AI transcript
0:00:10 that they will hold politicians accountable for pursuing, and politicians will respond
0:00:12 to that incentive 10 times out of 10.
0:00:16 I think it’s one thing that Donald Trump has done really well is he’s made it entirely
0:00:22 clear to all Republican elected office holders that his voters will respond to him, they
0:00:26 will show up, they will vote, and they will vote against the people who cross them.
0:00:31 If you want to push back against that, you’ve got to show that you can be equally powerful
0:00:37 at organizing from the bottom up.
0:00:38 My name is Guy Kawasaki.
0:00:43 This is the Remarkable People podcast, and as you may gather, we’re in the business of
0:00:49 helping people be remarkable by finding other remarkable people to interview and find out
0:00:54 their story and find out what they’re doing and how they got to where they are.
0:00:57 And we have a Remarkable Guest, of course, for you today.
0:01:06 His name is Yoni Applebaum, and he is the Deputy Executive Editor of The Atlantic.
0:01:09 And I want people to know I love The Atlantic.
0:01:13 It is a bastion of freedom of expression and freedom of thought.
0:01:17 And Yoni, I want you to know I am a paid subscriber.
0:01:21 I’m not just free-loading on your intellectual efforts, okay?
0:01:22 Love to hear it.
0:01:30 Now, Yoni has also taught at Harvard, Babson, Babson, that enlightened educational institution
0:01:32 gave me an honorary doctor.
0:01:33 I love Babson.
0:01:35 I’ve got to make sure I pronounce this right.
0:01:37 Is it Brandeis or Brandeis?
0:01:38 How do you say that at university?
0:01:39 Brandeis.
0:01:40 Brandeis.
0:01:41 All right.
0:01:43 So, obviously, I didn’t go there.
0:01:51 And I have to tell you that Yoni has one of the best stories about how he got his job
0:01:55 – ever, ever.
0:01:58 So I know you must be tired of telling this story.
0:02:01 It’s like when people ask me, “What was it like to work for Steve Jobs?”
0:02:07 But I got to ask you, “Please tell the story of how you got this job at The Atlantic.”
0:02:10 I got my job by procrastinating.
0:02:14 I was a doctoral student in American history.
0:02:17 And what you do if you’re getting a doctorate is you write a dissertation.
0:02:21 What you actually do if you’re getting a doctorate is you do almost anything to avoid
0:02:22 writing the dissertation.
0:02:24 It’s a really big project.
0:02:25 It’s really hard.
0:02:27 And I was prone to distraction.
0:02:33 And I was on my computer one day when I was supposed to be writing and clicked over and
0:02:36 saw a new blog I’d never seen before.
0:02:39 And the blogger had written something that I thought was wrong.
0:02:43 So I jumped into his comment section to tell him why I thought he was wrong.
0:02:47 This is the kind of thing a lot of people waste a lot of time doing on the internet.
0:02:51 But something really unusual happened, which is that he jumped into the comment section
0:02:53 himself and said, “Oh, that’s a really good point.
0:02:54 I’m glad you said that.”
0:02:56 I thought, “That’s unusual.”
0:03:01 So I came back the next day and engaged on his next post and we struck up a conversation.
0:03:06 I was commenting anonymously and was mortified when one day he reached out to me and said,
0:03:08 “You sound like you’re a historian.”
0:03:14 And I thought, “On the internet, nobody’s supposed to know if you’re a dog, right?
0:03:18 I’m writing in such stilted paragraphs and in such a long-winded way that it’s obvious
0:03:21 to him I’m an academic because who else talks like that?”
0:03:24 And so he outed me and so we talked.
0:03:28 And he was a staff writer for The Atlantic and his name was Ta-Nehisi Coates.
0:03:33 And he was thinking out loud on his blog and inviting others into the conversation.
0:03:38 And he’s a wonderful and warm and generous guy and he went to his editor about me.
0:03:39 I didn’t know that.
0:03:42 I’m sitting at my desk one day and the phone rings.
0:03:45 The editor of The Atlantic is on the other end of the line and he says, “Ta-Nehisi says
0:03:48 there’s a guy in this comment section who should be writing for us.
0:03:51 How would you like to be a contributor to The Atlantic?”
0:03:54 And that’s how I ended up doing journals.
0:03:57 Man, when I read that story, I said, “Wow.”
0:04:02 That is literally the only positive thing I’ve ever heard coming from commenting on
0:04:05 somebody else’s podcast or somebody else’s column.
0:04:08 That’s a great story.
0:04:09 Oh, man.
0:04:14 But do you think it’s because he has such an open mind and he’s so smart?
0:04:18 I mean, I don’t know if this would work with most people.
0:04:23 I wrote for The Atlantic for five years and then I got another call and they said, “Why
0:04:28 don’t you resign your post to Harvard, give up the only profession that still offers a
0:04:34 guarantee of lifetime employment, and switch to journalism?”
0:04:36 That was an IQ test, Shione.
0:04:37 And I failed.
0:04:38 That’s the sad thing I failed.
0:04:41 I did switch it, but it was a hard choice, right?
0:04:44 It was another one of those branching moments in my life where I thought, “God, why would
0:04:45 I do that?
0:04:46 I’m doing what I love.
0:04:47 I really loved teaching.
0:04:52 I loved writing, and I thought, why would I give that up to switch to a profession that
0:04:54 seems like it’s in free fall?”
0:04:56 But this is the answer to your question.
0:04:58 The two things that drew me to journalism.
0:05:01 One was when I was an academic, I was supposed to have all the answers.
0:05:05 I’d stand in front of the classroom and my students would ask me things, and I needed
0:05:06 to know.
0:05:12 As a journalist, and this was, I think, Tanhasi’s superpower, you’re encouraged to be ignorant.
0:05:14 You’re not supposed to have the answers.
0:05:17 You get this amazing privilege just because you’re a journalist.
0:05:21 You get to pick up the phone and call people or stop them on the street corner and say,
0:05:23 “Hey, I’d like to understand this.
0:05:24 Could you explain it to me?
0:05:27 Could you tell me how the world looks through your eyes?
0:05:30 Could you explain this complicated thing that I don’t get?”
0:05:33 It was a privilege to be ignorant.
0:05:34 It was a privilege to be curious.
0:05:38 To get to ask the questions rather than have to have the answers.
0:05:39 That was one reason I left.
0:05:44 I think it was the big thing about Tanhasi that really set him apart was he took that
0:05:45 to the end degree.
0:05:48 He was relentlessly, is relentlessly curious.
0:05:52 He was open to hearing different things from different people, and I’ve tried to model
0:05:53 myself on that.
0:05:56 The other part of it was academia.
0:05:57 It’s a solitary pursuit.
0:06:01 I was pursuing my own glory, my own research, sat in my own office on the end of a long
0:06:05 hall with a lot of other brilliant people who were smarter than I was, who were sitting
0:06:06 in their offices.
0:06:09 Sometimes I’d see them down by the coffee machine.
0:06:14 In the job I moved into, my job as an editor is to make other people’s work better.
0:06:17 That just turned out to be a lot more satisfying.
0:06:22 Pray tell, did this job change involve a physical move?
0:06:24 I’m glad you asked that.
0:06:26 It involved an involuntary move.
0:06:30 I was very happy where I was, and they said, “You’re going to have to leave Cambridge,
0:06:33 Massachusetts,” which is where I was living, and move down to Washington, D.C. if you
0:06:36 want to take this job, and so I did.
0:06:39 You weren’t stuck.
0:06:45 I wasn’t, but I was thinking about it already, and what you’re getting at there is the thesis
0:06:49 of my new book, which is about moving.
0:06:54 We will come back to the subject of stuck, because I know you’re on my podcast, not
0:07:00 because you like me, but you want people to read your book, which is, I understand that.
0:07:02 You have such an interesting background.
0:07:08 Let me fast forward to March 2019, and you know what questions is coming.
0:07:13 You write this piece recommending the impeachment of Donald Trump.
0:07:17 Just tell me, when you write a piece like that at The Atlantic, what the hell happens
0:07:18 to you?
0:07:24 Do you just get shitloads of angry emails, and what happens when you do something like
0:07:25 that?
0:07:26 Yeah.
0:07:32 So as an argument, I backed my way, and I started writing a piece about President Andrew
0:07:36 Johnson, and the first impeachment, I thought, “What could I learn from this history?”
0:07:40 And by the time I was done with the research, I thought, “Well, I’ve learned a big thing
0:07:45 here,” which is, “This is an important and valuable process, and I got to lay that out.”
0:07:50 It’s actually something that Congress should be taking much more seriously than it has.
0:07:51 And then I published that.
0:07:56 I threw it out into the world, and discovered that not everybody agreed with me on this,
0:08:02 in fact, a lot of the President’s ardent supporters let me know in detailed and graphic
0:08:06 ways just how profoundly they disagreed with me about this.
0:08:08 And some of that could be laughed off.
0:08:14 Some of that was detailed and threatening in ways that posed a direct risk to safety.
0:08:19 Unfortunately, our political atmosphere means that these things often move in really unpleasant
0:08:23 directions if you’re going to make a bold claim that the backlash can be switched in
0:08:24 fears.
0:08:31 Even today, when you hear the candidate to run the FBI or the Attorney General is saying,
0:08:35 “Now we’re going to hunt down all Donald Trump’s enemies,” you’re probably on that
0:08:37 enemies list, right?
0:08:41 So, I mean, right after they arrest Nancy Pelosi, are they going to come for you?
0:08:44 Do you have any paranoid thoughts like that?
0:08:47 I think everybody in my line of work has paranoid thoughts right now.
0:08:52 It’s not a subject I like to dwell on a whole lot, because my ultimate responsibility is
0:08:53 to our readers.
0:08:58 And the articles we assign, the reporting that we do, it’s in the interest of pursuing
0:08:59 the truth.
0:09:04 And you don’t want your selection of stories to be shaped by too many thoughts about how
0:09:06 people are going to react to it.
0:09:10 You select the stories that are worth going after, you pursue them wherever the facts
0:09:13 lead you, and then you owe it to your readers.
0:09:18 I owe it to our readers to write whatever it is that I come to as a conclusion without
0:09:21 fear of favor, without worrying about what the consequences will be.
0:09:26 Well, maybe you’ll be roomies with Heather Cox Richardson.
0:09:31 Think of the conversation that two of you could have at night, that would be a great
0:09:32 conversation.
0:09:34 I’d be a little intimidated.
0:09:39 Heather was on my doctoral committee, and I already had the pastor judgment once and
0:09:45 would worry about what she’d say about my latest work.
0:09:50 Back then, when you wrote that story, I think the attitude of many people was that impeachment
0:09:51 is going to work.
0:09:56 It’s going to prevent the abuse of the Constitution, et cetera, et cetera.
0:10:00 But obviously, we’ve been proven wrong twice.
0:10:02 So what happened?
0:10:08 Going into that, there was much more optimism coming out, two-time impeachment, and now
0:10:09 reelected.
0:10:11 Like, how do you explain that?
0:10:12 It’s a great question.
0:10:19 I think one problem that we’re all grappling with is that the founders, when they designed
0:10:25 the Constitution, expected the branches of government to be jealous of their powers.
0:10:30 They were balancing the branches against each other, and they just assumed that if you had
0:10:35 an executive who was pushing the boundaries of what the executive should do, and then
0:10:39 stepped way over the line, that the legislative branch would say, “Whoa, hold on there.
0:10:41 We may agree with you on policy.
0:10:45 We may like some of what you’ve done, but you’re upsetting the system.”
0:10:49 And so it’s our job, our constitutional responsibility to push back at that.
0:10:54 They didn’t count on the kind of toxic partisanship that has really come to predominate in this
0:10:59 country where people tend to see things more through that partisan lens than through the
0:11:00 constitutional one.
0:11:05 And we’re all grappling with what that means because the basic checks and balances that
0:11:09 were built into the Constitution, they’re not going to work in a highly partisan atmosphere.
0:11:14 The only kind of checks right now we have is to the inauguration committee, and the only
0:11:18 kind of balances, how much is a billionaire worth?
0:11:21 That’s checks and balances circa 2025.
0:11:25 And now Al Green is looking into doing this for number three, right?
0:11:30 Trump has a higher probability of a three-peat than the Kansas City Chiefs.
0:11:31 Wow.
0:11:34 You know, that’s an interesting thought, right?
0:11:38 Because the Kansas City Chiefs went out there and everybody knew what the outcome was going
0:11:43 to be before the first kickoff, and by the end, it was not what people had expected.
0:11:49 What can happen, and this is a lesson that politicians have repeatedly learned, is that
0:11:54 you’re riding high, you think the public’s behind you, you feel invulnerable.
0:11:57 And that’s precisely when people tend to overstep and overreach.
0:12:02 The check and balance that is still there, that still operates, is the participation
0:12:04 of the American people.
0:12:07 And I think in this administration, when it runs up against limits, that’s where it’s
0:12:08 going to find them.
0:12:12 You can be Donald Trump and order your attorney general to charge somebody with a trumped
0:12:16 up crime, but they still have to go to a grand jury and get an indictment, which means that
0:12:22 you have to persuade a dozen ordinary Americans that there’s been at least enough evidence
0:12:24 to charge somebody with a crime.
0:12:27 Then you got to go in front of another jury and you got to secure the conviction.
0:12:34 And again, that puts the ball back in the hands of ordinary Americans who tend to not
0:12:38 like to shield what to do, who tend to like to form their judgments.
0:12:44 I would expect that if there is a check on Donald Trump’s pushing the boundaries of executive
0:12:46 authority, it’s not going to come from Congress.
0:12:51 And it will only be sustained if it comes from the courts if ordinary Americans make
0:12:55 clear their own views and their own fidelity to the Constitution.
0:12:56 So I want to emphasize this point.
0:13:02 So you’re saying that if the courts fail because the courts have no real way to, I mean, what’s
0:13:04 the U.S. marshals going to do?
0:13:06 They’re going to invade the White House, right?
0:13:12 So if the courts fail because they don’t have much power to enforce.
0:13:18 But you are still optimistic because ultimately it is the will of the American people that
0:13:19 will survive.
0:13:25 I have a lot of faith in the American people to eventually do the right thing when they’ve
0:13:27 run out of all their options.
0:13:32 But ultimately our democratic system does not depend on a document.
0:13:37 It doesn’t depend on the virtues of the politicians that they put in office.
0:13:38 Thank God for that.
0:13:44 I imagine if our democracy rested on politicians being virtuous, it would have been over a
0:13:45 long time ago.
0:13:48 It really rests on the extent to which we believe in each other.
0:13:52 And as long as Americans are committed to our common project, I tend to think that there
0:13:57 will be elections that put people in office with whom I disagree and elections where I’m
0:13:58 happier about the result.
0:14:02 But that’s what will make democracy survive is the American people being thrown into that
0:14:04 composite.
0:14:23 Yoni, every part of my body that can be crossed is crossed right now, hoping you’re right.
0:14:29 Recently, I got into a discussion with a history professor and I said, like right now, if you
0:14:36 go to a history class in college or high school, they’re teaching you about Samuel Jackson
0:14:41 or the original framers of the Constitution and they’re going back hundreds of years and
0:14:46 trying to opine and trying to interpret what happened.
0:14:53 But it seems to me that we may be living the most important and interesting time ever in
0:14:54 American history.
0:14:59 So I said, why are you constantly referring to the past?
0:15:05 You should just be studying current events every day now because 200 years from now people
0:15:08 are going to be looking back and saying, who was this Donald Trump?
0:15:09 How did it happen?
0:15:12 And the history professor said, you cannot do that.
0:15:17 You have to use history to understand the present.
0:15:23 So we have to teach about Clinton and Nixon and Jackson in order to understand today.
0:15:29 So do you agree with that or can history today in such an interesting time just be the study
0:15:31 of current events?
0:15:36 When I was a boy, I sometimes resented that I didn’t get to live through any great momentous
0:15:37 events.
0:15:42 There were no wars raging, there were no, not in the Great Depression.
0:15:47 It’s the kind of childish thing a lot of us are prone to and then all of a sudden you
0:15:52 find yourself in the middle of very interesting events and create just a small hint of normalcy.
0:15:56 It’s a tough moment to be living through and there’s enough to see every day that you could
0:16:00 occupy yourself just chronically in what we see unfolding around us.
0:16:03 But the past is actually really valuable.
0:16:04 It’s in two ways.
0:16:08 One is it helps us understand how we’ve gotten to where we are.
0:16:14 But the other way that you can look at the past is as a palimpsest of possibilities.
0:16:18 So much of what we see at present can feel for ordained.
0:16:21 It can feel as if there’s no other option.
0:16:22 This is the way things are.
0:16:24 This is the way things were meant to be.
0:16:27 And when you go back into the past, it’s a strange world.
0:16:31 People did things really differently and you come to understand that the way we do things
0:16:38 today is as much a result of accident of contingency as it is of inevitability.
0:16:42 And to me, that gives me a lot of hope in this moment because it means that the things that
0:16:47 feel like historical inevitabilities, things that feel as if they’re bound to happen, that
0:16:51 we’re stuck on this one track and we’re barreling it toward the future.
0:16:53 That’s not how the past is usually unfolded, right?
0:16:58 Things happen unexpectedly, contingent events intervene.
0:17:04 People organize themselves and decide collectively to make change in ways that nobody had anticipated.
0:17:09 And when you look back into that kind of history, I think it’s not just about explaining how
0:17:11 we got to this moment.
0:17:14 It’s also a way of imagining other directions we could take.
0:17:19 If we’re sitting here trying to imagine directions and a podcaster says to you, “So yes, you’re
0:17:20 a historian.
0:17:22 You understand what happened in the past.
0:17:24 You understand what’s possible now.
0:17:28 You’re deputy executive editor of The Atlantic.”
0:17:36 So give me some practical tips about what can I do to help preserve the America I love?
0:17:37 Yeah.
0:17:42 I can’t give any simple solutions because it’s not a simple problem that we face.
0:17:47 The first thing I’d suggest is actually get involved with your community at the local
0:17:48 level.
0:17:50 That’s the place to start.
0:17:56 And by involved not tweeting or posting or clicking like on somebody else’s post, too
0:18:02 often we become political hobbyists who follow politics as if we were following the NFL.
0:18:07 And you’re sitting on your couch cheering for the quarterback who throws the deep strike
0:18:12 and feeling as if you’re putting on that special game day jersey made a big difference.
0:18:14 It’s fandom, right?
0:18:18 That’s really different than going out there on the field yourself.
0:18:23 And so the first way to make a difference is to stop being a fan, stop being somebody
0:18:29 who’s a spectator who’s doing this on social media and to start be a participant, to come
0:18:35 off the bench to say, “Okay, I’m going in and maybe I can’t fix the world, but I can
0:18:39 make a difference with my local school board.
0:18:43 I can make a difference with something that’s happening in my local community.
0:18:44 I can get back.
0:18:47 I can find a way to affect positive change in the world immediately around me.”
0:18:51 And I think that’s tremendously empowering if it changes our whole attitudes.
0:18:56 If you’re out there making a positive change in the world, other possibilities open up.
0:18:59 So that’s the second thing is like to think about how to scale that change.
0:19:04 If you have people who are really invested in the country, not as it is, but as they
0:19:07 think it should be, as they think it could be, and they’re willing to work together in
0:19:13 order to realize that vision, and they start to hook up with each other, they start to
0:19:14 build.
0:19:17 We’ve seen too many social movements in the last couple of decades that call millions
0:19:20 of people out into the streets and they feel as if they’re going to change everything.
0:19:23 And then everybody goes home and there’s no infrastructure there.
0:19:26 There’s not weekly meetings where somebody’s keeping the minutes and somebody else is making
0:19:27 a motion.
0:19:29 That’s how Americans used to affect social change.
0:19:32 They built this infrastructure slowly from the ground up.
0:19:33 It was hard work.
0:19:37 It was difficult work, but it meant that when something big happened, there was an infrastructure
0:19:38 to activate.
0:19:42 It meant that after everybody went home from the rally, there was follow-up and they said,
0:19:44 “Hey, and on Tuesday, please write to your senator.”
0:19:48 And on Wednesday, we’re looking for people to come testify to the local city council.
0:19:51 Without that infrastructure, it’s really, really hard no matter how well-intentioned
0:19:53 people are to affect change.
0:19:57 So you start at the local level, you hook up with other activists, other people who are
0:20:01 just ordinary Americans trying to make the world a little bit better, and you create
0:20:06 that infrastructure, and then ultimately it scales to the national level where politicians
0:20:09 are really reactive, craven creatures.
0:20:13 When they see that people are well-organized, when they’re articulating what they want,
0:20:17 it doesn’t actually take a majority of the population to move.
0:20:21 It takes a large chunk of the population that makes it clear that it has a set of priorities
0:20:25 that they will hold politicians accountable for pursuing.
0:20:29 And politicians will respond to that incentive 10 times out of 10.
0:20:33 I think it’s one thing that Donald Trump has done really well is he’s made it entirely
0:20:39 clear to all Republican elected office holders that his voters will respond to him, they
0:20:43 will show up, they will vote, and they will vote against the people who cross them.
0:20:48 If you want to push back against that, you’ve got to show that you can be equally powerful
0:20:51 at organizing from the bottom up.
0:20:54 Let’s switch to your book for a second.
0:21:01 All right, so walk me through the gist of your book stuck about how the lack of mobility
0:21:08 is a key factor in American society today, so unstuck my mind about stuff.
0:21:11 I started writing this book more than a decade ago.
0:21:15 I was living in Cambridge, I was in an apartment, it was already getting a little too small
0:21:19 for my family, and I could look out the window at the streets around me.
0:21:23 And I knew as a historian something about the neighborhood I was living in, it was a
0:21:24 special neighborhood.
0:21:29 For a hundred years, it had been a neighborhood where the children of immigrants moved in
0:21:31 and moved up.
0:21:35 One wave after another, after another, had gotten onto that bottom rung of the American
0:21:37 ladder of opportunity, and they’d kept climbing.
0:21:39 They started in that neighborhood, and they kept going.
0:21:44 And by the time I’d lived there, I could look out that window, and I mostly saw young professionals
0:21:45 walking by.
0:21:49 The city I was living in had lost two-thirds of its kids, families couldn’t afford to
0:21:53 live there anymore, and I thought, “This is really weird.
0:21:59 How was it able to accommodate all that growth for all those years and bring in so many different
0:22:02 people seeking opportunity in America and help them find it?”
0:22:04 And now it can’t do that anymore.
0:22:08 Now the people I’m talking to are moving out, the pastors at the local churches were telling
0:22:12 me that their parking lots fell on Sunday because their parishioners had all moved to
0:22:13 other communities.
0:22:16 They’d drive back on Sunday, but there was nobody to fill the pews.
0:22:20 Something had gone very badly wrong in this place, and I wanted to know what it was, and
0:22:22 I started digging.
0:22:29 And what I landed on eventually was that we had given communities a set of tools that
0:22:34 had broken the most powerful part of the American idea.
0:22:40 That was that you had the opportunity as an individual to move toward opportunity and
0:22:45 to leave the circumstances of your birth, the identities you’d inherited.
0:22:46 You had the option.
0:22:49 You could embrace them, or you could build your own identity.
0:22:54 You could stay where you were, or you could move someplace new.
0:22:58 And over and over and over again, the people who moved someplace new, they thrived, their
0:23:02 children thrived, they were able to go toward the new opportunities that were opening up
0:23:05 in some other part of the country and some other part of their own community.
0:23:10 And as long as we gave people the chance to do that, this society became more equal over
0:23:11 time.
0:23:14 It spread rights more broadly over time.
0:23:18 And as we’ve rolled that back over the last 50 years and really priced people out of the
0:23:20 prosperous places, it’s broke.
0:23:23 I mean, why can’t somebody move?
0:23:29 Because my experience, I moved from Honolulu to why I went to undergraduate, then I moved
0:23:34 to LA, then I moved to Orange County, then I came back and I went to San Francisco, I
0:23:40 went to Atherton, I went to Santa Cruz, I went to Watsonville, I moved six, seven times.
0:23:44 So what is preventing people from moving?
0:23:45 It’s not like there’s immigration.
0:23:49 You can’t move to Texas unless you get a resident card or something.
0:23:53 Yeah, no, I love the way you laid out that sequence of moves.
0:23:57 I love asking people for their stories and I bet a lot of your listeners have stories
0:24:01 like that themselves where they moved many times in their lives.
0:24:04 And those are very American stories.
0:24:07 It used to be the case in this country that it was like you needed a permit.
0:24:12 If you moved into a community in America in the colonial period, they could warn you out.
0:24:17 Even if you owned a house, even if you’d rented property, even if you had a job, they could
0:24:20 deliver a notice to your door that said, “We don’t want you here.”
0:24:21 And they did it.
0:24:22 They did it routinely.
0:24:26 They did it often to poor people, they did it to racial minorities, they did it for
0:24:29 people who were moving in where there was already a blacksmith in town and they didn’t
0:24:30 want a second one.
0:24:34 This was like European societies, it was a very closed society.
0:24:36 You couldn’t just live where you wanted.
0:24:38 You needed the permission of the community to accept you.
0:24:43 And then right around 1800, we launched this legal revolution for the first time in world
0:24:44 history.
0:24:49 Instead of the communities choosing their people, in America we say, “People can choose
0:24:50 their own communities.”
0:24:56 If you can find a place to live in that community, you can establish residents in that community,
0:24:59 not because anybody gave you permission, but just because you decided it was where you
0:25:00 were going to live.
0:25:03 Residents will be a matter of intent rather than acceptance.
0:25:08 That was like a revolutionary thing, right, that communities no longer got to function
0:25:11 like members of the clubs, but they used to.
0:25:12 So that was what we got right.
0:25:18 And then what we got wrong was that after 100 years of remarkable fluidity, and these
0:25:23 are the, in the 19th century, maybe one out of three Americans was moving every year.
0:25:25 Today it’s fallen to one out of 13.
0:25:30 The thing that shifts is that we give communities a whole new set of tools.
0:25:36 And it starts actually, the very first tool starts in 1885 in Modesto, California, where
0:25:42 the town really, really doesn’t want any Chinese immigrants living in its borders.
0:25:45 And they try all kinds of ways to get rid of the Chinese.
0:25:47 They try arson, burning down their buildings.
0:25:50 They try vigilante violence.
0:25:52 They come in, they round them up, they beat them.
0:25:56 And they can’t force them out because those Chinese residents want the same thing everybody
0:25:57 else wants, right?
0:25:58 They want opportunity.
0:25:59 They want better lives with their kids.
0:26:01 They can see that Modesto is going to give that.
0:26:03 And then they hit on this really ingenious solution.
0:26:07 They say, well, we can’t pass laws that discriminate against the Chinese because the courts won’t
0:26:09 let us do that.
0:26:13 And beating them up hasn’t worked, burning them out hasn’t worked.
0:26:17 But we could pass a law in this town, which says that the laundries, which were the only
0:26:22 thing that would employ the Chinese at that point, they all have to be in this one narrow
0:26:27 part of town, China town, we’ll push them back in.
0:26:29 And that was the first American zoning statute.
0:26:32 It’s the first time that a municipality passes a zoning rule.
0:26:36 It was to push the Chinese out of Modesto and back into China town.
0:26:39 And that tool proves remarkably powerful.
0:26:45 So after 100 years of almost unlimited mobility, America starts to roll it back.
0:26:52 But wouldn’t somebody say that the reason why there are zoning regulations is to prevent
0:26:58 excessive traffic or excessive population or something like that?
0:27:00 They’re not going to say it because they’re Chinese.
0:27:03 So how do they do it today?
0:27:08 Yeah, the amazing thing about 1885 is they actually said it.
0:27:11 This is a pretext, which is sort of, as a historian, it’s a wonderful thing to see somebody
0:27:13 say the quiet part loud like that.
0:27:17 But yeah, there’s lots of good reasons to regulate land use.
0:27:22 Where you run into trouble is where you let people create one set of rules for really
0:27:28 rich areas and another set of rules for the poorer areas because always those rules will
0:27:30 be rigged against the poor.
0:27:36 And today, the zoning rules that go into affluent areas are often very well-intentioned.
0:27:40 They’re about protecting the environment, protecting the history of the community.
0:27:45 They’re about worrying about traffic and light and shadow.
0:27:47 There’s always a good reason not to build.
0:27:51 But the way I’ve come to think of this is it’s a little bit like dropping an apple
0:27:53 core on the sidewalk.
0:27:58 If I drop one apple core on the sidewalk, I’m not really making the world much worse off.
0:28:01 If everybody drops through apple core on the sidewalk, pretty soon that sidewalk gets a
0:28:05 rat infested, smelly, disgusting, right?
0:28:06 It’s the same thing with blocking buildings.
0:28:11 For zoning rules, you can create rules that apply really well in any individual circumstance.
0:28:14 And if you block one building, that’s not a big deal.
0:28:17 If you block all the buildings, then there’s no longer a way in.
0:28:21 And so these rules that come out of a history of discrimination get sort of laundered over
0:28:24 time where we come up with polite ways to talk about it.
0:28:25 You’re right.
0:28:29 Nobody these days says, “Oh, I’m zoning this for single family homes because I don’t want
0:28:32 any Hispanic immigrants moving into my community.”
0:28:37 Instead they say, “I’m zoning this for single family homes because apartment buildings are
0:28:40 not a fit for the character of this place.”
0:28:45 But they sometimes mean that they’re more worried about the characters in those apartment
0:28:46 buildings.
0:28:50 There is a way in which we’ve come up with polite ways to talk about segregating ourselves
0:28:52 economically in America.
0:28:55 If you segregate yourself economically, it usually means segregating yourself racially
0:28:56 too.
0:29:00 Now, you mentioned three ways to deal with it.
0:29:04 This is consistency, tolerance, and abundance, right?
0:29:10 Now, if I may paraphrase those three, so consistency means that there’s not local regulations.
0:29:14 It’s consistent for the entire state, at least, let’s say.
0:29:19 And then tolerance is tolerance of differences and abundance means create more housing.
0:29:24 But as I read that, I said, “Man, this guy, can you name three more impossible things
0:29:25 to do?”
0:29:29 You’re going to go to this progressive mafia and say, “All right, so we’re going to have
0:29:31 no more local zoning.
0:29:36 We’re going to have you understanding other people’s frameworks and skin colors and religions
0:29:40 and genders and sexual orientation, and we want you to build more housing.”
0:29:44 Man, I hope you don’t run for office on that platform.
0:29:49 Yeah, in some ways, it’s a tough sell, but I’ll tell you this.
0:29:54 If you walk up to somebody and say, “Do you want multi-family housing on your block?”
0:29:56 Usually they’ll say, “No, we’re all change-a-first.
0:29:58 We’re used to the way things are.”
0:30:02 And if you say, “Should there be an apartment building across the street?”
0:30:03 And most people say, “No, I don’t want to.”
0:30:07 But that’s not the only way you can ask the question.
0:30:11 You can ask them, “Do you think that your neighborhood should be a place where young
0:30:13 families can still move in?
0:30:18 Do you think that the service workers who are making your life possible, the daycare
0:30:23 workers and the hospital nurses and the firefighters, should they get to live in the same town
0:30:27 where they’re providing services on behalf of the people?
0:30:31 Do you think that your community should be welcoming to people of diverse backgrounds
0:30:33 or reserved for the rich?”
0:30:39 If you ask the questions that way, Americans will overwhelmingly say, “No, no, I want opportunities
0:30:40 for families.”
0:30:44 And if the price I have to pay is that there’s an apartment building in a neighborhood of
0:30:47 single-family homes, I’m happy to pay it.
0:30:52 And so a lot of this depends on whether you see the problem as one isolated building where
0:30:56 you don’t want the change, or whether you can help people zoom out and see the bigger
0:31:01 picture and say, “This was a country that grew prosperous and diverse because it let
0:31:03 people move toward opportunity.
0:31:04 We’ve broken that.
0:31:06 It’s embedded in our politics.
0:31:11 It is the thing that, above all else, I genuinely believe, drove support for Donald Trump.
0:31:16 It was the rage he tapped into, the sense that people had, that there were islands of
0:31:19 prosperity that had walled themselves off from the rest of the country.
0:31:21 And he was angry at the right people, right?
0:31:22 He was championing their costs.
0:31:25 People really felt stuck in their lives.
0:31:27 And if you put it to them like that, it’d be like, “Do you want to fix America?
0:31:29 Do you want to restore the American dream?
0:31:33 What you have to do is let somebody build in your neighborhood so that new families
0:31:34 can move in.
0:31:36 The firefighters are supposed to live.”
0:31:38 My experience with these is people say, “Yeah, I wanted to pay that price.
0:31:39 That’s a good trade.”
0:31:46 I mean, you must run around with different people than I do, Yoni, because if I ask people
0:31:52 that I know, and let’s take the extreme example of Atherton, California, the most expensive
0:31:57 zip code in the United States, if I said to them, “Don’t you want to make it so that
0:32:02 young families can move here so your service workers don’t have as difficult a commute
0:32:03 and blah, blah.”
0:32:04 They would say, “Nope.
0:32:05 Nope.
0:32:06 I like it.
0:32:09 I want minimum zoning of two acres, and I don’t want any affordable housing.
0:32:10 I don’t want any more traffic.
0:32:13 I’m already spending too much time in my G-Class.
0:32:16 I need to get a new set of friends, Yoni.”
0:32:19 No, it’s a good objection that you’re raising, right?
0:32:22 And I don’t mean to sugarcoat this too much.
0:32:26 A hundred years ago, and it’s really that reason, we gave towns a new set of tools
0:32:28 they’d never had before.
0:32:29 Zoning wasn’t legal.
0:32:34 When people started passing zoning laws, they knew it was unconstitutional, that they were
0:32:38 deliberately trying to spread it around the country so fast that by the time we got to
0:32:41 the report, it would be too widespread to undo.
0:32:45 The drafters of zoning rules understood that what they were undertaking was like a legal
0:32:50 revolution and that if the courts heard about it too early, it wouldn’t take.
0:32:51 They pulled it off.
0:32:52 They spread it.
0:32:55 By the time the Supreme Court hears the first zoning case, Washington, D.C. is zoned, and
0:32:59 they’re walking to court, to their jobs, through a zoned city.
0:33:04 And it comes to seem unimaginable that you could roll it back, but it’s a recent change.
0:33:08 And it came from states delegating powers down to local communities.
0:33:13 And what we’ve seen over time is that the richer those communities are, the better educated
0:33:20 their inhabitants are, the better able they are to use these rules in order to create
0:33:22 a members-only club back out of their community.
0:33:26 I remember we talked about America starts as members-only clubs, these communities that
0:33:29 could warn you out if you were poor, if you had the wrong skin color, like, we’re back
0:33:31 to that now.
0:33:35 Communities today have figured out how to build new walls around themselves, how to wall themselves
0:33:36 off.
0:33:38 But there’s no reason that they have to have that power.
0:33:40 They didn’t historically have that power.
0:33:44 When they got that power, everyone had initially thought it was unconstitutional.
0:33:45 And it’s up to the states.
0:33:49 The states have the capacity to say, most of the voters in the state don’t get to live
0:33:50 in Atherton.
0:33:54 And what we’re going to do is try to create a society that shares prosperity more broadly.
0:33:59 If Atherton’s got great schools, then let’s build more housing in Atherton so that more
0:34:01 kids get to go to those schools.
0:34:05 And that will be good for all of us, because those kids, they’re going to grow up to be
0:34:10 the next generation of venture capital barons out on Sand Hill Road, right?
0:34:15 There’s a way in which, you know, rather than creating an elite that’s self-perpetuating,
0:34:20 if you allow people to move, you can create a genuinely meritocratic society that gives
0:34:23 new opportunities for new waves of people to move up.
0:34:25 Up next, unremarkable people.
0:34:30 I think this country is an amazingly resilient place.
0:34:33 America will die if it chokes itself off.
0:34:38 If it loses its optimism, if it loses its ability to innovate, if it loses its openness
0:34:39 to change.
0:34:41 We’re at some risk for that right now.
0:34:44 That is the direction, I think, in which Donald Trump has pointed us.
0:34:50 And so I don’t mean to suggest that America is invulnerable, but I think that fundamentally
0:34:57 most Americans view this as a land of opportunity, think that the country is stronger because
0:35:02 it has their neighbors in it, too, and as long as we don’t lose sight of those fundamental
0:35:06 values, I think America will survive a heck of a lot longer than I will.
0:35:24 Thank you to all our regular podcast listeners.
0:35:27 It’s our pleasure and honor to make the show for you.
0:35:33 If you find our show valuable, please do us a favor and subscribe, rate and review it.
0:35:39 Even better, forward it to a friend, a big mahalo to you for doing this.
0:36:06 And listening to “Remarkable People” with Guy Kawasaki.
0:36:14 I’m going to be working at a Starbucks in Hiroshima right now.
0:36:20 What’s the consequence of trying to prevent people from coming to America?
0:36:24 So first you want me to advocate apartment buildings in Atherton, and now you’re asking
0:36:26 me to go after immigration guys.
0:36:27 Exactly.
0:36:32 No, but it’s a good question and it’s not unrelated, right?
0:36:37 Whatever you think our immigration policy should be, whatever the right level of immigration
0:36:41 is, whatever the right enforcement mechanisms are, I don’t think anyone doubts for a moment
0:36:43 that immigration is one of America’s great strengths.
0:36:48 We have brought so many talented people to this country through the years, and I know
0:36:53 something about the psychology that comes with mobility.
0:37:01 People who feel stuck, who are born someplace and want to leave and can’t, they change
0:37:02 psychologically.
0:37:09 They grow more cynical, more pessimistic about the world, more hostile to outsiders.
0:37:14 They tend to see the world as a zero-sum game in which anyone new coming into their community
0:37:18 is dividing the same pie into smaller slices.
0:37:24 And that frankly describes a good number of Trump supporters who were much more likely
0:37:27 than Democratic voters to still live in the communities in which they were born, much
0:37:31 more likely to report that they wanted to move than they could, and much more likely
0:37:37 to be really resentful of immigration, to see it as diminishing their possibilities.
0:37:44 If you let that same person move toward opportunity, they get a sense of agency in their own lives.
0:37:48 Suddenly instead of the world being on them, they’re taking control of their own lives.
0:37:49 They’re making their own decisions.
0:37:50 That’s really empowering.
0:37:55 It’s not just empowering, it makes them more optimistic and it does something else.
0:37:57 They stop seeing the world as a zero-sum game.
0:38:02 They start to understand that they’ve moved toward opportunity, the place where their
0:38:05 living will thrive if others have that same chance.
0:38:08 They start to see the pie getting bigger, and instead of somebody else taking a slice
0:38:13 out of that pie diminishing their slice, they understand that together they can make that
0:38:17 pie big enough that everybody gets a larger slice than they started off with.
0:38:22 It sounds a little counterintuitive, but one of the things that has changed the American
0:38:28 debate over immigration is that more and more Americans are stuck where they are and feel
0:38:33 cynical about the world because they’re not getting in their country the kinds of opportunities
0:38:34 they expect it to have.
0:38:40 If you can restore that sense of agency, of mobility, you can restore the kind of optimism
0:38:47 that had for a long time, you will do unique American ability to absorb new waves of immigrants
0:38:49 and to build a cohesive country.
0:38:51 Let me make sure I got this right.
0:38:59 Are you saying that if Americans had a greater sense, and it was actually true of mobility,
0:39:05 that we would be more empathetic and tolerant of immigrants moving into America?
0:39:07 That is what the psychologists tell me.
0:39:12 When you look at people who have moved in the last year, they feel better about the world.
0:39:17 They are more tolerant of others, they’re more likely to reach out to others of diverse
0:39:22 backgrounds and when you look at people who want to move and can’t, the opposite things
0:39:23 are true.
0:39:24 All right.
0:39:28 So I’m going to switch gears again, don’t worry, we’ll let you plug your book at the
0:39:29 end.
0:39:34 Okay, so now, do you believe that the, because I caught this sentiment earlier in your writing
0:39:45 that the Republican Party is fighting a battle they cannot win against the pure math of demographics.
0:39:54 But it seems to me, since you made that kind of sentiment 2019-2020, it seems to me that
0:39:59 they have disproven that, that they are not fighting a losing battle.
0:40:03 They own all three branches, they theoretically are more popular than ever.
0:40:07 So what happened to this demographic inevitability?
0:40:09 Yeah, that’s a great question.
0:40:14 And there were a lot of people out there suggesting that there was some irresistible demographic
0:40:18 tie that’s going to sweep Republicans from power.
0:40:24 I think the most interesting thing that Donald Trump has done is found ways to build his
0:40:30 support, particularly among young men who don’t have the benefits of a college education.
0:40:32 And he’s done that across racial boundaries.
0:40:35 In some ways, we should all be happy about this.
0:40:40 American politics was becoming increasingly racial polarized and Donald Trump has depolarized
0:40:41 it a little bit.
0:40:47 In other words, it’s really worrying because some of the appeal that he’s exercised is
0:40:50 about enlarging.
0:40:53 He did what the Republicans I thought needed to do, just not the way I was hoping they would
0:40:54 do it.
0:40:55 Right?
0:40:58 He enlarged a sense of who could be a Republican.
0:41:03 He said, “I’ll take people of all backgrounds, of all colors, we’ll build that kind of party,
0:41:06 and we’ll do it through our hatred and resentment of them.”
0:41:08 And so he managed to switch the us and them.
0:41:15 He enlarged the Republican us by targeting them, progressives, liberal elites, and that
0:41:18 was a very effective political message for Donald Trump.
0:41:24 It still ultimately doesn’t leave the Republicans in a great spot where they have struggled
0:41:27 when Donald Trump is not at the top of the ticket.
0:41:31 He has fused this coalition of resentment together, but it’s not a coalition that holds
0:41:33 in midterm elections.
0:41:37 It’s not a coalition that holds in gubernatorial races.
0:41:43 Where they continue to face this problem that Trump can weld these folks together, but there
0:41:45 are other politicians who don’t seem able to do it.
0:41:52 I need a Harvard educated brain or Harvard professor to explain to me how Donald Trump
0:41:59 did this because from the outside looking in, I completely agree with the demographic
0:42:05 inevitability, but then I’ve learned that young black men and young Hispanic men and
0:42:10 young Muslim men and all that, they voted for Donald Trump.
0:42:14 Explain that to me that this guy says that the Mexicans are rapists and drug dealers
0:42:19 and the black people are all like criminals and the Muslims are terrorists, but their
0:42:21 young people are voting for me, huh?
0:42:23 I’m having an out-of-body experience here.
0:42:27 I only went to Stanford, I didn’t go to Harvard, so explain this to me.
0:42:32 I think this is a question a lot of people have, and there’s two ways to think about
0:42:34 political preferences.
0:42:38 One is shaped by a bunch of disqualification, so you look at it and you say, “Well, this
0:42:42 candidate said this and that and the other thing, and I don’t agree with that, I’m not
0:42:43 going to back him.”
0:42:48 Another way to think about it is thinking about what they call negative polarization,
0:42:54 so not what is this candidate and what’s disqualified him, but rather who does this candidate resent,
0:42:55 who do they hate?
0:42:57 Do they hate the same people that I hate?
0:42:59 Are their enemies the same as my enemies?
0:43:04 And I think for an awful lot of Americans, and you’ll forgive me for this, is one of
0:43:07 the things I’m getting at in the book, for an awful lot of Americans, there’s a sense
0:43:12 that something has gone wrong in their lives, particularly young men without college degrees
0:43:16 don’t have access to the same kinds of jobs that they did a generation ago.
0:43:19 We don’t have the same kinds of blue collar jobs in this country.
0:43:22 Donald Trump has talked about that over and over again.
0:43:26 We don’t offer those young men the same kinds of opportunities.
0:43:29 60% of college matriculants are now women.
0:43:32 Women are much less likely to be going to college than their female peers.
0:43:34 They’re much less likely to wind up with full-time employment.
0:43:39 They’re much less likely to be able to build the kinds of happy and productive and satisfied
0:43:40 lives.
0:43:46 And Trump is a genius for spotting resentment, and he channeled that anger.
0:43:48 That doesn’t mean that he has any practical solutions.
0:43:53 It doesn’t mean that he’s given them a vision that can turn their lives around, but it does
0:43:59 mean that he was able to make them feel seen, and people will overlook a lot in somebody
0:44:03 — they’ll overlook the things he said, they’ll overlook the things he’s done — if he makes
0:44:09 them feel as if they are real, they are recognized, that somebody has looked at their pain or their
0:44:13 suffering, understands it, blames some of the same people that they blame, gives them a
0:44:16 narrative that explains why it’s happening to them.
0:44:19 Those are really powerful political forces, and that is one thing I think that Donald
0:44:23 Trump has done brilliantly that Democrats have really struggled to match.
0:44:29 I gotta tell you alone, if I had not lived through it, I would not believe it.
0:44:33 If this happened 200 years ago, I was — this is impossible.
0:44:36 There’s no way that happened, but, wow.
0:44:42 Okay, I’m gonna ask you one last heavy question, then I have some short questions.
0:44:48 And the last heavy question is, what’s your thoughts on if and when America will die?
0:44:53 I think this country is an amazingly resilient place.
0:44:59 America will die if it chokes itself off, if it loses its optimism, if it loses its ability
0:45:02 to innovate, if it loses its openness to change.
0:45:04 We’re at some risk for that right now.
0:45:08 That is the direction I think in which Donald Trump is pointing us, and so I don’t mean
0:45:11 to suggest that America is invulnerable.
0:45:17 But I think that fundamentally, most Americans view this as a land of opportunity, think
0:45:23 that the country is stronger because it has their neighbors in it too.
0:45:28 And as long as we don’t lose sight of those fundamental values, I think America will survive
0:45:30 a heck of a lot longer than I will.
0:45:35 Like I said before, every part of my body that can cross is now crossed again.
0:45:36 Yeah, thank you.
0:45:39 Okay, so some quickie questions for you.
0:45:40 Okay.
0:45:43 First, where do you get your news?
0:45:48 I get my news from mainstream outlets, so I read as many newspapers and magazines as
0:45:54 I can, and I like particularly to read magazines and newspapers that publish things I disagree
0:45:55 with.
0:46:01 Okay, so tell us, what are the things you disagree with?
0:46:04 I love reading op-ed pages.
0:46:09 I love reading really smart reporting that pushes me in some direction I didn’t expect
0:46:10 to get.
0:46:16 I already know what I think, but when I open a newspaper, I really like to read something
0:46:18 that surprises me or tells me what’s wrong.
0:46:23 Which newspapers are you opening when you look for these op-ed?
0:46:27 I get The New York Times, The Washington Post, every day at my door, and I do that so I can
0:46:31 share them with my kids so they can see me not staring at a phone, but actually opening
0:46:33 a newspaper and reading it.
0:46:38 I didn’t even know there were print editions.
0:46:43 What do you think of the work of Katie Drummond and Wired?
0:46:48 In my mind, Wired was this thing that would talk about artificial intelligence and virtual
0:46:54 reality, and all of a sudden it’s like The New Washington Post, so what’s going on with
0:46:55 Wired?
0:46:59 I love the reporting they’re doing, and it’s a reminder that part of what’s happening
0:47:06 here is a transfusion of people and values from Silicon Valley into Washington, and Wired
0:47:12 is uniquely well positioned to cover that because they understand the Valley, they’re familiar
0:47:17 with the players, and a lot of the outlets that are based in DC, they’re covering it
0:47:18 like foreign correspondents.
0:47:22 Wow, the Silicon Valley people, who are they, and what are they up to, but Wired is there
0:47:24 to bring readers to that store.
0:47:29 Madison, make a note that we got to go subscribe and pay a subscription to Wired.
0:47:31 I’ve been forgetting to do that.
0:47:34 All right, next quick question.
0:47:39 Do you participate in social media at all, or is just a waste of time for you?
0:47:41 More than I should.
0:47:42 I’m on X.
0:47:43 You’re on X.
0:47:44 I am.
0:47:46 You’re a collaborator.
0:47:47 What?
0:47:54 Well, I enjoy on X, Blue Sky, on Facebook.
0:47:59 I enjoy being reminded that other people don’t see the world the way that I do.
0:48:04 It’s the biggest danger I have as a journalist is sitting in a room with a bunch of other
0:48:07 people whose views may more or less align with mine.
0:48:10 If I want to be interesting, if I want to find good stories, I’ve got to constantly
0:48:15 expose myself to things that might be a little enraging, but at least show me the world through
0:48:17 a different set of eyes.
0:48:20 For all of its flaws, that is one thing that social media does beautifully.
0:48:24 It can give me the perspective of somebody living in a different state, somebody with
0:48:28 a different education, somebody with a different set of values, and it reminds me that mine
0:48:30 is not the only way to see it.
0:48:35 I get the point of read-only access, but are you participating?
0:48:40 Are you posting and commenting or you’re just using it as a data source?
0:48:41 Not as much as I did.
0:48:47 It’s really hard to have a meaningful conversation on social media than it’s just.
0:48:54 This has been a very, very stimulating episode, and I like to give authors, because Madison
0:48:59 and I, we’ve authored a few books too, so I just want to give you this opportunity for
0:49:06 you to pitch stock as your book so that listeners can say, “Well, I got to go read that book.”
0:49:11 I wrote this book because I wanted to understand what had gone wrong in America, and what was
0:49:16 fun about it was giving the whole historical art, how we invented this idea of mobility.
0:49:22 We set Americans loose to define their own identities, that this was the thing that created
0:49:27 so much social and economic mobility in America, it made us able to welcome people from other
0:49:28 countries.
0:49:33 It gave us much of what we consider American values was this outgrowth of this historical
0:49:38 accent that we had set people loose to define their own lives.
0:49:42 One little thing in the book that I particularly loved was Discovering Moving Day.
0:49:47 All the leases in a particular town or city would expire on the same day, and a quarter
0:49:53 or third half the people would pick up and swap apartments, move houses, switch farms.
0:49:57 It was an annual ritual that people would come over from Europe just to watch all the
0:50:03 carts carry the goods through the city going in every direction, and getting the sense
0:50:09 of what mobility had once meant to Americans, and then seeing how we had accidentally choked
0:50:10 it off.
0:50:13 It’s one of those things where it’s like breathing the air, right?
0:50:14 Take it for granted.
0:50:16 You take it for granted that you can decide where you want to live.
0:50:20 It’s easy to take for granted that we have the ability to move someplace new, but when
0:50:25 you see how quickly we’re losing it and how much is at stake, suddenly you see the world
0:50:26 a different way.
0:50:28 At least I did as I wrote the book, and I hope that as people read the book, they’ll
0:50:32 see their own stories in there, and they’ll see their country in a new country on tomorrow.
0:50:33 All right, Neon.
0:50:34 Thank you so much.
0:50:41 I mean, you listeners, I hope you got these main points about fostering mobility and also
0:50:47 of remaining optimistic in the future of America, and you can’t just be optimistic.
0:50:52 You have to actually get involved, and you only suggested rather than just post it, read
0:50:58 and bitch, you’ve got to get involved and actually take action locally, do something.
0:51:05 And I will say that for the fourth time, I think I hope you are right.
0:51:13 And I would tell you, subscribe, pay the subscription for The Atlantic, and wired, and watch what
0:51:14 he does.
0:51:19 Maybe if you want to work at The Atlantic, you start commenting on Yoni’s articles, and
0:51:23 he’s going to reach out to you and give you a job at The Atlantic, and that would make
0:51:28 another great story for the Remarkable People podcast.
0:51:29 I’m Guy Kawasaki.
0:51:32 This has been the Remarkable People podcast.
0:51:39 Our guest was Yoni Appelbaum, and he is the deputy executive editor of The Atlantic, one
0:51:41 of my favorite publications.
0:51:43 So I think he’s helped us be remarkable.
0:51:49 And my thanks to Madison Nysmer, producer and co-author, Tessa Nysmer, researcher, and
0:51:54 then the two sound design engineers, which is Shannon Hernandez and Jeff Sey, and we
0:51:56 are the Remarkable Team.
0:51:59 I hope we made you a little bit more remarkable today.
0:52:07 Yoni, for sure, you did, so thank you very much.
0:52:08 This is Remarkable People.
From the halls of Harvard to the pages of The Atlantic, Yoni Appelbaum’s story defies conventional career paths. As Deputy Executive Editor and author of Stuck, Appelbaum illuminates how America’s declining mobility is transforming our social fabric and political landscape. Drawing from his unique background as both historian and journalist, he examines the intersection of housing policy, community dynamics, and democratic resilience, offering fresh perspectives on how to reinvigorate the American dream.
—
Guy Kawasaki is on a mission to make you remarkable. His Remarkable People podcast features interviews with remarkable people such as Jane Goodall, Marc Benioff, Woz, Kristi Yamaguchi, and Bob Cialdini. Every episode will make you more remarkable.
With his decades of experience in Silicon Valley as a Venture Capitalist and advisor to the top entrepreneurs in the world, Guy’s questions come from a place of curiosity and passion for technology, start-ups, entrepreneurship, and marketing. If you love society and culture, documentaries, and business podcasts, take a second to follow Remarkable People.
Listeners of the Remarkable People podcast will learn from some of the most successful people in the world with practical tips and inspiring stories that will help you be more remarkable.
Episodes of Remarkable People organized by topic: https://bit.ly/rptopology
Listen to Remarkable People here: **https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/guy-kawasakis-remarkable-people/id1483081827**
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