momentary exception to not posting to amplify how beautiful & powerful this Providence protest is #ICEout
momentary exception to not posting to amplify how beautiful & powerful this Providence protest is #ICEout
in case you're curious about how angry Minnesota is about ICE, it was -20 today
I'll be there and so will a ton of the Jedi team! Stoked to catch up. Glad to hear things are on the up and up
Willl!!!!! Crazy it's been that long. Hope you're doing well and still crushing it
Hey y'all, we just posted a Sound Design intern position here on the Respawn Jedi team for Summer 2026! Come make some really cool stuff with us
*Caveat is you must be a student graduating no earlier than December 2026
jobs.ea.com/en_US/career...
I will be at GSC
In other news, I paid of my student loans so that's cool
Decades of unlimited local control over land use have left us with an historic housing shortage, unaffordable rents, homeownership out of reach for the middle class, and crisis-level homelessness.
Enough is enough. Itβs time for the state to step in and set some basic ground rules by passing SB 79.
Jon Lovettβs face when LA City Councilmember Imelda Padilla said she forced an affordable housing project to go down from six stories to three stories and add in EV charging spaces
Been relearning how to draw after years of avoiding it. Here's a tree
The most impressive thing about this campaign is how *creative* they are. Theyβre trying new stuff! Multiple times during the last few months Iβve thought βwow, Iβve never seen a campaign do that.β Much more of that needed everywhere.
Josh Albrektson turned this tweet into a letter to the LA Times! www.latimes.com/opinion/lett...
Mayor Karen Bass & Follow @MayorOfLA Today I signed a City Council resolution opposing SB79 unless it is amended to exempt cities with a state-approved and compliant Housing Element. While I support the intent to accelerate housing development statewide, as written, this bill risks unintended consequences for LA.
Karen Bass is an unhinged NIMBY and everyone still on the other site should ratio her
βLos Angeles leaders are once again demonstrating their cowardice and failing their own constituents who desperately need more housingβand theyβre doing it at the behest of LAβs wealthiest, most entitled voters, who have consistently blocked progress on housing affordability.β - @hanlon.bsky.social
It's 2018. The LA City Council is opposing SB827 because it overrides local control. Rent is $1,663
It's 2019. The LA City Council is opposing SB50 because it overrides local control. Rent is $1,791
It's 2025. The LA City Council is opposing SB79 because it overrides local control. Rent is $2,625
Is private equity buying homes a problem? Yeah for sure, I hate BlackRock owning homes as much as the next person
Is that as big of a deal compared to the fact we simply don't have enough housing and have built up massive barriers to building housing? No, not really
AAA estimates the average cost of owning a car is $12,297 a year, and recommends drivers spend no more than 10 percent of their income on car costs. This means you should make 120K to afford the average cost. Median *household* income in the US is $77K. The math just doesn't work.
Best thing to do is to write to your local leaders (city council, mayor, etc) about changing city code to allow for things like Single Stair Apartment buildings, upzoning R1 areas to allow for townhomes/duplexs/triplexes, abolishing parking minimums, etc and speeding up permitting for new housing
Picture of large apartment complex in Austin
Today's affordable housing is the market rate housing that was built 20+ years ago etc. To make affordable housing now and in the future, we need to build housing period. That includes the kind of housing that's pissing you off. Most of Austin's housing that is driving rents down is this type
Here's a good video about specifically that idea. TLDR: Essentially higher income folks move into the "luxury" housing leaving vacancies for folks to move into the cheaper housing they currently live and so on and so on
www.youtube.com/watch?v=pbQA...
Lack of diversity in housing options in what's being built is definitely a problem. A lot of that is in zoning codes and regulations (parking minimums etc). That being said, all of those apartments open up cheaper, older housing that otherwise would be taken by folks with the money to afford them
Anyways, that's my rant. Feel free to call me a developer shill or landlord sympathizer or something I guess. I just want more walkable cities and cheaper rents/mortgages
Screenshot of an article that reads: The chief reason behind Austinβs falling rents, real estate experts and housing advocates said, is a massive apartment building boom unmatched by any other major city in Texas or in the rest of the country. Apartment builders in the Austin area kicked into overdrive during the pandemic, resulting in tens of thousands of new apartments hitting the market.
Fix the supply issue and companies like Blackrock have much less reason to buy and hold housing. Cities like Austin have been building and showing by example that building housing, even market rate housing, brings rents down for everyone.
Is corporate ownership an issue? Hell yeah and we should do something about it. Do companies like Blackrock explicitly say to investors the reason they are buying houses and apartments is because the US doesn't build enough supply thus making it a desirable commodity for them to invest in
Overhead shot of Vienna showing many multistory apartment buildings as far as the eye can see
Overhead shot of LA showing single family homes as far as the eye can see
Vienna is the classic example from the left of social housing done right and they deserve praise. The problem with that though is they actually built dense housing compared to cities like in the USA. Single family homes are the true luxury housing
Rent control is a great stop gap for stopping the immediate bleeding but long term all it does is trap people into staying in there current housing as the market around them skyrockets and makes it unfeasible to leave meaning the supply of rent controlled housing dwindles fast
I love affordable, non-market, social housing like the next lefty. I will always advocate for that. The problem is without removing the constraints that make it hard to build housing, there will never be enough housing to go around and only the luckiest or people who wait the longest get housing
As a self described lefty, getting out of the all new housing is luxury housing and that's bad mindset was pretty hard and took a while. This is a pretty rad video that describes why lefty NIMBY-ism is still bad even though it's more caring and understanding
www.youtube.com/watch?v=tvTa...
Today, Secretary Duffy said he wouldn't fund high-speed rail projects due to them "not having the means to go the distance".
Hours later, he announced plans to build a nuclear reactor on the moon.
Skill issue π