1 00:00:01,400 --> 00:00:11,920 Speaker 1: The Armstrong and Jetty Show. I need to stop looking 2 00:00:11,920 --> 00:00:14,360 Speaker 1: at Twitter for the day. It has ruined my soul. 3 00:00:14,760 --> 00:00:17,000 Speaker 1: My soul has been ruined for the day, and on 4 00:00:17,040 --> 00:00:20,320 Speaker 1: a Friday, and this early in the day. That's a shame. 5 00:00:21,200 --> 00:00:23,480 Speaker 1: What are you gonna do? So much to talk about? 6 00:00:23,520 --> 00:00:26,280 Speaker 1: With lanh Chen David and Diane Stephy, fellow in American 7 00:00:26,280 --> 00:00:28,960 Speaker 1: Public Policy Studies at the Hoover Institution, the director of 8 00:00:29,000 --> 00:00:32,720 Speaker 1: Domestic Policy Studies at Stanford University, and a candidate for 9 00:00:32,800 --> 00:00:38,159 Speaker 1: the California State Controller's Office, recently endorsed by both the 10 00:00:38,240 --> 00:00:42,280 Speaker 1: Los Angeles Times as a Republican for the Love of 11 00:00:42,280 --> 00:00:45,159 Speaker 1: Heaven and the Orange County Register. It's Lon chan Lan, 12 00:00:45,200 --> 00:00:48,720 Speaker 1: he are you hey? Great to be with you, great 13 00:00:48,760 --> 00:00:51,840 Speaker 1: to have you so something we're discussing earlier in the show, 14 00:00:51,840 --> 00:00:54,120 Speaker 1: and I will take pains to keep this on an 15 00:00:54,120 --> 00:00:58,080 Speaker 1: academic level. You have a president who is not terribly 16 00:00:58,120 --> 00:01:02,480 Speaker 1: popular and really quite old and unlikely, extremely unlikely to 17 00:01:02,560 --> 00:01:05,640 Speaker 1: run for re election. In fact, I've predicted he wouldn't 18 00:01:05,640 --> 00:01:07,760 Speaker 1: finish his term. Maybe I'm right, maybe I'm wrong. You 19 00:01:07,800 --> 00:01:12,800 Speaker 1: have an extremely unpopular vice president whose qualifications to lead 20 00:01:12,840 --> 00:01:15,959 Speaker 1: the nation are in doubt. To say the least. I 21 00:01:16,000 --> 00:01:20,160 Speaker 1: think we are a nation that is headed toward a 22 00:01:20,200 --> 00:01:25,040 Speaker 1: real crisis. Do you share that worry at all? Well, 23 00:01:25,080 --> 00:01:28,640 Speaker 1: I have a particular concern around the economy now, and 24 00:01:28,959 --> 00:01:31,200 Speaker 1: I think as both of you know. You know, in 25 00:01:31,280 --> 00:01:34,160 Speaker 1: my my prior life, before running for this office, I 26 00:01:34,160 --> 00:01:37,360 Speaker 1: spent a lot of time thinking about economic policy and 27 00:01:37,400 --> 00:01:40,039 Speaker 1: a lot of time thinking about the course of our economy. 28 00:01:40,120 --> 00:01:42,760 Speaker 1: And we got used yesterday. You may have covered this 29 00:01:42,920 --> 00:01:46,720 Speaker 1: that the economy is actually shrinking, that that that the 30 00:01:46,760 --> 00:01:51,120 Speaker 1: size of our economy is decreasing. And you add that 31 00:01:51,200 --> 00:01:54,280 Speaker 1: to the inflationary pressure that a lot of families around 32 00:01:54,320 --> 00:01:57,680 Speaker 1: the country and particularly here in California field, and we 33 00:01:57,760 --> 00:02:00,800 Speaker 1: have some real severe economic challenges. And of course, what 34 00:02:00,880 --> 00:02:02,760 Speaker 1: if the President decide to go and do well. He 35 00:02:02,800 --> 00:02:08,120 Speaker 1: decided yesterday to talk about student loan forgiveness, and he's 36 00:02:08,160 --> 00:02:12,480 Speaker 1: really at this point now engaged in politics as opposed 37 00:02:12,560 --> 00:02:16,919 Speaker 1: to policy, because if he were really serious about dealing 38 00:02:16,919 --> 00:02:20,480 Speaker 1: with inflation, really serious about dealing with our economic condition, 39 00:02:20,960 --> 00:02:24,160 Speaker 1: he would not go out and propose, you know, hundreds 40 00:02:24,160 --> 00:02:27,280 Speaker 1: of billions, if not trillions in new spending, which is 41 00:02:27,320 --> 00:02:29,400 Speaker 1: part of the reason we're here. By the way, guys. 42 00:02:29,440 --> 00:02:31,040 Speaker 1: Part of the reason we have eight and a half 43 00:02:31,040 --> 00:02:34,560 Speaker 1: percent inflation, why gas and milk and everything else we 44 00:02:34,680 --> 00:02:38,000 Speaker 1: buy costs more, is because we have put trillions of 45 00:02:38,120 --> 00:02:41,440 Speaker 1: dollars of stimulus into this economy in the last year 46 00:02:41,440 --> 00:02:44,079 Speaker 1: and a half two years, and so it's just not 47 00:02:44,320 --> 00:02:48,680 Speaker 1: serious anymore. And that's the problem, is that the folks 48 00:02:48,680 --> 00:02:52,840 Speaker 1: in Washington, they don't seriously understand the challenges of the 49 00:02:52,880 --> 00:02:55,560 Speaker 1: economy is about to face. And so if it's not inflation, 50 00:02:55,639 --> 00:02:59,200 Speaker 1: it is going to be recession. And that's a horrible combination. 51 00:02:59,240 --> 00:03:01,560 Speaker 1: If anybody remember us back to the late nineteen seventies, 52 00:03:01,600 --> 00:03:04,680 Speaker 1: it is a horrible combination for our economy. Yeah, so 53 00:03:04,880 --> 00:03:07,639 Speaker 1: who's making these decisions? Speaking on Twitter? Has he been 54 00:03:08,120 --> 00:03:11,000 Speaker 1: being led by the Twitter left? Who cares about the 55 00:03:11,040 --> 00:03:14,639 Speaker 1: college because the average American thinks it's insane to bail 56 00:03:14,639 --> 00:03:18,040 Speaker 1: out the college student loan debt and at a time 57 00:03:18,040 --> 00:03:21,600 Speaker 1: when the economy is shrinking and inflations at record highs. 58 00:03:21,600 --> 00:03:26,519 Speaker 1: You're absolutely right, it's a what an insane policy decision? Well, 59 00:03:26,600 --> 00:03:29,680 Speaker 1: it is. You know. It is interesting because when Biden 60 00:03:29,800 --> 00:03:32,720 Speaker 1: campaigned for president, he campaigned as somebody who would bring 61 00:03:32,760 --> 00:03:36,400 Speaker 1: people together and try to find relatively central solutions, and 62 00:03:36,520 --> 00:03:39,680 Speaker 1: so far we have seen a lot of pretty far 63 00:03:39,800 --> 00:03:42,520 Speaker 1: left policies. I mean, this thing on student loan forgiveness 64 00:03:42,560 --> 00:03:45,640 Speaker 1: is the latest example of something that is embraced by 65 00:03:45,640 --> 00:03:49,480 Speaker 1: Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren but causes Kirsten Cinema and 66 00:03:49,600 --> 00:03:53,400 Speaker 1: Joe Mansion to cringe because it is not It is 67 00:03:53,640 --> 00:03:56,480 Speaker 1: an example of another set of policies that do not 68 00:03:56,720 --> 00:04:00,320 Speaker 1: speak to the economic challenges that American family these are 69 00:04:00,360 --> 00:04:04,080 Speaker 1: facing right now. The fundamental economic challenge that American family 70 00:04:04,160 --> 00:04:07,000 Speaker 1: space right now is they have a difficult time affording 71 00:04:07,000 --> 00:04:08,800 Speaker 1: the gas they need to put in their cars to 72 00:04:08,800 --> 00:04:12,440 Speaker 1: get to work. And and you're out here talking about 73 00:04:12,480 --> 00:04:14,960 Speaker 1: something which is, you know, I think frankly a a 74 00:04:15,080 --> 00:04:18,560 Speaker 1: political campaign issue. Joe Biden needs to figure out a 75 00:04:18,560 --> 00:04:21,880 Speaker 1: way to fire up the progressive left because that is 76 00:04:21,920 --> 00:04:25,000 Speaker 1: the only way he believed that he bailed himself out 77 00:04:25,040 --> 00:04:27,720 Speaker 1: of a very very poor midterm election cycle. So he's 78 00:04:27,720 --> 00:04:30,680 Speaker 1: trying to motivate the progressive left, and he does it 79 00:04:30,800 --> 00:04:34,479 Speaker 1: by proposing policies that I'm pretty sure seventy five percent 80 00:04:34,480 --> 00:04:36,680 Speaker 1: of people look at and they say, why are we 81 00:04:36,839 --> 00:04:38,600 Speaker 1: doing this? Why are we not figuring out a way 82 00:04:38,640 --> 00:04:42,880 Speaker 1: to get this economy on track instead. So this is 83 00:04:42,920 --> 00:04:46,800 Speaker 1: more a philosophical question than a policy question. But as 84 00:04:46,839 --> 00:04:50,159 Speaker 1: most political messages, especially these days, have to be extremely 85 00:04:50,200 --> 00:04:54,000 Speaker 1: simple and blunt to break through, are this is it 86 00:04:54,000 --> 00:04:57,200 Speaker 1: possible that voters are beginning to grasp the subtlety of 87 00:04:57,600 --> 00:05:01,280 Speaker 1: when the government acts as Santa clause, there are economic 88 00:05:01,320 --> 00:05:04,640 Speaker 1: effects that hurt you. Do you think people are connecting 89 00:05:04,680 --> 00:05:08,560 Speaker 1: those dots? You know? I don't know. I hope they are, 90 00:05:08,839 --> 00:05:12,600 Speaker 1: because I think it's fairly obvious why we've seen inflation 91 00:05:12,640 --> 00:05:17,000 Speaker 1: and prices explode so much over the last six months. Um, 92 00:05:17,080 --> 00:05:19,760 Speaker 1: And I think it's important for people who who believe 93 00:05:19,800 --> 00:05:21,960 Speaker 1: that to be the case, and I certainly do to 94 00:05:22,080 --> 00:05:24,320 Speaker 1: make that, to make that clear that the reason that 95 00:05:24,400 --> 00:05:28,240 Speaker 1: we have record inflation, the reason why families are having 96 00:05:28,240 --> 00:05:30,520 Speaker 1: a tougher and tougher time making making ends made. And 97 00:05:30,600 --> 00:05:33,880 Speaker 1: by the way, the housing market, which has undergone a 98 00:05:33,960 --> 00:05:37,160 Speaker 1: massive expansion over the last two years, is headed in 99 00:05:37,200 --> 00:05:41,600 Speaker 1: some places. I fear for a massive correction, uh, precisely 100 00:05:41,680 --> 00:05:45,479 Speaker 1: because of the economic conditions and the broader inflationary conditions 101 00:05:45,520 --> 00:05:48,880 Speaker 1: we face, and with interest rates rising, it's gonna get 102 00:05:48,880 --> 00:05:52,360 Speaker 1: harder and harder for people to afford houses. And also, 103 00:05:52,440 --> 00:05:55,479 Speaker 1: by the way, people who carried out loans UH that 104 00:05:55,600 --> 00:05:57,760 Speaker 1: have adjustable rates, they're going to get hit very, very 105 00:05:57,800 --> 00:06:01,360 Speaker 1: hard because of the rising just rate. So there's all 106 00:06:01,400 --> 00:06:04,040 Speaker 1: sorts of things happening in this economy that I think 107 00:06:04,120 --> 00:06:07,480 Speaker 1: is really kind of a toxic mix. And uh, and 108 00:06:07,520 --> 00:06:09,760 Speaker 1: folks just need to recognize that we didn't get here 109 00:06:09,800 --> 00:06:12,560 Speaker 1: by accident. Okay, it's not like, you know, Joe Biden 110 00:06:12,600 --> 00:06:16,960 Speaker 1: makes us sound like Vladimir Putin caused inflation, and that's like, listen, buddy, 111 00:06:16,960 --> 00:06:19,480 Speaker 1: I got used for you. You caused it, you and 112 00:06:19,560 --> 00:06:21,440 Speaker 1: people who decided that we were going to put it. 113 00:06:21,520 --> 00:06:24,400 Speaker 1: I said, trillions of dollars into this economy. You caused it. 114 00:06:24,839 --> 00:06:28,200 Speaker 1: So long you're the guy who's putting all those stickers 115 00:06:28,200 --> 00:06:31,040 Speaker 1: in the gas pumps, then you're the guy with the 116 00:06:31,080 --> 00:06:34,000 Speaker 1: Biden sticks. I did that next to the numbers on 117 00:06:34,040 --> 00:06:38,240 Speaker 1: the gas pumps. By the way, here's here's a simple idea. 118 00:06:38,480 --> 00:06:41,640 Speaker 1: Why don't we give people a very clear sense when 119 00:06:41,680 --> 00:06:45,200 Speaker 1: they sell up their gas take how much in those 120 00:06:45,320 --> 00:06:49,120 Speaker 1: uh gas fees per gallon are because of taxes? And 121 00:06:49,240 --> 00:06:51,440 Speaker 1: no kidding, no kidding, Why don't we just give people 122 00:06:51,440 --> 00:06:53,159 Speaker 1: a clear idea of that so they can get a 123 00:06:53,160 --> 00:06:55,840 Speaker 1: sense of how badly they're getting hosed every time they 124 00:06:55,880 --> 00:06:58,480 Speaker 1: put a gallon of gas into their cars. I'm against this. 125 00:06:58,600 --> 00:07:00,599 Speaker 1: I'm against this sort of thing as a libertarian, but 126 00:07:00,640 --> 00:07:02,680 Speaker 1: I would like it to happen like the same way 127 00:07:02,720 --> 00:07:04,720 Speaker 1: that they have calories next to the food now and 128 00:07:04,760 --> 00:07:07,120 Speaker 1: the menus and be awesome. On the phone, every gas 129 00:07:07,200 --> 00:07:11,120 Speaker 1: pump it told you how much of the price was taxes. Yeah, 130 00:07:11,360 --> 00:07:13,360 Speaker 1: I mean and and and then it'd be great if 131 00:07:13,400 --> 00:07:15,280 Speaker 1: we could figure out where that money all actually went. 132 00:07:15,360 --> 00:07:17,720 Speaker 1: Because what we're told in California is it's going to 133 00:07:17,720 --> 00:07:20,360 Speaker 1: build better roads. I don't know about that. I don't 134 00:07:20,360 --> 00:07:22,360 Speaker 1: know about that. I've driven around on these roads recently. 135 00:07:22,400 --> 00:07:25,680 Speaker 1: They're not so good. So you know, it's it's this 136 00:07:25,720 --> 00:07:29,280 Speaker 1: is the stuff that drives people nuts, though, is that fundamentally? Uh? 137 00:07:29,360 --> 00:07:32,720 Speaker 1: You have government making excuses, you have governments saying well, 138 00:07:32,720 --> 00:07:34,960 Speaker 1: we're doing all this stuff for you, and people turn 139 00:07:35,000 --> 00:07:37,080 Speaker 1: around and they say, no, actually, I think you'll make 140 00:07:37,160 --> 00:07:40,200 Speaker 1: it harder. And right now, in many cases, unfortunately for 141 00:07:40,240 --> 00:07:43,320 Speaker 1: too many families, Uh, things are not going well and 142 00:07:43,320 --> 00:07:45,560 Speaker 1: they're and they're not going well, because of bad decisions 143 00:07:45,560 --> 00:07:48,560 Speaker 1: by our policy name hey, speaking of bad decisions by policymakers. 144 00:07:48,600 --> 00:07:50,120 Speaker 1: We talked about this story earlier in the week, and 145 00:07:50,160 --> 00:07:52,680 Speaker 1: I understand you have some thoughts on it um. The 146 00:07:52,720 --> 00:07:55,320 Speaker 1: San Francisco Chronicle did a great job of looking into 147 00:07:55,320 --> 00:07:59,480 Speaker 1: the results of the hundreds of millions of dollars taxpayers 148 00:07:59,520 --> 00:08:02,600 Speaker 1: have spent to deal with the so called homeless problem, 149 00:08:03,000 --> 00:08:08,600 Speaker 1: and the results have been horrible. People dying of opioid deads, 150 00:08:08,680 --> 00:08:12,680 Speaker 1: people staying homeless, and increase in homelessness of fifty six 151 00:08:12,760 --> 00:08:15,320 Speaker 1: percent after spending all that money. How did how did 152 00:08:15,360 --> 00:08:18,360 Speaker 1: that report strike you in two minutes or less? If 153 00:08:18,440 --> 00:08:21,520 Speaker 1: you can pull it off, well, it reminds me of 154 00:08:21,560 --> 00:08:24,920 Speaker 1: what happens when you don't have effective oversight in in 155 00:08:24,920 --> 00:08:27,720 Speaker 1: in a city or in a state. And in California, 156 00:08:27,760 --> 00:08:31,040 Speaker 1: there is no problem where the lack of oversight has 157 00:08:31,240 --> 00:08:34,199 Speaker 1: has been a bigger cause of things getting worse than 158 00:08:34,200 --> 00:08:37,439 Speaker 1: our homelessness crisis in San Francisco. They spent a lot 159 00:08:37,440 --> 00:08:40,320 Speaker 1: of money in l A. We know they in one program, 160 00:08:40,360 --> 00:08:44,040 Speaker 1: they're spending eight hundred thousand dollars per unit of housing construction, 161 00:08:44,520 --> 00:08:48,000 Speaker 1: and the problems are getting worse in the state of California. Overall, 162 00:08:48,040 --> 00:08:51,280 Speaker 1: we've allocated twenty billion dollars for homelessness and over the 163 00:08:51,320 --> 00:08:54,400 Speaker 1: last three years, and every California and I speak to 164 00:08:54,520 --> 00:08:57,079 Speaker 1: and everything that I seek suggest the problem is getting worse. 165 00:08:57,360 --> 00:08:59,600 Speaker 1: So you tell me what what what's the problem here? 166 00:08:59,600 --> 00:09:03,040 Speaker 1: The problem them is there's nobody who's saying, hey, you 167 00:09:03,080 --> 00:09:05,720 Speaker 1: can't keep spending this money if it's not solving problems. 168 00:09:05,720 --> 00:09:07,880 Speaker 1: If you're gonna spend money, it better solve problems. And 169 00:09:07,880 --> 00:09:09,319 Speaker 1: that's you know, that's one of the reasons why I'm 170 00:09:09,360 --> 00:09:12,679 Speaker 1: running for for Controller in California because as Controller, my 171 00:09:12,800 --> 00:09:16,280 Speaker 1: job would be to provide accountability for every single dollar 172 00:09:16,360 --> 00:09:18,560 Speaker 1: this state spends. And I will tell you, in homelessness, 173 00:09:18,600 --> 00:09:21,280 Speaker 1: we are not solving the problem. We are spending an 174 00:09:21,280 --> 00:09:23,520 Speaker 1: awful lot of money, and we need to get back 175 00:09:23,520 --> 00:09:26,640 Speaker 1: into the problem solving business again. We are not only uh, 176 00:09:26,800 --> 00:09:29,400 Speaker 1: we are not only hurting people who are homeless by 177 00:09:29,400 --> 00:09:32,160 Speaker 1: not giving them the ability and helping them figure out 178 00:09:32,200 --> 00:09:34,720 Speaker 1: how to get down of that situation, but we're making 179 00:09:34,720 --> 00:09:38,040 Speaker 1: it worse. And people are literally dying in San Francisco. 180 00:09:38,080 --> 00:09:43,600 Speaker 1: They are living in rat feasts infested hotels because because 181 00:09:43,640 --> 00:09:46,000 Speaker 1: the City of San Francisco can't get it back together, 182 00:09:46,360 --> 00:09:49,440 Speaker 1: and because the mayor there doesn't want accountability, all right, 183 00:09:49,520 --> 00:09:52,960 Speaker 1: and and they have repeatedly refused to have an oversight commission. 184 00:09:53,320 --> 00:09:55,480 Speaker 1: And I'll tell you it's about time somebody was up 185 00:09:55,520 --> 00:09:57,400 Speaker 1: up there calling balls and stripes and saying, you guys, 186 00:09:57,480 --> 00:10:00,000 Speaker 1: can't keep doing this. You can't keep spending good money 187 00:10:00,040 --> 00:10:02,360 Speaker 1: and sending it after bad So that that I think 188 00:10:02,440 --> 00:10:04,559 Speaker 1: is really the fundamental route of the problem is we 189 00:10:04,600 --> 00:10:06,920 Speaker 1: don't have an independent fiscal watchdog. We have too many 190 00:10:07,000 --> 00:10:10,600 Speaker 1: lap dogs. And that is why, that is why Alan 191 00:10:10,679 --> 00:10:14,000 Speaker 1: he Chan is running for California State Controller. Lan he 192 00:10:14,240 --> 00:10:16,560 Speaker 1: always enlightening, Thanks so much for the time. Good to 193 00:10:16,559 --> 00:10:19,320 Speaker 1: talk to you, great to do with you, guys. And 194 00:10:19,360 --> 00:10:21,240 Speaker 1: of course, one of the most insidious parts of that 195 00:10:21,360 --> 00:10:25,520 Speaker 1: lack of an oversight or accountability or whatever is that 196 00:10:25,600 --> 00:10:28,760 Speaker 1: for ideological reasons, those on the left continue to ignore 197 00:10:28,800 --> 00:10:31,120 Speaker 1: the fact that we have an enormous drug crisis, and 198 00:10:31,160 --> 00:10:32,960 Speaker 1: that's at the heart of a lot of what's going 199 00:10:32,960 --> 00:10:36,079 Speaker 1: on with the so called homeless crisis. But just in general, 200 00:10:36,200 --> 00:10:39,760 Speaker 1: nobody ever looks at the results of government programs. He 201 00:10:39,880 --> 00:10:42,560 Speaker 1: just he's somebody proposes them, they passed. You spend a 202 00:10:42,559 --> 00:10:44,720 Speaker 1: bunch of money and then no where ever checks to see, 203 00:10:44,760 --> 00:10:46,840 Speaker 1: hey did that work or not. You just keep doing 204 00:10:46,880 --> 00:10:49,400 Speaker 1: it right. You don't even like get as far as 205 00:10:49,400 --> 00:10:52,319 Speaker 1: getting a dishonest answer. Nobody even asks the question. You 206 00:10:52,400 --> 00:10:55,000 Speaker 1: miss an hour. Grab the podcast Armstrong and Getty on 207 00:10:55,160 --> 00:10:59,160 Speaker 1: demand and Getty