Great Moments in Unintended Consequences: Rent Control, Arizona Alt Fuel, Ballot Access (Vol. 8)
Good intentions, bad results.
HD Download"Great moments in unintended consequences"—when something that sounds like a great idea goes horribly wrong. Watch the whole series here.
Part One: Housing Costs
The year: 2021
The problem: Rent is expensive in St. Paul, Minnesota!
The solution: Limit residential rent increases to 3 percent a year, even if there is a change in occupancy.
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
The initiative did not account for inflation. And unlike most rent control initiatives, the new law also applies to new apartment buildings, discouraging housing construction and investment. Which is why multi-family building permits are down over 80 percent in St. Paul, while ramping up in the rest of the state.
Which explains why St. Paul is the patron saint of tent makers.
Part Two: Arizona Alt Fuel
The year: 2000
The problem: Not enough alternative fuel is being used in Arizona.
The solution: Generous tax credits for new vehicles to incentivize buyers to add an alternative fuel tank.
The subsidy allowed tens of thousands to buy fully loaded luxury SUVs at a nearly 50 percent discount, as long as they were converted to add a secondary one-gallon alternative fuel tank that would likely never be filled up. The plan wound up costing the state hundreds of millions and actually increased gasoline consumption.
Tanks for nothing!
Part Three: Georgia Ballot Access
The year: 1940
The problem: Communists.
The solution: Bar communists from appearing on ballots.
Sounds…pretty unconstitutional, with questionable intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Restrictive ballot access measures were codified in 1943, requiring signatures from 5 percent of a congressional district's voters. Later, more requirements were added, including forcing signatures to be notarized and the imposition of qualifying fees. It's now been over 60 years since a third-party candidate has muscled through the restrictions to appear on the ballot for any congressional race in Georgia.
Written and produced by Meredith and Austin Bragg; narrated by Austin Bragg
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Fuck Joe Biden
That would be a great moment in unintended consequences.
What about the unintended consequences of fucking Neilia Biden?
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A tax credit doesn't cost the State. It costs the taxpayers who don't have the alternative fuel tank who make up for the revenue the State doesn't get as a result of the tax credit. Ditto for tuition tax credits, tax credits for solar panels on houses, etc.
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The year: 2019
The problem: There's a big orange ickypuss in the White House!
The solution: Media collusion and voter fraud to get "their guy" elected.
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Wait… a law to squelch the free speech rights of dirty communists? I mean, I’m for free speech and all, but advocating for worker solidarity in the face of late stage capitalism and a full-of-shit political system is just going way too far for this gay and Black man. We’ve got to have limits— like: “Donald Trump: Great President or the Greatest President?” Let’s all be reasonable here.
OBL is funny but admittedly because he's playing to his audience. His schtick wouldn't go over well at WaPo.
Your schtick wouldn't go over well at WaPo either, because it isn't clever or funny.
The solution: Bar communists from appearing on ballots.
I have no problem with this.
Except for choosing who gets to decide, and how close they have to be to communism to be excluded.
Except the solution is fairly routine and other than the notarizing of signatures, I'm not seeing the problem with ensuring there is interest in your platform before you're added to the election options.
5% of the population needs to give a signature. How is that not an undue financial burden to have to get enough volunteers to even begin to contact that many people, let alone get them to give a physical signature. Meanwhile the established parties get to take all of that cost and put it into other campaign efforts.
Georgia has 10Million people in it. If we say 8 Million of them are of voting age, 5% of them are 400,000 people. If it takes 2 minutes to travel to and explain what the signature is for and collect a signature. That is a minimum of 13,333 hours. With the current federal minimum wage that is $96,666
And that is assuming you target ONLY people who will sign, take only 2 minutes per person, and have zero overhead cost. The real cost would easily be 20-30 times that amount. This is a prohibitively expensive regulation on top of all the other hurdles third party candidates face.
This isn't about keeping crazy uncle carl from trying to run with zero support, this stops ALL candidates that are not from the main two.
Crazy Uncle Carl has my vote and full support.
Anybody to the left of Ayn rand is excluded
Registration as a Democrat is close enough for me! 8*)
This is the kind of libertarianism that I— as a gay (don’t forget Black) man who is GOP Proud like Caitlin and Milo— can literally get behind.
> It's now been over 60 years since a third-party candidate has muscled through the restrictions to appear on the ballot for any congressional race in Georgia.
Which was precisely the intended consequence!
These are getting old. Foreseen and expected consequences are not unintended. The people implimenting it think the reward out weighs the cost.
Part 1 and 2 the concequences were known full well and pols went along anyway.
For part 3 there should be a communist hunting season as they are a cancer of society
The bible is pretty old, yet for some reason people keep going back to it.
You don't have to prevent commies from appearing on the ballot anywhere if you just arrest them for crimes against humanity.
100,000,000 is a lot of crimes. And that's just the fatalities.
The bible is quite old, but for some reason, people keep returning to it.