All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E134: Ukraine counteroffensive, China tensions, COVID Patient Zero, RFK Jr reaction & more

Episode Date: June 24, 2023

(0:00) Bestie intros!: Bad conference lunches, hair fluffers, and focus groups (12:36) Zuck vs. Elon cage match (15:50) Ukraine / Russia updates: underwhelming counteroffensive, reported peace deal re...jection (33:25) Blinken's China visit, Biden's "dictator" gaffe, Taiwan's future (51:49) RFK Jr's Rogan appearance, big pharma's impact on media via ad spend, COVID origins (1:09:59) Secondary market for depressed startup shares heats up (1:16:36) Ford to receive $9.2B federal loan to build out three battery factories, industrial policy to on-shore US supply chain Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg https://twitter.com/altcap Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/06/biden-regime-quietly-drop-5-charges-against-sbf https://twitter.com/Dexerto/status/1671971832809791509 https://thefederalist.com/2023/06/20/heres-the-truth-about-ukraines-failing-counteroffensive-and-the-peace-that-could-have-been https://www.cnn.com/2023/06/22/politics/ukraine-counteroffensive-western-assessment/index.html https://twitter.com/aaronjmate/status/1670514363634176000 https://apnews.com/article/us-army-ukraine-russia-ammunition-war-75a9ca2e3be09578c65f1198ba5b72e5 https://apnews.com/article/ukraine-war-us-munitions-stockpiles-0d38850603f4264b7568d63d6e7e3d93 https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/17/politics/us-weapons-factories-ukraine-ammunition/index.html https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/04/08/ukraine-ammunition-shortage-shells-ration https://twitter.com/davidsacks/status/1671628570714845184 https://www.npr.org/2023/06/19/1183053024/profound-differences-remain-us-and-china-beijing-blinken https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/us-senior-officials-caught-guard-biden-calling-xi-dictator-rcna90398 https://twitter.com/chamath/status/1671806525029986304 https://www.wsj.com/articles/beijing-plans-a-new-training-facility-in-cuba-raising-prospect-of-chinese-troops-on-americas-doorstep-e17fd5d1 https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2023/06/05/asia-pacific/politics-diplomacy-asia-pacific/taiwan-2024-presidential-election-candidates https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12210999/We-not-support-independence-Taiwan-Blinken-stresses-U-S-commitment-One-China-policy.html https://twitter.com/shellenberger/status/1671162870422454272 https://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-funded-scientist-among-three-chinese-researchers-who-fell-ill-amid-early-covid-19-outbreak-3f919567 https://mediaengagement.org/research/ad-spending-on-primetime-news-coronavirus https://news.gallup.com/poll/165893/majority-believe-jfk-killed-conspiracy.aspx https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-06-22/startup-shares-selling-for-61-off-attract-venture-capital-hedge-funds https://pitchbook.com/news/articles/tiger-global-secondaries-direct-stakes-sales https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2023-ford-ev-battery-plant-funding-biden-green-technology

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 So wait a second, you guys, I saw that you were at a CO2 conference or a TPG conference, you're at some banking conference, SACs. Brad and I were both at the CO2 summit. CO2, CO2 is a large investor, is it a hedge fund, private equity? They're a late sage fund. It's a big late sage fund. Some, it's a really big word. Was it a summit or was it more like a meeting?
Starting point is 00:00:21 Well, it's like a two-day conference in Santa Barbara. Oh Oh nice. They've done a number of years in a row now. Last year, Brian and I went and we met with SPF Never tell you that SPF story. No, let's go. Who's got crazier hair right now? You for SPF give us a quick Take that hat off for a second. Take that Mon Clare offcler offer second let's get aside by side oh my god sacks is using no product it's not that bad you're starting to look like the emperor like Senator Palpatine from Star Wars I mean people are having a field day with this crazy hair but what was the vibe if you said there was a vibe two years ago the vibe was crypto mania SPF was the vibe? If you said there was a vibe two years ago, the vibe was Cryptomania, SPF was the bell of the ball. I suppose it will be the bell of the ball when he goes in the Huskow as well
Starting point is 00:01:12 No, looks like he's getting off. He's getting up. I thought he was getting off. I guess the fixin is the ID Fixes in God. I agree. Can you imagine if he gets off? He's almost as protected as Hunter Biden Here we go. Okay, everybody. Freeberg's not here this week. Insert jokes and conspiracy theories for the Mids. There's going to be about 8,000 messages on a subreddit about freeberg missing this week and sacks missing. Last week I'll let you guys all read into it. But would you say Brad? Brad Gershner back, of course, Fifbestyie Brad, what would you say the vibe was at this one? If it was SPF lunacy two years ago, what was the vibe this year? Well, you know, first they put on an incredible event called
Starting point is 00:01:53 an East meets West. And it was really about bringing, you know, CEOs and founders from China to the States and connecting them with founders and CEOs in the United States. Listen, I think it's somber, right? There's a recognition that we've seen about in the public markets. You know, off of this devastation in 2022, but I think listen, they gave a great tough love speech. Discussion with the 1,400 unicorns that are out there and they said do not expect your unprofitable tech company to bounce like one of the magnificent seven right those are highly profitable companies trade it 19 20 times earnings and if you are burning cash today They're you can't come back to the well. So you need to either figure out how to get profitable figure out how to get fit Or you need to either figure out how to get profitable, figure out how to get fit, or you need to sell your business because there's not an endless stream of money.
Starting point is 00:02:51 So I thought it was a sober view. You know, Larry Summers was there, and I think a lot of the people who called 22 right were looking for a hard landing in Q1 of this year, probably including, you know, the Larry was probably more in that camp. And I think everybody still views this distribution of probabilities over the course of the next four quarters, and you know, whether it's Dr. Kim Miller's stern lick this morning on CMBC or whether it's Larry Summers, they're all saying, well, we could 30% chance of a hard landing in Q4 Q1.
Starting point is 00:03:21 So I would say it was something. Yeah, I could tell it was sober, SACs. Go ahead, and you want to say something? Well, I would say last year, it was somber in a different way, because you got to remember in the first half of 2022, you had this huge decline in the markets around gross stocks, because interest rates said started going up. We had the whole regime change.
Starting point is 00:03:38 But I don't think founders had internalized the way that it applied to them. And then the thing that has happened over the past year is that sales have been hit. Every software company that I know is reforcacing down. It's so much hard to grow. Customers are consolidating vendors, sharpening their pencils. Seat expansion has been replaced with seat contraction. So negotiations are hard, right?
Starting point is 00:04:03 Yes. It's been a lot of time now to sell software than it was, let's say, eight years ago, you know, two X is now the new three X. If you can go to X in this environment, it's basically a good scoring three X before. It's funny to me that how much the Fed's actions impact buying behavior. That's the thing that I. The psychology is distinctly different. Yeah, the psychology really is different. I mean, we knew that the Fed's behavior influenced valuations and sort of capital markets,
Starting point is 00:04:33 but the way that it influences the business outlook and how willing companies are to spend money. And Co2 is no different. I see they hire Billy McFarlane from Fire Festival to do the food. What is this? I mean, CO2 should be ashamed of themselves. Look at this focaccia, some vegetable soup with the broth drained out, super stamina.
Starting point is 00:04:54 Oh, this is so wrong. That is so wrong. Look at this. I mean, it looks like a dog went to the bathroom. That and I open our lunch box and we're like, let's go somewhere else. Oh my God, CO to on a budget. Wow. They look like a surprise that someone to put a surprise in our.
Starting point is 00:05:10 It looks like freed bird's dog. Uh, put a surprise in the coach lunchbox. Wow. Well, listen, it's good. Coach, you know, he should be very happy looking at that $7 lunch that they put out there. I mean, Brad, should we tell the SPF story from last year's summit. I mean, last year we talked about the,
Starting point is 00:05:27 maybe founders hadn't internalized yet, but the markets had corrected. But the one founder who was super bullish and optimistic and talking about how he was spring money all over the place and he was acquiring companies and who was followed around by minions and had everyone like a B-hives surrounding him and trying to talk to you, was SBF.
Starting point is 00:05:49 And so I remember, yeah, so I remember thinking, like who's gonna be this year's SBF? Somebody here, who's somebody with an AI company with Sam Altman there. So basically the co-to conference went from bullshit to dog shit. No, no. No, no. To the right part about that shit. You two are proud of this.
Starting point is 00:06:07 Brad is like, look at Brad, he's so uncomfortable. Brad's like, I like this invite. That's just like, I got a good invite. Chimoff and I are invited to nothing. We give no shit about co-to or their budget. They do put on a really good event. Incredible firm. And I think that the message they gave to founders.
Starting point is 00:06:25 Actually, this year and last year was great. It was actually really appropriate. Whether founders choose to listen is a different story. But the message they've been conveying is similar to the message we've been conveying for the last year and a half. Hey, Jamal, any more jokes we can make about Cotus since you and I get invited to nothing? No, I mean, I'm not making fun of Cotus.
Starting point is 00:06:43 I was just making fun of the fact that we went for literally bullshit with SBF to what looks like dog shit. By the way, I bet they would invite you if you wanted to go. I'm pretty sure they would send 10 invitations if I if I even saved a desire to go. But I'm in Milan right now. The pod's very popular there, by the way. I know you did a focus group. Tell everybody, can we play the focus group, or was that, I think we could play it? Well, just a fan came up to me. I mean, when I say fan,
Starting point is 00:07:12 this is like a very high profile person. This woman works at Netflix. She's the D-D-D-D-D. She works at Netflix and her husband is the founder of a startup. She said she was a fan of the pod. So I started asking her questions about it. Well, focus group.
Starting point is 00:07:24 Because, you know, we've been having this debate over the last couple of weeks about what issues we should be talking about, and certain people on the pod never want to discuss politics. Oh, it's not like I only want to discuss politics. I just don't want to exclude it. I think we should just be talking about whatever the biggest issues are in the world
Starting point is 00:07:43 in any given a week, current events. Yeah, I mean, whether it's business markets or politics, be talking about whatever the biggest issues are in the world and any given a week. Current events. Yeah. I mean, whether it's business markets or politics and she confirmed that was basically right. Don't change it. So I don't know why we would want to change the formula for the pot at this point. Every week, Zach, there's a group of people who are like, stop talking about politics. And then there's another group of people and their feedback is, why didn't you talk about
Starting point is 00:08:02 100 Biden, Ukraine, Ukraine, Putin, China, whatever? And so, the docket is the docket, just to let the audience know, not that it's like all that big of a deal, it should be fairly obvious. Everybody has equal input on the docket. So it's not like anybody owns the docket. If you want to talk about something, you can talk about something, but some people want to not talk about politics, some people want to talk about a lot of politics,
Starting point is 00:08:25 the magnificent seven for those people who didn't catch the reference, is I think something Kramer's been talking about on CMBC, seven stocks make up the most of the gains this year, meta Tesla, Nvidia, Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Apple. Can I tell you guys? My welcome back to Milon story.
Starting point is 00:08:43 Oh yeah, absolutely. So I'm back in Milan for this one. Honest round. So I have a chef Stefano, and if you could stay high to, um, definitely all my friends, uh, butlers, everybody can tell your back in Italy because the buttons are gone. I'm working from my office here, but this morning I went to Coppola, which is my stylist, my hairdresser. Oh, and the is, there's like a hierarchy in the hairdressers. And so Roberto, this guy, Roberto, he's like the sort of top of the ticket.
Starting point is 00:09:10 And that has first dibs with Roberto. And I have this other guy who's excellent, his name is Joquino. Yes. You guys will see Joquino in a few weeks. Anyways, the best thing about the haircuts at this place, Coppola is you get a hair fluffer, which means that as Joquinoino Roberto cuts your hair, a guy comes and he just like, he like does this and then
Starting point is 00:09:30 he like, you're patting your hair in a very, he fluffes your hair. He's a very uncomfortable, it's a thing that doesn't exist anywhere that will never get disrupted by AI. And it's incredible. A hair styling fluffer, the hair fluffer gets like a 50 euro tip. It doesn't matter what he does. Wow. Wow. When sax rolls in, you're going to need two fluffers with that hair.
Starting point is 00:09:57 You're going to need one on each side. I mean, the tops are getting crazy. So, I'll tell me if you want your keener to cut your hair because when you come, because he will do it, he'll do an incredible job and I'll ask him to bring the hair flutter. All right, listen, I think we're just going back to the Co-Tothing. I know we're in a high interest rate lunch environment. The Herp environment is hard right now for everybody, but we did get the feedback. Let's play the feedback. Hey guys, I'm at the Co-Tuse Summit and I just met a fan here who wants to explain the magic of the pod because you guys keep wanting to change things and mess things up.
Starting point is 00:10:30 So, here we go. Good world to everyone. My husband and I were listening to your podcast pretty much religiously and there is this incredible magic that the four of you have, the red martague, the back of the fork. It's super informative, the girls sort of rooting for characters almost. It's almost like a scripted show in some way. So I have my favorite character. My husband has his favorite character. I want to say who's who. I want you all to stay together. And keep doing the show. But it's fantastic. And we love it. And you work at Netflix, right? I work at Netflix. Back in the day, I pretty show. So pick up the show. I'm telling David,
Starting point is 00:11:01 trying to get that magic. You can put any number of scripts together. But once you get the cast on the floor, actually start getting you know that chemistry going that's when the magic happens And you guys kind of just nailed it Say it. All right, so that's a professional right there. So stop screwing with the formula stop protesting Protesting Oh, I mean The camera really does add 10 pounds, doesn't it? I take two things away from this, Jamoth.
Starting point is 00:11:28 Number one, she's much more charismatic on camera than Sacks. She stole the show. She's delightful. And then two, that sweater. Oh my lord. What's the brand? What's the brand? Fantastic.
Starting point is 00:11:39 No, the sweater's fantastic. The shirt's fantastic. I just think they may not have been, I don't think the intention was to mesh the two together, but I'm going to get you to see each other.'t think the intention was to mesh the two together, but I'm always each other. Too many buttons for you, Trimoth. No, bro. It's like, when you have a cream colored sweater, you can't wear a red checkered shirt.
Starting point is 00:11:52 It's just not. Yeah. Yeah. I agree. Red striped. Anyways, it's a, yeah. I mean, it looks like you're wearing an Italian tablecloth under there from a pizza real, and combined with like an $8,000 sweater.
Starting point is 00:12:04 It's great. but the hair. I mean, the hair is out of control. I think the hair is fantastic. I do. Don't you don't care. Do not cut the hair. Don't let your keynote touch your hair, bro. I'll just get a fluff.
Starting point is 00:12:14 I'll tell him just fluff it. Don't touch it. Just fluff it. Just fluff it. I'm going to get wet. You're wet. You're wet. Your winter is hot.
Starting point is 00:12:22 Rainman David's side. I'm going to get wet. And I said we open sources. Let's talk about the Zuck Elon Cage match. Oh yeah, oh my god. This is a little worried for my friend here. Yeah. Zuck Elon is completely up to date on what kind of shape Zuck is in. Zuck is in tremendous shape.
Starting point is 00:12:50 He's got like a dojo at his house. He's been getting training in, you know, mixed martial arts from the graces or whoever, you know, as a Jiu-Jitsu. He's been competing in events. Zuck is in tremendous shape. And no joke here. Now, Elon's a big guy. He's been competing in events. Zuck is in tremendous shape. And- No joke here. Now, Elon's a big guy.
Starting point is 00:13:07 Elon's a monster. But I mean, Elon's not in this kind of shape. You don't have time to work out like this. I hope you get some sort of Gracie on your team to train you up for this thing. Also, Elon has a neck injury that he got from the Sumo thing years ago. Yes.
Starting point is 00:13:26 And he's had to have surgeries on it. So it really suck if that would get retriggered. Here's the thing though. He did take on a sumo wrestler. I we were there for that at his birthday party. And he held his own against the giant sumo wrestler. If you on does get on top of and do the war is on top of Zuck, Zuck has no chance. He will get war.
Starting point is 00:13:47 You're telling me what he should do is abandon the mission to Mars. Yes. Stop electrifying the world. Totally. And stop free internet on the world. So he can beat up Zuck. I mean, if you want to put that to a vote, I think this is what's being put, but he's gonna suck as number one.
Starting point is 00:14:11 This is the dumbest fucking idea I've ever heard in my life. Oh my God. I love the banter between the two of them. And let's just say we can all agree out of all the companies, right? There's only one contender to Zuck getting fit, right? Getting that company fit, getting himself fit is Elon. 75, 80% of the people gone and product velocity is on fire at Twitter. So this is, this should be a cage match between the two who have defined this era of getting fit.
Starting point is 00:14:40 All right, let's get to the docket here. What the fuck are you talking about? He's using the fitness. The guy burned a quarter trillion dollars and then found a way to stop it. That's very different than firing on all cylinders and three compasses. I didn't say he was firing on all cylinders. By the way, I am the only one of anybody I think that knows how well. Well, maybe Saks. Well, it's kind of like, you know, if you've got like a faucet running and it's spilling over the sink and then you turn it off, that doesn't make you a firefighter. Exactly. You just make you a plumber.
Starting point is 00:15:15 You know, there's a lot of features to a bathtub. Stop spending money on. There's a feature of a bathtub where when you get into it and the water gushes so violently over the outside of it. And then there's a drain at the top as well as the bottom. And so that eventually just stops. Yes, you could. On the side of the drain. Yeah, but Chamothra is a good point, which is, look, Elon's a big guy. If he got training in MMA, I'm sure he'd do fine.
Starting point is 00:15:41 But we don't want Elon spending two hours a day for the next six months or whatever because it's been doing MMA, I guess for a while. Maybe years. Just into it. All right, well listen, there's been some updates. This war between Russia and the Ukraine or the invasion of Ukraine by Russia. You wrote a piece about it in what was it? The federalist I think this week Title the truth about Ukraine's falling failing counter offensive and the peace That could have been why don't you give us an overview of what you wrote and what your take is on the state of affairs right now Well, the thing that's been going on since around June 4th or June 5th is this long-awaited
Starting point is 00:16:23 Ukrainian counteroffensive This has been touted for a long time, is this going to reverse Russian territorial gains. Ukraine's going to use all of this modern Western equipment, these leopard tanks that have come from Germany and Bradley's from the United States, and a lot of other NATO or American equipment, and they're going to push Russia out of their country. This has been told to us since the fall of last year, since that sort of carkey, kind of offensive, produce some Ukrainian territorial gains. You've had former generals like Ben Hodges and Petre S. say that this counteroffensive is going to be highly successful. Where it stands right now is that around 18 or 19 days into it, it has produced minimal gains.
Starting point is 00:17:09 In fact, it's been somewhat of a disaster. It's hard to get conclusive estimates of personnel and material losses, but I think as many as a quarter of the tanks and armored vehicles have already been destroyed. And the casualties may be as high as around 10,000, out of an army that was trained up for this purpose of around 50,000. So so far it is knock on well. The Ukrainian army hasn't even made it
Starting point is 00:17:39 to the first line of defense. So what the Russians did is they created three fortified lines or belts of defense. So what the Russians did is they created three fortified lines or belts of defense. And then in front of that is what they call a gray zone or security zone or crumple zone, which is an area they can test, but it's not technically a fortified line. The Ukrainians are still in that sort of gray zone. They are not punching through. They are not even at the first Russian fortified line to give you some idea of what's involved here. The Russians have these obstacles. There's basically trenches of them and dug. There's ditches that would stop tanks or sort of force them to go in a certain direction. Steer the traffic.
Starting point is 00:18:20 There's extensive minefields. They've got these things called dragon teeth which are concrete ballards that stop tanks or move them in a certain direction. Then the Russians have massive amounts of artillery, they've got infantry on the ground that helps spot the artillery. And if all of that doesn't take out these Ukrainian tanks, they've got these attack helicopters that come in almost uncontested because at this point it doesn't look like the Ukrainians have any air defense. And they've also got fixed wing aircraft that are capable of dropping precision munitions.
Starting point is 00:18:53 So it really seems like the Russians have fixed a lot of the problems that they had last fall in their army. And so far it seems like this counter counteroffensive is not going anywhere. We're 16 months into this, Chimath, and clearly fatigue is setting in. It's not commanding the new cycle here in America and on a percentage basis, even the Neocons and Republicans are dropping their support for this at a pretty precipitous rate, which is predictable. Americans don't want to be in forever wars. We all know that. So which are taken on how this winds up, especially
Starting point is 00:19:31 in relation to a our budget and be this upcoming election, which this seems to be will be a major issue if this isn't resolved by the time we get into the 24 election cycle. As part of answering this, I have a question for SACS. But is it true that there was a ceasefire? Like Kooten had a press conference where he showed a document that he said was a ceasefire that then the United States apparently sent Boris Johnson over to Russia, Ukraine, to basically blow up the agreement? Yes, this is a yes, this is fundamentally correct.
Starting point is 00:20:04 This was in a ceasefire. This was a piece deal before the war started, is a yes, this is fundamentally correct. This was in a ceasefire. This was a piece deal before the war started, correct? No, it was after the claim. There were rounds of negotiation before the war. Notably, there was a round of diplomacy between Blinken and Lavrov in January, the month before the war, where Blinken said that we cannot compromise on NATO's
Starting point is 00:20:22 open-door policy that sort of diplomacy diplomacy fell apart but then after the war there was a meeting of the Russian delegation Ukrainian delegation in iston bull under the supervision of of urduan and turkey not only been it also had a similar process in both cases the west rejected a piece deal allegedly we don't know this is Putin we're talking about right now. Let me come back. Hold on a second.
Starting point is 00:20:48 Let me come back to the evidence for in a second. But what the deal would have provided is that the Russians would move back to pre-war lines if the Ukrainians would agree not to become a member of NATO. However, the Ukrainians could still receive specified security guarantees from the West. That was the deal. Now, nothing. Well, we have now multiple data points. You've got Naufthali Bennett saying that he thought a deal was among these lines, but
Starting point is 00:21:13 it was rejected by the West. You also have now Putin showing the very document, which was signed by the Ukrainian delegation. So this was the document. Well, he flashed the document, right? Nobody has his document. It hasn't been released yet. I hope the Russian government releases it was the dot flash the document right nobody has a document it hasn't been released yet i hope the russian government releases it for the purpose of history so we can inspect it
Starting point is 00:21:30 but nobody can test this document is real remember if he's just making this up you would think that urdu on the basic comfort and say no this is fake there's too many people who are in that room who'd be able to say this document is fake no one has done that so i think there's every reason to believe this document is real now it is not a final agreement it appears to be a preliminary agreement or an outline
Starting point is 00:21:50 but the outline is that russia is saying we will move back to pre war lines if you agree not become part of nato and that deal was rejected when barris johnson flu into kief and basically told the ukrainians we do not want to make a deal with Putin. We want to pressure Putin. And the source for that is not the Russians. The source for that is a Ukrainian publication called Ukrainian Provda, UP. And they ran an article in May of 2022 that I can put on the screen.
Starting point is 00:22:21 And it is the source for saying that Boris Johnson came in and told Zelensky, we do not want to make a peace deal. We, the West, are not ready to make a deal with Putin. We want you to fight Putin or pressure Putin. And if you do, we will give you advanced weapons systems. And that is when the deal fell apart. If you look at the timing of it. So this has been lightly sourced here. So let's do it here.
Starting point is 00:22:44 But you have to consider the source here. this is a pro-Ukrainian publication writing in may of twenty twenty two now the tone of the article and what they basically say in this article is that zalinsky accepted boris johnson's offer in other words he took the gamble and at this point in time you got to remember this is two months after the war started looked like the Ukrainians were doing well. So, UP was essentially praising Zelensky in this article for taking the West up on this deal to pressure Putin rather than make peace. Now, a year later, it looks like this gamble was a disaster.
Starting point is 00:23:18 Yeah. And so, that is the real conclusion here. A deal was available, but the West chose not to take it. By the way, Fiona Hill, who is a Russia hawk, and you could almost put her, I'd say, Neocon adjacent, has basically said that this type of deal was available. The West did not want this deal. I think Jason, maybe to give you an answer, my thought is that this week was a very bad week for establishment politics
Starting point is 00:23:45 and institutions. Because on the one hand, if you take the Russia incident in the Ukraine war, what you saw was that there were ample numbers of off-ramps that we chose, frankly, to not take so that we could engage our enemy in some long-d drawn out war on the hopes that it just depletes their resources. That's kind of rolling the dice, I think, in a very dangerous way. I think this week, we also saw some published stuff on COVID and the COVID vaccine, which also debunked a lot of widely held truths and it turned out that folks that may have been conspiracy theorists, quote quote unquote were right there as well. So I think it's just an uncomfortable set of facts that again just reinforce that if you're not really thinking for yourself you're not going to see the
Starting point is 00:24:34 totality of what's actually going on. I think with respect to Russia Ukraine everybody has moved on and so sadly the only people that are left over are the people that have to fight the war, were still separated from their families. There's the people that are dying. There's an article I think today they recruit prisoners right. So obviously some of the prisoners that Russia users are still pretty crazy. That person went on some rampage inside of a train, killed a couple people, stabbed some other people. There was just pictures of blood everywhere. I mean, this is just a horrible situation.
Starting point is 00:25:11 And it's still not clear to me why we didn't take the offering. If in fact, it's real. So I just want to keep putting that disclaimer out there because Putin flashing a document doesn't make all this true. It doesn't mean it's not true. What about Ukrainian Proftada? Well Jason I would say what about not tallie Bennett? I am just being clear here that none of this is confirmed data points You need I would say what are you talking about not tallie Bennett confirmed it? What is Senator just the Israeli former Israeli leader have to lie about this? Here's what I would say Jason. I think that something like that is so
Starting point is 00:25:44 profoundly important that if it were not true, I think it would have been very important for the powers that be to discredit it almost immediately so that they didn't have to look like they were warm-ongering unnecessarily. Can I also up level and connect to this point about the establishment? Because I think there's been a lot of pushback to even challenging the status quo, even having a conversation about Ukraine or having a conversation about COVID. And I think if there's one thing this pod represents, the fight going on at Twitter represents,
Starting point is 00:26:23 is the need to have this conversation. If we look at the wars the US has engaged in since September 11th it's estimated three to four million people have died in Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan, we spent eight trillion trillion in World War II. $8 trillion represents 25% of our entire national debt. And I've yet to meet a single parent who said to me, I care so much about this Ukraine situation, I would be willing to put my children in harm's way to fight
Starting point is 00:27:06 for the defense of Europe. Okay, so those data points tell me at a very minimum, we need more of this discussion, more of this debate, not less. The idea that we could be tiptoeing closer and closer to some land war in Europe unnecessarily and, I think the bigger issue is, and you can't trust what you're being told. And I think the bigger issue is, and you can't trust what you're being told. And I think that that's what's very probable. That is a bigger picture.
Starting point is 00:27:30 And just so we're clear here, I'm not saying I'm on either side of this. I'm just pointing out that this is all still very thinly sourced. It's not. Until the West confirms any of this. I think expect the West to do you, expect the State Department to issue a press release saying,
Starting point is 00:27:44 yep, we fucked up. It's on me. My theory. My theory has been, and I've been very clear on this podcast. My theory has been since the beginning, they want to deplete Russia and they want to deplete their army and not keep the capabilities and have regime change and Putin. I'm not saying I'm for that just for the people who are not. I'm not. I'm not. I'm not. I'm not saying I'm for that, just for the people who are not. I'm not. I'm not. I'm not. You said it with ankle Putin, that was the crude language you used. That is what they, that is what they plan on doing.
Starting point is 00:28:11 Yes, I think that's what they're doing. And I know they asked in our secretary of defense said that our purpose was to weaken Russia. Yes. So to knock it out. I agree. That's what purposes. Yes, but I think they want regime change. Yes.
Starting point is 00:28:22 That's what Boris Johnson once again said. We want to pressure Putin not make a deal with him. So they reported this war. They will. They prefer that's's what Boris Johnson once said. We want to pressure Putin not make a deal with him. So they reported this war. They prefer to fight. That's been my theory since the beginning. They prefer to fight a possible choice. To be clear. That was easy.
Starting point is 00:28:32 I'm not endorsing that. I'm not endorsing that. I'm saying that's my view table. This is not about you Jason. I'm asking. No, not. But it's just said it was. But it's just said it was.
Starting point is 00:28:40 So I'm just clearing the right. He just said that was your position. And I'm correct. Okay, fair enough Jason. I have the right to correct you. That was clearing the right he just said that was your position and I'm correct okay fair enough Jason have the right to get that was not my position I said that's my fear I actually agree with you if you're saying that that was our government's objective which was yes to weaken Putin I agree with you they've chose to fight an optional proxy word choice that was easily avoidable if they just taken NATO expansion off the table because they thought it would weaken Putin but here's the rub on this it is not we can put in as we can the United States and our allies anyway you want to look at this thing look at just the weapons and munitions
Starting point is 00:29:14 so we are out of 155 millimeter artillery shells we cannot produce enough this is the crazy thing we spent 800 hundred billion a year plus on the Pentagon national defense right out of ammo i mean we must be getting so roly ripped off by the military industrial complex okay we cannot produce ammo fast enough that's why Ukraine's losing this war the balance of artillery favors russia russia is basically using about twenty thousand shells a day
Starting point is 00:29:43 the Ukrainians are using so between 3,000 and 6,000. We are out of ammo. We cannot produce enough. And this actually dovetails nicely with another story this week. There is a journalist named Matt Egliseus. Is that his name? No, Egliseus. Egliseus.
Starting point is 00:30:00 And he said, I mean, he literally said the quiet part out loud. And I'll just quote because he was criticizing you and Shemoth for hosting RFK. We'll get to that in a second. But he basically said, this is actually a really good idea for us. Basically, NATO equipment plus Ukrainian lives are being traded for Russian equipment and Russian lives, which leaves NATO coming out ahead. That's doubly true because NATO is much richer than Russia. So we win a long-term game of everyone
Starting point is 00:30:30 explode their weapons as fast as they can, make them. Again, though, what makes that really true is NATO material is killing Russian soldiers, while Russian material is killing Ukrainian soldiers. That's a deal in our favor. I mean, that is a cynical of Do you be clear? You wrote that? Yeah, he wrote that last year in defense of the war.
Starting point is 00:30:48 Basically, like all the Neocons, he's sort of an establishment approved intellectual. They think he's smart, I think he's really foolish. He basically wants to fight the last Ukrainian here for the sole purpose of blowing up Russia's stockpiles. The reason this is so dumb is Russia can always make more. Those lives aren't coming back, but they can always produce more artillery, more and in fact the Russian war machine is now ramping up to full production.
Starting point is 00:31:11 Okay, they are ramping up the number of people in their army. I think it's estimated that by the end of the year they're going to have 750,000 men under arms. They've ramped up artillery shells production. They're at something like one and a half million at the beginning of the war. We were only producing 14,000 artillery shells a month, mostly for training purposes in the United States. We've since ramped that up to 20,000, but that's still massively trails what the Russians can do. And they're trying to ramp it up to 90,000 a month,
Starting point is 00:31:39 but that's gonna take till 20, 28, because it takes time to build, you gotta build up new factories, new production lines You got to issue contracts to suppliers or vendors. It takes time to do this But the Russia's mercy of ramp up their war machine And then the other thing that's happened is that Russia and China have entered a day facto alliance and including Iran So you now have the cementing of this giant Alliance in Asia between China, Russia, and Iran. They're sharing equipment now together. Iran is producing drones for
Starting point is 00:32:13 Russia. Russia is now going to be giving advanced fighter jets to Iran. So this idea that this war has made the West stronger is depleting the West over an objective we didn't need to fight. this war was easily avoidable and we have now created I think the most fearsome opponent that America has ever faced. We have never faced a adversary with a combined manufacturing capacity and raw materials of China, Russia, and Iran. If we were to get in in a war in new world war against this sort of new access we could lose they actually have more manufacturing capacity to produce weapons of war
Starting point is 00:32:52 and munitions and ammo then the united states does china has been clear that they're not going to provide weapons to russia and so i'm not sure that that alliance is exactly accurate they've given us no such assurance. All they've said is they haven't done it yet. It's a theoretical thing that you're talking about here that could be very serious.
Starting point is 00:33:10 I think your point, and this is to Brad's point, we should be having a very thoughtful discussion here because if China did pick Russia, which they haven't, and they went to war, it would be more, what would you call it? One of the many, one of the many, let's go to college. Well, we should talk about the China relationship actually.
Starting point is 00:33:24 Yeah, okay. Bl let's go to college. Well, we should talk about the China relationship, actually. Yeah. Okay. Blinken just went to China. And this was the first trip for an American Secretary of State since 2018. Obviously, things have been strained with the spy balloon and the visits to Taiwan. Blinken gave some basic goals for this engagement with China, the fentanyl problem, some detained Americans and protecting US citizens working in China. Those were kind of the easy check boxes, but they wanted to create also an open line of
Starting point is 00:33:59 communication between our militaries, which China wasn't super stoked on, or wouldn't agree to. Tony did a great job. Yeah. Okay. I think what's really disappointing is that while Tony's over there doing this hard work, which is, must be tough to do because it must have been a little bit
Starting point is 00:34:16 like dancing on eggshells a little bit, right? He had to be intense. He had to be very thoughtful, very measured. But as far as I could tell, he did a fabulous job. Now, the disclosure, he's a friend of mine, so maybe I'm biased. But then over here, Biden at some mid-level fundraiser in California is calling G a dictator.
Starting point is 00:34:37 How hard must it be for you to try to do your job when your boss is just like completely undisciplined? And here's the problem with that is that if the United States actually thought that G was a dictator, do you think that a mid-level fundraiser that we were all invited to in North America, or any of that none of us said yes to, is the place to announce a foreign policy shift like that?
Starting point is 00:34:58 Absolutely not. So it just means that again, there's just more evidence about Biden being very undisciplined. Now, again, that could be an age issue. It could be a mental acuity issue. We don't know because we're not given a chance to really prosecute that problem. Meanwhile, Tony's there trying to do the best job he can and the sand shift underneath him. Thank God he was able to get the trip done before this thing happened is what I think. But that gap was a very big gap and a very big problem, I think, because whatever goodwill he built up was practically flushed down the toilet if you saw the reaction from the Chinese, which was to be deeply offended.
Starting point is 00:35:36 It makes no sense to poke. When he went to CNPS and they had to negotiate a fist bump versus a handshake like what is all of this either unplanned or undisciplined theater? Why are we engaging in any of this stuff? It doesn't make any sense. Joe Biden's always been known for being a liability in terms of these statements when he worked for Obama. He was the VP. He also said things, you know, he shot from the hip a lot. You should not be calling him a dictator when you're trying to do this critical work. It's a stupid move. I think everybody can agree. You were going to say something, Brad? Yeah, I was just going to say, you know, kind of market reaction going.
Starting point is 00:36:14 And so the K web, the Chinese index was up about 20% heading into these series of meetings. Now, notably, Blinken was not scheduled to have a meeting. Wishi. And so, what happened is, on day one, there's a meeting with the foreign minister, right? And it seems that there was some positive trend lines coming out of these first two meetings with the top diplomat with foreign minister, which led to the meeting. And notably in the meeting, he did say, the United States has not changed his policy on Taiwan, we don't support Taiwanese independence. Now, the market reaction post visit was down 10%,
Starting point is 00:36:51 and I think this is owing to what Chema said that people felt like maybe we took a step forward here that we at least had a meeting, but then it was another step back. And so I think where we sit at the moment is there's probably going to be some follow on meetings coming out of this. This was not a path back to where we were, but I think it was a stabilizing moment. And again, we were just at the East meets West conference where there are a lot of Chinese CEOs and founders who were there. And I think the idea there was like things are stable, like not getting worse.
Starting point is 00:37:27 And by the way, six months ago, there was a real concern that things were deteriorating quickly. So I think it's, you know, you can see something constructive coming out of this. Not getting worse was how I felt coming out of it. And then Biden then makes it worse. Is it really, it is a, I agree, it's just a stupid gap. Let me tell you about some of the reporting from the Chinese side. out of it and then Biden then makes it worse. Is it really, it is a, I agree, it's just a stupid gap. Let me tell you about some of the reporting from the Chinese side.
Starting point is 00:37:48 So after these diplomatic events and you're right, Blinken met with Wang Yi for seven hours, then he got an audience with Xi Jinping. They do these readouts where each side basically produces a public summary of the meeting. In the Chinese readout, they said that US-Chinese relationships are at the lowest point they've ever been. I mean, since, I guess, diplomatic relations were kind of reestablished under Nixon, so that from the Chinese standpoint, they believe that
Starting point is 00:38:16 relationships are at the worst they've ever been. Moreover, the US sought to put Ukraine on the agenda. The Chinese response to that was we are not interested in discussing our relationship with Russia that is none of your business. So this idea, there's been this Neocon fantasy that somehow China would help us in this war between Russia and Ukraine. And I've said all along that the last thing China wants is for Neo-Khanso to achieve their objectives with respect to Russia because then China alone will be in the gun sites of US hawks. So China will do what it has to do to support and even prop
Starting point is 00:38:56 up Russia if they have to. Remember China and Russia, and specifically she and Putin. They are the two leaders who've met with each other more often than any other leader. And they've called each other their best friends or most, I think the language they use was, most bosom, well, most bosom friends was what they called it. Okay, it was a little weird. It was a little weird.
Starting point is 00:39:19 Yeah, but yeah. It was a bit of a great TV show, good pull. Yeah, exactly. Just to give people exactly what happened, by and when he was at this campaign fundraiser in North Cal, that again, yeah, we were probably invited to people on the show. He was talking about the military Chinese spy balloon. And he said she got very upset, quote, that this was a great embarrassment for dictators when they don't know what happened. And he continued to say that she didn't know the balloon had been over the country until U.S. and was off course in Alaska.
Starting point is 00:39:48 And this is the kind of thing where he's basically saying she is stupid or whatever, or there's some level of incompetence over there. It's exactly the wrong message you want to send. Calling him a dictator and calling him stupid and saying he was embarrassed. Why would you provoke that to raise money or to be a tough guy, it makes no sense? I mean, it sounds like Trump's version of foreign relations. From the Chinese standpoint, they thought the whole balloon thing was a travesty. I mean, I don't know what the truth of it is,
Starting point is 00:40:13 but they feel like it was just this continuous drumming up of outrage on the American side against China. And they wanted to put that behind us in terms of the relationship. I heard Blinken interviewed about this. Tremoth, I agree with you. I have no complaint with Blinken in terms of how he handled this meeting.
Starting point is 00:40:33 I have a complaint about how I have a complaint about how I handled Moscow, but not Beijing, but they wanted to put this balloon business behind them. My guess, I've always said that it never made sense to me that the Chinese would use such a ham-fisted way of conducting an S-renage to fly a deliberately fly a balloon over the U.S. It was obviously not deliberate. It never made sense to me.
Starting point is 00:40:56 Yeah, of course. And it became this cost 11 the U.S. and I think the Chinese at a minimum wanted to put it behind us and then Biden reopened the issue. Like the submarine tragedy, the balloon is like made for network television because it's a live event where you can put live cameras up and you can carve a rich 20 for seven. It's just like Trump.
Starting point is 00:41:16 We've had a really careful media. It's just for the media. It's catnip for them. We have to be very careful now, I think, in our relationship with China. Because again, you now have this ageatic alliance between China, Russia, and Iran. It is the most capable, let's say, adversary United States ever
Starting point is 00:41:32 faced. Remember that when we face the Soviet Union, their economy was never bigger than one-third of the U.S. economy, the Soviet block versus the Western block. The Chinese economy on a purchasing power parity basis is roughly the same size as the U. the US and they've got more Manufacturing capacities if you think about the type of manufacturing capacity United States had during World War 2 That now belongs to China not the US. We have hollowed out I just I'm a factory why our foreign policy Brad of bringing into discussion why our foreign policy isn't
Starting point is 00:42:03 being driven by some of the things that we could do together to collaborate on? Like we have global warming, we have issues on this planet that we could collaborate on, and it seems like we're spending no time on those issues. And Sabre Analing, Cuba, another example, why can't we set a goal for the United States to normalize relations with Cuba and get them on our side since they are the equivalent of let's say Ukraine, David, to America. You've brought back comparison. Why don't we make peace with Cuba?
Starting point is 00:42:33 Why can't we have a peace-based foreign policy where we're trying to build bridges? God, Cuba and the United States could do amazing things together and we should be trying to win that relationship instead of living 50 years in the past over it. I'm not sure. There was legitimate outrage over the past week because we discovered that China was planning on, they already have an intelligence outpost in Cuba listening outpost, but also they're thinking about doing training of troops in Cuba.
Starting point is 00:43:02 And that would be a violation of Monroe doctrine, and we should basically get our backs up over that. The Monroe doctrine states that no disintegrate power can bring troops, weapons, or bases into the Western hemisphere. The United States spent over 100 years basically enforcing Monroe doctrine. It would greatly diminish US security if we allowed any foreign great power to have troops in the Western hemisphere. So we deserve to have our horns out over that. The problem is that we have our horns out over everything.
Starting point is 00:43:33 And so we're not really taking seriously, we've cried wolf so many times. I don't think we're really taking seriously by the Chinese on this. And this should be a teaching moment to the foreign policy establishment because this is Russia's objection. Russia's objection is to having American troops weapons and bases directly on their border. This is our objection to what China is seeking to do in Cuba. Okay, Brad, do you want to add something to that or can we move to COVID? Just real quickly, I would say.
Starting point is 00:43:58 There's a real appetite in the business community to be engaged. This idea that we're going to decouple the world, never have to deal with these folks, right, is just a farce. Bike dance bought a billion dollars worth of Nvidia chips announced this week, right? Like, like, the world is entangled, and I think we would be better off having our political and business leaders in more sync over how to achieve this long term safety and prosperity as opposed to what feels like a disjointed foreign policy relative to the global reality around AI and what's happening on the business firm. I agree.
Starting point is 00:44:38 Well said. Yeah. I mean, it's just so obvious. Why can't we be collaborating on stuff? And we see when you and I made our trip to the UAE and then we see the Saudis bringing movies back, we have certain regions, we're doing a pretty good job of engaging with.
Starting point is 00:44:51 Engagement, reasonable engagement is a good idea. It's because, and I think our FK has said this, we have created a very dangerous revolving door between our most critical institutions and the largest industrial companies in the United States. And that revolving door creates all kinds of conflicts of interest. And those things get sorted out via revenue and dollars and profits. And incentives. And so those incentives will drive us if it's the military industrial complex to go to war.
Starting point is 00:45:25 And you're seeing that it'll complicate our foreign policy. So this is what I've always said. The most important thing that we're doing is something that the military industrial complex cannot stop, which is our energy independence. And when you have energy independence and abundant cost of energy, I do think that the biggest thing you get is this piece of it and you stop fighting these wars, you become much more rational abroad, and you're like, okay, I don't need to fight with all of these people
Starting point is 00:45:50 because things are so great within our borders. You're so right, Bob, because we actually have stopped those wars and now we've created two other ones, Russia, Ukraine, we can't help ourselves. How far China? What's that? We can't help ourselves and we'll use the scarcity of commodities as a boogie man to basically incentivize us to go in these foreign misadventures and it really has
Starting point is 00:46:12 the stuff. By the way, just two quick points on that on Taiwan. There's an election next year and it looks like right now that the pro-China party might actually take power. Right now the party that's in power is more of a pro-Western party. And the reason I think is that the Taiwanese are looking at what's going on in Ukraine and they're looking at the corpses of the Ukrainian youth pile up and they're thinking maybe it's not such a great idea to be an American proxy state. Or in the words of Henry Kissinger, he once quiped that it's dangerous to be an American enemy, but it's absolutely fatal to be an American friend.
Starting point is 00:46:48 I think that this war may be backfiring in terms of the incentives is creating around Taiwan. Remember Biden said that this war would basically help protect Taiwan by deterring China. It might actually deter Taiwan from opposing China. So we'll have to see how that plays out. All an able-bodied person in Taiwan, a voting age needs to do, is read the newspaper and understand it in the last two and a half years. We've essentially started a multi-trillion-dollar program to deliver ourselves from all the critical resources that China and Taiwan gives us.
Starting point is 00:47:18 And so if you're a Taiwanese citizen, the writing is unfortunately on the wall, which is that we are giving ourselves the optionality to not have to do anything. So to your point, David, if you're a rational thinking Taiwanese person, unfortunately, you're forced to be in a position where you may have to head your bets. And if the United States can basically have a chip supply that comes from Europe and Mexico, now the sudden the criticality of TSMC goes away. To it, I published his tweet yesterday about Buffett and his trades in Japan. He bought these five trading companies. So it's just a really novel, carry trade that I've really fallen in love with, just understanding it.
Starting point is 00:47:58 But the code up to that is that when he did this and going long Japan, what he actually also did was he delivered himself from China, he had a long position in TSMC and he said, I'm out. And when they asked him why he sold TSMC, he said, this is a very complicated thing. And he basically said that it's not a bet
Starting point is 00:48:17 that's worth making. And I think underneath that, if I had to guess what he's trying to say about Taiwan indirectly, through his sale of TSMC, the odds are that we are not going to get into a land war over there, which means that that asset and its equity value is in danger, and I don't want to own it. And I think that that's a very clinical summation of his rational action. So to your point, well, here's what Blink said.
Starting point is 00:48:45 People speak with their dollars. I think it's very important. You know, the one China policy says Taiwan is part of China. It's not an independent country, but we've had a very ambiguous intolerance for this ambiguity of Taiwan acting as its own nation while saying we support the one China policy. And that ambiguity has served us very well in the China relationship. Here's a Blink said at the press conference quote, we do not support Taiwan independence. We remain opposed to any unilateral changes to the status quo by either side.
Starting point is 00:49:14 The status quo he's referring to here Brad is that they get to be independent in Taiwan, but we don't say they're independent. They are obviously acting in an independent manner, but it is not our business to tell the Taiwanese people that they're independent or not. It's their decision to determine if they're independent or not. Any thoughts on the trade by Buffett and Blinken? I think that is a comment at the press conference and this ambiguity.
Starting point is 00:49:41 I think we want to maintain the ambiguity. I think we're basically saying, Fuchina, don't change the status quo at least for now, right? While we rebuild these chipfabs in Arizona and other parts of the world, I think most of the wealthy families I've talked to from Taiwan believe that five or six years from now
Starting point is 00:50:03 the US will no longer be in the position where they will need Taiwan and Taipei as much as they do today and there were years You think it will take to be independent say it one more time and explain it Well, it's not about being independent. It's how much longer will Taiwan have what they believe to be de facto protection from the United States. And I was told by one very influential Taiwanese family that they believe what the fifth chip fab comes online in Arizona, which I think is scheduled for 25 or 26. They intended to have most of their family members out of Taiwan at that period in time.
Starting point is 00:50:42 Now I think most Taiwanese don't envision this being, you know, a violent invasion of Taiwan at that period in time. Now I think most Taiwanese don't envision this being, you know, a violent invasion of Taiwan. It's more of a take under in the same way that Hong Kong was. And so I don't see an American president frankly going to war, nor would I want them to go to war over Taiwan. But I think it's in all of our interest to maintain that status quo,
Starting point is 00:51:04 which is why taunting the Chinese over the course war over Taiwan. But I think it's in all of our interest to maintain that status quo, which is why taunting the Chinese over the course of the past few years over Taiwan has seemed like a policy that's not fit with our goals. Right. Well, if you look at skin in the game, the fact that the chipsack went through so quickly, the fact that Warren Buffett, as you pointed out, schmoth made his bet and this family that has obviously, you know, skin in the game quite literally are making these decisions.
Starting point is 00:51:29 I think we know where this is headed. You can just follow the bets. And if you look at the bets in five years, $5,000, $5,000. Follow the dollars. And also where people put themselves geographically, everybody left Hong Kong when the turnover happened or before it, they went to Singapore, they went to UAE, they voted with their feet and their dollars.
Starting point is 00:51:47 And that's obviously what's going to happen here. This is a good pivot because this criticism of the Ukraine policy by Matt that SACs pointed out came because there is a belief on his part and others that the pod here all in is putting its unilateral support behind RFK. That is not true. There are two people on the pod who hosted a fundraiser last week and here is what Matt incorrectly said because I have not put my support behind RFK. I think he's very interesting and I'm glad he's in the race and neither has Friedberg but Chimoff and Saks did host one and I'll hand it over to them, but here is what Matt said in his
Starting point is 00:52:32 Substack and even though it's not the subject of this post I do want to say that I think it's really sleazy and gross For the host of the all-in-pockets to be engaging in this Kennedy booster ism as a bangshot way of harming Joe Biden's reelection prospects not with saying the recent conversions around Russia policy Kennedy represents precisely the strand of progressive thought that right of center business people have highly have rightly spent the better part of the century bemoaning. His is an anti-progress anti-technology ultimately antihuman, to all of you that stands against bio-mogal progress, against energy progress, and against human civilization.
Starting point is 00:53:10 The guy who wants to blow up as many Ukrainians as possible, as a shield. As a shield. Yeah, exactly. Pretty gross, yeah. Listen, I don't even think we should be giving him this much time. Well, no, but I think it is important that because people now have connected this pod with the rise of RFK. This was the first major either what a glaci a glaci is accusing us somehow of do of of supporting rfk not because of
Starting point is 00:53:32 issues but somehow because it's a bank shot for Donald Trump which is ridiculous and none of us support Donald Trump he's not even my preferred candidate in the republican lane well what he said was a bank shot against biden just to be clear, a bank shot against Biden. I prefer I prefer RFK to Biden. It's that simple. What's wrong with that? He's not even making any arguments here.
Starting point is 00:53:53 Look, we've explained in a lot of detail and I explain in my response all the issues where I support RFK. He supports free speech over censorship. He supports civil liberties over the surveillance state. He supports peace speech over censorship. He supports civil liberties over the surveillance state. He supports peace instead of war. He supports sealing the southern border virtually alone among Democrats and talking sense on that issue. And I believe that he's completely correctly diagnosed what we're doing in Ukraine.
Starting point is 00:54:17 So on the issue is I support. You disagree with some of that some issues, right? You disagree with them on nuclear and you may disagree with them and his anti-vax stance if If he is, in fact, anti-vax. I just hope that sex finish those two. I think he was right about COVID lockdowns and I think he was right about COVID, the so-called COVID shot that wasn't even a vaccine that that should not have been required. But what about those two issues? You obviously disagree with them on some things. Do you disagree with them on his anti-vax stuff and his nuclear stuff? I don't know enough about those issues to have like a firm stance, but I would say is that every candidate represents a bundle of issues, and you support the ones who are aligned
Starting point is 00:54:57 with you on the issues that are most important to you. On the issues that are most important to me, which are these questions, the great questions of Warren Peas and great questions of warrant peace. And the questions of free speech and censorship and even I would say the question of the economy and who do we prioritize. Because he wants to prioritize the middle class on those big questions I feel like I'm aligned with rfk perfect that's why I support him. Let me go to the mind of my way you think jack dors Dorsey is supporting RFK as a bank shot, something or other. No, he's supporting it because he agrees to RFK on these questions of Warren Peas. Okay.
Starting point is 00:55:33 And free speech. Great. I'm just letting everybody be very clear about their position since this is becoming the support of RFK by this podcast or two of the four people in the podcast. He's now becoming kind of national news. Eglace is even making any arguments here. He's just applying drogatory labels to us. Yeah, I didn't know. And I believe what this is. This is a disciplinary tactic or a shaming tactic yes, by the sort of enforcers for the establishment. Right. You want to prevent
Starting point is 00:56:01 independent thinkers from stepping out of law. I agree. That's what this is about. It looks like this outsider went to the Dalton School in Harvard, University, so there you have it. Yeah, you got a $2 million education doesn't know what a basis point is. Oh, he's the guy with the basis points, right? Oh, boy. He failed math. He graduated with a Dalton in Harvard.
Starting point is 00:56:19 Good luck with your substatus. Oh, my God. Chimath, you are pro-new clear. You've been very clear about that. Although your pro renewables mostly, you've been clear about that on this podcast and many conversations I've had with you. You were also pro vaccine, but your anti-what happened with the lockdown. So maybe you could expand upon your support of RFK, why you held a fundraiser firm and what things you agree with them on and maybe what things you don't necessarily agree with him on.
Starting point is 00:56:45 Well, first I actually did what I think a lot of people haven't done, which is just listen to him, just stop talking, zip the old yapper, and there is an enormous amount of long-form content where you can really understand where he stands on some of these topics. He's right about the war on Ukraine. We shouldn't be in it. He's right about free speech, which is we should have it. He's right that the COVID vaccine was not a vaccine. And really what it's done is actually discredit the word vaccine, unfortunately, in a lot of people's minds. He actually is a person that is pro-vaccine for all these other vaccines. He himself is vaccinated, his children are vaccinated.
Starting point is 00:57:43 You would all know this stuff if you just took two minutes to just listen to it. He is against the COVID vaccine. And what I would say is, I'm very sympathetic to that. I'm very sympathetic to the job the FDA had to do. And I think they generally did do a great job. But we ran something through and we allowed it to be labeled a word that misappropriates what it is. It's not a vaccine and the problem with that is that it now makes people mistrust the measle mumps and rubelle of vaccine. That's crazy. You shouldn't mistrust the MMR vaccine or D-tap, but because those things are lumped in with the same thing as a COVID vaccine that is at best 30 or 40% Percentifications, we have these problems. He calls that out pretty honestly. So I like the fact that he actually speaks in nuance. I like the fact that when I listen to him I find that the
Starting point is 00:58:41 Talking head think police are Generally lying it confirms what I believe about them, because he just says things in a very plain spoken, intelligent way. And I think that there are a lot of folks who don't want to think, who want to be given the simple answer, who want to just reject what he stands for and just take the establishment view and the hopes that they'll get, I don't know, maybe accepted by the establishment. The establishment just wants to curate power. And I just think that people should be thinking for themselves.
Starting point is 00:59:15 If you listen to the Rogan podcast, if you listen to the Jordan Petersen podcast, there are millions and millions and millions of links and page views and discussions and thoughts and there's probably thousands of minutes of RFK explaining what he thinks on basically any topic you can imagine you can get to your own conclusion. And now I think what I think you'll find and this is true for me is there's 10% of stuff you are just vehemently supportive of. 70% of stuff that's like quite reasonable and fair. And then there's the rest, which is a spectrum of things I disagree with. But then you're left with blended expected value where you're like, man, this guy is really better than all the other alternatives. Brad, I'll let you go and then I'll give my Pacifico. What I find most insidious about the opposition
Starting point is 01:00:08 to this discussion is people are upset that you're not swearing an allegiance to a dogmatism. Right? The truth of the matter is this group has hosted dinners for Rokana, for Senator Manchin. We've hosted dinners for DeSantis, right? Had I been here, I would have put my name on the dinner for Kennedy
Starting point is 01:00:31 because I want to gather information. I'm an analyst, I wanna think for myself, how can we spend trillions and put ourselves into potentially harm's way without having a real conversation in Congress and on these pods about the risk of war. Why can't we have an authentic post-mortem about the efficacy of the COVID vaccine
Starting point is 01:00:56 without being shamed? The revolution going on in this country, which is fantastic from my perspective, is that there is no longer a monopolistic control over the discussion. And that's why this podcast and this friendship and the conversation we all had here is resonating with people because they also want to hear all the different sides because most people are capable, are way smarter than the elites on the coast thing. people are capable are way smarter than the elites on the coast thing. You know, I'm from Indiana, lots of smart folks who think for themselves in Indiana, but they're told by coastal
Starting point is 01:01:31 elites what to think and they reject this and that's what you're seeing in this discussion in so many of these others. It's not about vaccines, it's not about a war. It's about their control over how you think and then wanting to force you to swear to an orthodoxy. I think that's really well said. Yeah, that is well said. But the way they try to control what you think is by labeling candidates. So as to exclude them or make them sound crazy.
Starting point is 01:02:00 So, Jake Al, I mean, you kind of introduced RFK as an anti-vaxxer. I don't think that is the correct way to describe his position or the singular way that he should be labeled. No, I don't believe that. I said, here are the things he believes that we agree with, and then I gave the things that the media is saying, you know, so I was trying to present the totality of it. And I said, he is obviously in favor of the middle class and all this stuff. So, I would be clear on my position here. So I am in support of vibrant, long form debate,
Starting point is 01:02:31 like we have here. And I'm in support of anybody who takes on the establishment because there are crazy incentives. As we talk about here, incentives matter. And we are long overdue for a discussion on vaccines. But it's very important that everybody understand here that everybody on this podcast took the COVID vaccine. And everybody here, our kids have been vaccinated. It's not a vaccine. It's not a vaccine. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:02:54 So they took the COVID-19 reduction. We were injected with an experimental mRNA treatment because we got hoodwinked by the media into thinking it would prevent us from ever getting COVID, which it did not do. I think it's like that. Two months later, I got vaccines are good and the COVID thing was not very good. And it reduced death in older people and probably was the only group of people. And we'll know when we do a post-mortem. But do not do that. Now we got this mRNA like flowing through our bodies.
Starting point is 01:03:24 Who knows, it might be a time bomb. Well, and then for people who are wondering like if we should even be having these discussions, the the hypocrisy of the media, I think, is very important to look at here because the media is going to be attacking this podcast over and over again, not that it matters. But when we moved into the top hundred top 50 top 10, that's when the knives came out and I would like to remind the media of the long history of investigative journalism and debates what was once a conspiracy theory often goes on to win a Pulitzer Prize and you know the hypocrisy here is crazy because if you look at some of the greatest stories and investigative journalists pieces, they started with these debates, rumors, etc.
Starting point is 01:04:08 Abu Ghrab. That was the New Yorker. Ralph Nadeh, on-site. That was a side-horses reporting. That was a side-horses reporting and he can't get the time of day. Right. He can't get the time of day for his report on who really destroyed Nord Stream. The Catholic Church, sex scandal, the Boston Globe.
Starting point is 01:04:24 The mainstream media does not perform the function that you're describing anymore. They act as the bodyguard for the elite, for the establishment. They actually have even a leg done- They are stenographers for the people in power. Not exactly true. They have actually done incredible reporting, but there is a group of them, which is towing the party wine, because you have The New York Times and their expose on the Taxi Commission, that won a Pulitzer in 2020.
Starting point is 01:04:49 And then you look at, I know you don't follow Pulitzer's or investigative journalism. In 2020, Brian Rosenthal at the New York Times did a massive expose on the predatory New York City Taxi industry. And at the same time, that might be important in New York or in Darlis. There's a few other issues that might be more important to the nation.
Starting point is 01:05:06 It was an example of protectionism and rent seeking. The N Ron scandal, big tobacco, 60 minutes. What about the pretzels monopoly in the South part of the Bronx? What about that hot dog vendor on the new? No, no, no, you guys are uninformed. Didn't have all of his licenses up to date. I thought there was a long time. What about the big exro's in that.
Starting point is 01:05:25 You guys are shooting the back. The fact is, at the same time that the New York Times, CNN, were attacking what Uber was doing, the New York Times won a fucking Pulitzer for their coverage of predatory loans by rich, powerful people in New York City. I bet they also did a great story on the guy selling trinkets outside Penn Station
Starting point is 01:05:47 without a license. For somebody who's a man of the people like yourself, actually should actually be more informed. Okay. Well, what they should be reporting on, for example, if they really, if the pullerchers worked the way they should is where patient zero came from on COVID. Because Michael Schoenberg just reported this over the last week and it got picked up by the Wall Street
Starting point is 01:06:07 Journal that patient zero, it turns out, was a researcher at the Wuyang Lab who was performing gain-of-function research. Yeah, shocker. Another conspiracy theory proven true. And we'll wind up being a Pulitzer. He deserves a Pulitzer. He does.
Starting point is 01:06:24 And the crazy thing about this quote-unquote conspiracy theory to turn to be true is like it brought together the most odd bedfellows, Rand Paul and John Stewart. When Rand Paul and John Stewart can be in a room and agree on basically the totality of a topic, we should all just pay attention because it's not a normal rule in which these guys get along. Right. And go to them nailed it from day one. They have the same name. But now connect the dots further, okay.
Starting point is 01:06:54 Why was the truth suppressed? Why did it not come out? Because Fauci had funded Gain of Function Research at the Wuhan Lab via eco-health alliance. So he knew that if at the beginning of this pandemic, it turned out that he had been partially responsible for the creation of this virus that had now turned into a pandemic around the world, his career would have been over. And it's worse, SACs. It's even worse than that.
Starting point is 01:07:22 46% of the advertising on TV news comes from farm and we did not always allow farmer spending and this is may not be one to one. It may not be that a specific person doing a report at CNN or Fox or any of the networks is saying, oh, I'm gonna lose my job if I write something critical of farmer, but they're not doing the investigative pieces on, I can tell you this, on the people who have 46% of their advertising revenue. Unless it really gets to the final inning on something. And that is something that we need to question.
Starting point is 01:07:59 The media is funded. 46% by pharma companies and pharma companies were given a pass and if you criticize any of the pharma companies The media is gonna come for you and so listen. I'm not a tinfoil, but you do That is not tinfoil. Listen the media is funded by big pharma and its primary sources are these high-level government employees Who've been there forever who leaked them information that is why the new york times was carrying water for falchi and big pharma this is the marriage of state power and corporate greed that rfk junior denounces well uh... there you have it folks so and now he believes he could be assassinated
Starting point is 01:08:41 by the c.a. no he didn't say it like that he didn't say it like that he He didn't say it like that. He was asked what is his strategy on campaigning and all of that stuff. And he said, look, I'm gonna do as much as possible, but one thing that I'm going to avoid are like these open air parades, just because there's just a lot of folks
Starting point is 01:09:01 that we can't control, crowd control. Yeah, okay, reasonable. Yeah, I mean, the conversation on Rogan went something like this. there's just a lot of folks that we can't control crack control yeah okay reasonable yeah i mean that the conversation with rogan went something like this rogan was asking questions about the kennedy assassinations and rfk believes like something like sixty percent american public believes that lea harvier's wall did not act alone then rogan as a will do you ever feel afraid
Starting point is 01:09:23 running for office and his answer was basically no not really it's not something that i'm preoccupied with but yeah i'll take precautions does that mean he thinks the c a is going to assassin no that's not what he said but that is how the media reported it including fox news that became the sound by well the sound by from this podcast was
Starting point is 01:09:41 that he believes his uncle was in it and his father were that the CIA was involved in the assassination. A lot of people. I am not giving my opinion. I'm giving his opinion on it. He said it on this podcast. And the CIA won't release all the information to this day, even though they've been commanded to do so. So make your own decision, folks.
Starting point is 01:10:00 According to Bloomberg, there is a ton of action for startup shares in secondary markets. If you don't know what secondary market is, that's when one investor buys shares in a company that's not yet public directly from another investors on the cap table. So if Stripe, which is not yet public or Reddit, there are shares floating around in those companies, either previous employees or previous investors. One firm might see an opportunity there and buy them. As this process of bottomy out has occurred occurred, pitch book reported Tiger Global told secondary investors and that's a class of people who like to buy these that they could bid on any
Starting point is 01:10:32 individual private company in its portfolio. They tried to sell a bundle of these shares about 30 startups at a time, but they couldn't find buyers according to the reports. So now they're allowing people to bid on per company on a per company basis Some of these are being marked down a third 50% Etc Here's the quote from Bloomberg as of May 31st shares of startups were trading at a median discount of 61% Compared to valuations at their latest funding rounds according to report by forage global holdings a
Starting point is 01:11:04 16 according to the report is actively buying shares in secondary, Excel, Bane, Bessamer, and Cliner are also using secondary to grow stakes in their existing investments, doubling down as it were cross over firms like CO2, Tiger Growth, Global, and even Brad's altimeter are actively searching for deals. So, Brad, your thoughts this, is this sign of a bottom? And why are you doing this? It's not really true, you're doing it. Yeah, it is true.
Starting point is 01:11:29 I mean, our job is to look at all these companies, understand their value. You know, I'm sitting here looking at a list that I was given this morning, 125 companies, secondary. You know, the Goldman Sachs unprofitable tech index in the public markets is down 64% as of this one. Unprofitable public companies, they put together a basket, they track unprofitable public companies down 64% off of its peak as of this morning.
Starting point is 01:11:55 So you just quoted the Bloomberg article saying, yeah, these unprofitable tech companies in the private markets are down about 60, 61%. That smells right to me. The repricings have to occur. These have to occur, right? There are 1400 unicorns at the end of 2022, and a hundred percent of them will likely do a down run. And if you said, what is the average that they're going to be down, it's over 50%. You saw the reprisings out of some of the best ones, like a Canva or a Stripe, where it was down, let's go out 30, 40, 50%. But, you know, they're going to
Starting point is 01:12:31 be companies like in the public markets that are down 80 or 90% and disappear altogether. So we didn't see the reprisings, okay? And by the way, when we say, you know, that article quotes, forage, that is what the sellers are offering to sell shares for. That is not where transactions are clearing, right? So why hasn't altimeter purchased any of this because the prices aren't low enough to induce me to get off the sidelines to purchase the shares, but we're within kind of, you know, we're starting to get off the sidelines to purchase the shares, but we're within kind of, you know, we're starting to get in the zone where we can underwrite to a margin of safety,
Starting point is 01:13:11 competitive or better than the public markets for companies that we think are great companies. Now out of those 1400 unicorns at the end of 22, they're probably less than 5% of those companies I would even want to own at the right price. So it's a small subset of companies. The price has to get to this clearing point. But I think over the course of the next 18 months, we're going to see an acceleration of market clearing events
Starting point is 01:13:39 as these companies need to raise capital as their employees want to get liquid on shares. And it's probably some great opportunities, but most of these things that get put on sale should not be purchased, right? Most of them, even the first sale price is never the last sale price. The mark down on the black t-shirts will continue. Tom Arthur, sax any thoughts? Are you buying in secondary? Are you looking at this?
Starting point is 01:14:05 Yeah. We'll look at secondary deals. It's not primarily what we do, but we're open to it. But Brad, if you were to categorize the 1,400 unicorns into one of three categories, what do you think the percentages would be? Those three categories being zombie corns, like unicorn companies that just don't deserve to exist in a product market fit and they're going to go away. Category 2 would be viable companies that are just overpriced and are headed for a down
Starting point is 01:14:29 round. And the number 3 would be the ones that are actually headed for an up-round. Yeah, I would say 30 to 40 percent are these companies that were valued over a billion dollars that don't have product market fit. They'll disappear. Zombie companies that will disappear. Right. Listen, just to be fair, let's explain, most of these companies have less than 200 million
Starting point is 01:14:54 of preference preferred shares that venture capitalists invest into the company. And many of those companies in that 30, 40%, there's a team, there's some asset of value. They may be able to sell the talent of the team and recoup, David, let's call it 30, 40% of the pref stack in that transaction. We're starting to see some of those occur. Then I think the lion share of the companies that are left. Let's call it another 40%. These are companies that should never have been marked at these prices, but they do have a business, and they're going to be marked down 50% to 80%.
Starting point is 01:15:37 But none of those have been able to grow through it. Then there's less than 10% of the companies whose growth has been so robust through this period that they've actually grown into or within 10, 15% of those prior prices. And if you do all of that work, it puts us back on trendline, right? The only thing unusual here is how far off trendline, we had 1,400 unicorns, right? In 2020, we had I think 145 IPOs. In the last two years, we've had four. Okay. So there's a huge backlog. These companies aren't getting public. Why? Because public market buyers like ourselves, we're not willing to pay the
Starting point is 01:16:19 prices that were in the private market. So the first step is to just have these clearing events. And as David, you and I heard, sober talk over the course of the last couple days i think they you know said to the founders very clearly you need to sell your businesses or you need to get profitable there is no middle ground in other news for it has been issued a conditional nine point two billion dollar loan from the use department energy to build out three one two three EV battery factories specific alone is coming through the Department of Energy's LPO that's the loan programs office. They've got about 400 billion to lend out. You might remember this from 2010 when they gave Selindra a one two three batteries which eventually went bankrupt and got bought by a
Starting point is 01:17:03 Chinese company I I believe, and Tesla, a $465 million dollar loan, Tesla paid it back, the other two didn't, Tesla paid it back with interest, Jig or Shah, the director of the loan program office described the lending moves as a way to onshore and reshore manufacturing, the goal of the program, is not innovation, but to get more of the supply chain
Starting point is 01:17:24 to be manufactured in the US. Yes. Some people are criticizing this just out of the gate with why should we be giving these loans to companies should this be the private sector doing it. Jim, what are your thoughts here? Is this a good idea, a great idea, a neutral idea? It's a great idea. Explain. It's us using our balance sheet to make sure that we get to energy independence.
Starting point is 01:17:50 So this is actually a perfect role for government. It's shaping incentives so that capitalism can do its job. What this does for Ford is, Ford has a partnership with SK. And so SK has a lot of capability in Korea, but they can bring that know-how now domestically on short of the United States. You'll be hiring thousands of people. You'll be building battery factories.
Starting point is 01:18:14 Ford needs batteries. Their forecast is they'll be selling 2.5 million electric vehicles by 2026, 2027. So whatever Ford does, you can expect GM will also do. You can expect all of the other big companies to do. So this is all just great. And at the end of the day. For people to not over this is 9.8 billion. I guess it sounds like a lot, but we're probably spending 9.8 billion dollars a day fighting wars. So this is a day of just taking a pause on all these dumb wars and actually becoming energy reliant, carbon neutral, fixing the climate. It's great. Jobs, energy independence, and less dependency on autocratic nations.
Starting point is 01:18:57 It seems like good idea. Everything should be... How about instead of thinking about it in terms of wars, let's think about it in terms of... be, how about instead of thinking about it in terms of war, so think about it in terms of, so if the, if the, the DOD budget is $800 billion, okay, per year, what is that 2.6 billion a day, 2.7 billion a day? Okay, so we're talking about three days, four days, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. You want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want to say, you want, Thursday. You want to say, actually, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday? Yeah, I'll take a look inside of it.
Starting point is 01:19:25 The private should probably be doing that. I agree with Jamoth about the wars, but this is all money we don't have. I mean, we shouldn't be spending the money on wars and we shouldn't be spending it, I think, on industrial policy. So first of all, one of our friends who's an energy investor, we should beep his name if it was telling me that the energy subsidies that were in the
Starting point is 01:19:47 misnamed inflation reduction act, it is like the biggest bananza of all time. He said that the energy sector is going crazy now trying to figure out how to exploit these incentives. And his view is that although I think it was supposed to cost about $350 billion, he thought that it would ultimately cost the government somewhere around a trillion. Because the way these subsidies work is that you just qualify for them and then you get the subsidy, it's not like the credits run out. So if you qualify, you get it.
Starting point is 01:20:17 So this could end up costing the government way more than what was originally projected. And so the question is, what are you going to get for all of this money? And in this article on Ford, they were talking about these 7,000 jobs that are being created at a cost of $440,000 per job. So it's great that the jobs are being created. But if you look at the efficiency of that, that spend per job doesn't really make sense. I don't understand how you get that number. You take that for the article. That's where the article said it. The article said $440,000 per job doesn't really make sense. I don't understand how you get that number you take that's where the article
Starting point is 01:20:45 The article said it the article said for four four hundred forty thousand dollars. Do you do take nine point eight billion and divided by Thousand what do you do? I'm just quoting that paragraph of the article so yeah, so the job creation is good But you got to look at the efficiency of the job creation The other thing is the question I would ask you guys actually is, who wants one of these Ford EVs? Do you want an EV by Ford? I think there are a lot of people that drive a Ford pickup truck. We talked about this before, so that's one 50s. That's one 50s coming, yeah. Very popular.
Starting point is 01:21:17 There is an article in the Wall Street Journal a few months ago which talked about the brand consideration cycle that has been going on, And there was a large, we're friends with Elon, but we should acknowledge there's a large number of people that are frankly a little bit turned off by him. And they've been very clear that they want an alternative to Tesla because they don't want to buy Tesla because they don't necessarily prefer him as a brand ambassador for their car. And the reality of life is that even if you're like maximally incredible, unless you find some clever way of creating a monopoly, in which case you can be a douche or evil,
Starting point is 01:21:53 you're only ever going to capture 30 plus 40 percent, maybe you have a mark. Coke Pepsi is a good example. And so there's always going to be long tail alternatives. And I had a chance, for example, in Vegas to drive a Rivian. I was surprised at the quality or drive inter- Rivian. I was surprised at the quality of Rivian, only because I've been so focused on tests on my whole life. So yeah, I think there are a lot of people that will buy forwards. Doesn't take anything away from what Elon's doing, but I do think there are a lot of people that will buy it. My problem with industrial policy is this. Do you think about that EV summit that the White House did. They didn't even invite Elon.
Starting point is 01:22:26 And that was for political reasons. Union reasons, yeah. Partly because of his views on speech, but I think mostly because he's not a union shop. And so that's the real reason why Ford is being doled out this sort of nine point something billion dollar loan is because they're polically connected with the right people in this current administration and that's the problem with industrial policy is that the money gets handed out by
Starting point is 01:22:51 government to the polically connected in this case test the two the companies that may be producing the best products the fact is test that you get one of these loans in twenty ten when it was a very nice and company so you gotta give them some credit they took a big risk there but let's think about that for a second. Okay, because I know that example comes up a lot.
Starting point is 01:23:08 And a one, two, three, and cylindra. Yeah. So Elon was basically a fluke. I mean, you get like a once in a generation non-spanur who helped me working on this EV problem and he got that loan. If you're to take Elon out of that government portfolio, it all looks like cylindra. Yep.
Starting point is 01:23:25 So the question is, like, what is this portfolio going to look like? Is there really going to be another Elon in there? Because if not, there's going to be a lot of Selendras. Well, even if they break even. There's going to be a lot of subsidies to companies like Ford, which are politically connected. And I think a point Freiber would make, if you were here, is that at some point, you're going to have to turn off the subsidies because we can't afford it and then at that point is that factory give me self-sufficient. Brad? You've heard the two sides of the story here.
Starting point is 01:23:53 Well, listen, while generally against industrial policy, I come down on Jamassad. I think this is a once in a generation opportunity to reduce our national security risk profile and to achieve what is really a national security imperative, which is energy independence. It's not going to happen just according to the invisible hand of the market. We see our great power competitors who are using this against us, frankly, and have robust industrial policies. So I'm willing to stipulate that there will be those inefficiencies in this system. But I was lucky enough last night I was having dinner with the deputy secretary of the Treasury, Wally Adiyama, who was out here meeting with founders, including battery founders in Silicon
Starting point is 01:24:41 Valley, on this very subject. And I know some of the companies who are getting checks from the US government to scale up right, innovative battery technologies, innovative chip manufacturing. And I have to say this is the best of America. I see some really great public private partnerships that are ensuring vitalshoreing vital national interests in ships and batteries. And so I'm happy to see it happening, but I also know there will be grift and there will be waste along the way. But compare that David to the 8 trillion we've spent over the last 20 years on war policy and what we've gotten from that.
Starting point is 01:25:19 So, you know, you know, rather see us take chances here on innovative battery technologies that we've seen. It's not as wasteful as a war. Of course. I mean, the first thing we got to do is turn off all these crazy wars, but that can't be the bar because that's a very low bar. I mean, anything's more productive than, you are wasting the money blowing up other countries that we don't need to be involved in.
Starting point is 01:25:41 I mean, remember, we do have a $32 trillion debt. I think a great thing to do here is what they should have done with Tesla, which is when they gave that $500 million loan to Tesla, they should have gotten 10% of that in warrants to buy Tesla shares at the IPO. 50 million at that IPO would have gone what, 200 X. And that would have been an incredible payday. So if they give this $9.2 billion to Ford, why not get 900 million in war? So you want the government to become a VC? credible payday. So if they give this 9.2 billion to Ford, why not get 900 million and why do you want the government to become a VC?
Starting point is 01:26:07 No, I want them to get a little participation in the upside of the company. I don't want them to own it. I want them to have potential participation. Well, I'm giving a modest number here. So right now, they're a VC without participation. But right now, they're alone that gets paid back with interest. And I'm saying give them some upside in the equity, even if it's a small piece, would you object to that sex? You basically want to make them a venture debt provider like SVB basically. Yeah, like venture debt, like give them a pot sweetener. Yes. Yes. Give them a pot sweetener. Why don't you work out so good for SVB? You may not remember that, but it would have worked
Starting point is 01:26:40 out incredibly well with their pressing. It doesn't solve my problem. You might drive a better deal for the US government in that case, which is their pressing. Jason, it doesn't solve my problem. You might drive a better deal for the US government in that case, which is fine with me, but it doesn't solve my objection, which is at the end of the day, these decisions are going to be made based on political criteria. But true, yes, I'm got it. Okay.
Starting point is 01:26:55 And we're going to end up with crony capitalism and state capitalism as opposed to entrepreneurial capitalism. But this isn't supportive of that because this is a deal where that 9.8 billion does come over, but these are basically like loans and loan guarantees. You select to put up the equity yourself. That doesn't solve anybody's problem, meaning you need to still be entrepreneurial. And there needs to be risk capital.
Starting point is 01:27:14 In this case, the risk capital is coming from Ford and SK. And I think that that's my understanding of this. I'm just really suspicious because this is Ford. I'm just really suspicious because this is Ford. 90% of the costs or 95% of the costs. So there's not much risk capital here from Ford or SK. I mean, it might be opportunity cost, but it's not the full cost of these three factories,
Starting point is 01:27:31 almost $13 billion. So there's still a non-trivial amount of risk capital that has to get put to work here. Man, I would love to only have to put up 20% on the dollar with the resense on the dollar. In my investments. I think Brad does make a good point about the security of our supply chain. I'm more willing to use this sort of industrial policy. We're talking about
Starting point is 01:27:51 something that is vital to the security of the United States. I think you make you make your you make that with chips. I don't think electric vehicles rise to that quite that level. Batteries might. I don't know. I wouldn't say batteries, dude, but I think obtaining a secure supply of the rare earth that are needed to make batteries, there's maybe a role for government in that. But the reason batteries must is because the only way to lean yourself off of the dependence we have on fossil fuels around the world, and even though we produce, and we're now a net
Starting point is 01:28:23 exporter of oil, the reality is we're still in entanglements around the world because the world is dependent upon those fossil fuels. And so I do think that that is a national security interest having energy independence, not only for ourselves, but for ourselves. If Jeremy was energy independent and kept their nuclear running and didn't have Nord Stream, we'd have a different situation here right now. We'd have a much better situation. True, maybe true. We got plenty of oil and gas over here.
Starting point is 01:28:48 All right, everybody, there you have it from the architect, Drill-Bit-Trigger Warning. I like to grab a Thumbberg tweet from off. That was a really good tweet, shout out to you. Oh my God. Oh my God, the number of people. I mean, did the mids like it or the mids hated it? What happened? Can I just address what this means? So when I think of somebody as a mid, it's somebody that is just a hapless, impotent cuck that can't think of themselves.
Starting point is 01:29:15 A madaglacious. And so what I don't mean is that, you know, you're just from the beginning of the right about us every week. You know what this, this is it's the all in podcast for clicks. If you 10 people have started kind of finished, yes, got it. Is nothing to do with your financial status. It's just everything to do with your open mindedness. And there are these people that are just so reactive on Twitter. I feel a little bit sad because like in a few years, they'll still be very unaccomplished and yet still be wondering who they can blame now and it'll just be
Starting point is 01:29:49 them. So I would just encourage these people that just fucking do some work. Put your head down. Do the work. My God. Build something. Make something. So anyways, most of the comments were really great and interesting. And then there's a couple of people who are like, oh my god, how dare you, you know, and it's like, how dare I what? How dare I what exactly? You can tell that the Spargast has truly become successful when the mainstream media fights up and punches up to try to get us to respond to them to get more people to subscribe
Starting point is 01:30:19 to their sub-stack while playing Matt. I'll tell you the funniest thing. The funniest thing was I did this tweet about Buffett and then people are like, oh, but I thought, you compared yourself to Buffett. And I was like, no, no comparison, just benchmarks. And then they get tweaked about the word comparison versus benchmark.
Starting point is 01:30:37 And then Carson Block jumps in and I texted Carson on the side, I was like, bro, I'm just trolling the mids. Just don't worry, this is all bullshit., I'm just trolling the mids. Just don't worry. This is all bullshit. It's all just for shits and giggles. I do it. I do it when I'm either pooing or I haven't jet liked. It's one of the other. It's on Ambien or Waltting the Dump or both. No Ambien. For the dictator, the architect and Bestie Brad, the fifth Bestie, and our new mascot, Matt the mascot, who'll be writing three more substacks about us.
Starting point is 01:31:10 I am the world's greatest moderator. Can we make that shit bread logo, our logo? Yes! Haha, make, to co-tos, austerity measure lunch. We salute you. The all-in lunch will not be a steady way to touch it. Do you know what it was? Was it bread? Did you touch it? I didn't touch it. No. What wasn't I abandoned it immediately? Is it vegan pretzel? I don't know. I was a vegan. Is that what they call poop?
Starting point is 01:31:37 Don't poop now a vegan pretzel? Does that mean that Friedberg was going to be there? A vegan pretzel. I mean the WTF wants us eating insects. I think that's probably what it is. It looks like a vegan donut slash a do-do. It looks like a French donut. It's a face when he opened that box. He just dropped it on the right. It's like a literally let-tugged ass. It's a matter of fog. I thought my seven year old had played it trick on me
Starting point is 01:31:58 because it's a ghost type. I think that's a ghost type. I think that's a ghost type. I think that's a ghost type. I think that's literally let- You're gonna have to let him pop. You're disgusting. I thought my seven year old had played it fricking on me because he's into those types of like ass. What about the fake dude?
Starting point is 01:32:12 There's the rubber ones. I'm gonna buy some fake dude. I'm gonna be honest. I've done that. I'm gonna throw it off. The fake dude is great. I'm gonna buy some fake dude. Actually, you know what they should do.
Starting point is 01:32:23 They should put that cotuchia make fake dude and put it in the gift bag for all in summit. That would be a great little merch item. Alright, we'll see you on the next and they've just got crazy with it. Lumbi West, I squeeed a kid while I'm going on a leave What, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what Oh man, my hamlet is actually a meaty apple. We should all just get a room and just have one big hug or two because they're all It's like this like sexual tension that we just need to release that out. What your beef? What your beef? Beef. What's good for you? We need to get my cheese out of that.
Starting point is 01:33:19 I'm doing all this! I'm doing all the same!

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