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The Chris Abraham Show
Chris Abraham
435 episodes
3 days ago
tl:dr: Just a 55-year-old cisgender white male mansplaining his own self-importance. But good. Full Summary: The musings of Chris Abraham as he aspires to know the world and himself while getting healthy, losing weight, becoming fit, and running his small business while living in South Arlington, Virginia. Walk with him a while and see what's up.
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All content for The Chris Abraham Show is the property of Chris Abraham and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
tl:dr: Just a 55-year-old cisgender white male mansplaining his own self-importance. But good. Full Summary: The musings of Chris Abraham as he aspires to know the world and himself while getting healthy, losing weight, becoming fit, and running his small business while living in South Arlington, Virginia. Walk with him a while and see what's up.
Show more...
Comedy
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Cities, Money, and the Great Escape
The Chris Abraham Show
6 minutes 51 seconds
2 weeks ago
Cities, Money, and the Great Escape

Imagine watching a pot of water with frogs in it. The city adds a little heat — higher taxes, new regulations, moral lectures — and waits to see what happens. At first, nothing. The frogs get used to it. Then one day the temperature crosses a line, and they jump. That’s how modern economies lose their wealth. Not with protests, not with revolutions — but with relocation.

In the past, money was trapped. Rockefeller couldn’t just move Standard Oil to Singapore. The state had leverage. That’s why we could run top tax rates near 90 percent in the 1950s — and still fund highways, NASA, and free public universities. But we deregulated, digitized, and globalized, and suddenly money turned into vapor. Now it flows wherever the vibe is better.

Today, every governor plays host instead of sheriff. They beg for headquarters, sports teams, rich residents. Remember Amazon HQ2? That wasn’t a competition — it was a collective confession. Cities have to woo wealth because they can’t hold it anymore. Modern taxation isn’t punishment; it’s marketing.

And it’s not just billionaires. It’s every dual-income family earning mid-six figures — the real tax base. They can move to Florida, Texas, or just twenty minutes north to Westchester. If you make them feel like villains, they’ll leave quietly, and when they do, you’ll lose the revenue that funds the compassion.

I want cities to care for people — I believe in that deeply. But compassion without arithmetic is just performance art. If we want social programs that last, we have to keep the contributors from leaving. Make prosperity feel safe, not shameful.

The stadiums, the Olympic bids, the waterfront makeovers — they’re not just vanity. They’re bait. The trick is pretending it’s about culture while it’s really about capital.

That’s the truth nobody likes to say out loud: in 2025, the rich don’t live in cities; cities live under them.

It’s not the 19th century anymore. The world of heavy money and civic loyalty is gone. What’s left is the great escape — quiet, legal, and constant — and the only cities that will survive are the ones smart enough to keep the frogs comfortable.

The Chris Abraham Show
tl:dr: Just a 55-year-old cisgender white male mansplaining his own self-importance. But good. Full Summary: The musings of Chris Abraham as he aspires to know the world and himself while getting healthy, losing weight, becoming fit, and running his small business while living in South Arlington, Virginia. Walk with him a while and see what's up.