Adam Sosnick
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
In the 1960s, half of 30-year-old men were married and owned their home.
Today, less than 15% of 30-year-old men are married and own their home.
In the 1960s, a mom and a dad could raise a family of four on a single income.
That was regular.
That was not out of the ordinary.
That was ubiquitous.
Today, it is the rare
exception for a working class family to be able to raise a family on a single income.
So the stock market's gone up, GDP has gone up, this, that and the other.
But unless we can actually deliver affordability for working families, young couples and seniors, none of that economic mumbo jumbo statistician nonsense, none of that matters.
And so I'm running for Florida governor for the very simple reason that I want to measure economic prosperity the right way, which is
Do our men, are they married?
Do they have jobs?
Do they own their homes?
And can young couples actually raise a family on a single income?
And most importantly, can our seniors retire without worrying how they're going to pay their property tax bill at the end of every year?
Tom, what do you say to that?
Anytime you go too much this way or too much this way, it's a problem.
You need money to come in to invest to create jobs.
But you need to think about, is this opportunity still good for the person that's coming out of college to start a family?