The Daily Signal - Top 5 of 2021 Day 1: Former Soros Activist Explains How Progressive Policies Ruined San Francisco (Repeat)
Episode Date: December 27, 2021Top 5 of 2021 Day 1: During this Christmas season, we're sharing some of our favorite interviews of the year to allow our team to take time off for the holidays. There’s a crisis in San Francisco. H...omelessness has skyrocketed and drug use is rampant. Michael Shellenberger moved to San Francisco in 1993 to work on liberal causes, and even spent time working for George Soros’ foundation. He advocated the decriminalization of drugs and promoted drug treatment programs. But, Shellenberger says, he began to worry when he saw the number of drug overdose deaths in America rise from 17,000 in 2000 to more than 70,000 by 2017. “Clearly, we are in the midst of a massive drug crisis,” Shellenberger says, “and it felt like nobody was offering a particularly clear explanation of it or offering very good solutions.” Out of frustration over the problems he was seeing in San Francisco and other liberal cities, Shellenberger became determined to diagnose the problems driving the homeless crisis and find solutions. He presents the result of his research and investigation in his new book “San Fransicko: Why Progressives Ruin Cities.” Shellenberger joins “The Daily Signal Podcast” to discuss how the left’s “victim” ideology has harmed West Coast cities and what can be done to save those communities from complete ruin. Enjoy the show! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Daily Signal podcast for Monday, December 27th. I'm Doug Blair.
And I'm Virginia Allen. We hope that you all had a wonderful Christmas.
Throughout this week, we are going to be bringing you all your and our favorite podcast interviews from 2021.
And today, I'm excited to share my conversation with Michael Schellenberger, the author of the book San Francisco, Why Progressives Ruined Cities.
He explains how the homeless crisis got so out.
out of control in San Francisco and so many other West Coast cities and provides a roadmap for how
that problem can be fixed.
We won't be sharing news headlines this week, as much of our team is often enjoying the
holiday season.
But we hope you enjoyed this conversation with Michael Schellenberger as we kick off our best of
2021 podcast series.
I am so pleased to welcome Michael Schellenberger to the Daily Signal podcast.
Michael is the author of the new book San Francisco.
why progressives ruin cities.
Michael, thanks so much for being here
and congratulations on the new book.
Thanks for having me.
It's a pleasure to be here.
Now, you have lived and worked in San Francisco for a really long time.
Explain why you wrote this book.
You do not mince words in the title, San Francisco.
What is the mission behind this book?
Sure.
Well, I wrote this book because I love San Francisco.
I moved to San Francisco in 1993 after graduating from college.
I moved to San Francisco to work on progressive causes, radical left causes.
I'm best known for my work on the environment, in particular around nuclear energy,
which I've been focused on for the last 20 years.
But in the late 1990s, I worked for a number of George Soros-funded nonprofits.
I worked for George Soros' foundation.
I helped to advocate to decriminalize drugs, promote drug treatment, promote harm reduction,
including the exchange of clean needles for dirty ones,
worked with Maxine Waters from Los Angeles
to organize civil rights leaders in support of needle exchange.
And as drug overdose deaths rose from 17,000 in the year 2000
to over 70,000 by 2017, I started to worry.
And this is an issue that I have always cared a lot about,
even if I hadn't worked on it very much in the last couple decades.
You know, my aunt had schizophrenia.
My parents are psychologists.
I live in the Bay Area.
I live in Berkeley across the bay from San Francisco.
I'm still in many ways a bleeding heart liberal.
I'm a very sensitive person.
I really bothers me to see the suffering of people that are obviously suffering from drug addiction
or mental illness or some combination of the two.
I wrote a couple of pieces for Forbes in 2019.
The first one I wrote was sort of around the contribution of housing to homelessness.
But then after I wrote that, a number of friends were like, look, you know, you have to consider drug addiction and mental illness.
And I was like, yeah, of course.
I knew that was a big part of it.
And I read a lot more about it and learned that a lot of the things I believed were wrong.
You know, one of the things that you listen, when you interview progressives still to this day,
and I discover this quite a bit of my research, they blame Reagan first as governor in the 1960s
and then as president for the homeless crisis, even though, you know, progressives have controlled
California for decades. Democrats have a super majority in Congress. We spend more than any other
state per capita on homelessness and mental illness, and we have the worst outcomes. And so I wanted
to write San Francisco to both get to the bottom.
of what's really going on and also figure out what the solutions are because it's it's obviously
we're dealing with a catastrophe you know i mentioned drug overdose deaths rose from 17 000 to 70
000 by 2017 last year drug deaths were 93 000 which is almost three times as many people then die
from car accidents and four times as many people as die from homicide so clearly we are in the midst
of a massive drug crisis and it felt like nobody was offering
a particularly clear explanation of it or offering very good solutions.
I love that curiosity and that drive to say, okay, there's obviously an issue here and we actually
need to find a solution. You're asking the hard questions. That's something we really need more
of. Now, Michael, for those who have not been to San Francisco, for those who are not too
familiar maybe with the situation there, if you were to leave your house, cross the bay and
walk through the streets of San Francisco. Give us a picture of what we would see. Sure. So,
you know, San Francisco remains, you know, one of the most spectacularly beautiful cities in the
world, just driving across the Bay Bridge into San Francisco. Its skyline is stunning. You know,
it's three major bridges from, you know, into San Francisco. You know, it's incredible
skyline, beautiful, surrounded by water, humpback whales, not far from the coast.
But as soon as you drive downtown, you see tents, you see what are euphemistically called homeless encampments,
but they are more accurately described as open drug scenes.
That's the expression that's used by European researchers.
I point out that the Europeans dealt with this exact same problem in the 1980s,
in places like Zurich, Switzerland, Amsterdam, Netherlands, Lisbon, Portugal, Frankfurt,
Germany. And what you find is just these are people that are living on the street. They're
living on the street because they're almost all of them, if not really all of them, are
suffering from severe drug addiction, severe drug and alcohol addiction. In the 1980s, what we
called homelessness. And I point out in the book that homelessness is a propaganda word. It was
designed to mislead people about what's really going on. It was designed by progressives to mislead
people into thinking that people live on the street because they can't afford the rent.
That's not the case. The people on the street we know have been, are there for, because of
addiction and untreated mental illness. And, you know, look, there's some people that think
that all addiction is a consequence of untreated mental illness. I'm not sure I would go that far,
but clearly a significant percentage of people on the street are suffering from some sort of
mental illness, whether severe like schizophrenia or just depression, untreated,
depression. And, and yeah, you see, you know, you see people openly using drugs smoking fentanyl,
which is, which is responsible for about half of the drug deaths, people defecating in public.
It's very common to see that. And you see just a lot of tents. You know, hundreds of people,
San Francisco officially has about 5,000 unsheltered homeless, meaning people that are not in shelters,
but on the streets are actually thousands more because a lot of the people on the streets using drugs
are people that may have a shelter, they may have an apartment or a single resident occupancy room,
but are still living on the streets. So that's what you see. It looks like a third,
like it looks like our, what we think a third world country looks like. I'm somebody that spent a
fair amount of time in Brazil, in Africa, in India. I go to slums every time I go to developing
and poor countries, this is different in the sense
that obviously San Francisco is one of the richest cities
in the world.
I mean, the number of billionaires per capita is huge.
It's obviously the center of much of our technology boom.
And so the drug crisis is a result of policies,
deliberate policies that are imposed by progressives,
demand by progressives to not treat addiction,
not treat mental illness, and to basically defend
the right of people to sleep,
anywhere, defecate anywhere, and not be arrested, not be mandated treatment.
Hmm. Okay. So I know you, you dive really deeply into this in the book in San Francisco.
I'll hold it up. Excellent, excellent read, encourage all of our listeners to pick up a copy,
Amazon, Barnes & Noble. But talk a little bit more about the policies. What do you mean by policies
led to this? How have we gotten to this moment in San Francisco?
where there are literally, like you say, now these encampments and individuals openly using drugs
and no one is stepping in to stop them.
Yeah, there's so many levels to pick on this.
This is why I really required a whole book.
And I told people, you know, even though even after three hours with Joe Rogan, it still didn't cover all of it.
But at the very simplest level, you do not need to have anybody living on the street if you just build enough shelters and require
people to use them. That's what most
developed and civilized cities around the
world have done. Before the
pandemic, New York
basically sheltered 99% of its
homeless. And the
reason that we have so many
people unsheltered living on the street in California
is because the progressives have opposed
building sufficient shelters and
requiring people to use them. So the simplest level
it's just that. It's just that we have had
what's called a housing first policy
rather than a shelter first policy.
Housing first, of course, meaning
this idea that anybody who wants their own apartment should be able to get one.
It's completely ludicrous.
I mean, even if you are a socialist, even if you're a radical left, it doesn't make any sense.
You can't provide that much apartments and housing for people.
First of all, you just can't build it in San Francisco because there's so much Nimbiaism
and the regulations are so strict against building housing.
But also, there's just not the money for it.
You can't just provide free apartments for everybody.
That may seem more obvious to listeners of Heritage Foundation than listeners to MSNBC, but it's just the fact of the matter.
Then you kind of go back further and you go, what is the history of untreated mental illness and addiction?
San Francisco is a city that has always tolerated much more extensive alcohol and drug use than other cities.
Very high, you know, more bars than churches for, you know, its entire founding.
It was the last city to ban opium dens in the 19th century.
It obviously was the epicenter of the new drug culture in the 1960s, which introduced most famously marijuana and psychedelics, but much more insidiously, heroin and amphetamines.
And we've really, those things have only gotten worse.
The de-institutionalization of psychiatric hospitals, the closure of psychiatric hospitals begins after World War II.
It accelerates under President John Kennedy.
It was actually a progressive.
It was progressives who led the charge to empty the mental hospitals.
The promise was we would have community-based care.
That was never built.
It's something that progressives blame Reagan for as governor,
but the truth is that half of the people in psychiatric hospitals
had already been released by the time Reagan became governor.
It's one of the many things I debunk in the book.
I also debunk the claim that Reagan slashed the federal budget for housing,
In fact, the federal budget for housing was basically steady during Reagan's years in office.
At the same time, by the way, I should add I do make a critique of Republicans and conservatives in the book at the end.
I argue that Republicans and conservatives have not offered a proper urban policy that they've been, you know, Republicans and conservatives tend to be more suburban and rule, and they don't care as much about the cities and they tend to look down on the cities.
And so they haven't engaged in the cities.
And I extend that criticism at the end.
But nonetheless, it's wrong to blame Reagan and Republicans for what's happened in San Francisco.
And so what you basically have is massive untreated mental illness, including severe mental illness.
You have the ACLU, which I think in many other contexts has done good things.
I have been a long-time supporter of ACLU.
But in this case, we have the ACLU irrationally defending, leaving people with schizophrenia on the street in states of psychosovo.
using hard drugs, living in totally unsafe, unsanitary conditions, having a complete double standard
when it comes to requiring people with dementia, for example, our grandparents who suffer from
dementia, either from Alzheimer's or something else, we don't let grandma and grandpa wander onto the
streets. And yet we allow people in psychotic states to do that. They use a double standard to
justify it. And what I get at the bottom line here is that this is a victim ideology, meaning that
there's an ideology here, and it's just as dumb as it sounds, unfortunately. It's the idea that you can
classify certain groups of people as victims. The racist aspect of this is that progressives classify all
African Americans, all people of color, except for Asians, as victims. And but they also classify
people with mental illness as victims. They classify children. They classify women, you know,
gays and lesbians, people suffering addiction are all classified as victims. That's the first thing they do.
The second thing they do, which is as insidious, is that they believe that to victims,
everything should be given and nothing demanded. This is terrible for raising kids. It's also
terrible for dealing with people suffering from addiction and mental illness. You know,
The fact of the matter is a fair number of the people on the street are, have been victimized.
I mean, it's true. There's a lot of, there's a higher percentage of people on the street that were abused, you know, foster kids and were, you know, physically or sexually or emotionally abused.
And that's terrible. But that's, that does not merit giving people the cash to use drugs, giving them hotel rooms in which to use drugs, giving people the paraphernalia in which to use drugs.
During the pandemic, the city of San Francisco was even the work, the social workers for the city were actually buying people.
alcohol and delivering alcohol and drugs to people's hotel rooms.
It's so bonkers that when I describe it,
it sounds like I'm describing a fictional,
dystopian film, but this is actually what's happening in San Francisco.
And so the San Franc sickness that the title refers to,
yes, it's referring to the folks that are living in squal around the streets,
but it also is referring to a kind of compassion sickness,
a compassion unchecked by discipline, by reciprocity,
by reciprocity, by personal responsibility, by the things that people need in order to improve
their lives. Yeah, and you talked a lot about that kind of victim, victim mentality,
victim mindset during your conversation with Joe Rogan, like you mentioned, excellent
conversation. So how does that translate? You refer to it with Joe Rogan as kind of a coddling
mindset. How does that translate to policy? What's the line of thinking that we're seeing from
politicians going from, okay, these people are victims, we need to care for them. But how has that
translated in policy to we do nothing to stop them from, you know, openly using drugs as much as
they want, living wherever they want, doing whatever they want? Yeah, I mean, you just said it.
It's the coddling that has been increasing, really for 150 years, is now extended to people
on the street. So we're coddling the people on the street. We're coddling addicts. We're coddling
criminals. We're coddling, you know, would be murderers rather than providing them with the
discipline and the rules that they need in order to live happy and healthy lives. I mean, look, to some
extent, what we call coddling started out as kind of positive. I mean, let's face it, life on the
farm was pretty rough. Kids were beaten with sticks and rods. We know the rise of
We know that coddling was already increasing when you started hearing people say things like spare of the rod, spoil the child.
So there's always been a recognition that, you know, as we go from farm to city, kids, you know, this is, to some extent, this is a process that's been really wonderful for children.
They can be children. They don't have to be workers, little workers or little adults, which is how we used to see kids.
But obviously, it's gotten way too far.
You know, I mean, we see the rise of participation trophies for kids that don't succeed in sports,
basically a shielding of children from adversity.
And yet we know that adversity, that overcoming adversity is what builds strength and resilience.
I mean, one of the questions I had is, you know, there's a lot of upper middle class parents or middle class parents that are very progressive and liberal in the Bay Area who, yeah, they coddle their kids to some extent.
But they also require their kids to do their homework.
They require their kids to do chores.
They require their kids to do sports.
They require some amount of adversity their kids.
But then when it comes to their politics, they'll say things like,
you shouldn't require abstinence, for example, before giving people housing,
because that would be blaming the victim.
So there's a bit of a double standard here.
One of the most interesting things I discovered is that the drug rehab centers in Malibu,
which is this very rich coastal community north of Los Angeles,
you know, the thing that rock stars and celebrities go to, $50,000 a month, they're very strict
in drug rehab for rich people. They're very strict. They're hard on you. That's what you pay for.
And yet for the poor on Skid Row in Los Angeles, which is just a devastating area, you know,
thousands of people addicted to hard drugs dying on the streets. I mean, literally, it sounds bizarre
to describe it. Literally when I visited Skid Row last time, there were just people passed out on the
sidewalk on fentanyl, on heroin. That's it, just in the sunlight, you know, lying on the ground.
I mean, there was too many people to even check to see if they were alive. So the coddling is
now part of our policy response. You know, and as I point out, I had this very revelatory
trip to Amsterdam, which in every respect is a very liberal city. You can smoke marijuana in
these coffee shops they have. Psychedelics are very in fashion. Sex work is
kind of decriminalized, regulated.
They're not a bunch of Puritans in Amsterdam.
But there's nobody on the streets.
There's no homeless people, so-called homeless people.
There's nobody on the streets using drugs.
They make people stay in shelter,
and they enforce their laws.
And so what we have in San Francisco,
it's a more radical, you know,
because there's people, you know,
in Boston and New York,
we are now starting to see open drug scenes.
There's now a big open drug scene in Boston.
But it's nothing like the West Coast.
So it's really the combination of a kind of wild west libertarianism and libertinism with a kind of progressive victimology.
That's been what's been so toxic and devastating for people suffering from addiction and drug and mental illness.
Yeah.
Now, I know in writing the book, you kind of went on a search to see, okay, who is actually addressing this correctly?
who's doing this well. Like you said, you went to Amsterdam, you spent time in the Netherlands,
you talked to leaders. What did you discover that the Dutch are doing really well? And what are
some of the principles that you learn from them that you're trying to convince individuals in America,
hey, we could actually do this here? Yeah. I mean, what I discovered ought to be great news
for both reasonable liberals and reasonable conservatives.
You know, the first thing is that in Amsterdam,
they have the back-end services.
So they have shelter for everybody that needs shelter.
They have housing for the people that really do need subsidized housing.
They have psychiatric beds and psychiatric care for the people that need that.
They have the police working with the social workers.
You know, it's both and.
So in some ways, it may sound really like I'm trying to be,
there's a lot of fake bipartisanship right now.
There's a lot of fake efforts at it.
But this is really truly both and approach.
You need police and you need social workers.
They're not the same thing, but they need to work together.
And so you get these buddy stories of police and social workers
that have been working together in Netherlands that are really important.
You know, we're starting to see some of that.
in the United States, but not nearly enough.
You know, one question is, do you need to have, you know, single-payer health care?
I mean, that's what the left has long wanted, right?
They want socialized medicine.
Amsterdam does not have socialized medicine, but they do have universal coverage.
And so they actually have a private insurance model that, like we have in the United States,
but you make sure that everybody's covered.
And so that is something that we need to do, that's something that, something that,
I think reasonable conservatives and liberals would agree on.
You know, to some extent, we have that with Medicaid,
but you can't be in situations where we don't have insurance to cover people's psychiatric care.
The other thing is there's some amount of discernment.
I mean, my aunt had schizophrenia.
She had a pretty good life for a woman with schizophrenia,
which is a very serious mental illness.
She lived in a group home, as we call it, residential care.
She had her own room.
She shared a house and a kitchen and a living space with other people.
But she didn't work.
She couldn't work.
Some people with schizophrenia can work, but she wasn't able to.
I think most conservatives understand that there's a certain number of people in our society
with mental disabilities like schizophrenia who, if they can work, it's great for them and it's
great for everybody else, but some of them can't.
But that's different from a 25-year-old guy who's addicted to heroin, you know, who probably
just needed an antidepressant and some purpose in life and some Jordan Peterson lectures
in order to be on a straight and narrow. That young man needs to get his life in order. And that
means that he needs to be, after he breaks the law, if you're a street addicts, you're breaking the
law every day, usually, including theft to sustain your drug habit. You need to be offered the
choice of, if, you know, when arrested, offer the choice of jail or drug rehab.
and then he needs a personal plan.
He needs an assertive case worker.
He needs to have a, he needs to know what he's going to do when he gets out of rehab.
He needs to have a job.
He needs to have a place he's going to live, preferably living somewhere far away from
open drug scenes.
And the drug scenes need to be shut down.
You can't allow open-air drug dealing.
In a city, I mean, it's absurd.
We have, you know, like literally two dozen drug dealers selling you any,
amount of drugs in not just San Francisco, but other major cities in the United States, we have to shut that
down. This is not rocket science. You can't allow open drug dealing. Does that mean that you're going to
eliminate drug dealing? No. But I'll tell you, it's interesting. If you're an addict and there's no
open drug dealing, you often have to spend a bunch of your day finding your drugs, buying them,
And that means you end up doing less drugs.
So it's not great.
You know, I'd love to see fentanyl eliminated in meth, but these are highly concentrated
drugs.
We haven't been able to get rid of them.
I think the idea that we can stop China or Mexico from getting them over the borders
of fantasy.
You can mail enough fentanyl to somebody through FedEx to supply an entire city.
But you can shut down the open drug dealing.
That's easy.
Shut it down.
The addicts will end up using less.
Right now, it's too easy.
You know, the open drug scenes are addicts living in open drug markets.
And they're just ending up using hard drugs every four hours.
I mean, it's barbaric.
And it makes them sick and they die.
And so, you know, you can't allow that.
But we do need a better, I think the message for conservatives is that,
and the liberals too, but I think in the sense that you do need to fix our psychiatric
and addiction care system. It's just not working. And I think that is something that I did find
some agreement among conservatives with. There's just not a free market. There's not a market among
schizophrenics to pay for their mental health care. They just don't have the money and they can't do it.
And even addicts are people that have spent basically all their resources and stolen usually from
family and friends to sustain their habit. That's just not something that's going to be served by free
markets. There's got to be some amount of government involvement. And it just should be smart and it
should be efficient and there should be a hierarchy and there should be accountability and
responsibility. So I do think there's plenty in the proposal that I'm making for Cal Psych to centralize
addiction and psychiatric care to appeal to both reasonable Republicans and to reasonable Democrats.
When it goes with the analogy that that you have given, I know in the past of the carrot and the
stick, correct? We need to make sure that we're actually motivating individuals who are on drugs
to make changes in their life. And then there have to be consequences when proper, you know,
action isn't taken? It seems so basic, doesn't it? I mean, it's, it's, it was one of those things
where you, when I asked my, the character in the book, the terrific character, his name is
Renee. He's Dutch. He's actually a nurse. He was a former professional.
soccer player, very charismatic, very blunt. And I was like, and he and his wife, there's a member
apartment, they love to travel. So they love San Francisco. And I was like, what, what is going on
in my hometown? What are we doing wrong? And he was like, you look, he goes, look, dude, you need
carrots and sticks. You got to have carrots and sticks. You got to have consequences for bad
behavior. You got to enforce the law. At the same time, you should reward people. You know,
addicts what's happening, we now know at the brain chemistry level, although honestly
addiction science hasn't progressed that much, but we know that addicts are seeking rewards.
So you want to provide some other reward as a kind of high, a dopamine high for addicts when
they perform well. So if you pass your drug test, you should get something, you know, a gift card,
you should get your own private room, you should, you know, something should be done as a carrot
for you. It seems so basic, but basically what we've done in progress.
of cities out of this softening, this coddling in the culture is we've removed all the sticks.
We've actually removed the carrots too.
Because even giving, when you give somebody something that they have not earned, it's not actually a carrot.
It's an entitlement at that point.
And so for it to be a true reward, you have to earn it.
That's why participation trophies are so terrible.
Kids know, why am I getting a participation trophy?
I lost.
And it's supposed to, it's supposed to feel bad to lose.
Like, you should feel good to play the game.
You should have fun playing the game, but you shouldn't get a trophy for playing the
game.
And so similarly, you should not give people housing for being a drug addict.
You know, you should get, if you're down, your luck, maybe you, and you, and you quit drugs,
then maybe you do get some housing or some subsidized housing or some reward, but not for
your bad habits. Now, I know that you have spoken with leaders in in California and other
West Coast cities that are experiencing these issues. Do they recognize that there is an issue?
And if so, why aren't they taking steps to actually bring change? Yeah. I mean, this is the
craziest thing. I mean, I found a lot of agreement from both liberals and conservatives for the
program that I'm advocating, which is just a modified Dutch model, a modified European model.
I interviewed Governor Gavin Newsom, California Governor Gavin Newsom's top advisor on mental health,
homelessness, and addiction. His name is Thomas Insull. He worked at the National Institute of
Mental Health for 12 years. He was the director of the National Institute of Mental Health.
The man and I had a Zoom conversation for over an hour. He's got his own book coming out.
And we were like finishing each other's sentences.
I mean, like we didn't disagree on anything.
Like literally zero.
We had zero disagreements.
And I just asked him, I was like, you know, Tom, like, can you go talk to the governor?
Like, what's going on?
Like, why is this not happening?
And he just kept, he was like, well, the people in Sacramento, they say you have to modify the constitution.
Okay.
So let's modify the constitution.
that's actually not as hard as it may sound.
We pass ballot initiatives all the time in California
to modify the Constitution.
This is one of the things we love to do that in California.
He finally said, and he said it six times in our interview,
it's a leadership problem.
It's a leadership problem.
It's a leadership problem, which is as close as he would come
to basically saying Gavin Newsom is not the leader that we need.
Because he obviously, Tom Insull has to be a political person.
He's a very good person, by the way.
I mean, it's not a criticism at all.
We've got a problem with our political leadership.
Obviously, I think you need new leadership in California.
Can someone beat Gavin Newsom next year in the run for governor?
Very hard.
Gavin Newsom has so much money.
So to some extent, what I'm talking about here is the need for significant political change.
And I think that Democrats certainly need to change.
but I think Republicans need to contest Democrats and Democratic rule on these issues.
And I'll tell you something that really I found inspiring is that the way that in Amsterdam, in the Netherlands,
it took political change.
It took really a political revolution whereby the center right defeated the left-wing parties on this issue,
on this issue of open drug scenes.
And that is why the Dutch government, and the Dutch government has been a center-right government.
I mean, if it were translated into American context, it might be more like center-left, I don't know.
But in the Netherlands, it was center-right.
They defeated the left on this issue.
And so what I would say to my Republican friends, and I'm an independent, is I would say, start competing with Democrats on this issue, have a proper agenda.
and I think that that's not just what it's been to date.
I think what it's been to date is I hear Republicans and conservatives talk a lot about the need for the churches and the charities and private sector solutions.
That's not good enough.
There has to be a governmental response.
And so for me, if the center right is going to be the change that we need in the world, then they need to change, I think, the agenda that they're offering.
And we're starting to see some of that.
I did see Republican candidates in the recall that just failed attempt to offer that.
But I think much more should be done both the state and the federal level by conservatives
and Republicans to offer a proper agenda to deal with this problem because, you know, California,
it's the number one issue.
It's not the number one issue nationwide, but it's the number one issue in California.
And it's also now a big issue in Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, New York, other big cities
where conservatives, Republicans, center-right candidates want to start contesting Democratic rule.
So in the model that you have created, taking pieces from the Netherlands, what they do there,
and how to address homelessness, drug addiction, mental health, what is step one?
What is the action that progressive cities need to take today to start fixing this problem?
Yeah, I mean, the first thing is shut down the open-air drug dealing.
There's no need for that.
Build emergency shelters, require people to use them.
Do triage.
If you want to earn housing and make progress on your personal plan,
I think the issue needs to be handled statewide so that people that are arrested in the open drug scene in San Francisco can get treatment in Fresno.
You can get treatment a couple hundred miles away, away from where the temptations of drugs are.
I'm completely practical when it comes to dealing with addiction.
Some addicts need opioid substitutes.
They might need, you know, methadone or Suboxone as a substitute.
That's fine.
I think that there's something more heroic about becoming completely sober and abstinent,
but I don't, I think we're dealing with a massive drug epidemic and we can't be
perfectionist about this. We can't make the perfect enemy the good. So shelter first,
treatment first, housing earned, make psychiatric and addiction care a statewide function,
create calcic. And then we probably need to, you know, I mean, I'm not totally sure. I mean,
it was funny because I would get to this place with this book where I go, gosh, you know,
Is the problem the liberal laws?
Is it the liberal judges or is it the politicians and the public?
It's kind of all three.
So one question is how much can be done under existing laws?
The short answer is a lot.
Do we need to change some of the laws too?
Probably.
But again, that's what you have leadership for,
because if you have political leadership,
then the leadership, you know, for example, if we had a truly great governor, the governor would come in and say,
would do as much as you could through executive order, you would then put forward a big legislative package or separate legislative vehicles.
It depends in front of the legislature. And then you would also put a bunch of initiatives on the ballot.
Because, you know, the thing is, the great thing about having an emergency, a true crisis like this one, is that you have the will of the people to want to solve this.
the public in California are just, we're fed up. I mean, people are fleeing the state. We're
desperate. I mean, honestly, it's gotten so bad that the real issue I think is just the cynicism
that people believe that nothing can be done. And we ended up losing some of our best and brightest
people to New York and Miami and other states. Yeah. Well, you've been living in this world for so long.
Are you able to kind of walk out the other side of all this research optimistic? Do you think that
there can actually be real change? I do. I find hope in a couple of different areas. First of all,
I think that the culture is changing. I think that we're in the midst or we're at the beginning
of a backlash against cancel culture, against woke religion and woke ideology.
It's interesting. There are even some liberals and leftists that are expressing support for my
position on drugs as well as on energy. They're starting to do so on Twitter. They get shouted
down by other progressives, but they're starting to kind of poke their head up out of the,
you know, out of the tunnels to sort of say, hey, I think Schellenberger is making a good point
about this. It's not moral to have people with schizophrenia on the street. So that's starting
to happen in the culture. I love these long form podcasts because, you know, one of the
problems that this issue has had is that people go, well, it's really complex. And that's been a way
to dismiss having the conversation on what to do about it. Long-form podcasts are a way to talk about
the complexity in a way that it's just much harder to do on television and sound bites. So I'm
excited about what's happening in the culture. And then I just think there is a big opportunity
politically for somebody to offer, you know, and honestly, I genuinely believe it could come from
either the center right or the center left.
California has an open primary system.
So you could have a Democrat run on this agenda against Gavin Newsom next year.
You could have a Republican run or you could have an independent run.
So it seems to me that there's a big amount of space for some political entrepreneur
who picks up this agenda.
I and my organization have helped to create a new statewide coalition called California Peace Coalition
because we don't have peace in the streets.
We don't have peace in people's minds.
and we've attracted support from parents of kids killed by fentanyl, parents of kids addicted to
fentanyl, recovering addicts, community leaders, and just interested citizens like myself.
And I do think that it's created a kind of opportunity for a different approach than the one
that's been pursued either by the left or the right on these questions for the last 30 years.
The book is San Francisco Why Progressives Ruin Cities.
You can follow Michael on Twitter at Schellenberger MD.
You can get a copy of the book on Amazon, Barnes & Noble.
You can listen to it on Audible.
We could, Michael, we could keep going.
But I want to let you go.
But thank you so much for your time.
Really, really appreciate your insight.
It was a pleasure speaking with you.
Thanks for having me on.
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