Editorโ€™s note: UNC professor Jonathan Weiler, an INDY Voices columnist, headed to the not-so-frozen tundra of Iowa this weekend to be the INDYโ€™s official Iowa Caucuses Correspondentโ„ข. His first dispatch comes from Boone, Iowa, about an hour outside of Des Moines, where heโ€™s hanging out with long-shot entrepreneur Andrew Yang and supporters.ย 

Andrew Yang is probably best known for having pledged that, as president, he would give every American $1,000 a month (sign me up!). And when his event kicked offย on Saturday in a meeting room adjacent to a Mexican restaurant, it was the first thing Yang brought up. Yang repeated throughout his 30โ€“40-minute talk that he was a โ€œnumbers guy.โ€ (Some of his supporters wore baseball caps with the word โ€œMATHโ€ on them.) Among the numbers Yang shared was that our private data is now worth more than oil. But, he asked, where is all that money going? Facebook, Amazon, Google and other big tech companies. In other words, Yang argued, we the people should be shareholders of the richest country ever, and that $1,000 a month is a dividend check for all the wealth weโ€™re generating for rich corporations.

But Yang doesnโ€™t see people as corporate bots. His campaign slogan is โ€œHumanity First.โ€ And he spoke eloquently about the mistake weโ€™re making in assessing peopleโ€™s value only by their economic worth. This left all sorts of basic human endeavors uncounted, economically speaking, and undervalued, including family members who take care of sick loved ones, volunteers in community organizations, artists, writers, and more.

Yang spent relatively little time attacking President Trump (though he did say he was the exact opposite of Trump since he is โ€œan Asian man who likes math.โ€) Instead, Yang said, our problems predate Trump, as job losses in manufacturing and retail have denuded small towns and denied people the opportunity to provide for their families. In turn, the U.S. has witnessed a surge in โ€œdiseases of despair,โ€ as many have written, including spiking suicide rates, growing mental illness, and declining life expectancy. Meanwhile, more Americans are saddled with credit card debts and student loan payments they cannot make. (Yang pledged to forgive a โ€œsignificantโ€ chunk of the $1.6 trillion of accumulated student loan debt).

The somewhat unusual venue was packed, with 200 or more people sitting or standing shoulder-to-shoulder in tight quarters. Yang himself was both a bit stiff and funny. He repeatedly said he wasnโ€™t really a politician and, apart from the fact that heโ€™s never held electedย office, his style reflected his lack of political polish. He joked with the crowd quite a bit, was charmingly self-effacing, and took some questions from the audience in a comfortable back and forth.

As is obligatory for all candidates, Yang asserted confidently that he would win Monday night, that he was the candidate Trump most feared, and that he would be president a year from now. That all seems unlikely, but Yang has clearly struck a chord with some people, as a younger, less intense, and more techie version of Bernie Sandersโ€”a kind of populist ready to rewrite the rules of American capitalism to create a fairer, more humane society.


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