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¶ Introducing Jared Klickstein and Skid Row
At one point in your life, you woke up in a bathtub and realized that you were missing your big toe and your bottom lip. Can you describe Skid Row for people who have never been there? incredibly scary, incredibly violent. You know, you'd walk by, you'd see pools of blood sometimes, dead bodies occasionally. So it was really easy for me to stay sober in jail, but once I got out of jail, you know, they sort of just let you out at 2 o'clock in the morning right next to Skid Row.
Eventually, I pulled out a knife. I sort of lunged at him with a knife. So I got arrested for assault with a deadly weapon and went to jail and was going to go to prison for a year and a half. Addicts will take the path of least resistance. The state... currently in places like California are doing everything in their power to make it as easy as possible to keep getting high. Jared, you've got...
What is possibly the craziest life story of anyone we have ever had on the show? You lived on Skid Row for years. And your autobiography, which is great, is called Crooked Smile. And the reason it's called Crooked Smile is at one point in your life, you woke up in a bathtub. and realized that you were missing your big toe and your bottom lip. Yes. Which you then had to have reattached as part of like student training. Yes. Yes. How does...
¶ Childhood Roots of Addiction
How does that happen? How do you get to that point in your life? Tell us that. Well, first of all, I just want to say thank you for having me on. I'm honored to be here. How do you get to that point in your life? I mean, it's really like unadulterated. addiction, you know, allowed to just kind of sprawl out and do whatever it wants for 10 years. I mean, nothing is really stopping me. And the logical endpoint of that is death. But if you're lucky enough to live, you might lose a body part.
and uh i lost part of my face from you know doing copious amounts of methamphetamine and heroin and crack cocaine and um to my surprise after waking up i had done it to myself actually i had munched a bit on it, I guess, and most of it was gone. Wow. Yeah. And tell us your life story, because when I say, how do you get there, I imagine all of that shit starts in childhood, right?
I'd imagine so. I mean, I grew up in Boston, Massachusetts. Both my parents were heroin addicts. Pretty stable childhood, but still, there was the addiction in the household. There was... You know, I got to see a lot of terrible things, you know, no food in the refrigerator sometimes, you know, things like that. I do think that contributed to the fact that I became a drug addict, possibly genetic as well. Both my parents are heroin addicts.
uh i think it's a bit of both yeah so you you grew up in a household where but were your parents using before you were born as well My dad became addicted to heroin when he was about 12. The Vietnam vets were coming back to America. A lot of them that my dad knew were addicted to heroin. They would pay him in heroin to do...
you know, different tasks and things like that when he was a kid. So both my parents had a history of heroin use, but actually cleaned up before I was born and then got back into it when I was about three or four. Yeah. I mean, that... I can only imagine how difficult that must have been because for a child, there is nothing more terrifying than seeing your parents.
I can't think of the word for it, but basically out of it on a drug, whether it's alcohol or heroin or something like that. It's incredibly traumatizing. Yeah, it was traumatizing. I didn't really understand what was happening. Some of it was fun. I mean, my parents would...
you know, act, you know, they would act erratic and then maybe wake me up at two o'clock in the morning and take me to get pancakes and things like that. You know, there was those fun times. And then there was, you know, other times there was guns in the house. There was a lot of paranoia. There was a lot of...
waking me up and handing me a gun and telling me to cover them because the CIA was like outside, you know, doing a perimeter check on my dad for some reason. And, you know, of course, that didn't actually, that wasn't happening. But that was like my version of...
catch like playing catch with my dad was like doing a perimeter check around the house with a gun and you know so there's that kind of stuff but then there's also the you know the parents going to jail the parents you know falling asleep while driving you know things like that and
¶ Early Drug Use and College
Yeah, it was generally pretty traumatic. So when did your journey with drugs start? Because there's a lot of people I know who, when they see their parents do that, they go, I'm never touching any of that. And then there seems to be the other camp, which is... I'm going to do drugs just to cope. Yeah. Yeah, that is interesting how that happens.
Definitely had an aversion to heroin, specifically. I didn't really ever plan on messing with heroin, but I really liked alcohol in high school and marijuana. You know, it was like an alcoholic, basically, as a teenager. And when I got to college, I went to college at UC Santa Cruz. Everyone was doing heroin. And I was like the last of my friends to try heroin. In college?
Yeah, in college. 2007, UC Santa Cruz. Everyone was smoking heroin. Really? Yeah, yeah. All right, don't send your kids to college. Specifically, UC Santa Cruz. And that's a good college. Well, I think it's, you know, a loser factory, but it is ranked well, and I think I was in the art dorm, and I really think it was specific to my dorm, so I don't want to, you know, obviously college is probably a bad place to go, but...
I don't think everyone's doing heroin at every single college, but I was in the art dorm of a very artsy college where people were experimenting with drugs. And I experimented with drugs, but I was actually the one that was saying, hey, you probably shouldn't smoke heroin. but um but oxycontin was around and i and i had no idea what that was and and i didn't know that it was an op it's an opioid i didn't know so i started messing around with oxycontin
Can I just pause you there? Because there's going to be people listening who don't know what that is. Can you just explain what OxyContin is? Yeah, OxyContin is a brand name for oxycodone. It is a semi-synthetic opioid. It is essentially heroin. I mean, heroin is dicetylmorphine that's a fully... natural opiate, whereas oxycodone is a semi-synthetic. It still requires raw plant material, but it's more refined and actually through years of research, I guess, personal and just...
general research that people have done, it can be more physically addicting than heroin. And can I ask another question, not to sidetrack this, but one thing we kind of skipped over is... you grew up in a home where people are taking hard drugs getting arrested go you know giving guns all of that crazy stuff you talked about how did you even get to college yeah that's a good question um when i was 12 i
essentially told on my parents i told my distant relatives i said you know i don't know what's really going on i thought my parents were doing you know smoking marijuana or something like that i didn't really know what drugs were but when i sort of found some needles and things like that i realized it was hard drugs and i called my extended family and i was actually adopted by my extended family in in oakland california
So from 12 to 18, I had a very normal childhood and prepared me for college. So you're in college, you're experimenting with Oxycontin. What happened there?
¶ From College to Homelessness
Well, I got wildly addicted immediately. I mean, it was like the greatest feeling I'd ever felt. I was very ashamed of who I was growing up, essentially thinking of myself as a crack baby and sort of the offspring of... undesirables you know in my head and and uh was ashamed about who i was and oxycontin fixed that you know i could you know alcohol fixed that to some extent but but oxycontin uh didn't have a hangover and it was just so much more easy and it just really got to the point and
It fully enveloped my entire life within a month or two probably. I did some Googling and I found out that Oxycontin is actually pretty close to heroin. Once I was wildly addicted to Oxycontin, I realized that, well, I might as well just do heroin. It's a lot cheaper.
actually a lot easier to get to it was it was a lot easier to get at that point um because it's you know it's not a controlled substance it was just kind of on the street you could get it you know the dealers were taking the bus up to the campus and selling it to kids and uh it was just super easy to get and super cheap i find that horrific the fact that dealers were on campus dealing heroin
Yeah. You know, this is a drug which has destroyed hundreds of thousands, if not millions of lives over the years. Yeah. And did camp... Did the university, did the college do anything to try and stem the tide or arrest these dealers, et cetera? Not really. I mean, it wasn't campus-wide. It was specifically my dorm.
It was a very large campus. I did eventually go to a campus therapist and told them I was a heroin addict, and they prescribed me benzodiazepines, which I'm not a doctor, but that's...
That's pretty dangerous to prescribe benzodiazepines to someone actively using heroin. I told my professors they essentially gave me longer times to complete papers and stuff. So they gave me like a... a break scholastically but they no one really did anything not that it's really their place to do anything but they certainly didn't you know they didn't do anything yeah and so then what happens do you graduate do you leave college what goes on then
Well, by senior year, I'm wildly addicted to heroin. I can't really afford it. You know, I'm like committing small crimes to get it, not really going to class anymore. Definitely on the path to getting kicked out or dropping out. I eventually get a deal with the drug dealers who were cartel-affiliated. They gave me a job, and I started driving.
uh heroin around uh santa cruz and delivering it and um a requirement of this job was to smoke meth before every shift so i wouldn't crash while i was driving because they which is actually pretty smart i guess because you know heroin addicts crashed because they fall asleep. So as a result of that, I got really addicted to meth and...
immediately dropped out of college and got kicked out of my housing and my family didn't want to talk to me. They knew I was on meth and my family sort of let me go. Within a matter of months, I was homeless on Skid Row.
¶ Life of Crime and Money
You mentioned committing small crimes and you mentioned your family letting you go. Was that something they were like, we just can't cope with someone who's an addict? Or had you done things by this point that they kind of... like they didn't know what to do maybe because you talk a lot about
someone who's that addicted they will do literally anything right yeah yeah so tell us not to like get all kind of you know uh addict porn into it but what what kind of crimes were you committing and what is the nature of an addict's relationship with the people around them their family and so on. Yeah. The kinds of crimes that I was committing was petty theft, you know, stealing textbooks from campus and then selling them and maybe stealing things from CVS sometimes. That was on heroin.
when my family found out about my drug addiction they had sort of spent the last decade dealing with my parents in and out of rehabs you know my mom ended up passing away like they went through hell with my parents so i think i don't blame them they just said you know we can't do 10 years of this with you we just did 10 years of this with your parents so they just kind of took a step back and they said you know give us a call when you know when you're really ready um
and uh now once i started doing meth meth is very sadistic it's it's much different than heroin you start really doing crimes i mean you really it's like almost part of the addiction i mean i started breaking into houses i started climbing into windows I started doing some darker things, you know, and I don't know why meth entices people to do much darker crimes, but it seems to always happen.
And you must have some pretty wild stories to tell about those days. Like, I imagine breaking into houses in America is not the safest thing to do. Well, it's pretty safe in California. I wouldn't break into a house in Texas, but California, I mean, this was back then. Now it's basically legal to, I mean, you know, you're not going to go to prison if you break into a house in Oakland, California. Right.
um so i'd say it's a lot easier now but uh and in fact if someone were to shoot you in oakland because you broke into their house that they would go to prison and you probably you know get probation or something in a settlement of cash
But anyway... Yeah, I want to make clear to people as well. We're going to talk about policy and homelessness and all of that, but we're just trying to get your story first. Yeah, so these were the olden days when there was... when there was punishment for crime there was some amount of punishment for crime um i was breaking into houses with other meth addicts and um was sort of an apprentice like tagging along and i didn't really know the law i didn't know that it was even that big of a crime
They told me that you can go to prison for like 20 years for doing it. So I stopped doing it, actually. I didn't know that. So when I found that out, I was... i stopped breaking into houses i could make money other ways i mean it was very um you know when i landed on skid row i i i made a lot of money you know i i made eventually i started making more money than i'm you know i've i've just in my life at 36.
hit a financial point where I'm making as much money as I did when I was homeless on Skid Row. What? How are you making money? Well, the first time I was on Skid Row, I was just begging for change at the train station. I'd make like $80 a day, which is pretty good. But later on, once Prop 47, sorry to get into policy, but basically once shoplifting is legalized, I was making... you know, $300 to $500 a day in cash shoplifting. $300 to $500 a day. So that's...
That's insane. Our producers are looking around going, we're in the wrong job, mate. Yeah. So that's around about, what, $2,500 minimum? That's your base rate? Yeah, I think, you know, I made six figures probably. uh untaxed um and usually went to sleep with zero dollars because you'd spend it all on drugs yeah spend it all on drugs and and now that game has changed a lot now obviously shoplifting is
Illegalized. I will just, you know, I know that's not the correct word, but it's essentially legalized. It's decriminalized. It's decriminalized. And with that, now there's a lot more people doing it and there's a lot less things to steal. So I don't think people are making $300 to $500 a day, but I really caught it at the golden age. You were at the gold rush. Yeah, exactly. It was 1849, and I was there, and the gold was there.
and you know i don't want to sound braggadocious about it i'm not like proud of this stuff but um there was a code you know you know we didn't attack anybody and you know we weren't There was some secrecy to it. You had to have some skill. You had to really act covertly. There was some pride in it at that point. Now it's really just run in and grab everything and leave.
But yeah, that was by 2014-15, I was making with my partner about $300 to $500 a day. And that was all going on drugs? Yeah, primarily heroin, but crack cocaine, methamphetamine.
¶ Describing the Skid Row Environment
Can you describe Skid Row for people who have never been there? What is it? What's it like? Well, it's different now, but I'd say I landed there in 2011 for the first time. It seemed like there was thousands of people just, you know, out and about, really in a zombie stage. You know, a lot of them really not. I wouldn't call them...
I mean, a lot of them just on methamphetamine and sort of in a different realm. A lot of screaming, a lot of, you know, mental illness shrieking into the atmosphere and all that. Incredibly scary, incredibly violent, blood on the sidewalk. You'd walk by, you'd see pools of blood sometimes, dead bodies occasionally, mostly from overdoses.
You know, I didn't I had just gotten out of college. I'm 36 now and I look pretty young. I mean, I look like a child. And, you know, a lot of people didn't didn't look like me. You know, I was, you know, the racially it was it was primarily. african-american some hispanic not a lot of white people um so when
I showed up. They assumed I was like some rich kid that got addicted to heroin and was just down there to score drugs. And, you know, people messed with me and all that. But once they realized I lived there, they respected me and I was treated pretty well. So what you're describing is a community.
Well, kind of, yeah. I mean, everything is based on, you know, can you help me? If you can help me, you're protected in some way. If I can get something from you, you're protected. No one's like selflessly acting out and helping anybody. you know it's all everything it's a very it's a free market of you know getting over on one another or at least i'll help you as long as you are useful to me in some capacity so
¶ Who is on Skid Row
What percentage of the people there, Jared, do you think were severely mentally ill, as in they were unable to cope? How many people do you think could be helped? And because there's also this narrative, and I would like you to talk about this as well. People are like, well, it's a choice people make. You know, people choose to live like that. They don't want to live in the real world. They don't want a proper job. They just want to hang out, score drugs, smoke, shoot up.
and abdicate adult responsibility, for want of a better term. I'd say... Now, Skid Row specifically, I'd say... Now, I never met someone down there that lost a job and ended up on Skid Row. That's not to say that people don't lose jobs and find economic hardships and end up homeless. They just don't go to Skid Row. I mean, Skid Row is not for the faint of heart.
You know, you just wouldn't go down there unless you were either mentally ill or on drugs. So I'd say close to 100% of people were either mentally ill or addicted to drugs or both. I'd say roughly 25% were probably just purely mentally ill. Now, that could be mental illness that resulted from a past addiction to drugs, or they could just be mentally ill and can't really, you know, they get dropped off there by an ambulance or a police.
car or something like that, they just ended up there. And then roughly, I don't know, the remainder was on drugs, it seemed. Now how many of those people are able to be helped? Man, I think a lot of them. I think a lot of them that are just there for purely addiction. Those people can be helped. And then a lot of those people that are mentally ill or appear mentally ill, they may not be mentally ill. They may just be on methamphetamine. I mean, I've been known to cause a scene in a McDonald's.
dining area you know i've been i would i appeared like a crazy mentally ill person and and um but if you take away methamphetamine i'm a pretty normal person i'm a pretty normal guy so uh a lot of those people if sort of you know if they dried out for a few days we'd really be able to determine oh this person is totally capable of self-sufficiency and leading a life of purpose um it's going to be very difficult it would require a lot of
¶ Fentanyl's Devastating Impact
money and a lot of policy changes, but I think a good portion of them can be helped. I was going to say, because Skid Row has expanded... hugely over the years yeah and i was gonna i was gonna ask number one why do you think that happens and number two is it how much of an influence is fentanyl playing because fentanyl was a very new player on the scene isn't it really yeah
I got sober in 2018. Fentanyl was around, but it didn't really replace heroin yet. Now, heroin's essentially non-existent at this point. It's all fentanyl in terms of opiates. So fentanyl has played a huge role. So fentanyl has changed the game in that, first of all, it kills a lot more people. So it also makes people a lot more... I mean, heroin, you can... I've held jobs on heroin. I've gone to Thanksgiving dinner on heroin. You can sort of function badly, but you can still function partially.
there's no there's no functioning on on fentanyl there's no recreational use of fentanyl i've used it i've done it before uh it's like you snap your fingers and you are a zombie uh you know you're hunched over you don't know what your name is i mean It's a completely debilitating drug. Why do people do it? Well...
I personally didn't like it. It didn't really react well with me. It was not incredibly euphoric for me, although it did give me the physical properties of an opiate, which is sort of that soothing physical sensation. So I did it because there was no heroin where I was at that time.
there was just fentanyl. And if a heroin addict can't get heroin, they will do any opiate. And if fentanyl is the only thing available, they'll do fentanyl. And what we saw around 2019 was essentially the eradication of heroin. And fentanyl just...
came in full force and a lot of people got addicted to fentanyl not even knowing that it was fentanyl they thought it was still heroin and everyone sort of transitioned to fentanyl The news moves fast, and it's not just about keeping up, it's about seeing clearly.
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¶ Why People End Up on Skid Row
Join them today. And coming back to this idea of how people end up on Skid Row, you mentioned that you'd never met anyone who lost a job and then... three weeks later there on Skid Row. So reading between the lines then, you as a college kid, you go there because it's a place where you can get drugs? That's why people go to Skid Row?
That's why I went and that's why a lot of people go. Because back then, if you were in LA and you didn't really know what you were doing and you wanted drugs, you went to Skid Row and it's a free market. I mean, they're just everywhere. So that's why I ended up there.
A lot of people end up there for that, and then a lot of people end up there because there's services there. I mean, there are some homeless services there. It's also sort of a safe place to... it's not safe but it's you're allowed to sleep there if you're homeless you know so a lot of people will voluntarily go down there uh because back then you couldn't just sleep anywhere you know you kind of had to you got funneled there really and then a lot of people
um get dropped off there so if you get arrested for some sort of disorderly conduct in burbank or something and you're on drugs uh oftentimes you you would just get dropped off on skid row and But it's really, that's where the carnival is. I mean, if you're in that lifestyle, that's where you're going to go. Wow. And do the police come through there?
¶ Police and the Justice System
Yeah, the police come through. I don't know if they do anymore, but certainly in my time, they'd come through, and they'd arrest you every once in a while. You know, they'd have to sort of make their numbers, I guess, and arrest some people. I mean, I don't blame them. You know, what are you going to do? You know, you got, you know, two to six cops or something driving around Skid Row and you got thousands of people on drugs. You know, you can't just arrest everybody.
um but they sort of monitor and make sure no one's you know getting you know if they see violence they'll stop it or if they see someone od'd they'll you know resuscitate or um and then occasionally they'll just make some random arrests that i've been a part of but um you know you go into jail for a day and then you come out tell us about that because this is one of the things that as we start to edge towards the policy conversations one of the things that i think a lot of people
uh i kind of like trying to work out is you mentioned shoplifting and stealing things yeah like what happens to a drug addict who gets arrested by the police back then maybe three days at the most for various types of crimes. For shoplifting, after Prop 47 passed in 2014, it was a ticket. You know, you might go to the station for a few hours, then you're let go.
¶ Seeking Sobriety Through Jail
Basically if you're not doing something violent, you're not going to jail. And that becomes very difficult because a lot of people start to desire to go to jail. for a long period of time and the only way to really do it is to commit violence and if you commit violence you're going to have a violent criminal record it sort of becomes this tough situation to navigate why do you want to go to jail
Because I couldn't stop. I just couldn't stop doing drugs. I was going to die. Your back starts hurting from sleeping on the concrete. You grow tiresome of this, and you want to go to prison. you know i wanted to go to prison by by 2015 i wanted to i wanted to go to prison and um i just didn't know how to do it without doing something horrible you know and how did you end up going to prison Oh, I got really lucky. Well, I actually didn't go to prison. I faced a prison sentence, so I was on meth.
And I was in Panda Express, which is a restaurant here. And it was actually the Panda Express inside of a food court inside of the major library in downtown Los Angeles. And I was in that Panda Express.
i reached for a plate you know people would leave plates of food sometimes like when they were done with it so i went and i started picking at orange chicken and another homeless man uh unbeknownst to me had claimed to this chicken already and uh sucker punched me in the face and we started you know, fighting over this chicken.
And I didn't really know what to do. You know, he was bigger than me and he, you know, we sort of got to a standstill and he was like, you got to pay me for that chicken. And I said, you know what, I was on the, he took my cell phone. That's what happened. He took my, I had a cell phone. Most homeless people do.
In fact, the more cell phones you have, the more likely you're probably homeless. I mean, because they sort of hand them out. So I actually had multiple cell phones. But he took my cell phone and essentially said, you're going to have to give me $10 if you want your cell phone back. And I said, well, I really, you know, I don't want to do that.
And eventually I pulled out a knife and I sort of lunged at him with a knife. And at this point, security from the library had come and sort of detained both of us. And the police came and looked at the footage. you know you can't do that you know you can't try to lunge at somebody so um so i got arrested for assault with a deadly weapon and um went to jail and and was going to go to prison for a year and a half for assault a deadly weapon um
I got a public defender and they basically told me they were going to drop the charges and let me go. And I said, please don't let me go. I don't want the charge, but please don't let me go. And they said, well, you know, that's pretty difficult to do. And they said, well, we can give you a six-month violation.
and then drop the charges. And I said, that's the most perfect situation I've ever heard. That's exactly what I want. And she told the judge, and the judge gave it to me. They gave me a six-month violation, and I did six months. You know, when you're saying that, I'm just thinking... Why isn't there a program which takes these people off the streets, drives them out, and gets them back functioning and hopefully back into the real world?
Well, there were programs like that. You know, there was the Midnight Mission. There's the Union Rescue Mission. These are programs on Skid Row, and they're great programs. And I actually went to one one time for about seven months. They're, you know, it's a miracle factory. I mean, but you have to voluntarily go, you know, it's very hard to voluntarily go and, you know, you can voluntarily leave too.
It's very difficult to encourage someone on fentanyl to go to one of these programs, especially the detox process. It's so difficult and painful. There's SB 1380, which Gavin Newsom passed when he was lieutenant governor, and this is a state bill in California passed, I think, 2014 or 2015, which states that any program that desires state funding cannot require sobriety.
This was a housing first policy, sort of top down from the federal government under the Obama administration. And that sort of ended everything. So the Midnight Mission does... wanted to get that sweet state money and in order to receive that state money they could no longer require sobriety uh tied to housing so it's essentially a a fentanyl housing program now wow yeah i mean you know
¶ Experience in LA County Jail
When I was listening to an interview you were on, you said the words, you were glad that you went to prison because prison helped you get sober. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I didn't go to prison. I went to LA. Sorry. Brits always get confused. No, it's okay. You went to jail. You went to jail. There's all these podcasts now with guys from prison, and they always want to call each other out for lying about their time at prison, so I didn't go to prison. Call us out. It's awful. It's awful.
You went to jail. I went to L.A. County jail. L.A. County. Which is worse than prison, probably. Why? Because it's smaller quarters. There's worse food. You're... Everyone's kind of on edge about their case. Once you're in prison, you sort of know the deal. Okay, I'm going to be here for six years. It's just a little bit more of a tense place. But I had a great time. I mean, I had a wonderful time. It was one of the probably the greatest times of my life.
Because you weren't using or why? Because I finally got a bed and a pillow and I just didn't have any responsibilities. And I just knew that my one task was just to get off heroin. It took me like... three or four weeks to get a full night's sleep and just i detoxed hard and and i just read books i read books every day i just you know i pretend i was on a beach and just lay on my bed and just read a book and um
And I really grew up. I mean, I really became a man. There's better places to become a man, but I really was a boy. I was still a boy. I got to learn so many things about different cultures and I had to join a gang and I had to really... you know, immerse myself in some dangerous situations, and I came out of it unscathed, and I really think that was a growth experience. I don't recommend it for everybody, but I had a phenomenally interesting time. You said you had to join a gang.
¶ Jail Gangs and Race Dynamics
Talk to us about that. Yeah, well, when you go to LA County Jail, you have to join a gang. Everyone has to join a gang. There's no, like, I'll just opt out of that. You know, everyone goes to a gang, and the gangs are racially based, so you have to join a race gang. I wasn't excited to join a race gang, but, you know, when you went in Rome, you... You know, you join a race gang, and if you're white, you have to join the Peckerwoods or the neo-Nazis.
But everyone just joins the Peckerwoods. I mean, that's really kind of like the easy route. Who are the Peckerwoods? The Peckerwoods are like diet Nazis, I guess. I mean, they're not really racist. They're just white guys. uh so like if a dad goes in for drunk driving and he's like a businessman he'll join the pecker woods i mean there's just no that's the lowest level that you can join um
But there were Nazis, you know, there were Nazis. And I am, by birth, I'm half Jewish, half Irish. I don't really look Jewish. But my last name is relatively Jewish. i went in there and like a nazi greeted me and was you know asked me what my name asked for asked me for my paperwork my name is jared klickstein he you know his eyebrow raised a little bit and then he looked me up and down and he said you know he's like are you german
And I just said, yeah, I'm German. And he loved that. I bet he did. He is one of us! But weeks later, I figured out that they actually didn't have a problem with Jews. What? What? Yeah, I guess they were like, they've had like a reformation or something or, you know, they're like, they've, DEI has really hit the Nazis, I guess. So prison Nazis don't hate Jews. Well, I don't think they're like fond of them, but, but.
Also, this was like 2015, kind of a peaceful time in America, like people were getting along. So maybe they had sort of calmed down about that. But I found out there's a kosher meal in jail and it's like worth the most money out of anything. I actually came clean and admitted that I was. I was Jewish. And the Nazis thought it was funny and they thought it was fine. And they asked me about...
legal advice for their cases, and they sort of thought, because I was Jewish, I could help them with their case. And to be honest, they were like... At first, they were like, well, what are you doing? You know, if you're Jewish, what are you doing here? And they're like, can't you make a...
uncle owned the prison or something like can't you make a phone call and i because they had already gotten to know me as a normal guy and they're like this guy's just a street crackhead and then when they realized i was jewish i think it opened up their mind to like
Well, I guess a Jewish guy can just be a normal guy. I mean, I guess anything could happen. You know, people are just people. And I've stayed in contact with some of them. And one of the guys, like, covered up his swastika tattoo, and he's sort of like a normal guy. He got off drugs. i don't think i did that but i think i might have like played a role in it you know just kind of opening up people's minds to like you know
A Jewish guy can just be a guy. You know, he doesn't have to own the prison, you know, or whatever. So I don't think he'd ever really met a Jewish person. Right. Yeah. So you joined the Pekka Woods and you mentioned, from what I know, which is nothing. There is a lot of tension between the different gangs on a racial basis. Was that going on when you were there? Yeah, so the Peckerwoods, or just really the Whites, are linked up with the Mexicans. So the Mexicans, the Southsiders.
they have an alliance against the Blacks and the Asians, which is like a very funny arrangement. I don't know the history of that. I don't know why it's like that. I think it does date back to like... meth-dealing agreements between neo-Nazis and the Southsiders, I'm not sure. But you're basically linked up with the Mexicans, and you're their ally. And really, the whites get a lot more benefit from this relationship than the Mexicans.
So you have to be a worthy ally, which means you have to work out every day and keep up appearances. You've got to sort of pretend to give a shit about all this stuff. And there is tension, you know, mainly between the Mexicans and the blacks.
The Asians and the whites are kind of on the sidelines. Because those are the two biggest demographics in the prison? Those are the two biggest demographics. And also on the street, they have a huge rivalry for territory. There's a huge problem. Really, specifically in Los Angeles, where there's almost a... ethnic cleansing of Blacks by Mexicans, which is never reported in the news or talked about. But there are cities that Blacks have essentially been...
They call it green lit, meaning like there's the green light to kill any black person if you're in a Mexican gang, you know, like places like. Highland Park and places like Winnetka and places in the valley. So that's sort of a war that isn't really reported. I don't know. Maybe it's died down a bit. I'm not sure. And how did this affect your life when you were in prison?
all of this stuff that's going on. Well, since you're allied with the Mexicans... In jail, sorry. No, no, it's totally okay. You're allied with the Mexicans, so they sort of set the rules. I mean, they run the place. I mean, they run the place more than the guards. I mean, they're in charge.
And because of that, you know, they view Blacks as lesser than human. And the Mexicans are our allies, so we have to do what they say, really. And they make the rules, and the rules are that you can't share food with the Blacks and you can't... shower with the Blacks, and you can't sit on a Black's bed, you can't get too friendly with a Black. But you have to respect them to prevent a race war. So it's actually a very respectful place, although there is this sort of nasty racial stuff going on.
And the whites in jail that I, at least in my experience, kind of didn't care about any of it, but they just had to follow these rules in order to sort of impress the Mexicans. It's all about impressing the Mexicans. That's so... It's a different world. It's a different world.
¶ Rules and Violence in Jail
Were you worried? Because, you know, you're watching movies about these types of institutions and, you know, you're always constantly there, eye over the shoulder, looking around, thinking someone's going to attack me, beat me up. Or is that just not true? Well, I think it really is different across the United States. It's very specific. This is very specific to Los Angeles, really greater California, and maybe even the southwest of America.
It's all pretty standard. I mean, these gangs, this is a gang culture. It's the Beckerwoods, the Southsiders, and the Blacks. And these are the rules. And really... There was a lot of violence, but it was inflicted by your own race. So if a Mexican saw you spitting trash into the urinal or something, which is a rule, you can't break that rule.
They would then inform your shot caller, and your shot caller, to show respect to the Mexicans, would do an in-house punishment. So three white guys would beat you up for 23 seconds. Why 23 seconds? Because W is the 23rd letter in the alphabet and W stands for wood because we're, you know, we're woods.
I guess. And so there's really the majority of the violence is actually inflicted by your own race to show respect to the other races if something disrespectful occurs. So it's maintaining this. It's not like random violence where someone is like, oh, you're new here. I'm going to beat you up or rape you or whatever. I think that definitely goes on in other states and other.
¶ Drugs in Jail Availability and Cost
you know, regions of America, but non-existent really in Los Angeles. And how come there are no drugs in prison? Because we keep being in jail. It's totally okay. How come I keep... No, I want to be accurate. How come there are no drugs in jail? Because what we hear is there's more drugs in jail than anywhere. Well, there are drugs in jail. That is a common line by anti, I guess, D.
What's the word for someone that's against prison? Oh, yes. Yeah, so that's a big talking line from them is that there's more drugs in jail than there are in the streets. I mean, that's absolutely not true. There are drugs in jail. They're very limited quantities. They're primarily reserved for the shot callers and anyone, they call it politics, like anyone high in politics in jail. They're incredibly expensive. I mean, if you want to get a single...
serving of heroin in jail, you have to have someone on the outside wire money to someone else's family, like $100 for a tiny little $5 piece of heroin. So it's a 20x price increase. Yeah, there's drugs in jail. They're very expensive. Hypnosis gets a bad rap, but it's not a gimmick. It's a legitimate therapeutic tool backed by research. And when it comes to weight loss, it can be a game changer.
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¶ Release, Relapse, and Recovery
Like a 12-step program in order to help you become clean and sober? Yeah, they would bring AA meetings into jail, various 12-step meetings into jail. I'd go to the meetings. you know i i enjoyed it but the real problem was that you know you go to jail and then they just sort of let you go they just let you out of jail after six months and there's no real like landing pad for you to hit um
So that was the, you know, I was like wishing that they would mandate me to a treatment place after jail. And I was even writing letters to treatment places to try to get them to take me in. But yeah, so it was really easy for me to stay sober in jail. But once I got out of jail, they sort of just let you out at two o'clock in the morning right next to Skid Row. So it's tough. So you ended up right back there?
Yeah, my intention was to stay sober, but I was in a release pod with someone that I knew that had money. They were getting released with $40, so we went and got high. you know, there's nothing I could really do. So this is like, you know, people accuse me of being like a very pro-jail, like, let's just send everyone to jail. And I'm not, you know, that's not what I'm saying. You know, there's, um, that we really need an all-encompassing, you know, solution to this.
Jail alone is not that solution. Jail plays a role in the solution, but there has to be a process of graduated reintroduction into society and most importantly, preparation for joining society in the form of job training. absolutely because one of the things and you know better than me about addiction is that you literally put you put a pause button on your life so when you're an addict you don't care about
You don't care about acquiring skills, getting better, becoming a better person, progressing in a career. So when you get sober, you're behind a lot of people. Yeah, I mean, you basically don't have anything on your resume.
You know, you get tattoos that you probably regret, you know, like me. You know, I just got all these tattoos now, and now I have a little bit of a criminal record. You know, I have a felony on my criminal record. Obviously, now I have a facial scar. It becomes more difficult to get a job.
We are obviously going to need a lot of... people working in the in the coming 10 years you know in various industries we should really have like a labor expert you know examine this you know where do we need people are we going to need 300 000 electricians to support the grid if so let's maybe do some training programs for these people. I unfortunately didn't get anything like that, but I did have carpentry skills. So I was always willing to do construction and do carpentry.
and eventually landed at a non-profit long-term rehab where they allowed me to go look for work. I got a decent-paying carpentry job, and that's where I got sober. So jail sort of helped me get to that point, but jail was not the...
¶ Policy Failure Enabling Addiction
the actual all-encompassing solution. And speaking of solutions, I mean, one of the things that I can sort of sense in reading between the lines of everything you're saying is
Getting clean is the most important thing, and it sounds like a very, very, very, very, very hard thing to do by yourself. Yeah, it's incredibly hard. What makes it infinitely more hard or more difficult is that the state... currently in places like California are doing everything in their power to make it as easy as possible to keep getting high.
And when it's easy to get high and when it's easy to keep doing what you're going to... I mean, addicts will take the path of least resistance. You know, they really don't have agency. I mean, I've been there. You're really not you.
I mean, you will do anything to get drugs. I mean, you will rob your grandmother. You will, you know, sacrifice, you know, you would sacrifice... an entire relationship with a family member for twenty dollars i mean you know you're not really making the decision so if you just let that thing coast it's just going to keep coasting towards death i mean that's what's going to happen so um
Every incentive we currently have is for people to keep doing what they're doing, and we need every incentive in place to be encouraging people to get sober. What does that look like? That looks like, at least in California, what I'm familiar with, recriminalizing crime. Crime has essentially, across the board, been decriminalized. This is not good. As a drug addict...
When I was out there before Prop 47, which was the decriminalization of shoplifting, I didn't shoplift. I mean, you actually got consequences for that. You could get a felony if you stole enough things. I just didn't do it.
would panhandle or whatever um i remember you know we wouldn't smash car windows because there was a thing in la where if you smashed a car window and you entered the car you could get breaking and entering you could get a felony you go to prison i've never smashed a car window
Once they got rid of that, now it's like the biggest problem in California is smashing windows. So, you know, people will do what you let them do. So we need to recriminalize crime, especially property crime, which is the... probably the crime that most addicts do to get drugs.
We need to recriminalize that, and then we need to actually arrest people for doing these crimes. And if they happen to be drug addicts, we have to give them the option. Do you want to get punished for this crime, or do you want to be mandated to a long-term treatment program?
That's going to take a lot of money. That's going to take a lot of work. You know, I understand why people don't want to do that. The biggest problem is that it's the least easy path to launder and steal money by, you know, nonprofit, you know. globs or whatever you want to call them, you know, people that have made billions off this industry. It's a lot more easy to get a $5 million contract to hand out crack pipes because there's no, you know, you just need a...
You just need a cart and crack pipes, and you just need to hand them out. And you just pay someone... with an art history degree to hand them out for $30 an hour, and you get to pocket millions of dollars. That's really easy. What's not easy is pocketing a million dollars from actually having to do some work and help people.
¶ Spending Versus Outcomes
Not that people should be pocketing millions of dollars, but it's become a grift. California spent $24 billion on homelessness and addiction in the last five years. And until last year, the number just steadily climbed. Do you think that that's a reason why a lot of crime has been decriminalized?
Because it's just easier than actually tackling it. Or do you think there's an ideological basis behind that policy decision? Well, there was definitely an ideological basis for this decision. I mean, during the time of... criminalization we'll call it you know uh i'd say pre-2016 especially pre-2020 um
people were getting arrested for doing drugs and selling drugs and it did ruin some people's lives and some people had to go to prison for 20 years for selling crack cocaine and you know that's that's you know a bit harsh i i agree i think we we did go over the line a little bit and
And the system wasn't working perfectly, so those in charge said, this system's not working perfectly. Let's do the exact opposite. It's never going to work perfectly. Definitely some lives got ruined, but a lot of lives did. you know, get saved by getting the threat of these repercussions really did encourage people to change their lives and get sober. If you go to any AA meeting or NA meeting, a lot of people will tell you the reason why I got, a judge sent me here.
or you know i was facing a prison sentence and i they told me to come here and now i've been sober for 20 years so Definitely ideological. Also, we were just running into an issue where jails were getting full. I mean, people were committing crimes and going to jail, and we were running out of space, and then COVID happened, and they wanted to let everyone out of jail so they wouldn't spread COVID. I mean, there's all kinds of...
horrific, terrible, you know, mistakes made. Because also the other problem is, in going back to the discussion about fentanyl, you've got this deadly drug on the streets. So you need some kind of policies in place because if your whole thing is, you know what, we're just going to let it run rampant and then people come and see us when they see us.
If you've got a drug that's killing people at the rate fentanyl is, most people aren't going to be around for that long. Yeah, so now we're seeing a drop in ODs. And I'm wondering, are we doing the right thing and that's why it's dropping, or are we just running out of people to OD? I mean, 806 people OD'd last year in San Francisco. San Francisco's not a huge city. I mean, you know, there's, I don't know, 700,000 people in San Francisco. It has the highest...
per capita OD rate at 80 per 100,000 residents. It also spends the most amount per capita on harm reduction and homelessness services. It spends the most per capita probably on anything. um and the number has just steadily increased i mean we spent 1.1 billion dollars to address homelessness and addiction in 2022.
That's a 500% increase from 2016. Meanwhile, homelessness rose 64% in that time frame. So the more money that we throw at it... doing the wrong thing it seems to just actually increase the level of ods the level of addiction a level of homelessness because you're doing the wrong thing we're doing the complete wrong thing
¶ Mental Health and Deinstitutionalization
Yeah. And your book has a foreword by our friend Michael Schellenberger. Yes. And one of the things he's talked about a lot, and he talked about San Francisco. he talked in San Francisco about this, his book, San Francisco, is the mental illness part of it. Yes. And one of the things that I've always been persuaded by, I'm happy to be corrected, obviously. is that when the decision was made to deinstitutionalize people that is to say close the mental asylums and basically let people you know
live their life whatever way they can with mental illness, that became a big part of the problem. How much of a problem do you think that is and how... how much of this can be solved by creating facilities where people who are not mentally well can be given the help they need instead of like, hey, you're free. This is America. Go and live on the street. Yeah. I definitely think that that played a big role in the problem.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest came out in, I don't know, 1976 or something like that. And rightfully so, it sort of, you know, enraged a lot of people that this could possibly, you know, not that it's a real story, but like...
You know, that story's happened. Of course, some people have ended up in mental institutions that shouldn't have been there. This was really, you know, Reagan did this. Reagan did this as governor of California as sort of like a deal with the libertarian left of California.
California. Like, this was a freedom issue, and he sort of cut this deal. So, of course, he got something out of the deal by cutting the budget. You know, that's what he wanted to do. And then they got something out of the deal by increasing freedoms for people. And then, you know, here we are 30 years later.
or 40 years later, or 50 years later, I don't even know. But, you know, now there's really no place for these people to go. And, you know, when I was out there and I was on meth and I was going crazy... You know, I went to mental institutions. They take you for three days and then they let you loose. I don't even think they're taking you for three days anymore. This is an issue. It seems like people have gotten crazier due to the lower quality of meth.
meth is very low quality right now it's very cheap it's made in we used to make it in america and it was pretty good you know it was the greatest not my words i mean it you know meth is terrible no one do meth. Even great meth, people shouldn't do it. But meth, you know, you used to kind of, you used to be able to somewhat, you know, function. You'd start to go crazy after like three days or something like that. But meth now, you take a hit and you're just crazy. And it's like $20 an eight ball.
You know, not that that means anything to you guys, but it's gotten very cheap and people are going insane. And people have the right to be insane. I believe people have the right to do drugs. I think if you have your little apartment and you want to do drugs in your apartment, do drugs. But if you're smoking fentanyl on the train around children, that's not a freedom issue.
It's almost like a civil rights issue for the people on the train. You know, they don't want to inhale fentanyl. So we're sort of living in this... in this age where, yeah, we are feeling the effects of closing down those mental institutions. I don't really understand the path how we get back to... creating those and sort of changing the laws and being able to mandate some people to these facilities. Do you think this is the...
¶ Politics, Public Will, and Future
action over reaction over reaction over reaction sequence playing itself out. Like you talked about, there would have been a time when people were very harsh on these things. uh very harsh on people with mental illness you know like the stuff that used to happen in mental assignments like horrific yeah so the reaction is the overreaction is we've got to have more freedom
Right. So then you end up with a position that we've ended up in. And hopefully there is a move to, A, recriminalize crime. I mean, that's just insane. The fact that you can commit crimes, you can steal things without being punished for it. And hopefully we can now move back to a kind of more sensible middle position where it's like crimes are crimes, but we aren't going to throw you in an institution and throw away the key.
Do you think that's likely or are you seeing something else? All right. Bit of an unexpected one for you, but this actually got my attention. The other day, I was scrolling online and came across this video from none other than Chuck Norris. Yes, that Chuck Norris. He's in his 80s now, and according to him, he still feels like he's in his 50s. And honestly, watching it...
I could believe it. The video goes through three specific foods he says you should avoid like the plague, and a few other things he's doing to keep in shape and stay sharp. I was skeptical at first. The stuff he suggests is genuinely simple and actually makes a lot of sense. If you're interested in health, energy, or just curious what Chuck Norris swears by at 80+, this is worth your time.
watch the video now at chuckdefense.com slash trigger that's chuckdefense.com slash trigger and we put the link in the description below to make it easy Well, that's definitely the way we need to go. Now, is it likely? I'm not sure. We're already sort of seeing the overreaction. I mean, even in California, you know, 70 percent of people voted for Prop 36, which Governor Newsom did not endorse and Kamala Harris did not endorse.
It turned into a 70-30 issue in the most liberal state in America. And what was the proposition? Proposition 36 was essentially the recriminalization of crime. I mean, especially retail theft. Now we're... So it's like... The people want it. I mean, the people voted, I think, 65% in San Francisco to tie welfare benefits to drug testing. In San Francisco, the most liberal city in the world.
The people overwhelmingly voted for tying a negative drug test in order to receive your welfare. We're seeing the overreaction, but we're not seeing the politicians really reacting. to the will of the people. And, you know, it's already bit a lot of them in the ass. I don't really know what's going to happen, but we're also seeing, you know, like in places like...
San Francisco, they voted out the DA. They voted in more of a moderate DA. And then we're running into more roadblocks where we see activist judges just not charging people. So we got the DA. But now we're like, okay, now we have to get the judges. When are the judges up for re-election? Now we have to wait another two years. Will people just eventually overreact and say, okay, we're just going to elect Hitler or something? You know, like, are we just going to elect the guy that's going to...
be the most extreme because we're not getting anywhere with these little moderate steps. So it would really benefit everybody if politicians started listening to the will of the people. Jared, this is a...
¶ Societal Issues and Loss of Hope
how can I put it a provocative question, but I think it's one that needs asking. When I look, and I love America, but when I come here, I'm always shocked and horrified and depressed by what I see when it comes to the homelessness. Is that just a symptom of a society that's sick in some way? Yeah, we got some major problems. I love America. I love this country. My family came here from Ukraine. You know, that's where they came from and they built a beautiful life. My great grandparents.
My father, with high school education, was able to make a very good living as a blue-collar union worker and owned a house by the time he was 30 and was able to support a family, although he was a crackhead and a heroin addict. My dad, as a heroin and a crack addict, was able to own a house, whereas I can barely rent an apartment. So we're seeing a loss of hope. My generation, I think, is...
looking at the future grimly. We don't see a lot of opportunity out of this. I think there is just a loss of hope. My generation went to college in droves and came out with really... not a lot of opportunities and i'm not saying let's make fake opportunities for them you know but it's like we were sort of sold a lie about that's our fault you know we all got liberal arts degrees and we were basically worthless
So there's just a general loss of hope. And the leaders, I mean, they're like, I can't name one leader that's like, gives me any sort of hope, you know? And that's a real issue because it doesn't matter how bad things get. If you've got hope, you're probably going to be okay. The moment the real darkness sets in is when you see no hope. There is no light. That's when you lead to despair and despair.
leads you to do some very, very dark things in dark places. Yeah, we need to create opportunity. I mean, the reason why I was able to, you know, get off the streets and stay sober was because I saw... some kind of path to self-sufficiency and self-esteem with the carpentry stuff. And I was building America. I was building things and contributing to society.
We need to figure out how to provide that to a larger pool of people. Not everyone can be as lucky as me and wake up missing body parts and get shook and awake from this nightmare. A lot of people are just going to wake up, or they're not going to wake up. They're just going to die. yeah and you know you said you know the about liberal arts degrees
I really have a lot of empathy for people of your generation and our generation. Look, I did a liberal arts degree and I was told that that was a thing to do and you need to go to university. You're 18 years old. What do you know about life? All your life you're told by your parents what to do. do how to do it when to do it or your guardians and your teachers so why wouldn't you follow them at that point why would you choose to reject them
Yeah, listen, my dad didn't go to college. He was making $51 an hour as a carpenter in 1998.
he wouldn't let me touch his tools. He was like, you can't go down this horrible path of making $51 an hour. You have to go to college where you'll make $30 an hour in 30 years. He didn't know that. He just assumed that, well, if I make $51... people at college must make 500 an hour yeah you know he but he was uneducated he just didn't he didn't know you know it's just a very funny situation well listen brother it's been great having you on and um
It sounds weird, but I'm really proud of you, man. Thank you. It's so great to see you well. And after that kind of journey and you spreading your message, I think is really important because one of the things that really worries me, you know. And I think it's partly because of the way America is structurally is you guys don't walk a lot. Yeah. You drive. And so all the people who have money.
All the people who have power, all the people who have influence, those DAs and judges and politicians and whatever, they can just drive past the shit and they don't see it. But for us, when we walk around in America... Our episode with Joe Rogan will be out by the time this comes out. We talked about this as like just walking down the streets in DC and fully mentally ill, drug-addicted people are just there making their own lives hell.
and everyone else's life's hell and all of that's going on but i think it's very easy especially in this country just for that reason alone for people not to see it and not to talk about it and you've been there and you and and You know, when someone says we need to recriminalize crime, everyone goes, yeah, yeah, yeah. But when you're talking about it, I think it lands in a different way.
So I'm really excited about the fact that you are now getting your voice out there and spreading your thoughts on this because it's really, really important. So thanks. I hope everybody gets Crooked Smile and reads it. And I hope people who have influence hear that message. It's very important.
Well, thank you so much. It's been an honor, and I just really appreciate this opportunity. And the final question we end every interview with is, what's the one thing we're not talking about that we really should be? Before Jared answers the final question, at the end of the interview, make sure you click the link in the description. Go to our sub stack where you will see this.
Do you think California and other places like it are just too soft, allowing homelessness by not scraping tents etc. away and jailing people for small crimes? Is social media kind of a drug that the young minds get hooked on? Clickbait and outrage clips are a continuous dopamine hit. I mean, people are talking about this a little bit, but I think it needs to be taken a lot more serious.
the labor market over the next five years uh it just seems like i've been playing around with some ai stuff and like i just really think we need to actually formulate a real plan i mean i know people talk about ubi but i think you know there is a situation where
We just need to prepare for the worst. What are we going to do? What does society look like if 50% of people are out of work and 50% aren't? Where does this go? I basically just hear people mumbling about UBI. I don't know if that's the solution. I don't know what we do.
¶ UBI, Purpose, and Addiction
do. But it seems to be something that I keep obsessing about as I sort of figure out what I'm going to do with my life. Well, let me ask you a question on that since you bring up UBI, universal basic income, which is the idea that as automation and AI and robots take over.
There's not going to be that many jobs. There's going to be a lot of wealth created by AI and robots and whatever. So what we need to do is redistribute it and give it to people as a form of like a monthly paycheck for not actually for work and just, you know, we've got loads of money. Let's give it to people.
And I always wonder about that because when you tell your story, I'm not hearing I got clean and straight and decided to focus on my life and make my life better when someone gave me money. You... got that clarity when, A, you had time to be away from that shit, when you couldn't get drugs, and B, when you had something in your life that gave you purpose and meaning. Yeah. Which I think is so important to people. So I guess...
What I'm wondering is, when you were living on Skid Row, if someone came in and gave you $1,000 a month, wouldn't you just stay on Skid Row forever taking those drugs? Yeah, this is like... a giant thing that people talk about like what if we just give them money uh first of all i got money i got food stamps and i got general relief i got about 550 a month i spent it within three days
two or three days. And then people ask, well, what if we gave them housing? I got housing while I was on Skid Row. I got kicked out of housing twice for getting blood everywhere and causing a ruckus.
The housing did not help me get off drugs, and a lot of people would get housing and actually sell it. Now, that means rent it out to a pimp or rent it out to their drug dealer. You will take anything given to you and try to convert it into a way to get drugs if you are... you know terminally addicted to drugs so um
you know but but giving people ubi in general you know it could go either way it could give people enough time to actually find that passion and that purpose in life or if you're already sort of prone to doing drugs and things like that it could create a crisis i'm not sure we're gonna have to
i guess we'll see how that plays out well i just think what's true of what you're saying as an addict is also true of all human beings but when you don't have meaning and you don't have purpose having more money just gives you more leverage to do things that are bad for you
Yes. Yeah. So it's like, do we incentivize people? Do we open up like art studios everywhere and, you know, axe throwing and, you know, make a clay pot over, you know, like, do we open up all these arts and crafts stuff so people can... get started with hobbies i mean we're going to have to really try to because people a lot of people will take the path of least resistance just like drug addicts and they will lock into netflix and
that could become a very dark future. The reason I'm honing in on this is that Francis and I, we both have addictive personalities in different ways, right? For me, work and having a job and then family, that's kind of where I channel that energy. But if you create a world in which I don't need to go to work and no one around me goes to work, I am not sure I come out of that situation a better person. I really am not.
Well, I'm not that good at anything, so I don't know what kind of hobby I'd take up. I mean, I'm not like exceptionally good at drawing or, you know, playing basketball or anything. I don't know where I, I mean, I'd figure something out, but a lot of people, yeah, I don't know if I think it would, could be detrimental.
You know, particularly a lot of people, and understandably so, find a great deal of meaning, and men in particular, of having a family, doing a job that actually they don't really like. You know, it's a grind, it's a bit miserable, but they get a hell of a lot of pride, and deservedly so, in putting food on the table for their family. And you take that away from them, then you take away pride and self-respect.
And men in particular, and I'm saying this from my own experience, I wouldn't cope very well with that, if at all. I would go down a very, very dark path.
Yeah, I totally agree. I mean, we're seeing it. I mean, you can go to San Francisco. There's not a lot of smiles. I mean, there's a lot of people that can make just enough to barely survive. There's no chance of like, you know, having a wife that... doesn't have to work or being able to afford a kid i mean no there of course are people like that but the majority you know are people that you know are my age that like couldn't even dream of having a family not that
you know what are we going to do about that i don't know yeah yeah brother like i said great to have you on appreciate your time uh head on over to substack where we ask jared your questions
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