Yes I already saw from your heavily promoted tweet that if I don't agree with you or vote Prop C that I hate the homeless. This is moral blackmail. If you want to talk about your massive economic incentive to pass Prop C lmk, otherwise we can keep pretending you invented empathy.
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Maybe he's honestly just tired, after 15-20+ years, of being the only prominent person in tech that groups serving the poor consistently ask to donate money because no one else who has become wealthy from this city does....
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Replying to @kimmaicutler @Benioff
We aren’t talking about philanthropy here. We’re talking about a poorly designed revenue tax that takes money from *companies* to fund a broken system. The victims of this won’t even be tech companies who can prob afford to take it on, it will be other local businesses.
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who designed the revenue tax?https://www.reuters.com/article/us-sanfrancisco-conway/in-san-francisco-tech-investor-leads-a-political-makeover-idUSBRE89S05F20121029 …
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And yes if the private sector created an inclusive economy where every person from every income quintile had a living wage, we wouldn’t have a broken system and we wouldn’t need redistributive programs. https://calbudgetcenter.org/resources/inequality-economic-security-silicon-valley/ …pic.twitter.com/g0YpyzDw1b
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the private sector is a participant *within* the economy, not the creator of it how many jobs would be created, and how much would cost of living be lowered, if we double the bay area housing stock over the next decade? 'political economy' is a more accurate term
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we do both. We've changed 23 laws at the California state level to increase housing stock over the last 2 years. Did you contribute to that change at all? People who work on zoning also know that it is mathematically, financially impossible to produce new units in CA that are
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Replying to @kimmaicutler @wminshew and
accessible to workers making minimum wage or less on coastal regions absent public subsidy. So we do both.
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Replying to @kimmaicutler @wminshew and
coastal CA, I should be more specific.
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Prop c doesn't do both, though. If it changed zoning laws *and* raised taxes, I'd vote for it. The point isn't necessarily that new units are accessible, there's a substitution effect. 1 unit built is 1 new unit open, regardless of who ends up occupying it.
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Normally new laws don’t come all-in-one like that. You create a package of legislative change in different bills and initiatives.
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Yes..
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