All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E8: TikTok + Oracle, how privacy loss will impact society, economy & COVID outlooks for 2021 & beyond, California wildfires & more

Episode Date: September 19, 2020

Follow the crew: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://bio.fm/the...allinpod Articles referenced in the show: America Needs to Lock Down Again: https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/united-states/2020-09-16/coronavirus-america-needs-lock-down-again A Taxonomy of Fear: https://www.persuasion.community/p/a-taxonomy-of-fear NuScale Power Article: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200828005299/en/NuScale-Power-Makes-History-as-the-First-Ever-Small-Modular-Reactor-to-Receive-U.S.-Nuclear-Regulatory-Commission-Design-Approval Running Tide Article: https://www.fastcompany.com/90548820/forget-planting-trees-this-company-is-making-carbon-offsets-by-putting-seaweed-on-the-ocean-floor Show Notes: 0:00 The besties talk about the bestie reunion mishap, the Code 13 story & more 5:42 TikTok + Oracle, is the escalation between China & US a slippery slope, security threats created by modern software 15:01 What’s the bigger picture of the TikTok debate, what policy could be enacted 20:13 The emerging market for guaranteed privacy & how this impacts society 27:43 State of the US economy, is there a permanent unemployed class & could there be a second wave of lockdowns? 37:44 COVID outlooks for 2021 & beyond, innovations in rapid testing 46:22 Trump’s COVID response, Trump vs. Biden, shrinking impact of the executive branch 55:11 California wildfires, politicization of global warming, financial incentives to solving climate change 1:08:28 Practical ways to impact global warming & the carbon crisis 1:11:57 Sacks on A Taxonomy of Fear by Emily Yoffe, Safety-ism & contamination by association 1:18:58 Could Trump being re-elected eliminate the two-party system?

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, everybody. Hey, everybody. Welcome to another episode of All In, the podcast episode eight besties are here to talk about tech economy politics, the election and our lives in Silicon Valley. Welcome back to the pod, David Friedberg, Queen of Kenwai is here from an I just close. JTL always always a joy. Yes. Undisclosed location somewhere in the Midwest. Yes, undisclosed location somewhere in the Midwest you you bowed on SF after the Smoke you left it how many days into the barbecue into the orange cloud I
Starting point is 00:00:32 left on the Wednesday of the orange cloud and Took it was crazy took my kiddos and we're waiting it out the fires in the in the Midwest Well, it's beautiful the last two days here. Also from an undisclosed Bestie location, David Sacks back on the program. Rain Man is here. Yep. Definitely here. Good to be here.
Starting point is 00:00:54 All right. Well, they got a man of many words and speaking of man of many words, how to off of seven keynotes this week talking about SPACs, the Prince of SPACs, Chimath Polly, Hapatia back on the pod. How are you, Besties? Well, we had a little Bestie reunion, which I think we can talk about, Chimath invited us over to have an outdoor Bestie reunion. Yeah, and you gave one of them Godorea, and you gave the other two. Well, it's crazy to say, but I literally had to call
Starting point is 00:01:25 Chimoff two or three days after he hosted. Oh, so, so socially, by the way, a socially distanced dinner outdoors, social distance dinner outdoors. Wonderful. We had some great ribeye, fantastic, cracked open a nice bottle or two of one and the port. And but, but then what did you do? Well, then a family member of mine, who shall remain nameless,
Starting point is 00:01:51 decided to go to a party in San Francisco and possibly got the Rona and he tested positive. And then I had to get everybody in my house tested twice. Everybody came back negative, but I had to call Shamath and tell him, listen, I wasn't exposed, but some members of my family were. Therefore, I might have second-hand exposure. I took two tests, came back negative two times in a row. Can I just say, though, it's really crazy, like, we have to develop all these new social norms, and you're not sure what to social norms and you're not sure what to say and you're not you're not sure how to react and it's like it's it must have been like when, you know, you got a call and it's like, hey, listen, uh, you know, you know,
Starting point is 00:02:33 girlfriends like, I may be pregnant or like, you know, somebody's like, hey, listen, I have an STD like you just like, what's going on? I felt like that when I was texting the green chat. I was like, three of us. And I had to text my tail between my legs. I think I've been exposed. I'm really sorry guys. I think Calcannus is the Greek word for a turd in the punch bowl. You know, that's all. Yeah, it's some, yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:02:55 I don't know if we can tell the code 13. Oh, I'm gonna tell the code 13. Sorry, I wasn't even there, but I. Sorry. Sorry, it's legendary. Jason, Jason Calcan is gets invited by David Sachs out of his benevolence to come
Starting point is 00:03:10 to stay in Hawaii at the four seasons. And at some where some point during this week log vacation, Chris, because Jack, Christmas day, you hear a shout from the pool from the life card. No, it was, it was even before that. We were
Starting point is 00:03:24 sitting at the bar. So me and Jason and his even before that. We were sitting at the bar. So me and Jason and his brother-in-law were sitting at the bar having drinks. And all of a sudden, there's a commotion and the bartenders and the staff and we started hearing people on walkie talkie saying, code 13, code 13. And people running. People are running. We don't know what to make of that.
Starting point is 00:03:39 We think it's a terrorist attack. I mean, literally the four seasons is on a high alert. A alarms are going off. And then and then we hear, okay, well, we're like, we set to the bar, what's the code 13? And he's like, well, it means that some kid, you know, crap in the pool. Yeah. Did a number two in the pool. And we're like, you know, and then we're like, okay, well, you know, it was Jason's kids. Well, then, then I started hearing about like the sax kids, and I'm like,
Starting point is 00:04:09 sax, sax code 13. Yeah, and then you got sax. They thought it was us, and then it turns out it was, it was Jacob's kid. And we were, we were never able to get a, a reservation. But they have this, well, it's so funny. It's like, I, I, I went, I went there at one point a few years later. And it's a whole ordeal because they said, so how do you guys It's like, I went there at one point a few years later, and it's a whole ordeal because they said,
Starting point is 00:04:26 so how do you guys deal with like, you know, a code 13? They're like, oh, code 13. You have to evacuate the whole, how the island gets sent to. Here's what had to happen. This is on, just to put the code, their data perspective, I think my 10 year old at the time was two years old.
Starting point is 00:04:43 My sister-in-law takes the baby in the pool without telling anybody, and the baby is not wearing a swim diaper. And so, basically a Snickers bar floats out of the, and there's a Snickers bar in the pool. You guys have kids, you know how big these things could get. You're like, how is that possible? You know, like a movie theater- other size snicker, king size snicker boy is floating in the middle of the pool. But this is on December 25th, these poor people are spending $3,000 a night. There is not a single shace lounge by the pool that's not occupied. It is peak capacity at the four seasons hotel on the big island or wherever it was. The pool has to be shut down for four hours.
Starting point is 00:05:26 The person has to get in with the hazmat suit, retrieve the Snickers bar, King size Snickers has to get out of the park. Then they have to throw in every chemical known to man so much so that the pool is ruined for Christmas day. And that's the code 13 story. All right, getting back to our topics, TikTok is on the verge of being banned from additional US downloads. The Commerce Department has announced that it will ban US downloads and business transactions with TikTok and we chat somehow we check up holding into this
Starting point is 00:05:56 on Sunday. This will seemingly we're going to allow TikTok to operate until November 12th. Seemingly, we're going to allow TikTok to operate until November 12th. So they got a little bit of a stay at execution. But of course, if they can't update in the app store, that means there could be any security vulnerabilities that could found between now and then would not be able to be updated. And Stephen, you chin? Stephen, I have a tempting to push through a TikTok deal that'll enable retaining some Chinese ownership.
Starting point is 00:06:27 And there's some sort of agreement now with Oracle. We'll have some kind of an oversight board to do continuous third party audits. What does this say, Chimoff about? We're at and do you believe that a Democratic leader, let's say Obama or Biden, would have taken the same approach here? Does it worry you that the government is getting this involved? Or is this inspiring that the government is putting their foot down and saying, hey, listen, we're going to need to have some basic level of reciprocity from China if we're going
Starting point is 00:06:58 to allow you in our episode? You know, I think it's kind of like, you know, like if you've ever been driving some place with your significant other and they're like, turn left and you're like, no, no, I'm going to turn right. And then you realize you should have turned left, but then you keep turning right a few more times, then you take a couple more lives, but then you end up at the same place, but it was complete shit, dumb luck. I feel like we're going to end up in the same place here with TikTok, which is that I think that the Trump administration probably is doing this, and Donald Trump specifically probably
Starting point is 00:07:30 does this more as a demonstration of power, and American exceptionalism, which I'm not sure is the right reason to do it, but I think the outcome is right, which is that for years China has essentially been shut out to American companies, unless you effectively just couch out to these guys. And, you know, some companies have, and some companies like, you know, Google have not. And other companies like Facebook
Starting point is 00:07:55 have been totally basically blocked from entering. And so I think it's completely right. It's unfair to have the asymmetric market advantages that Chinese companies have had. And so you have to play hardball to create a different set of rules. It's unfair to have the asymmetric market advantage that Chinese companies have had. So you have to play hardball to create a different set of rules. I think this probably gets us to that place. The reason why it's happening is probably more because the TikTok people played that joke
Starting point is 00:08:15 on Trump at the Tulsa rally, if I had to guess. Yeah. What do you think, Friedberg? Is this a good sign for America and the globe that you know and the democratic nations of the world that we're going to put a foot down with China and say hey some reciprocity or you're not going to be able to participate in our marketplace or is this personal vendetta from Trump we're a little bit about. I don't see how it's anything but a slippery slope forward in the escalation of you know what's going to be kind of transpiring between
Starting point is 00:08:47 these two nations in the next couple of years and maybe decades. This goes back to the early 2000s when Google and others wanted to enter China, and China has, for those who don't know, China has this great firewall. Chinese citizens can't openly access the rest of the internet. And China wanted to censor content and censor what their citizens are accessing. And so there's been a back and forth between the tech industry and China going back almost 20 years
Starting point is 00:09:17 now to try and figure out how we can bring our services to China. And then China launches a service that's very successful in the US in TikTok. And I think it's just a part of the reciprocity equation, which doesn't resolve anything. It only escalates things. So it's unfortunate, but it's just kind of another step in the path that I think is inevitable in front of us here.
Starting point is 00:09:39 Saxa, we'll give you the final word here. Is this a good thing for humanity, for international relations that China is having a little bit of a hand check here, like, hey, there's going to be a limit to how you can operate in the West, or is this a personal event debtor from Trump, and then what are you seeing going forward? It's true that, I mean, first of all, our social networks are not allowed over there, so I don't think we need to feel bad about not allowing their social networks over here. But besides reciprocity or the lack of it, I think the deeper reason for this is just around data security and how the, and I think that the CCP has given us adequate grounds here to ban not just TikTok, but apps like that, because President Xi himself declared this policy of civil military fusion, which means that any business in China, any business asset there, including data, can be appropriated
Starting point is 00:10:39 to serve the ends of the Chinese military or the Communist Party. And the CCP has set up this vast surveillance apparatus over its own citizens. It's asserted extraterritorial sovereignty over former Chinese citizens, which meaning dissidents. So the Chinese diaspora anywhere in the world, they've asserted sovereignty over that. And recently, there was a pretty remarkable speech by the FBI director, Christopher Ray, describing Operation Fox Hunt, which is the Chinese effort to track down and presumably, ultimately
Starting point is 00:11:16 punish Chinese dissidents anywhere in the world. And as part of that, the Chinese have sort of weaponized AI and social media. He also described, I mean, this is like pretty amazing, not that the Equifax hack, which collected data on something like, a sensitive data on over 100 million Americans, the Chinese were behind that. I didn't know that. And so, you know, it's true that, you know,
Starting point is 00:11:40 no one piece of data poses by itself a risk to the security of America or Americans. But it's sort of the systematic collection and aggregation of the data and the hacking collectively that I do think poses a security threat. And I think you got to stop right there, Sack. Yeah. Actually, an individual's data could absolutely be compromised if they have access to your passwords because through the clipboard, they've access to your phone roll. If a young person had photos that
Starting point is 00:12:13 were say compromising in their photo roll, the phone is, you know, basically given access to that. They upload that. Now you could use that as a compromise against a senator's child or against a senator themselves. And this seems like an abstract thing, but this is exactly what the Chinese and Russians have been doing for a very long time. If you've seen the series, the Americans, and you go back to the 80s, to see the weaponization of somebody who was in the closet, who was gay during that time, or somebody who was having an extra marital affair, you could compromise anybody with just sexual compromise, and you're here, we're giving access
Starting point is 00:12:47 to hundreds of millions of people's photo library. You use, by the way, clipboards. By the way, you just said something that's really scary, which is like, if you're the Chinese, and you know, they have the patience to play the long game, you just aggregate and collect this thing for 30 years, on the off chance that one of these people becomes important. I mean, what is the real-
Starting point is 00:13:05 You got a mentoring candidate. Just you just surveil 300 million Americans and just say, you know what, we'll take our shot. I mean, it's gonna cost us a few billion dollars a year in storage, who cares? Yeah. I'm not like, is there really a case that what they're doing in the TikTok app?
Starting point is 00:13:20 I don't know how much you guys have read some of the studies on what they are actually pulling, but is there really a case that what they're pulling is particularly different than what would be pulled by pretty much any other social app or photo sharing app on your phone. There was some insight that they were capturing the MAC address, but that was up until last November, after November, the app refresh and stopped doing that. And it was a hack that some number of apps out there were already doing. But my understanding is the way that they've built the app. It's the same kind of ad tracking type approach that a lot of apps are taking.
Starting point is 00:13:56 I think you're, I think it's a naive position that because we haven't caught them doing something nefarious, that they aren't actually doing something nefarious right now. If you look at what MBS did to Jeff Bezos sending that, I guess it was a movie file or an image that then wound up hacking his reach at his phone, like, I think they've built the software. I think it's purpose-built, whether it's reach at or TikTok to have these backdoors. There's no way the Chinese government is not influencing that. Guys, look, if you had to bet, David, what do you think the odds are between zero and a hundred with a hundred being absolute certainty that there are foreign national spies that
Starting point is 00:14:35 work at Google, Facebook, Amazon, Microsoft? That's my point. It's, is it, I mean, look, I think that there are. No, but do you think it's 100 hundred percent? Oh of course is a hundred Yeah, I think at every one of them. It's probably a hundred percent. Yeah, at least one you know four national that has a connection to intelligence in China Yeah, it's probably a hundred percent so my point is TikTok is 100 Chinese 100% Chinese So we don't even have to guess whether it's My point is like if if if there is some you know access to personal data that we're all concerned about being compromised, at literally every other fucking app company, we're exposed.
Starting point is 00:15:12 Yeah, every other app company is not connected to, you know. But the point that Chimalt just made is that they very well could be. The fact is, we as individuals have exposed all of our personal and private data to six or seven companies. I think you're saying to me really right thing. This is a canary in the coal mine for a bigger issue. This is why I'm saying, I think that Trump is probably acting out of an expression of power, but I think what we're realizing is actually this is about core fundamental privacy
Starting point is 00:15:41 and the safety and security of each of us as individuals. And it should start a bigger conversation. Like, privacy, I really do think this privacy is the killer feature of the 2020s. Right. You know what David just said about like, you know, if you're a Chinese ex-national, the idea that you're like, look, I've been a citizen of three countries. The idea that the Sri Lankan government, all a sudden may not like what I have to say and conspire on me or you know root my phone or steal my data it really disturbs me like I'm sorry but
Starting point is 00:16:15 no go fuck yourself like I left that country for a reason. Yeah so I think I think the Republican to watch on this is well besides Trump I guess is there's a center of Josh Hawley who is crazy. Well he's he's sort of a critic of big tech and I think he's got some interesting things to say but but in this particular area he is proposing legislation to regulate the types of information that can be collected by applications that are based in countries that are fundamentally hostile or adversarial to the US. And that to me seems like the right policy because, you know, it's not just about TikTok, it's about all the apps that collect information on Americans that can be appropriated by, you know, the Chinese Communist Party or Russia or Iran, places like that.
Starting point is 00:17:05 And so I think we need a more holistic policy here than just banning TikTok. And it may not be necessary to ban TikTok if you had the right limitations placed on them. But I do think this whole sort of compromise solution with Larry Ellsson and Oracle, that makes no sense to me. This idea that Ellison will own 20% of the company, but nothing else really changes. It will still be based in China. A Chinese company, it will still be Chinese engineers based in China, who, you know, and they still own 80% of it.
Starting point is 00:17:36 I mean, how does that really address the data security issue? Don't you think, David, that that's just basically a way of just, it's a wealth transfer to Larry Ellison, which I think is amazing. I mean, if I could just basically a way of just it's a wealth transfer to Larry Ellison? Totally. I think it's amazing. I mean, if I could totally have it. Yeah, it's bite dance. It's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's bite dance. What did you do? Your lap? No, it's it's bite dance. It's bite dance paying political protection money. Yeah. To Larry Ellison to be their bodyguard in this political process. But and I but that's what I don't think it's going to fly. I mean, Holly has already
Starting point is 00:18:05 said that it's not good enough for him. And so even if I think, and it doesn't live up to the Trump-stated criteria, even though he seems to be supportive of him. Is this ultimately a syphias ruling sex? Is that who's going to make the final call on this or does Trump have so executive kind of authority on foreign security, on security grants to kind of block it? Does it go to CIFIAS? That's a good question. I think CIFIAS disapproves M&A, right? It has to approve it, yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:31 I mean, so you're right. I mean, there are members of Congress that are all going to need to be convinced to get this thing done. Well, but CIFIAS approves M&A. I didn't think they could block application. As of last year, every investment triggers CIFIAS. It's a weird new thing that happened. I was involved in a company recently.
Starting point is 00:18:52 Yeah, that's secondary to the national security power that the Trump may have. So this is almost like a two-tier kind of thing. One is for Trump to be cool with it. National security terms have been second is the antitrust issues. If we just go back a second talking about the broad, you know, as Tomov called it kind of this canary in a coal mine, you know, I don't know how many of you guys use an Amazon echo or a Google home
Starting point is 00:19:19 or Amazon Fire TV or the next thermostat every single every single one of them has ambient audio listening on it Every single one of them has ambient audio listening on it. Every single one of them, even, and another thing people don't realize is every speaker is actually a microphone as well as a speaker. You can actually listen on any how speaker whether it's a Sonos device or what have you. And so we've got, you know, our homes are already wired. Amazon Fire TV runs on fucking Android. I mean, there's a hundred ways into your home as it is. It seems to me like there's a significant concern about how much data we are already exposing that's being highlighted here. I don't think that there's, you know,
Starting point is 00:19:57 it's sort of like playing the, where you try and pop the hamsters in the game. It's like, at some point, we're going to realize these things are here everywhere and it's not just a company, but it is how we are living our lives now and how technology is kind of capturing every piece of information about everything we do. This is like go back to this. Somebody will take this or many people will take this and run with it, but I think that there is an enormous amount of money that consumers will pay for the assurance of anonymity and privacy.
Starting point is 00:20:28 I don't really know how it's expressed, David, but like, you know, for example, like if I could get a phone that was completely locked down and encrypted and... Like a burner phone is what you're talking about And like a lot of people are now doing this. They take a second phone, they put a VPN. VPNs are the first step in all. I, and you're seeing, I try to use, I'm very popular.
Starting point is 00:20:52 Well, like I try to use signal, I try to use FaceTime audio. I'll even use WhatsApp now, just because these things are end-tended, encrypted. And I have nothing particularly important or interesting to say or hide, but I just don't like the idea that in the open wild, I just feel very vulnerable to data breaches, more than any other kind of breach. I mean, I had this conversation with somebody that was, you know, sort of helping me lock down my Wi-Fi network. You know, and for a
Starting point is 00:21:23 long time, I only had one endpoint. And all of a sudden, he's like, look, let's have a home and a guest. But in that conversation, what he was saying is the biggest form of theft isn't like burglary's anymore. It's basically people just having packets in the first outside your house because they can get access to everything and anything. Can I ask you a question? There's a book by a guy named Stephen Baxter, a science fiction book from years ago in Arthur Clark called The Light of Other Days. These guys developed a wormhole technology.
Starting point is 00:21:53 They could put it in any house and they could see and listen to everything. Suddenly, the technology became ubiquitous. Everyone could create a wormhole anywhere and see and hear everything. Effectively, information was completely transferable and free and available to everyone. And the book kind of highlights how society changed in that context. So in a world where you see where everyone is and what everyone is doing and saying, there's no longer any notion of information asymmetry and the way people operate and behave changes because so much of our life is dependent on people not knowing things about us that we know.
Starting point is 00:22:24 So when you're when your employees go to go interview for another job and they tell you they're going to the dentist, you can say like, hey, that's not true. And the guy says, you know what, I'm actually thinking about looking for another job because I hate work and for you, you suck. So everyone starts changing kind of how they behave. Do you think that 50 years from now, that's where the world heads? Do you really think it's possible to stop this train in its tracks and not end up in a world of what I would call kind of like hyper transparency where all information becomes kind of, because it's already being collected everywhere about everyone. It's only rising exponentially.
Starting point is 00:22:55 People are going to start, I think that people are going to start turning their homes into like those skiffs, you know, sensitive, compartmented information facilities. You always hear about like senators going into the skiff kind of situation for private stuff. I think like people are going to start taking this very seriously as they get compromised, you know, time after time and embarrassing. And you can see it with Apple making it their marketing strategy. Apple's you don't you don't think society changes. Oh, I think it already changed already with like people getting their phones hacked
Starting point is 00:23:23 and their, you know know news being leaked. People are now be getting normalize that. I think it makes the world a much easier place because it basically robs us of our own independence and our fundamental right to privacy. And I just think that's a really bad outcome. And so you know what what, like, if, if, if like, the need for likes and tweets and followers leads me to a place where I lose privacy, I would just say, shut them all down now. Because I think that people's self worth is much bigger
Starting point is 00:23:58 than what they understand it to be if they're willing to make that trade off. But yeah, most people appreciate that? Well, I would also just add that just because there's more transparency doesn't mean that it serves the interests of truth. Like Jason said earlier, this information can be used to create ops and manipulate. And so yeah, I don't, like Trotsky said,
Starting point is 00:24:28 just because you're an answered and war doesn't mean war isn't interested in you. I mean, this data can be collected to run operations on people that don't serve, you know, the interests of greater transparency. I think, I think people don't think from first principles on this topic. This is sort of like the idiotic orthodoxy of Silicon Valley, which is like they wrap themselves in the flag of transparency, like it meets something, but they have no real idea what it really means at scale and at the limit. And, you know, there's one thing about getting access to a fucking look or dashboard. Who cares?
Starting point is 00:25:01 You know, and, but the word transparency is used for that the same way that it's used for David exactly what you just said. And they're two completely different things. They have completely different meanings and the latter's implications are so much more important. And we need to think about this from first principles because I think people's inherent identity as human beings ultimately gets put at risk over time. It should absolutely be the case that the social networks or anybody collecting data gives
Starting point is 00:25:29 an op, this is the way I would form the legislation. If you are running a service like Facebook, Twitter, Google for free and you're monetizing through advertising, you must provide an op. Like what they do provide. They're monetizing. They're monetizing. Oh, listen, if you're more high and you're monetized. They're monetized. Oh, listen, if you're monetizing your service to advertising services, then I think you
Starting point is 00:25:53 should be forced to give a option for whatever the amount of that monetization is a year to pass a subscription. So for example, if Facebook makes $8 per person, you lost a, you lost this, uh, modulation, Jason, sorry, I think let's, it's, it's over. It's over. Next segment, next segment, next segment, next segment, next segment. Uh, all right. Well, just as we wrap up here on this segment, Kevin Sishram might, he's in the running apparently to take over for TikTok. Is that a good idea? Sax, I think you know a system.
Starting point is 00:26:29 I think it's a pretty, it's a dumb idea unless the company literally becomes an American company. I don't know why. You've made this point in the context of Kevin Mayer. If he's working for bydance, he's working for the by dance board directors, which reports the CCP. It's just why would someone who's in his position want to sacrifice his independence to do that?
Starting point is 00:26:54 Yeah, that makes no sense. I mean, this is becoming the big test on everybody's moral compass, especially Hollywood, which is changing the ending of movies to satisfy the CCP. Like literally the people who are the biggest virtue signals in the world, celebrities, Hollywood. China knows how to use its market access. We don't. We just threw open our markets to their products, which caused us to lose our whole industrial manufacturing capacity.
Starting point is 00:27:23 We didn't demand anything really in exchange for that. Whereas in order to get access to China, you have to say and do the right things or certainly to not criticize them. And so they know how to, yes, we saw with the MBA and the whole Darryl Mori thing, you know, they know how to use their market access. All right, well, let's go on to the economy here. We've been sheltering in place essentially for six months. And now people are starting to talk about, hey, maybe we need to do another lockdown.
Starting point is 00:27:55 And obviously this economic challenge is being felt very differently. In some places, it's an opportunity. Obviously, a lot of people with SaaS software and people who work behind keyboards are having a renaissance and a lot of the economy is pouring into their keyboards, while restaurants, retail, and anybody who has to work in the real world is part of what's becoming essentially a permanent
Starting point is 00:28:24 unemployed class that perhaps is starting to look like a dry one of UBI. What are your thoughts, Tramoff, on this permanent unemployment situation? I have a bunch of thoughts here. Let me just go kind of give you the stream of consciousness. Jerome Powell gave a speech. I think it was two or three weeks ago in Jackson Hole. And he basically said, like, look, the Federal Reserve is taking a completely new posture on rates. And, you know, they, they basically clarified that in explicit detail just, just a few days ago. And they basically said, we're keeping rates where they are until at least 2023. You know, my personal views for rates are going to stay basically at zero for the next half decade.
Starting point is 00:29:09 And I think it's probably pretty likely that we're going to see rates day at zero, probably a full decade. So what does that mean? Okay. Well, a typical recession, what happens is you don't know where the bottom is, right? Things sort of sort of decay, they get a little bit worse, they get a little bit worse, they get a little bit worse, then things bottom out, and then you start to grow. And you can use interest rate policy to kind of help navigate how soft the landing is as well as how fast the recovery is. That's sort of like classic economics
Starting point is 00:29:41 and how bankers and the markets and all these folks used to work and it eventually would trickle into mainstream? Now we just have none of those things. We have rates zero. They're not going to go anywhere. They're not going to go up. They're probably not going to go down. They're going to kind of just stay where they are. That's one thing.
Starting point is 00:29:57 Second is we priced in the bottom, which was the first month of the coronavirus. We took the markets basically assuming, oh, there's no growth. And now we've priced things back as if they'll recover. The rating agencies are out to lunch. They've basically said, you know what, I'm going to look out till 2021 or 2022. Give me a reason to justify not to downgrade you so that you can continue to raise more debt, which by the way is free. So you have all these dynamics where I think the capital markets are in an expansive mood and an expansive mode. And in that I actually think there's a real bid to employment because there isn't really that many ways now you can, without
Starting point is 00:30:41 just getting completely ripped apart, put money to work. So the real earnest capital allocation strategy that's left from those CEOs is to actually buy things, invest in things, try more things. And all of those, I think, lead to net employment. So in general, I'm kind of constructive in bullish. And I don't think that this idea that there's a permanent unemployment class sticks around.
Starting point is 00:31:04 Freeberg, where are your thoughts? Obviously, a lot of Americans work in retail. We obviously have all these restaurant workers who are out of work, and travel is now hitting the end of the furloughs at a lot of these different airlines, et cetera. What's your thought on this unemployment middle America? Catastrophe well, I don't think
Starting point is 00:31:31 happiness comes from You know absolute standards of living. I think happiness arises From one's relative standard of living whether that's relative to how you lived last year or how you're living relative to your neighbor and seeing some progression over time is the only thing that keeps people happy. It's otherwise society decays. So the notion of some sort of flat line or even flat line that inflation adjusted, basic income level for a large number of people will inevitably result in kind of what we're trying to prevent, which is, you know, decay, we have to resolve the opportunity framework for people, which is how do you give people an opportunity to kind of progress in their lives and earn
Starting point is 00:32:15 more over time and have access to doing more with themselves while they're here on planet Earth. That's just what humans need. Maybe there's a short-term fix, but I think we've got some structural things to fix to kind of enable opportunities and give people kind of an inherent, you know, kind of step ladder in life. I heard a really dark theory a few years ago, which is if we do this, we're going to resolve to a world where we're going to have a bunch of people playing video games because then the only way you can get people to feel like they're progressing in their lives is to give them more medals on their video games and give them a higher ranking and score. And that's where society kind of gets to to kind of keep people psychologically kind of
Starting point is 00:32:57 satiated. And it's a pretty dark, you know, sad place if that's where we end up. It's like a bad episode of Black Mirror, but we've had a few episodes of Black Mirror this year. So, you know, we'll say that. It sounds like Ready Player One with a master's were playing video games instead of actually going out in the world. Totally. Yeah. Sex, what's your thought on, you know, just the next two years, let's say, and how this all shakes out, and this will give us a good segue into the coronavirus and where we stand right now with this potential second lockdown and the impact that might have psychologically on people and also on the economy.
Starting point is 00:33:32 There's not going to be a second lockdown. It doesn't make any sense and even if there were people aren't going to support it. Certainly any of the red states aren't going to do it. I guess the blue states may, they still haven't, you know, sort of unlocked down, so maybe that gets more protracted and places like California, but, but we're not going to go back into lockdowns and people won't support.
Starting point is 00:33:54 And I think the thing that we've basically figured out that should have been obvious months ago now is that coronavirus is really like two different diseases in terms of its effects on people. So for elderly people and for people with risk factors, it's very dangerous. You know, I'm very worried about my parents and you know, for people in that group, they have to take extreme precautions. But for young healthy people without risk factors, it's not in that deadly.
Starting point is 00:34:22 It's very unpleasant. It's a very bad two weeks. But, for example, if you look at the data now on colleges coming back, there's been some reports that the virus is spreading like wildfire on college campuses. That's true, but hospitalizations and deaths have not gone up. And so, because it's not that deadly to younger people. So I think this idea of shutting down the whole economy to protect people at risk seems like overkill. I think if we had to do it all over again, we wouldn't have done lockdowns.
Starting point is 00:34:54 We just would have protected that risk people. We've still consistently had a thousand deaths a day. We thought this might go down where your thoughts on Americans just being okay with that, that basic death toll sex. Well, I mean any deaths is obviously bad and tragic and statistically there are going to be people who die even who are in the Lotus group, so for sure. But we've had about 200,000 deaths, the original estimates from this virus
Starting point is 00:35:28 were two to three million. So I guess my point is not that it's not bad, but that it's much less deadly than I think was originally thought. There was an argument that that's not deaths directly attributable to coronavirus, right? And that the vast majority of those folks had comorbidities and that the primary driver, this is an argument many have made.
Starting point is 00:35:54 I'm not going to take a strong point. But 85% plus of folks have significant comorbidities. And this virus maybe kind of has a contributing factor to their death. But if let's assume everyone in the United States had coronavirus today, then every death that was reported today would be reported as a coronavirus death. And so they're testing a lot of folks in the hospital, finding that they have coronavirus, it's very difficult to then prove that the reason that they died or the sole reason that they died was coronavirus. If you had to pick a percentage for you, where would you put it?
Starting point is 00:36:34 Half of all that? If you just got guests. But that's my point is I don't think it's one thing, right? I'm not sure that it's someone goes into the hospital with coronavirus and they've also got severe diabetes, heart disease, cancer, they're on chemotherapy. I mean, you could list the other things that they might have. What caused their death?
Starting point is 00:36:52 You know, you can't, as a corner, it's very difficult to say this one being caused the death. But when they test that person and they find that their coronavirus positive, that number is now being counted in the statistics that say that was a coronavirus death that day. And coronavirus is so prevalent in the United States right now, it's such a significant part of the population.
Starting point is 00:37:09 It's also very difficult to say, hey guys, like, you know, these deaths are, so I'm not trying to be little. The fact that people are absolutely dying and they wouldn't have died if not for coronavirus. That is absolutely happening. But it's very difficult to say what is the net effect on life right now? We're still learning a lot about how this virus interacts with different people based on their genetics and based on their disease state and other factors. Let me ask one more way for you, Friedberg, and then I'll give it over to Jamoth, which
Starting point is 00:37:37 is Friedberg and your estimation as a scientist, and somebody is a, I would say, a man of science on the call here. Are you optimistic about us coming out of coronavirus in 2021 and what's your best outlook for our return to normalcy? If you had to pick a time when it feels like we can go to a warrior's game or play cards regularly or go to the World Series, a poker, Wendy, do you have a time period where you think that could possibly happen? It's all politics and social behavior. It has nothing to do with science.
Starting point is 00:38:09 Like after 9-11, there were no more serious terrorist attacks on the United States, but our fucking lives changed dramatically. We go sit in TSA lines and get our asses swabbed when we get on an airplane now, and that's still going on 20 years later. So I'm pretty sure there's a lot of change that's here to stay in the US because of coronavirus, and will be even after everyone gets vaccines in the death drop below 10 a day and yada yada. So, you know, I'm not convinced that this is like, hey, here's the date. We're all going to be out of it and then we're safe because people are psychologically scarred. Behavior has changed,
Starting point is 00:38:41 businesses have changed, the landscape of how we work as a society has changed, and that's not going away. So it's not like we're going to go back, I think it's like we're going forward into a different world where we operate differently. Much is what happened after 9-11. Where is your take on that, Shema? I think that David's right that we're at but-for coronavirus, I think a lot of these people that died would still be alive. And so, you know, I don't think it really matters how much of the blame we're trying to describe to it. It's just that it was a meaningful, non-trivial contributing factor. So these deaths are avoidable, and we have to deal with that.
Starting point is 00:39:17 The second is, I don't think what we know what the peak to trough looks like because we haven't really gone through a real full-blown flu season yet. You know, Coronavirus came to America at the tail end of the winter. And it's going to be, I think, tough to figure out what it's going to do in October, November, December, January of February, when it's really cold in many parts of the United States. And, you know, whatever effects, again, we still don't know it in totality, but whatever effects the warm weather had in muting it or whatever mutation muted it may change. So I tend to think it's another 18 to 24 months of this posture, but Friedberg is really right, which is like, this is what's so sad, which is when you could point a finger and
Starting point is 00:40:02 look at somebody and say, you, you're the cause, it was much easier to react and create rules and create boundaries as uncomfortable or as inconvenient as they were and live by them. And because this is more nameless and faceless, it's impossible. All right. Well, here's some good news. I was able to acquire. I've been on a little investigative journalism kick asking people if they have access to rapid testing kits,
Starting point is 00:40:32 i.e. they have them in Korea. And I was able to get, and I'm curious your thoughts on this, Friedberg, the rapid response Liberty COVID-19 IGG slash IGM tests cassettes. And they cost 15 to 20 bucks each and they take 10 minutes. They're easy to use. I mean, I've had those since March and they cost 50 cents each.
Starting point is 00:40:54 So, so these are now officially available though in the United States. You had those from some other country, correct? I got from China and I got from the US and I got from Korea. And these things are just made everywhere. And they're like, these are the anti-blog facts, right? Yes. Yeah, so there's a paper that was published at UCSF.
Starting point is 00:41:19 I got an acknowledgement because of my donations to support the research. I got an acknowledgement because of my donations to support the research. And it showed that these tests have actually very good specificity and the sensitivity is going to be called at 85%. But these are antibody tests. And further research has shown that not everyone has the same antibody response after getting infected. And there's a relationship between how severe the disease is for you and various other factors. So, and these will only show up typically, you know, days to weeks after you get infected.
Starting point is 00:41:53 The antigen tests, which are the more common kind of ones that everyone's looking for now, are these tests that can actually find the virus itself. And so they'll take a swab of your nose or some saliva from your mouth and see if there's any virus in there. And it's a much, much lower sensitivity than the PCR test, which is the expensive, you know, lab test, but it can be done on a stick. And it's a good enough thing for letting people into say a football game. And our good friend of ours just texted me and told me that they're doing this at the UT Austin game. They're using this antigen test to let people into the football game today.
Starting point is 00:42:26 So, or this weekend. So it's getting kind of more widespread use. And so when we have those tests at scales, what will the world look like, Freeberg? I don't know, you'll just like the TSA, you'll get swabbed and you know, these things, it's great business to be in by the way. If you guys, you know, wanna spack a Korean antigen test, these
Starting point is 00:42:45 things are going to sell like career. There's a company that I heard of through a friend which had, it's an Israeli company, I never followed up on it, which was effectively a breathalyzer, which would be, could you just imagine, that would be incredible, right? Right. You just, well, there we then, yeah, we've You just read in a few seconds. We've talked about this in our chat group. There are startups like, was it Quiddell, Hematius, Q,
Starting point is 00:43:12 who've got these little $200, $300 little handheld readers and the cartridges are basically mouse swabs or lower nasal swabs, cost 10 bucks. And I think they're gonna be rolling out over the next few months. As soon as we can scale the production of them, I think they will be everywhere. I don't think it will be a government mandated thing, so I don't think the government will get us act together. But it will be the kind of thing where you go shopping at a store or whatever, and there
Starting point is 00:43:39 will be early adopters or a restaurant. They'll start using it. People will realize, well, I don't want to get swabed three times a day, so then they'll get some sort of like receipt or voucher they can take with them to the next place. And so I think, you know, I'm like actually, like, I think I'm more optimistic than you guys about COVID right now. I think that whether it's because of these rapid tests or because of treatments coming or just this fundamental fact about comorbidities, again, not absolving, not saying that COVID isn't serious, but this is the fact that we've learned that it's, you know, that it's really deadly, primarily for people who have comorbidities. I think for all of these reasons, I think COVID is going to be a distant memory by next
Starting point is 00:44:19 summer. I really do. I think, I think. Behaviorally too. What's that? You think behavior changes as well, like businesses and movie theaters and sports. Yeah, I think people will largely be back to what they're doing last summer or by next summer. I think we're going to have like, you know, call it a six month period where, you know, we do these rapid tests just to make sure. But I think as the case rate starts dropping off, things will kind of revert back to where they were. I mean, the question to ask is kind of,
Starting point is 00:44:55 which trends were there before COVID and have been accelerated? Like I would say, the move from, like, death of retail, the shift to e-commerce, that feels to me like it's here to stay, but you know, food delivery, things like that. But there was no trend of people not going to sports games anymore, you know? And I think like stuff like that will just snap right back. I don't know, I don't know about you guys. I'm still like feeling fucked up by the whole thing. You don't really realize how much your psychology has changed until you kind of reflect on
Starting point is 00:45:24 decisions and behaviors. There's still a fear factor that I think needs to kind of be ironed out, but we'll see how long it takes for people. It's just like, it's so different when you're so used to just waking up and hopping on Zoom for work and avoiding people and putting a mask on when you go walk your fucking dog. I mean, it's like, it's going to be hard to kind of
Starting point is 00:45:43 change out of that overnight. Well, I think there's, I think this idea of the greater flexibility around working arrangements, the ability to work from home, I think offices will become a little bit more like co-working spaces for a single company where people come in three days a week and work from home a couple days a week. I think there'll be a permanent flexibility, but I also think that people want to get back to work and they want it back to offices and they want to interact with people. and I think everyone's going to be excited to do that again. It's not like everyone's is going to be working from home forever. So I, you know, I think again, I next summer is kind of my my date for when things are back to back to normal. Well, this has been certainly driving a lot of our politics right now. You probably saw
Starting point is 00:46:27 the book that came out with the tapes of Trump saying that he was trying to play it down sacks as a lifelong Republican. What were your thoughts when the Republican presidential candidate, the Republican president said, hey, I'm trying to play this down when he was at the same time saying it was deadly serious. Does that make you worry about Trump as a candidate? And what do you think that's gonna have that might play into the election? It must have been disappointing for you
Starting point is 00:46:56 to hear your candidate Trump say at the same time, this is deadly, and I wanna play it down. Well, Trump's leadership on this has been a little bit erratic for sure. And by the way, let's go back and remind the viewers here that in the first pods we are doing back in April, I think we kind of nailed what the right policy response should be. I wrote a blog on April 2nd talking about that mass should be required, that that was the right response. But we also said that lockdowns, very quickly after the start of lockdown,
Starting point is 00:47:23 said that it was excessive. And that what we should do is be going all in on mass, not lockdowns. I certainly would have liked to have seen Trump get that right several months earlier. That being said, let's not forget everybody else who got this stuff wrong too. I mean, you look at CDC or WHO, had talked about this in our previous pod. I mean, WHO was also unclear about mass and Fauci, I guess, now retroactively saying that he didn't think mass were necessary because he was trying to prevent a run on supplies. I mean, the whole response of the healthcare establishment, they were all like really bad. And so I have a greater degree of forgiveness
Starting point is 00:48:13 for people who made mistakes back in March or April. But what I think is hard to forgive now are these people who are promoting the wrong policies now that we know so much more. And I mean, at this point, I think that COVID policy is a net plus for Trump in this campaign because the other side of it is these permanent lockdowns. You know, there's just an article in, was it foreign policy saying that we need to go back to lockdowns? And I think Biden said that we need to have lockdowns again. And his policy would be to listen to the experts, but all these experts again were wrong about so many things. And so, you know, again, I think this idea of permanent lockdowns, if
Starting point is 00:48:55 that is the alternative to Trump, we'll help Trump win. And so you don't think that this woodward book and that kind of stuff plays into the election or the debates in the coming weeks? I think it's sort of priced into the stock. You know, I mean, look, if it weren't for COVID, I think that if you go back to like January February when Trump gave that state of the Union speech, his ratings were the highest they had been, the economy was on fire. You know, he kind of, it looked like he was on cruise control to winning reelection and then COVID happened and
Starting point is 00:49:29 his ratings went down to their lowest point. I think he already paid the price for the, let's call it, Inconsistent Leadership that would were described. I think that's priced in. Now the question is if the economy gets good enough fast enough, and the other side is on the side of lockdowns and Trump is on the side of reopening, again, I think COVID policy becomes a net plus for him.
Starting point is 00:49:58 Chimatha, 538 has in its simulation 77 wins and 100 for Biden. You think that's accurate? Yeah, I mean, I think that until the debates, I think that this thing is basically where it's been for a long time. And if Biden flubs the debate and basically comes out as intellectually too inconsistent to be voted in
Starting point is 00:50:22 by a plurality of Americans, he's done for and Trump's going to win. So he can't have these verbal gaffes and basically seem like he's a senile octogenarian. If he does come off that way, he's going to lose. But if he doesn't and look many of the moments you see him now, he's actually pretty crisp, that probably gets the job done because like I said, I think more people just want a non-Trump alternative than want the Trump alternative, even within the Republican Party. And look like preference falsification can cut both ways. All the people that said they weren't going to vote for him, but then did, you know, there's also
Starting point is 00:51:00 probably a cohort of people that now feel obligated when they came out of the woodwork as supporting him. Now they just feel like it's easier to be publicly supporting him, but then they may go the other way. So it all kind of works in both directions. But I still think on the margin, Biden is the favorite. How different will the world look, Tremoth and your estimation under a Biden presidency? We get to January 1st, how different does the country feel? Is it going to be some great relief? Is it going to be some great joy like when Obama won?
Starting point is 00:51:33 No, no. What do you think the feeling is in the country and all reality? No, all these things are emotional over reactions in both directions. The reality is that if you, if you actually graphed substantive policy that affects your everyday life, the magnitude of the impact of the presidency has been shrinking since the 1980s. I think the most impactful president of our lifetimes, our lifetimes, so 70s onwards, was Reagan. And it's basically been decaying ever since.
Starting point is 00:52:05 And so I think that the job of the presidency is mostly window dressing, except for foreign policy. That matters less and less, and I'll tell you why that matters less and less, because all the things that the president used to, really governed, like foreign policy was a byproduct of a whole bunch of other things. For example, our entire posture on the Middle East, which has been a fucking shit show,
Starting point is 00:52:29 or our entire posture on Russia, was in part because of our energy policy. And in a world of sustainable energy, those entire regions are not important anymore. So it doesn't let them basically fend for themselves. We do not need to be involved. They're going to. They're going to devolve because they're going to have to suck out all the oil out of the ground to try to monetize it before wind and solar and everything else become the dominant form of of energy. And so if you take energy policy off the table, all of a sudden, the national security interests to care about large swats of the world go to zero.
Starting point is 00:52:59 Right. So so then there's less than a lot of present. I was pretty, pretty, pretty sure I didn't. So then there's less than a hundred percent of the president. I was pretty, pretty sure I didn't it. Yes. So my point is the surface area of the impact of the president is shrinking. And it shrinks as technology. Like if you think about it, what is driving foreign policy
Starting point is 00:53:15 and national security policy changes over the last 10, 15 years, definitely over the next 40 or 50, is technology. Right? If we get, for example, if we get any form of like carbon sequestration at get, for example, if we get any form of like carbon sequestration, at scale, broadly available, you're going to have a complete resurgence of Western economies. If that technology is invented in the United States or Western Europe. Freeberg, quickly, you'd think that Biden is going to win, and then what do you think the country
Starting point is 00:53:42 feels and looks like into a Biden presidency? And then let's move over to energy and sustainable energy and carbon after that. I don't know. You know, I'll say the same thing I've said in the past. I don't think the notion of a sense of relief is realistic. I don't think this is about... people think it's about Trump, but Trump is the product of what it's all really about. So I'll just highlight, I think Biden is a column, instead of thinking about things as Democrats and Republicans and left and right,
Starting point is 00:54:15 if we think about it as populism and free marketism and in the middle of centrism, we're probably taking a notch towards centristism. And at the end of the day, the march towards populism seems to be continuing. And whether Trump is the product of that march, or maybe the next one will be Elizabeth Warren or AOC, it's kind of the same thing in my opinion. But I think that's the bigger concern is, again, keep generally keep most people in the United States feeling like they can progress in life, feeling like they can find happiness in life, and feeling like there's opportunity for them to kind of achieve their objectives. And if they don't feel like they're getting it, they're gonna try and wrap it all up. And unions will continue to scale,
Starting point is 00:55:05 and AOC will become the vice presidential nominee in 2024. Yeah, they gotta. Freiburg, what are your thoughts on the wildfires, global warming and the politics of all that? And then we'll go to cancel culture with you, Sex. California has 33 million acres of forest land. It's about 100 million acres in total land. So it's for us to make up about a third of our land.
Starting point is 00:55:32 So far, we're burning 3.5 million. So about 10% of our acres, when we burn an acre, we release about 15% of the carbon that's stored in that acre into the atmosphere. So thus far, if you do the math on that, we've released about as much CO2 as the California cars release in a year by the wildfires. And the politics we're seeing play out, so it's a significant problem, but over the last 40 years, we've added about a quarter ton of carbon to each acre per year.
Starting point is 00:56:07 And the reason we've done that is we haven't kind of, you know, lit fires and managed the forests and cut down trees. And there's been all these restrictions in California. So there's an argument that some are making that this is about forest management. And then there's an argument that others are making that this is about climate change and dry weather and hot weather causing the fires. And the reality is it's both. But it's as everything else in this country right now becoming highly politicized that,
Starting point is 00:56:33 and you know, Trump visited NewSum in a very kind of symbolic gathering this week. I don't know if you guys saw the packet that was handed out to Trump. It was awesome. It was like 24 point font. And it was like, Yeah, it's like Yeah, yeah, yeah,
Starting point is 00:56:47 Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah,
Starting point is 00:56:54 Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah,
Starting point is 00:57:02 Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah,, Yeah, Yeah And then you some sat like exactly six feet from him with a mask on and Trump sitting there without the mask on I mean, it's such a fucking political circus
Starting point is 00:57:07 um, and uh, you know, I think all things are true and all things are false and we can move on uh well the the debate on the fires is I mean it what what it's the debate has has become sort of climate change versus force management, you know, that's sort of the debate about it. And like most of these debates, you don't necessarily have to choose. There can be an element of truth on both sides. You know, regardless of how much climate change has caused these fires, we've done a very, very poor job in the state managing them. And, you know, this idea that we can just fix global warming or wait, not have good forest management until, you know, and just kind of wait for global warming to be fixed, I mean, that's a really
Starting point is 00:57:50 stupid idea. So, regardless of how much climate change is to the cause of this, I think we need a much more competent state reaction to the fact these fires. Do you believe in global warming, David Sacks? to the fact these fires. Do you believe in global warming, David Sacks? I believe in greenhouse gas theory, and that man-made CO2 emissions are going to have an impact on the environment. I think that what's a little bit hard to know
Starting point is 00:58:15 is that the exact timing and magnitudes of some of these things, but I agree with what Elon said, which is that we're running a very high risk experiment here, continually putting out CO2 greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. Why isn't so difficult for the Republican Party? And I feel like you're almost straining and couching your words there, David, that you believe in global warming, you believe in what Elon's saying is not worth doing this for risk. Why do Republicans seem to have such an aversion to just saying, hey, global warming is a thing,
Starting point is 00:58:48 and we need to fix it. Because Democrats wrapped those words around them like a flag, and so it became a political issue, like with everything else. Yeah. I mean, I think, so again, we have this false choice now of whether you want to save the environment or save the economy. And the problem is, I think a lot of Republicans don't want to concede the issue. Oh, hey, little guy. A lot of Republicans don't want to concede the issue because they're afraid
Starting point is 00:59:17 it'll lead to something like the green you deal. And so what we need to do is figure out some responses to the problem that don't require us to destroy the economy Right and for you if we did incentives if the if the country spent incentive sacks to get solar on roofs and stuff like that you wouldn't be a post What would you? You mean like taxing carbon emissions or just giving discounts on putting solar in subsidizing solar for people's houses Or maybe the middle ground of creating more nuclear reactors, which seems like something that neither party can agree to. Hold on, little guy. Sorry, I got a little bit of a...
Starting point is 00:59:53 A million podcasts, okay. No problem. Yeah. Look, I think to the extent that carbon emissions are an externality, the traditional way of dealing with this is you would internalize the extern one-for-one tax reduction other areas, right? Because there's a there's a other larger debate about whether you know what else should be taxed. What about you, Chimaltto? Are your thoughts on solving global warming and this polarized sort of Republican Democrat? If you're for global, if you're if you believe in global warming, you're not a Republican.
Starting point is 01:00:41 There's a I think that this is the most correlated thing with a healthy economy, because I think that whoever solves climate change or the set of solutions that solve climate change. First of all, they'll be unbelievably economically successful. They will employ enormous numbers of people and they'll have a really profound legacy in the world. So, the question is how to do it. And I think the problem is right now,
Starting point is 01:01:08 there's, as David, I think actually puts the best lens on the topic, which is right now, we don't even have enough canonical data so that there's a single source of truth that we can all rely on. And not having to judge it as climate change, I think is an important step, which would just mean having a longitudinal measurement of temperature.
Starting point is 01:01:26 And having a longitudinal measurement of everything from PM2.5 to PM10 to carbon, methane, all of the other normal sort of emissions, nitrous oxide, all this stuff so that then you can just understand what men and women as part of the human race are doing to fuck with the counterfactual, because the counterfactual is if we were just like living normal chill lives. And so once you understand that, then you can figure out how to at least mitigate that back to what the counterfactual would have been
Starting point is 01:01:58 or do it even better. I think the best thing again, we talked about this in a pod a couple weeks ago, or a couple of months ago. The best thing the governments we talked about this in a pot a couple weeks ago, or a couple months ago. The best thing the governments can do is introduce incentives. And I think the most meaningful incentives here are not at the consumer level, but they're more upstream.
Starting point is 01:02:15 So if you take something like cement, cement, which is responsible for I think 20% of all the carbon emissions, is a really pernicious industry because, you know, they all, they are very local. They operate within 300 local kilometers of every place where you ship cement to make concrete and whatnot. And when you look at sort of where the emissions are, they're at a very specific part of the chain, which is effectively impossible to mitigate. So you have to have a level of material science, you know, improvement to really move things away from cement altogether. Well, just knowing that, you're going to have to have the incentives that a government
Starting point is 01:02:52 creates to pull that forward. Another example is when you look at like manufacturing, all the shit that we all love, you know, I don't care whether you like fucking normal pants or hemp pants, you know, when you go back and you look at how H&M makes those pants, there's our high temperature processes that are burning false fuels, they're emitting all kinds of really terrible junk into the environment. And so it doesn't matter whether you're vegan per se, you know, you're not going to go around on clothes, you're not going to not use spoons, right? So all of that, the totality of all of that, we need to completely reinvent a high temperature
Starting point is 01:03:24 manufacturing. That's not going to happen unless the government steps in because like for example, take something as simple as steel. You know, it's a tragedy of the comments, right? I mean, basically is if if no individual can make a major impact, maybe they won't freeberg, you think we have all the technology we need to do this, and it's really just a matter of incentives and deployment right now in terms of global warming or stemming, global warming. Is that a correct statement that we have the technology? We just haven't
Starting point is 01:03:52 deployed. Correct. Correct. And I think it's 100 percent. It's unpacked. Well, what I will say is we have the science, the engineering, and the resourcing, and then the market are the kind of unresolved, right? And so resourcing is capital. The market can be created artificially by putting in place government subsidies. They're having the government be a customer or you just have to wait along enough period of time. If you listen to the Tim Ferris interview with Coke,
Starting point is 01:04:25 which one was it Charles Coke, he talks about how ultimately consumers will vote with their dollars if climate change is real and global warming is starting to have an effect on planet Earth, and we're seeing that, right? We're seeing people make a switch to a vegetarian diet, we're seeing people by Tesla's, we're seeing people make choices for sustainability.
Starting point is 01:04:43 So the free market is resolving and will resolve climate changes, the argument that some libertarians might make. And then I think the, is that true in your mind, Freiburg? You buy that? I think it's, I'll be honest with you, I've been fucking shocked by how many people
Starting point is 01:04:58 are choosing to pay a premium for vegetarian meat alternatives. I was wrong on this. I bet against these companies eight years ago, I didn't bet against it, but I chose not to bet for them because I made the argument consumers will only buy stuff that's cheaper and taste as good. And I was wrong. Millions of consumers are going to Burger King
Starting point is 01:05:15 and buying a veggie burger now, which wasn't the case, and we're seeing this across the world. And they're doing this out of a crisis of consciousness, right? Like they're saying. That's right. It's a behavioral change. Wow.
Starting point is 01:05:26 Because, yeah, that's what they want in the market. That's what they want to spend their money on. They want to spend their money on having a nicer world. It's just like when people will spend a premium amount of money on a nice suit. It makes them look good and feel good. It's the same sort of notion. I feel good when I'm buying a Tesla. I feel good when I'm buying a veggie burger instead of a meat burger knowing that it is
Starting point is 01:05:52 harming my people around me. I couldn't bring myself to buy a carbon-based ice engine. Recently, I was thinking about, you know, if I'm in Tahoe and I need to go off-road or there's no conditions, I need to have a car for it. And I wound up picking up the model Y with the dual engine and putting snow tires on it as opposed to getting the new, you know, G-brangler or the new defender. But whether it's bio manufacturing or, you know, synthetic meats, or I think we're not just in a point where we have to create luxury markets. I think we are going to disrupt commodity markets. And I think we're going to do that this decade. And it's going to blow people's fucking mind
Starting point is 01:06:27 when everything you're eating looks, tastes, and feels the same and it's cheaper, and it was just made in a more sustainable way using bioengineering, which is kind of, the ability to write the physical world with software except it's realized through genomics. And it's an incredible thing that we're... How is it that we're seeing that?
Starting point is 01:06:43 How is it that we're seeing that? How is it that we're seeing that? How is it that we're seeing that? How is it that we're seeing that? How is it that we're seeing that? How is it that we're seeing that? How is it that an incredible thing that works. How much of this is the generational shift? I mean, Gen X seemed pretty absorbed with our own projects and a little bit of consciousness. But these millennials are now getting into their 30s and they're 35 years old, these the oldest millennials. And they seem to be incredibly focused on the environment and doing what's right.
Starting point is 01:06:58 This is a generational shift in your mind, Freiburg. No, I think this is just the slow march of humanity's ability to master our world in technology. And, you know, look, let me just give you a scenario. Timoth kind of says we're going to decarbonize the atmosphere. If we could build an algae or a seaweed from scratch or using some basis and use software to resolve what's the right sort of seaweed to create that will grow like crazy in the oceans when it gets heavy It sinks to the bottom of the ocean and it literally just pulls at carbon out of the atmosphere and drops to these 40,000 foot
Starting point is 01:07:34 D or you know 4,000 foot deep kind of wells we have already built around 70% of planet earth We have the tools to do that again the engineering and the capital to do that, and then the market for, is there a market for that? It doesn't, if governments are like, it's a crisis, let's put a billion dollars into this, like we did in the Apollo program, we will get that done in five years.
Starting point is 01:07:56 I mean, there's just, there's no shortage of tools and science to be able to resolve that sort of a problem today, much like we're about to produce a coronavirus vaccine in a matter of months after discovering the virus, which is unprecedented. So our ability to kind of read genomics and write genomics and as a result, create biological machines that can do things in the physical world and self-propegate, gives us this incredible toolkit humans never had at its disposal before and it will be the way that will resolve
Starting point is 01:08:23 climate change. And it will, in the meantime, we're gonna bridge the gap between here and there by creating these nice luxury markets. By the way, here's an incredible example. So when you look at sort of where methane is a really problematic greenhouse gas, and most of the methane emissions are from cows,
Starting point is 01:08:41 but it's from enteric fermentation, which is fancy language for burping. What's incredible is there are now efforts to use CRISPR to genetically engineer cows that don't necessarily have that same gut biome dynamic so that you're burping methane. There's also feed that you can actually give a cow that will minimize methane emissions burping by 30 or 40 percent. All these things are to your point, David. They're so fantastical if you think about it, but they're possible today.
Starting point is 01:09:12 And we just need to organize and get a kind of like a center of gravity around these things and they'll happen. Can we get Jason the human version of that? Does it also cover tuning? Does it wear a proflash? Interestingly, Chris Socket tweeted about investing in a company called Running Tide, which grows kelp, and will suck carbon from the atmosphere. He just thinks it's the ocean floor, and they're selling carbon offsets by putting seaweed on the ocean floor.
Starting point is 01:09:41 So, such a no-brainer, right? I mean, like, the ocean ocean is so big and it's this per and like it's not getting in the way of land where you don't have to go figure out licenses and rights. So you got you got to basically get carbon to go into the ocean. And so then you basically need an organism that can grow and self propagate quickly and radically accumulate a biomass in the ocean and then figure out how to get rid of it. So the best way to get rid of it is having sync. It's got to be some sort of sea seaweed or kelp or algae and you just put it in the open ocean
Starting point is 01:10:08 and it'll propagate. I mean, that's just such a great obvious, and there's a thousand scenarios like that that I think we're gonna kind of creatively come up with and resolve here. Why is nuclear not even on the discussion, freeberg, I'm curious, like, is it just too tainted? Look, we can't.
Starting point is 01:10:23 The work I've done on nuclear, it used to cost something like some number of dollars to get a nuclear power plant through the regulatory barriers in the United States. And now it is so cost prohibitive, it's something like $10 billion now from maybe a hundred million two decades ago. There's something about the regulatory barriers. There's a huge nimbiproblem, right? I huge, there's a huge nimbi problem, right? I mean, who wants a nuclear power plant in their backyard? Nobody.
Starting point is 01:10:49 I mean, nobody wants it, Jason. But, but I agree with like the larger point here that the solution to the problem is ultimately going to be all these new technologies, these innovative solutions, not making people feel bad for consuming and, you know, being alive. You know, you, you look at Tesla and it's moving the whole world to electric cars, not with the government mandate, but just by creating a better car. And so it's ultimately gonna be technology companies
Starting point is 01:11:16 increasing the solution set and giving people new choices. That's how we're gonna ultimately solve the problem. And interesting in the news, new scale is creating small nuclear reactors and they just got approval. And this is a the Portland based new scale powers. They had a small module reactor that has been approved by the US Department of Energy for a site in Eastern Idaho.
Starting point is 01:11:41 We'll see if that ever comes online, but it does seem like small nuclear reactors could solve part of the NIMB problem in that. They're smaller, so if something were to go wrong, we would have some ability to contain or have a smaller footprint in a disaster-like situation. Let's wrap with the Overton window. Chimoff talked about it closing and sex. There was a good article that attacks on a meaffir that you share with the group. Tell us a little bit about that article attacks on Amia Fear by Emily Yof. Yeah, she's a writer for the Atlantic who wrote this against called the Tax on Amia Fear in Persuasion. I think it's an important article. What it does is analyze cancel culture in the language that's
Starting point is 01:12:21 used to cancel people. And one of the, you know, one of the things she diagnoses is what she calls safety ism, which is anytime somebody doesn't like what, you know, an idea or what somebody else is saying, they claim that their safety is being threatened by that idea. And it's kind of invoking these magic words that HR, you know, has come up with where if anyone is creating an unsafe work environment or an unsafe college campus, well, the source of the problem has it is that it doesn't really matter what the intent of the person was, or you know, intense sort of irrelevant, or whether the objection is reasonable or not, you know, whether it causes, whether it actually threatens anyone's safety. And so there's an example of this when 50 prominent sort of writers and intellectuals wrote a letter to Harper's magazine,
Starting point is 01:13:26 including JK Rowling and Matt Glacias, who's a co-founder of Vox. And so there was a trans writer, there's a writer on who's a trans person at Vox who claims that her safety was threatened because one of the co-founders had signed this letter. The letter didn't discuss trans issues. It was simply the fact that a glacy's had signed it along with J.K. Rowling. And so J.K. Rowling apparently is, is,
Starting point is 01:13:58 you know, had a misactive. Yeah, I missed this part of Harry Potter, but apparently the the trans movement is really against her, but women who were born, women who were born biologically female are different than women who transition. Right. So, so, right, and that's her position, but her position is being attributed to the Glacier by association, yeah, exactly. And so, Yachtwick calls this. I would be like saying that I'm in support of Trump, just because I'm on this podcast with you,
Starting point is 01:14:31 so I'm in support of Trump, just because I'm on this podcast. So, to be clear. Yes, it's contamination, it's contamination by association is what she calls. She was on this sort of, you know, cancel culture and this. Everybody being scared of words. And this will be, if Trump wins in November, it'll be because this whole thing just gets too much for too many people.
Starting point is 01:14:54 There is a massive plurality of people in the middle who think this overwrenching sensitivity sensitivity by the extreme left and the extreme right are are just completely out to lunch and I think that by the way the extreme left and the extreme right they should all just get a room and just have one big huge orgy because they're all this useless fuck with anyways all of them both of them on the extreme right like when antifa and the alt-right are fighting with each other, it's like this sexual tension that they just need to release them out. Thanks for tuning in to the olive bucket.
Starting point is 01:15:34 I mean, I mean, most people are in the middle. Most people don't need to have this like us or them. You know, it's like you're not allowed to have an opinion. Like I actually learn more from people that I disagree with just by hearing them and not trying to judge them. And I think that most of us as well have our views that are sort of moderately in the middle. So for example, there was a USC professor that got sanctioned because he was trying to, he was teaching a language class and he used the Chinese word for that, which sounds like the N word. And I think he didn't preface it correctly or what have you, but then he apologized, he was suspended, and folks wrote a letter. Now, everybody has a right. The people who felt
Starting point is 01:16:17 offended have the right to write the letter. The administration had the right to react. And then I think people read that article and think to themselves, is this actually the, has the pendulum swung too far or not? And, and mark my words, if people feel that the pendulum has swung too far, they will elect Donald Trump because he is the complete antithesis of giving a shit about any of this stuff.
Starting point is 01:16:44 So that would be the bell weather. No, that's exactly right. So I think it's really important. I think there's a large part of the country that feels that Trump is a shield, not a sword, that he is their protector against this type of cancel culture. And I know Trump seems like an instigator and he's very threatening to a lot of people on the other side. But again, to these people, he's more of a shield.
Starting point is 01:17:05 And I think it's not just the fact that he speaks out into Nance's cancel culture that makes him a hero to these people. It's his superpower is his uncancellability. It's this, you know, it's the fact that the left has done everything they can to try and get rid of this guy to impeach him and what have you. And he keeps surviving.
Starting point is 01:17:23 And so it's his very, you know, uncancellability that makes them such a hero to these people. And I think this is the thing that the left or the media doesn't quite understand is that denouncing Trump in ever more hysterical terms doesn't, you know, it doesn't work because it kind of feeds into this. It actually hurts. It actually hurts. It actually hurts. It adds more people to his cohort who say you're overreacting.
Starting point is 01:17:47 Right. Right. And the hystericalness of overreacting. Like I tweeted, I've been on this, you know, many tweet effort to tell people, listen, there are Chromebooks in the world. They're very cheap. 90% of the Americans are, excuse me, on the internet high speed. And there are so many online resources for you to get ahead in life. Go try to be a marketer, go do economy, go learn UX and design. These are the clearest paths into the technology industry.
Starting point is 01:18:16 And I get hysterical liberals who say, people don't have access to the internet, people don't have access to Chromebooks, and people don't have the free time or the motivation to improve their lot in life. And it's like, who are you talking about? Because 90% of the country has access to the internet and uses it already. And if you go and do a search for a Chromebook on eBay, you can find one for 50 to 150 bucks. So we have this narrative that people cannot rise up and people cannot improve themselves. And every time I say, I believe people can improve themselves, people say that
Starting point is 01:18:49 I am like a racist that I believe that people could improve themselves. And it just makes me further away from the Democratic Party. It makes me further away from the left. I think I think this, I'm going to put out a crazy idea, which is that I think if Donald Trump wins in a meaningful way in November, I don't think he will, but if he does, the actual silver lining for everybody is I think the Republican Party will disintegrate and the Democratic Party will disintegrate. And in its place, I think you'll probably have three or four parties. And I think that that would be amazing. So it's the Burn It All Down vote, which was Peter
Starting point is 01:19:30 Tiel's idea in the beginning was like, I think Sachs and Tiel when they coordinated this Trump election, it was all Burn It Down, right? Sachs, that was your start, chain bird discussion with Tiel, was you wanted to burn it all down? I think you're trying to, I think what you're doing is contamination by association there. Yeah, just because you went to college at PeterTL. Was it last time you talked to PeterTL? No, Peter's a friend of mine,
Starting point is 01:19:53 but I don't, but again, and I agree with him about some things, I just agree with him about other things, but the side, yeah. You disagree with this idea, but this idea that we can't hang out with people, you know, or that hanging out with people means that we can't hang out with people, or that hanging out with people means that we must endorse every view they have. Why is it even relevant that I'm
Starting point is 01:20:11 friends with Peter? Like, for example, we're friends in our group chat with a couple guys who are very far right. We're not going to name who they are. But I would say that I think that the group chat is better off for them being able to say what they believe and push back. And just like there's a bunch of us who are in the middle and we waffle back and forth between the left and the right, and then there are folks that are more on the far left or on the left. So I just think that we forget that there is enormous value in the diversity of thought. And people think that there is some sort of safety and conformity. And in fact, I'll tell you,
Starting point is 01:20:55 that's actually the exact opposite. You're more likely to be in conflict with someone that you are very similar to, because eventually you will always end up competing for the exact same resource, and that resource becomes scarce. If you are actually spending time with people that are divergent and different from you,
Starting point is 01:21:13 you actually end up not competing for the same resources because you're, one second, you're built differently. So there's just less conflict. So this is why multi-party systems work. This is why you have less fighting when there's, you know, in Canada and Europe than you do in the United States because the United States tries to reduce things down to two choices. And so we all of a sudden like just glom into these pools that are seemingly similar and we just end up hating each other. Freeburg any final thoughts on cancel culture?
Starting point is 01:21:47 Yeah, I think it's just gonna be bad. Like, I totally agree with Jamoth that if Trump wins the election, this will be the reason. That the same thing happened when the Republicans overplayed their hand with Bill Clinton. And it was said at that time that, you know, Clinton was always very fortunate in who his enemies were because no matter what he did wrong or how badly he screwed up, his enemies always
Starting point is 01:22:11 made too big a deal of it. They overreacted and it played into his hands. And I have to wonder if that's what's happening right now with this whole cancel culture. Yeah. All right. Well, we'll leave it at that. We've gone over an hour. If you're listening to the All-In podcast and you'd like to advertise, it's not possible.
Starting point is 01:22:27 There's no ads on this podcast. And if you'd like to be a guest on the podcast, that's also not possible. There's no guests. So send your advertising and guest requests to who tomorrow's back, back, back, back, org. Breaking news right now. there is a tech crunch story that just broke while we're on air. Can't stop, won't stop, social capital.
Starting point is 01:22:50 Just follow for its fourth SPAC. If you're into SPACs, SPACs, SPACs, SPACs, SPACs. That's not the article, the article. Oh, no, the article is, Tremoth launch is SPAC. SPACs and SPAC, as he SPACs, the world with SPACs. Yeah, we just announced three. Oh, you just not the thing. As he spacks, the world with spacks. Yeah, we just announced three.
Starting point is 01:23:06 Oh, you just announced number three. No, no, three, three, DE and F. Oh, DE and F got approved. No, yeah, they're filed with the SEC now. And when would DE and F be available for people to buy shares in it then? Is that like a 60 day overdue? 15 days.
Starting point is 01:23:21 Oh, okay, great. All right, well, there you have it. And then you confirmed that the second SPAC was open door, right? Is that confirmed? That was an out-suntosed day. Yeah. Guys, congratulations on that. Thank you so much. And then how do you feel about all these people stealing your thunder with SPACs? I think it's great. No, it's great. I think it's growing the market. It's good for entrepreneurs. It's amazing. I mean, what this is going to mean that companies with 50 to 150 million will be able to go public on a clear path. I hope so. I mean, what this is going to mean that companies with 50 to
Starting point is 01:23:50 150 million will be able to go public on a clear path. I hope so. I've said this before. We've gone from 8,000 public companies to 4,000 in 20 years. So let's reverse the tide. It should be double the number of companies. Right? I mean, we should have gone up. You would think it would be going to be a world of zero percent interest rates. it has to. Yeah. Yeah. All right. Well, here we go. Please, for the love of God, somebody convinced CAHM Robin Hood, Thumbtack, and data stacks to go public because I've got kids to put through school. All right, everybody.
Starting point is 01:24:15 For Bestie C, the rainman himself, David Sacks, and the queen of Kenwa, freed burgers. This is the All-in podcast. We'll see you next time. Bye. Love you, Bestie's. Wow, freed burgers. This is the All in Podcast. We'll see you next time.
Starting point is 01:24:26 Bye. Love you besties. Love you besties.

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