@DallasAptGP As a 10 year Economic Development guy, I met people on X I did deals with. Also, economic developers, know where the pots of gold. Go in as their partner, help solve their problems and they will lead you to it.
HOUSING AFFORDABILITY AND THE AMERICAN DREAM
For generations, the American Dream was simple and deeply human: the ability to have a home.
A place to build a family. A place to celebrate holidays. A place to feel safe, rooted, and proud.
Today, that dream is slipping further out of reach.
Many households now require two working parents just to stay afloat. Costs keep rising. Saving for a down payment is harder. Qualifying for a mortgage is more complicated. For too many Americans, owning a first home no longer feels like a milestone—it feels like a stretch.
We’ve lived through both extremes. In the early 2000s, getting a mortgage became too easy. A system meant to be built on trust and transparency fractured. When it broke, standards tightened, hurdles rose, and the possibility of homeownership moved further away for the people who need it most.
If there is one issue this country should focus on, it is this.
I don’t believe government should run private business. But I do believe in its role as a builder of infrastructure and a creator of smart incentives—ones that empower the private sector to make homeownership attainable again.
The obstacles are real and interconnected.
Land is expensive. Materials cost more. Skilled trade labor is harder to find.
Somewhere along the way, we lost focus on the workers who build things, fix things, and make everything come together. These jobs aren’t secondary. They are foundational. If we want affordable housing, we must once again value the hands that build it.
This problem won’t be solved with exotic financing or financial engineering. It has to be solved from the ground up—from land and materials to labor, infrastructure, and access to opportunity.
In many city centers, land has simply become too expensive. So the answer can’t be to keep building higher and hoping it works. We need to think differently—building outside city centers and extending economic hubs through transportation, reasonable commutes, and new places to work and live.
Technology is reshaping where jobs exist. Data centers and AI infrastructure are being built in remote locations, often far from traditional labor pools. That creates a challenge—but also an opportunity. If we extend opportunity instead of compressing it, we can unlock affordable land, create jobs, and make homeownership viable again.
This isn’t about artificially driving wages higher. Wages follow the free market. This is about financial literacy and clarity—helping people understand the true profit and loss statement of their home.
What can you afford? What should you save? What fits your income and your life?
Owning a home shouldn’t feel like gambling. It should feel like planning.
I’ve decided to make this a personal mission.
I can’t solve this problem alone, but that’s not a reason to wait. I intend to use my platform, my voice, my resources, and my businesses to help rebuild a system where homeownership is once again within reach.
The first home matters. The first night matters. The pride matters. The accomplishment matters—no matter the size, cost, or location.
Homeownership remains one of the most reliable ways to create and pass on generational wealth. Markets rise and fall, but rarely does someone lose everything by investing in their first home.
As a society, it’s time to refocus—away from the belief that everything must be bigger, shinier, and more extravagant, and back to what matters most.
A modest home. A yard worth mowing. A grill in the backyard. Neighbors you know. A place to call your own.
I’m committed to this mission because it’s hard. That means surrounding myself with people smarter and more experienced than I am, and staying focused on solving one of the biggest challenges facing our country.
Find the best talent. Solve the biggest problem. Leave something better behind.
The American Dream is still alive—but it needs rebuilding.
And I intend to help bring this part of it back within reach.