Monday, December 29, 2025

Homelessness Isn’t Caused by a Housing Shortage—It’s Caused by Low Wages and High Rents

From LA Progressive (Platkin is always a good read): 

Overcrowding and homelessness are both increasing because -- after controlling for inflation – the price of housing is up and most wages are flat. The causes are not a mystery: elected officials who dance the tune of major campaign contributors.

While the housing crisis is already severe in US urban areas, the situation is particularly tough in the greater Los Angeles area because elected officials ultimately control housing policies. For them, their concerns are rarely their poorly housed constituents. Instead they parrot that false narrative that an (imaginary) housing shortage is the cause of rising homelessness and overcrowding.

This explanation is not only wrong, but it hides the real causes of both homelessness and overcrowding. As shown in the chart below, the price of housing has continued to increase, while most incomes have been flat for the past 50 years. In fact, Los Angeles has an ample supply of vacant houses and apartments. What it lacks is people with enough income to buy or rent them. The problem is simply a lack of money by the homeless and overcrowded, not the supply of housing. Nearly all of these groups would gladly move if they could afford to rent or buy. But they can’t afford existing vacant housing, so they remain homeless or over-crowded.

Homelessness Isn’t Caused by a Housing Shortage  
Until this situation is remedied with higher wages, real rent control, and the restoration of public housing, little will change.

There is a solution, but it is a shot across the bow of both major electoral parties and their claim that homelessness and overcrowding result from a housing shortage. They ignore the 16 million vacant homes in the United States, including many in the Los Angeles area, as well as an average local apartment vacancy rate of 5.1%.

The Remedies: First, the solution is already known. In addition to raises, it is real rent control to replace LA’s anemic Rent Stabilization Ordinance, plus the restoration of HUD public housing programs jettisoned during the Nixon, Reagan, and Clinton presidential administrations.

Second, in addition to reestablishing HUD public housing programs, California must end vacancy decontrol by revoking the Costa-Hawkins bill. Real rent control should mean that rents do not increase when tenants move out.

Third, in Los Angeles the cutoff date for rent stabilization should not remain 1978. Instead, rents should continually change, such as replacing 1978 with a sliding date, such as apartments built 15 or more year ago.

What are the real barriers? The barrier is the power of landlords -- as opposed to tenants - to shape national, state, and local legislation. Until this changes and tenants gain the upper hand, we will be subject to minority rule since renters far outnumber landlords.

The chances of positive changes trickling down from Washington are minimal. Elected Democrats don’t offer any credible housing solutions. As for Republicans, the Trump Administration proposes major cuts in HUD’s low-income housing programs, then adding work and service requirements. Internal HUD documents estimate that an additional 170,000 people may become homeless because of these changes.

This cure is worse than the disease!

The opinions expressed here are solely the author's and do not reflect the opinions or beliefs of the LA Progressive.

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Whence Housing Inflation?

 Answer: from the Fed's Quantitative Easing. Excerpt:

This paper examines the impact of quantitative easing undertaken by the Federal Reserve from 2020 to 2022, during which the Fed’s mortgage-backed securities (MBS) purchases ($1.33 trillion) were equal to nearly 90% of the growth in MBS ($1.50 trillion). Evidence suggests that housing’s unique role as an asset class is a factor explaining the rise in the cost of housing and hence overall inflation.

Mearsheimer's Latest Debunk of the Ukraine Narrative

 

Monday, December 22, 2025

The benefits of not being a jerk to yourself

 An entertaining and enlightening TED talk.

 
Some notes:
 
Loving kindness meditation is:

May you be...
happy, safe, healthy, live with ease

Finish the meditation by directing it to all beings everywhere'

Put your hand on your heart and tell yourself, "I've got your back," when self-critical

Demons are ancient fear-based programs trying to help me. Don't slay them, give them a high five when they cross your path. This is radical disarmament.

Conclusion: "The view is so much better when you pull your head out of your ass."


Sunday, December 21, 2025

In case you ever wanted to know how deceptive the "Paper of Record"--the NY Times--is... [petroleum edition]

The point of this rebuttal is to remind us that the NY Times' agenda isn't always the public's. Remember: The NY Times cheerled the US into a war in Iraq. 

The petroleum bias answer comes from this:


The rebuttal (lots of tweets assembled)

1. First: the elephant in the room that he doesn't mention explicitly but haunts the whole piece: climate change is real, we've already overshot and the only way to turn the corner is to leave fossil fuel in the ground. To ignore that is to talk about rocketry and ignore gravity. 

2. What he says about climate is patently false (more on that later) but to the extent he's saying "politicians shouldn't do the right thing unless it's popular", I'd note only that that is a toddlers view of leadership. If the popular kids are mean, should you be mean? 

3. Leadership is about doing what is necessary, not just what is popular. Read literally anything our founders wrote about virtue, and the inherent risks to a society based on democratic processes to sustain the rule of law to the extent that unvirtuous people gain power. 

4. Yglesias instead seems to argue that politicians should only do what wins elections, virtue be damned. One wonders what he thinks of those foolish 1850s abolitionists. As Condleeza Rice once said, politics is the art of making the impossible inevitable. That ain't this. 

5. But enough on climate. This is an opinion piece and if MY's opinion is that we shouldn't act on climate at a scale sufficient to the threat there's not much I can do. Let's go to the facts. First, the idea that Obama won in 2012 because of his oil & gas platform. Really?


6. That election had a robust debate over the gulf war and the scope of the 2008 bailout. Romney was framed as an out of touch plutocrat. To the extent energy came up it was the criticism of the Dems for Waxman Markey cap & trade in 2009, not "thank you for drilling". 

7. But even beyond the political conversation, you can't compare 2012 energy policy to 2025 without understanding the massive shift in US fossil energy production & net imports over that period. Look at the "net imports" line on this chart.


8. In 2012, the US was a net importer of oil and domestic production, after decades of decline was starting to tick up. Today, the US is a net exporter. Couple that with concerns about middle east politics in 2012 and you have a VERY different set of issues for US consumers. 

9. As a net importer, every incremental unit of domestic production reduced our exposure to foreign oil & associated price volatility. As a net exporter, every incremental unit gets shipped overseas. 

10. IOW, in 2012 new production benefited domestic producers AND consumers. But today, new production only benefits producers. That's a fundamentally different policy and political environment. And note also that domestic consumption is basically flat for the last 20 yrs. 

11. That's a good thing! We're just as warm, just as able to travel as we were 20 years ago, and rising vehicle efficiency, EV deployment, etc. is giving consumers more useful energy with less oil expense. That's good for consumers, even if it hurts producers. 

12. And if we want to talk about the politics, here's some easy math: there are a lot more voters who consume energy than there are who produce energy. If you're confused on that point, you might be a crappy pundit... 

13. And this isn't just true of oil. We've also moved from a net importer to a net exporter of natural gas since 2012. (Also because fracking.) Which again means that to take Yglesias' advice in 2025 is to prioritize energy producers over energy consumers.
 

14. The wealth transfer from natural gas is perhaps even more direct since gas - unlike oil - isn't quite a global commodity; the costs to liquefy and transport gas, per MMBtu are a lot higher than oil, which creates much higher local price disparities. 

15. As such, when US producers can swap European/Asian markets for the US markets and make a higher margin, even after accounting for shipping costs it puts significant upward pressure on previously land-locked domestic prices. 

16. This is the reverse of getting off middle eastern oil in 2012. Now, instead of decoupling from global volatility we absorb it. That gets quantified whenever a US LNG export facility has an outage & domestic NG prices fall. Who ya rootin' for, Matt? .

U.S. natural gas supply and demand balance shifts amid outage at Freeport LNG - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=53079#:~:text=A%20fire%20at%20Freeport%20LNG's,U.S.%20natural%20gas%20demand%20outlook

 
17. It's worth reading the entirety of what DOE had to say about the impact of that 2022 outage on domestic prices. These are massive price swings - and therefore massive wealth transfers from US consumers to US producers!
18. Because natural gas is used for so much of US power generation, increasing gas exports = higher gas prices = higher electricity. One climate negative impact of that is that after years of decline, we now are seeing an uptick in domestic power generation from coal.
19. This isn't because coal is cheap, or because we're building more coal plants. It's because when the price of gas goes up gas fired power plants are a little less competitive against other asset classes and the competition (in this case, coal) picked up the slack. 

20. So this goes back to point 10. When we are a net exporter, decisions to produce more help producers and hurt consumers. And in this case, are ALSO bad for the climate. It's lose / lose all around. 

21. And before team Yglesias responds by saying "yeah, but it's bad politics to run on climate and energy"... I'd point out that I've won 4 elections in a very purple district running on climate and energy. Pro-tip: leadership is possible! You don't have to be stupid to win! 

22. Speaking of climate. Let's now pick apart this word salad of stupidity. Specifically the assertion that US oil is "cleaner" than other countries and therefore it is environmentally virtuous for us to drill baby drill.


23. Here's the report he links to in order to prove his point, that compares the carbon intensity of various global oil production regions.

Report: U.S. Beats Competitors with Low Carbon Intensity OilThe United States is a global leader in minimizing greenhouse gas emissions from offshore production, according to a recent from the National Ocean Industries Association (NOIA). The report, commissi…https://www.energyindepth.org/report-u-s-beats-competitors-with-low-carbon-intensity-oil/

 24. Here's the chart. I don't know if he looked at it, and I certainly don't think he thought about it but I'd encourage you to as it refutes much of that word salad paragraph.


25. First, note who is the cleanest: Saudi Arabia. So when he says that we should "work with other low-intensity producers", he is essentially saying that we should maximize production in Saudi before bringing on US production. How does that help win elections in TX and OH? 

26. Interestingly, since the Saudis gave Kushner his PE fund and Trump his LIV tournament he's been quiet as they've kept the oil price under $70 which in turn has suppressed US rig counts. So maybe Trump is taking Yglesias' advice? How's that polling? tradingeconomics.com/united-states/…

https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/total-rigs

27. Back to the chart. Look at how much dirtier Canadian oil is than US oil. (Because tar sands are very energy intensive to extract). You know who pushed to stop imports of dirty Canadian oil into the US? Obama! Google "keystone XL pipeline" if you've forgotten that history. 

28. Recall that the oil industry (and the GOP) demonized Obama for blocking Keystone because they had spare refining capacity and wanted to make money exporting the resulting finished products. So again, this is about producers v consumers. 

29. Now look at the US bars on that chart. Bars is plural because US production is not monolithic. Conventional oil production (offshore gulf, southwest) uses relatively little energy to lift the oil to the surface and as a result is much cleaner than "other US" (aka fracking). 

30. Which means that if you're making the argument that US oil production is cleaner, you have to be honest about where the marginal production is happening. And in OH, PA and those other swing states he describes, it ain't from conventional drilling. 

31. On natural gas, his arguments are just as bad. It is true that at the burner tip a unit of natural gas emits less CO2 than a unit of coal. And if you have a coal mine and a gas well in your back yard, both of which are hooked up to your furnace that is a relevant comparison.


32. That's of course not the norm. And because methane is such a potent greenhouse gas (>80x as bad as CO2 for the first 20 years after release) even a minor leakage rate in the collection and distribution makes natural gas worse than coal from a global warming perspective. 

33. That's even more true for exported natural gas which also has to be liquefied since the liquefaction process is so energy intensive. Roughly speaking, you need nearly 120 units of gas to make 100 units of LNG. So more CO2 and magnified impacts of upstream leaks. 

34. And of course you also need to fuel the ship that transports the LNG - which means that environmental impact of exported natural gas is primarily driven by methane leaks and liquefaction / distribution. The burner tip comparison is just a vapid industry talking point.

35. Source for that graph if you want to get into the details: research.howarthlab.org/publications/H…

36. Finally this. The mark of the fossil fuel shill who never loses the arrogance to walk into a room, say "the sun doesn't shine at night and its not always windy", drop the mic and leave, confident that no one else knows what they just discovered.


37. I will concede. Night is real. Some days I can't fly a kite. It is also true that sometimes coal trains are stuck, gas pipelines fail, warm weather derates thermal power plants and unplanned outages happen. 

38. Every utility manager and operator knows this. NERC standards explicitly require that in any given utility control area you cannot have a coincident failure mode that affects more than 10% of your load. The scary scenario (night time blackouts!) doesn't happen and won't. 

39. Moreover, wholesale power markets include variable time of use rates and capacity payments to pay a premium to sources that can ramp up on a moments notice. Here is a list of what PJM used last year (% is the likelihood that the given source will be there when called.)
 

40. So we have a grid with lots of stuff. The most reliable backup in that PJM analysis was nuclear and load sited demand reduction. Diesel gen sets. Pumped hydro. Battery storage is a big deal and a bigger one as costs fall and longer durations are available. Gas peakers too. 

41. Not shown here, but also a big deal is transmission to connect different parts of the system so that the wind in Iowa can power Chicago, or the sun in Florida, or the geothermal in Nevada, or the hydro in Oregon, etc.  

42. Point is, markets and existing regulatory structures also know that no source is available 24/7/365 and manage the grid accordingly. They don't learn anything from Yglesias insight about nighttime and you didn't either. 

43. If you're still reading at #43... thanks, I guess? But also this. :) Anyway, a final thought to wrap up. 

44. I've spent my entire career in the energy industry. As a consultant, as a manufacturer, as a power plant developer/owner/operator and as a legislator. There is something really optimistic about the moment we're in that pundits like Yglesias said was impossible 20 yrs ago. 

45. Specifically, we've decoupled economic growth from fossil energy consumption. Coal demand has collapsed. Oil use is flat. Natural gas use is growing but < GDP, even as standards of living have gone up. That's happened because of higher efficiency and decarbonization. 

46. We are, in a word, investing in energy productivity, getting more value out of less input. That is great news, for the same reason that higher returns on capital are good or increases in labor productivity good. Make more useful stuff with less input and we get richer. 

47. As Amory Lovins has said for years, no one wants a lump of coal, or a barrel of oil. All we want is a hot shower and a cold beer. And if we can get that heat and light and chilling without paying for (or burning) fuel, we're all happier... with one notable exception. 

48. That exception of course is the fossil fuel producer. They are hostile to energy productivity for the same reason John Henry didn't like the steam shovel. They can't compete with it. Wins for consumers come at their expense. Wins for the climate come at their expense. 

49. The game isn't over by far. But we are winning. That's something to be proud of. It's something to accelerate. It's nothing to take for granted. And it's certainly no time to take Yglesias' advice and fumble the ball so the other team won't feel so sad. /fin

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Boston Tea Party... The Rest of the Story

 

Monday, December 15, 2025

Anti China Fake News

 

The details (from  a tweet):

I SUPPORTED THE so-called pro-democracy politicians in Hong Kong for many years. I knew the main members personally and happily stuffed my hard-earned cash into their collection boxes. But I increasingly felt something wasn’t right. Then I did some digging. And then I backed off as fast as I could. Here’s the story. . A NEW ASSISTANT As a South China Morning Post reporter in 1991, I noted the rise of a new political group called the United Democrats. They had an “executive assistant” who was always seen at the right hand of the leaders. His name was Tom Boasberg. So, not Chinese, but American. He was hyper-political, and his previous employer was the United States government. Many businesses in Hong Kong employed Americans, sure. We all liked Americans. But this wasn’t a business – it was supposedly a "grassroots" political party—and I thought it odd to have a foreigner at the top end of the noisiest political organization in the city. And when Boasberg moved on in 1992, I noticed that he was replaced by another executive assistant, a woman named Minky Worden. She too was American, she too was hyper-political, and she too was previously employed by the United States government: a coincidence. When Ms Worden left that role in 1998, the group took an another person in her place: a woman named Emily Bork. She too was American, she too was hyper-political, and she too previously worked for the United States government. A series of coincidences? (Ms Worden went on to become an enthusiastic player in the Uyghur genocide hoax. Her journalist husband Gordon Crovitz, with whom I worked directly, later went on to sign a contract to work on media monitoring with the Pentagon.) . FACTIONS For some of this period, I was a Legislative Council columnist for the South China Morning Post. I lived next door to Yeung Sam, a leading member of the so-called “pro-democracy” party, and soon learned there were factions within it. Everyone’s favorite (including mine) was a rough diamond called Szeto Wah who was noisily patriotic about China while believing that western democracy would be good for Hong Kong. (Yeung himself was unpopular within the organization.) But many of the other “pro-democracy” politicians, unfortunately, became closely tied in with anti-China groups funded by the US National Endowment for Democracy, which had taken over the CIA's “soft power” covert regime change duties. The NED had quietly started funding political parties in Hong Kong in 1990, but kept under the radar, using multiple other identities. Cash arrived in Hong Kong listed as “donations” from a non-existent body called the American Institute for Free Labor Development (set up by the CIA for money transfers). . EXTREMELY DANGEROUS The NED were and are extremely bad people. Working worldwide, they used the “pro-democracy” label as a cover to poison the public against local candidates who failed to be pro-Washington in any country. The NED successfully manipulated elections in Nicaragua in 1990 and Mongolia in 1996 and helped to overthrow democratically elected governments in Bulgaria in 1990 and Albania in 1991 and 1992, as intelligence historians noted. And they would eventually cause chaos in my peaceful, gentle Hong Kong. The NED did this by using their bottomless funds to blend Hong Kong’s “pro-democracy” politicians with two groups they funded to poison Hong Kong people against mainland China. One was called the Human Rights Monitor and the other was the Confederation of Trade Unions (not to be confused with the HK Federation of Trade Unions, which was a genuine trade union organizing group). . DESTRUCTION OF LEGCO The "pan-democrats" quickly lost the goodwill of the Hong Kong people by automatically vetoing every act the government did, causing massive delays in a city used to efficiency. Legco became dysfunctional, sometimes grinding to a halt. The physical violence seen in the Taiwan parliament was transferred to Hong Kong, with people such as Ted Hui throwing fists and foul matter into the parliamentary chamber (and becoming hated by the building's cleaners). . PROTESTS PREPARED OVERSEAS By 2012, this pro-US movement in Hong Kong was working with the Oslo Freedom Foundation (which, despite the name, is based in the US), in a multi-year operation to organize massive demonstrations in Hong Kong with the aim of destabilizing the city. The US plan was to present this foreign-organised anti-China insurrection as home-grown “pro-democracy” protests, trusting in the western mainstream media to excuse the horrific violence and hide the US funding. (Which they did.) A major aim was fearmongering. By forcing Beijing to send the tanks into Hong Kong, Taiwan would abandon its growing friendship with the mainland, and became once again a dependable part of the Pentagon's First Island Chain. . A FAILED OPERATION The rest is history. The Chinese refused to send in the tanks. The PLA stayed at home. The Hong Kong police managed to quell the riots without killing a single person (unlike in the six other uprisings in the world that same year, all of which led to multiple deaths). The operation failed. . DISGUSTED By 2021, many people in Hong Kong knew about the foreign forces' involvement and were disgusted with the pan-democrats. My friends and I, almost all of whom had been big fans for many years, became totally disillusioned with them, and with western-style democracy as a whole. The western mainstream press rigidly turned their faces away and refused to see any of this. And today, the China-hostile media, from Reuters’ James Pomfret to the BBC’s Danny Vincent, continue to fail to report the real story. Whether they are hiding it or are genuinely unaware of what is going -- that's not for me to say. But I will say that the catastrophic loss of trust in the western mainstream media is well deserved.

 

Homelessness Isn’t Caused by a Housing Shortage—It’s Caused by Low Wages and High Rents

From LA Progressive (Platkin is always a good read):  Why Vacant Homes, Flat Incomes, and Political Deference to Landlords Are Driving Overc...