

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

Sep 12, 2017 • 0sec
Alan Joyce on the land economics of Eve Online and Second Life
Alan Joyce (co-host of Earful of Convoy and Earful of Cocktail) comes on the program to explain the ins and outs of some of the weirder and wilder economic laboratories out there: videogames. How does scarcity in Eve Online resemble real estate bubbles? What does Second Life tell us about marginal land?

Aug 1, 2017 • 0sec
Matt Krisiloff on Y Combinator, Basic Income, and LVT on the United Slate
We have Matt Krisiloff of YC Research to talk about the Basic Income project, Y Combinator's United Slate (which featured LVT as a plank). Should these be viewed as separate, or two ideas that are fundamentally linked? Also a conversation with Kedar about the technical and moral merits of a UBI versus a Jobs Guarantee.

Jul 25, 2017 • 0sec
Alvin Roth on Designing Markets
2012 Nobelist and Stanford professor Alvin Roth has saved lives by designing better markets: clearinghouses to trade kidneys, as well as improved matches in public schools and medical residencies. He joins the show to talk about his life's work and the many lessons we can learn about fixing broken markets.

Jul 18, 2017 • 0sec
Steve Omohundro on AI Risk, Human Values, and Decentralized Resource Sharing
Steve Omohundro shares plans for creating provably correct protections against AI superintelligence, and thoughts on how human values can be embued into AI. Resource allocation, decentralized cooperation, and discussions on how Blockchain Proofs of Work/Stake can possibly be compatible with basic needs.

Jul 11, 2017 • 0sec
Jack Miller on SCOTUS, Prop 13, and rationalized injustice
Let's head back to the early nineties―Prop 13 was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in an 8-1 decision, and Jack Miller wrote a 66-page barnburner about the injustice in the decision. We have Jack Miller on to talk about the jurisprudence of fair taxes, the importance of Horizontal Equity, and how this all came together in Nordlinger v Hahn.

Jul 4, 2017 • 0sec
Victoria Fierce on socialism and housing
Victoria Fierce works for (pro-housing) East Bay Forward. Victoria Fierce is a member of (pro-economic-justice) DSA. This has led to an undue amount of drama. Does this have to be so? Why can't socialists and YIMBYs get along?

Jun 27, 2017 • 0sec
SF Supervisor Katy Tang and Home-SF
Katy Tang represents the Sunset on the SF Board of Supervisors, and has led Home-SF, which works to end displacement while still building more units, by tying affordability to upzoning incentives. We talk about ending zero-sum thinking.

Jun 20, 2017 • 0sec
James K. Galbraith on inequality
James K. Galbraith has produced a deep catalogue of books; in his recent "Inequality: What Everyone Needs to Know", he touches on the land value tax. We talk about that and much more.

Jun 13, 2017 • 0sec
Jeff Andrade-Fong and Josh Vincent on Influencing Housing Policy
Jeff Andrade-Fong works with Tech for Housing to bring attention to tech workers about how housing policy affects them, and what they can do. Josh Vincent advises land policy on a city-by-city basis using open data and more. Changing policy is hard, but we talk about what people can do about it.

Jun 6, 2017 • 0sec
James Howard Kunstler vs Sprawl
We talk to James Howard Kunstler, who has long been a voice railing against the ugliness of modern sprawl and its attendant psychic torment. How does a land tax offer a possible answer to this tragedy?