The New York Times says that low-skill migrants generate homelessness for the native-born

Without noting that this contradicts everything that they’ve been telling Americans for 20 years, the New York Times suddenly says that bringing in welfare-dependent low-skill migrants exacerbates homelessness among native-born Americans (full article):

What will happen next in this New Age of Wonders? Will the NYT tell us that buying an electric car won’t reduce CO2 emissions from India and China? That Kamala Harris’s laughter/joy in situations that appeared to call for neither was not a sign of hypercompetence and fitness for high office but instead a sign of dementia, consistent with “Observing conversational laughter in frontotemporal dementia” (J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry; 2017)?

Speaking of immigration and Indians, here’s a highly Deplorable tweet on the subject of reducing H-1B “nonimmigrant” visas (that somehow produce a huge number of permanent immigrants to the U.S.):

also

Elon Musk now says that he wants only the top 0.1% of engineering talent as H-1B-style migrants (tweet). But how could this be implemented with the bureaucrats that we have? What stops 100 percent of potential migrants from writing down on their applications that they scored in the top 0.1% of an exam that Americans have no way to verify?

Related:

  • “PhD dropout to OnlyFans model” (YouTube video from Zara Dar, holder of a Master’s in Computer Science from University of Texas-Austin; she’ll need to be replaced in the tech workforce)
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Harvard considers housing affordability from all angles… except immigration and population growth

“Home Unaffordable Home” (Harvard Magazine, Nov-Dec 2024, remarkably un-paywalled) is an interesting window into the minds of the elite.

If present trends continue, nearly every American will become eligible for taxpayer-subsidized housing (not “welfare”, certainly!):

In many metropolitan areas, the annual income required to afford the median-priced home exceeds $150,000, about double the national median income of $75,000. Among renters, the number of cost-burdened households—those spending more than 30 percent of income on housing and utilities—in 2022 hit a record high of about 22 million, of which middle-income households represent an increasing share. Rental assistance, reserved for the lowest-income households, cannot keep up with demand: between 2001 and 2021, the number of assisted households increased by 0.9 million, while the number of income-eligible renter households rose by more than 4 million.

The “housing crisis” was intensified by Coronapanic:

The current housing crisis is broader than prior episodes, according to JCHS managing director Chris Herbert, Ph.D. ’97, who says, “For many years, housing affordability was really a problem of the poor.” Even when home mortgages became unaffordable for moderate-income earners—for example, as interest rates rose into the double digits in the early 1980s—rents did not rise in lockstep. The same was true during the housing bubble of 2006 and 2007: rents remained affordable, and home purchases by would-be first-time buyers could be deferred until the cost of borrowing moderated.

But after the Great Recession that began in 2008, he says, “Rents started to grow astronomically, faster than incomes, and we went from about 39 percent of renters cost-burdened in 2000 to 50 percent in the early 2020s.” In high-cost cities such as Boston, Washington, and San Francisco, people working year-round at decent jobs—making perhaps $50,000 a year—could no longer find a place to live that fit within their budget. Initially, says Herbert, this broadening of unaffordability into the ranks of the middle class was confined to rental properties. Homeownership remained within reach thanks to historically low mortgage interest rates.

During the pandemic, though, both housing prices and rents spiked. “We had an enormous demand for housing,” he notes, “and people weren’t spending money on anything else. Home became all-important.” Interest rates were low, and twenty-somethings who had been renting with roommates suddenly realized “they needed their own place to work from home.” They flooded into the market, pushing up prices of houses and apartments alike to new multiples of median income.

Could the problem be that U.S. population was 226 million in 1980 and it is now 338 million? (the growth is almost entirely because of low-skill immigration; native-born Americans can’t have big families because they can’t afford housing (see above) and they aren’t willing to pack 6 people into a 2BR apartment; see “Recent Immigration Surge Has Been Largest in U.S. History” (NYT), for example, regarding the Biden-Harris years) Harvard doesn’t consider this possibility. The words/phrases “immigration” and “population growth” don’t appear in the article.

Despite the fact that population growth isn’t mention, Harvard says that we need to learn to live like the Shanghainese and Israelis:

Adjusting for inflation, the cost to build a house today is about the same as it was 40 years ago. But inflation-adjusted prices have nearly doubled because there is not enough buildable land to satisfy demand. “We can’t make more land,” Herbert points out, “but we can make better use of it by increasing the density of housing…putting four units on a lot instead of one. So zoning reform gets a lot of attention as a means of increasing housing production.”

Can Harvard’s statement that housing isn’t more expensive to build be correct? My parents bought a brand-new three-bedroom house with central AC in the D.C. suburbs in June 1962 for about $15,990 (previous post). Adjusted to Bidies at official CPI, that’s about $167,000 today. If we assume that the land underneath the house was worth 15 percent of the total, the cost of building the house was no more than about $125,000 in 2024 Bidies (that would give the developer roughly 10 percent profit). I would love to see someone build a normal-sized house today, even to the lower 1962 standards, for $125,000, the price of a high-end car. (My parents could have bought a 4BR house for about the same size; see below.)

The same people who tell us that we need high minimum wages to keep the low-skilled peasants out of places such as Maskachusetts and California also say that we need cheap housing to bring them in:

“People used to move to higher-income states,” Glaeser continues. But middle-class migration stalls when housing becomes unaffordable. “The tragic part,” he says, “is that we’re both making America less productive—by not enabling people to move to places like Boston or Silicon Valley, which are among the most productive places in America—and ensuring that lower-skilled people, people who are less fortunate, can’t afford those places.” Denying them the economic opportunity afforded by mobility “just feels profoundly wrong,” he adds, “as well as being probably inefficient” (see “Immobile Labor,” January-February 2013). By excluding lower-paid workers from high-wage cities, the downstream effect of high housing costs is greater inequality.

Here’s a fascinating example of counterintuitive reasoning… a higher-density lifestyle has “downsides” for anyone living in a higher-density environment, but when every person’s local lifestyle is degraded by congestion the overall effect is everyone becoming better off.

Although additional restrictions render that [2021 California law trying to force cities to permit additional building on single-family lots] largely “toothless,” says economist Rebecca Diamond, Ph.D. ’13, state or regional legislation is probably the most effective means of addressing the housing crisis.

That, she explains, is because “the downsides of building more housing—in terms of congestion, too many kids in your schools, too many cars on your streets, and expanded infrastructure—are borne at the local level. But the benefits are diffuse. If you build more housing in Palo Alto,” continues Diamond, the Class of 1988 professor of economics at Stanford Business School, “it’s probably going to make housing prices a little bit cheaper in many parts of the Bay Area, not just in Palo Alto. So, Palo Alto gets all of the negatives, and only a tiny share of the benefits. Palo Alto has no incentive to build more housing.”

My personal opinion is that housing will continue to get more expensive relative to incomes as long as U.S. borders remain open. U.S. population is growing via the addition of people who don’t earn enough to fund the construction of new houses or apartments at present prices with present technology. The only thing that would bring down the cost of housing is, I think, a method of factory-producing houses that is dramatically cheaper than on-site construction (this has been the Holy Grail for a lot of developers for at least 75 years and it never seems to work on a large scale). A recent WSJ article says that the savings are only 5-10 percent, however, which isn’t enough to enable low-skill Americans to live in as-seen-on-TV homes.

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I’m Speaking puzzle for Kwanzaa

Found at the Palm Beach Gardens Barnes and Noble on this first day of Kwanzaa 2024:

Looks like one can also buy it on eBay.

Readers: How are you celebrating this important holiday?

Related:

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Another insured day in the U.S. health sector

At the intersection of our failed healthcare system (20% of GDP compared to 4% in Singapore) and United Healthcare…. Quest tried to charge our family $102.95 for a test. The fair price for this service was $5.86, their “negotiated rate” with United Healthcare. United paid nothing so Quest sent us a paper bill for $5.86, out of which they will have to pay about 55 cents for postage alone (a discount from the 73 cents that peasants pay for stamps).

The beauty of this system is that nobody questions why it starts with a vendor attempting to charge 17.5X the fair price.

Loosely related, a friend in Maskachusetts recently registered on the Quest web site for a pre-employment drug test:

I’m wondering what the lab technicians do with this information. Is there a “Genderqueer” setting on a Roche blood testing machine? “Additional gender category or other” reagents?

I paid the Quest bill, described above, as part of an biannual desktop clearing process. I found another bill. It was an X-ray for which $36 had been charged. United Healthcare’s price is $10.92 of which they paid… $0. So there was a paper bill for $10.92. Plus a second reminder bill, also for $10.92. Even if they’d gotten $10.92 via ACH from United Healthcare I don’t see how that enables the X-ray folks to keep the machine plugged in and the tech paid.

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Christmas/Hanukkah/Kwanzaa thought: How Donald Trump can bring our divided nation together

2024 will be remembered, I think, as one of the best years ever for progressive Jewish American Democrats. Last month’s election could have been improved, of course, but the pain of that loss is more than made up for the fact that Hanukkah and Kwanzaa are almost perfectly aligned this year. The first full day of Hanukkah is December 26, which is also when the Harris family traditionally lit the first candle of the kinara during the 1960s when it became one of the first adopters of Maulana Karenga‘s new holiday (like Donald Trump, Professor Dr. Karenga, Ph.D. beat more women than Doug Emhoff. Because of prejudice against the Black man, however, Karenga was imprisoned for kidnapping and torturing women rather than being elevated to the Presidency).

How about a Christmas wish that Donald Trump will begin the healing process for our divided nation by bringing Kamala Harris into his administration as Kwanzaa Czar? Other than Maulana Ndabezitha Karenga (born Ronald McKinley Everett), there doesn’t seem to be anyone better qualified.

What about a job for Doug Emhoff? Claiming to be a victim of domestic violence is one way for a migrant to obtain asylum here in the U.S. (see “Biden administration reverses Trump-era asylum policies” (Politico, 2021)). Mx. Emhoff could be an asylum court administrative judge evaluating tales of who slapped whom in the privacy of a home 8,000 miles away.

Finally, let’s remember how much seemingly different groups of people actually have in common. The following diagram should be helpful and inspiring:

In case the above tweet is memory-holed:

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Merry Christmas from Abacoa

Merry Christmas from Abacoa, our MacArthur Foundation-developed corner of Jupiter, Florida.

My soulmate:

What if HOA rules won’t let you fly an Israeli flag (American flags only, though an exception was granted for a sacred Rainbow Flag during Pride prior to the Prideful homeowner who ultimately chose to move to the San Francisco Bay Area)? Use Christmas lights to turn the house into an Israeli flag:

At the Dakota rental complex:

Abacoa is adjacent to Jupiter Heights, which lacks an HOA. Thus, there is no limit to Deplorability:

What the yard looks like this time of year without decoration:

But everything is better with lights!

So… I hope that everyone has a great Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. I plan to cook GE Monogram range convection oven turkey since the LG steam oven bit the dust after one use.

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Could one make a turkey deep-fryer powered by a Tesla charging cable?

As readers who love pigs get ready to shop and cook for something other than ham to serve for Christmas/Kwanzaa… Here’s what happens when elite New Englanders try to play Redneck for a Day and deep-fry a turkey (ABC):

WESTON, Conn (WPIX) – A home in Connecticut was destroyed over the Thanksgiving holiday due to a turkey frying mishap, local officials confirmed.

The home, located in Weston, caught fire Thursday afternoon after its residents attempted to fry the turkey in their garage, a preliminary investigation revealed.

No injuries were reported. But the home — which has an estimated value of over $4 million dollars, according to listing sites Redfin and Zillow — was quickly engulfed in flames.

Fire departments from the nearby towns of Westport, Wilton, Redding, West Redding, Georgetown, and Easton responded to the place. Crews battled the fire for over 16 hours, according to the Weston department.

The house — which features 11 bedrooms and 9.5 baths, per online listing data — has since been deemed “uninhabitable,” the department said.

Plainly oil, open flame, and elite New Englander is a flammable combination. Did it have to happen this way? The typical elite American has a charging cable at home for his/her/zir/their Tesla. Why not an electric deep fryer powered by this cable? The standard Tesla “Wall Connector” seems to deliver about 11,500 watts of power. That’s nominally about 40,000 BTU, but electric coils around a pot should be 2X as efficient as a gas burner underneath so that’s like an 80,000 BTU gas burner. A standard turkey fryer from Bass Pro Shops has only a 38,000 BTU burner and is theoretically sufficient for an 18 lb. turkey.

Designing and manufacturing this shouldn’t be too expensive by Tesla owner standards. A regular electric deep fryer is about $130. To this, the manufacturer of the “Turksla Deep Fryer” need only add some of the electric car charging protocol electronics and software so that it looks like a car to the charger. Maybe this is tough because Tesla keeps its protocols secret? But on the other hand, Tesla home chargers supposedly support other brands of cars that use industry standards.

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When will there be a refugee swap between Europe and Syria as a result of the change in Syrian government?

Roughly 20 percent of Syrians now live in Europe (Politico), about 4.5 million people plus their descendants. They were entitled to EU residence based on a fear of persecution by the Assad regime, which has now been replaced by the other side (“another side”?). Will there now be a refugee swap? Everyone who was targeted by Assad can now safely return to Syria. Everything who was on Assad’s side will need to seek asylum in the European welfare system. When does the swap happen?

BBC:

Ten men, mostly Syrian refugees, have been found guilty over the gang rape of a woman outside a German nightclub.

The 2018 attack in the city of Freiburg fuelled anti-foreigner sentiment, with protests by the far right.

The lead defendant was sentenced to five and a half years for the attack – which lasted for more than two hours – while seven others received sentences of up to four years.

The victim, who was 18 at the time, had her drink spiked before being attacked in bushes outside the venue.

Eight of the men on trial were refugees from Syria, while the other three came from Iraq, Afghanistan and Germany.

From The Critic, 2024:

The Germany-wide statistics on sexual violence were also sobering. An internal study by the German federal law enforcement agency, leaked to a Zurich newspaper, revealed that asylum-seekers have committed some 7,000 sexual assaults (ranging from groping to gang-rape ) between 2015 and 2023. Although they make up only 2.5 per cent of the population, asylum-seekers made up 13.1 per cent of all sexual-assault suspects in 2021.

Same question about the U.S., though on a smaller scale. We have at least 100,000 Syrians and their children who were granted the right to live in the U.S. because of a fear of persecution by the Assad regime. Do they now go back to Syria so that their places in the U.S. can be taken by Assad loyalists? We are informed that the U.S. does not have unlimited capacity for hosting refugees. If so, shouldn’t all of our refugees be those who are actually at risk in their home nations?

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Come to MIT January 7-9 for our ground school?

Folks: I hope that you’re almost finished decorating for Kwanzukkuh (Kwanzaa and Hanukkah overlap this year). If you know anyone crazy enough to want (1) to learn to fly, and (2) to be in Boston, Maskachusetts in January, our MIT Private Pilot ground school class is free and open to the public. It’s a for-credit aeronautical engineering dept. class, but anyone can join and get a sign-off from me (an FAA-certificated instructor) to take the knowledge test. Imagine being able to say “I went to MIT and didn’t join Queers for Palestine” or, even better, “I went to MIT and did join Queers for Palestine.”

It’s an all-day every-day class for three days. Here’s the schedule from a year ago:

Thanks to the Boston Covidcrats calling in an airstrike on their own position with the lockdowns of 2020-2022 and not as many hotels being used for migrant housing as in NYC, hotel rooms aren’t priced at crazy levels.

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ChatGPT tries to figure out time zones

Here’s an interesting failure of ChatGPT 4o, asked “Would I get more jetlag flying from Fairbanks to Seoul or flying from New York to Seoul?”

Seoul is, of course, only 6 hours away from Fairbanks, but the International Date Line is crossed. ChatGPT did not reconsider its answer when I followed up with “Isn’t Fairbanks closer to Seoul than New York is?” but it did when I asked “Isn’t the 18-hour time difference that you mention actually a 6-hour time difference, but in the opposite direction?”

(Who wants to join me and some friends in Fairbanks, Feb 20-26? Email me if interested. We’re hoping to see the Northern Lights! Happy first day of winter, by the way. If you’re in Florida, a trip to Fairbanks might be the best way to experience a true winter…)

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