Abundance, the Everything Bagel, and Why Salinas Can’t Build Anything (But Blame Everyone Else)

In their new book Abundance: How We Build a Better Future, Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson make a sharp and timely argument: America doesn’t have a resource problem—we have a building problem. And nowhere is this more obvious than right here in Salinas, where the Rent Stabilization Ordinance (SRSO) is a perfect example of how good intentions, weaponized bureaucracy, and decades of anti-growth sentiment turned housing policy into a flaming-hot Everything Bagel of contradictions.
Let me explain.
The Everything Bagel of Policy Paralysis
Klein uses the metaphor of the “Everything Bagel” to describe what happens when you try to make a system that pleases everyone. You don’t just get salt or sesame—you get garlic, poppy seeds, onions, flax, chia, and whatever else the latest interest group insists you add. In theory, it’s comprehensive. In practice, it’s a mess. And worse, it prevents the very thing it's supposed to support: action.
That’s Salinas housing policy in a nutshell (or maybe a poppy seed).
From Ambition to Inertia
The Salinas Rent Stabilization Ordinance didn’t spring up overnight—it’s the product of years of policy decisions made by the same people who now shame landlords and investors for the mess they helped create. We downzoned. We layered in CEQA delays. We created permit bottlenecks. We turned “public input” into a bureaucratic moat. And then—when none of that produced more housing—we blamed the people still willing to build or maintain rental units.
It’s like making a sandwich with 14 spreads and then wondering why no one wants to take a bite.
The Problem Isn’t Scarcity—It’s Permission
Klein and Thompson argue that we live in an age of artificial scarcity, where we have the capital, technology, and talent to solve major problems—if we could just give ourselves permission to build. But instead, we’ve created a culture of scarcity by design. We fear change, so we regulate it to death. We want affordability, but we sue every housing project. We want green energy but protest every windmill. We want more rentals, but punish landlords.
And when rents go up? We blame the last guy standing.
Salinas: Where Common Sense Is Hiding in Plain Sight
Here’s the kicker: the solution is so simple, if it were a snake, it would’ve bitten us. We need to build more housing. That means supporting owners and investors, streamlining permitting, and ditching the Everything Bagel approach that tries to satisfy every demand group while building nothing for anyone.
Instead of treating landlords like villains, we need to bring them to the table. Instead of creating ever-thicker ordinances, we need to make it easier to build and rent safe, decent housing. And instead of reacting to the crisis with another regulatory band-aid, we should ask: what policies actually lead to abundance?
Build More. Shame Less. That’s Abundance.
The bottom line? Abundance is a call to build—a reminder that progress is possible, but only if we stop standing in our own way. Salinas doesn’t need more symbolic policy wins. It needs homes, and the people willing to create them.
So let’s put down the Everything Bagel and pick up a blueprint.
https://www.36northpm.com/abundance-the-everything-bagel-and-why-salinas-cant-build-anything-but-blame-everyone-else/
Could "everything-bagel liberalism" be making the housing crisis worse? (PM+)
Podcast Episode · Planet Money · 2025-05-19 · Bonus · Planet Money+ Only · 17m
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