So True with Caleb Hearon - Tara Raghuveer is Lowering Your Rent
Episode Date: October 24, 2024Welcome back! Today’s guest is the incredible Tara Raghuveer! Tara and Caleb talk the KC Tenants union, how they became friends, what Tenant Unions can do to help regular folks around the c...ountry, favorite Kansas Citians, and so much more! Get tickets to see Caleb, Waxahatchee, and more at YeeHaw: A Benefit Show for Kansas City Presented by KC Tenants on November 23rd at The Midland in Kansas City, Missouri: https://www.midlandkc.com/events/detail/670783 Donate to KC Tenants! https://kctenants.org/donateSubscribe to our YouTube channel for full video episodes!Join our Patreon for an exclusive extended interview with Tara and other bonus content!Follow Tara! @taraghuveerFollow the National Tenant Union! @tenantfed Follow KC Tenants: @KCTenants Follow the show! @sooootruepod Follow Caleb! @calebsaysthings Produced by Chance Nichols @chanceisloud About Headgum: Headgum is an LA & NY-based podcast network creating premium podcasts with the funniest, most engaging voices in comedy to achieve one goal: Making our audience and ourselves laugh. Listen to our shows at https://www.headgum.com. » SUBSCRIBE to Headgum: https://www.youtube.com/c/HeadGum?sub_confirmation=1 » FOLLOW us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/headgum » FOLLOW us on Instagram: https://instagram.com/headgum/ » FOLLOW us on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@headgum So True is a Headgum podcast, created and hosted by Caleb Hearon. The show is produced by Chance Nichols with Associate Producer Allie Kahan and Executive Producer Emma Foley. So True is engineered by Casey Donahue and engineered and edited by Nicole Lyons. Kaiti Moos is our VP of Content at Headgum. Thanks to Luke Rogers for our show art.Advertise on So True via Gumball.fm. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
this is a head gum podcast i go to the coffee shop get a latte and uh an ice vanilla thank you
and read my book for like an hour but this is the problem with you is that you have you have
this life that i want and you have no problem telling me about it i'm like that sounds amazing.
I love you so much.
I love you.
This was so much fun.
Thank you for coming on.
Thank you for having me.
This was a blast.
Let's wrap. This was great.
Thank you so much.
Let's wrap.
Now that I know you love me, let's get out of here.
Let's do it.
Do you want to hear a joke that my dentist told me the other day?
I'd love to.
I've been thinking about it a lot.
Okay.
My dentist in Kansas City, he had his hands in my mouth as they do yeah they're freaks
they are these people they're obsessed um he goes okay here's the joke ready he goes this man walks
into a bar right it's an empty bar and he's and i'm paraphrasing because you know i don't remember
all of it he walks into a bar it's an empty bar and he's thinking man this is so nice i got the
bar all to myself i just got off work he sits down at the bar and it's just like a bunch of empty
tables you know some some um nuts on the counter, some empty stools,
things like that. He's in there alone. And he, uh, he orders a beer and bartender brings him a
beer. And then he hears, um, Hey man, that's a really nice shirt. He looks around bartenders
all the way down at the other end of the bar and not talking to him. And he's like, Whoa,
who said that to me? Right. he's like man i think i'm
hearing things but it's just been a long day maybe i'm just making things up in my head so he goes
back to his beer and then a couple seconds later he hears and that's a nice tie too you look good
and he's going whoa who said that to me so he calls the bartender and he goes hey let me let
me close out my my tab i think i'm gonna get out of here it's like haunted in here i'm hearing
voices yeah the bartender goes well what'd you hear and he goes what someone complimented my He goes, hey, let me close out my tab. I think I'm going to get out of here. It's haunted in here. I'm hearing voices.
The bartender goes, well, what'd you hear?
And he goes, someone complimented my shirt and my tie.
Told me I looked good today.
And there's no one around me.
And the bartender goes, oh, it's the nuts.
They're complimentary.
I really like that.
I really loved that.
I laughed for about five minutes. I thought that was really funny.
Good for your dentist.
Isn't that nice?
That's an amazing joke.
He's really, I like him a lot.
He took a big swing with that one with his hands in your mouth.
And that's amazing.
He took a big swing and it paid off.
Yeah.
You have great teeth, by the way.
Shout out to my doctor.
Shout out to my dentist.
He's been in there doing stuff.
Good at many things.
Good at many things.
I really do love, I love that joke.
Because I didn't see it coming personally.
I really didn't.
Didn't know where you were going with that.
You know, when you hear those old school kind of dad jokes, you're always looking for the like, okay, where are we?
But man, they really got me on that one.
That's a good one.
What's going on with you?
You know, I am in the middle of a bunch of things right now.
Casey Tennant's just launched Rent Strikes on October 1st.
Yeah.
So pretty much every
day it's like a fight with the landlord with the regulator um so i'm trying to stay hydrated and
endure through that so okay so for the for the people for the listeners um you and i met in
kansas city where you're from yeah and you live in kansas city you go to the east coast for college
for a little bit you then live in chicago for a while yeah um you're doing and you live in Kansas City you go to the east coast for college for a little bit you then live in Chicago
for a while
you're doing a bunch
of organizing
during that time
you're a political organizer
and a genius
and my friend
and I know you don't
want to do that
but you go back to Kansas City
and you start the tenant union
and so KC Tenants
is the city wide
tenant union
in Kansas City
you'll do a better job
of explaining it than me
but what
first of all
before we even talk about
the rent strikes
because I do obviously want to talk about that, what is a tenant union
and what is the point and why are you doing that? Yeah. So a tenant union is kind of like a labor
union. A bunch of neighbors get together and they recognize the central premise of a union,
which is that we're stronger together than we are as individuals. You know, alone, we could write a
nasty email to the landlord and say,
you know, such and such is wrong with my unit. And the landlord could say, delete,
like not going to do anything. Fuck you, don't care. Exactly. So together in a union,
we have a lot of power. And fundamentally, a tenant's power is their rent. We actually pay
the landlord money, which allows the landlord to run their business and pay their mortgage and pay
their utility bills and all the rest of it. So a union is about taking seriously what a tenant's power
is and the power that they have with their neighbors, too. Should they take that seriously
and get together and organize? So that's basically what a tenant union is. A lot of people don't even
identify as tenants, though. So we actually have an even more fundamental problem, which is
telling people that they're tenants, defining what that means for people, and also moving people out
of what is often a sort of starting orientation around shame. People feel a lot of shame about
being tenants. It's not a political identity that people associate with pride, like being a worker
or being a parent or something like that.
If people are tenants in this country, they're told to be ashamed of that. They're told to want
to be owners. So we have a lot of work to do to move people into a sort of powerful identity as
tenants and then into action to knock on their neighbor's doors and get together and try to do
something to improve their conditions. You said something really interesting to me, because I had been doing some work with KC
Tenants before I bought a house. And then we had a little bit of a talk where I was like,
kind of bummed. I was like, man, I want to, like, I feel like, you know, I want to be a tenant.
And you said this really great thing that I thought was really interesting. And I think
about it a lot, which is that if you bought your house on a loan, you're a tenant to the bank.
That's right.
What does that mean? Like, what is? So yeah, say more about that.
Yeah. So at KC Tenants, we actually have a pretty broad definition of tenant. It includes people
who rent their homes. That might be the kind of traditional category that we think of as tenants.
We also have a lot of people active in our union who are working class homeowners,
and they're tenants of their banks.
We call them bank tenants. They don't own their home outright. They're actually still on the hook
for a mortgage payment that makes them tenants in a way. And in a way, they share a lot of interest
with the sort of renting class in this country. And then we also talk about unhoused people as
tenants at large. A lot of those are people who were previously tenants who have been displaced,
displaced onto the street. Some of them are aspiring to be tenants. So they've sort of
self-identified within our union as tenants at large. And we actually think it's helpful to
think about tenant as a pretty broad identity where we are on purpose trying to build a big
tent across all the lines that the other side uses to divide us race class gender sexuality
everything because there's power in numbers and we're up against some of the most powerful
potent forces in the global economy yeah this is gonna be a tough interview for me because i just
want to listen to you talk like i'm like as soon as you start talking i like forget you know usually
i'm doing a little bit of math about where i'm taking the conversation and you're talking and
i'm just like yeah i just love listening to you talk.
I think you're.
It's also going to be a tough interview because I'm not a comedian and I'm going to keep being like, it's real estate capital.
That's the problem.
No, that's what we're here for.
You know, there has been a big negotiation with us and our fans since the beginning of this podcast about whether or not this is a comedy podcast.
And it remains to be seen.
I say no.
I say it's not a comedy podcast.
I say it's a podcast. And if we happen to be funny, fantastic. But so you're doing a rent strike right now. And
tell me about that. What is going on with the rent strike? Yeah. So this is where we get really
nerdy real quick. Yeah. Basically, the government is in business with our landlords. And this is
not something that a lot of people know. But the government has big business with the landlords.
There's two government sponsored banks called Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Together, they do
$150 billion in business with our landlords every year. And that means our landlords get loans on
very sweet terms with almost no strings attached. And some of these landlords are the biggest and
the baddest. And I don't mean bad as a compliment. This is bad in the actual way.
This is bad in the actual sense. They keep their tenants living in squalor. And as we know right
now, the rent is too damn high. All of us are paying more rent than we've ever paid before
for worse conditions than we've ever endured. And that's a problem. That's a huge problem.
And it's an even bigger problem that our government is essentially enabling it. So we're now running coordinated rent strikes in buildings with these types of federal loans to actually attack both the landlord and the federal regulator.
And what we're seeking is federal rent caps at 3 percent.
We want new ownership in these buildings that are on strike.
And we want collectively bargained leases so that the tenants can actually have a say-so in the protections around their homes. So what does a federal rent cap at 3% look like? Is that
for someone who's not as smart as you? Me. 3%, does that mean that the rent can only go up by
3% every lease? Yes. Right. So is that annually? Yeah. So that would be annually. And even that
is a lot, right? The rent is too damn high right now. People can't endure rent increase after rent increase after rent increase. But the reality of the market today is that it's basically the Wild West. There's no regulation, right? All the time we have tenants calling our hotlines being like, is it legal that my landlord is hiking my rent 200 percent?
my rent 200%. Unfortunately, in most states in this country, that is completely legal right now.
That doesn't make it right. That doesn't mean that we're paying for anything, any changes,
improvements, right? The rent is actually not a reflection of the quality or condition of our homes. It's whatever the market will allow. And the market is just a bunch of white dudes in suits
who made some shit up. So what
we're trying to do is say, let's actually regulate this market and protect people, try to stabilize
things for the poorest people, the most vulnerable people in our economy. And then ultimately,
we shouldn't be sort of captives of the market in the way that we are. There should be alternatives.
Housing should be guaranteed for people, not commodified. Our lives shouldn't be
line items in someone's budget. Right. So where's this rent strike taking place?
So the rent strikes right now are taking place in the Kansas City area. There's one in downtown
Kansas City at Quality Hill Towers, and there's one in Independence, Missouri, just outside of
Kansas City. But there's tenants organizing in these federally backed properties in Michigan,
North Carolina, South Carolina,
Kentucky, Montana, Connecticut, the list goes on. So the threat to the federal regulator is,
listen, either come to the bargaining table with the tenants right now,
stop these strikes, help protect your precious market, or unfortunately, we're going to be on
a path to rent strike in all of these different places with federally backed loans across the
country.
So, OK, a lot of people, I think, who rent like, you know, you think about they're the people that are like in organizing their people that are 100 percent always on our side. Right. Like very leftist, very progressive, like young people who have seen how bad things are, older people who have seen how bad things are, like people who are just 100 percent down for the cause.
And there are people that are never going to side with us. Your landlords, your big finance people, your people who work for Fannie
Mae or whatever. They're never going to maybe get with us, whatever. But those people in the middle,
someone who might say like, okay, Tara, sounds cool. You make it sound really nice.
Why aren't these people paying their rent? They signed a lease. Like what kind of conditions
exist in these buildings that people feel that they need to strike?
Caleb, they're horrible. Yeah. They're so horrible.
I mean, one step in these buildings
and you'll see some of the worst shit
you've ever seen in your life.
Independence Towers, for example.
In Kansas City.
In the Kansas City area.
You walk in and the carpet is disgusting.
There's holes in the wall.
There's mold everywhere.
There's rodent issues.
There's holes in the ceiling
filled with asbestos. Half of a whole floor is burned out. The units burned. At the end of July,
a child fell out of an eight-story window to his death. The conditions are really bad. And it's
hard to imagine if you're someone who's lucky enough who hasn't had to endure conditions like
this. But our neighbors live like this in every
community in this country. Our neighbors, working class people live in conditions like this and are
paying more money than they've ever paid before. It's robbery. A theft is occurring.
Well, and it's tough to imagine, I think, for people who, you know, if you have like a
good paying job and you rent from a landlord who maybe you even know like somebody
you know you're somebody's your friend's uncle or something who has a house that he rents out
you think like oh man i would never like i think there are people who go why would you withhold
rent for them just because they didn't you know replace a light fixture or you didn't feel like
it's not like that it's way worse there are rats in the buildings there is asbestos there is there
are safety issues i think that's sometimes hard for people to grasp because these people every month expect the rent on time even though
they're letting people live in what are effectively like wild west unregulated like uh like slums
right right you know a lot of the feedback that we've gotten about the strike strategy so far
people are like is that legal like can you withhold rent, right? When workers go on strike, there's a whole kind of formal process around it. There's no such thing for tenants,
not yet, right? Maybe one day we'll get there, maybe one day soon. But our response is, no,
this is not legal. We are not taking a legal action. We're taking an action from a place of
collective disobedience because the landlord has broken their contract. The
landlord is not doing the thing that the landlord has said that they will do in return for our rent,
so they don't get our rent. And that's the kind of premise of the strike. Then a lot of other
people will say, if these conditions are so bad, why don't these people just move, right? Why don't
they leave? Why don't they get up and go? The issue is there is no place to go. If you're poor, if you're working class in this country, there is no place to go. This is Independence, Missouri, and people are forced to live in conditions like this, renting from what we call landlords of last resort, because there is simply no place to go. There's not another place to rent if you're a poor person earning minimum wage if you if you earn minimum
wage and work full-time in this country there's not a single county where you can afford a two
bedroom apartment right and also moving is expensive as fuck yeah who's going to move
your stuff like you if you don't have a i think also a barrier sometimes for people understanding
how serious it is is like everyone doesn't have the social
and financial safety nets that a lot of people just assume.
They go like, oh, my buddies could help me move.
Some people don't have that kind of community
because their buddies are also working full-time
and have kids.
It just doesn't exist in the same way that you think of it.
I think sometimes for certain people to get on board
and it's also the moving cost of getting your stuff moved, signing a lease on a new place. They might want, I want three times first month's rent.
I want security deposit. I want, now there's all of a sudden pet fees, gas fees, cable fees,
trash fees, whatever it is. There's absolutely no regulation around any of that. So landlords are
just shaking us for everything we have, every last penny and dime. And some of the people that
we work with are some of the most vulnerable people in this country. I've spent a lot of time in the last couple of weeks with elderly folks
in the Kansas City area who are just getting hosed. These are people living on fixed income.
Many of them have disabilities of various kinds. Not only are they dealing with the same constraints
that all of the rest of us are in this terribly expensive market, they also just actually cannot find some extra
cash. They don't have cash laying around. They don't have family left anymore. Some of our most
vulnerable neighbors are the most at risk and are forced to live in the most undignified ways.
Like you and I would not allow our parents or grandparents to live like this.
Our landlords wouldn't allow their family members to live like this, but they're very happy to wring these old people dry for everything that they're worth.
Yeah.
So what is the end goal of the tenant union?
Like, you know, if what is the ideal?
Is it a future where there's no rent?
Is it a future where like what is the end goal ideal of the tenant union?
So tenant organizing.
Yeah. Tenant unions are kind of beautiful, enduring projects unto themselves, like bringing building a strong union is a goal unto itself.
We're practicing democracy every day, which is kind of a corny way to put it. But it's like, they are these beautiful projects where you bring together people across race, age, gender, class, etc.
And every day is a day to sort of reinvent what the union is, build more durable, more democratic
structure. So the union itself is a goal. And then obviously, just changing material reality,
right? And I think for some within our unions, that looks like a
world without rent, like the abolition of the concept of rent itself. For others, it looks like
the construction of something that we call social housing, so housing that's off the market. It's
not available for investment or speculation. For still others, it looks like cooperatives,
land trusts, like more creative and collective ways for
people to live um so you know i have my own visions but the beauty of a union is you kind of have to
like negotiate that with your with your neighbors and the people that you organize with yeah well
you talk about your own visions i mean you're an extremely smart and and you're very extremely
smart person you're very talented at what you do You could have done any kind of work after college.
You went to a good school,
you have a good education,
whatever those things mean.
What,
why did you choose tenant organizing?
Like why this instead of anything else?
I'm obsessed with power.
I mean,
that's the truth.
And let me dig in.
I'm obsessed with power.
And there's almost no, I think there's like no more profound expression of the imbalance of power in this country than tenants and their landlords.
And we see power dynamics play out in every sector across every issue.
Happens in schools, hospitals,
churches, et cetera, of course, the workplace. But there was something about this issue that
was really compelling to me. And I was so curious about why people weren't doing more, saying more
about this gross imbalance of power between tenants and their landlords. And for me personally, the kind of
reason behind that obsession is like, like so many people, I've been on the wrong side of power
imbalance. I, on a soul level, feel very connected to the people that I organize with. I know what
it feels like to be trapped and powerless. And I don't want that for myself and I don't want that for anyone. And I was so drawn
to this work, I think, because of what felt like a really clear path to confront that imbalance in
power. And to this day, there's nothing. It feels so electric to be in a tenant meeting where people
feel powerful for the first time ever. I think about so many instances of tenants saying
to me, I have never felt power in my body before this moment, before taking this collective action
with my neighbors. And that's, I'm hooked on that. You know, there's like, there's no better
feeling in the world than getting to invite people into that and to continue building on it and
building on it. And I mean, you know this because you live in Kansas City, but Casey
Tennant's is undeniably one of the most powerful institutions in town.
It's a fucking powerhouse.
It's a powerhouse. And people walk around in our yellow shirts and they feel powerful
and they feel pride in their union. And I can't underestimate the reality that so many of those people that feel that kind of power
have never felt that before.
And that's profound.
I mean, it's completely changed my life
and there's no looking back.
Yeah, I could cry.
I mean, I got close.
I got close to crying because it is.
And I know, I know, you know,
I've met many of the people that you're talking about
and they're my neighbors as well.
And like, it is, it's just like kick ass.
Like it's cool as fuck to be like,
we don't actually have to accept any of this.
Yeah.
Like we actually,
there's a lot of talk and I got very disillusioned,
frankly,
with like candidates and like,
you know,
I worked in like electoral politics,
uh,
when I was younger and I got so disillusioned with it and just felt very hopeless.
Like,
damn,
everyone is not who they say they are,
or many people are not who they say they are.
It feels a little hopeless,
but then the tenant union really,
really,
and I've talked to you about this,
like really reinvigorated my passion for just local community organizing and
feeling like,
no,
we actually like all talk aside,
do not have to accept this.
We do not have to have a life where rent is this fucking high.
We do not have to live in a world where our neighbors are living in horrible conditions
and treated badly by people. By the way, most of whom, or at least a lot of whom do not live locally
are not our neighbors. They come in here and buy properties and then they extort our neighbors.
A lot of them old, older, a lot of them disabled, a lot of them, you know, all of them low income
and they extort our neighbors for their profit and they don't even fucking live
here yeah that shit enrages me yeah and i think it's so cool to see and genuinely feel like
there's some group out there in kent city it's the tenant union and i know that another place
it is as well that feels the way i do which is like we don't have to accept this yeah we do not
have to live like this well now this is my chance to tell the story of how we actually met. Go ahead.
Go ahead, tell our story.
Because you have been such an extraordinary supporter of the Tenant Union since before we were friends, for which I'm totally and deeply grateful.
And we met, I remember seeing your name because you had made a really generous contribution at some point during the pandemic.
So I remember seeing your name and you had made a really generous contribution at some point during the pandemic so i remember seeing your name and i knew of your work and then i saw you one night on a dance floor at a local bar that we both love called the ship and i went up to you and
in such a weirdo way like there's a total weirdo behavior instead of being like I'm Tara I
organized with Casey Tennant's and I'm familiar with your familiarity with us instead of any of
that I did I was just like I'm a huge fan I ran up to you and I was like I'm a huge fan
so of course I was in meeting a fan mode and I was like what's your name like no exactly you
were sort of like okay goodbye like I'm out with my friends. No, you were very, very sweet. But it was, I was being a weirdo. In retrospect, I am obviously also a fan. But we got there eventually. And I was like, I organized with Casey Tennant. And then you and I met up for coffee, which turned into like a three hour endeavor, because you were so compelling to me, you were talking about this kind of shift in your own politics from being someone who had been really attuned
to candidates and the sort of formal political process to becoming really disillusioned with
that and starting to think more about issues. And we, I don't know if you would identify it this
way, but we had what I consider basically an organizing conversation where I was like,
who the fuck are you? Like, why do you care about this stuff? Not from a place of suspicion, but from a place of genuine curiosity. And I tell people this
all the time. I'm like, we're so blessed and lucky to have someone like Caleb in our corner. And it
comes from such an authentic place where, you know, you told me about growing up, how you grew
up in Chillicothe and the reasons that this shit
matters to you, the reasons that you care about Kansas City and giving back in Kansas City.
And that has stuck with me. I feel so grateful. You know, I'm surprised. I think about this a
lot because people obviously know I'm from Missouri and a lot of people who aren't from
Missouri will be like, oh, I'm so surprised that you're so progressive. Like that's,
or it'll come up in some way.
And I'm like, it's really funny to me that people come out of my circumstances being conservative, actually.
I'm sorry.
I just don't understand it.
The Missouri values I grew up with were kindness and generosity and worrying about your neighbor and specifically fairness.
There's a very long thread of my childhood of like every,
like a lot of Republicans that I grew up around,
they were at that time very obsessed with fairness.
Yeah.
And that has kind of gone out the window on it for a lot of different
sectors of the American political life and societally in general,
I think.
But I,
I don't like things that are unfair.
It pisses me off.
I don't understand.
I'm like,
it doesn't make sense to me that someone is paying their rent.
You, okay. So you had the capital to buy a multi-unit building.
Fantastic.
You got that money however you got it and you bought a multi-unit building.
Okay.
So then you decided to enter into contract with people to rent out the place.
You have a responsibility to them.
That's the fair thing to do.
They're paying your mortgage.
They're making you money.
You do nothing.
You have no real job.
Landlords do not have a real job. Most of them don't even go to their buildings and fix anything. They have contractors for that.
So here you are, a person with no job, and you're existing off the money of people who often have
multiple or very arduous jobs or actually important jobs. They're teachers, they're nurses, they're
firefighters. And the only thing you have to do is make sure that they live in a safe building
that's clean where they can raise their kids and wake up and go to work and be a part of society.
And you can't even do that. That to me is fucking insane. And yeah, we did grow up poor. We rented
my whole life. My mom still rents. I rent as well. I'm still a tenant. It just doesn't make
any sense to me. And I was so happy to learn about KC Tenants.
Well, the fairness thing is super interesting because I think you're right.
Like, so many people, regardless of political affiliation, actually share our values, right?
And we see this all the time in the tenant union.
We've organized straight up Trump voters.
I remember this amazing, we had this great campaign a couple of years ago.
Yes. I love this story. We had this great campaign in a trailer park, right? It's in
Kansas city, but right outside of the city proper. And this trailer park, we had heard
everyone was going to be displaced so that the County could build a new jail called heart village
trailer homes. Right. And we were like, okay, we probably have
to go organize there. And we sent out a scout in advance. And the scout like went and kind of
surveyed. We do this to try to figure out how many people it's going to take to knock all the doors,
whatever. The scout went out and counted all the doors, but also came back and was like,
there's a lot of Trump signs out there. And so we had this debate within the union. Some people were like, I'm not trying to organize racists into the union. Like, there's no way I'm not knocking on those doors. And other people were like, hang on. We have a community agreement that says we don't make assumptions about anyone, about anything. And those might be our people. And they are going to be displaced so that the county can build a jail, which we all agree is wrong. We have to go knock those doors. So the latter category won out in the end. We said, you know, if you're not comfortable
knocking doors, don't go out. But some of the rest of us are going out. And we knocked those
doors. And first of all, we found we definitely found Trump voters. We also found black families,
Mexican families. We found working class white families who are not Trump voters. You know,
we found a whole mix of people, all of whom were like, we're about to be screwed and we're trying to do something about it.
So within a week, we had 111 of the 120 families signed on with the union.
And we ended up winning multiple millions of dollars to support their relocation.
We canceled their rent for six months. I mean, it was this amazing campaign where by the end of it,
some of these Trump voters were joining their neighbors in chanting homes, not jails.
That's like, I mean, think about that. That is, that's an abolitionist chant.
That's fucking crazy.
It's amazing. Right. And, you know, we did not knock on doors, like teaching lessons about racial
capitalism or something like that. But through the union,
people get a political education. Through meeting their neighbors and actually forging
real relationships with them, they get a political education. Does that mean that
they've totally transformed and they're not going to still go vote for Trump? No,
but that's not the goal of the union, right? They have transformed as individuals. They've
transformed as neighbors. They've transformed as neighbors they've transformed as
members of their community and that's powerful and that's worth something and i think people
within the context of a union often get exposure to this reality that we have more in common
than we think we do and we definitely have more in common with one another than we than any of
us do with our landlord with our boss or from most of the shot callers in this country.
Yeah.
And that's part of the shift for me personally is like,
I just want life to get better for people.
Yeah.
And it doesn't feel, I don't feel that in national politics.
I just, it doesn't feel, it's part of the conversation,
but you just, I think everyone in the country is feeling this right now on,
on both sides, on all sides and sides are not equal, but I do think everyone is feeling
life is supposed to be good and it's only good for a very small percentage of people.
And that's not right. And we want something different period. And I just think like,
yeah, the things like the tenant union and things, and I love, that's my favorite story
from the tenant union, by the way. Um, um because it is it has very much informed like my understanding of where i'm at in the political scheme of things
now where i'm like i don't want to convince you to vote like me i do want you to take care of
your neighbors and i want to take care of my neighbors and i would like to be a neighbor that
you also take care of i want to be in community whatever that means and i just want everyone to
be safe and feel good and have a nice life.
Yeah.
And I don't, it feels juvenile to say that. Like, you know, it feels like, okay,
you know what I mean? But I'm like, no, that is how I feel. That's just how I feel. I don't think it's juvenile at all. And I frankly wish more of our national political leaders
were tapped in enough to understand that that is what most people want and need, right? Across every line that people
might use to divide us. People want to feel safe and secure in their homes. They want their kids
and their parents to be taken care of. They want their community to be safe and their neighbors
to be secure. You know, these aren't radical things. They're not radical in any one direction
or the other. And I don't think it's
juvenile at all for that to be your politics. I think that is most people's politics. And it's
unfortunately misrepresented and completely distorted in our national discourse.
Yeah. So what do you say to someone who's listening and is like, I don't live in Kansas
City, unfortunate. I live somewhere else. And I'm inspired by everything you've said because you've talked so beautifully about the work.
So someone who's listening, I'm so inspired by what you said.
I want to be part of a tenant union or I want to organize in that way or I want to have these beautiful stories about crossing lines and getting together with my community.
What do you tell those people?
How do they do it?
So we've just started a National Tenant Union Federation.
We launched in August and we have five founding locals. Casey Tenants is one of them.
And then we have a local in Kentucky, Louisville Tenant Union, one in Bozeman, Montana, one in
Chicago, one in Connecticut. We're going to grow next year. We started small on purpose because
we're actually kind of figuring out together what a tenant union is and how to be as powerful as possible. But people can
organize their neighbors anytime. They don't need my permission, right? Like I have a lot of friends
across the country who are taking to just printing out little letters, sticking it under all of their
neighbors' doors, convening meetings. We have a bunch of tools to support people to do that. But also, people have really good intuition about this stuff, actually,
once they actually get that going. I've been so inspired to see Starbucks workers organizing
across the country, people sort of taking it upon themselves to organize their workplaces.
And it's the same project, essentially. It's going and introducing yourself to your neighbor,
getting together with a bunch of neighbors to discuss what's going on with the building, what could be done about it. A lot of tenant unions don't necessarily fight the landlord. Maybe the first set of things that they do is actually take care of some stuff themselves, right? Organize like a cleanup day among the neighbors to actually get some stuff done that is within y'all's control.
So there's a lot to do.
And I think the most important thing is to like get out there and find a political home, a group of people who actually share your values and want to do something about them.
Yeah.
It's something I just think about constantly lately.
And you and I have obviously talked about it.
It's a lot of your work. But just like community and like warm, genuine, supportive community and how many people are missing that.
And part of it is like, look, there's a piece of it that is like somebody in the mix needs to be an extrovert.
Like somebody has to go next door and say, hi, I am your neighbor.
I would like to talk to you.
And that part is is
is tougher for some people than others but i just think about like what does good genuine community
look like and how do you actually support people because it's what everyone wants everyone wants
to be part of a good community what most people um i think most people want to be part of a good
community and a lot of people are like missing it right now and so i'm just thinking constantly
and like turning over all the time like even the tiniest ways that we can build community and i'm not even talking
necessarily about like your neighborhood i'm talking like community in the grocery store
community at the concert community at like just community all the time and how we can just feel
more connected in a time when it feels like disconnection is everyone is anxious about it
because we all feel so like separate,
you know?
Yeah.
I'm thinking about it all the time.
Totally.
People are so alienated and it's really,
really bad for us.
It is.
And I want,
and the thing I think about all the time,
and this is not to be like,
damn,
that's crazy.
Couldn't be me.
But it's like,
that is not my experience.
I am lucky to be a part of a lot of warm community.
Well,
you're not just lucky. You also work hard for that. And, and it's like that is not my experience I am lucky to be a part of a lot of warm community well you're not just lucky
you also work hard
for that
and
and it's beautiful
yeah no it's true
don't edit this out
because it's true
it's
you work really hard
to cultivate
a beautiful community
and that's I think
one of your
best attributes
um
most beautiful gifts
is you bring people
together all the time
you're extraordinarily
generous with
your time, with your energy, with your resources, et cetera. And so few people have that instinct.
And it's not their fault, actually. We live in a world that conditions us against building that,
right? Even in our homes, right? In the context of an apartment building, so often when we're
organizing with people, we hear people say
to us, I keep my head down. I don't know my neighbors. I just come here. I close my door.
I watch my television. I leave in the morning. I go to work. People have been told, keep to yourself,
right? Do not actually connect with the people around you. And also some people just straight
up do not have the time or the energy, right? Like people are working three jobs to pay the rent. So not everyone has the sort of luxury. And it is unfortunately kind
of a luxury these days to build rich community. But it's not just luck that gets you there. It
does actually take work. And there is actually a cost when people don't have that. Like the
alienation and the loneliness is so corrosive to the human spirit, I think, and leads to so many of the horrible things that we see in this world.
Like, hate and division festers in those circumstances.
The, like, misinformation that we all get fed on our social media and traditional media all the time these days.
That shit can only, like, resonate in a world where we don't actually know human beings who can check our
understanding of the facts. Yeah. I felt this a lot in high school. I started traveling with this
organization that I was a part of and I met a lot of different like people. I just met a lot of
different people, very different from my hometown. I met people of different faiths and different
backgrounds and different races and all kinds of stuff. And then I would hear things differently.
Like I would just hear like, you know, older dudes in my hometown being like, you know, something, this, that, or the other about
Muslims. And I would be like, I know a Muslim person and you don't. And what are you taught?
You know, but like knowing people and, and being like, uh, attuned to other people who've had
different human experiences than you is like, obviously the number one, in my opinion, thing
that like builds empathy. And I do think the important thing
about a tenant union
that you were touching on earlier
is like it's not all about
sticking it to the landlord,
which is pretty fucking cool.
If that was the only thing it was,
that would be pretty cool.
But it is also about like
there are a lot of fringe benefits
to knowing your neighbors.
Like I know all my neighbors
on my street in Kansas City
and it's partially because
of the tenant union
that we're not like organized through the tenant union necessarily, but like the values that I
have gained from being a member of the tenant union and a fan of the tenant union where we
know when I moved into my house, I was like, I'm going to go meet every neighbor. And it has come
in handy so many times. My neighbors next door to me, they had a tree fall in their yard. They're
two older women. They're not old, but they're and you know we all like three or four of us went over and like helped get the tree
out of their out of their yard and like fix their fence and like my door like swung open while i was
out of town and they text me and we're like hey we're gonna shut your door you know just things
where like you have to know the people who live around you before it's necessary yeah you know
what i mean because then it will be there for you. Can I tell you my favorite story about this?
Yes.
You've probably heard this before, but you'll love this.
So you know Denise Brown.
Midtown Denise Brown.
Midtown Denise Brown.
So Denise Brown, leader with Casey Tenants.
She's an-
Icon.
Icon, first and foremost.
And an older black woman in our base.
And she joined the Tenant Union a couple years ago. And specifically the
neighborhood union that she's in is quite diverse. Midtown Kansas City is quite diverse. It's black,
it's white, it's young, it's older. It's also changing rapidly. It's one of the most
rapidly gentrifying areas of the city. So Denise was kind of thrown into this fray early and she's
like such a chiller. Like she dug in immediately and kind
of rolled with the punches. There was this amazing moment where there was a reporter in town from a
big national news outlet, fall of 2022. And he was kind of following the union around for a week.
And in the way that reporters sometimes do, he was like looking for the cracks, right? He was kind of like, I don't buy that this is all working the way that you all
say it's working. He was like looking for the division, looking for the like vinegar.
Sure. You've got the young gay people and the Trump supporters doing rallies.
Right. Exactly.
I'll be the judge of that type of stuff. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Exactly. And it's like, yeah, I get it. It kind of sounds a little kumbaya made up, whatever.
But he was kind of walking around looking for these examples of like fissures in the union. And one of the funniest encounters that I observed to this effect is that we were sitting, we had just had this massive action in City Hall where we sat in and city council chambers took over the chamber, shut down the council meeting that day.
chambers, took over the chamber, shut down the council meeting that day. We had been in a big fight with the mayor and the city council that week. And we had this massive action, and it was
a huge success. But also someone was arrested and blah, blah. It was this high-intensity thing.
So afterwards, a bunch of us met up at the local wine bar that is a big supporter of the union
to decompress a bit. Denise Brown was there. The reporter was there. And over wine, the reporter turns to
Denise and he goes, Denise, what do you think of all this pronoun business? And Denise sat there
for a second and she was like, you know, I don't mind it. It's been good to learn more about leaders in the union who identify different ways. In fact, there was a moment where I started identifying as she, they. I started using she, they because, I don't know, I've never completely thought of myself as like a woman in that way. So she, they, I was using she, they.
they i was i was using she they but then i had to shift back i had to shift back to she her and the reason i had to shift back is people were getting confused she's talking to the reporter she
goes people were getting confused they started to think that maybe i was gay and i needed to make sure that people know that I'm obsessed with that dick.
This reporter turned ghost wife.
I fell on the floor.
I absolutely lost it.
Yeah.
But that, I mean, that's like, that sums it all up.
You know what I mean?
She said, I'm cool with she, they, but I'm beating the lesbian allegations.
I will beat those lesbian allegations today.
Those allegations will not stand. They end today. Yeah. I need men knowing what I'm beating the lesbian allegations. I will beat those lesbian allegations today. Those allegations will not stand.
They end today.
Yeah.
I need men knowing what I'm about.
Exactly.
So this is like, I mean, the pronoun stuff comes up all the time, right?
But it's like, we've got, yeah, elderly people being exposed to like newfangled concepts.
We've got kids in our unions sort of being taught lessons by the elders among us.
We've got like cultural competency we have to pass across race lines all the time. There's like all sorts of negotiation like this. But people like, you know, outsiders are always suspicious of this. This reporter is
kind of suspicious that this thing actually like works. And the reality is people are genuinely
quite curious about one another. And if folks understand why something like unions,
something like pronouns are used in a union and it's about respect and about treating someone
with dignity, our leaders are like, okay, cool. It's not a big deal.
Also, when you remove these national conversations about things like pronouns and trans people in
bathrooms and stuff, when you remove it from the national context of like these scary people in
some,
in some city,
almost always Chicago that you don't know that are,
that are,
that want to,
you know,
that's this amorphous like kind of caricature of a figure who wants to hurt
you and your family.
When you remove it from that context and put it into the context of the
person sitting across from me,
who's trying to help me not get evicted from my home because I couldn't
afford rent this month. Right. A lot of that shit starts to make a lot more sense.
For sure. And it also is like, I don't, and there's a lot of privilege in this and I'm not,
I'm not prescribing this to everyone. I am a cis white guy who has a certain level of financial
stability. Like I know my privileges in the world. And I acknowledge that when I say this,
there's a certain level of me that like, I don't really care if your language is perfect. I don't really care if you like, when we're at work, when we're at the tenant union,
when we're like talking about you being my neighbor, I'm trying, I want to help you.
And I trust that you're going to help me back because we're neighbors and that's the agreement
that we're in. And if you don't always get it right and you say something that's like,
you know, maybe in the context of like my age and my life experience and my education,
I would understand to be homophobic. I got a lot of space and a lot of
patience for that because you're my neighbor. Completely. I'm not looking to be offended. I'm
not looking to be mad at you. And I'm not assuming that you're trying to hurt me. I actually assume
we're all here to help each other. Yeah. And that we'll just miss the mark sometimes. Totally. And
I think this is where like a lot of, especially kind of left spaces get shit wrong is that there's a purity test at the door. There's a series of litmus tests. There's like exclusionary politics around if you don't say things perfectly or if you're not right here right now, you don't get to be one of us or you're not good enough or whatever. And that shit sucks. And that's not how you build power, frankly.
Like, you do not build power that way.
No one is born a radical.
You were not born with perfect politics, sir.
Like, it's just, you have to meet people where they're at,
be patient with people, not make assumptions,
and frankly, get over yourself a little bit.
Like, don't be so precious
about every
little element of everything to the extent that you can't see someone trying and help them try
to meet you where you're at too right it's not it's not about compromising your needs it is
actually very important that we respect people's pronouns in a union.
Yeah, we don't compromise on that.
And we don't shun people for getting it wrong right out the gate.
We correct them in real time and we help them understand why it's important in a way that doesn't shame them or make them feel like idiots for not getting it right the first time. See, something about you that I think people get wrong
is that I think a lot of people from the outside
think that you're primarily, first and foremost, an organizer.
And I think that, first and foremost, you're a storyteller.
I think that storytelling is the actual crux of your job.
I think if you were a bad storyteller,
you would be a lot less effective organizer.
I think your ability to tell stories as beautifully and succinctly and as aptly as you do and to know which stories to use when
and to know what levers to pull. I think your, your talent as a storyteller is like the hallmark
thing about you. And I think it's the most, it's the reason that the tenant union in Kansas City
is so successful because at the core of it, and you're not the center of the tenant union, it's,
it's all of us. We're all in it together together and i know you would be quick to tell me that but as the person
who started it and who pulls a lot of the levers and um who is kind of in charge you your storytelling
is like the the heart of the union thanks that's very sweet and i'm not in charge i do have to say
that i know the union is a collective. We make decisions together.
But I do think like so much of being serious about power is being serious about our story and their story.
Like knowing what the enemy's story is and how our story actually contests against that.
And our stories are fucking fun to tell.
I mean, that's why I really appreciate that you see that in me.
I fucking love telling our story, both the story of our campaigns, but also like there's so many individual people that I'm obsessed with.
And I think actually to be a good organizer, you have to love people.
have to love people. You have to love messy people, weird people, freaks, stubborn people,
indignant people, haters. You have to really love people. And I really, really love people.
And there's so many people in our midst who are just the most incredible characters you've ever met. And you have so many people like this in your beautiful community you've cultivated.
So I know you get it. But yeah, telling stories is easy when the people you meet every day are the most interesting people in the world.
Yeah.
And there are people.
Yeah.
That's the other thing, too, is like I my love for Kansas City and my love for where I'm from has grown immensely in my time being a part of the tenant union because a lot of my experiences growing up
in Missouri were not ideal. You know what I mean? They were not, um, uh, things that they were not
necessarily value aligned with who I think I am as an adult and the life I've built for me. Um,
but yeah, the, the reconnecting, reconnecting with like actual people who are in my community
and who are my neighbors has made me be like, Oh, actually home is pretty sick. Yeah. I actually
really like where I'm from.
Yeah.
You love Kansas city.
I really do.
I love it.
You're the best recruiter to Kansas city that I've ever met in my life.
It's my number one job.
It's incredible.
You're bringing me more and more friends with every passing year.
And I'm so grateful to you for so many things,
but that's one of them.
I love how you put on for your city
it's so good i think it's a great place yeah i have a segment for you hold on now i have a segment
for you on this clipboard are you ready for this yeah okay now you know what this is i think i'm
gonna read you 15 statements you're gonna tell me as quickly as you can if you think they're true or
false okay okay speed is of the essence if you get 10 or more correct we're gonna give you 50 us dollars so there's right and wrong answers there's it's
true or false okay okay the longest case of hiccups ever lasted 68 years true true the most commonly
used english word is because false false it's the lex luther is spider-man's arch enemy no idea
false damn it i gave it away. False.
It's Superman.
Kansas City has never had an NBA team.
True.
False.
Ah, false.
No, I knew
that was false.
I knew that was
false.
Got it wrong.
I'm canceled.
Kansas City Kings.
Mosquitoes have
killed more humans
throughout history
than any other animal.
True.
True.
Modern bulletproof
vests are made
of wood.
False.
False.
It's Kevlar.
Penguins use tools.
True.
True.
The Nintendo DS came out before the Nintendo GameCube. False. It's Kevlar. Penguins use tools. True. True. The Nintendo DS came out before the Nintendo GameCube.
True.
False.
The chief judge in the Salem Witch Trials graduated from Harvard.
False.
True.
There are four films in the Jaws franchise.
True.
True.
Charlie XCX's real name is Charlotte Aitchison.
False. False.
True.
Cats can make over 100 different vocal sounds.
True.
True.
There's a Domino's pizza in Antarctica.
True.
False.
VCR stands for video cassette recorder.
False.
True.
There are more Applebee's franchises than hospitals in the US.
True.
False.
How'd she do?
Eight.
Eight.
You were so close. You're so close!
I'm really upset about
the NBA team one because
I knew that we
I knew the right answer
which is that we have had an NBA team
but here's the thing is I really need us
to have an NBA team. Badly.
Badly. I really need us to
have an NBA team. You and I would be at the games
all the time. Kansas City and you know what? They should be the Reapers. The Reapers? Kansas City Reapers. I really need us to have an NBA team. You and I would be at the games all the time.
Kansas City.
And you know what?
They should be the Reapers.
The Reapers.
Kansas City Reapers.
I keep trying to get someone in Kansas City to be the Reapers.
Why?
Because there was this quote.
Chance, what was the quote?
It was in the 13-second victory game against the Bills for the Chiefs where Patrick Mahomes came to the sideline and Andy said,
When things look grim, be the Reaper.
Oh.
Pretty hard.
That's pretty good.
But how are you going to name an NBA team off of an NFL reference?
Well, because the Chiefs won't change their fucking name.
I would love for them to be the Reapers.
Correct.
Yeah.
But they won't do it.
And so I just want someone to use that.
Because Made Mob has made, I think, some Kansas City Reapers stuff that's sick as fuck.
So cool. Kansas City Reapers is awesome. I actually need, some Kansas City Reapers stuff that's like sick as fuck. Like so cool.
I'm like Kansas City Reapers is awesome.
I actually need that.
Kansas City Reapers is good.
Kansas City Reapers is good.
The Chiefs need to change their name to the Chefs.
Chefs would be cool.
Chefs would be good.
A little weak though.
Yeah.
I mean, it's not the strongest, most powerful name in the world, but there's already merch
that says, let's eat, which I think is really cute.
That is cute.
Yeah.
There's so many cute and there's so many options basically for the Chiefs.
I don't know why they insist on racism.
That's your team.
Tell me.
That is my team.
I love it.
I wouldn't change the thing.
About the Chiefs.
Yeah, I love it.
I'm going to stand beside them.
No, I would change it to the Reapers immediately.
I think that's so cool.
And Andy Reid's our greatest head coach ever.
I think it's like a perfect, it's a perfect pivot.
You love Andy Reid.
Is he your favorite Kansas Cityan?
Oh God, that's such a, that's such a hard choice.
You know, um, no.
Do you know Charles Goosewell?
No.
Charles Goosewell was a columnist for the Kansas City Star.
And he, I think, I believe I've sent you this quote probably more than once.
And I think I've said it on this podcast more than once. Where Charles Goosewell had a quote about Kansas City. He's a lifelong Kansas City star. And he, I think, I believe I've sent you this quote probably more than once. And I think I've said it on this podcast more than once, where Charles Goosewell had a quote about
Kansas City. He's a lifelong Kansas City. And he said something to the effect of, I might butcher
it a little bit, but he said, it used to be when people asked me how long I've lived in Kansas
City, I would say with a bit of provincial shame all my life. But now I say it as someone who knows
my luck. It's where I've laid up my rich store of friends and good in good times oh i love
that beautiful beautiful beautiful quote about kent city and also to me encapsulates my experience
with being from the midwest is which for a long time i would go oh god i'm from you know the
middle of nowhere yeah and then i just i just something clicked and i was like no this is the
coolest thing ever yeah where i'm from is the best place totally nobody's from a better place than me totally there are other places i like and there are things i like
about other places but none of them are where i'm from right and you know it kind of fits in with my
my whole mentality of the last several years and i hope the rest of my life which is like
you know nothing i don't do anything cool like what i do is cool because i'm doing it like sure
yeah i bring the cool to everything I do.
If I wear something, it's cool.
If I listen to something, it's cool.
Stuff is cool because I'm into it.
I'm not into it because it's cool.
Yeah.
You're not aspiring.
You're living.
Like you're doing the things and that makes it cool for you.
Yeah.
I love that.
I struggle with Kansas City sometimes.
And then the moment I leave, I'm like like don't fucking talk about my city that is my
favorite place in the world that's the best city in the world i also think about this sometimes the
phenomenon you're describing of like so many of us i think grew up with some kind of shame about
where we were from and it's kind of a nothing place fly over country whatever um i remember
like being away for college and sort of rediscovering pop country
music yeah that like the dudes i went to high school with would play all the time and i i was
like i'm better than that i'm smarter than that i don't like that music whatever and then the second
that i was out of that context i listened to pop country and i was like this is incredible this is
good it's commentary.
It's good.
It's important.
I've completely re-embraced it.
I listen to country radio all the time.
106.5, The Wolf.
I endure the conservative radio ads just so that I can rock out.
And it's part of my re-embracing my home.
It's also part of me appropriating white male culture.
Taking it back. Taking it back. We're taking our it back taking it back we're taking our country back yeah we're taking our country back you have great taste in music and
i won't say who you've been really obsessed with lately that lies outside of that scope but
if you could only listen to if you only listen to two records for the rest of your life okay and
you hear them everywhere this is only these records could play in your movies and your tv shows in the grocery store when you're shopping in the back of the uber
yeah you would only ever hear music from these two records no greatest hits albums because that's a
cop-out what would the two records be okay one of them is definitely in spite of ourselves by john
prine you love john prine i love john prine i was and maybe still am his youngest brownest fan and i and i've
always said that about you you've always said that about me and people know this about me um i really
love john prine speaking of storytellers he was one of the best storytellers ever yeah and i'm
also obsessed with the type of person who's like your your favorite songwriter's favorite songwriter
he's the songwriter songwriter right and he is was also just like a kind amazing man he loved
the Archie comics he was like always eating his hot dogs and ketchup and whatever you know there's
just there's so many little like John Prinas songs that I really love um so yeah in spite of
ourselves it's a movie soundtrack interestingly
i've never seen the movie but that soundtrack is amazing and that's the first set of john prine
songs that i really got into and then i might say the bell album by al green oh god i love al green
so good it's this incredible record liam put me onto it back in the day. And it is about, it's like his transition from pop music to gospel.
And you can really hear it in the record.
It's gorgeous.
It's fun.
But he's also singing about Jesus the whole time.
And I love it.
I love that.
I absolutely love that for you.
You know, I ask people on this show a lot.
I think every episode at this point, maybe, or most of well what do you want Tara what is what is the what do you
want what do you want out of your life where are you going where's it all going what's the point
what do I want what do you want I want to win yeah in my lifetime obsessive power wants to win
yeah I want to win um but truly I mean I think a lot of people in my world are less focused on winning than we all
should be yeah I really want to win like I don't I don't I would prefer not to do all this kick up
all this dust for the rest of my life like I want to win I want to win material a materially better
world for our people and like soon we need it yeah so i want to win um i also personally want
to like chill a little bit i feel like i've been fantasizing about slow mornings with a cup of
coffee recently oh baby it's such a simple fantasy but i want that for me i want that for all of us
um what else do i want i don't know i I feel some like untapped creative energy these days. I do love music. I love art. Organizing is a deeply creative practice for me, but I also feel like there's more. I love design. I love fashion. Like there's so much stuff I actually would love to do in the world. That's beyond what i am currently able to do so i want to
explore some of that i want to learn how to swim that's another big one yeah yeah i don't know how
to swim it's a problem i can teach you oh great maybe we get to the pool when i come back to town
let's do it let's go we'll get to the we'll get to the y yeah you and i both big y girls oh yeah
big y girly big y girly yeah uh i love i love those ones for you i see that all for you i love that for you
what was there something in there that you said wanting to wanting to win yeah i mean i don't
remember what i was thinking but i'm i'm i'm i'm over the moon that you're obsessed with winning
i wouldn't want anyone else in your position than somebody who deeply wants to win yeah
and now yeah i want to win quickly as well yeah that would be fantastic everyone
everything for everyone we want it now we want it all um yeah i think if we're not obsessed with
winning we're doing it wrong i i'm not trying to be in like a leftist book club i want to be in the
most powerful tenant union in the country that changes everything and wins better for all of us
you will just drop like the hardest line ever sometimes
you know what i mean like you will tar will just casually in conversation be like i don't want to
be in a pussy leftist book club i want to behead my fucking enemies it's like god i'm obsessed with
you i mean you said it better thank you for that well you can't say things like this this is for
me exactly uh i've been big on the slow morning recently yeah i've been getting i've been big on the slow morning recently I've been getting up smoking
a little bit of a joint
tiny little joint
two three hits
not right away
I get up I shower I do a little bit
then when I feel my wits about me
then I like to take them back away
I like to build my wits and then cut them back down
I like to get into tune with the world
and then go back away
and then I go to the coffee shop
get a latte and an iced vanilla.
Thank you.
And read my book for like an hour.
But this is the problem with you.
Is that you have this life that I want and you have no problem telling me about it.
I'm like, that sounds amazing.
That sounds amazing.
Simply not my journey at this moment in time but thank you for reminding me
this is the problem with you you have this life that i want and then you're comfortable telling
me about it that is so fucking funny dude well i invite you to smoke a little joint in the morning
thank you i love that i love that i will consider the invitation. It will make, we were talking about this yesterday, but I have to send so many like mean emails every day. And I kind of love it. It's like, as an organizer, I have a daily choice to make about whose team I'm on. I see that as like a part of my organizing practice. And as long as I'm choosing the right team, I'm unleashed. I'm the right
team's asshole. You know what I mean? Like I get to be an asshole via email to our enemies because
I'm on my team and I need to be their fighter. So I have to compose these emails like every day
that are just like me at my meanest, most aggro, cutthroat, whatever. And somehow I think they
would be even funnier and even more aggro
if i was smoking a little jay in the morning so maybe i'll try that literally you're on you're
on email at like 4 53 p.m being like we will destroy your fucking business we are going to
withhold rent until we get what we deserve and then five minutes later you're at dinner with
me scratching my back like how's it going honey and i'm like this is my girl this is the duality of tara i love that though i one thing i'm really really
grateful for is in kansas city we now have this incredible little friend group that is so separate
from my work life and also is filled with other main characters if i can be so bold. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And it's such a fun escape.
Like, I love getting to run off, like, right off of a mean email or a work call
and going to dinner with our friends and getting to exist in your worlds
and learn about what you're up to.
It's so cool, and I feel so lucky.
Shout out, Kevin and Katie.
Shout out, Kevin and Katie.
Shout out, Kevin and Katie.
And shout out to Tara.
What is so true to you?
It's so true to me.
The rent is too damn high.
I knew it.
Yeah.
I knew that this would be.
So predictable.
I'm really sorry.
What if I was like, I don't really agree.
After all this, I'm like, I don't know, Tara.
I'm not sure.
No, the rent is too damn high.
And that is so true.
And it's so wrong.
And let's do something about it.
And we are.
Yeah. And we are. Yeah.
And we will.
We will.
We will together.
So, I don't know yet when this episode is coming out, but we are doing a benefit show for the Tenant Union.
Right.
As you well know, me and Waxahachie, in Kansas City, Missouri even, at the Midland on November 23rd,
a bunch of special guests.
We've got Beth Stelling, very funny.
We've got the Salvation Choir, and we're going to add some other folks as well i think holmes is gonna get to be there which is
gonna be fantastic um and i'm so so excited for it yeehaw i can't wait for yeehaw are you pumped or
what i'm so pumped it's really one of the best nights of the year so fun our leaders have a
great time last year we had like all these kids on stage, like Casey Tennant's kids on stage, kind of revving the crowd up.
Incredible energy.
I'm so excited for the guests this year.
The Salvation Choir.
I just saw that announcement today.
Best band in the world.
Massive.
Congolese choir from my neighborhood.
Yeah, I'm psyched.
It's going to be incredible.
We should come up with a chance.
Maybe remind me to do this if you could.
We should come up with a chance, maybe remind me to do this if you could. We should come up with a donation link for people that are fans of the show that can't make it to Kansas City or just want to donate. We should work on that as well.
Love that.
I'm so excited. I just love you, dude.
I love you so much.
Thanks for coming on.
Thank you.
Do you want to tell people where they can find and support? Sure. KCTenants.org slash donate. And then for updates on the rent strike and all things national, Tenant Union Federation, a.k.a. TEF, on all the socials.
Tenant Fed on Instagram, Tenant Fed on Twitter, Tenant Federation.org on the Internet.
I think I'm slacking.
I need to go follow.
You've got to go follow.
I think I'm behind.
Well, we love you.
Thank you for being on, hon.
Thanks, Caleb.
Love you.
That was a HateGum Podcast.