angeles.
People do not feel as safe as they used to feel.
They feel like there's more violent crime,
it's more unreported crime, and maybe more concerning
is that people get arrested and then immediately
get released, and there doesn't seem to be
any repercussions for that.
Right.
So what would you do to change that?
Well, thank goodness state law got changed.
I mean, that's another really good example
of what happened in California, that they repealed
the law that allowed anything under $900
to just be a misdemeanor.
It was insanity.
Insanity.
Just insanity.
And they weren't bundled.
So you could, like, in a Syrian fashion,
keep stealing $900.
Right, every day.
Every hour.
Right, yeah, as long as it's out of pop.
It was still a misdemeanor.
So that law changed.
Great progress.
Holding bad people accountable is really important.
I'm also a big believer to give people a chance to rebuild their lives
No doubt goes hand in hand
but
We made a big change by getting rid of George Gascon as our district attorney who was not prosecuting and allowing people
It was just a turnstile. You got arrested you were let out
What can we get to the heart of that? Sure. What's the motivation for that?
Motivation for doing that? Yes.
That well I probably won't explain it right because I don't I don't agree with it is that
from a social justice standpoint quote unquote you don't want to overpopulate the prisons,
you don't want to hold people and take away their life
for a minor crime
uh... a lot of it was a minor crimes a lot of it was a minor there was one of
them that was a guy who's is crazy homeless guy pulled a knife on a sheriff
and then two weeks later there at least
somewhere a little small short time after that i know it's two weeks
attacked a man with his family with a machete on the beach.
Yeah, no, I know, you're right, you're right.
I mean, what George did, yeah, you're right.
You're absolutely right.
And I can't explain it because it's just, it's so messed up.
I don't even know how you justify
letting somebody out of jail
or not holding them with bail, any of that.
I don't understand it.
I think most people got to the point, they were so worried about where crime was going, they did
finally get rid of George. And we brought in Nathan Hockman, and I think Nathan's doing a
great job. So I can't, I can't explain it. But
the fear is that it's done on purpose. This is the fear. Oh, of course it is. That's the fear. The great fear is that there are people in this world that want LA and major cities in
this country to be in complete disarray, to have constant chaos and to be able to push
liberal prosecutors and then push even more liberal prosecutors to go against them and
continue this cycle and make it so that people live in a constant state of fear. And what's the
end goal of that? It has to be profit. I mean someone has to be profiting off of it.
Who profits off of that? I don't know. Ask George Soros. Yeah. Ask the people that
fund these like extremely liberal district attorneys that all seem to
have the same idea. But do you think that no cash turning? I do. I do think that time is turning.
And I know that Elon Musk wants to do sort of the exact opposite, like to try to finance
– he's been talking about that – financing people that are much more reasonable and that
believe in law and order.
Well Nathan is a good example of that.
That's great.
We need fair laws.
We need kind justice.
We do need rehabilitation.
But we also need to protect people that aren't criminals.
Of course.
That's the primary thing, is to protect the general public. Serve and protect, right? That's the whole idea.
We need to protect everybody else, and then the people that were, life did them wrong, and they've wound up,
let's figure out a way to actually rehabilitate them instead of just putting them in cages.
Yeah, and people are doing that. I mean, there's some very successful programs that are doing that.
But I agree with you.
I mean, we got to get back to the point where government's primary function is to protect
the public and give them the ability to prosper.
Give them the ability to build a business, raise your family, keep your community safe.
It's just so basic.
It's so basic.
It's gone upside down.
Yeah. That's what's crazy is that law and order thrown out the window. Without law and order,
no one is safe. That's right. You need to understand that if you just don't go after bad
people, then they have no fear of doing whatever they want, and then you're letting them out on
jail, so out of jail, so then you've got more of them out than ever before. Self-perpetuating.
There was a podcast that I listened to where there was a former gang member who was talking
about how they're going to let 70,000 hard criminals out of the LA jails and he's like,
I'm getting out of town.
This guy was a hardcore gang member.
He's like, LA is going to get too crazy in the next year.
It's just nuts.
And, you know, there was the whole defund the police movement Which was just catastrophic that that whole and is seeing politicians including Kamala Harris seeing politicians
Openly say and post it on Twitter. We need to defund the police which is
Just crazy it is it doesn't mean wrong as it can be yeah
Certainly hold bad cops accountable certainly have better training. Yeah, certainly hold bad cops accountable, certainly have better training,
certainly have higher standards. But defunding the police, like what are you talking about?
You need to do the opposite. That's right. You need to train them better, refund them.
Right. Definitely make the bad ones accountable. Definitely make people feel safe that they're
interacting with police officers. But respect these people. Respect these people that are
protecting your life. That's right.
Because all those people, when something goes down, they call 911.
They're furious when cops don't show up.
That's right.
All these people who talk shit about the cops that are protected, defund the police.
You're protected by armed security people.
Right.
And you're saying defund the police.
This is fucking nonsense.
It's nonsense.
I couldn't agree more.
And for people that suffered because of this defund the police thing and this whole wave
of crime that went through LA in the wake of it all, those people are the people that
you can get to.
The people that saw it, experienced it, know the consequences of this foolish direction
that everything is going in, those are the people that you can still reach. And I think it could be reached with a person like you
that is a compassionate, kind, liberal guy
when it comes to social issues,
but understands business and understands accountability
and that you have to see positive results.
You have to do what needs to be done
to get those positive results.
You can't just do the same shit over and over again
and pay more people and we need a bigger budget.
You know, like, oh, let's raise the budget.
We've increased the budget to fix the problem.
You're not fixing it.
Keeps getting bigger.
It's just nuts.
It needs someone outside the system
and that's why I was really happy to talk to you
and that's why I'm really happy that you're still involved
because a lot of people like yourself that are very wealthy
and you don't have to do this,
this is not gonna be,
you're not gonna make money doing this.
Like this is probably gonna be a huge strain,
a tremendous amount of pressure,
but some people feel a calling and they feel like,
I think I can do something and fix this
that other people maybe won't be able to do.
I appreciate that.
And I do, I do because what's the alternative? We stay in the same path?
It gets worse. The alternative is it gets worse.
It's going to get worse and more and more people are leaving, more and more businesses close down,
but here's what really hit me on the campaign and I was telling
our family, I've got four kids and they're 35 to 25
and just incredible people.
And my wife is wonderful.
I'm really incredibly blessed with all of that.
I was so worried when I decided to run for mayor
the impact on the family, right?
A little bit scary, high profile, all these kind of things.
It ended up being the greatest experience
and we would go into neighborhoods,
hardworking neighborhoods of people that just
wanted the ability to work hard and live their life.
That would just want the ability to allow their daughter to be able to walk to school
on her own and not have to walk around in an encampment or for fear that there'd be
somebody that would attack her on the way to school.
The most basic things. And we'd give them a hug. You know, they would cry, we would cry. And I
would tell the kids that cry is hope. And what we're seeing there is for the first time,
there's actually somebody coming into their neighborhood, a neighborhood that historically doesn't vote in large chunks so the politicians
forget about them, right, because they're not likely voters necessarily.
But we were trying to mobilize it.
And we were also trying to give a voice to people that don't have a voice.
How inspiring that was for me.
That's what fueled me.
And you're right. I don't want a career as a politician. I
want a career of being able to give back and help and
and and take the group of people that have the least voice but are
Some of the hardest working people of our society and give them an opportunity to grow. That was my grandfather as an immigrant, as a gardener, but he had the opportunity to
raise his family where he didn't have to worry about all this shit.
It's just changed so much.
So I believe we've got to get our elected officials.
If we take people who are the hardest working, the dearest people
that have the most impact because of crime, because of homelessness, because of being
overly taxed, all of these kind of things, and we give them hope and a path forward,
everybody benefits from it. You start solving so many problems Joe. There's a little school in the middle of the heart of the worst part of
Los Angeles with the homelessness in Skid Row and it's called
Pada Los Niños and my wife and I have been supporting that school for over 30
years now. Outside the doors is the biggest sea of inhumanity
of homeless people just strewned out on the street,
drugged out, all terrible mental health conditions.
You open that door and it's beautiful and caring
and loving and this school that we support,
there's a series of schools,
takes in children from six months to five years old.
The parents are all working parents, below the poverty line working parents.
So they're working in the sweatshops, whatever the case may be. They're living
down on Skid Rowan Apartments, two or three families in an apartment,
working their tail off to just survive. and then to be able to get their
child in this school to cost them nothing, it's fully supported.
Those are the dearest, sweetest children in the world.
We love going down there.
Our kids have worked down there since they were little kids.
We do a Christmas party for them.
And what gives us such joy is seeing the hope in their eyes.
And I know it sounds corny, but it's such an important path that we've got to get our
elected officials to be more supportive of that and get more of these kind of schools
and give more of these families the opportunity to do well because they want to do well.
But the system is frankly against them.
And that's what I wanted to change more than anything. Well let's talk about that. This school, there's no reason why they should have to
encounter that environment outside that school. You're right. There's no reason.
This is not nuclear waste. This is not something that can't be cleaned up
for five million years. We have to leave it alone. This is human beings. This is
human devastation out there in the street. The fact that these kids have to encounter that, first of all, what does that do for
your sense of hope and your future of the world?
This is what you're seeing every day?
You absorb that from your environment, the sadness and the devastation all around you.
You're seeing people with lost lives out in the street right in front of your school.
When you're a young kid and you're developing mind and
that's the environment that you encounter all the time like that is
gonna fuck your head up forever yeah it's very tough and then there's the
question of the sweatshops like why why why how come people that work their tail
off constantly have to live three four four families in an apartment. Like what the hell's going on there?
I agree. Yeah, but that's what that's what I'm saying.
That's what I think we got to start fixing. Yes, right. And if you start fixing that now,
your point is right. These kids having to see that every day,
they're being yelled at, you know, by people as they're walking through the doors and all that. It's terrible.
But thank God that school's there because if that school wasn't there, they have nothing. They got nothing. Right. They're on the street.
No, it's amazing. I mean it's the problem outside the school that should be fixed. That should be a public health issue.
I mean if you were the
the future human beings,
if you want to look at this country and you want to make America a great place,
what you want is less people that are going to lose at life. You want less losers.
The best chance you can have less losers is start them off on a good path when they're young.
That's right. Well said.
If you're starting them off on a good path when they're young,
if you're giving them the tools that they need to have a successful life, giving them hope, giving
them examples of good people that you could strive to be like, what would Mike do? I'll probably want
to do what he does. He would get up and get this done. And you know, I admire that person. And having
people around you that are examples of someone who lives a life that you admire. And when you're just
seeing people peeing on themselves and throwing up and walking through the streets just covered
in cardboard shelters and tents, like that's not hope. You're not going to see, you're
not seeing good examples. So what are you depending on for your examples? That, that's
a travesty. That should be cleaned up immediately.
So let's talk about that.
What could be done for Skid Row,
which is probably the worst example
of LA's homeless problem.
It's the same thing with any place else
that we talked about.
You have to, I believe, supercharge these organizations,
like Apollo's Ninos that are doing
well, that are really changing lives. Like the downtown Women's Center, like
Common Concern, there's Union Rescue Mission, there's dozens of them. Where do you put
all those people? You've got all these people on the streets, you got a hundred
thousand people in the streets. There's endless land, there's endless land. We, the
city of Los Angeles has something like over 300 or 400 parcels of land that are vacant.
They're just sitting there vacant.
Densify them.
Build on them.
Build housing.
Absolutely do it.
Skid Row, there's a lot of opportunity to do that, and a lot of organizations that will
do that.
But we can never say, well, create enterprise zones.
I mean, I wanted to create
enterprise zones. You go to South LA or whatnot. There's areas that they were burned out years
ago from the riots that have never been rebuilt. Create an enterprise zone, give tax incentives
to go down there and build housing. The tax code, when I was a young lawyer, they changed
all the tax laws, had a lot of tax credits, a lot of incentives to do things it's a it's a great way to
incentivize businesses mobilize the private financial markets to invest and
do things there's an enormous amount of capital in this country we're the
wealthiest country in the world especially LA LA is so wealthy state of
California fifth largest economy in the world. We have an economy
larger than India. It's nuts. It's nuts. And do we have problems? Of course. Can you imagine
if we fixed the problems with this state could do? It would be incredible. There's nothing
like it. And so I think we just have to have some really basic goals of how we're going to change things
little by little, start attacking them, but start getting people off the streets, start
building, start giving the incentives to do it, break some eggs as you're doing it because
you're saving lives.
And I think once you get that in motion it starts taking off. I really do because people do not want to continue the way
we're continuing and if there's a handful of people that do who cares? God
bless them. Yeah. Leave them there. But that's not the far majority of the
people. I think those handful of people are fed a narrative. And the narrative is there's one way that's good
and there's one way that's evil.
And there's the right-wing people
that want to be fascist totalitarian dictators,
and they just want the wealthy to get wealthier,
and they want the poor to starve.
And then you have the left-wing side
that has this idea of compassionate care
and letting everybody be themselves
and let people camp out and let, you know,
and we need to treat people like human beings
and they're not homeless, they're the unhoused,
and you start reframing things,
and it's just a bunch of nonsense.
And unfortunately, these people are all conditioned
to think that everybody opposed to them hates civil rights,
hates women's rights them hates civil rights, hates
women's rights, hates gay rights, they're right-wing, hardcore, fascist assholes.
What we need is someone, this is one of the things that made me happy about you, is that
you need someone who appeals to people's sense of kindness and caring and you know being a progressive person in terms
of like social issues right but yet understands human nature and
understands business like that you have to do things if you want to change
things you can't just throw money at it you can't just have a bunch of people
that are just bullshitting and not getting anything done and this is the
problem with LA that we see.
Well, there's no doubt. But don't you think that is changing now, right? We've talked
about that.
I think it's changing.
I think it's changing.
But you know, LA will snap right back to the old way. I mean, if you just give them a couple
of good years, they'll be convinced that, you know...
We got to fight that good fight though, Joe. We got gotta fight that good fight. There's too much at risk.
There is too much at risk.
I do think, it all really depends on how successful Trump is
in this four years that he has
and the structure that he sets up
and how he can kind of, if it really shows people that,
hey, guess what, gay people aren't losing rights.
Hey, guess what, women aren't losing rights.
Hey, guess what, civil rights aren't being eroded.
This is not what's happening.
And then the whole country benefits.
If we see GDP go up, if we see homelessness,
joblessness go down, that would be amazing.
If that happens, then maybe people could wake their mind
up to the fact that you're not in this binary system
and that you really shouldn't be a part of a team.
You should be a part of Team America.
And Team America is like we want the whole thing to be better.
Everybody, all of us.
Wouldn't that be great?
It would be amazing.
It can be done.
And it can be done.
I agree.
It can be done.
Most people, I think, are reasonable, kind people.
Most people.
Yes.
But I think people get trapped in ideologies.
And California is one of the
better examples of a place that's just trapped. You're either a Democrat or you're a fucking
asshole. That's how people look at it. You know? Oh, God. That's how people look at it.
Yeah, I think there's a lot of that. There's a lot of that. I have a little bit more. Again,
I run a little bit more optimistic in the faith of my fellow Angelenos in Californians
that I think there's a real desire to make significant change.
I really do.
I'm hearing a lot of that, even from some of my most liberal friends.
They want change.
Oh yeah.
Well, you can push people up until a point.
Yeah. Oh yeah, well you could push people up to a point. Yeah, yeah. Now, I do think the success of Trump is going to have a big influence on that.
And so, especially in California, you know, because you know, they're, the majority is
very leery, right?
Yeah.
And Los Angeles, very leery of that.
And if he could do more of what he did that day
at that press conference, out on the Palisades,
it would be great, because he did show a compassion.
He did show a strength.
He showed that what he cared about
was the people getting back in their homes,
and let's take care of them.
He showed an impatience with the bureaucracy that was,
you know, they were spinning it, boy, the elected officials that day,
and he was pushing back on it.
Yeah.
Very professionally, very nicely, but very strongly.
He's much better at handling people this time around.
I think he sort of corrected a lot of the way
he used to communicate with people,
and he's much more even and measured.
Yeah.
It's much more effective and measured. Yeah.
It's much more effective.
I agree.
I was impressed.
And like I said earlier, he's a builder.
He's a successful builder.
And I would love to him to give a little blueprint to the city of LA and say, you know, here's
the 10 things you need to do.
Yeah.
And it should only take, I mean, that's what we're doing.
This new foundation I launched with a bunch of really smart thought leaders in industry
have come together. We launched it yesterday just to go tackle problems.
Don't tell me what the problem is without the solution. You know, I just
live by that and there is a solution to every problem. It may not be the solution
you want, but there's a solution out there so work towards it. And I'll give you an example. You know, I've been pushing since the fires.
We've got to underground all the power lines. You can't go rebuild the Palisades or Altadena
the way it was built 70 years ago. Right. It'd be insane. It's insane. So underground
the power lines, redo the water mains, redo the higher firing system, blah blah blah. And I get this pushback.
We don't have the money, we don't have the time. You just had the largest urban disaster in the
history of the United States, 250 billion dollars worth of damage, and you're telling me you don't
have the money to do the right thing? Didn't we just have the largest infrastructure bill in history passed about a year ago?
We must have the money and we'll find the money
but that can't stop you from doing what's right. So
this organization I put together is to go
be the advocate for those homeowners, to be the advocate for those business
people that lost their businesses
and work alongside government and say listen we'll solve the problem
for you and hand the blueprint to you so we're gonna hold you accountable to
implement it what is the answer when they say we don't have the money if you
have California which is just insanely enormous economy yeah so and a very high
tax rate but one of the highest, that's right.
So you have high taxes, so you have an enormous economy. That means you got a lot of money. Right.
So where's the money going?
Where the money's gone, I can't tell you. You know, we used to have a surplus in California. Now we have a deficit.
So if that happens at your home or my home, that means we mismanaged our money. It's pretty simple. Yeah.
happens at your home or my home, that means we mismanaged our money. It's pretty simple. In solving the problem for the Palisades or Altadena on the electric issues or the infrastructure
issues, listen, the city has bonding authority, Department of Water and Power has bonding
authority, there's federal grants, there's state grants, there's private capital. We're
going to go solve that and give some answers to the
city. But my point is the answer can't be let's not do what's right. We've done
enough of that. The answer has to be we're gonna go do this and now we're
gonna solve how to pay for it. And we're gonna do it quickly to get people back
in their homes and start building again. And I believe we can bend the curve.
If somebody thinks it's going to take five years,
let's go figure out how we get it done in two years.
This is where private enterprise needs to come in and help the government
because the government alone can't fix this problem.
It's too big. They work too slow.
You need innovation and entrepreneurship that private enterprise brings.
We saw that in COVID with Project Warp Speed and getting the medicines that were needed
at the time.
We saw it at 9-11 on getting the rebuilding done.
And we need to implement the same thing in Los Angeles to get the city rebuilt because
it's an impact on the American economy to have the size of two Manhattans,
two Manhattans,
burned down. That's how big it is.
Can you imagine that? That's insane.
14, 15,000 structures.
It's so hard for people to imagine that.
I just went back, like I was telling you,
I was there a couple weeks ago for the UFC.
And you see it, and when you're flying over,
it just doesn't even make sense.
And we showed the drone footage as well,
of the Palisades, it doesn't make sense.
It's so much devastation.
Altadena's gone.
Gone.
Gone, which is, and Altadena,
my friend Jimmy Dore was just talking about this
the other day in a video,
it was this beautiful, like nice neighborhood.
Oh yeah. Tree-lined streets.
Yeah, cottage homes,
dear sweet neighborhood.
And gone.
Yeah, gone.
One of the nice neighborhoods,
like a beautiful neighborhood to drive through.
Yeah.
It's gone.
And those people mostly, Joe, as you know,
so many of them, there's no safety net.
Right.
I mean, very moderate income, working class,
hard working class people.
And I've been telling all the elected officials,
you've got to have programs that start supporting people,
because they are down and out.
They have nowhere to go.
And we've got to do something to help them day to day to live.
One of the things that was bothering me was
they were talking about replacing all those beautiful streets that were filled
with single-family homes with big apartment buildings and then it would
just ruin that area. Can't do it. Yeah. Can't do it. It's wrong. Yeah this is not the time to be
reimagining anybody's neighborhood. No. of the devastation and the pain. I've
been really vocal about that. And this is, you know, this is
the creep you get what you're talking about. This social
justice. Well, now let's say in the palisades, let's start
building a whole bunch of low income housing. I'm all for low
income housing. I'm building workforce housing for our employees that are low-income because I want to make
sure they have a home.
So I'm all into that.
But now is not the time to do it in a neighborhood that's been devastated.
And there's also, you're going to have people that won't be able to move back to their neighborhood because they may
not be wealthy but they may make more money than what is required to move into
a low-income apartment they can't move back don't do that that's not fair if
you want to do that what I've told the elected officials is provide an
incentive not a requirement if you build build some low income units in an apartment
building you're replacing, we all let me back up. So we have this crazy law in the city
of Los Angeles. Crazy law in the city of Los Angeles is something of this effect. I may
not get it exactly right. If you tear down an existing apartment building that's market rate, you have to replace it
with low income housing.
Okay.
All of it?
Maybe it's not all of it.
I think it's the majority of it.
But whatever the number is, okay?
My point is, when you do that, you provide a disincentive
to reinvest in the city.
Yeah.
So let's turn it around and provide an incentive.
Say if you close, knock it down, and rebuild,
or it's burned down in the palisades, and want to rebuild,
then give a bonus density and allow that person
to build more to compensate them for providing housing
that is low income, right?
Just seems to be more fair.
Everybody gets what they want.
How would you do that?
How does that work?
Well, let's say you have a 12 unit apartment building
that burned down in the Palisades.
Instead of requiring low income housing
for let's say 20, 30, 40% of it,
say instead of building 12,
we're gonna let you build 20 units.
And out of the 20 units,
give us six units that are low-income housing,
whatever the numbers are.
But let's have governments start thinking about
an incentive-based system, right?
I mean, you look at your life or my life
or the people that work here,
the harder you work, the more that you do,
you're more rewarded, right? You're not required to work harder. You're incentivized to work harder or work smarter.
And I think if we build that kind of thinking into government to provide capital, to provide
investment, especially on the rebuilding, you can have some social policies that are very important
and very good, like low income.
What I would even say is, why don't we give an incentive to build workforce housing in
the Palisades and Altadena, where the workforce housing goes to the first responders, firefighters,
police and teachers.
So now you can have firefighters, police and teachers living in the neighborhoods
they're serving. As you know, LA is so expensive, most of the cops drive two hours to get home
and two hours to get to work. Same with the firefighters. You want them to be in the neighborhood
they serve. That's a great public policy. Do it around an incentive.
Especially in a place like the Pacific Palisadesades I think people deeply resent the idea of being forced to have any kind of low-income housing
The idea is that it's hard to live in the palisades. It's expensive. It's beautiful
It's a incredible piece of land or it was yeah before the fires devastated it
It was a glorious place to live like it was very difficult to afford to live there
So the people that made the most money
were the ones who could buy the homes there.
They don't want someone to open up low-income housing
in the same neighborhood that's very difficult to live in.
The whole idea is that you make enough money
where you could live in a place
that's very difficult to live in,
but it's beautiful and it's really safe,
and that's what the Palisades was.
They don't want this to be replaced
with low-income housing.
They don't want incentives for it to be replaced
with low-income housing.
Yeah, I don't know, Joe.
I think there's people, I think there's a lot of people
that would be very excited to have workforce housing,
especially if you tie your workforce housing
into first responders.
And I think there's people that would allow-
That's different, though... That's different though.
That's different than apartment buildings.
They're low-income apartment buildings.
Yeah, but even in an apartment setting, I think it can work.
I mean, listen, I think there's people in the Palisades that would very much welcome
affordable housing, low-income housing.
I certainly wouldn't have a big landowner in the Palisades.
But what I don't like about it is the requirement off the backs of people
who have lost everything. That's just not right. That's not the time to do it. If you
want to go rezone stuff, let the place get rebuilt and let people get back on their feet
and then go have that discussion. It's a timing issue on it in my opinion. But listen, there's
a lot of issues the city's got to tackle to
get these places rebuilt. It's immensely complicated. And again, I mean, I'll be very honest, the
government just cannot do it alone. There's just no way. There's just no way.
One of the things that people complain a lot about California is regulations.
Yeah.
And how regulated it is and how difficult it is to start businesses and to maintain businesses.
Hugely overregulated.
What can be done about that?
Cut through the red tape.
We have more regulations.
It's insane to run a business.
I run a business, obviously, in LA and in California.
And it's to the point that I would never
restart the business in LA and in California. It's too expensive
The tax rates are too high for everybody not just people that are making money. I'm talking about people who are
You know moderate hard-working people had tax rates too high, but the regulation on small businesses in Los Angeles
You have businesses now closing because of its's overregulated. And then it got even,
frankly, worse post-COVID because a lot of the restrictions they took away during COVID
in order to allow businesses to survive and restaurants to operate, they started taking
them away. Like just having outdoor dining. Like, why would you do that? Why would you make it more
difficult for a small business owner to operate a restaurant? So that gets back to like the business approach to running government.
Let people prosper.
Have a system.
There's certain laws you need, obviously, to operate safely and smartly, but let have a system that people can earn money become successful.
What's the cause of regulation?
Where? How does it start?
become successful. What's the cause of regulation? How does it start? I don't know, Joe, that's a good question. I think that there's a group of people
that feel like government is the only way that society can be safe and
regulated, that people left on their own, you know, will go crazy and do terrible
things and running around the streets and it's just not the way it works, right?
Capitalism is a really good system.
We've proven that.
And over-regulation starts squeezing capitalism
to the point that it pushes out people
from investing and creating jobs and creating opportunity.
And LA has gotten to the point,
it's certainly over the bridge, it needs to
get pulled back. I mean, I can't even tell you how over-regulated it is. And then on
top of it, in LA now, we have too few cops. And so the obligation to protect your property
is getting pushed to private landowners. So like on our shopping centers, you know, we
have a very safe environment, friendly environment, family environment, all those
kind of things we're very protective of. LAPD wants to do the right thing, they
don't have the resources. So we've had to supplement it. Millions and millions of
dollars of private security. And that's a whole nother problem because what about
the individual landowner in a neighborhood that doesn't have
the kind of protection they need and
And they don't have the police force to protect them and running a business
becomes impossible
So and again those things are just fixable
They really are fixable
so
regulations water really are fixable. So regulations, water, law and order, what other things are giant
issues about LA that you think need to be addressed? Well, I think we have to, on the
positive side, I want to be more business friendly. I want to invite businesses back
to California. I want to invite businesses back to LA. That's a tough sell. I know to I want to invite businesses back to California. I want to invite businesses back to LA. That's tough
So I know I want to get Elon back to LA. I don't want him to leave LA
I've told him that you know, and I think he would come back
I think all these businesses would come back sure if it was reasonable if it was
Leave because it was awesome. That's what people have done. I didn't leave because it was awesome, right?
I left because I just didn't want this group of people that I thought were inept telling me what to do
Of course and they gave you in a weird way. They gave you the incentive to leave and not the incentive to stay
Yes, I want to give people the incentives to stay start your business grow your business raise your family
Let's protect you clean the streets, you know. All of those basic things are really important.
And again, Joe, maybe I'm overly optimistic in it,
but it can come back.
And I think California, if unleashed,
is just a mighty powerhouse.
It could really change the direction of this whole country.
The innovation that we have in California,
the technical knowledge, what's happening in our universities, some of the best in the world,
what's happening in the tech field with AI,
it's all based here in California.
And you've gotta let that flourish.
Set the platform that's encouraging these youngest,
brightest minds to come here and start your business.
And do the right thing.
And you've made the point, you're absolutely right. I've talked to a lot of the tech
people, you know, they want a different leadership that is supporting the growth
of technology that's going to change the world. It's going to happen somewhere.
We saw it happen in China with their new AI company, and we better be prepared
to be the best at it.
And we have to provide the platform to do that.
So in order to incentivize people, if they wanted to come back to California, you've
got these enormous taxes.
So something has to be done on a state level not just on a city level
That's right to address that looks so how do you address that? Yeah, you should have competitive tax rates
I don't know why California needs to tax people much higher than any other state
Why would you the cost of operating a state? You know, you've got very sophisticated states very dense states
It's a matter of setting priorities. And we've
got to look at the tax code to make it fair. We've got the highest gas costs in the country.
Why does a gallon of gas in California cost more than a gallon of gas in the world?
Well, isn't that because in California you're required to sell gas that's refined in California?
I don't know if that's the case. See if that's the case, Jamie.
But I know, I think the gas in California is also highly taxed of course
Yeah, wouldn't it is taxes based. This is the question though Rick
It's like where's all this money going if you've got these insanely high tax rate
But yet you don't have any money to fix the power lines you get the same insanely high tax rate
But you can't clean up the homeless problem and even though you throw on a lot of money on it
Where's that money going?
I don't know. It's not going to the school system.
They need to get these super nerds that are
on top of this department of government efficiency
and set them loose.
Set them loose on California.
We've got a lot of smart people in California,
along with them, that, you know,
really want to help the system.
And I think the minute you bring some really smart people...
This is what I did with this foundation. You look at the list of people that are
donating their time and talent, they're just brilliant people. I made one phone
call to each of them, would you give me your time and talent? I don't want a
dollar from you. Yes, I'm in. Whatever it is, I'm in. And that's what we need to do more of is have the elected
officials have the courage and the competency to reach out and get the
smartest people in different industries to come in and help get their ideas and
then implement them. That's the greatest form of government. Whether
you're a Republican or a Democrat it doesn't really matter if you got great
ideas.
And if you're a big thinker, that's what I would do.
That's what I am doing.
But on a state level, like the taxes for the state, that would have to be addressed by
the governor, right?
The governor and the legislature, yeah.
What could be done about that?
I think you've got to rebuild it, Joe.
I don't want to give you a specific proposal here,
but it doesn't need to be as high as it is in order
to operate the state of California
if the state of California has their priorities right
of what they're spending money on.
And by the way, the best way, and we learned this from Reagan,
to raise revenue for the government
is to allow businesses and families to grow
and create jobs and industries, not to suppress them.
Right.
So the many you keep overtaxing people,
all you're doing is giving people the incentive to leave,
which we've seen, right?
The exodus.
If you start giving people a rate
that allows them to be benefited
by staying in the state of California that business will grow and
California is gonna make more revenue. It's not rocket science.
It's not rocket science.
It's not rocket science.
The economy grows, people have more money, it's better for everybody.
And you get some jobs, you get people off the streets.
Yeah.
You know, this whole thing starts changing the dynamic. How great would that be?
It would be pretty incredible. I just don't want to get my hopes up.
Let's do it. No, no it now come on don't leave me I think it's possible it's just is a daunting task it is
a daunting task but okay I'm not throwing flowers at you look at what you've accomplished in your
career that was a daunting task yeah but I didn't think about it I just it just sort of lucked out
it was a luck yeah whatever it was a little bit of it. I just it just sort of lucked out. It
wasn't luck. It was a little bit of luck. Everybody's got a little bit of luck. For
sure. It was a hell of a lot of hard work and you were very focused and you had your
head down and you just kept going forward. So it can be done. Yeah, I couldn't do what
you did. Yeah, you could knock out. No, I can't. I just want to go on a tangent for a second. Sure. Okay, my boys got me addicted to taking an ice bath.
Okay?
You're insane.
What's the temperature of yours?
34.
Oh my God.
Okay, I saw a picture of you removing a sheet of ice.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm nowhere near the stud that you are, obviously. It's not that hard. It's just three minutes and it makes the rest of the day wait. I'm I'm nowhere near the stud that you are obviously it's not that hard
It's just three minutes, and I'm at the rest of the day way
He's cold. Yeah, and I I'm addicted to it. Yeah, it's great you in for three minutes
You'll still get the benefits at 50 okay?
What I get at 30 is much more suck and getting through the suck is part of it
Is it yeah long is the suck part? Sucks for about a minute.
Yeah, the first minute.
The first minute really sucks.
Yeah, that's with me at 50.
Yeah, I took a, I got some stem cells shot
into my shoulder recently, and when I do that,
you have to take like 72 hours,
because the actual, the inflammation is actually good
from the initial injection to heal the area.
And so I took three days off, and it's funny, just taking three days off,
when you get back in, the suck is worse.
Yeah.
But it doesn't, for me, it doesn't get any easier though.
It doesn't?
After the first minute?
No, no, no, no, no, no.
Oh, every day.
Every day.
Yeah, it gets a little easier.
It never gets easy, but it gets a little,
it's like it's easier now.
Like three days, like now I'm like four or five days in.
It's like, so when I pop the lid off of it. I just I don't even think about it
I just go get in there. Yeah, just shut up put the timer on get in there. Just sit
Yeah, just sit there. I do love it
But the thing about it is the way you feel when you get out is so amazing
Yeah, you feel alive you feelized you feel like your brain is firing
Yeah, all your indoor it kicks up your dopamine levels by 200% it lasts for hours and hours
Yeah, you feel wonderful and that's the thing. It's like we need to delay gratitude. You need to delay
These this people like to like feel comfortable now. You need to delay that
Yeah, put that on the side.
I like that.
Just suck it up for a while.
Yeah, I like that.
And doing that, forcing yourself to have voluntary adversity, just have three minutes a day
that's horrible, is going to make the whole rest of your day better.
It's only three minutes.
How much time has he been on Instagram?
Just flipping through nonsense.
Just looking at bullshit, getting upset at Twitter, going on Twitter,
what are these people talking about?
Like, three minutes instead of that.
No, it's addicting to me.
I never thought I would be addicted to it.
I love it.
I love it.
And the other thing I love, which I heard you do,
is the infrared.
Yeah, I do that too, I do that today.
I do it every day.
Yeah.
I love it.
Oh, you're talking infrared sauna.
I do a red light bed every day.
I do a regular sauna, a dry sauna
because I think there's more research that's been done particularly out of Finland.
You know, they did a 20-year study where they showed a 40% decrease in all-cause
mortality for people who use the sauna four days a week. Really? Yeah. More than an infrared. Just an old-fashioned dry sauna.
It's just not more than an infrared. Just an old-fashioned dry sauna.
It's just not more than an infrared.
I think, look, infrared is definitely beneficial.
The whole idea is heat shock proteins.
The whole idea is raising your body temperature to the point where your body develops these
heat shock proteins in order to mitigate the effects of the extreme heat.
Because you can only tolerate that extreme heat for a certain amount of time.
A regular dry sauna gets way hotter.
So my sauna, I like to keep it at 196.
So I get in there at 196 for 25 minutes.
And it's not fun.
It's not fun. It sucks.
But that stress of doing that is what makes your body stronger.
It's the response, your body's response to that extreme stress that makes it stronger. And this is what develops the heat shock proteins and this is what is
responsible for this. There's an EPO-like effect on your blood where you have more red
blood cells. It raises your endurance. It's almost like static cardio. Even though you're
sitting there
You know
I wear a heart rate monitor sometimes when I'm in there and my heart's jacked up to 147 beats a minute at the end
Wow, I mean it's pretty high at the end
When you're hitting that 21 minute mark and you're looking at your watch
Oh, Jesus Christ four more minutes of this shit and then has your is your recovery quick once you get out
Yeah, what's down? I'm so used to it
But another benefit is living in Texas.
When I go out in the heat and the sun,
it doesn't bother me at all.
My body's fully adapted to being hot.
It's hot every day.
And this just, that's again, it's just voluntary adversity.
It's forcing yourself to do something physically
and it makes the rest of your day way easier.
Okay, so you should get into politics, voluntary adversity. No would way rather have people like you on and try to help you out
than get involved myself. I appreciate that I'm grateful for that. Zero interest in getting
involved myself. Is this where your interests end though? Is it just mayor stuff or do you
ever look bigger than that? I don't know. You know right now honestly I was looking at a lot of a couple of different
options and then when January 7th hit with the fire the world sort of stopped
and I want to spend a lot of time right now trying to get it rebuilt. There's
gonna be time for politics for me for sure. It's probably not right now. So you
think like one day like governor, one day like president?
Maybe.
Well, I don't, you know.
Come on.
Come on, Rick.
You know what I want to do?
I look at it, and I don't mean this in a morbid way.
I mean it in a positive way.
I'm sort of at the back nine of my life, right?
And I've had an incredible life.
And so what can I do like that's really meaningful
at this point? And I enjoy public service a lot. I enjoyed when I worked for three different
mayors. And so I do want to do something at some point. But the question for me is where
is the place that I can do the most good? And have a good time doing it, by the way,
because I like having fun.
And where does that intersect?
And so as time goes on, I'll figure that out.
And whether it's the governor or whether it's the mayor,
I'm not quite sure, but I want to do something at some point,
but now I really want to get the place rebuilt.
Let's get moving.
What does that involve? You wanted to get the place rebuilt. Let's get moving. What does that involve? You wanted to get the place rebuilt. So how long is this woman
still going to be the mayor for?
Well she's there for, you know, I think about 18 months or so and she already announced
before the fire she's going to run for reelection. But we'll see how that plays out. As a private
citizen it's this group that I put together that's going to work really
closely pushing the city, finding solutions, sort of calling out when they're not doing
what they need to be doing.
And I'm hopeful that that's going to be really effective in, like I said, bending the curve,
shortening the timeline to get people in.
And that's going to take most of my time and most of my day.
I got a small, mighty staff that I hired for it.
I'm going to fund it myself.
I'm going to use all the resources from my company
and the talent we have in the company
to help find answers to rebuild it.
We got guys like Joe Lonsdale is a part of that group, one
of the biggest thinkers around. I got the head Parsons you know one of the great Gensler
architectural firms everybody's donating time and talent and so we want to push
the needle on this thing and then politics will come down the road we'll
figure that out. Well that that sounds wonderful but it seems to me that like
even less you're at the cockpit unless you're you, you know, controlling the direction of the city,
yeah, it's going to be very hard to really change things in a meaningful way.
It's a good challenge for sure, but I can't change the leadership that's there now,
and the problem is now. Right. Right. So I got to figure out how I help the leadership be successful.
Has the leadership adjusted their perspective based on this enormous failure of the fire?
Because it seems like politically that's a giant handicap for them.
Right. Obviously it was a huge disaster.
So in order to get re-elected you have to give these people some faith that you've
recognized that you've made some errors and you're going to do that I haven't heard that I haven't heard that that sounds
crazy yeah but you know I'll be really honest with you I'm always honest with
you with everybody when you're a leader and you weren't around to help prevent
the problem probably highly unlikely you're gonna be able to fix the problem, probably highly unlikely you're going to be able to fix the problem, if that
was your judgment.
Yeah.
Right?
Right.
So if your judgment was, I'm going to go out of town when this catastrophic event is about
to hit the city that I'm in charge of, you probably don't have the judgment to get it
fixed.
I hope I'm wrong, but what I'm going to do whatever I can to
help because the problem is bigger than the politics and the problem is bigger than her
and the people that are suffering shouldn't be suffering because of her or anything that
she did or who she appointed that failed in their job. We've got to do a workaround. It's the only option I've got right now, and that's what we're going to do, and that's
what I'm going to do.
That's very practical.
Is there anything else that you would think of that needs to be discussed about LA and
that you think could be fixed?
We covered the regulations.
Yeah.
What about desalination?
Absolutely, should be done.
Great idea.
I tried it when I was head of Department of Water and Power.
Yeah?
Got fought by every environmental group there is.
Why?
Do they think we're gonna empty the entire ocean?
It's crazy.
There's so much water right there.
It's crazy.
First of all, we're dumping sewage.
There's tertiary treatment where water is potable.
We dump sewage secondary treatment.
It doesn't hurt the ocean, but we're dumping it.
Take it to tertiary treatment.
Put it back in the natural underground aquifers
and save it.
Yeah.
I mean, the abundance of water that goes into the ocean is sort of what you start out with.
De-sale, brilliant.
Absolutely.
We should be doing it.
We should have de-sale plants supporting Los Angeles and big parts of the Southern California.
Also it creates jobs.
It creates jobs.
You can do it where it's environmentally safe.
Absolutely.
And it has a redundancy of power
that comes off of it also that's helpful
because we've got a power shortage in California.
Absolutely.
And we've got more and more demand on our grid
than we know how to supply right now.
And again, back in the day-
How does it work as a redundancy of power?
Well, because you've got to generate
a lot of power for the de-sale. the de-cell is not operating you still got an operating
power plant there. So you can skew up the operation in order to have additional
energy coming off your de-cell plant. Mmm okay. And you got to build a power plant
to de-cell because of the amount of power it consumes to clean the water. And
how much water could be de-celling? Like how of power it consumes to clean the water. And how much water could be desalinated?
How much of an impact can that actually have?
Does it depend upon the size of the plant and how many of them there are?
It depends on the size of the plant.
Yeah, it depends on the size of the plant.
So ideally they should be set up though at various intervals along the coast and you'd
probably fix the entire, I mean California can be completely green well it listen it could be but it's also you mix you mix sources of water like
right now in LA I'll just take LA you've got the aqueduct that's bringing water
down the William Mulholland built at the turn of the century right he was
brilliant on how he did it there isn isn't one pump. It's all gravity flow that comes down from Inyo County, Owens Valley comes down. There was a
whole bunch of controversy and everything, but put all of that has sort
of been fixed. That water comes down. There's some water that comes down from
the state. There's water that Los Angeles has natural aquifers. We pump, right?
Again, if you, and then you add de add desal to it, then you have one
more supply that's backing up supply. And then, of course, you want to capture rainwater,
which we do a terrible job of. We let it go in the ocean. We don't capture as much rainwater
in Los Angeles as we should. Probably not much at all. But even with the sewage, why wouldn't you just spend
the investment and take the treatment and put it back in the aquifer and have
clean water? Yeah. It's just a constant supply. All we're doing now is we're
dumping it in the ocean. Yeah, it's very stupid and again it's doing the same
thing you've always done and hoping for a different result.
What was the pushback from the idea of desalination plants?
Because there's a long line of thinkers that there should be no power plants along the
coast of California because of the emissions.
So years ago when I was president of DWP, under Tom Bradley's leadership at the time, converted all the old oil plants on the coast to gas,
to be clean.
There's better technology now.
You know, you can convert those,
they're testing out hydrogen,
and convert them to hydrogen plants.
There's a big plant that DWP built in Utah
when I was president called Intermatter Power Project. It was the
cleanest coal burning plant in the country at the time. This is probably 25 years ago
now, 30 years ago. They're now testing and converting it to hydrogen, which will be absolutely
clean. That's smart, right?
So we need-
Literally makes oxygen.
Right.
Yeah.
We need more- the question is how do you boil water? Pick your source.
That's what a plant does. A plant boils water, creates steam, spins a turbine. You got electricity.
You know, so whatever kind of fuel you want, we built, we were partners in Palo Verde,
which is the nuclear plant in Arizona. We need more nuclear plants in this country.
So, and I don't know why the leadership in this state, you
know, hasn't been aggressive in building more clean burning plants because we need them.
Nuclear has a negative stereotype in the public eye, unfortunately, because of Chernobyl,
Three Mile Island, because of Fukushima. People think nuclear, they think disaster.
They think terrible waste.
You can't get away from it.
It pollutes the ground forever.
But it can be made very safe.
But it can be made much safer and much cleaner.
And it's not being done because we're.
And then also people have to understand
that if you go back to the cars that were on the road
at the time
these nuclear power plants were built,
those cars were polluting like crazy.
You got a brand new car, the emissions are far less.
Or you get a Tesla, you have none.
So why would we look at the same old architecture
of these, like the Fukushima one's a prime example.
It only had one backup generator.
The backup generator.
The backup generator went out, they were done.
They have them now where they can actually shut them down.
They have, there's new designs.
Oh yeah, and listen, Palo Verde again
is probably 20 or 30 years old.
It's been an incredibly performing plant.
Never has had a problem.
So again, this is where you sort of get into
what your point is. Get
somebody from the outside who's thinking big, who's thinking outside the box, who wants
to change the landscape for the better way of having a quality of life and is willing
to think big. And you're going to get kicked in the head sometimes and not every idea is
going to make sense and work. But you only get there if you throw enough good ideas out on the table that
you figure things out right and so when you take a look at Los Angeles when you
take a look at California I'm hopeful that you get leadership that just
starts looking at things differently and we'll make some small moves that turns
into big changes so we'll see I Again, I'm optimistic about it.
Well, I'm optimistic too.
I am.
We're going to get you back there.
Good luck.
I'm never leaving Texas.
OK.
Fair enough.
I'll never leave in a big city again.
I think you get too big.
It's just people become a burden.
I think there's a psychic aspect to it. Just the mindset of living in a smaller place is more relaxed.
It just feels better.
I get it. I get that. Especially raising a family.
Yes. But I did love living in LA. I lived there for 25 years. I loved it. I thought it was awesome. had a great time there. I still miss parts of it, I still miss the Comedy Store,
and I still miss, you know.
There's amazing aspects to LA still,
and there's an amazing group of human beings
that live in LA still.
It's an incredible city.
Yeah, but the problem is, everyone knew that it was amazing,
and everyone knew that everybody wanted to go there,
and so they just sort of took everybody for granted.
Yeah.
And they said, look, let's just take the shit out of these people.
They're staying.
They're not going anywhere.
It's California.
Where are you going to go?
That's right.
Yeah.
There's still that attitude by the way.
Yes.
Still that attitude.
Yeah, that's the one I felt.
Doesn't work.
That's what I felt.
And that's what you hear from the governor and that you hear from people when they brag
about California, you know, about instead of addressing why are people leaving they
talk about how great California is. I work I can ask. Yeah, yeah, yeah, still, but not as much
as before and there's a reason you're on a downward trend. It's the
government. And not as much as we could. Yeah, not as much as we could. Well listen, Rick,
whatever you do, I wish you the best. Thank you, sir. I really I hope you run for mayor again, and I hope you win this time, and I hope you
can enact some of these ideas that you have, because I think they're very, very promising.
I think government needs people like you, people from the outside.
Thank you.
I really do.
So thank you very much.
Thank you very much.
This is really an honor.
My pleasure.
My honor.
Thank you.
My pleasure. Barber.