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Can the Left save itself?

BradStevens

All-American
Sep 7, 2023
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Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson think so and argue how to do it in their new book. If you're on the Left, you should listen and hear some good stuff about the direction you should want the Dems to go. If you're on the Right, I bet you'll be surprised to hear some common ground you share with these two. If you're not either, you should listen and hear good ideas being discussed intelligently by people who don't agree about everything but can still have a productive conversation.


 
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Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson think so and argue how to do it in their new book. If you're on the Left, you should listen and hear some good stuff about the direction you should want the Dems to go. If you're on the Right, I bet you'll be surprised to hear some common ground you share with these two. If you're not either, you should listen and hear good ideas being discussed intelligently by people who don't agree about everything but can still have a productive conversation.


The answer is probably not. Bitcoin solves almost the issues Ezra and Derek spoke of in the beginning. The world will continue to become more decentralized in the 21st century. The future is much smaller governments. Healthcare, housing, and cheap energy will all be solved through Bitcoin and innovation. Governments that don't adjust will see capital quickly flow out of their jurisdictions. The answer is the same as it's always been, human innovation will solve humans greatest issues, not governments and kings.
 
Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson think so and argue how to do it in their new book. If you're on the Left, you should listen and hear some good stuff about the direction you should want the Dems to go. If you're on the Right, I bet you'll be surprised to hear some common ground you share with these two. If you're not either, you should listen and hear good ideas being discussed intelligently by people who don't agree about everything but can still have a productive conversation.



I've got this book on my reading list. I don't know very much about Thompson, but I've always found Ezra Klein to be somebody worth reading and listening to. I'll try to give this podcast a listen in the next couple days. Appreciate the link.

One thing I know that has purchase on some parts of the left is YIMBY - basically the idea that blue jurisdictions (particularly urban ones) have become too restrictive to new land development...be it for housing or anything else.

While I certainly agree with them about this and wholeheartedly endorse it, it feels a bit like "Glasnost and Perestroika" to me. No, I'm not saying they're a bunch of commie Soviets. I'm saying that they're aware there's a problem that needs to be addressed, but that the problem goes deeper than the reformists realize -- such that their reforms, advisable as they are, end up being too little, too late. The problems are more fundamental.

I've had discussions about it...and, basically, their belief seems to be that if they can get more housing built, the problems plaguing urban America will largely be alleviated. People will stop leaving those areas, costs will come down, investment will flow in, crime will come down, budgets won't be stretched so thin, core services will be improved, etc.

If this movement was a stock, I'd be shorting it. And it's not because they aren't right that many of our urban centers (and states like CA and NY) need to relax development restrictions. They are. I just think they have bigger problems on their hands than they realize.
 
I've got this book on my reading list. I don't know very much about Thompson, but I've always found Ezra Klein to be somebody worth reading and listening to. I'll try to give this podcast a listen in the next couple days. Appreciate the link.

One thing I know that has purchase on some parts of the left is YIMBY - basically the idea that blue jurisdictions (particularly urban ones) have become too restrictive to new land development...be it for housing or anything else.

While I certainly agree with them about this and wholeheartedly endorse it, it feels a bit like "Glasnost and Perestroika" to me. No, I'm not saying they're a bunch of commie Soviets. I'm saying that they're aware there's a problem that needs to be addressed, but that the problem goes deeper than the reformists realize -- such that their reforms, advisable as they are, end up being too little, too late. The problems are more fundamental.

I've had discussions about it...and, basically, their belief seems to be that if they can get more housing built, the problems plaguing urban America will largely be alleviated. People will stop leaving those areas, costs will come down, investment will flow in, crime will come down, budgets won't be stretched so thin, core services will be improved, etc.

If this movement was a stock, I'd be shorting it. And it's not because they aren't right that many of our urban centers (and states like CA and NY) need to relax development restrictions. They are. I just think they have bigger problems on their hands than they realize.
I’d love to hear your thoughts. Thompsons podcast, Plain English, is really good.
 
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Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson think so and argue how to do it in their new book. If you're on the Left, you should listen and hear some good stuff about the direction you should want the Dems to go. If you're on the Right, I bet you'll be surprised to hear some common ground you share with these two. If you're not either, you should listen and hear good ideas being discussed intelligently by people who don't agree about everything but can still have a productive conversation.


I don't have time to listen to this now, I'm just jumping in to bookmark it and remind myself to circle back around.

Sure would be great to see you start a thread that only required 10 minutes of background work instead of 90. 😁
 
Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson think so and argue how to do it in their new book. If you're on the Left, you should listen and hear some good stuff about the direction you should want the Dems to go. If you're on the Right, I bet you'll be surprised to hear some common ground you share with these two. If you're not either, you should listen and hear good ideas being discussed intelligently by people who don't agree about everything but can still have a productive conversation.


No.
 
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Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson think so and argue how to do it in their new book. If you're on the Left, you should listen and hear some good stuff about the direction you should want the Dems to go. If you're on the Right, I bet you'll be surprised to hear some common ground you share with these two. If you're not either, you should listen and hear good ideas being discussed intelligently by people who don't agree about everything but can still have a productive conversation.


It’s not where the Democrats party is headed currently. The answer is absolutely not right now. A lot will have to go right for them and wrong for Trump to have any shot over then next several presidential elections.
 
It’s not where the Democrats party is headed currently. The answer is absolutely not right now. A lot will have to go right for them and wrong for Trump to have any shot over then next several presidential elections.
Adow GIF by A Discovery of Witches
 
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I've got this book on my reading list. I don't know very much about Thompson, but I've always found Ezra Klein to be somebody worth reading and listening to. I'll try to give this podcast a listen in the next couple days. Appreciate the link.

One thing I know that has purchase on some parts of the left is YIMBY - basically the idea that blue jurisdictions (particularly urban ones) have become too restrictive to new land development...be it for housing or anything else.

While I certainly agree with them about this and wholeheartedly endorse it, it feels a bit like "Glasnost and Perestroika" to me. No, I'm not saying they're a bunch of commie Soviets. I'm saying that they're aware there's a problem that needs to be addressed, but that the problem goes deeper than the reformists realize -- such that their reforms, advisable as they are, end up being too little, too late. The problems are more fundamental.

I've had discussions about it...and, basically, their belief seems to be that if they can get more housing built, the problems plaguing urban America will largely be alleviated. People will stop leaving those areas, costs will come down, investment will flow in, crime will come down, budgets won't be stretched so thin, core services will be improved, etc.

If this movement was a stock, I'd be shorting it. And it's not because they aren't right that many of our urban centers (and states like CA and NY) need to relax development restrictions. They are. I just think they have bigger problems on their hands than they realize.
The basic absurdity of American politics is that the “people’s party” doesn’t dominate. The only logical explanation is that there is no party actually representing the majority of people on pocketbook issues.

Klein and Thompson ought to focus their abundance on that. More housing is great if more people can afford to buy them.
 
It’s not where the Democrats party is headed currently. The answer is absolutely not right now. A lot will have to go right for them and wrong for Trump to have any shot over then next several presidential elections.
They will have to moderate but right now they don't seem interested in that.
 
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Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson think so and argue how to do it in their new book. If you're on the Left, you should listen and hear some good stuff about the direction you should want the Dems to go. If you're on the Right, I bet you'll be surprised to hear some common ground you share with these two. If you're not either, you should listen and hear good ideas being discussed intelligently by people who don't agree about everything but can still have a productive conversation.


My short answer to that is that the Republicans will save them.
 
Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson think so and argue how to do it in their new book. If you're on the Left, you should listen and hear some good stuff about the direction you should want the Dems to go. If you're on the Right, I bet you'll be surprised to hear some common ground you share with these two. If you're not either, you should listen and hear good ideas being discussed intelligently by people who don't agree about everything but can still have a productive conversation.


No.

The left’s DNA is to tear down and destroy the status quo, not to build enduring things. This has been true since at least the French Revolution.
 
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No.

The left’s DNA is to tear down and destroy the status quo, not to build enduring things. This has been true since at least the French Revolution.
The current administration is doing a pretty good job tearing down and destroying the status quo, too. And you've praised that.

Comparing the left in revolutionary France circa 1790 and the left in the US in 2025 is not very useful.
 
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