Oneofthethingsthat's appealingaboutyouas a candidateisthatyouseemprettynormal.
Oh, thankyou.
You'redoingsomethingthat's veryabnormal.
Runningforpresident. That's true.
SoofallthewaysyoucanserveandwereservingthroughtheventureforAmericathatyoustarted, whydidyoupickthisone, runningforpresident, runningfor a jobthatbymostconventionalmeasuresyou'renotreallyreadyfor?
Well, I spentsevenyearshelpingtrainhundredsofentrepreneursandhelpingtocreatethousandsofjobsaroundthecountrywiththisnonprofitthat I foundedVentureforAmerica.
And I startedthatorganizationbecause I feltlikeourcountrywasheadinginthewrongdirectionintermsofitsenergiesandthewayoureconomylooked.
AndwhenDonaldTrumpgotelectedin 2016, I tookthatas a redflag, thatitwasgettingevenworsefasterthan I thought.
Andwhen I dugintothenumbers, I wasshockedtoseethatwe'd automatedawaymillionsofmanufacturingjobsintheswingstatesthatTrumpwon.
Andthen, nowwe'reclosing 30 percentofstoresinmallsand, being a retailworker's themostcommonjobintheeconomy.
Andsoyouwouldconsideritmoralifyoucaredmoreaboutcapitalthanhumanbeings, which I wouldsuggestyou'd havetobefairlydementedtogotothismoneypileandsay, yes, we'reservingyoumoneypile.
SothisisanAmericanproblem, butit's also a globalproblem.
It's a humanproblem.
Right. Someofyouropponentsintheracehavecastthisas a a humanproblem, particularlyhumans, WallStreethumans, CEOsandtheirdecisionstoembracemaximisationoftheirownwealthandinfluenceandpower.
Greed, asBernieSanderstalksabout, is a bigpartoftheproblem.
Doyouagreewiththat?
Well, I thinkthatwe'vegoneoverboardinfinancializingoureconomy.
It's becomethetailwaggingthedog.
And I thinkthatWallStreethasbeenveryeffectiveatacceleratingthatfinancialization.
It's somethingthat I thinkthecountryisstillrecoveringfrom.
ThefinancialcrisisactuallyhadmestartVentureforAmericainresponsebecause I sawthatliterallymyfriendswerecreatingfinancialinstrumentsthathadtankedtheeconomy.
Tome, thevisionthatifwejustscrapeprofitsbackfromWallStreet, allwillbewell.
Tome, doesnottakeintoaccountthemagnitudeoftheeconomictransformationthatwe'reinthemidstof.
Theysaystrongincentivesthatwhatwewanttodoishave a taxsystemthatencouragesworkandassistpeoplewhoneedhelp.
I talkedtoGregMankiw, whowhowas a George W.
Bush's chiefeconomist, andhesaidifyouwanttohavesubstantialredistributionofincome, which I don't necessarilyfavor, but I understandthatmanypeopledo, theUBIis a veryefficientandeffectivewaytodothat.
I wouldsuggestthattheFreedomDividendisbipartisan.
AndifyoulookatAlaska's experience, wherenoweveryoneinAlaskaisgettingbetweenoneandtwothousanddollars a yearinoilmoney.
Andsotome, thecitizensofthiscountryshouldbeinthesameplaceasshareholdersof a company.
Andthat's somethingthat I dothink I needtoexplainmorefullytoDemocratsforthemtounderstandmoremoredeeplyandnaturally.
Whatabouttheincentiveissue, though, theideathatthatgovernmentas a policystatementoughttobereinforcingandencouragingworksothat, forexample, insteadof a universalbasicincome, a muchlargerearnedincometaxcredit, thatsortofthing.
I'm a hugefanofwork.
I thinkit's integraltothehumanexperience.
I dothink, though, thatmywifeisworkingharderthan I amandmywifeisathomewithourtwoboys, oneofwhomisautistic.
And a workincentiveprogramwouldnotrecognizethat.
So I wouldsuggestthathaving a narrowconceptionofworkisnotnecessarilygoingtohelpusinthe 21st-centuryeconomy.
I lovetheEITC, but I think a dividendis a betterwaytogo.
Well, thepeoplethatbenefitthemostfromoursocietywouldenduppayingintothesystemat a higherlevelthan $1000 a month.
Andsothejoke I tellisthatifwegethundredsofmillionsfromJeffBezosandthentryandsendhim a thousanddollars a monthtoremindhimhe's anAmerican, that's notsomethingweshouldbeconcernedabout.
It's possibletomakepeopleunderstandthattradeoff.
I thinkthebenefitsofuniversalityarenoteasilyunderstoodwhereitseemsfair, allAmericanscangetbehindit.
Soifyou'rereceivinghousingbenefitsandheatingbenefitsandSNAPandsomeotherthings, thenyouwouldlookatitandsay, like, do I prefer a thousanddollarscashtothesebenefits.
Someonebeingontheirlastlegs, theycan't paytheirbills, andthentheysay, I'm goingtostart a business.
That's actuallynotthenormalwayithappens.
It's morecommonthatyouhave a littlebitofsecurity, like a littlebitofrisktakingcapacity, andthenyousay, youknowwhat, I wanttotake a chanceonthisbusiness.