

Build, Interrupted: A Conversation with Ezra Klein
256 snips May 27, 2025
Ezra Klein, a journalist and author known for his deep dives into infrastructure and renewal, discusses the significant hurdles to building in America. He highlights the extensive delays in housing projects like San Francisco's Nordstrom lot transformation and critiques bureaucratic processes that stifle progress. The conversation also touches on California's high-speed rail dilemmas, the need for innovative climate governance, and historical lessons from the New Deal. Klein emphasizes the importance of effective institutional reform to overcome modern challenges in resource management.
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Legal Barriers Block Building
- Our biggest obstacles to building necessary infrastructure are legal and procedural, not technological or financial.
- These self-imposed complexities block progress in housing, energy, and transportation projects.
High-Speed Rail's Delay Lessons
- California high-speed rail exemplifies how complex negotiation and legal hurdles stall infrastructure projects indefinitely.
- Processes designed for thorough review become leverage points for indefinite project delays.
Complex Motives Behind Obstruction
- Obstructions in projects come from genuine environmental concerns and political leverage, often unrelated to original law intents.
- Laws like California's CEQA are used by unions for labor leverage, complicating environmental protections.