Elon Musk's "$10,000 Home" Is A Complete Lie

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  • Опубликовано: 24 апр 2023
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Комментарии • 4,2 тыс.

  • @mushmush4980
    @mushmush4980 Год назад +6188

    "If we stack the tiny homes for maximum efficiency, we get.. an apartment complex?"

    • @heyhoe168
      @heyhoe168 Год назад +190

      ikr? Also market issues ruins it way more then the building cost itself.

    • @Bustermachine
      @Bustermachine Год назад +146

      @@heyhoe168 This ^ I'm not crazy about them, but the problem with 5-1 Apartments is more that they're being constructed as 'premium housing' than anything to do with their construction quality or 'character'. Brownstones, after all, were once considered 'cheap' 'mass produced' and 'lacking character' but they too were a solution to housing affordability based on cheap construction techniques at the time.

    • @Kacpa2
      @Kacpa2 Год назад +143

      That fool tries to reinvent the wheel, but infinetly shittier and more costly. Over and over again

    • @braxbro6674
      @braxbro6674 Год назад +126

      Apartment complexes: the trains of the housing world.

    • @heyhoe168
      @heyhoe168 Год назад +9

      @@braxbro6674 yes. However I bet someone powerful simply dont want prices to decline.

  • @slateslavens
    @slateslavens Год назад +4641

    as someone who has lived in a motorhome with our family of four for nearly the last decade, I can say with some authority that the fun of "tiny homes" wears out _really fast._

    • @johnsmith-cw3wo
      @johnsmith-cw3wo Год назад +476

      is like living in a tent... fun for a weekend... after that, not so much.

    • @senritsujumpsuit6021
      @senritsujumpsuit6021 Год назад +34

      how did it wear off those Bus Conversions with families of six look pretty dang comfortable

    • @edim108
      @edim108 Год назад +182

      I used to live in a house built on the footprint of a garden arbor with scrap bricks and cement my dad stole from the construction site he worked on in 80's.
      It was less than 30m2 for the three of us (my mom, my dad and I) and living there was quite something. I cannot stress how much happier I was when we finally could demolish it and build an actual house and not an outbuilding as it was legally classified bc it didn't meet the code. My current room with bathroom on the 2nd floor is the size of that house...

    • @CRneu
      @CRneu Год назад +317

      @@senritsujumpsuit6021 you have zero privacy, you're always cramped for space, you have to lower your head all the time, there's no "quiet" time/space, no storage, etc. It's doable but it gets old very fast.

    • @senritsujumpsuit6021
      @senritsujumpsuit6021 Год назад

      @@CRneu you did not look at many conversions did you

  • @Akinto710
    @Akinto710 Год назад +3371

    My college actually did this. Instead of having small shared rooms, they made a building where every room was a prefab room in a 40ft storage container. This meant that everyone could get a private room, and it was twice as big, for the same cost. Around $300 a month.
    Problem is, most adults can't live in a fucking single room storage pod like a college student who lives off of ramen.

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem Год назад +40

      This channel are Asian, they can do over 100 in a container .....
      Mad people here !

    • @uis246
      @uis246 Год назад +142

      If you look at price of containers, container housing becomes expensive.
      Speaking of prefabs. Panel housing is a thing and it's very cheap at scale.

    • @liamnehren1054
      @liamnehren1054 Год назад +37

      This reminds me of the game CommonHood, glitchy mess, economics that make no sense but it basically has you designing increasingly modern rooms in a common area in a commune style. You make the rooms in a tiny house format so you can quickly move the commune between areas in a linear fashion deeper into the ruins of a huge factory retaken by nature.
      Also adults in Europe live like this quite a bit, apartments or houses cut up into private and collective areas, everyone interacting, it can be a real blast or a quiet place to crash, depending on the people and rules.
      Which can be either an amazing way to live or hell based on the people going by my time in shared apartments.
      Something like CommonHood could actually be an interesting housing concept in theory. Someone could build large empty areas either in a tower or underground. Bring in natural light with a reflectors system and basically have people living around an indoor park.

    • @mrpumperknuckles1631
      @mrpumperknuckles1631 Год назад

      The Tesla home had different rooms storage containers do not…

    • @liamnehren1054
      @liamnehren1054 Год назад +92

      @@mrpumperknuckles1631 you mean one of the two which have never existed?

  • @Error-5478
    @Error-5478 Год назад +2593

    My grandfather told me stories of how you could buy entire houses from catalogs in the 30's and 40's. They'd ship right to your plot in pre-built sections that took about a day to put together with a small construction crew. The only problem was finding land to put the house and then getting water. Guess some things really don't change all that much.

    • @diktatoralexander88
      @diktatoralexander88 Год назад +160

      Even far back as the 20s. In American history, the only thing that fixed anything was the baby boom of the 40s, and returning veterans needing homes for their families, that made companies build loads of houses and neighborhoods like crazy. This was the modern subdivision planning we still use today.

    • @Drunken_Master
      @Drunken_Master Год назад

      A real house is made of bricks and mortar, not that wood and plaster american sh*t...

    • @tampabaybuccaneer10
      @tampabaybuccaneer10 Год назад +94

      Sears sold kits for houses! They were actually quite nice and there are still some remaining that are still recognizable (haven't been extensively remodeled).

    • @goekhanbag
      @goekhanbag Год назад +15

      Yes, they’re prefabricated standardized steel houses. They sold I think around 10,000 or fewer of them in the US. It never caught on.

    • @gusto9452
      @gusto9452 Год назад +4

      That’s what my grandma did in the early 2000s. We drove behind it and watched them put on the land. It was awesome

  • @theprecipiceofreason
    @theprecipiceofreason Год назад +9862

    it's crazy to me that we aren't making it illegal for investment companies to own homes after what happened 15 years ago. It's almost like we want it to happen again.

    • @michaelsasylum
      @michaelsasylum Год назад +767

      True, big companies require big profits and hence big fraud.

    • @8is
      @8is Год назад

      They don't own any homes, people who take out loans put up their homes as security.
      And it was the government who was the most responsible for the 2008 housing bubble. The government used Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to encourage banks to give out loans to people who didn't have good enough credit. You can blame the banks all you want, but what are you really going to do when the government has written a blank check for you, the housing prices just keeps rising and no one (not even the rating agencies) have picked up on the overvalued mortgages. It's honestly shocking that the government didn't bail out Lehman Brothers when they went under; the government did bail out the banks eventually though and even turned a slight profit doing so, which was definitely the best for everyone.

    • @brigidia8218
      @brigidia8218 Год назад +75

      nooooooooooo waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay

    • @HTV-2_Hypersonic_Glide_Vehicle
      @HTV-2_Hypersonic_Glide_Vehicle Год назад +574

      whatever pleases the shareholders for personal financial gain without a care for anyone else, they'd be willing to blow up earth if it jut put a little more money in their net worth

    • @drachenfels6782
      @drachenfels6782 Год назад +178

      @@michaelsasylum It's not fraud, it's just a stacked system. It was easy to do in the past, easier nowadays, just here and there small support in say planning permission speed and suddenly you have a big company that can outbid everyone else. It's not necessarily a law that forbids competition, just small heads up in advance, and the system stays broken for ages. Then those companies can toss a donation here and there, find a useful idealist that will preach that it's not a system, it's you buying avocado on toast (and coffee, can you believe it?), but if you didn't and at the same time worked harder and longer it would be all fine.
      What I cannot believe is that in the XIX century and early XX, in London super-rich built housing in slums to improve the health and well-being of denizens of those. In XXI century the top 100 company in the UK is buying them from the local government, refurbishing and selling them for profit all that after securing a concession that affordable housing is anything that they sell at 80% of the market average. This is what we call charity, you could sell something for 40 times the average annual salary but you do for 32 average annual salary.

  • @Skylancer727
    @Skylancer727 Год назад +4846

    "Towing houses with a Cybertruck is probably the most fuel efficient idea".
    Ah yes, nothing more efficient than towing a mobile home all day everywhere you go as you don't own any land to put it on. Also bet the Walmart will be perfectly okay with you keeping it parked in their parking lot at night.

    • @faustinpippin9208
      @faustinpippin9208 Год назад +336

      When I used to be broke I used to live in a stealth camper van on the edge of a walmart parking, 2 years and noone noticed...or maybe noone cared because the parking was 90% empty all the time anyway?

    • @demo2823
      @demo2823 Год назад +277

      I loled at the guy saying that Tesla products work so well together. He seemed to have forgotten that the main charging station for a Tesla is inside a stationary house.

    • @t_ylr
      @t_ylr Год назад +73

      Honestly my dream home is probably an apartment or a townhome with basically no lawn, but I do wish mobile homes were not socially stigmatized. Like it would be great if most young ppl had an affordable option to live alone on their own land if they want.

    • @ralang999
      @ralang999 Год назад +139

      a nonexistent elon product towing another nonexistent elon product loool

    • @Liam-vb3xo
      @Liam-vb3xo Год назад +19

      Walmart probably would, you can already park an RV there overnight

  • @stewy497
    @stewy497 Год назад +244

    The most unbelievable part of that last Rewind video is that any of Elon's children would ever want to live with him.

  • @jeltezandberg6893
    @jeltezandberg6893 Год назад +1232

    I really hate minimum parking requirements. When I studied city planning in University I always struggled fitting enough houses within a certain plot of land. Even when I finally did draw a design I was happy with I had to fit in so many parking spaces that I basically had to start over.

    • @OnlyForViews
      @OnlyForViews Год назад +137

      A lot of US states (California is one of the bad ones) require parking for commercial spaces based on square footage, so places like Home Depot and Costco have vast parking lots that are never full. One of the bigger issues with modern cities is all the open asphalt space. Although CA is beginning to deal with that by doing solar parking covers. Shade, less blackbody thermal islands AND clean power...!

    • @spankeyfish
      @spankeyfish Год назад +100

      We have the opposite problem in the UK with new office buildings. Planning regs limit the number of parking spaces to a % of the number of workers that the office is designed to accommodate so it's illegal for there to be enough parking. It's meant to encourage people to use public transport but only really big cities have multiple train stations and busses are a joke, especially at rush hour. This leaves people parking all over the neighbouring streets.

    • @Ch4pp13
      @Ch4pp13 Год назад +87

      ​@@bigchunguscultmember1267 and to the politicians who say "just take public transport" while refusing to expand it, we say "take public transport while being just 30 minutes out"

    • @dadudeme
      @dadudeme Год назад +45

      ​@@spankeyfish that vould be great if the public transport worked.

    • @pw6002
      @pw6002 Год назад +61

      That’s the problem when your whole country has been organized around the interests of your national car industry.
      And it’s even more dramatic when your national car industry is crumbling down because its unability to meet the rest of the world’s standards (nobody outside the US buys american cars…)

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Год назад +1981

    Born too early to explore Space
    Born too late to explore Earth
    Born just in time to witness wild housing prices, what a time to be alive

    • @johnburn8031
      @johnburn8031 Год назад +12

      I agree 🤦🏻‍♂️🙇🏻‍♂️

    • @theowlfromduolingo7982
      @theowlfromduolingo7982 Год назад +34

      Yes, I’m sure you would like to live in the 1800s or early 1900s. I’m confident that all your ancestors weren’t as well off as you are today

    • @222cubing8
      @222cubing8 Год назад

      I think if you followed Elon musk you would know that you are born at the perfect time to go to space.

    • @WeeWeeJumbo
      @WeeWeeJumbo Год назад +34

      well i mean video games are pretty hot right now

    • @TSZatoichi
      @TSZatoichi Год назад +19

      @@theowlfromduolingo7982 - For that matter, space isn't all it's cracked up to be either, we have a more hospitable environment here on earth in Antarctica.

  • @synthiandrakon
    @synthiandrakon Год назад +7576

    The funny thing about the "$50,000 shipping container home is that you can actually just build a house with that kind of money, the real barrier is the land to put it on, if you have a reasonable parcel of land to put a microhome on, with some proper planning you could probably cram a small real house on there

    • @dickyboi4956
      @dickyboi4956 Год назад +203

      Or just get a camper

    • @rt_goblin_hours
      @rt_goblin_hours Год назад +334

      That's why you stack them like in ready player one lol

    • @NS-hs6lt
      @NS-hs6lt Год назад +431

      Zoning laws almost 98% of the time prevent small houses. Which is fuct.

    • @Damian-cilr2
      @Damian-cilr2 Год назад

      @@NS-hs6lt i think you meant fucked.Sorry for being bit of a grammar uhhh... youtube will probably shadowban me for saying that word

    • @dave_riots
      @dave_riots Год назад +82

      Problem is, that land is still taxed starting right from the moment it is purchased, on top of what was spent to build the home there in the first place.
      I'd rather pay the tax as is practiced in quite a few countries, to just live in an already existing home or apartment with plumbing, drinkable water, electricity, and WiFi/Internet/Data access, and access to goods and services instead of buying land far away from any goods or services, buying access to plumbing, water, and electricity, paying for the home I bought to be built or placed onto the plot that I paid for, only to continue having my finances suckered out of my bled-dry wallet.
      The concept of buying land to just place a small house on is the most inefficient use of space imaginable. Unless you plan on using all of the land around you for agriculture if the land is arable and the soil being fertile enough, you aren't seeing much benefit from what you paid for in terms of affordable living.
      This varies depending on location, but just using the land to just place a house in the middle of nowhere makes no financial sense in the slightest to me.
      I might be wrong, though.

  • @Nebs1
    @Nebs1 Год назад +239

    So these tiny houses are basically what we call granny flats in Australia.
    You build them in the backyard of a regular sized house and they are used for having other family members live with you while still being somewhat seperate and independent or some people rent them out to random people for a bit of extra income.

  • @ShinGallon
    @ShinGallon 11 месяцев назад +623

    The housing problem isn't lack of available homes (the US alone has literally hundreds of thousands of empty houses everywhere) the problem is the parasitic leeches known as landlords/property management companies.

  • @TotoDG
    @TotoDG Год назад +2676

    I believe I have a step-by-step process on how to improve the $10,000 home:
    -Put wheels on the bottom of the house. Maybe even metal wheels with flanges on them.
    -Add some rails underneath so the wheels have something to roll on.
    -Attach a bunch of the houses together through some sort of coupling mechanism.
    -Install an engine in the house at the front so it can pull the other houses. Or even add motors on all the axles and run them all as one unit. A "multiple" unit, if you will.
    -Add either another rail or an overhead wire to harness energy that will power the motors.
    -Remove all the furniture and replace it with rows of seats facing in the direction of travel.
    -Put a seat and a set of controls in the front and rear houses respectively, and hire someone to drive the houses.
    -Also hire someone to "guard" the houses, and make sure nobody is freeloading the service.
    If anyone else has any suggestions to improve upon this process, I'm happy to hear them.

    • @Mechanikatt
      @Mechanikatt Год назад +678

      To safely access the houses, there should be designated places where they can remain stationary for a brief time. We could call such places 'stations', if you will.

    • @mustacheman2549
      @mustacheman2549 Год назад +106

      gommunism

    • @NeonNion
      @NeonNion Год назад +185

      What a revolutionary idea! We need these everywhere!

    • @Kuba_K
      @Kuba_K Год назад +143

      Who tf would want to live in a train??? Like cmon they are superior TRANSPORTATION method not place to live in. (yes i got the joke, but it sounds so bad i had to write this)

    • @jmi5969
      @jmi5969 Год назад +28

      Strap on 33 raptor engines and make sure it belly-flops before crashing

  • @gabriels2859
    @gabriels2859 Год назад +492

    "With five children from a previous marriage, you might be wondering how he manages to fit everyone into such a small house. The answer is simple--he's estranged from all them."

  • @keithlarsen7557
    @keithlarsen7557 Год назад +189

    Ironically, a conventional 3 story house could be WAY more efficient than a tiny home. With a garage on the first floor, and living spaces above it.

  • @foomaoseng8936
    @foomaoseng8936 11 месяцев назад +125

    Sadly, ppl thought affordable apartment complex as "neo-communist building".
    Singapore is doing so well in solving housing crisis while implementing government owned apartment complexes, and not being communist at all.

  • @thomasherzog86
    @thomasherzog86 Год назад +927

    In my opinion, you missed the most crucial point against tiny homes; Insulation. The reason we build big houses out of wood or concrete isnt because some construction company wants to get rich. Its because metal and glass transfer heat like a champ. Its fine to run heating/cooling all day long if you dont have to pay the energy or care about the climate, otherwise - you build something well insulated.

    • @anna-flora999
      @anna-flora999 Год назад +100

      Probably explains why most of the tiny houses are meant as auxiliary units or weekend/vacation homes

    • @Dionyzos
      @Dionyzos Год назад +24

      Ever heard of vacuum insulated panels? You can insulate anything if you choose the right solution. That said, you can even run your heating all day long if you choose a heat pump or simply an AC unit which is basically the same thing and still save on heating compare to a bigger house.
      Insulation is not an issue for tiny houses.

    • @HeadsFullOfEyeballs
      @HeadsFullOfEyeballs Год назад +145

      @@Dionyzos Tiny houses are inherently energy-inefficient because they're all outside walls. Building a block of 20 apartments, each with the floor space of a tiny house, will always be more efficient. Making your tiny house of a dumb material like metal just means you either get even worse energy efficiency, or have to spend extra on expensive insulation solutions.

    • @vlnow
      @vlnow Год назад +39

      Tiny houses are just caravans /trailers, that the financially challenged have lived in for the past 50 years or more.
      But yes, i have done two UK winters living in a caravan. Somehow, unless you are actually pumping the heating at the time, they are colder inside than outside.

    • @anti-emo4721
      @anti-emo4721 Год назад +11

      @@HeadsFullOfEyeballs Right, but it all depends on your situation. If your apartment doesn't have a good insulation between apartments, you're gonna hear your neighbors doing moaning late at night. (As it happens in Soviet blocks, from my own experience).

  • @mneri
    @mneri Год назад +732

    The definition of "affordable housing" should also be changed to effectively be affordable. If I recall correctly, in UK "affordable" is defined as 80% of standard market rate. In a country where a two-bedroom can touch the 12 times the median income mark in some areas they should be called "discounted housing", not affordable.

    • @faustinpippin9208
      @faustinpippin9208 Год назад +32

      only 12times? In my country ONE SQUARE METER cost 1 year salary, if you want to have a decent 120m^2 you have to work 120years :)
      And thats assuming you can put away all the money you make into a savings account and not use it on stuff like food
      So a normal person has to work like 700 years

    • @PtrkHrnk
      @PtrkHrnk Год назад +4

      Is _35 % of regional average total disposable household income for 2 person household for 60 m² adjusted for floor area and total disposable household income_ ok?
      The formula goes like this:
      N = √(f/60) × 0.35a × √(a/b)
      Where:
      N = maximum monthly rent
      f = floor area area of living space + ³/₂root of area of non-living spaces in m²
      a = average total disposable income of a 2-member household in the given region for the previous year; if it is higher than 120% of the national average, 120% of the national average is used
      b = total household disposable income

    • @mneri
      @mneri Год назад +17

      @@faustinpippin9208 What a time to be alive /s

    • @jojbenedoot7459
      @jojbenedoot7459 Год назад +20

      ​@@faustinpippin9208what on earth is your country?

    • @Blaze6108
      @Blaze6108 Год назад +1

      It should really be based on nth percentile of incomes, where n is small.

  • @yeastov5470
    @yeastov5470 Год назад +154

    A few years ago, my family was considering selling the family home and buying a plot of land to build log cabins on. We had worked out the feasibility and costing of getting water and utilities to the plot and it seemed like a good idea, but the local government planning department said no because that privately owned land was allocated to holding livestock... which it did not. So it was then sold to a local crime family who turned it into an illegal horse meat farm.

    • @LRM12o8
      @LRM12o8 Год назад +8

      Good on you. Selling your house is a terrible idea in this market!

    • @davidh8271
      @davidh8271 Год назад +31

      How nice! A place to go and meet horses!
      Oh wait, oh no

    • @paulstaker8861
      @paulstaker8861 11 месяцев назад +5

      Which crime family & which area?
      Sounds like a funny story to me 😂

    • @yeastov5470
      @yeastov5470 11 месяцев назад +47

      @@paulstaker8861 Nice try but I'm not telling the horse mafia where I live XD

  • @LambentOrt
    @LambentOrt Год назад +308

    If you believe Elon Musk can solve anything, you would believe anything.

  • @michaelfjmusic
    @michaelfjmusic Год назад +1605

    As someone who loves tiny homes, designs them in my free time, and is perfectly happy in my $700 room, I was actually intrigued by the idea of these tiny $50,000 homes. Thank you for providing me with a reality check.
    Now, I'm just incredibly angry at these laws that make it difficult to build affordable housing.

    • @robertjenkins6132
      @robertjenkins6132 Год назад

      "these laws that make it difficult to build affordable housing" - Nope. Rather, the lack of affordable housing is caused by thinking that capitalism will provide affordable housing. Capitalists don't care about affordable housing; they just want to build luxury units, because that's what will make them the most money. As the video explains: what is needed is state intervention: " _large-scale, state-run public housing construction projects_ " - i.e., "big government," or "socialism," as it is called by capitalist propagandists.

    • @SS-rf1ri
      @SS-rf1ri Год назад +116

      Its just like cars, of course some people enjoy owning one, but if everyone used one it would be a nightmare

    • @gregmccauley1687
      @gregmccauley1687 Год назад

      people preach that they want affordable housing built-- just not near them, because it will drive their property values down and put a bunch of low income people in their neighborhoods.

    • @damejanea.macdonald2371
      @damejanea.macdonald2371 Год назад +15

      I would love a tiny home since any normal size of house is going to be way more space than I need, but I think I'm just going to have to put up with the potential for noisy neighbours in an apartment building.

    • @karld1791
      @karld1791 Год назад +10

      @@SS-rf1ri hey doesn’t virtually everyone use a car? … oh😢

  • @KaigaiKitsune
    @KaigaiKitsune Год назад +1848

    I will never ever get sick of watching videos just rip into Musk's transparently dumb "solutions".

    • @buwanbuwaya6927
      @buwanbuwaya6927 Год назад +23

      I know right! Anyways, now that we're in the same opinion, please gimme to sauce to your pfp

    • @Amdor
      @Amdor Год назад +167

      Funny enough this time its ripping into people making up imaginary Musk projects xD

    • @eryalmario5299
      @eryalmario5299 Год назад +26

      That's not even a tesla product 👁️👄👁️

    • @takeuchi5760
      @takeuchi5760 Год назад +3

      ​@@buwanbuwaya6927 Don't know the sauce but I'm 90% sure it's AI generated.

    • @thearpox7873
      @thearpox7873 Год назад +33

      That'd require it to be a *Musk's* sollution.
      This is just blatant lies by clickbaiters.

  • @RabidNemo
    @RabidNemo Год назад +177

    The issue in Seattle is they're taking single-family homes that are in an affordable range something that would have been called a starter house 40 or 50 years ago and then they tear them down and they put four condos in its place at all cost a million dollars each

    • @Bustermachine
      @Bustermachine Год назад +14

      Okay, but were the individual starter homes still reasonably prices before they were torn down?
      It's not the house that appreciate in value, it's the land underneath the house that appreciates in a desirable area.

    • @RabidNemo
      @RabidNemo Год назад +51

      @@Bustermachine They were certainly more reasonably priced than the condos replacing them that's for sure

  • @23nine
    @23nine Год назад +238

    I always thought of tinyhouses as an option for a few people who like to move around a lot and either
    - like to live in remote areas with cheap land or
    - have a friend who allows them to use their estate or
    - are wealthy enough to own/buy a plot of land.
    I never thought of tinyhouses as a large-scale solution to the housing crisis, but of mobility as the main benefit.

    • @LRM12o8
      @LRM12o8 Год назад +15

      For real, a tiny house might be an acceptable living situation for a single person (or the really rare close-knit couple) who spends nearly all their free time outdoors or at social gatherings (and they'd probably still need a rental storage unit for their outdoor equipment), but then if your home is literally just a place to sleep, a single room apartment would serve you just fine as well and at a much cheaper price (plus it probably comes with a storage compartment in the basement or attic).
      Anyone who believes that tiny houses are the future is simply a sucker for thr flashy, buzzwordy marketing.
      The mistake these people make is as old as Kickstarter: Just because an idea is "new" and challenges the established way of thinking ("more space = a better home"), doesn't mean it's a good idea!

    • @stynnieuwenhuis9999
      @stynnieuwenhuis9999 Год назад +5

      makes sense to place them in suburban yards. good for young adults, elderly, or as a rental unit

  • @galffygergojozsef7816
    @galffygergojozsef7816 Год назад +206

    They really missed their chance to call it the "Musk pod"

    • @alphakevin687
      @alphakevin687 Год назад +25

      This was my first thought too: "oh god, they used the stupid pod idea for housing this time"

    • @demo2823
      @demo2823 Год назад +13

      Yep, why do they always need to make the edges smooth so that it has no structural integrity unless it is made out of custom smelted steel frames?

    • @JackdotC
      @JackdotC Год назад

      ​@@demo2823 so it's easier for them to make to too it. yelling "I love freedom" as they ejaculate in a Walmart parking lot they have parked their house in is much harder if there are sharp edges

    • @ChucksSEADnDEAD
      @ChucksSEADnDEAD Год назад +3

      @@demo2823 You wouldn't cast/forge the curved edges, you'd cut the curved profile off thick sheet/thin plate with waterjet and weld box tubing across for reinforcement.
      Fun fact, that "sweep" on Smart cars that's curved and typically of a contrasting color compared to the body panels is the rigid frame that gives the car most of its structural integrity. The curve wouldn't take away from structure's strength, it just creates unusable space because a rectangular prism will always give you more volume available for a given footprint.

  • @dobekkujda5479
    @dobekkujda5479 Год назад +934

    tiny homes have already existed, they're called apartments. reinventing already well established and proven concepts are just dumb. well made video mr. Adam

    • @alexturnbackthearmy1907
      @alexturnbackthearmy1907 Год назад +57

      Here we go reinventing worse version of existing stuff again.

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Год назад +10

      @@alexturnbackthearmy1907 You talking about Musky Elon or the house-building teenager?

    • @draneym2003
      @draneym2003 Год назад +28

      Isn't that right on brand though? "Invent" something that already exists, but somehow worse.

    • @sirgavalot
      @sirgavalot Год назад +26

      To be fair, tiny homes already exist, and they're called Tiny Homes

    • @justynawisniewska1213
      @justynawisniewska1213 Год назад +44

      Americans would rather live in a wooden barrel as long as it is a single detached barrel in a shitty suburb instead of move into a an apartment building in a mixed use neighborhood.

  • @UpLateGeek
    @UpLateGeek Год назад +148

    Yeah, I looked into the idea of tiny houses a while ago, and the situation here in Australia is that it's basically impossible. In theory if you had a friend or family member with a big backyard who's willing to let you park your tiny home in it, you'd be set. Or perhaps you could rent part of someone's backyard for a reasonable fee. Unfortunately it's not that simple.
    Every local council has different rules about them. Some treat them as caravans, some as temporary structures, some as permanent structures, and whether they're allowed without notifying council, require rubber stamp approval of a simple form, require application of planning permission (submitting structural plans and complying with all building codes), or whether they're not allowed at all is completely random. One council might be fine with them, but drive down the road and they're completely illegal.
    The only sure-fire way is to basically buy your own block of land, and build a small house that complies with all normal building codes. And at that point you're spending not a lot less than if you just bought a normal (not new) house on a normal block of land. So basically there's no point.

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA Год назад

      It is still beyond me as a Ukrainian that you have councils telling you what to do on YOUR land. Like, here if you have land, you build whatever you want, as long as you don't break actual laws (so no Soviet flags).
      Why do your countries hate freedom? We also had government limiting what we can grow and how much we can build before 1991. It was called communism. Fucked up seeing it still be a thing in USA and Commonwealth.
      I heard about Homeowner Associations in USA, that's even worse... it's an absolutely Marxist nightmare where neighbours snitch on each other!

  • @Baltasarmk
    @Baltasarmk Год назад +91

    Hi! I am from Eastern Europe. I lived in one of those large-scale apartment blocks without many parking spaces. First, the population density is so significant that you won’t solve the commute problem with just one or two tram stops. You will need a public transportation hub near each of such housing blocks. Second, because of the high population density, there is no way you find enough schools, kindergartens or just shops in the vicinity. Most of the people where I lived were driving their kids to school and were shopping in malls 10-15km away. Which means that a lot of people were buying cars and because of the lack of parking spaces all the empty space around those buildings became a giant parking lots without any room for people.
    We definitely need multi apartment houses. But they need to evenly spread across the city.

  • @Happymali10
    @Happymali10 Год назад +241

    The only advantage of tinyhomes is that, since they are "glorified trailers", some places let you build them with far less paperwork/permits needed than a normal house.
    Elsehwere (like here in Germany) they've instead cropped up as rental units on campgrounds.

    • @demo2823
      @demo2823 Год назад +10

      That advantage just becomes a disadvantage when you learn that paperwork sets you up for higher property taxes while decreasing your property value for the eventual sale.

    • @linusmlgtips2123
      @linusmlgtips2123 Год назад +1

      They aren't necessarily trailers, you can set them some of them on a permanent foundation like Boxabl

    • @falkorornothing261
      @falkorornothing261 Год назад

      They are taking down 2 tiny houses on the property beside us and moving them. Overpriced hot boxes 😂
      My buddy built a 2 story cabin at less than half the price.

    • @Happymali10
      @Happymali10 Год назад

      @@linusmlgtips2123 When they came up/became "trendy" they'd have an axle of some sort attached to the bottom so it counted as a non-permanent installation (similar to a parked camping trailer).

    • @PaulSpades
      @PaulSpades Год назад

      @@linusmlgtips2123 By the time you manage to get approvals for a foundation/permanent structure or want to hook it up to sewage/gas, and pay tax on it - you might as well go with the more affordable route and build it properly. These modules also have serious downsides.

  • @werbearjack
    @werbearjack Год назад +660

    Huh, for once Elon Musk technically did nothing wrong.
    He did nothing at all and it was others that said he did something he never did or intended to do but still: easily Adam's most positive video on Elon ever!

    • @steemlenn8797
      @steemlenn8797 Год назад +52

      But it's strange that the copyright hordes have not invaded those channels for using the logo and spreading lies.

    • @SilverDragonJay
      @SilverDragonJay Год назад +53

      It is both impressive and disgusting how bold those channels are to just make shit up like that. Maybe its all just clickbait and they clarify that within the first minute of the video, but for some reason I doubt it and don't want to give them so much as a single view to check.

    • @lawncrow
      @lawncrow Год назад +11

      I don't know if that is entirely true, his mere presence caused this to happen, and that doesn't come from nowhere.

    • @BIGBLUBLUR
      @BIGBLUBLUR Год назад +12

      ​@@steemlenn8797Oh, I'm sure he'll get right on it. Elon's a busy man! Why, right now he's in the middle of a heated negotiation battle with a gentleman named... .. dril.
      Sounds serious

    • @Monsterpala
      @Monsterpala Год назад

      But he destroys titter 😂

  • @Ewiggrimmig
    @Ewiggrimmig Год назад +32

    Tech Bros proposing a technical solution to a social problem. A tale as old as time.

  • @SJR_Media_Group
    @SJR_Media_Group Год назад +24

    Home Depot has a bare-bones 540 square foot kit home for $40,000. By the time you add plumbing, fixtures, power, etc, the price is over $85,000 or about $150 per square foot. That is as much as or more than $100 - $150 per square foot for traditional built homes. Cheap housing isn't cheap.

  • @humanharddrive1
    @humanharddrive1 Год назад +501

    we need more people who fight misinformation like you.

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem Год назад

      Only freaks here, mad channel it is !

    • @GNMbg
      @GNMbg Год назад +38

      people who fall for misinformation dont watch this kind of videos

    • @humanharddrive1
      @humanharddrive1 Год назад +27

      @@GNMbg this says a lot about our society

    • @humanharddrive1
      @humanharddrive1 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@Srijith.Seetharaman many such cases. this says a lot about our society.

  • @davidallison5204
    @davidallison5204 Год назад +225

    Adam, you never fail to make me laugh at the insanity that surrounds us. Thank you.

  • @mukkah
    @mukkah Год назад +247

    Really appreciate the teardown on Elon's involvement (or complete lack of). Internet is a wild ride of misinformation and attention click seeking lol
    Awesome presentation, fun info with good comedy sprinkled in.
    Thanks as always for your efforts, it really is appreciated.

    • @RazorsharpLT
      @RazorsharpLT Год назад +2

      So... now he makes fun of him for correcting people and saying the truth?
      He's chasing the same bit of clout himself.

    • @Zakahia
      @Zakahia Год назад +15

      @@RazorsharpLT The difference is Adam actually takes the effort to inform us about the misinformation that has been going on and making us aware of content farms like the ones he showed. Additionally he offered potential solutions for the overarching topic of the video.

  • @Psychx_
    @Psychx_ Год назад +19

    In Europe it used to be quite common for the govts to have huge public housing projects during the 70s-90s. Nowadays, this has nearly halted and on top of that, existing public housing is increasingly sold to investors - under value ofc, since it's just tax payer money that's being privatized here.

  • @RichardBetel
    @RichardBetel Год назад +710

    A good friend of mine got somewhat obsessed with the idea of tiny houses. Being someone with a brain, she started doing the math. In towns that are popular for summer cottages or skiing or things like that, the locals are being priced out of the rental market too. She *thought* maybe there was a market for small homes there... After a few years of research, it starts to look like Canadian federal and provincial building codes make tiny homes impractical in many ways and likely wouldn't solve SFA in the short term.
    Tiny homes really look to me like a solution only for disaster relief and as a way to "improve" some slums. IIRC, venezuela used to offer free sewer service and tax breaks to homes in the barrios if they built their homes out of brick, or something like that. These homes might mitigate some of the issues they have there. *might*.

    • @Emiliapocalypse
      @Emiliapocalypse Год назад +3

      Can the building codes be changed, or exceptions included?

    • @queenvagabond8787
      @queenvagabond8787 Год назад +40

      Tiny homes are great for someone wanting to 'do it themselves,' especially if they want to build licitly or circumvent planning regs. They are great for living cheaply on an existing property, perhaps owned by a friend or relative. If mobile, they can be pleasant for a person travelling or on holiday. However they are no good for families or for most people. You need to make a lot of compromises to live in a tiny home, and in really cold or really hot conditions they are not easy to regulate temperature in.
      They can also be great for, as you say, disaster relief, extreme slums relief in developing countries, or indeed for quick housing and dignity for homeless people.

    • @cyan_oxy6734
      @cyan_oxy6734 Год назад +37

      ​@@queenvagabond8787 Or you know the government could build lots of tiny houses next to each other and make some with flat roofs so you could stack these tiny houses on top of each other. Now we could get provide lots of people with housing that pay a monthly fee to life there so they don't have a prohibitively high upfront cost that homless people won't be able to afford.
      We could call this fee rent and the stacked tiny houses a apartment building.

    • @RichardBetel
      @RichardBetel Год назад +7

      @@Emiliapocalypse It is a democracy, never say never, but it's pretty complex to achieve. you essentially need coordinated action at all levels of government, and the rules exist for reasons, so they likely need a lot of nuance so that they don't become loopholes for cutting corners by unscrupulous developers.

    • @luke_fabis
      @luke_fabis Год назад +6

      Tiny homes are awesome in a suburban setting, with appropriate design of the community and infrastructure.
      In a walkable suburb with good public transportation (like streetcar suburbs in the late 1800s and early 1900s), small houses make better use of small plots, and they give people more incentive to go outside and interact with their neighbors, which has substantial benefits to health and safety. Wrapping blocks around small parks or communal walkways gives people room to stretch their legs without needing big lots, and creates a zone where a lot of people can keep an eye out. This in turn keeps burglars at bay and also gives kids a safe place to run around without strict supervision.
      Apartments and rowhouses can be designed to accomplish the same things, but if you're going to have suburbs, tiny homes on a grid dotted with parklets is going to be leaps and bounds better than McMansions packed onto spaghetti streets tangled up around cul-de-sacs.
      Pocket Neighborhoods by Chapin and Susanka is a great book on the subject.

  • @73caddydaddy93
    @73caddydaddy93 Год назад +324

    This reminds me of the tiny house craze a while back, all these people talking about tiny house communities not willing to admit they were hipster trailer parks. Also, people never think about these places need proper sewage disposal even if you supply your own water and power, poops gotta go somewhere, so even if you get an affordable plot you'll need to plan for that expenditure, if the plot meets the requirements.

    • @linusmlgtips2123
      @linusmlgtips2123 Год назад +1

      Ok and that's what, another 10k?

    • @0HOON0
      @0HOON0 Год назад +11

      Seems like many here are intentionally missing the point. The biggest problem with all types of affordable housing is the residents.
      The middle class hipsters creating a community of only their tribe is exactly what everyone secretly wants. Kinda genius if anyone figures out how to pull it off.

    • @SaURoN-lh1dl
      @SaURoN-lh1dl Год назад +8

      Considering how much crap techbros are willing to swallow, maybe this would be perfect for them ...

    • @donquique1
      @donquique1 Год назад +7

      @@linusmlgtips2123 more than that. Also you water connection, power and maybe gas.. plan for at least 30k.

    • @drebk
      @drebk Год назад +12

      ​@@linusmlgtips2123when the whole "claim to fame" is that the house costs 50k, but they leave out 18k for the septic and 15k for power...
      But in reality, a single septic field won't suffice if they are going to pack the houses densely.
      So you will need a waste treatment facility which is a prohibitively expensive endeavor.
      Full blown cities have gone bankrupt over dealing with sewage (govt loan subsidies need to get paid back)

  • @angelosophy
    @angelosophy Год назад +14

    If you want a good idea of what happens when real estate developers get full autonomy look at Australia. People literally just horde houses and leave them empty in order to artifically deflate the supply, thus making the cost of owning a home skyrocket, which then increases rent.
    Real estate companies *are* the enemy.

  • @kylejohnson6775
    @kylejohnson6775 Год назад +37

    I'm surprised you glossed over the bigger issue of restrictive zoning codes in general.
    It's definitely the worst in the US, but it applies to places in Europe as well

  • @sakurazero3641
    @sakurazero3641 Год назад +69

    “A tesla burning bright in the night sky” omg this made my depressing week worthwhile thanks adam.

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz Год назад +126

    Is this like where he claimed he'd make tunneling 1000 times cheaper and in the end it was on the higher end of the average price and took a lot longer than it normal to do.

    • @alexturnbackthearmy1907
      @alexturnbackthearmy1907 Год назад +9

      Well if you hire 10 times less people and pay them 100 times less then you should, then math add up! Oh wait...

    • @evanflynn4680
      @evanflynn4680 Год назад +9

      The tunnel was half the size, too.

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 Год назад +1

      Well, he /did/ recently unveil a new high-speed tunneling rocket.

  • @janisvaro4949
    @janisvaro4949 Год назад +10

    Seattle eliminated parking minimums over 10 years ago. Didn't make any difference. Developers still run the show and the average rent has skyrocketed. All the parking minimum elimination did was mean the developers could make more tiny cardboard boxes for $3500+/month.

  • @polarfroge
    @polarfroge Год назад +12

    Elon is the emperor of goobers.

  • @thexalon
    @thexalon Год назад +333

    I feel like Adam needs to go through a similar process for housing that he does for transportation. Something like this:
    "So, having small homes for each household seems like a good idea, but there's a problem with the land being expensive in cities. So let's crowd those homes as close together as we can. Still not enough, darn it. But cities have 3 dimensions, so we can stack the homes on top of each other, quite a lot of them, and provide some sort of elevator system for the people that live higher up. And it would help structurally if we connected the homes together into a single frame. And now we have a whole lot of small modular homes all in one single building, which we might call a 'high-rise', which is a totally unique modern thing that nobody ever invented before."

    • @RichardBetel
      @RichardBetel 11 месяцев назад +27

      A good rundown of the actual economics of water-treatment would help too. Long-term, big picture, tiny-homes off-grid make real-estate *more expensive* for everyone, thus making over-crowding worse.

  • @cloakedwanderer4283
    @cloakedwanderer4283 Год назад +96

    Tiny homes are really the pods of the housing industry. Futuristic, small and totally impractical.

    • @MG-mh8xp
      @MG-mh8xp Год назад +8

      I DO like the pods as an idea, because there are cases where they're useful and practical. just.. not as housing. they're great sheds. if you have one of those japanese pods installed in a home, there's a lot of people that find the tiny space to be comforting. pods are usually light, and easy to carry. but.. well, shipping containers are also light and easy to carry, so that's not useful. sheds already exist so why turn them into pods?
      the only thing I can think of is using a tiny pod as a sleeping container. I like the idea personally. it sounds comfortable. but that's basically JUST me, and my dumb brain that likes claustrophobic spaces.

    • @electric7487
      @electric7487 Год назад +7

      As Adam said in his video eviscerating the HyperPort:
      "Take something that's large and has excellent economies of scale, break it up into small individual pieces for absolutely no good reason, then make the individual things look like futuristic sex toys."

    • @andyc9902
      @andyc9902 Год назад

      Stupidity. Looks like a stationary rv lol

  • @cryptopolice6202
    @cryptopolice6202 Год назад +22

    Yup, before I bought a house with my girlfriend, I looked into this.
    I found a couple areas where it was somewhat doable, but they didn't allow you to put a 50k-90k tiny house / vacation-home on it. It had to fit in the street image and required houses in the range of 500K - 700K.

  • @isaacturner9306
    @isaacturner9306 Год назад +4

    "So look up your political parties and find out what they're doing."
    ...
    ...
    ...
    *We're fucked.*

  • @Cmdtheartist
    @Cmdtheartist Год назад +117

    You can say sanitation worker. My brother worked at a garbage company (no, not Tesla) and he always laughed when someone said sanitation engineer. Garbage man is acceptable, but on the Internet, there might be issues. Great video! Thanks!

    • @daxasd3270
      @daxasd3270 Год назад +3

      @@debesys6306 I need to think about Java rn.

  • @rasrandir
    @rasrandir Год назад +457

    Adam unmasking musk again. Can't get enough of it. Unmusking so to say.

    • @klaus7637
      @klaus7637 Год назад +27

      was about to write "unmusking" but you got there first lol

    • @rasrandir
      @rasrandir Год назад +6

      @@klaus7637 couldn't let that one slide ;)

    • @losnino4515
      @losnino4515 Год назад +4

      He really knows how to dunk on apartheid musk

    • @SwordQuake2
      @SwordQuake2 Год назад +10

      this time it's just his rabid fanboys

    • @theowlfromduolingo7982
      @theowlfromduolingo7982 Год назад +10

      So it’s Musk’s fault if a clickbait channel uploads fake videos about tiny houses?

  • @ByeByeBayou...
    @ByeByeBayou... Год назад +83

    I think some of these portable housing companies were responding to code changes in California where you can add a small apartment in the backyard of your single family home. I don't think the intent was to make an entire neighborhood of of these tiny houses. That said, the code change in California is an interesting idea, but small tweaks to zoning here and there is also not going to solve the housing crisis. I think Adam's conclusion of needing more subsidized housing and rent control is the way to go.

    • @CRneu
      @CRneu Год назад +7

      a huge issue is zoning. A lot of places in the US are zoned to not allow high density housing. a lot of places only allow single family dwellings which means no affordable housing and urban sprawl, which means cars and shitty public transit.

    • @shaunnichols1743
      @shaunnichols1743 Год назад +8

      @@CRneu Also in the places that do allow high density housing most of it is now being used for luxury condos, not affordable units. Downtown SF has tons of high-rise condos where entire floors are vacant because nobody can afford them and a rich person only bought them as an investment/tax write-off

    • @TheDawnofVanlife
      @TheDawnofVanlife Год назад +3

      Most of those people who add an ADU (backyard tiny house) aren’t actually going to rent to poor people. I know people with essentially a tiny rental unit behind their house (not a new idea) and they are priced competitively generally with apartments and room rentals in the area.

    • @Bustermachine
      @Bustermachine Год назад +1

      @@TheDawnofVanlife As others have said, the rule of the game is 'build baby build' each additional unit of housing expands the overall supply and thus reduces the equilibrium price. That's not to say you shouldn't spencifically incentivize affordable housing, but any significant increase in housing will help to an extent.

    • @Tyranastrasza
      @Tyranastrasza Год назад +1

      So instead of living in your mom's basement you live in your mom's backyard ?

  • @crassustheelder9665
    @crassustheelder9665 11 месяцев назад +7

    Quick note on those meat riding channels: Kyle Hill did an excellent piece on them gave a decent amount of evidence that they are all likely run by the same group that hunts uses AI generated scripts, read by AI voices, with AI generated images.

  • @greybeaver8300
    @greybeaver8300 Год назад +144

    But Adam, what if we manufactured numerous housing pods and combined them to form a sort of apartment com-- I mean, Human Habitation Center in order to more densely house people?
    Also, windows can be omitted to make them even more environmentally friendly and modular

    • @alphakevin687
      @alphakevin687 Год назад +25

      Maybe there is some novel mineral material that can be used for structural support. Or some mineral-metallic compound for extra strength.

    • @heartdex
      @heartdex Год назад +16

      @@alphakevin687 and to keep it safe, maybe add some sort of iron-steel wire, aligned vertically in fun diamond shapes around the perimeter

    • @Ivytheherbert
      @Ivytheherbert Год назад +8

      Munger hall called, they want to give back their windows.

    • @maciejduda5257
      @maciejduda5257 Год назад +2

      And get this, we can put them all on a monorail and make them double as tram----------- TRANSPORTATION CAPSULES

    • @volo870
      @volo870 Год назад

      @@heartdex Yes! And optimize governmental bureaucracy by posting a friendly officer in each aisle.

  • @TheDarkfighter101
    @TheDarkfighter101 Год назад +234

    Casita just means a small house in Spanish. Also in California Casitas are typically mother in law units rented out to other people. Very common in larger backyard in more urban areas.
    So the product name is literally what it is. A small secondary dwelling for in laws or rental.
    PS. Also California often uses Spanish as a flare to make things feel exotic or trendy. It’s very common to see very white neighborhoods littered with Spanish place names. Calling their tiny home a Casita is definitely playing into that.

    • @hyperion3145
      @hyperion3145 Год назад +18

      I mean... California formerly being part of the Spanish and then Mexican Empire for literal centuries may explain why Spanish is so popular. It's literally in the name.

    • @TheDarkfighter101
      @TheDarkfighter101 Год назад +33

      @@hyperion3145 it doesn’t explain why there are half Spanish half English amalgamations naming the streets of modern developments. They also make Italian sounding names near wine country, Native names near tribal territories.
      But when a new development is named Rancho ______ and then is filled with white people it’s not because of the Spanish heritage.
      You sound like someone who has never been here

    • @TheDarkfighter101
      @TheDarkfighter101 Год назад +27

      @@hyperion3145 Also look at our history. Very few places have kept their historical Spanish names. The ones that have are major cities.
      Even then, many cities with Spanish names were named such long after that. How does the city of El Dorado Hills, 2 Spanish words and an English word, formerly the post war town of Clarksburg Spanish fucking heritage when it was renamed in the 90s

    • @frafraplanner9277
      @frafraplanner9277 Год назад +3

      That last parts very true. Look at street names in Santa Clarita and then look at the demographics lol

    • @frafraplanner9277
      @frafraplanner9277 Год назад +1

      @@creamwobbly LMAO 😭

  • @kilianstarzengruber6835
    @kilianstarzengruber6835 Год назад +8

    10:15 When the cynicism gets too real....

  • @capitalistraven
    @capitalistraven Год назад +9

    A cool thing happening where I live is a scrap of bare pavement that used to be home to a derelict grocery store is now going to be a huge 4 story apartment building. The greatest part is that it's waking distance for all essentials including being right across from a community owned grocery.

  • @Macintoshiba
    @Macintoshiba Год назад +212

    owning a home isnt even a dream anymore. its just unachieveable, and even if you did buy a home, the costs associated with maintaining it are nightmare inducing

    • @clray123
      @clray123 Год назад

      fortunately the green communists are there to convince you it's completely unnecessary! remember that you have to save the Climate instead!

    • @cowlinator
      @cowlinator Год назад +26

      The main cost is the mortgage.
      Beyond that, all costs are way, way cheaper than renting. A 3 bedroom apt in LA is $5000+. There is no way in hell that house maintanance comes close to that.

    • @MERCENARYTAO1
      @MERCENARYTAO1 Год назад +7

      Get out of the big metro area and you can still buy a house on the median salary in the US.

    • @ricechido1089
      @ricechido1089 Год назад +41

      Problem is that society has viewed housing as a investment as opposed to a need and aristocrats use housing as a game of hot potato

    • @Emiliapocalypse
      @Emiliapocalypse Год назад +15

      @@MERCENARYTAO1 finding work is hard out in the sticks, though. Not everyone can telecommute

  • @michaelcoward1902
    @michaelcoward1902 Год назад +42

    "A tesla burning bright in the night, showing us the way".
    Still laughing at that one.

  • @Langenbergh
    @Langenbergh 11 месяцев назад +28

    0:52 A Tesla burning bright in the night... Hilarious 😂😂🤣🤣

  • @junme1389
    @junme1389 Год назад +9

    "Don't look a gift emerald mine in the mouth." 😂

  • @Skylancer727
    @Skylancer727 Год назад +168

    I knew the plot location was gonna come up. Seriously these people know nothing about land rights. Houses aren't just expensive because of the building but the land they're put on and how much is your property. If you have a tiny home but normal sized yard, you changed literally nothing; that's just as unsustainable as the bigger homes.

    • @demo2823
      @demo2823 Год назад +4

      In terms of housing and transport, sure, but high intensity vegetable gardening or growing indigenous plants in the yard makes it sustainable in other aspects.

    • @USSAnimeNCC-
      @USSAnimeNCC- Год назад +1

      They don't know it shocking how their rich

    • @Dionyzos
      @Dionyzos Год назад +3

      A tiny home uses less resources and you have space left to grow your own food. How is that not changing anything? Musks house is bs but tiny houses are not a terrible idea at all.

    • @bramvanduijn8086
      @bramvanduijn8086 Год назад +1

      Hey tiny and small houses are a better use of land than villas, mansions, and suburbs. They just don't add a lot of value inside a city, except for filling a few underused gaps here and there. The real solution is high density city planning.

    • @bubandlisa
      @bubandlisa Год назад

      Adam is a socialist... he despises americans in suburbs or countryside. He wants everyone to live in cloned shoebox houses, get rid of personal cars and thinks everyone will dance like hippies around campfires sharing homemade food and sharing vegetables 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Baekstrom
    @Baekstrom Год назад +251

    I was fascinated by all the videos about tiny houses. They sure look neat! So, I checked out prices for ready made units. Then I looked at what a plot of land costs. Added it all up, remembering to account for a lower tax rate if you live in a house that has wheels even if you never plan to move it anywhere. Final price: About the same as a small house that is after all bigger than a tiny house. You could probably save some money by building it from scratch yourself, but I am no good with my hands. I could spend the same time doing what I'm good at and earn ten times what I could have saved by building the house myself. All in all a disappointing calculation.

    • @ASDeckard
      @ASDeckard Год назад +2

      I mean if you do most of the carpentry yourself, building a house is cheap as xxxx compared to what it ends up being worth. Why do you think literally any carpentry company builds any home ever?

    • @InfernosReaper
      @InfernosReaper Год назад +10

      @@ASDeckard The fun thing with carpentry is thanks to modern tools, it's become a lot less skilled than it used to be. With a few angled clamps, nailgun(hammer + nails can work too), a table saw(a handheld one will work too), and a tape measure(or yard stick), pretty much anyone with a functioning-enough body can build a decent shed.
      A house is that just with some more windows plus some utility lines ran to and with in it. Since those need to be inspected anyway, one who's too lazy to look up a video on how to do it will still learn how it's *supposed* to be done anyway.
      The *real* headache with cities(especially huge ones) is all the getting permission. That's why NYC had a parking garage collapse recently. Even if one wanted to fix it, they need permits to do so and those are an ordeal to get(especially in New York).

    • @Llortnerof
      @Llortnerof Год назад +2

      @@InfernosReaper Spoken like somebody who either doesn't know the actual work involved with that, or doesn't realise how little skill the average joe has with those tools.
      And that only works for houses mostly built of wood. So you can forget about that for most of Europe.

    • @InfernosReaper
      @InfernosReaper Год назад +2

      ​@@Llortnerof I've done construction. The tools aren't that expensive and measuring isn't that hard.
      As for Europe, why is wood out of the question there? Is that a building laws thing or a materials cost issue?

    • @Llortnerof
      @Llortnerof Год назад +2

      @@InfernosReaper Both. It's possible to build wooden houses, but they'd both be far more expensive than in the US and require much more knowledge of local building codes. And quite a few things *require* certified craftsmen, regardless of whether you are capable of doing the job. You're not allowed to.

  • @johnwest7993
    @johnwest7993 Год назад +6

    The trailer park was better than any apartment I've ever lived in. The owner charged a very reasonable lot rent and only asked everyone to be quiet, clean, and not bothersome to their neighbors. Since the lot rent was low, everyone complied. I should have stayed there.

  • @JoshKablack
    @JoshKablack Год назад +4

    Zillow currently estimates that the vacant lot on my block is currently worth 90k. And I live in an especially "affordable" neighborhood in one of the very cheapest major metro areas in the US.

  • @Luccaluke
    @Luccaluke Год назад +98

    Man it really does always come back to "better trasportational infrastructure" and "regulate greedy businesses". Almost like that could actualy be a good idea.

    • @reappermen
      @reappermen Год назад +5

      Correction: 'Better infrastructure'. Not necessarily transportational, sometimes instead housing, energy, production or other kinds of infrastructure (often a mkx thereof)

    • @Bingo_Bango_
      @Bingo_Bango_ Год назад +6

      A good half of the video was dedicated to "deregulating greedy businesses." Shock: when you make it illegal to develop cheap through Etruscan zoning laws, parking minimum, and nuisance taxes, people don't develop cheap. (Adam is a bit of an anti-capitalist pessimist so he fails to address why public development is miraculously necessary *now*, when private developers loved making high density housing in the 20th century and only stopped as NIMBYs drove law changes.)

    • @firstwavenegativity6379
      @firstwavenegativity6379 Год назад +10

      ​@@Bingo_Bango_ Yep, it must be that businesses suddenly decided to become more greedy lol. Of course, admitting that regulation is what's causing the housing crisis wouldn't suit Adam's ideological leanings, so he just omits it

  • @ThinBear4
    @ThinBear4 Год назад +264

    Adam, you're completely wrong. These minihouses *absolutely can* solve the housing crisis. They just need a few tweaks:
    - It's true, the cost of land is a major issue here. How about we alleviate this issue by pooling a large amount of minihouses in a single plot and then split the cost of plot between the tenants?
    - Of course cramming the small houses in a horizontal plane can only get us so far. In order to maximize efficiency, ideally we should stack the houses on top of each other, making 4-12 floors.
    - For safe traversal between the floors, we can add a stairway attached between the minihouses.
    - Modularity is a cool thing, but I believe it would be more efficient to simply merge the minihouses together into one continuous "mega-house". It would make a single building organized inside into multiple separate dwellings and a stairway. That way we can also install an elevator inside for added comfort.
    - Since people will be living in that mega-house for years, there's no point in making it mobile. Let's attach it to a concrete foundation, so that it's more stable and it's easier and cheaper to connect water, electricity, and sewage system.
    - At this point, we could also tweak the surroundings of the mega-house. Since there's going to be lots of people living in near proximity (even more so if there's going to be several mega-houses close to each other) I believe it would be beneficial to add some useful amenities in the area, like a school, a park, a couple stores, etc.
    I think we could also think of a better name. Maybe "mid-rise apartment", "flat", or something like that.

    • @gdmango783
      @gdmango783 Год назад +16

      How about we just build more flats? Or in general, how about the 20 trillion dollar economy of the USA gets used a little bit more on housing.

    • @NimanyuRajAgrawal
      @NimanyuRajAgrawal Год назад +45

      your comment is genius and the greatest bait lmao

    • @maximilianstrasse3904
      @maximilianstrasse3904 Год назад +3

      ​@@gdmango783 it still wont solve ur housing problems, europe ist full of smaller houses, smaller flats etc, still its hard to find housing in more popular areas.

    • @FilliamPL
      @FilliamPL Год назад +8

      @@NimanyuRajAgrawal I am a little upset that this comment isn't a giant thread yet. I love bait like this LOL

    • @jassykat
      @jassykat Год назад +1

      no, you can't do that.

  • @rosskgilmour
    @rosskgilmour Год назад +16

    my city installed 90 prefabricated homes (not made by Tesla ) in like 5 months or something. They were able to create housing pretty much instantly in housing terms.
    That said the $15k costs were not even close once you consider land acquisition costs etc.
    The development was basically a stacked trailer park in downtown surface parking lot but it was housing and quick.

  • @TheFourthLaw
    @TheFourthLaw Год назад +6

    Another solution, that has been around for a while but with the housing crisis seems to be gaining popularity is housing co-ops, basically a bunch of people get together to buy a plot of land and build appartments that suit the needs of the co-op members. This way you can own your home at a much more reasonable price

  • @r2dezki
    @r2dezki Год назад +26

    "Let's not look the gift emerald mine in the mouth" Oooohhh I felt that.

  • @greyfells2829
    @greyfells2829 Год назад +119

    After reinventing trains and cars, he's moved on to mobile homes. Truly a visionary.

    • @ItsBoyRed
      @ItsBoyRed Год назад +2

      you forgot spaceships lol

    • @earnthis1
      @earnthis1 Год назад +1

      Don't forget the hyperloop! A tunnel!! Something humans have been building for hundreds of years. Wow what will he do next? A horse and buggy? A cheese grater? lol

    • @motherlove8366
      @motherlove8366 Год назад +10

      Actually in this case in particular, he didn't do anything, dickriders just created smt out of thin air

    • @dutchdykefinger
      @dutchdykefinger Год назад

      ​@@motherlove8366 exactly
      Noone advertised with this shit

  • @lool8421
    @lool8421 Год назад +7

    the thing with rent prices is just the fact that they'll raise the prices as much as ppl can afford
    you make $1000 more per month, they'll raise the prices by $1000 as well because well... people can afford it and they can't just give up on their house

  • @pjmincanada5747
    @pjmincanada5747 Год назад +3

    I like Adam Something's videos, but having a VRBO ad with this video kind of defeats his point about the unaffordability of housing now.

  • @simonhuber6769
    @simonhuber6769 Год назад +559

    Hi Adam,
    I really like your entertaining videos. Your reasoning is always understandable and well backed by facts. As of this im a bit shocked you are advertising AG1, because its basically what you normally criticise. Its freaking expensive (about 100$/month) and if you research a bit the effects of the ingredients are not really backed by science and its like an unnecessarry elon musk product, overpriced and overadvertised. I hope you take another look at AG1 and i also know you need partners to run your channel but i think AG1 doesn't really fit in.
    Have a lovely day😊

    • @ShanghaiWall
      @ShanghaiWall Год назад +65

      Yeah, I was appalled by this too, so disingenuous.

    • @RapierNeedleCrime
      @RapierNeedleCrime Год назад +119

      he also did an ad read for masterworks, another well known scam website, he probably has to take whatever sponsorship money he can get

    • @danielkelly2210
      @danielkelly2210 Год назад +47

      I wish he'd promote more ethical consumption.

    • @Fabelot1
      @Fabelot1 Год назад +21

      Exactly! It's just super expensive greens that likely effects placebo more than anything. Without knowing the reasons for you choosing to advertise this, it feels misplaced in your videos, Adam!
      Thanks for entertaining videos though 😍

    • @Wintercat1
      @Wintercat1 Год назад +28

      Agreed. If Adam takes and supports taking multivitamins, I'm glad he at least goes with something comprehensive that makes an effort to be based on whole ingredients. However it's definitely a lifestyle choice that does not fit the skeptical nature of the channel. Large scale, long term studies have never identified any discernible benefit to taking multivitamins. Most people only need your cheap pharmacy supplements for Vitamin D, B12, magnesium and, for pregnant women, folic acid only IF you do not already get adequate amounts from your diet and lifestyle. If your lifestyle lets you spend plenty of time outside and eat lots of fresh produce, you're completely fine according to current scientific understanding.
      Multivitamins are an expensive exercise in peace of mind: maybe they could provide you some benefit by covering a gap in your nutrition needs, but the chances are low and they are far more mainstream than they should be. You're much better off making a daily greens smoothie from non-powdered leafy greens.
      Athletic Greens barely even gets you any magnesium, and personally I'm not a huge fan of including protein isolate, even from peas, in a daily supplement marketed towards all demographics.

  • @floofnoodle
    @floofnoodle Год назад +42

    > new adam something video
    "oh what stupid thing has elon thought of this time?"

    • @godassasin8097
      @godassasin8097 Год назад +2

      this video wasn't really anything elon did

    • @mrlaz9011
      @mrlaz9011 Год назад +3

      this time it was just the Elong Goblins screaming nonsense, so he's off the hook... for now.

    • @alexturnbackthearmy1907
      @alexturnbackthearmy1907 Год назад

      @@godassasin8097 And it is good,for god sake. At least he is silent, before another terrible idea kicks in.

  • @zoicon5
    @zoicon5 Год назад +16

    I think that the sweet spot for something like boxabl could be infill of suburbs with larger lots. I used to live in small city where over the years many property owners had essentially subdivided the one lot they had, putting a second home either in front of or behind the pre-existing house. Presumably this was done in economic hard times, or in family situations where parents were finding a place for their kids with families to live, or both. I'm seeing some of this going on right now where I live, though it's conventional building methods not pre-fab.

  • @vinylcabasse
    @vinylcabasse Год назад +5

    that AI generated voice at 2:25 is like nails on a chalkboard

  • @skepticalmagos_101
    @skepticalmagos_101 Год назад +102

    As an architect this is my favorite channel that delivers the lols 🤣

  • @MichaelGraham1980
    @MichaelGraham1980 Год назад +213

    In a number of cities in the US and Canada (looking at you Toronto!) the problem is the missing middle. Most of the city is zoned for single family homes so the rest of the land is expensive (and so is getting planning permission) so the developers tend to build large luxury apartments. If developers were able to convert existing single family homes into duplexes, triplexes and small apartment blocks a lot of todays problems would be solved.

    • @houndofculann1793
      @houndofculann1793 Год назад +26

      @@michaelhill6451 Obviously denser housing needs to be supported by a properly working public transit system. Also, denser zoning would make it more affordable for the city to make better public transit, sparse car infrastructure is very expensive.

    • @HontasFarmer80
      @HontasFarmer80 Год назад +12

      This is a real answer. For the United States of America we need more of that middle. Not large apartments / condos either luxury or government... 3 flats, 2 flats, town houses. We also need to consider building more medium sized cities built from the start to be walkable, bikable, and good public transport and cars will be present but not required. (Ideally put all the parking underground or on the first floor or two of the buildings.

    • @HontasFarmer80
      @HontasFarmer80 Год назад +9

      @@michaelhill6451 This is only true if we insist on living in the same old cities. The Us has a ton of land. The Midwest has cities that are now depopulated. We need to revitalize these places with new industry, jobs, and just the sort of housing described. Not everyone can live in Lower Manhattan.

    • @HontasFarmer80
      @HontasFarmer80 Год назад +5

      @@michaelhill6451 It's true though. Want a cheap house... you can find tons of utterly abandoned ones in some surprisingly large midwestern cities.

    • @odizzido
      @odizzido Год назад +11

      While we are at it maybe look at the fact that it's literally illegal to open a little grocery shop for the local community. I don't understand why someone cannot convert half their way too large house into a grocer that people who live in the area can just walk to in 5mins and get what they need. Canada is messed up.

  • @r3altalangodfrey39
    @r3altalangodfrey39 Год назад +6

    @ 9:55--- in los angeles, for the homeless and homeless VETS, they actually did that. there's in north hollywood, and 87k per shed and it's bigger enough for two people.💯

  • @Adam-wx9jp
    @Adam-wx9jp Год назад +4

    Its still crazy to me that the solution people suggest to housing isn't "fix the problems with spreading out more" and instead it's "live in ready player one slums".

  • @hobotify
    @hobotify Год назад +88

    I have an idea to improve these tiny houses and make even more affordable housing: what it we stack a few of them on top of each other? And put a couple of these stacks right next to each other? I imagine tiny streets with tiny houses on both sides, several layers high.The upper layers of course could be accessed by pods that travel vertically. Each house could even have a tiny garden that sticks out to the side - they would just need some kind of safety feature to make sure people don't fall out. I imagine a kind of railing that borders the tiny gardens. To make costruction faster and easier the developer could build these "blocks" of housing all at the same time, and then find buyers for the individual tiny homes.

    • @therealcmj
      @therealcmj Год назад +12

      You had me at vertical traveling pods

    • @wilberdebeer4696
      @wilberdebeer4696 Год назад +1

      Yeah a balcony will never be a proper garden, especially for your dogs or children to run around in. Now if I can have a balcony that's 6 m wide and 15m long with grass, bushes, a tree or two and space to have a picnic on with a BBQ then sign me up.

    • @hobotify
      @hobotify Год назад +3

      @@wilberdebeer4696 I can´t really imagine dogs and children running around in your garden either, 6x15m is really timy when it comes to gardens. Apartments often have bigger balconies. Get the penthouse, those have the big terraces, with enough space for everything you mentioned, plus a nice view. The grass would have to be artificial and the trees and bushes put in planters though.

    • @senritsujumpsuit6021
      @senritsujumpsuit6021 Год назад

      So micro Venice housing with elevators

    • @Tiberium10332
      @Tiberium10332 Год назад +1

      During colder days the heat of your neighbors tiny house would even reduce your own need to heat!

  • @Korschtal
    @Korschtal Год назад +45

    The annoying thing about this is that as a cabinet maker, I could make a really nice small house for less than USD 10,000. I'm just not legally allowed to.

    • @JoeOvercoat
      @JoeOvercoat Год назад +9

      “Whoa there, child! You were supposed to stop at building the kitchen bits! Are you mad?!?”
      “Well yeah, a bit, just not the way you mean.”

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA Год назад +2

      I will never stop being fascinated with how in some countries making homes out of paper is considered... A thing. That exists. It's weird. Reinforced concrete, bricks, or wooden logs are the only materials that seem to be able to hold without collapsing in a slight breeze.

    • @herrschaftg35
      @herrschaftg35 Год назад +1

      @@KasumiRINA: Wood is perfectly fine for a home, the problem is that most "industry standard" homes are absolute garbage. They intentionally make them minimalist and weak to ensure job security.

  • @raycearcher5794
    @raycearcher5794 Год назад +6

    My grandparents had a Sears kit house. It was pretty nice! But it was definitely just a way to get a regular suburban home for less money but more work.

  • @deazee2288
    @deazee2288 Год назад +7

    His "home" is literally the "you will live in the pod" meme

  • @ccoder4953
    @ccoder4953 Год назад +37

    There's another thing you missed about rural property and that's utilities. Most (but certainly not all) rural property has electricity, at least somewhat nearby. But alot of it doesn't have water or sewer. Especially in the western US, water is sort of a big deal. In my area, it's not uncommon for a household well to run $20,000. A septic system is probably going to be similar. So, yeah, you can plop your tiny home on some plot in the middle of nowhere and it might not be too expensive as long as you only want lights. If you want a shower, sink, and toilet, well, that gets pricey quickly.

    • @cezgamer
      @cezgamer Год назад +1

      A while back, I went down a rabbit hole of tiny modular homes, and honestly I was all for it as a concept. Then I thought, wait, I really want good internet, I don't think that'd work well with no lines dug. Which is when I also questioned where the hell would I get plumbing. Those vids are still fun to look at for space-saving interior design ideas though. But yeah It's pretty clear now that these homes are novelties to people who could easily afford a regular house already.

    • @Esperologist
      @Esperologist Год назад +3

      8:50 - He sort of touches on that. "... lack of broadband internet, and possibly drinking water." Yes, he could have mentioned electricity... probably decided to trim it out for time or forgot to mention it or something.
      I will add that you don't always have to go far from town to be on a well. I live a 10 minute drive from town, and the sewer doesn't come anywhere near.

    • @ccoder4953
      @ccoder4953 Год назад +1

      @@Esperologist I'm quite similar. I live maybe 10 minutes from an area where there's major shopping and I'm on well and septic. And there's people quite a bit closer too - like 5 minutes. Internet used to be a problem (thanks Centurylink for decades of not investing), but a local ISP got a grant from the state and now I have really good fiber to the home.
      In some really rural places, even electricity is hit or miss. There's areas where its cheaper to build your own off grid solar than get electricity run. That does tend to be areas that are more actual desert or deep in the mountains, but even my neighbor, when he subdivided his land, it cost $10k to get electric run to the new lots. But having said that, you usually can find reasonably priced lots with electricity readily available.

  • @adamspencer3702
    @adamspencer3702 Год назад +262

    5 years ago I started studying Architecture because I got on board with the whole Tiny Homes trend. Now I find myself wanting to design Commie Blocks and 15min communities. Tiny Homes are really only useful at increasing density early one with secondary units in my opinion, but I still like the little things, I've never needed much space anyways.

    • @InfernosReaper
      @InfernosReaper Год назад +8

      In a city, tiny homes are fine for people who want to rent out a room to someone but don't want that someone in their house, *or* for someone who somehow got a plot of land in a city that's otherwise unusable, yet still accessible.
      In the countryside, they're okay vacation homes or as a temporary dwelling until you can build up a bigger home. As something hauled around the country(as some tiny home advocates do), they are godawful. They aren't built to withstand that kind of travel. The people who want *that* should consider a used camper trailer.

    • @TomasSawer
      @TomasSawer Год назад +29

      Commie blocks have a lot of hidden disadvantages. Trust me - I'm born and grew in USSR. It works well only if you have huge factory and living blocks around it where 90% of citizens works on this factory. Else you will have constant problems with transportation in rush hours.
      Second - all the citizens of these blocks should be relatively poor and have no property or cars. It simply no space there to store or use it. But when you have many poor people in the small area be ready to huge crime on it. In my childhood it was very dangerous to walk alone to another neighbourhood. Chance to be robbed was about 70%. And this was in the capital city with a lot of police and very tight government control. In the smaller cities crime cituation was even worse.
      Experiments with such "social" blocks was provided and failed in many countries starting from US and ending in Paris. In 90% you will have a ghetto with a huge crime after 10-15 years there.
      The best decision there IMHO is relatively low height apartments (5-7 floors) with a good green territory around and 100-150sq.m. size, underground parkings and proper transportation infrastructure. Very good example of such city is Munich in Germany. It green, safe, easy to walk or reach any place less then in an hour.

    • @InfernosReaper
      @InfernosReaper Год назад +10

      @@TomasSawer Yes, but this channel *hates* personal transportation and loves trains, rather than seeing the pros and cons of both and acknowledging that the can and should coexist where possible.

    • @dave_sic1365
      @dave_sic1365 Год назад +2

      Study engineering instead and develope a factory that produces home modules that could be stacked to multistory houses

    • @Sasha-zw9ss
      @Sasha-zw9ss Год назад +21

      @@TomasSawer We're not saying they're perfect. They just seem like a more optimal decision than many others. I live in a good, relatively early Soviet neighborhood now and I love it.

  • @generalnarwhale708
    @generalnarwhale708 Год назад +5

    I think something like Boxable might have some potential for stuff like affordable student housing or council housing, but it will definitely not solve the housing crisis.

  • @fairywngsx
    @fairywngsx Год назад +17

    I can't believe we fell for it 🤦🏻‍♀️ we as in me and my husband and some of our friends. We looked into it and we're super confused cause we couldn't find the connection between boxabl and telsa but didn't think too much of it. Thank you so much for making this video!

  • @civilengineer3349
    @civilengineer3349 Год назад +32

    Location seems to be the prime cause of expense. Thats why people in the countryside can live in a big house that costs as much as a studio apartment in a condo in a town center

    • @toooes
      @toooes Год назад

      Damn man how'd you figure that out

    • @Mightydoggo
      @Mightydoggo Год назад +1

      That´s why everybody and their mother´s dog wants a home office job nowadays.

  • @notdonuts7552
    @notdonuts7552 Год назад +86

    Elon Musk is a marketing genius for an era of the internet that is over. Watching his brand wither, rot, and die, has been one of the few consistent joys for me in the past few years.

  • @poly2081
    @poly2081 Год назад +3

    would have been funny if you threw in the occasinal aoe2 sound of a hut beeing finished😂

  • @Draconatus24
    @Draconatus24 Год назад +3

    It’s insane that I actually watched those, but I realized that any channel that has “Elon Musk” in the title is full of bs

  • @ladyvanda
    @ladyvanda Год назад +14

    They act as if Musk lives with his children lmaooo. 7:03

  • @tophat593
    @tophat593 Год назад +56

    I'm a private developer and put up luxury units. Couldn't get planning permission for affordable units. Honestly, local planning is backward... I'd make more money with cheap, high density but nope, they'll just not give you permission. Hell, it takes years even bending to their will.

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 Год назад +20

      City government doesn't want the lower social classes moving in.

    • @bramvanduijn8086
      @bramvanduijn8086 Год назад +8

      Yep, it became a game of chicken: The first municipality that puts up affordable housing will attract poor people from all over the country.

    • @rdizzy1
      @rdizzy1 Год назад +12

      @@bramvanduijn8086 And? I've been poor my entire 40 year life, and have lived in and around poor people this entire time. Only wealthy people give a shit about living near poor people, I certainly don't. It has been totally fine, no major issues at all in my entire life to live around poor people.

    • @anon746912
      @anon746912 Год назад +9

      "but what about our property valuations" or something like that

    • @zandaroos553
      @zandaroos553 Год назад +6

      @@rdizzy1 that’s the problem though, rich people don’t want to be around poor people so they make sure every obstacle is created to keep them separated.
      I lucked out in life, my mom’s very working class but my dad’s affluent family came back into my life during my teenage years, paid for me to go to a good school, and I now am able to afford to live in a posh neighborhood in Boston. Now where I live is on of the six very dense old neighborhoods near the city center (Back Bay, Beacon Hill, Fenway, South End, North End & Central Brookline) and it’s hard to build more housing in these areas given they’re already quite packed. But there’s a lot of wealthy neighborhoods near us (Cambridge, Newton, Chestnut Hill, Somerville, Jamaica Plain and the rest of Brookline) that have insane amounts of building restrictions to keep these areas low-density and absurdly wealthy, forcing Boston’s working class population further and further outside the city to protect the property values and horde educational, transit and healthcare opportunities for residents. It’s selfishness through and through.

  • @toweringhorse2054
    @toweringhorse2054 Год назад +3

    You know things are bad when people are excited to live in pods

  • @uralmutlu4320
    @uralmutlu4320 Год назад +3

    We call those houses container houses, although they arent exactly shipping containers. The cost starts from around $2.5k. If I can afford 400-500m2 land, I would consider getting one of these.

  • @animeguy6877
    @animeguy6877 Год назад +22

    Elizabeth Holmes: I lied to my investors too. Where are my YT fan page accounts?!
    Musk: You forgot to stutter.
    Homes: But I used low pitched voice.
    Musk: Hmm.. Did you plagiarize multiple ideas?
    Holmes: No. Just the one.
    Musk: There you go. You gotta "invent" new stuff so the investors never catch up to your lies.

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +38

    Quote of the Day: “Elon Musk fans will be the end of me.”

    • @darkartsninja
      @darkartsninja Год назад +1

      As a woman in STEM, that statement has been my reality since undergrad

    • @PokhrajRoy.
      @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +1

      @@darkartsninja I’m so sad to hear you had to go through that.

  • @rabiasghar1236
    @rabiasghar1236 Год назад +2

    Another problem is that the US infrastructure is largely based on around parking and massive road sizes. It would be an absolute nightmare to redo utility work below grade to expand right of way and expand buildings as well.

  • @TsukiNoInu93
    @TsukiNoInu93 Год назад +2

    No parking space? So how can I go to work? Not everyones work is accesible via public transport (or not at the hours they need to start/en their shift/work). So they need a car to get to work. Like working at a hospital/sorting centre you could be required to start working before public transport even starts driving… better parking solutions, but I woulndt say none. What if someone wants to visit you? Also, you want to move houses, how? I live in the Netherlands, and there is always parking nearby, not enough, but even that makes the above things hard some times.