The Good System Podcast

Ian DeBay

Our current system is crumbling down. In The Good System I am, Ian DeBay, searching for a way to change the system. We create a system together, that is good for everyone and the planet. The topics are sustainability, education, politics, infrastructure and more.

  1. 06/24/2025

    Universal Language Communication: Building Equitable Global Dialogue

    So there I was, sitting in a Turkish barbershop in Vienna, conducting an invisible orchestra with my hands while trying to explain how I wanted my hair cut. Twenty minutes later, I walked out looking like I'd lost a fight with a lawnmower – and that's when it hit me: we're approaching this whole universal language communication thing completely backwards. Here I am, a non-native English speaker hosting a podcast about building a better world... in English. The irony is so thick you could cut it with a linguistic knife, but it perfectly illustrates the trap we're all stuck in. This episode dives deep into why English became the global lingua franca (spoiler: it wasn't because of superior grammar), how universal language communication could actually work through constructed international auxiliary languages, and why the future might need its own tongue. We're talking about power, oppression, connection, and the beautiful chaos of linguistic diversity – because if a simple haircut can turn into a communication disaster in multicultural Vienna, imagine what's happening in boardrooms, hospitals, and diplomatic meetings around the world. The goal isn't to replace languages but to create a universal second language that belongs to no one and everyone, designed for equity rather than empire. Key Points: English dominance isn't neutral – it comes with heavy colonial baggage and gives native speakers an unearned advantage in international settings, affecting everything from job interviews to diplomatic negotiations Constructed languages like Esperanto offer a solution – imagine a universal second language designed for clarity and equity, supplementing (not replacing) local languages while preserving beautiful linguistic diversity Universal language communication could transform global cooperation – from medical emergencies to climate negotiations, having a language designed for understanding rather than historical conquest could make us better at solving planetary challenges This is the article the episode is based on: https://iandebay.com/the-good-system/why-we-need-a-universal-language/ These are my YouTube channels: https://www.youtube.com/@Ian_DeBay https://www.youtube.com/@Ian_Debay_Shorts https://www.youtube.com/@Ian_DeBay_Podcast This is the link to my newsletter: https://iandebay.substack.com Chapters (00:00:00) - The Future of Language Is in Your Hair(00:03:59) - The Problem With English(00:08:39) - A Universal Language(00:17:48) - A Universal Language(00:22:27) - A Universal Language for the Future

    26 min
  2. 06/17/2025

    Confessions of a Walking Dad - Why Walkable Cities Are the Key to Urban Happiness

    Picture this: You're stuck behind a Karen in an SUV honking at a crosswalk because people are actually walking across the street. Meanwhile, the solution to our city nightmares isn't flying cars or hyperloops—it's something so ridiculously simple we've convinced ourselves it's impossible. In this episode, I confess my double life as "The Walking Dad" and reveal how walking—this thing humans have been doing for literally millions of years—has become an act of rebellion. From discovering hidden parks that are invisible from car level to nearly getting my son run down on a crosswalk by a reversing SUV, I share the personal stories that made me realize walkable cities aren't just better for our health and environment—they're the secret weapon for building communities that actually work. But here's the plot twist: Walking was murdered, and it wasn't an accident. We've created urban environments so hostile to human beings that parents drive their kids to school not because they're lazy, but because they're genuinely afraid their children might die on infrastructure supposedly designed for them. From construction sites that prioritize car traffic over children's safety to the linguistic programming that makes us call them "sidewalks" (as if pedestrians are just sidekicks), I dive into the economic conspiracy that killed walking and why the 15-minute city concept is actually punk rock transportation. This isn't utopian fantasy—it's remembering how successful cities worked for thousands of years before we decided to organize human settlements around the convenience of automobiles. Key Points: • Walking is economic dynamite we're ignoring - Pedestrians are shopping ninjas who stop, browse, and buy, while drivers zip past businesses at 50km/h contributing zero dollars to local economies except when desperately searching for parking • The 15-minute city isn't a conspiracy, it's how cities worked for millennia - Everything you need for daily life accessible within a 15-minute walk isn't some New World Order plot—it's literally how human settlements functioned before we decided metal boxes were more important than people • Making walking cool again requires cultural hacking - We need walking influencers, Instagram-worthy urban exploration, and apps that gamify discovery instead of just guilt-tripping you about step counts, because cycling has cool gear while walking just has comfortable shoes Links: This is the article the episode is based on: https://iandebay.com/the-good-system/why-walkable-cities-are-my-secret-obsession/ These are my YouTube channels: https://www.youtube.com/@Ian_DeBay https://www.youtube.com/@Ian_Debay_Shorts https://www.youtube.com/@Ian_DeBay_Podcast This is the link to my newsletter: https://iandebay.substack.com Chapters (00:00:00) - The Simple Solution to Our City Nightmares(00:01:32) - I Am The Walking Dad(00:05:23) - The secret park that car drivers can't see(00:10:39) - The 15-Minute City(00:16:44) - Walking for People, Not Cars(00:24:19) - The Good System: Episode 20

    26 min
  3. 06/10/2025

    AI Job Displacement: How the Future of Work Will Reshape Society (And Why We're Not Ready)

    Picture this: it's 2035, you wake up at noon with literally nothing to do because your AI assistant has organized your life, your robot cleaned your house, and your job doesn't exist anymore. Oh, and your bank account is empty because while machines took over your work, nobody figured out how you're supposed to survive. Welcome to the AI revolution we're building right now, whether we want to or not. This isn't another AI panic podcast about robot overlords - this is about the much weirder and more immediate reality of how artificial intelligence is about to completely reshape society as we know it. We're standing at the edge of the biggest transformation humanity has ever seen, and we're sleepwalking into it like we're heading to brunch on a Sunday morning. While AI companies paint beautiful pictures of a future where you'll have time to pursue pottery and write novels, they conveniently skip over the tiny logistical issue of our entire economic system collapsing. When 40-70% of jobs disappear over just a few years, where exactly will governments get tax revenue? And why are the people making these decisions - the ones who'll own the robots - sitting in front row seats at inaugurations while the rest of us figure out how to survive the biggest wealth transfer in human history? Key Points Discussed: • AI job displacement timeline - We're looking at 40-70% of jobs disappearing over years, not decades, creating an unprecedented economic disruption • The tax revenue crisis - Our entire system depends on people working and paying taxes; AI job displacement threatens the foundation of how we fund society • Digital feudalism emergence - A handful of tech companies are building the infrastructure to replace human labor, creating a new aristocracy that owns algorithms instead of land • Environmental impact reality check - While AI uses massive energy and water resources, the impact is manageable compared to livestock farming and could be solved with better renewable energy and heat recycling • AI warfare concerns - Automated weapons and AI-powered conflicts remove human barriers to starting wars, potentially making conflicts more frequent and devastating • Thomas Piketty's thesis on steroids - Just like historical aristocrats, those who own capital (now algorithms and robots) see wealth grow exponentially faster than workers can achieve • Marx's relevance in the AI age - Marx's vision of workers benefiting from their labor could actually be achievable with AI doing the dangerous, boring work • Universal Basic Income necessity - With traditional work disappearing, UBI becomes essential infrastructure, not radical socialism • The power concentration problem - Major AI companies had front row seats at political events while orchestrating the transfer of economic power • Hope for better systems - This future isn't inevitable; we can build public AI, redesign tax systems, and create technology that serves humanity instead of replacing it Links and Resources: This is the article the episode is based on: https://iandebay.com/the-good-system/how-ai-will-reshape-society-the-future-were-building-right-now/ Thomas Piketty Capital & Ideology as Graphic Novel ✱Affiliate Link Thomas Piketty Capital in the 21st Century ✱Affiliate Link Karl Marx The Communist Manifesto: A Graphic Nove... Chapters (00:00:00) - We're Building a Good Future With Artificial Intelligence(00:02:02) - The Future of Work Is Unraveling(00:10:01) - AI's Rise to Digital feudalism(00:14:54) - How AI Is Burning Through Our Planet(00:19:31) - What Happens If All Wars Are Won by Robots?

    27 min
  4. 05/27/2025

    Missing: Third Places and Public Spaces

    Episode Summary I tried meeting a friend downtown and realized there's literally nowhere to go without spending money. Every café wanted 7 euros for apple juice, park benches were designed to torture your spine, and the library was closed because "no one wants to work anymore." Welcome to late-stage capitalism's war on third places! In this episode, I break down how we've systematically eliminated the spaces where people can gather, connect, and exist without opening their wallets. Third places aren't your home or workplace – they're the coffee shops, parks, libraries, and community spaces that make society actually function. I explore why third places are disappearing (spoiler: it's always about profit), how this isolation is literally killing us, and what we can do to fight back. From Barcelona's car-free superblocks to Vienna's lingering coffee culture, I share examples of places getting it right. Because honestly, shouldn't we be able to exist in public without justifying it through consumption? Key Points • Third places are dying because our economic system treats every space as wasted potential unless it's generating profit – parks become parking lots, community spaces become luxury condos • Social isolation from losing third places literally kills people: elderly adults without community connection face health impacts equivalent to smoking 15 cigarettes a day • We've created a world where teenagers have nowhere to exist – malls kick them out, cafés demand constant consumption, and hanging out on streets attracts police attention • Libraries are our last true public third places, serving as community centers, job resources, and safe spaces while constantly fighting budget cuts and reduced hours • Cities like Barcelona prove another way is possible with car-free "superblocks" that transform streets into community living rooms where kids play and neighbors connect Related Links This episode is based on this article: https://iandebay.com/the-good-system/third-places-crucial-for-society/ Referenced episode: https://iandebay.com/podcast/why-cars-are-bad/ Ian's YouTube Channels: https://www.youtube.com/@Ian_DeBay https://www.youtube.com/@Ian_Debay_Shorts https://www.youtube.com/@Ian_DeBay_Podcast Subscribe to Ian's Newsletter: https://iandebay.substack.com Chapters (00:00:00) - Third Spots(00:02:25) - What are 3-Place's?(00:10:43) - Third-Place Problems(00:16:42) - Social isolation among older adults is comparable to smoking 15 cigarettes a day(00:23:18) - How to Reclaim Third Places(00:28:41) - The Fight for Third Places(00:32:10) - The Good System: A Third Place

    34 min
  5. 05/20/2025

    The Individual Carbon Footprint Myth: Why Your Sustainable Lifestyle Isn't Saving the Planet

    In this brutally honest episode, Ian DeBay exposes the greatest environmental misdirection of our time: your individual carbon footprint. Spoiler alert: your reusable bamboo straw isn't saving the polar bears. Episode Summary You've gone plastic-free, switched to cold showers, and calculated the carbon footprint of every breath you take. Congratulations on your perfectly sustainable lifestyle! Too bad, it's completely f***ing pointless. The climate is still changing. In this eye-opening episode, Ian reveals how the concept of a "personal carbon footprint" was actually created by BP (yes, the oil company) as a brilliant marketing strategy to shift responsibility from corporations to individuals. It's like if cigarette companies created lung cancer awareness campaigns focused exclusively on not standing near smokers rather than, you know, not producing cigarettes. What You'll Learn Why your meticulously calculated carbon footprint doesn't matter in the grand scheme of climate change How Ian's own bathroom sustainability journey led to both victories (soap bars!) and failures (goodbye, bamboo toothbrush) Why driving 45 minutes to buy local organic vegetables might actually be worse for the environment than walking to your corner store for imported produce How the construction, fossil fuel, and meat industries are the real drivers of climate change—and they're deeply embedded in our economic and political systems Why shame doesn't inspire change and how to have meaningful conversations about systemic issues instead Forget Your Individual Carbon Footprint—Do This Instead Living sustainably isn't bad—being vegan is healthier, walking is good for you, and using less energy saves money. But don't fool yourself into thinking your reusable water bottle will stop climate change. It won't—not as long as the system remains unchanged. So what should you do? Continue living sustainably if it makes you happy and aligns with your values (just don't let it distract you from the bigger picture) Be wary of expensive "sustainable" products—the best thing for the environment is usually to use what you already have Get political: vote, engage in local politics, join community groups, and support policy changes that regulate industries and transform infrastructure Remember: While one person changing their lifestyle barely registers on the global carbon scale, millions of people demanding systemic change can move mountains—like climate change moves glaciers. Final Thought Your individual carbon footprint is a concept created by BP. The system needs to change, not just you. Links & Resources Read the blog article this episode is based on Subscribe to Ian's Monthly Review Watch Ian on YouTube Podcast episode about the deodorant industry scam (German) Chapters (00:00:00) - Congratulations, You're A Realist!(00:00:43) - Your Carbon Footprint(00:07:28) - How To Stop Using Plastic To Clean Your Bathroom(00:14:52) - Vegetarian Diets and Their Climate Impact(00:21:22) - How to Live a More Sustainable Life(00:28:33) - How to Talk About Sustainability Without Losing Your Mind(00:31:22) - The Good System: Question Everything, Change the System

    33 min

About

Our current system is crumbling down. In The Good System I am, Ian DeBay, searching for a way to change the system. We create a system together, that is good for everyone and the planet. The topics are sustainability, education, politics, infrastructure and more.