Keith Rabois
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
All of that leads to cheaper energy.
It's a phenomenal question, Jason, but I think that's what the market sniffed out.
And I think that's what the market is now saying, like, that this is a chapter that
that we can close and move on.
I think the three of you guys are a little exaggerated, to be quite honest.
I mean, all the rhetoric sounds very clever, but I don't think it's accurate.
I think the way that I see it is,
more nuanced than this.
I think what's happened is that Zoran Mamdani is very smart and is running a playbook to win like all politicians do based on a formula that has been winning in large cities for the past decade.
And so I don't know if he really believes in this rhetoric or not, but it's worth noting that most of his platform is copied and pasted from London and Chicago.
So the things that he's talked about, universal basic free meals, affordable housing, freezing the cost of transportation, public grocery stores, all three of you are reacting like these things were pulled out of thin air.
They're not.
These were the public platforms of the mayors who have won
in London, in Vienna, in Havana, Cuba, and in Chicago.
So I think the reason why this works is that these are small pockets in the end of a large political spectrum.
Even though New York feels big, it isn't that big in the context of the United States.
And what you see is that when you try to take those policies in a city, take London, and then level it up at the national level,
There's a quick schism that happens.
So if you look at Labour and Labour trying to scale up the policies of a Sadiq Khan in London throughout the country, Labour is now at the absolute, the Labour Party, the absolute lowest approval ratings in the UK of any party ever in this moment in time after an election.
So I think what you're probably seeing