

The Henry George Program
Mark Mollineaux
Dedicated to exploring several forgotten economic ideas. Can they solve modern problems?
Episodes
Mentioned books

Sep 2, 2021 • 0sec
Georgism and Upzoning Debate; Opponent Patrick Condon
Patrick Condon, Vancouver-based urban design professor, published Sick City in the last year, which invited a good deal of controversy; though the book was all about overcrowding, inequality, and georgist theories of land rents, it was most rapturously praised by Livable California and various homeowner NIMBYs. Why? And can we agree with all the book's conclusions?

Aug 26, 2021 • 0sec
Rohin Ghosh on Peninsula Non-Profits, and Youth Perspective in Palo Alto
Rohin Ghosh was a high-schooler in Palo Alto just a few months ago, but has already had years of involvement in renter and houseless campaigns throughout the Peninsula, and is here to talk about what's it's like for teens in this crazy environment, as well as his perspective on the landscape of non-profits throughout the Peninsula, based on his work. Also talk about how cities are reflecting to RHNA allocations, tenant organizing in Palo Alto, and more

Aug 2, 2021 • 0sec
California Landlord Bailout ... Now What? with Shanti Singh
While moratoria expires federally, California has one more go-round of "eviction protections"; landlords get paid out 100%, but where exactly are tenants today? Shanti Singh of Tenants Together is back to talk about how Sacramento crafts tenant bills; also talk about how SF CLT's is held up by dismal city institutions.

Jul 6, 2021 • 0sec
A Freeway Revolt in Downey, with Alex Contreras
Alex Contreras is from Downey, CA (southeast LA County), which is facing off against a freeway expansion, which will destroy homes and take away public space. Who's responsible, and how is Alex and everybody else in the Happy City Coalition organizing to stop it?

Jun 29, 2021 • 0sec
Social Housing and Public Housing in Vancouver, with Jennifer Bradshaw
Jennifer Bradshaw is a housing activist in Vancouver, and is here to talk about how social housing and public housing works in her city, and the dismal politics that pits them against each other. Who controls property wealth, and how can we organize to achieve more equitable ends?

Jun 16, 2021 • 0sec
Value Capture for Transit: Past and Future, with Derek Sagehorn
Derek Sagehorn of East Bay for Everyone and Common Ground California is the co-author of a paper on transit value capture, and is here to talk about the dismal history of Bay Area transit and recapturing land value, and its more rosy future. What is Link21, and why do we need to take on Prop 13 and Prop 218 to make it work? Also featuring a discussion of the sort of *bad* "value capture" beloved by lazy non-profits, and how they almost killed AB1401.

Jun 2, 2021 • 0sec
Culver City Mayor Alex Fisch on Value Capture, and Posting
Alex Fisch is the mayor of Culver City, and a powerful poster on California Housing Twitter; we talk about projects within the city to improve the homelessness crisis, as well as recapture value from land value uplift; also talk about regional cooperation amongst the many governments, and how Culver City addresses its racist foundations a century ago

Apr 16, 2021 • 0sec
Shane Phillips on The Affordable City & Rethinking Homeownership
Urban planning expert Shane Phillips discusses the limitations of homeownership as a wealth-building tool, proposing innovative solutions like a rental pension and localized housing equity. The conversation also delves into the complexities of housing policies, including rent control, home equity disparities between generations, and the need for tailored solutions in different U.S. markets. Phillips challenges traditional views on homeownership, suggesting alternative approaches like collective mortgage payments and deliberate appreciation of home values at the inflation rate for sustainable investment.

Mar 31, 2021 • 0sec
Ma'ayan Dembo on Alternatives to Policing on Transit
Ma’ayan Dembo, formerly of KZSU fame, is back on the airwaves to share her academic research, done in conjunction with ACT-LA, about alternatives to policing in transit. In Los Angeles as well as the Bay Area, what interventions are effective, what best works to actually make riders feel safe, and how does this integrate into the larger homelessness crisis?

Mar 10, 2021 • 0sec
McDonalds: A Landowning Corporation, with Alan Joyce
We finally talk about McDonald's, and the big business of landowning with McDonald's expert Alan Joyce. How did the McDonald's Corporation leverage land speculation to grow faster than its competitors? What special relationships did the rise of McDonald's have in common with suburbanization? And should McDonald's just go all-in on becoming a REIT?


