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In this episode, we examine the illogic behind TSA security rules and how performative regulation often substitutes for real safety, before turning to the economics of ticket scalping and why attempts to suppress secondary markets routinely backfire. We discuss proposals to cap credit card interest rates, including Donald Trump’s suggested limit, and explore how price controls distort lending, restrict access to credit, and harm the very consumers they are meant to protect. The conversation connects these issues to broader misunderstandings about markets, incentives, and regulation, highlighting how political solutions driven by optics rather than economics tend to produce higher costs, reduced choice, and unintended consequences across everyday life.
00:00 Introduction and Overview
00:26 The Illogic of TSA Rules and Security Theater
03:19 What TSA Bans (and Allows) Makes No Sense
05:47 Why TSA Rules Persist Long After the Threat Is Gone
07:02 Missed Episode Fallout and “Are You Still Alive?”
09:02 Trouble Inside the Trump Administration
12:36 Foolishness of the Week: NFL Ticket Resale Crackdown
13:15 Are Season Tickets Really “Yours”?
15:29 Why Ticket Scalping Actually Adds Value
17:21 Risk, Resale, and the Free Market for Tickets
19:05 What Secondary Markets Reveal About True Prices
21:31 Trump’s Proposal to Cap Credit Card Interest Rates
22:33 Does the President Even Have the Authority?
25:28 What a 10% Cap Would Do to the Credit Card Market
28:13 Credit Cards as Unsecured Loans and Risk Sharing
29:30 Why Banks Can’t Lend at 10% to Everyone
31:59 Trump, Elizabeth Warren, and Left-Wing Economic Policy
33:32 Why People Feel Economic Pain Despite “Good” Data
34:45 COVID Policy, Inflation, and the Middle-Class Squeeze
37:22 Who Really Pays for Artificially Cheap Credit
38:46 Life Without Credit Cards and Financial Shock Absorbers
39:53 Saving, Self-Insurance, and Economic Reality
41:58 Government Intervention and Cascading Market Failures
42:48 Why a Credit Card Cap Would Make Things Worse
45:02 Final Thoughts and Closing Reflections
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By CiVL4.8
361361 ratings
In this episode, we examine the illogic behind TSA security rules and how performative regulation often substitutes for real safety, before turning to the economics of ticket scalping and why attempts to suppress secondary markets routinely backfire. We discuss proposals to cap credit card interest rates, including Donald Trump’s suggested limit, and explore how price controls distort lending, restrict access to credit, and harm the very consumers they are meant to protect. The conversation connects these issues to broader misunderstandings about markets, incentives, and regulation, highlighting how political solutions driven by optics rather than economics tend to produce higher costs, reduced choice, and unintended consequences across everyday life.
00:00 Introduction and Overview
00:26 The Illogic of TSA Rules and Security Theater
03:19 What TSA Bans (and Allows) Makes No Sense
05:47 Why TSA Rules Persist Long After the Threat Is Gone
07:02 Missed Episode Fallout and “Are You Still Alive?”
09:02 Trouble Inside the Trump Administration
12:36 Foolishness of the Week: NFL Ticket Resale Crackdown
13:15 Are Season Tickets Really “Yours”?
15:29 Why Ticket Scalping Actually Adds Value
17:21 Risk, Resale, and the Free Market for Tickets
19:05 What Secondary Markets Reveal About True Prices
21:31 Trump’s Proposal to Cap Credit Card Interest Rates
22:33 Does the President Even Have the Authority?
25:28 What a 10% Cap Would Do to the Credit Card Market
28:13 Credit Cards as Unsecured Loans and Risk Sharing
29:30 Why Banks Can’t Lend at 10% to Everyone
31:59 Trump, Elizabeth Warren, and Left-Wing Economic Policy
33:32 Why People Feel Economic Pain Despite “Good” Data
34:45 COVID Policy, Inflation, and the Middle-Class Squeeze
37:22 Who Really Pays for Artificially Cheap Credit
38:46 Life Without Credit Cards and Financial Shock Absorbers
39:53 Saving, Self-Insurance, and Economic Reality
41:58 Government Intervention and Cascading Market Failures
42:48 Why a Credit Card Cap Would Make Things Worse
45:02 Final Thoughts and Closing Reflections
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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