The Housing Hunger Games
The Intercept Briefing
The Intercept
4.7 • 6.4K Ratings
🗓️ 29 August 2025
⏱️ 43 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Homeless sweeps have become the go-to, bipartisan performance of “doing something” about the U.S. housing crisis — a spectacle embraced by Democrats and Republicans, city halls, and the White House alike. But sweeps are not a solution. They’re a way to make homelessness less visible while the crisis deepens.
The roots stretch back decades. President Ronald Reagan’s Tax Reform Act of 1986 pulled the federal government out of building and maintaining public housing, paving the way for a fragmented patchwork scheme of vouchers and tax credits. The result is the system we live with today — one that does little to stem the tide.
Last year, more than 700,000 people were officially counted as homeless, the highest number ever recorded. Nearly 150,000 of them were children. And that number leaves out the “hidden homeless”: families doubling up in cramped apartments or bouncing between motels.
“What causes homelessness, in the 1980s as now, is a lack of access to housing that poor and working-class people can afford,” says Brian Goldstone, journalist and author of the new book “There Is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America.”
This week on The Intercept Briefing, Goldstone tells host Laura Flynn that the housing emergency is no accident; it’s the product of deliberate political choices: “It's an engineered abandonment of not thousands, not hundreds of thousands, but millions of families.”
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome to the Intercept Briefing. I'm Laura Flynn. |
| 0:07.0 | Living on a tight budget can feel like balancing on top of a metaphorical janga tower. |
| 0:13.0 | One wrong move and the whole thing collapses. |
| 0:17.0 | Maybe your hours are cut at work, or you lose your job, or your credit score is dinged. |
| 0:22.3 | Maybe an eviction notice lands on your door. |
| 0:25.3 | Suddenly, what once felt stable is gone. |
| 0:28.5 | When we think of homelessness in America, we often picture people living on the streets, maybe in tents or cars. |
| 0:35.5 | But it can come for many of us faster than one might imagine. |
| 0:39.9 | As journalist Brian Goldstone writes, |
| 0:42.3 | homelessness isn't a fixed state. |
| 0:44.8 | It's a quote, |
| 0:45.5 | point along a spectrum. |
| 0:47.8 | In a motel today, |
| 0:49.1 | on a couch tomorrow, |
| 0:50.4 | possibly in a tent a year from now. |
| 0:54.0 | Here's the thing. Homelessness in the U.S. is increasing. |
| 0:57.6 | Last year, more than 700,000 people were officially counted as homeless. |
| 1:03.0 | The highest number ever recorded. |
| 1:05.5 | Nearly 150,000 of them were children. |
| 1:08.6 | And those figures don't capture the hidden homeless, the families |
| 1:12.1 | doubling up in cramped apartments or living in motels. Meanwhile, housing costs are rising while |
| 1:18.0 | incomes, especially for low-wage workers, are not keeping pace. Nearly 10 million children live in |
... |
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