A massive effort that started nearly a decade ago comes to fruition this week.
This is 26 USMNT Moments: Past to Present.
Ep. 23 - The United Bid 🎬 https://t.co/soVjiwLr9p
@nithyavraman There are an egregious number of tenants and unethical tenant lawyers that abuse tenant protection laws. Will there be an Office to prevent and police these abuses? This abuse has negative impacts on good tenants as high quality property owners flee City of LA due to this abuse
@LindseyPHorvath how about a bill whereby all county taxpayers would pay rent on behalf of tenants that are behind rather than forcing the property owner to absorb 100% of the delinquency? Similar concept to FDIC insurance where all citizens paying a bank loses a consumers money.
@SupJaniceHahn@HildaSolis Why doesn’t the county pay for the rent on behalf of these tenants? Why does the property owner have to bear 100% of the cost for that tenant rather the collective society as a whole? This is a significantly more equitable strategy.
@_LarryGross Have you considered creating new affordable housing and good jobs for working people as a profession? That’s real impact. Happy to chat with you about it.
@FreddieMac Terrific to see! Any update on making the approval process to build ADUs easier in properties with existing FM loans? This is a huge trend in the US to help alleviate the housing shortage and yet incredibly difficult and expensive with existing @FreddieMac loans!
What a failure of historic proportions by @RicardoLara4CA in allowing the CA insurance market to break down. So many homeowners with zero options and unable to qualify for FAIR plan. Lives ruined. What a disgrace.
@GustavoArellano “Rampant overdevelopment downtown.” Come on. Population growth has outstripped new development for 40+ years. The world needs more housing, not less. Do better.
ROG ON KLOPP LEAVING LIVERPOOL ✍️
❝The news is overwhelming. Partly because there were no hints of the manager standing down early. Two years remain on his contract, and the announcement totally blindsided us amidst the ambitious wonder of a quadruple chase, arriving after neither rumor nor leak. Secondly, Jürgen Klopp was more than a football manager, he was a leader, a transformational change agent, and a deep empath in a chaotic world where that has become all too rare a currency. What he has achieved at Anfield since arriving like a Teutonic Care Bear in 2015 has been nothing short of alchemy.
Back then, Liverpool was a club reeking of tradition, aspiration and haunted nearlies. Klopp transformed it with his singular brand of passion, faith, and bombast, unleashing that audacious, demanding collective pressing game which soon overwhelmed all-comers. Klopp’s Liverpool took the field with power, determination and exuberance—as if driven by their fans' very passion—as the manager demanded his players "must fight with the last drop of fuel in their machine,' and then rewarded them with a big, big hug.
To watch Liverpool was to feel alive. Champions League triumph in 2019 was followed by long-yearned-for Premier League glory in 2020. I know I am an Everton fan and meant to despise everything in red, but the small percentage of me that is still human could only marvel at the joy Liverpool fans were experiencing along the way, and the memories they made as they "conquered all of Europe." I was reminded of this on Wednesday night, when the Reds reached another Wembley final and their traveling fans raised a banner proclaiming, "Imagine Being Us." I stared at that statement for longer than I care to admit, before realizing that I honestly can't. That it does seem like under Klopp, Liverpool fans have journeyed to so many places both real and emotional, witnessed so many magical moments, and had so much bloody fun. Whatever you want to call the footballing style, "Gegenpressing," "Heavy Metal Football," or "Mentality Monsters," it has been humanly transcendent to watch Klopp forge that connective trinity: the unity built between team, fans, and himself on the sideline with his fist-bumps and ecstatic body jerks, always conducting the emotion.
Ultimately, The Hug was Klopp’s most most powerful tactic of all—and I hope one day, there is a statue of him delivering one outside of Anfield, like a giant German Elmo that fans can just slip into and take a selfie. Indeed, as someone who has been on the receiving end of a Klopp hug, I can confirm they are better than any drug Aaron Rodgers has dabbled in. The Klopp hug communicates belief, gratitude, and infinite love. Life Affirmation without words. A reflection of the truth of the man who has delivered it
What now? Klopp said this morning he hopes this news will be the ultimate motivator for his players. "Let's now really go for it. The outside world wants to use this decision, laugh about it, wants to disturb us. We are Liverpool, we went through harder things together. And you went through harder things before me. Let's make a strength of it. Let's squeeze everything out of this season and have another thing to smile about when we look back in the future." It is unknown if he will manage again. He said this morning, "If you ask me, 'Will you ever work as a manager again?' I would say now no. But I don't know obviously how that will feel because I never had the situation. What I know definitely—I will never, ever manage a different club in England than Liverpool." For their part, the club have said, even though they found out in November, they are yet to approach a replacement. While I hope they will give Roy Hodgson (my favorite ever Liverpool manager) an emotional return, or throw the bank to tempt that tactical maestro Stevie Gerrard back from Al-Ettifaq, expect former midfielder Xabi Alonso, who has propelled Bayer Leverkusen to the top of the Bundesliga, to be the subject of tabloid conjecture, and Liverpool fans' fever dreams.
A quick word to Liverpool fans reading this: I send you my love today. I can't even imagine the feeling of hope and happiness and glory this man has brought into your life, now singed by that sudden shocking sting of loss. Take strength from the memories you have made together though, because it has been a marvel to watch this bloke—a culture builder, a serial transformationist, a deeply authentic, empathetic human—do his thing. If anything, this announcement is a reminder that nothing is forever, and that we should not take a moment for granted. It is also fascinating that while every Liverpool fan I know has been agonizing about Mo Salah and his future—it is Jürgen that is the first to step off citing exhaustion. A reminder that the caregivers often pass on first, and a brutal truth that Rory Smith talked to me about when I saw him in December—it does not look that fun to be a Premier League Manager. It is a brutal job, lived out in the bright-lights of a global crucible with hysterical stakes, knee-jerk overreaction, and trial by tabloid, that grinds down all those that do it. I actually love that Klopp will sign off in a style befitting his unique personality, on his own terms, departing after a quadruple chasing-high.
There will be more, much more to come on this story. Liverpool’s innocuous Fourth Round FA Cup clash against Norwich City on Sunday morning now becomes must-watch theater for the emotional outpouring that will begin—setting the tone for the rest of a season that is going to feel like equal parts Crusade and McNulty’s Wake Scene from the Wire. Jürgen Klopp deserves that. Not just for the footballing memories he has given us, but the life truths he has dispensed along the way. I have interviewed him many times over the years, and honestly, learned so much about life from each conversation. I want to leave you one conversation I went back to this morning in the immediate wake of hearing the news. On the eve of lifting the coveted first title for Liverpool, I met with Klopp in his office, and asked him, a deeply religious man, if winning is, indeed, the most important thing. Jürgen did not have to wait a beat before telling me, "If life should be judged at the end, when we stand in front of the (heavenly) door, they ask, 'Did you win something or not?' That would be really strange. They should ask, 'Did you try everything to improve the place you have been, the house you have lived in, the mood, the love?' And I will say, 'Yes, I tried it everyday.'"
YNWA ❤️
@MattHaneySF All this does is hurt tenants with borderline credit that would’ve been approved with 2 months deposit but rejected otherwise. It’s a silly law that will hurt those in need.
@Kounkuey@LADOTofficial What an outrageous waste of time and money. Of all the transportation issues to focus on to truly bring equity at a massive scale, this is utterly meaningless.
@HugoForCD13 The amount of total new housing built will drop precipitously due to ULA. Your policies will make the housing crisis much worse. It’s shameful.
@HugoForCD13 Why is it reasonable to put the burden of housing entirely on the shoulders of property owners? How about increasing taxes for everyone in LA and funding housing vouchers? That’s an equitable solution.