All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E93: Twitter whistleblower, cloud security vulnerabilities, student debt forgiveness & more

Episode Date: August 26, 2022

0:00 Bestie intros! 1:25 Twitter's former head of security makes allegations against the company 22:08 Foreign countries placing government agents in US tech companies, cloud security vulnerabilities ...33:54 Student loan forgiveness 1:03:25 Red wave or red ripple? 1:07:57 Science corner: Gut microbiome, fecal transplants Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/interactive/2022/twitter-whistleblower-sec-spam https://www.npr.org/2022/08/23/1119071586/twitter-whistleblower-complaint-elon-musk-security-bots-fake-users https://www.cnn.com/2022/08/23/tech/twitter-whistleblower-peiter-zatko-security/index.html https://time.com/6207996/twitter-whistleblower-allegations/ https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1562179576800763904 https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1562179705322684416 https://www.reuters.com/world/india/india-forced-twitter-put-agent-payroll-whistleblower-says-2022-08-23 https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1562105413977493504 https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2022-08-24-musk-gets-a-potential-boost-with-twitter-whistle-blowers-claims-2 https://www.cnn.com/2022/08/23/tech/twitter-whistleblower-peiter-zatko-security/index.html https://www.zuckermanlaw.com/sp_faq/largest-sec-whistleblower-awards https://blogs.microsoft.com/on-the-issues/2021/06/30/the-need-for-legislative-reform-on-secrecy-orders https://theliberalpatriot.substack.com/p/the-democrats-shifting-coalition https://fortune.com/2022/08/24/biden-changing-income-driven-repayment-plan-student-debt-borrowers https://twitter.com/LHSummers/status/1562040653432999936 https://www.socialcapital.com/ideas/2021-annual-letter https://www.cookpolitical.com/analysis/house/2022-primaries/red-wave-looks-more-ripple https://www.cell.com/cell/pdf/S0092-8674(22)00919-9.pdf https://grow.google

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I wanna play the theme music for this episode, okay? Hold on a second, here we go. If you let the Indian government plant spies in your office, give a little whistle! If you have too many bots, you can come up with your own metric MDAUs. MDAUs. When you want to incent your staff to not look at the bots, give them bonuses based on dows. Always let your bonus be your guide When you're on the board and you see metrics that you don't like turn up blind eye
Starting point is 00:01:00 Sorry, I just got the peanut This is jc. I'll add his best You gotta stop it's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the one who's gonna be the story of 2022 for sure. Right before, I guess the big case between Elon and Twitter is about to happen, I guess, in October at some point, a Twitter whistleblower has come forward and dropped a nuke into the middle of what was basically the story of the year in business, I think. The former head of security hired by Jack himself and incredibly well respected Peter Mudge Zatko, he's referred to as Mudge.
Starting point is 00:01:58 One of the most respected people in the security industry, again recruited by Jack in 2020 after a team of hackers, you may have remember, took over all these verified accounts, Obama, Biden, and Elon's account as well. And he was head of security until January of this year, eight months ago. And he claims through explosive documents, a huge document dump that Twitter exact ignored these Twitter executives ignored, multiple security vulnerabilities. Now, why is this important? Well, obviously, if Obama, Biden and other heads of state have their Twitter handles, they could say something that could cause
Starting point is 00:02:34 an international incident, and that's actually happened with hacks before. He also says they were not following even the most basic security protocols like safeguarding staff access to core software. Of course, all of this comes after there were Saudi infiltrator spies essentially inside of Twitter. I mean, the list of things here that he is alleging is truly colossal. He dumped these documents to the Department of Justice, the SEC, Congress, and the Washington Post. He alleges that the vulnerabilities make Twitter extremely vulnerable to far and spice hacking and disinformation campaigns.
Starting point is 00:03:14 And perhaps most importantly to the acquisition, the plan also adds that Twitter's policy towards fake accounts incentivize, quote, deliberate ignorance by undercounting spam accounts and giving bonuses to exacts for increasing users but not finding bots, sacks, your thoughts. I mean, on this, we talked about your subpoena or whatever that was. I don't know. I'm being depositioned. It's you're having a deposition. Yeah, they want to depop me too, which is kind of amazing. But let's save that because I think this is more newsworthy. So, you're a call on a previous show.
Starting point is 00:03:55 We talked about this idea that if Twitter sues Elon to go after the kill fee or to go after damages, the question will very rapidly become about whether Twitter has a bot problem and we'll discover or reveal documents that show that Twitter executives knew or should have known there was a problem. And so I said, you know, the question will very rapidly become what did Twitter executives know and when did they know it. Now I couldn't have predicted that this whistleblower would come forward, but what he's basically
Starting point is 00:04:26 saying is not only is there a bot problem, there is a cover-up of the bot problem. He's accusing the company of positively Nixonian tactics here. So just to build on what you said, Jay Kow, he said that Twitter executives don't have the resources to fully understand the true number of bots in the platform, and their executives are disincentivized to count them properly because doing so would negatively affect their bonuses. So I didn't know that their bonuses were in any way tied to this bot issue. So he's basically making the Upton Sinclair argument that it's hard to get a man to understand a problem when his salary depends on not understanding it. So that's
Starting point is 00:05:05 part of what he's saying. He's also saying that he's accusing Twitter CEO, Praga Agarwal directly. Let's just say these are allegations, right? These are not proven yet. But here's what he's saying. Basically, he's saying that Praga and his lieutenants repeatedly discourage him from providing a full accounting of Twitter security problems to the company's board of directors. They basically prevented him from producing a written report. He also says that the company's executives ordered him to knowingly present, cherry picked and misrepresented data to create the false perception of progress on urgent cybersecurity issues.
Starting point is 00:05:41 He also alleges that they went behind his back to have a third-party consulting firm their report scrubbed to hide the true external of the company's problems. And as a result of this, he's basically saying that Twitter executives committed securities law violations by making material misrepresentations and emissions and SEC filings. And this is what got Elon to sort of commemorate Zacka's revelations with one of his trademark memes, which was the meme of Jimny Cricket singing, give a little whistle from the film Pinocchio, which I think was called open here. He's like, which just became our cold open. So yeah, look, these are very serious allegations. They're not proven yet. He's working with the same group who worked with Francis Hogan and
Starting point is 00:06:26 I certainly questioned some of the things she was saying so I'm not gonna automatically accept on faith everything he's saying But I think by the same token because he's working with groups that Back Francis Hogan who was very much not on the free speech side of this debate I also think you can't just accuse this guy of being an Elon Stoog. This guy is a respected cybersecurity authority. He's one of these like White Hat hackers. He's somebody who is an early hacker. Literally, if you were to ask before all of this, before we worked at Twitter, like, who
Starting point is 00:07:03 would you want as your chief security officer, you know, give me a short list, he'd be on it for any company. One of the most respected people who points out of Warner Bros. and Shema or Freeberg have a question about corporate governance and what seems to be a dysfunctional relationship here, you have Jack Hire somebody to solve the security problems. Then when presenting to the board, he's not allowed to tell the truth. And the board has given incentives to the management team. He's a top five, top seven member of the management team. So what's going on here with this dysfunction where he's hired to tell the truth to fix the problems. The board is turning a blind eye to it, and maybe the management team
Starting point is 00:07:45 is not giving the board the day to they need to make better decisions. Who, how do you game very this? I'm not sure that you can come to all those conclusions. Yeah, I'm not coming to the conclusion. My mind is wandering of how this function comes up. I read parts of this whistleblower. I can't claim to have read it all. It actually isn't super supportive of Elon's case.
Starting point is 00:08:09 The most problematic thing that he points out is the following and this is a quote from his complaint. He said, Twitter quote, already doing a decent job excluding spam bots and other worthless accounts from its calculation of M-dow. At best, he's alleging that Twitter omitted details, not that it's live directly. So if you kind of take that, I think what he's really pointing his sites on are, as you
Starting point is 00:08:38 said, disclosures that have nothing to do with the spam issue, but have a lot to do with security. And that is something that typically in a public company board filters up through the audit committee typically that gets a readout once a quarter, from the right people who talk about, here's our cybersecurity threats and vulnerabilities,
Starting point is 00:09:01 and then there is a readout from that committee chair to the board. And then those are noted in your quarterly reports that the secretary writes down. So I think part of why this guy may not have had the audience is it was also written that he was a pretty terrible manager and there were hundreds of people in his organization who were just kind of running here and there. And so, you know, you guys have all been in the situation where we hire somebody who is an exceptional performer. And then we miscast that person by putting them in a point of leadership and
Starting point is 00:09:42 being a team manager versus, you know versus a single kind of like product or engineering expert. And it seems that there is a part of that at play as well, which decayed the ability for management to actually have enough faith and trust in this guy to put them in front of the board. So, and that's all that's just come out in the last few days. So, I don't know, my reading of the whistleblower claim is really that this is the kind of thing that companies like Facebook and Google and others have had issues
Starting point is 00:10:12 with the FTC in the past. They typically settle those claims, they pay a fine snap, but those things take three to five years to play out. So I suspect that this body of content more leads to that outcome than is a smoking gun that really helps Elon. In fact, the fact that he's actually affirmatively stating that their calculation of M. Dow is actually pretty decent actually hurts the claim that Elon is making. I don't know if I agree with that actually. Okay, go ahead, Zach. So I agree with Jamoth that the claims he's making are far broader than the bod issue,
Starting point is 00:10:52 and far broader than the issues that Elon's raised. So I agree with you about that, Jamoth. However, I don't agree that what he's saying isn't specifically helpful to Elon's case. So what he said is, so this is from a CNN business article, he said, Zachos disclosure argues that by reporting bots only as a percentage of M-Dowr, rather than as a percentage of total number of accounts on the platform, Twitter obscures the true scale of fake and spam accounts on the service.
Starting point is 00:11:21 A move, Zachos alleges, is deliberately misleading. And then, I see that continues. So wait, what you're saying here, Zach, ZACO alleges, is deliberately misleading. And then, I see that I continue to say. So wait, what you're saying here, SACS, just to do the math, the denominator matters here. If the denominator was all accounts, the percentage of bots would be much higher. If the denominator is monthly M-dows, whatever they created, it would be a much lower denominator, and the percentage would change. I think is what's... I'm just sort of reporting what CNS reporting in terms of what Zachos alleging. That's what I get on the table.
Starting point is 00:11:48 CNN broke the story along with what other news was. Washington Post. Washington Post, yeah. Basically what happened is this guy got fired in January and started working with these whistleblower lawyers. They put together a big report and then that report got leaked to the Washington Post and CNN as well as people on Capitol Hill.
Starting point is 00:12:03 So that's kind of what happened here. So CNN goes on to say, Zachos says he began asking about the prevalence of bought accounts on Twitter in early 2021 and was told by Twitter's head of site integrity that the company didn't know how many total bots are on his platform. He alleges that he came away from conversations with the integrity team with the understanding that the company had quote No aptite to properly measure the prevalence of bots and quote in part because if the true number became public It could harm the company's value in image
Starting point is 00:12:35 So this is again the up to declare problem that there I mean then at a minimum David you have to agree this guy is basically speaking on both sides of his mouth I mean these are both direct quotes from his complaint. So his complaint at best is very confusing and a little schizophrenic. Well, it's also just coming out. So there'll be more data that comes from that. By the way, I'm not saying that I believe him or disbelieve him,
Starting point is 00:12:57 but I'm saying if you look at the quotes, the quotes aren't the smoking gun one would want. If one was trying to look, I think we have to remember the lawsuit has really nothing to do with this problem. The lawsuit really boils down to one very specific clause which is the pinnacle question at hand which is there is a specific performance clause that Elon signed up to, right? Which, you know, his lawyers could have struck out and either chose not to or, you know, couldn't get the deal done without.
Starting point is 00:13:32 And that specific performance clause says that Twitter can't force him to close at 5420 a share. And I think the issue at hand at the Delaware Business Court is going to be that because Twitter is going to point to all of these. You know gotchas and disclaimers that they have around this body issue. As their cover story. And I think that really you know this kind of again builds more and more momentum in my mind that the most likely outcome here is a settlement where you have to pay the economic difference between where the stock is now and 5420, which is more than a billion dollars, or you close at some number below 54 dollars and 20 cents a share.
Starting point is 00:14:22 And I think that that is like, you know, if you had to be a betting person, that's probably, and if you look at the way the stock is traded, and if you also look at the way the options market trades, that's what people are assuming that there's a seven to ten billion dollars swing. And if you impute that into the stock price, you kind of get into the $51 a share kind of an acquisition price. Again, I'm not saying that is right or should be right, that's just sort of what the market says. Friedberg, what's your take on this? You find this person credible, highly credible, and how damaging do you think this is to Twitter,
Starting point is 00:14:55 independent of the deal to sell the company? I think there's two tests. One is the materiality of what they've reported. So, and really, that comes down to just the the end out reported numbers. So if there really is some statement, knowing the statement based on what he's saying, that's an issue. The other one is the duty of care responsibility of the board, meaning did the information that he's providing actually find its way to the board. If it was blocked by management, you know, it's a judgment call on whether or not management was trying to deceive
Starting point is 00:15:33 or whether they were trying to investigate and identify more. If the information was brought to the board and the board did not act, then there's an issue with the board's meeting their duty of care responsibility at fiduciaries of the company. And that's really what he did pitch the board at some point or explain this to the board. But not in writing. Yeah, if what he's claiming did not make its way to the board, then it's hard to say that the board was in breach of their duty of care. I agree. If the CEO blocked it, then there's a question on what, then the
Starting point is 00:16:07 CEO can be fired, right? Then there's a good case for the CEO to be fired. I see, so I see, you know, probably one of three scenarios here. One is, you know, nothing happens, two is that the board is actually violating there, which I doubt knowing this board. I mean, knowing who's on this board, it's probably more likely that the CEO or some executives that blocked this information from getting to the board, the board then has to act. Now that they have the information and they say, hey, you blocked this information from getting to us, we need to act. And maybe they removed the leadership that was responsible for that. Sachs, in terms of board governments, how much of this has to do with the fact that nobody really
Starting point is 00:16:41 owned on the board any significant equity in Twitter. Is that true? Yeah, I mean, I think Jack on the board was the highest, right? He owned two or three percent. How much did Silver Lake own? Jack owns Silver Lake, he owns on the board. I mean, their owners on the board, right? Is it exactly a board?
Starting point is 00:16:58 Yeah, we're low. To be clear, Zacho doesn't seem to be pointing his finger at the board. In fact, quite the contrary, he's saying he wasn't allowed to present to the board in the amount of detail that he wanted in written form like he wanted. So in a way, he seems to be exonerating the board. He is pointing the finger at Twitter executives. And the timeline here is instructive. Basically, what happened is he was hired by Jack Dorsey back when Jack was CEO. This is in, I think, November of 2020. And at that time, Jack had Zacho report directly to him.
Starting point is 00:17:32 He actually took responsibility away from these issues, away from Prague who was running engineering, gave it to Zacho, Zacho reported directly to him. Now, fast forward about a year later, and Jack steps down, Prague's become CEO, and then two months later, Prague fires Zacho.
Starting point is 00:17:52 And it's in that time period, that couple of months, whereas Zacho alleges that he's prevented from providing a written report to the board, that Twitter executives instruct him to cherry pick, that they basically try to amend this third-party consulting firm's report in order to make the situation look better in order to hide the extent of the company's problem. So I think this is, I think the allegations as far as they go are mainly a
Starting point is 00:18:19 problem for Twitter executives. And look, I don't know the truth these things, they're just allegations. Twitter executives and look, I don't know the truth these things, they're just allegations. I think this guy is a respected sort of white hat hacker in the cyber community. At the same time, I don't know, maybe he is a bad manager, maybe there are other reasons for removing him. Could be a bad manager. Could be a manager, so can you give me some truth, right? Yeah, and you can't ignore the fact that under whistleblower laws, if Twitter gets fined as a result of these allegations, he could get 30%.
Starting point is 00:18:46 So listen, we don't know the truth of it. However, I do think that this whole thing is a windfall for Elon's case because it does seem to provide substantiation for Elon's assertion that there's a bot-prong at Twitter. Now, and a cover-up about it. And a cover-up about it and a cover up about it exactly Yes, and a cover up that would basically potentially invalidate the company's SEC disclosures on the subject. Yeah, there's a question. There's a question of law and a question of fact with regard to Elon's case So in other words at the end of the day what they're going to be litigating in Delaware is a contract dispute
Starting point is 00:19:24 Is Elon contractually required to close? And Elon's assertion is, I'm not because this bought issue. So there's a question of law where if everything Elon says about the bots is true, is he required to close? And I don't know what the legal ramifications that are. But I think with respect to the question of fact, which is, is Elon right about the body issue? There's no question that this is a bombshell that can only help his case. By the way, to your point, the stock was kind of pricing in a 70% likelihood of this thing closing if you looked at just how all this stuff was trading. And it went down to 60%
Starting point is 00:20:01 once that whistleblower report came out and people had a chance to digest it. So, to your point, it definitely moved the goalposts a little bit towards, to any lawns favor. There is an important thing to point out here, which is just touched on. There is a whistleblower program that was created in 2012. And by the SEC, as part of Dodd-Frank, I believe, or in part of the evolution of Dodd-Frank. And they've given out now over $1 billion in whistleblower awards. These awards come out of the SEC fine.
Starting point is 00:20:32 So you often wonder like, hey, they give this huge SEC fine. Who got it? Well, it turns out whistleblowers now are massively incentive because if you're a whistleblower, it's a career ending. But Jason, you're not saying the other part, which is when you go to these organizations to now help develop a whistleblower lawsuit, what has actually happened is you're not whistleblowing moral or ethical breaches. You're whistleblowing things that can come back to an issue that the SEC and the FTC can
Starting point is 00:20:58 make an issue up because that's where the financial fines come and that's where the remuneration and motivation. So for example, like you could have a company that's illegally, I don't know, killing dogs terrible. But the whistleblower claim will be about, you know, their disclosures in a 10K. How many dogs they killed to the SEC? Right. In this case, you know, how many, what did they tell the, yeah, and that's why he gave this to the SEC DOJ.
Starting point is 00:21:24 The other interesting wrinkle here. And by the way, there's been two, the whistleblower program, I did a bunch of reading on it this week. They also don't disclose who the whistleblowers are. So this is in a case where you have to come out like Francis did or or much did. A lot of these awards are being given quietly. So there and there's been two rewards over a hundred million dollars. and they don't say what the award was based on, who the whistleblower is or who the company is. They've been doing this in a very stealthy way, and it seems to be highly effective. The big difference, I think, with Francis compared to this one is Francis, just a PM who
Starting point is 00:21:58 was not a top five or 10 employee, not even close to that. This is a top five, top seven employee who had access to the board and was giving reports to the board at least orally. The final point on this, I would like to get everybody's commentary on. If it is true that they essentially were forced, Twitter was forced by the Indian government to put a government agent on the payroll.
Starting point is 00:22:22 I think agent means spy. How explosive is that? And then how many of the country's? that to me is the most important thing that is not getting nearly enough coverage. It's like, you had a government come to a company that's based in America. And it's a, it's not the United States government that did it. And basically said, we need you to place an agent of our intelligence services inside of your company. And it seems like they were like, okay, where do you want them to sit? Now, SACs, if that's true, I wonder if they would be required to tell the CIA and our government that their arms being twisted. Like, this seems unprecedented to
Starting point is 00:22:58 me. And if they did, I think this is all a legit, so, but if I do SACs, well, I think the bigger button of adjacent, you should also ask the next one, which is if they did it to Twitter, which is Well, I think this is all alleged so but if you sacks well, I think the bigger but no Jason You should also ask the next one which is if they did it to Twitter, which is kind of small What about the big honeypots of users? Apple Google Facebook Wow ticktock snap and what about countries outside of just India? What about The United States. No, I mean What about the United States? No, I mean, what about the United States? Well, yeah, we have access to the stuff, you know, through the courts.
Starting point is 00:23:30 It's supposed to be a process. There's supposed to be war. Yeah, we have warrants. The process is you go to court and you get a warrant, not that it's a high bar, but a prosecutor has to go show probable cause and get a search warrant, present it to the company, and then they turn over the data. This, you're right, it's explosive in the sense that what they're saying is that these government agents, this is what Zachos has, according to Ty Magazine, the purported agents
Starting point is 00:23:53 had direct unsupervised access to internal information. Which I think means DMs, when the accounts are created, who owned which account, the IP addresses, that's what I'm guessing. They had access to, which is, you do not want to trust., that's what I'm guessing. They had access to, which is, you do not want to trust. I'm guessing, I'm guessing, don't put anything in your DMs, folks. I'm guessing what it doesn't mean
Starting point is 00:24:11 is the Twitter menu and the cafeteria. Yeah, no. Not that, I mean, not that anybody's been to that cafeteria in three years. Anyway, I mean, there's literally $47. I think I'll have stayed. They had direct unsupervised access to the salad bar. Hahaha.
Starting point is 00:24:29 I think you basically, I think you have to make an assumption that if, if, what a shit government are doing this to one company, they're doing it to all companies. Yeah, but you would think, right? That you know, but who would put up a fight or Apple would put up a fight? But who knows? You think they put a fight when they went into China? The opposite. Don't you think they do the opposite?
Starting point is 00:24:51 Well, actually what they did, what there's actually a even sneaker away to do it, what Apple did when they went there is they said, we're not providing cloud services in China. But all the cloud services are provided by this third party company so then they could have plausible that I know what this is about.
Starting point is 00:25:05 This is about... Just giving an example of how... This is interesting, but I'm asking you a question. Do you think that foreign governments have put pressure on the largest American tech companies to place agents and do you think they exist in there? They've definitely put pressure. We see that, obviously. Then the question is, would
Starting point is 00:25:25 Apple or Google do this and not inform the government or not put up a fight? I don't know. Well, I think it's fair to say that the Senate Intelligence Committee is going to haul Twitter and have a closed door meeting. Then the question is, will they haul everybody else? I think what is an important question is, is this a dirty, dirt kind of business tactic at the highest levels of every company? And we just don't know it and are typically not read into it.
Starting point is 00:25:51 And we would never know in the absence of this whistleblower thing. And my question is, does our government know that our companies are asking to these governments? Well, that's been a problem for a long time, actually. So there was an op-ed by Microsoft Executive talking about this a number of months back, where the argument was, well, the government has a problem for a long time, actually. So there was an op-ed by a Microsoft executive talking about this a number of months back
Starting point is 00:26:06 where the argument was, well, the government has to go get a search warrant to get your data from these companies, but these companies don't put up a fight. Like, they don't challenge the warrant at all. At why? Because they don't have an interest. They have an interest in being cooperative, right? The article is basically saying that if you're
Starting point is 00:26:23 the subject of a search warrant, meaning they're going to Google to get information about Jason, the government should have a duty to inform Jason so that your lawyers can go challenge it. And that was the legal change that needed to be made. We had this conversation I think last year. That is a change that should be made because in the old days when the government would present you with a search warrant, they'd have to go to you because all of your documents were in your possession. They would be at your office, they'd be at your house, so they would come knocking
Starting point is 00:26:51 in your door, give you the search warrant, you could give it to your lawyer, they could challenge it. That doesn't happen anymore. Now the government just goes and gives a search warrant to a big tech company because your data is in the cloud, but their argument is you don't own that data, the big tech company does, the big tech company has no incentive to fight the government, and they just get access to all of your data. And you don't even know that you're being investigated.
Starting point is 00:27:10 Well, it's not an argument. It's not an argument. You agree to that when you sign their terms of service. Yeah. The current situation is bad enough that essentially you have very little protection and rights over your data. But what's happening here, the allegation is even worse, which is that government operatives are working with the company in a way that provides some access
Starting point is 00:27:29 without them even getting a search warrant. I think they just buy on their ex-girlfriend, their brother-in-law, whoever. They can just spy on a celebrity, do whatever they want. I'd always assumed that this was happening covertly, meaning like, look, if you're a tech company and you have a very bright, I don't know, PhD on a visa and you hire that person to work in computer vision, I'm just making this up. How do you really know that that person is not an agent of another foreign country? And obviously, the overwhelming majority are not.
Starting point is 00:28:02 But once you have hundreds or thousands of people, you know, that you brought into your company, all it takes is one person. You know, for example, we just saw, I think in Apple, there were two people that were just recently arrested for stealing all of Apple's autonomous auto data and documents and design schematics and all of that stuff. And one of the guys was arrested right before he was trying to fly back to China. And so somehow they figured it out, they were able to get him. He was not a US citizen, but then another guy that did it was a US citizen, but both were of Chinese origin.
Starting point is 00:28:40 It just goes to show you that the covert nature of industrial espionage is probably at an all-time high, right? And I think that's a risk that every company has to manage and do the best that they can, but this is different. This is an overt risk. This is just an overture and saying, open the door, give us a badge, we're coming in. And this is why I think you have to deal with this case very delicately in a different way. Yeah. And for people who don't know, Google does what's called the transparency report. Twitter also has one. So they do try to put out by category search warrants, subpoenas, etc.
Starting point is 00:29:18 Exactly how many warrants they're getting. And the tech companies are at least trying to be transparent about it to the extent they can. But this is going to lead to a lot of people moving off of the cloud I predict. And the tech companies are at least trying to be transparent about it to the extent they can, but this is going to lead to a lot of people moving off of the cloud, I predict. We're seeing, and in fact, Apple is now storing your data and a lot of your privacy information locally on your phone. And if it's encrypted, they can't hand it over.
Starting point is 00:29:39 As we saw with the terrorist shooting, and it was at San Bernardino, where they couldn't unlock the phone and they went to the Israeli spy company to do it. So, I think the companies here, at least in the United States, wanted to defend their users, but this could be, make people rethink the cloud. And I've seen a couple of pitches from start. I think you're confusing issues.
Starting point is 00:29:58 Of course, they're going to try to defend their users in the United States, but what if you let somebody in to a different country and that's not as if it's not as if those servers are not accessible. Yeah, I'm not confusing this. I'm just talking about the United States here for a minute. I do think you're going to see people buy many servers to put or rent their own cloud services that are encrypted and impossible to unlock. And so look for that trend to come. Or more companies to encrypt it and say, we don't have the the keys Chema. So isn't it crazy that like, you know, we spent the last 20 years pushing the cloud and the thing that may actually unwind the cloud is just the utter lack of privacy that we have now. I've just had like we've just created these massive honeypots where you know any
Starting point is 00:30:41 state or non-state actor can essentially just have an where any state or non-state actor can essentially just have an incredibly detailed understanding of who you are, and why, because we weren't willing to pay five bucks a month for storage. Everything needed to be free. Isn't this part of the philosophy behind decentralized services that, you know, crypto is distributed? the philosophy behind decentralized services that, you know, it's important is, yeah, I mean, I don't like using that term, but just decentralized services where the data doesn't sit on some centralized enterprise-controlled servers, but the data is distributed either on a chain or in your phone or in some way, you know, your identity, your information, your content, isn content, isn't centrally controlled,
Starting point is 00:31:27 and that that fundamental principle may actually come to kind of bear over the next couple of years and decades that that model is more appropriate for us for me and therefore the services that are built that way are gonna win in the market. The challenge is ultimately, how do you finance those because those services, right? I mean, they don't have as much of an advantage.
Starting point is 00:31:47 You have to pay for them. You know, if you're willing to pay five or $10 a month for your privacy. Consumers are doing it, free break. I use the Brave browser and VPNs, and these are becoming a major category. You hear it on podcast advertising all the time. Duck, duck, go.
Starting point is 00:32:04 Brave. VPNs are like, yes. VPNs aren't just for hackers anymore. They're like real like, um, product. You're bringing up something that I think that's really important, which is that, you know, in over the last 20 years for all of us, we've been building these products on the internet.
Starting point is 00:32:18 We've actually done a little bit of a disservice because we've basically created these expectations of consumer surplus. And we've never given people true sets of trade-offs. We've always said, oh, you'll get more, and it's essentially free, because we'll back into an advertising model that supports us being able to give you more and more for free.
Starting point is 00:32:37 But it turns out that it has some real consequences, and I do think that not enough of us actually understand why privacy is important. But when you start to hear these examples, and it'll be important to see what the true details And I do think that not enough of us actually understand why privacy is important, but when you start to hear these examples, and it'll be important to see what the true details of this Twitter situation are. I think that the pendulum starts to swing in the other direction where we say, okay, you know what?
Starting point is 00:32:56 I'll eat out at Chipotle one night a week less, and instead I'm going to reallocate that money to making sure that I have some amount of privacy for 25 bucks a month. Yeah, two with 300 bucks a year, which is a big number for, you know, maybe the average Joe, but it's being packaged and bundled right now. So you're seeing the VPNs, the anonymous search engines, the browsers all starting to bundle. They're bundling a set of suite of services. I think this is upon us now and consumers get it, and they want to protect their privacy. Apple has said this is going to be our reason
Starting point is 00:33:32 for you to choose our cloud. Is that we're going to put the local settings, we're going to put your data on your phone, encrypt it, we don't have access to it, use Apple for this reason. Of course, they're also building a multi-billion dollar ad business at the same time in Apple News and their app store. So there's that. I guess we should move on here. We'll see what happens with this. The other big news story that people are talking
Starting point is 00:33:57 about this week, and we talked about, I guess, last year was student loan debt relief. Interestingly, about 85 days before the midterms, Joe Biden has decided to unilaterally give 10 to 20K of debt relief to people who have student loans. You have to have under 125K in yearly income as an individual at 250 as a household. And the student loan pause program, which happened during COVID has been extended to the end of this year, I'm not sure why. No, that's about, they explained why. Apparently it takes four months for them to turn on
Starting point is 00:34:38 their cobalt-ball-written software that runs these loans or runs in apps. Of course, I'm mighty. So I'm sure it takes four months. It's going to take four months to restart the software that calculates your loan balance and is able to print a bill. We're so incompetent. Okay. Anyway, you have to apply for this.
Starting point is 00:34:54 And as we know, student loan debt is 1.7, 5 trillion. This is going to cost us another 300 billion. I can't imagine what's going to happen with this 1020K people buying NFTs and stocks and housing and we're going to hit the, I guess we're going to keep. Bloomberg kind of market that said that, look, we passed the inflation reduction act we talked about it last week, but one of the key pillars of that is that there's a 300 billion of expected revenues coming in and we essentially turned around and just gave that back. week, but one of the key pillars of that is that there's a 300 billion of expected revenues coming in, and we essentially turned around and just gave that back to a very, very small
Starting point is 00:35:31 segment of the American population. Bloomberg's analysis was that it's going to create somewhere between 0.1 and 0.3 percent extra inflation on top of all of that. And so, you really have to ask yourself, what was the White House trying to accomplish? I think number one, they made a campaign promise. And so, I think Biden needed to make sure that he fulfilled that. But nobody was really happy, right? The progressives wanted something extreme.
Starting point is 00:36:00 Everybody else said, you know, this is not really the right thing to do. Because it doesn't really solve the root cause of what we're dealing with. You know, if it would have been much better if you had said, hey listen, we're going to make this stuff expungible on bankruptcy. That would have been really useful. What happens if you actually tried to, I don't know, you were from the inner city and you worked your ass off, you became a doctor, you have 300,000 in debt. But now you're a resident and you make 126,000. Well, now you're, you know, you're kind of S.O.L. here. So there's a lot of folks that they probably wanted to help that they didn't help.
Starting point is 00:36:38 Then there's all the blue collar folks who are like, why this gave away only to these folks. Then there are the people that paid off their loans thinking, why did I pay my loans off? Then there's the incentives that it creates for colleges, which is, well, I'm just gonna keep jacking up tuition because if they did it once, they may do it again. So all of these things, I think, are sort of a little bit of, you know,
Starting point is 00:37:00 it's a little bit of a headscratcher. And then the last thing, which we can talk about at the end is, I don't think this is what gets people out to vote. And I don't think it's what people care about ultimately at the polls, which if there is a political calculation to make, that's important. And specifically, when you look at what happened last night
Starting point is 00:37:17 in a bunch of these districts, every progressive candidate got absolutely shellac. They lost across the board. And so the progressive talking points around this stuff, fundamentally when push comes to shove, doesn't work for democratic voters. And then second, is there was a really hotly contested seat, which was a Democrat versus a Republican. I think it's Pat Ryan versus this guy Mark Mollinaro, the Republican. He was leading the entire way, and then this guy won 51.49,
Starting point is 00:37:52 and this is a very centrist down the middle, damn. So all the signs are like, this may not have been the smartest thing to do, but I don't think Joe Biden had a choice because he made the promise and he had to live up to it. Freeberg, is this a fair thing to do? A smart thing to do? A cynical thing to do to buy votes? Where do you fall down on the decision? This is absolutely moronic. I think that the fact that 8 million households are eligible for this this relief and 10 to $20,000 is relief is provided to a minority of Americans is exactly
Starting point is 00:38:30 what Chimoff said, which is kind of distorted politics at its worst. There, this is a $300 billion bill to the US taxpayer and the ultimate beneficiary of that bill while we all might want to say it's the people that are getting debt relief that have taken out these student loans, that money was transferred to somewhere. And you know where it was transferred to? University Endowments, and the profit and the pockets of for-profit educational institutions. If there were a free market for education in the United States, and the government was not involved in the process of funding and supporting the educational infrastructure in this country. Individual citizens would have the right and the obligation to make decisions about whether or not the money that they're spending on tuition actually has a
Starting point is 00:39:17 positive ROI for them by spending 10,000 or a hundred thousand dollars am I going to make more than that much money back when I graduate? And unfortunately, we've lulled our citizenry, we've lulled our country into complacency, where that decision and that calculus is no longer required because Uncle Sam is there to give you all the money you want to go to college and the hungry, money-hungry institutions that are there to educate you
Starting point is 00:39:41 are taking that money, putting it in their endowments or in the pockets of their shareholders. And at the end of the day, it turns out that that decision may not have been the best decision. And we're no longer holding ourselves individually to take responsibility for the decisions that we've made. And we're creating misincentives because of the government programs that have been created. By telling people, you need to get a higher education, the government is going to pay forward for you. And it doesn't matter if it does or doesn't work. Because at the end of the day, if it doesn't work,
Starting point is 00:40:08 we're just going to pay it back for you anyway. We'll belly you out. Exactly. And there's a middle class in the United States of America that is going to end up paying the tax bill primarily because that's where most tax dollars come from for the minority of people that made a bad decision. And it's not necessarily their fault.
Starting point is 00:40:23 They made that decision because the infrastructure and the system was set up to tell them, they were duped, go to college, get a good degree, and you'll always work so hard. You'll always work so hard. You'll make more money, and the reality is that they aren't, and that they don't. The ROI for many of these degrees has been negative. You make less money than you would have if you were actually in the workforce earning an on-the-ground experience and progressing your career. You do not need a degree in philosophy or history or German studies to be able to go and be effective in the technology workforce or in the services workforce. And I think
Starting point is 00:40:56 that we're seeing that play out. The biggest challenge now is if we're going to provide this loan relief and not reform the educational infrastructure and the and the requirements for whether or not an Educational system is eligible for support from the federal loan program We are not actually solving the fundamental problem We are keeping this gravy train running and we're not actually getting to the root cause of where this money is flowing and this is exactly What happens? I will rehash my point that I've made 100 times at the end of empires. Everyone sees that the money train is leaving the station and everyone jumps and grabs what they can.
Starting point is 00:41:31 That's exactly what's going on. We think that we're a rich nation, but we're becoming complacent. This is unfortunate and it's a really sad sign. I think we need to fix this educational infrastructure. We need to make eligibility requirements for whether or not loans are actually going to have a positive ROI for students. And then individuals ultimately need to be educated on that and made held accountable to whether or not they're making the right decisions for themselves.
Starting point is 00:41:51 SAC should each American pay a thousand dollars to let these eight million people off the hook because that's what this is going to cost. No, of course not. I agree with everything. I mean, if people said I don't like you, I just gave you the softball of all softballs gum. No, I mean, look, I think this is an issue where all four of us are on the same page. I agree with everything that Jamassah and what Freiburg said. I mean, this bill
Starting point is 00:42:10 is unfair or it rewards relatively well off college grads over working class people. It's going to add 300 billion to the deficit. I mean, Joe mentioned should feel like a sucker right now because they just spent the 300 billion of supposed savings that he just agreed to. Just to add, it's unconstitutional. I mean, the Constitution expressly says, no money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in consequence of appropriations made by law. So I don't understand how Biden can even do this by an executive order. I expect this to be challenged and taken to the Supreme Court.
Starting point is 00:42:47 And I think it was a very good chance that it'll end up like Biden's other executive orders that were ruled unconstitutional. Remember, there was the vaccine mandate that he tried to do, and there was the eviction moratorium that he tried to do, and they're both ruled unconstitutional. I think it's a good chance that this will also be ruled unconstitutional. And like you guys mentioned, it's inflationary. I mean, these are basically STEMI checks, which we don't need right now.
Starting point is 00:43:09 And it's gonna make tuition go up because the more government subsidizes something, the more those providers have an incentive to raise the cost. So this is just a jump to the shark moment, I think, for policy making. The question is, why are they doing it? And I think it really speaks to the nature of the Democratic Party today, which is the Democratic Party has shifted from being a
Starting point is 00:43:31 blue collar sort of more economically populous party, economically left party, to being a professional class that is college educated, culturally left more woke party. And this is the ultimate example of that, where the Democratic Party is basically passing this payoff and give away to their sort of woke college graduates at the expense of their blue collar, the blue collar part of their coalition. And, you know, a Democratic political scientist that I like to read, Roy Tushira, just today he had a blog post called the Democrats Shifting Coalition where he pointed out that if you look at polling, if you look at the generic ballot among white college graduates, they
Starting point is 00:44:12 favor Democrats by 12 points, whereas the white working class, which is to say non-college voters, they favor Republicans by 25 points. So one of the biggest gaps in the electorate is college versus non-college. That is the fundamental gap. It's bigger than even, you know, than any other gap, then racial gaps or anything like that. This is really the key gap in the electorate. And this is a payoff to the, basically, to the new foot soldiers of the Democratic Party. If you think about it, the old stereotype of a foot soldier of the Democratic Party would be a union representative. They were the ones getting out the vote. That person's been replaced with sort of a well-college graduate who joins the Democratic Socialist
Starting point is 00:44:54 America and they go out and they're the ones pounding the pavement and doing the ballot harvesting. So there's been a real change in what this party is about. And I think that's the explanation for why they're passing this. The NFAs. change in what this party is about and I think that's the explanation for why they're passing this. The MFA's legislation. Chimath and then we'll go to you, Frimer. The MFA's from Sarah Lawrence College have taken over the Democratic part. Yeah. Well, let me ask you guys a question.
Starting point is 00:45:14 Yeah. When you guys graduated, everyone went to undergrad. Chimath, you went to undergrad in Canada, right? I have no grad degree. Right. But when you guys graduated college, what do you think the ratio 80, 20, 90, 10, 50, 50, 0, 100 was the first two years of experience you guys had in the workforce versus the education and knowledge you garnered in college? How
Starting point is 00:45:39 am I 90% workforce? 90% workforce. First college was just college at night. So I was working on it. That's cool Right, I was a 100 and zero I went to school University of Waterloo that has a program called co-op where you have to alternate school and work It takes an extra year to graduate But you end up getting 24 months of full-time work experience So it was the same and you graduate with a lot debt. I graduated with half the debt I would have otherwise. So, I mean, do you feel the same?
Starting point is 00:46:08 I mean, you wouldn't got a law degree. That's different. I mean, look, I think that it used to be the case that people would go get these degrees and they would take out these loans because there was a perceived ROI of getting this education. And I think one of the deeper issues we have today is it's very unclear what the ROI is.
Starting point is 00:46:27 I mean, what is the return of getting a degree in, you know, social studies or art history, or frankly some woke studies at one of these prestigious universities, their graduates go out and they're not especially qualified for a higher paying job. And actually, I think one of the really revealing parts of this executive order is not just the forgiveness part. We haven't really touched on. There's another provision that caps repayment levels. So basically, it says that the monthly payments
Starting point is 00:46:55 on undergraduate loans be limited to 5% of monthly income. Now, who is that to pay off to? That is to pay off to the art history major from Amherst who ends up being a barista at Starbucks, you know, or the Democratic political operative who works for the DSA, gathering votes. I mean, that is who disappear. Or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or the or Listen, the airlines got bailed out for a trillion dollars, you know, cumulative, um, 2008 financial crisis, 700 billion or something to that number.
Starting point is 00:47:29 I'm gonna respond to this. There is a caveat to that, which is, we actually made money on that bail. I'm gonna respond to this. No, no, no, no. Okay, great. And then number three, hold on. And number three, uh,
Starting point is 00:47:39 Me too. Airlines, banks, and then the Trump tax break, 1.5 billion. So why can't a bunch of students get but 300 billion? That is the counter-argument. Everybody, we don't complain when, you know, the rich people get bailouts and the rich corporations and airlines do, but now we're suddenly complaining about this little pittance here. What's your best response to that freeberg? I'm not saying that to my position.
Starting point is 00:48:01 My summer is former Treasury Secretary of the United States had a tweet storm about this and he said, you know, the student loan issue arises, arouses passion. Here are some observations and some responses. There is no analogy with bank bailouts. Student loans are grants that cost the government money. The bank bailouts were loans at premium interest in which the government actually turned a profit. And it's important to think about all government services being infrastructure funding, where
Starting point is 00:48:30 you are funding some underlying tubing or mechanism that allows society and the economy to progress versus making up for the dollar mistakes or decisions that were made in the past. I also have issues not just with this, but with the issues of people buying homes in coastal cities that they get bailed out at the price of that home at the fair market price when a hurricane hits. Because they paid a premium taking on the risk of a hurricane
Starting point is 00:48:57 or a flooding event hitting their home. Why should the US government and the US taxpayer come in? And say, you know what, I'm gonna reimburse you for the full value of your home, which frankly should have been 50% of what you paid for it because it's sitting on a coastline. And that's a big problem that we generally have is we try and use the government as a system for providing bailouts to make up for past investment mistakes made by individuals and businesses. And I think that there's a very clear distinction that you can make when you decide whether
Starting point is 00:49:23 or not a and we use the term bailout anytime we're spending money. But the reality is if you're making an investment that has some payoff for economic growth and for people and for this country to progress in some measurable way, that is a good way to assess whether or not that is a reasonable investment. Versus saying, you know what,
Starting point is 00:49:41 I'm covering someone else's liability. And when you do that, we're actually burning money and we're putting ourselves deeper in a hole as a nation and making it harder to do the former, to make the infrastructure investments and make the investments that allow us to move forward. And I think that that's a really good way to clarify these things.
Starting point is 00:49:58 And frankly, the list of things that people say, this is fair, this is not fair, yada yada, go down that list and ask yourself that question. Is it a positive ROI to progress our country forward? Or is it a bailout for people that had some liability they took on that they can't cover? And I think for all those things that are unfair, a really important point, we cannot get caught up in the endless cycle of making up for other people's unfair benefits that they got from this government. Because at the end of the day, that's a road to nowhere. We will burn through everything we have,
Starting point is 00:50:30 and everyone will scramble for money, and that's the state that we're in right now, where everyone's raising their hand, and they're seeing $800 billion bills, $600 billion bills, COVID relief, pandemic relief, PPP loan relief, and everyone says, well, what about me? And at the end of the day, everyone's what about me is going to drive us into an infinite black hole that we will never get out of. And we have to change our mindset and take individual responsibility and recognize the dollars that we're spending have to have an ROI for progression of us as a whole. And this is a really dangerous place that we're in right now. Sex, if the edge of comments.
Starting point is 00:51:06 Can I make a comment? Sure, you make sure you have some, then I'll ask question to sex. I'm on it. I'm on it. I'm on a two monologue you today, I feel like I'm very passive. No, no, you're doing great.
Starting point is 00:51:13 I mean, the fact that you have passionate about something of the other extreme. Maybe it was an almond milk game. That almond milk gave you a little, I make those cashews. Maybe four cashews going forward. I mean, this stuff really bugs me. I'll be honest.
Starting point is 00:51:24 Just take it easy on the dates. Yeah, I'm like, dude, this stuff just makes me feel like, what are we doing? It's just, uh, so I'm going. Did you put chia seeds in your, yeah, that's it. Was it the goji berries? The goji berries.
Starting point is 00:51:35 Goese on the goji berries. Dude, that's a superfood right there. If you have, if you have chia seeds in the morning, this is a huge BM that's about to hit. It's just, you're just waiting for the wave to hit. Yeah, yeah, for sure. I have two comments. Common number one is, I think the thing that shows that this could have been better is that it was completely silent on the ability to expunge your student loans in bankruptcy. The ability to discharge that is the single
Starting point is 00:52:00 biggest change you could make to the system to be fair to everybody and introduce a better ROI risk scoring calculation mechanism. On-packed. Okay, it's a great. So this is an all-wear environment. Go ahead, you can all explain it. Okay, in all debt markets, right, whenever you lend money, there is an assumption of risk that you're taking and that fits on a curve of highly likely to default, zero
Starting point is 00:52:25 likelihood of default, and that manifests in a risk scoring. So, a FICO score, but in the debt markets, right? And there's these companies that provide that moody's and S&P. They say, you're an investment grade debt, you know, you're a AAA plus, you're a junk debt. So, you're, you know, you're a triple B minus or whatever. And depending on where you are, you pay different rates. This is the same in car insurance. It's the same in home insurance. It's the same in health insurance. But in all of those cases, if you go upside down,
Starting point is 00:52:56 you can declare bankruptcy and you can discharge those debts. Here, we don't have that idea. So if you go bankrupt for whatever reason, this debt will stay with you forever, which is deeply unfair. Second is if you actually flipped it and you could allow it to be discharged, then the companies that provided these loans would be forced to risk score you. And the reason why that would be so powerful is that that would then create the forcing function for universities to actually deliver what they promise. And so who do you think is really against the ability to discharge in bankruptcy?
Starting point is 00:53:33 It's the universities and the university endowments. So, you know, if I were progressives, the thing that I would have pushed more than a handout to a few people, which by the way, didn't even, you know, really scratch the surface of the debt that they had anyways. And it also served to piss off everybody else. I would have focused on this bankruptcy issue because that is a meaningful lasting change. And the second is why don't you go and actually get a large portion of this money from all these university endowments because the longer that these folks run what is effectively a multi trillion dollar asset management business,
Starting point is 00:54:13 they're always going to treat education and the ROI that comes from it as a second class citizen. Okay, and that is what I think is wrong and if you were to just fix this one thing And that is what I think is wrong. And if you were to just fix this one thing, and then even the threat of actually confiscating some of the $50 billion that Harvard has or the $49 billion that Utimco has, you would start, or the UT system has, you would start to see the seeds of change
Starting point is 00:54:38 where administrators would think to themselves, I have to deliver something of value because these kids are getting loans. They're going to be risk scored. And I don't want to be the person that's like a low end borrower, right? I'm not serving junk paper to the market. I want to serve people that are going to go and really drive a huge R a lot.
Starting point is 00:54:57 So then SACs, you'd have an alignment between the people giving the loan and perhaps the value of the degree. And so you could say, hey, we'll give loans to stem degrees at a different rate or a different number of them or a different amount of cash or a different interest rate. Then we would for, I don't know, getting a degree in philosophy or like I did psychology. Right. Just give a different one based on the outcome. That makes total sense to you, right? We just give a different one based on the outcome. That makes total sense to you, yes? Yeah, I've said for a long time that we should be allowing student debt to be discharged
Starting point is 00:55:30 in bankruptcy, just like any other type of debt, just like credit card debt, just like other types of debt. Trauma is right. That would create some risk to the underwriter so that they would have to actually assess whether this person getting that degree would be able to repay the debt. But you have to ask the question, is it a bug or a feature that they're have to actually assess whether this person getting that degree would be able to repay the debt. But you have to ask the question, is it a bug or a feature that they're trying to remove market forces? And I would argue that this is deliberate, that progressives in the Democratic Party don't
Starting point is 00:55:56 want there to be accountability for what you learn in college. Why? Because as I mentioned, it's these colleges that are putting out the foot soldiers of the Dark Art Party. I mean, listen, there's a 37-point gap in party preference just based on one variable, which is whether you are professional class or working class, meaning college degree or no college degree. And that spans across different racial groups and other party lines. So the fact of matter is that if you go to college and get a degree, you are much, much more likely to become progressive. Now why is that? I think it's because a lot of these colleges have basically become reeducation camps. I Guys, these are great quotes. Wow, a woke madrasse.
Starting point is 00:56:47 It's kind of like Harvard has a pizzeria. It's like, that's how K-Docs are. Who wrote that one for you? I see that. Yeah. Inferno's f*** came out with that line. But look, these places are woke madrasse. And what do they do?
Starting point is 00:56:58 They graduate these people. I like that. I like that. I like that. I like that. I like that. I like that. I like that. I like that. I like that. I like that. The graduates are new clerics of our woke theocracy. These people go on. And then they go blow up building forcers. Hold on.
Starting point is 00:57:07 They come suicide bombers. Yes, exactly. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no become the speech police. I mean, they go enforce community moderation at social networks. They become the foot soldiers. All right, let me just make a call. I'm going to make a final point. This is the best. J.K. Let me say one thing. It's true, right? How is she explaining it? 37-break-up. So, if you're the Democratic Party, listen, if you're the Democratic Party, which is run by woke progressive local operatives, why would you want to defund the factories that are brainwashing more young students to
Starting point is 00:57:49 basically join your ranks? I want to say two things. I want to say two things. One is, I think that the university and the college degree has been used as a heuristic for progression out of blue collar to white collar. It says, if you get a holler and jaycal, I know you can speak to this because you come from a family that works blue collar and you got a college degree, but I think there is this kind of assertion in the United States and has now become one could argue a meme
Starting point is 00:58:24 that if you get a college degree You're no longer blue collar you're now white collar and the reality is that the quality of that degree varies greatly Based on where you go the major and the experience you get to accompany that degree and as a result You may not necessarily transfer from blue collar to white collar But you have the degree you say you're now white collar and then you're working a blue collar job with $120,000 a debt. And so that's the tragedy. That's the truth. That's the truth.
Starting point is 00:58:50 That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth.
Starting point is 00:58:58 That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. That's the truth. that there is a incredible benefit to broadening individuals' exposure to topics, research, and areas that they may not have naturally been interested in, or that they will not necessarily
Starting point is 00:59:12 get trained in. And there is an important role that that educational infrastructure has in allowing us to be a more enlightened populist. Meaning, we can understand history, we can understand philosophy, we can understand the things that shaped our world and our livelihoods and what makes us who we are today, and we can understand the sciences and the maps that affect us, so we can better understand the world and the people around us, so there is a role. But the real question is how do you integrate that educational role into a technical training program or into a real world development program, skills that basically make an educational system more than just a checkbox that doesn't actually do anything for you, but gives you that exposure accompanied by. Maybe that's the requirement with federal loans, is that there should be some skill or some...
Starting point is 00:59:57 I think the minute... I don't want to lose the important breadth of exposure that college is meant to bring to people. I think that's valid. Go ahead, Tremoff, and then I'll wrap up my phone. No, I was just going to say, I really think people do not understand how meaningful of a change it would be if you were able to just charge your student debt and bankruptcy.
Starting point is 01:00:18 It is the most powerful market function we could create to make these universities more accountable. And I think if you guys look at my annual letter, I put a chart in there, but part of the problem that we have in these universities, these leading universities is that these have become graveyards. There is a gerontocracy that runs these things with an iron fist. And as these folks have stayed in these jobs for enormous amounts of time now, 40, 50 plus years, the average person is in their mid to late 70s now who are lead, who are the administrators of our leading institutions. They are focused on running up endowments and they are focused on the power and the influence that comes with their position. So I implore anybody who has any ability to actually achieve this
Starting point is 01:01:07 change, there should not be a single logical person that should not support the ability to discharge student debt and bankruptcy. And you will identify the insider establishment by those that try to stop you. You will expose them, 100%. And I just want to put a closing thing here for the people listening who have young people making these decisions. When we all went to college as GenXers,
Starting point is 01:01:34 college was 9, 10, 11, thousand dollars a year in tuition. And if it came out with 10 or 20K and you had an average job or a salary of double or triple that, when you graduated, it seemed like a good deal. The ROI broke. Now, market forces are at work here. I just want to point out two of them.
Starting point is 01:01:49 Number one, there is a website grow with Google you can just look up right now. They're allowing people to get professional certificates and this is free. And if you could pull up, grow with Google, they've identified five different paths to jobs. One of them is digital marketing e-commerce, one's IT support, data analytics, project management, and UX design. They have essentially looked at what's needed in the world and aligned a three to six months online course for fucking free. That'll get you a job. And you, if you have executive function, the ability to sit down, shut up, and learn,
Starting point is 01:02:25 can do this first before you make the decision to go $100,000 in debt and then get a $50,000 a year job. Here are these jobs average, you know, 60, 70, 80 K a year, and you can do it for free. The next piece that the private market is doing, you and I looked into this, Chimoff, actually, together, ISAs, income sharing agreements. We were lucky enough to invest in a company called Maritas. They are providing ISAs for a college, Colorado Mountain College, for nursing. What this means is they will give you your tuition for free.
Starting point is 01:02:57 It's educate now, pay later. If you go to one of these colleges for nursing, you get educated, and then you pay it back, and you're kept paying back like two times whatever the loan is one and a half, whatever the college decides. But they take the risk as opposed to Harvard with 40 billion that takes no fucking risk. And so the free market, I think, can also solve this, but you have to sit down with your kids and say, let's have an ROI calculation. At 20K in debt, you know, okay, fine, you got a philosophy degree.
Starting point is 01:03:24 By the way, Sad Off. Sacks, final question for you. I posted this thing in the group chat, but what do you guys think about this? You know, Republican title wave becoming a Republican ripple. That's what, yeah. That's what, it was an odd set of outcomes, don't you think? For a question. I mean, Biden, look, has had had a good run over the last few weeks um... i'm sorry by my audio cut out one more time sacks he said again i'll see it again
Starting point is 01:03:52 the separate report says that the red wave looks more like a red ripple no i think it's right well look i think a couple of things happen so first biden has got some wins legislatively i don't think it's good policy i don't think this executive orders good policy I don't think the 750 billion of a climate that pretends to be an inflation reduction act I don't think that's good policy But nonetheless he has delivered some goodies for his his base for his donors and That has basically humiliated the story in the press that Democrats are in disarray
Starting point is 01:04:22 So you're not hearing that in addition. I think bines got two things going for him dobs and jobs i mean dobs there's no question dobs has helped the democrats quite a bit certainly is motivated their base and then the jobs report has been strong i look i think overall the economic data is mixed real wages are not keeping up with inflation but jobs have so far been strong so yeah there's no question that Democrats are in a materially better position they were in June when it looked like a tsunami. That being said, the election's still 10 weeks away, and I think we'll have to see what
Starting point is 01:04:53 happens. And I think the economy is still in a pretty fragile state. So 10 weeks is still a long time. But yes, you're right. You're right, Stet. Yeah. Where are things looking right now? Things are a lot better for Biden.
Starting point is 01:05:05 And by the way, I do think the Republicans have some issues with candidate quality. And so there's a couple of races that should have been more slam-dongson that are not. But so yeah, the question. What was the first word you used there? You said dobs and jobs? What was the first word?
Starting point is 01:05:21 Dobs and jobs? Abortion. Ah. The dobs case, yeah. Got it, got it, got it. Dops and jobs. Abortion. Ah. The Dops case, yeah. Got it, got it, got it, got it. Okay, okay. I just didn't hear it perfectly.
Starting point is 01:05:28 We're not a lot of these wins for Biden bipartisan? Well, no, the inflation reduction act was passed on straight party lines. This college loan forgiveness is something they can't even get through the Senate. It's being done as an executive order. The things that were bipartisan, hold on, the things that were bipartisan, there was that chips act where they got some votes. And then there was the guns bill. So yeah, look, he did get some bipartisan wins. There's no question about it. I think there are Republicans. I think there are Republicans got hoodwinked. Basically, there are Republicans foolishly went along with infrastructure and with the CHIPS Act.
Starting point is 01:06:06 They should have forced Biden to use up reconciliation on one of those bills, and then they wouldn't be able to get through the 750 billion inflation reduction act. Republicans, as much as a sort of master strategist as McConnell is reputed to be, they really got snowed on this one. If it's possible for somebody to masturbate themselves from the inside out, Jason's doing it right now. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
Starting point is 01:06:38 no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, what's likely to happen in November is still that there are Republicans win one of the chambers, probably the House. I think the Senate is still up for grabs. I don't think it's over. I think that'll be important because Biden won't be able to pass some of this legislation that's, I think, destructive from a deficit standpoint, from an economic standpoint.
Starting point is 01:06:57 And we've talked about in this pod. I don't think you guys are too excited about most of the legislation he's passing. So quite frankly, I'm just hoping for gridlock. I'd like to get back to a situation of gridlock. Less spending would be certainly great at this point. I mean, we'll try to find inflation here while we keep spending money over here. It's challenging. If you want to get back to fiscal responsibility, you got to vote for gridlock. Or hopefully moderates come. All right, well, let's go. Anyway, we're going to go to science anyway, and SACs checks his email during that segment. So, by the way, there's an article now, you know, when we talked about quiet quitting,
Starting point is 01:07:33 it's now become this huge thing that everybody's talking about. Yes. And what's so funny about quiet quitting is just yet another example of Gen Z, again, co-opting something we've already done. When we used to do it, it was called coasting. You just feel like a coasting. Rest in Vest. But now it's called quiet quitting.
Starting point is 01:07:51 Yeah, they're all up in their feelings. Do we want to talk about the gut bio? I want to hear about the gut bio. So there was a paper published in... So the journal cell, the paper was done by a research team out of Hliet. So I'll take a step back. The human body is made up of roughly 10 trillion cells. And there are also somewhere between 10 and 40 trillion bacterial cells that live in your
Starting point is 01:08:20 body, primarily in your small intestine, and what people call the gut biome. And so this is a population of microbes, bacteria that are basically chemical factors. They eat stuff up, and they spit out chemicals, and those chemicals end up in our body. And it turns out that the gut biome, the bacteria in our gut, can actually regulate our health in a very significant way. And this was the basis of our company, Munich. You guys can bleep that out if you want, which is now called Super Gut and J. Calano,
Starting point is 01:08:48 you've tried the product. Which was awesome. Thank you. I bought Munich, that helped me with my weight loss and then I just got Super Gut bought. Yeah, that's what you're doing. The principle of that business is that there is a known product, a molecule amelose, that you can feed the gut biome.
Starting point is 01:09:02 It doesn't get absorbed by the human body. It sits in the gut biome. And doesn't get absorbed by the human body. It sits in the gut biome and the bacteria in your gut, certain types of bacteria will eat it. Their population will grow and other population of bad bacteria will shrink. And the good bacteria release chemicals called short-chain fatty acids that go into your blood and reduce your blood sugar and have a profound effect on your metabolism. And there are also known gut bacteria that can regulate your sleep, your mood, your anxiety, your energy levels, and your glycemic control,
Starting point is 01:09:33 the control of blood sugar. So it's an incredible. Are you telling me that Cialis is a natural compound? Is it bacteria? Look, are you saying we have to cancel our sealis? First reaction. Oh no. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:09:49 So guys, there's a known principle that's really deeply studied now in neurology in neuroscience called the gut brain axis, that you can actually profoundly affect disease and the condition of the brain and a neuro conditions by changing the gut biome. And so this is this is something that's just being studied. The reason it's all it's all coming to light in the last few years is because of the cost of DNA sequencing. We it used to be very very expensive to sequence the DNA from your gut biome which you do by looking at your poop and then you know looking at all the DNA that's in the poop and that tells you what your gut biome what which you do by looking at your poop, and then, you know, looking at all the DNA that's in the poop, and that tells you what your gut biome, what bacteria in your
Starting point is 01:10:27 gut, that used to cost a thousand bucks now, it cost five bucks. And so in the last couple of years, there is this absolute explosion in research into the gut microbiome, and more importantly, how the gut microbiome affects human health. So this particular paper looked at the effect that eating artificial sweeteners had on the gut biome and on human health. And so what these researchers did is they took 120 people, they gave them nothing or gave them sugar
Starting point is 01:10:56 or gave them saccharine or sucralose or aspartame or stevia, the four most popular artificial sweeteners. And then they looked at how their gut biome changed and importantly, they looked at how their gut biome changed. And importantly, they looked at how their glycemic control or ability to control blood glucose changed. Blood glucose, as you guys may recall, you know, you always have glucose in your blood. The more, if you have over, you know, a level of 100, you know, you can, and it persists,
Starting point is 01:11:18 you can actually have really bad health effects. And it causes high A1C over time, which is diabetes. And so high- And it stores more fat time, which is diabetes. And so high... And it stores more fat when you're spiking. And so you get fat. When you have high blood glucose, it's actually damaging to organs, it's damaging to cells. And over time, it can cause very significant deleterious effects to the human body.
Starting point is 01:11:37 That's what the disease of diabetes is and does. Is it's about high blood sugar, blood glucose? So what these guys did is they gave people saccharin, sucralose, aspartymix, TVN, and then measured their blood glucose and their ability to convert sugar in the blood and absorb it and use it. And that's called glycemic control.
Starting point is 01:11:56 The way you guys are probably done this in a doctor, you take it to glycemic control test, you drink a bunch of sugar water, and they measure your blood sugar every couple of minutes, and then they show the curve on how effectively your body can metabolize that glucose. And if it cannot metabolize that glucose well, you have bad glycemic control. And ultimately that is diabetes. And what they found was that if you eat saccharin and sucralose, which we always assumed were better than sugar, they actually adversely affect your ability
Starting point is 01:12:26 to control blood glucose. Sackering and sucralose, in particular, drive up your blood glucose and makes it harder for your body to metabolize glucose out of your blood. Aspartame and stevia were relatively benign. Oh, really? That's what's in Coke Zero. That's what I drink.
Starting point is 01:12:44 There you go. Aspartame. So that was kind of the realization. Then they went deep, and they actually analyzed the microbiome. They showed that there were profound differences in how these compounds affected the microbiome. It turns out that sucralose, for example, is more likely not being absorbed by your intestine. So it's sitting in the intestinal walls, and the bad bacteria are eating it. And the good bacteria that are supposed to be making short-chain fatty acids and all these chemicals that regulate blood sugar, I have a lower population.
Starting point is 01:13:13 And so we actually see a profoundly negative effect from eating certain compounds. Have you shipped your poop to test these? Like, we're not in it. We just did a clinical trial at Super Gut, by the way, and we published it, so it's public. But wait, just, Leonidins doesn't even know this stuff exists in all likelihood. You basically take a poop and you put it in a vial and you send it and they analyze
Starting point is 01:13:37 your poop. I don't mean to be classic here, but have you done this before? How does this work? I do it every time. I've done it. Yeah, and I think it's, look, here's the issue, Jason. I think, and I want to say two things that I think are really important to say.
Starting point is 01:13:50 Number one is we know very little about what bacteria do what in your gut. How, which, we're starting to understand which ones are beneficial, which ones make good chemicals that your body use and regulate your cells and regulate your health. And remember, we have a symbiotic relationship with the bacteria in our gut. They're making chemicals and they're eating chemicals. The chemicals they make affect our cells, the
Starting point is 01:14:13 chemicals they eat affect our body. So the way that we evolve our health is actually profoundly affected by our gut biome. So we don't know enough yet to say definitively this bacteria is good, this bacteria is bad. We're starting to have a good sense of that. The second way. Yeah. Just so you know, just to double down on this, like, there's a form of therapy. It's experimental, but it's called fecal microbiome transplantation FMT. I heard about this. But, you know, we are finding now that you can take feces from healthy individuals that have good, you know, gut biome and good bacterial counts. And if you put it, you know, injected into people that are suffering
Starting point is 01:14:50 from a bunch of different diseases, it actually is looking like it's curative. So Parkinson's, MS, IBS, colitis. So it just goes to show you that this that it's somebody we could got by. There's bacteria. There's really understood. And it's really intense. Then where do you put the poop? No, you know, through the bum. No, no, no, you, yeah, you could do it there or you can take a pill. So there's a little pill and it's got the fecal stuff in it.
Starting point is 01:15:16 You swallow it and it and it now I want to see somebody else's poop. You gave me a picture. I said, I said it in a way so that we could see his reaction to in the bum and Jason was like this. How does this impact Uranus? That's what the audience wants to know for you. How could you Uranus impact your balance? Here's the other point I wanted to make which ties to what Shema said. This is really important to check out.
Starting point is 01:15:39 So the gut biome is an ecosystem like a rainforest. There are trees that grow monkeys climb the trees, they poop, there's jaguars, jaguars eat the monkeys, the trees grow because of the monkey poop. It is a whole ecosystem. All these organisms, all these microbes regulate one another and feed one another. And this is why probiotics do not work. Probiotics are single microbes, single bacterial strains or fungal strains that we put into a pill, and we swallow it. And just because that microbe happens to have some beneficial effect, you know,
Starting point is 01:16:10 on its own in a Petri dish, it does not survive in your gut biome. Because it's like putting a house cat in a rainforest. The jaguar will eat the house cat. The house cat has nothing to eat, et cetera. It doesn't inoculate, inoculate means that it survives thrives in the population grows. So when we take probiotics, it's just passing right through our gut.
Starting point is 01:16:28 It doesn't stay there and doesn't change anything. And it turns out that the reason fecal microbiome, fecal transplants work is because you're taking the whole microbiome from someone else's gut and you're putting it in your gut. The whole rainforest. The whole rainforest. And so all the organisms that are needed that regulate one another, all of the small molecules that cross-regulate each other, they all go in your gut,
Starting point is 01:16:51 and then they actually change your entire gut, and your gut becomes the rainforest of someone else's gut. And so if someone else has a healthy gut, meaning my anus, my anus can be your anus, Jason. There it is. So we put our anuses together and then a monkey goes between them and then the rain forest is well, let me ask you questions. FDA has not approved any of this yet.
Starting point is 01:17:11 When will the FDA be approving these treatments, exactly? There are a lot of clinical trials going on for fecal transplant. UCSF has a huge clinical trial for MS, as Jamal pointed out, right now where they are actually doing fecal transplants on patients without MS into people with MS and significant, the early data of these sorts of treatments has indicated that there can be a very profound effect on the frequency of lesions appearing on the brain, which is one of the primary symptoms of MS.
Starting point is 01:17:38 And so these organisms, we don't yet know why, but some of the factors, when will we understand this? Is it a five-year tenure thing? There's a ton of startups, there's billions of dollars invested. So when of the factors. When will we understand this? Is it a five-year ten-year thing? There's a ton of startups, there's billions of dollars invested. No, when will we know? When will we know? It's all in half, like a game plan.
Starting point is 01:17:50 It's already coming out. It's not like a binary switch. We're discovering new things. There's a set of companies that are discovering what are called small molecules. So they're finding what are the little chemicals that those good bacteria are making in your gut, and can we turn those chemicals into drugs? And so they're trying to turn those into drugs. Other companies are saying, you know what,
Starting point is 01:18:08 this is a set of good bacteria, let's just put them in your body and figure out a way to get them to inoculate and stay. Other companies are saying, let's do fecal transplants. And other companies are basically just saying, let's change, this is what we do with super gut. Let's just change the feed stock for your gut biome and you can actually evolve the rainforest into a different state by changing what you're feeding the stock for your gut biome and you can actually evolve the rainforest
Starting point is 01:18:25 into a different state by changing what you're feeding the bacteria in your gut. And there's certain molecules you can feed the gut bacteria and then the populations will change into a more beneficial state. Why are people saying like drinking kombucha and fermented vegetables, pickles, whatever apples are like great at fixing your biome and then taking sugar out is good for your biome. This is another thing I keep hearing. People are making single point claims like that because they have invested in a lifestyle
Starting point is 01:18:57 and they want to defend their choices. Is that a reason? It's not to say that those things are bad. Those are all good. But I think what we know and the fecal transplantation is the most simple way of pointing this out, is that it's a broad scale holistic approach that gets the best results. So as, you know, like, if you had a kid that's had, you know, diarrhea, for example, right, you know, sometimes what we'll do now is instead of giving the kid some sort of diuretic
Starting point is 01:19:22 suppressant, what you actually give them is probiotic, right? And what you're trying to do is to reintroduce healthy bacteria into that child's stomach in a way that allows them to self-manage and self-heal, while the bad, you know, diarrhea causing stuff kind of gets washed away. As an example, so, well, one thing be a cure-all for you? No. I think that you should be very skeptical of those claims. That's why everybody says a healthy, well-balanced diet is really important because we do not know conclusively.
Starting point is 01:19:57 This is why, you know, I tend to believe that the broad, holistic diet works the best in moderation. Yeah. Because you just don't know what you're not getting. We don't know that, you know, we don't know, you can't say conclusively that there isn't a form of bacteria that is created specifically when you consume animal protein that is extremely helpful to you. We don't know that that's not true.
Starting point is 01:20:20 Now we don't know that that is true either. Right? And there's a ton of research going on to try and figure that out right now. Have we figured out any of it though? Like, yeah, there's whole, there's whole, there's a lot of different ginger movement. We could do 12 episodes on this. There's so much amazing discovery happening. This is a good paper to highlight that, which is like, hey, maybe avoid products that have
Starting point is 01:20:38 saccharin and sycrolose in them. But my big thing is there is no diet, whether it's keto, whether it's the South Beach diet, whether it's specific vegetarianism, whether it's veganism, nothing is a cure all for what ails you. There is nothing. And by the way, one important point in this paper, one of the points that these guys highlighted, which we see all the time in microbiome research,
Starting point is 01:21:01 is that there are what are called responders and non-responders. That within a population, it's not like everyone that eats sucralose has the same negative effect. Some people have a really negative effect, and some people have a mild to moderate to neutral effect. And so there's a range of your particular physiology, your particular gut biome that will respond differently to different inputs into your body. And that's the most important thing to figure out because people need to spend time eating
Starting point is 01:21:28 and sampling to understand what makes you feel better or worse. This is why I have an issue with the broad-based claims of this path will solve all your problems. It's just not true. You have to solve it for yourself and it's through iteration. And then the, yeah, anyways. It does seem like non-process foods, whole foods, things that exist in nature. That seems to me directionally correct as the way to go. And then the fake stuff and the process stuff may be less good for you to agree with that. Well, this is why I think there is a little bit of a scam being run on people who want
Starting point is 01:21:59 to be healthy. Like, for example, have you guys looked at the ingredient list on Oatly? You know, everybody loves oatmeal, but have you looked at the ingredient list? Are you really telling me conclusively that that is healthier than milk? It's insane. I mean, I could argue both ways, but look at the chemicals. So look at the chemicals in a box of Oatly. I mean, just drink water. I can also tell you the chemical name for every chemical that's in milk, which is all chemical, like, everything around us is chemicals. So, I understand natural chemicals, but you understand synthetically made man-made chemicals
Starting point is 01:22:34 that are explicit, that have to be put on an ingredient list because of its danger in high quantities should be treated slightly differently, in my opinion. All right. I mean, Oli's just gave us three subpoenas. We're all fucked for being deposed by Oli's just gave us three subpoenas. We're all fucked, we're being deposed by Oli now. All right, everybody, we'll see you next time on the All in Pop.
Starting point is 01:22:50 Love you boys. Love you guys. Bye. Bye. Bye. We'll let your winners ride. Brain man David Sackett. I'm going low.
Starting point is 01:23:02 And it said we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it I'm the US, I'm the queen of kinwap I'm going to be a We should all just get a room and just have one big huge or two because they're all It's like this like sexual tension that we just need to release that out What your the beat I'm doing all it!

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