All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Tariffs, Trump's Economic Endgame, Market Chaos, Bitcoin Reserve, CoreWeave IPO
Episode Date: March 8, 2025(0:00) The Besties welcome Joe Lonsdale! (3:51) Jason recaps an eventful week in Washington (8:29) Trump's tariffs: endgame, impact, chaos, master plan (26:25) DOGE, IRA grifting, do campaign contribu...tions need to be capped? (53:42) CoreWeave IPO (1:03:36) Trump 2.0 favoring Main Street over Wall Street, bond market breakdown, re-balancing the economy (1:14:19) State of Ukraine/Russia, the Western alliance, and how techno-optimism plays into the future of defense pacts (1:24:31) GPT-4.5, Grok 3 on X, and the Golden Age of language models (1:33:47) All-In for F1 Miami! (1:37:34) David Sacks joins Jason to break down the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and Digital Asset Stockpile (1:48:30) Sacks addresses clearing all of his crypto-related positions prior to Inauguration Day (1:57:23) Importance of disclosures and updates on a market structure bill Get tickets for All-In Live: Miami https://allin.com/events Follow Joe: https://x.com/JTLonsdale Follow the besties: https://x.com/chamath https://x.com/Jason https://x.com/DavidSacks https://x.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://x.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theallinpod Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://x.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://x.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/114093526901586124 https://x.com/JTLonsdale/status/1896245689488920748 https://x.com/Jason/status/1896235076456739138 https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/114093946326587357 https://www.reuters.com/technology/tsmc-ceo-meet-with-trump-tout-investment-plans-2025-03-03 https://x.com/AutismCapital/status/1896655215899893968 https://x.com/USATODAY/status/1897248477081460849 https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/supreme-court/supreme-court-rejects-trump-administrations-bid-avoid-paying-usaid-con-rcna194230 https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/114116432894994278 https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/114112015891353323 https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/trump-auto-tariff-rate-will-be-around-25-2025-02-18 https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/USGOVT https://x.com/DOGE/status/1897464303428755692 https://electrek.co/2025/02/07/renewables-90-percent-new-us-capacity-2024-ferc https://www.thefp.com/p/a-20-billion-slush-fund-nonprofits https://x.com/bariweiss/status/1896992192197013888 https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/114117008305421663 https://x.com/chamath/status/1895948351516131515 https://x.com/chamath/status/1895948351516131515 https://x.com/unusual_whales/status/1897737394964906437 https://x.com/great_martis/status/1897194563800064153 https://x.com/great_martis/status/1897581115952804248 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000119312525044231/d899798ds1.htm https://x.com/chamath/status/1896052861500604884 https://www.newsweek.com/map-global-thorium-reserves-country-2039893 https://apnews.com/article/donald-trump-bitcoin-cryptocurrency-stockpile-6f1314f5e99bbf47cc3ee6fc6178588d https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/strengthening-american-leadership-in-digital-financial-technology https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/03/establishment-of-the-strategic-bitcoin-reserveand-united-states-digital-asset-stockpile https://x.com/dmartkc/status/1896260059640025113 https://x.com/ryangrim/status/1896306748052623852 https://x.com/_Andre_Ellis/status/1896935969041104981 https://x.com/KyleSamani/status/1897130321021411750 https://x.com/pbartstephens/status/1897008176467468349 https://x.com/HHorsley/status/1897461451675328879
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Brian Johnson, that's so funny. I, who knows?
I am the king of nighttime erections.
I go to bed thinking about myself and I wake up thinking about myself.
Big correction in between. David Sacks.
All right, everybody, welcome back to the number one podcast
in the world. Man, we're starting off with three of the four original band members, Chamath Palihappatia. He's your
chairman dictator, the Sultan of science, David Freberg. And of
course, I'm your host, Jason Calacanis.
And David Sachs from the original band will be on the second half of the show.
We're going to do some of the classics.
Yes, we get some of the classics, including Ukraine, Ukraine, Ukraine coming up on the
second half of the show in our greatest hits revival tour.
But with us again, sitting in the Red Throne is the one the
only Joe Lonsdale is back. He is, if you can imagine further
right than Keith Raboy and sacks. They tell him to pump
the brakes. Welcome back to the program. Joe Lonsdale. How you
doing, brother?
Hey, Jason, doing great here in Texas today.
Ah, yes, I see you right over the hill on the ranch. Our
ranches are within 20 minutes of each other. Joe Lansdale and I
are shooting guns at our ranches. Are you on a ranch,
Joe? Well, I bought a bunch of the homes and connected them. So
it's kind of like a ranch, but it's actually a suburb. Yeah,
it's more like a compound. He has a suburb. The creaking
sounder here are the libs rolling in the guillotine. Yes, he bought the small town he lives in. Joe Lansdale is here. Of course, he is a venture capitalist, the founder of 8VC. They've got six Billy in AUM, co founded Palantir OpenGov and Adipar. $3 billion plus companies he co founded and an early investor in Andro. I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your secondary. Andro, I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your secondary. Andro, I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your secondary. Andro, I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your secondary. Andro, I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your secondary. Andro, I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your secondary. Andro, I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your secondary. Andro, I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your secondary. Andro, I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your secondary. Andro, I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your secondary. Andro, I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your secondary. Andro, I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your secondary. Andro, I'm in the market for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks if you're selling your early investor in Andro. I'm in the market
for secondary shares. You know how to reach me folks. If you're selling your secondary
and Andro and building a position for obvious reasons and Oculus Wish Oscar health amongst
his other investments. Hey, what was the feedback Joe on your first appearance here on the all in
pod? People loved it. You know, you guys gave me no warning. So I was like on a mobile phone sideways,
but it worked out. It was great. Everyone saw it. It
looks like people actually watch your show, Jason. It was
surprising.
Apparently, people tune in from time to time. And that's why we
call it the number one podcast in the world. How are you doing
Shamath Palihapitiya? How are you doing, brother?
I'm doing really well.
Okay, once again, giving me a ton to work with there. And
Friedberg-
Wait, what would you like to know? Why don't you ask me a
question?
Oh, well, I asked you how you're doing. Maybe you say, oh, I had a great time with my kids.
I took them to Disneyland or I don't know, chef made an amazing arugula. You used to give me some
some color to work with here. So-
Nat was in Rome all last week.
Great. What was she doing in Rome?
She had to go see her factory. She also had to go and renew her visa at the US embassy there.
Okay, so she's renewing her visa. Hopefully she'll be able to get back in the country. I know we've tightened up the borders.
Well, she's on an EB2 visa. She's already, but she should switch to this EB5 as soon as it's announced.
Oh, yes, you can get the golden visa. And I think you already put a down payment on.
Freiburg, how was your week? How's How's everything going? I know, hollow you having a
productive week?
As one of my management team members told me today, it's a
very complex business. That's usually not a good sign.
Conversation.
Is that a way of saying everything?
No, no, we were good. I was on the road this week. I just got
back.
I mean, it's hard running a business is hard. You hire the
smartest people you know, and what happens, they bring you all the problems they can't solve. So it's never easy. We've got an incredible docket today. Let's just start with
I'll give you a quick recap boys of the week since we last taped to say the zone was flooded. In the words of Steve Bannon would be an understatement. Here's your Trump tsunami for the week.
Thursday when we take the Epstein file dump fiasco, you
remember that Joe, right? Big zero, big nothing burger, then
Friday, Zelensky was dressed down and kicked out of the
White House by the vice president presidents markets
collapse, they rebounded on Saturday, we got a beautiful
day off video of Trump dancing down a catwalk to YMCA. Maybe he played some golf. He was
at the White House South Mar-a-Lago Sunday 924 am Eastern, the president pumps three
specific crypto Solana Cardona XRP to be in the first government strategic crypto reserve
Joel Lansdale starts tweeting I I start tweeting, everybody's tweeting.
He quickly retweeted himself, included Ethereum and Bitcoin, some decentralized coins.
Reaction was, wow, crazy. You had a little bit of a spicy take, Joe. We'll get into that later.
And I'm sure our friend David Sachs will have much to say in the second half of the program.
But it was pretty negative. Cardona ripped 70% XRP 32% Solana 25%. And
then there was this crazy trade one whale went 50 times long on BTC and ETH $200 million
position on just a $4 million investment. Everybody trying to figure out who that was.
I'll leave it to you to speculate. Then we start the week Monday. Trump says significant
track tariffs with Canada and Mexico the the market collapse, he walks back tariffs
couple of hours later, and the market starts to rebound. Then
at 238pm. Trump announces a hundred billion dollar
investment from TSMC in American fabs. Huzzah for that and our
boy David Sachs gets dragged out to the podium for a quick 15
second cameo. Very nicely done to our boy David Sachs gets dragged out to the podium for a quick 15 second cameo.
Very nicely done to our boy David Sachs. And then Tuesday, we have the most chaotic state of the
union I've ever seen. Highlights include an angry man shaking a cane and getting kicked out. There
were some auction paddles from the libs. I don't know what they were bidding on. There were 13
Biden mentions and one Pocahontas. Wednesday, we have news that the Doge Blitz might slow down,
Supreme Court chimed in with a 5-4 decision backing the federal judge who ordered the Trump admin to
pay out $2 billion for USA contractors. Then there was a closed door meeting with the Senate with
Elon, maybe they discussed an approval process, maybe some voting type things. And then here we
are today, Thursday, when we're taping markets down 2% on more tariff news, breaking news
drops at 1130. Trump announced terrorists are off for Mexico.
Markets aren't rebounding. We might be leaving NATO can I hold
on? I'm almost there. Yeah, breaking. We might be leaving
NATO breaking. We're shutting down the Department of
Education site. We just found out we're not. Okay, gentlemen,
that's the week that was no
there's there's three things that are also kind of interwoven
in all of this. Open AI dropped GPT 45. And I think it was not
really that well received. I didn't even know nobody's talking
about that.
When which is the open source Alibaba dropped a rev, which seems actually really best in class.
So that was really interesting.
OK.
Then there was a story that said Lama is going sideways.
Facebook's open source.
Yeah.
And then the markets have just been going,
I think, the craziest I've actually seen in 20 years
of following the markets. And and specifically you're seeing the
mag seven compressed towards the rest of the S&P 500 and then you're seeing this insane
Trade away from Europe. So there's a ton that happened this week. I mean, I don't remember more eventful week
Joe is this a little too much maybe?
You guys missed the Shalom Hamas tweet by Trump too,
which for a lot of us is a big deal.
He said, I don't know if this is hello or goodbye,
but he's threatening them really strongly.
So for people who care about that part of the world,
it's interesting to watch what's gonna happen.
So that also happened, yeah.
Oh my Lord.
Well, and Shalom is hello and goodbye, right?
Just to clarify as a word, you would say both,
right? Shut up. Yeah. And, and, and ambiguous word. And peace. Anything. Well, maybe he's
leaving it into interpretation. Maybe they get to pick maybe it's hello. No, that's what he wrote
in the tweet. Oh, he did. Yeah, it's your choice. Okay, it's a choose your own adventure Hamas,
from the president United States. But I
think we should probably get into tariffs. This is
confounding to most people. Maybe since I just did the whole
rundown, I won't go into all the details about tariffs again. But
just looking at it from first principles, Joe, I asked a
couple of group chats, you're
in one one of them, in fact.
And I have about, I'd say about 400 people total in these four group chats.
What's the strategy here?
What do you think Trump is trying to accomplish?
And man, I got a range of answers.
Let me ask you, what is Trump, in your estimation, trying to accomplish with the tariffs on the
tariffs off the tariff ons the tariffs on says, Jamal said here, this is creating more chaos than any of us have ever seen in
markets.
Listen, Trump's negotiating, right? So I actually ran into David Sachs, each senator gets one
guest, we were both guests in the Senate dining hall, hanging out with a bunch of these guys,
multiple of the guests, some of them were spouses of the senators, multiple of the guests
were people who've lost kids to fentanyl, right? And so it's's actually a very serious issue. It's a big thing on the populist right,
as it should be for all Americans. We've lost, you know, tens of thousands of young people
recently to Fentanyl and Canada has done nothing about their border. And so, you know, you just
reported breaking news. I hadn't even heard yet that Mexico might be off. Canada is still on.
He's using this to negotiate. So I talked to the senators and I asked them what's going on because obviously I import things all over the place. I'd like to know what the hell
the rules are. But they want people to actually crack down on this stuff and save American lives.
And I think that's a reasonable thing to use to negotiate and force them to do that.
Okay, so you believe it's negotiation because of the fentanyl issue.
Chamath, let me go to you because many people are saying this has more to do
with some great reset and maybe the tenure. Do you think this is about fentanyl at the border
or something else? I think that this is the first week where I've seen the first real schism
I've seen the first real schism in how people are interpreting what's actually happening. I think that Trump and Elon were very much in a honeymoon period until this week.
And I think there was the benefit of the doubt.
But what I saw on X was a real divergence where on the one hand, there were people that were basically saying, Doge is deranged,
Elon is crazy, Trump is lighting the world on fire in one camp. And the other camp saying,
he's sticking to the plan. And when I thought about this a little bit, if you went back to
November the 5th, I do think it's important to remember that we were at this moment where you
had this fork in the road and you had all these important issues where I think the best way to
generalize it was that the Democrats believed that the lines should continue to be blurred.
So whether that was on gender or race or merit versus some other immutable trait or fiscal and
monetary policy, things were just getting more and more blurred. And then Trump and Elon basically
showed up and said, actually, we want to refocus and we want to make the lines very visible and
clear on all those dimensions. And a majority of
Americans voted that in. But I think what you're starting to see now is the difficulty in actually
implementing that plan. And what I mean specifically is tariffs are very nuanced and complicated.
On the one hand, there's the short-term wins, there's
these impacts, you could deem them positive or negative to the dollar. There's impacts to US
bonds. There's impacts to US bond markets. There's impacts to how countries deal with foreign reserves.
And then there's this impact that happens when the markets react to a tariff. And then Trump takes that off the table, and then they snap back.
So you have this weird set of boundary conditions right now.
So I think right now we're in the very difficult part of sorting through what the long-term
implications are.
And I can get to some of them later, but I think that's where we are.
I think that's really interesting. The goal of tariffs in your mind for Trump is fentanyl, finance related.
No, no, no.
Give me your definitive what you think this is about.
I think what tariffs allow us to do is rebase the long-term reliance on the US dollar. It allows us to rebase our ability to fund our own deficits.
And it allows us to rebase the long-term ability
for American companies to be economically vibrant.
Okay.
So, Freeberg, we got one person
with Fentanyl at the border negotiating. we got one person with fentanyl the border
and negotiating we got one person on trade, some portion of
this I hear and I asked in these four group chats I got he's
throwing stuff at the wall, the border. He's trolling the 10
year note. And he doesn't care about stocks. And then I got
on shoring and manufacturing as a possibility, we're going to
make it more expensive to bring things in. So why don't you consider making stuff here? Do you think
that third possibility is what's going on here? Does David Freeberg pick one of these three choices
or another? What's going on here with Tara specifically? I don't sit inside of Trump's head,
and I don't have any direct line of communication to folks that are constructing the theory and the policy.
If I were to say, what's the most masterful plan in an optimistic way of what could be going on here?
What's the master plan? I would kind of craft it as follows. Tariffs aren't being done in isolation.
They're being done along with a coordinated policy effort to reduce income taxes and another policy effort to reduce government spending.
So those are three actions, three legs on a stool.
So tariffs, reduced income taxes, reduced government spending, and
they are related to each other.
They're related to each other because if we increase tariffs, one element of that is that
to import products is more expensive.
For example, I buy LED lights in my greenhouse and the price of the LED lights just went
up by 25%.
This week I actually spoke with the CEO of an LED company and I was like, why don't you
guys make the LEDs here?
And there starts to become a crossover point where it actually makes economic sense for
the company to make the LEDs here instead of sourcing them from Asia.
And there's 100,000 examples of this.
When the industrial supply chain goes to the lowest part of production, it's going to end
up offshoring when there's no tariffs.
And if there are tariffs, then you start to do production here.
So you're increasing both kind of security for the US supply chain,
but also increasing demand and creation of a workforce. Now, I think that the income
tax piece is critical here, because in order to make the capital available to build that
industry here, we need to unleash capital and reducing of income taxes, the economic
theory would be that capital will
now flow into these entrepreneurial activities, these opportunities that have emerged, where
suddenly it makes sense for me to make textiles, to make metals, to make materials, to make
cars, to make all this stuff here in the United States that I otherwise wouldn't be making.
So both the corporate and the personal income tax, by reducing it, unleashes capital that
instead of going into the government, it now goes into the private sector into building businesses.
Okay. I think that there's another theory about this, which is as you drop the income tax,
one of the kind of key theories that I've heard spoken about a lot lately, and I think we're going to hear about it a lot more this year,
is trying to get the United States to move away from an income taxation model to a consumption taxation model.
So effectively, what the tariffs do is there's a tax
for you buying certain things.
So now instead of getting taxed when you earn money
as an individual, you get taxed when you spend money.
And some people think that that's both a more fair system
and a more kind of economically vibrant system
because that will drive investment in the things
that people want to produce
because the money's going into production.
Do you think that, Freberg? I'm curious.
I don't know. It's a really interesting economic theory. I mean, I am not opposed to seeing some
sort of an experiment play out where we look at a shift from income taxation to consumption taxation
and see if it actually does have an effect on economic growth and productivity. It has not been
done in 150 years. There's a lot of economic theorists on both sides of the equation saying
this does work or doesn't work. And let me just say one last thing. By reducing government spending,
we are moving workers from the government into the private workforce. So as those new industries
pop up, as those investments start to get made in building new industry onshore, where are the workers going to come from?
Remember, the government's 30% of the US GDP today.
So if that's not a great way to invest money, maybe the private industry is better at investing
money and employing people.
That will unleash the workforce and it will counterbalance the inflation that we're experiencing.
So there's a lot of inflation because of tariffs.
And by reducing government spending, that's the offset to inflation. So those three actions, I think, are three legs of a stool, and they actually
are all interrelated to one another. So that would be my grand master theory of what might be going
on. This is an interesting triangulation theory that people have been speculating about. And
there are a couple of caveats here, Joe. Number one, we do have lowering income tax and lowering
services experiment. It's called Florida,
Texas and a couple of the states where they have lower income tax and more consumption tax,
we pay a lot more in real estate taxes here, something we consume. Putting that aside,
the really interesting issue is we're at the lowest unemployment of our lifetime,
4%. Where are all these workers going to come from? What do you think Joe, now that you've heard the two other
panelists here discuss it? What are we trying to get to? Where
is the destination at the end of this term? Trump's lame duck, he
can go wild here. He's not running for reelection. And you
know, what what do you think he wants to see? Do you think he
just wants to cement some sort of legacy? And if so, what's that
legacy? And how do these actions equal his goals and legacy?
No, listen, I agree with what David with what David was
saying, Jason, and it's a really important point. Also, that we
should mention is that the last four years, the economy has
looked okay. But part of that is because governments been hiring
like mad. And so the point he made is that actually, you know, having twice as many people, you
know, harassing me, I just got back yesterday, no action on an audit that's been harassing
me on for three years, they found nothing.
Having twice as many people doing things like that and or like, you know, running TSA or
pushing papers around in the Department of Labor doesn't actually add output to the economy.
And so, you know, it does seem like it makes a lot of sense.
Let's take a million workers out of the consulting class around DC, out of the, you know, paper
pusher class around DC, and let's actually deploy them to the actual productive economy.
Elon and Trump have both been saying that. I think David's 100% right. And it is true. A lot
of my companies think that the tariffs stuff are looking to build stuff here. So I'm not a huge fan
of tariffs personally, but they definitely make sense for things in defense.
They definitely make sense for negotiating with countries.
And it is true.
It is pushing certain people, including me,
to build some more things in America.
Here's where tariffs make a lot of sense.
If you have markets where there are domestic alternatives
and or where things are fundamentally commodity,
there's no reason why tariffs can't work
to create the incentives
to redomicize economic productivity inside of the United States. That's a, that's a slam
dunk, I think.
And, and Shamath, there's another twist on that too, which I think we should all acknowledge
is that America does have some really tough environmental laws. Despite what Jason may
think of me, I actually don't want my daughters growing up with your messy air, messy water,
you know, screwed up country.
Oh, I don't think so.
Instead of you, I know that you're a nature guy, but here's where like a classic bush nature guy.
But here's the thing in China and Indonesia and all these other countries, they are just
shitting over the environment as they make things. I think tariffs are very reasonable in that case.
It's not fair to make it more expensive for us because we're doing it well. And then we outsource
it for them to destroy things. Right? So there are some things there where it does make sense. And what I would say is the other side of the tariff knife is that if
there are markets though where you're making something that's fundamentally innovative,
where you are but one maker, the problematic part of where tariffs really affect the US consumer is
then the price of that product of which there are no competitive
alternatives can go very, very high. And that's inflationary. And I think that that slows down
consumption. And then if that consumption is not just of something that's a nice to have,
but a must have, then it becomes problematic. And so you could see where tariffs could impact
certain industries. For example, if there are innovative drugs, I think that that's problematic.
If there are innovative technologies of which there's only one vendor, that's problematic.
So all of those need to get sorted out. But on balance in commodity markets,
like look at autos. Autos is a perfect example. There are so many purveyors and providers of autos. There's OEMs all around the
world. And so to have a compensatory system doesn't seem like an unreasonable thing where it's a tit
for tat tariff. But in other markets where if you need, for example, a specific piece of equipment
from ASML to build a chip chip and now all of a sudden that
that machine is 25% more expensive or 30% more expensive and they pass that cost downstream,
it becomes very speculative and it becomes a little bit more fragile, I think.
This is dangerous though, right? Because I agree with you in theory, but then there's something
where if everyone's lobbying for their thing to be an exception, you end up getting this very crony system that you
don't necessarily want. So you have to be very careful how you define these things.
Exactly. So this is why I think sector by sector, you can probably go and pass the smell test and
say if there are multiple providers and or if it's somehow commodity, I think it's easier to absorb the
tariff in the short term. Maybe that's the right way to say it, which is if you believe,
if Trump believes everything should be tariffed, then instead of debating if, to your point,
maybe the right thing to debate is when. And you have to put some things on a much longer
glide path so that you don't just create inflation out of nowhere and or you don't hold back American
business or American consumers. Well, this is a key point because you do need to have predictability
to make investment and reciprocity. So really two important points Chamath is making here.
One on reciprocity, these things haven't been looked at for a while. I'm not sure how they
got so out of whack, but just putting some facts to this. Shamat's exactly correct.
We get placed when we send cars to the EU, they get a 10% tariff. But when we get their cars,
it's a two and a half percenter. Who let it get out of whack? I'm not sure. But why not
make the reciprocity perfect and just, hey, you say 10, we say 10, you say two and a half,
we say two and a half. And that would make, I think a lot more sense just to put some numbers here on
government employees. It's not as bad as people make it out to
be a lot of our spending is non employee related. But it is if
you look over the last two administrations, we have added
million 2 million, three employees across all I
disagree that hold on, let me just finish the sentence. So you
have the facts and that you can disagree with the facts. 1.3
million additional employees added. This does not include
contractors. And so we don't know what USA was doing with NGOs
and contractors. And I think that's where we do need to get
some clarity. And to Chumot's point, this is all got to become
predictable, you cannot put tariffs on off every week, or
else how does your friend Dave
who wants to do the LED lighting where you're encouraging to do
it LED lighting know if they should build a factory invest
10 million in that you disagree with the number of employees you
want to address that? Yeah, look, the government accounts
for 30% of GDP in the United States. That's an extraordinary
sum. So just I was talking just about the employees.
That's a much smaller percentage.
But that doesn't matter.
The direct employees of federal agencies
is a fraction of people that are employed indirectly
by government spending.
This is super important.
Sure.
Because as we all know,
many government agencies write checks to large contractors,
subcontractors and third party service providers
that do the work for them.
So the money gets transferred, they then employ the people and they do the work. So it doesn't
technically show up on federal government payroll registers, but these are people that
are indirectly employed by federal spending. That's super important to acknowledge that
a large percentage of the US workforce is indirectly supported by federal dollars.
Yeah, it's got it's up massively with the NGOs too.
So you have about 4 million people employed
by contractors in DC, 1.6 million more at the states
actually by federal spending.
And then you have the NGOs, no one knows the NGOs.
Biden administration took down the data,
I used to see things in 2020.
So we didn't even know how much money,
but we know it was hundreds of billions.
So it's pretty crazy.
The number one thing about how Doge is not being done fully is that Elon's doing
an amazing job, you know, whether or not he cuts 500 billion or a trillion or a
lot more, but the senators and the congressmen are not willing to take it out of
their bill, their reconciliation bill right now.
There's talk about cutting one to two trillion.
So rather than like this is over 10 years.
It's ridiculous.
It's ridiculous.
If it was equal to what Elon was doing,
it'd be at least $5 trillion.
And I push a bunch of them.
They say, oh, the congressional budget office
and all these things.
And I'm sure there's some tough things there,
but like, this is crazy.
We need to see what these cuts need to be on Doge.
And we need to cut 5 trillion.
And none of these people have the balls to do that.
It's not the political will to do it is my interpretation.
And just, just, just, yeah.
No cojones.
Let me just show you one chart to back that up.
I have my new disgraciad.com for the week.
Look at this, Chamath.
We want to talk about software and waste.
35,855, according to Doge, breaking news, ServiceNow licenses on three products only
being used by 84 people in our government.
Oh my God. You're kidding me. 11,000 Acrobat
licenses with 0.0 users. Disgrace yard. Absolutely abhorrent. And I'm saying it right now. I
want an investigation into procurement. Who sold this? Who bought it? This could be a
crime. This could be fraud. That could be kickbacks. I'm saying it could be I don't think it's not
But I do think you have to look at the earnings of these companies in question. Where's all the correct number two?
Totally correct service now ever wants to work with the government again, mr. President
Mr. President our president. I want them to pay us back for the line use licenses.
And I want a full order for those last 10 years.
If they don't pay us back that money and give us a credit forever.
Hold on.
It's not president.
This may not be service now as fault.
This may be the ineptitude of the people.
But they should still give us a credit.
I want the money back for the American people.
I do think Adobe has the worst.
Have you guys ever done Adobe subscriptions?
They're impossible to cancel.
I think Adobe needs-
11,000.0 users?
The only thing harder than canceling an Adobe license
is trying to cancel Wall Street Journal.
I was about to say,
Wall Street Journal,
that's the worst.
Disgratsi-
All time hall of fame.
Let me just say something about the budget
because Joe brings up something important.
Unbelievable.
I'll just say it again, at the sake of being redundant. We're getting to the phase where the
details are complicated and they now matter. So we've talked about repealing the IRA in
its totality, right? So that was a statement and there's theoretically a lot of money there.
But the details now all of a sudden become complicated.
FERC published a report just this past week and what do you think it said was the percentage of
incremental electricity that was generated from renewables versus non-renewables? I'll tell you
the answer. It was almost 91% in December. So if you now tie two huge initiatives
together, which is how do we find a budget that saves money and how do we continue to win an AI?
Maybe you would have thought those weren't related. Well, guess what? We know that AI
needs a tremendous amount of power. And whatever you thought you knew, actually,
you had to re-underwrite because what Elon has shown is actually you need to now create AI needs a tremendous amount of power. And whatever you thought you knew, actually,
you had to re-underwrite because what Elon has shown is actually you need to now create these mega clusters, 100,000 GPUs going to a million GPUs. All of the power forecasting that we have
is miscast. It doesn't even account for this, number one. Number two, there are 35,000 applications
Number two, there are 35,000 applications into FERC
to get approved to generate electricity, 35,000. That's gonna meander through some administrative rigmarole.
There is a five-year delay to get a gas turbine
into America and online.
Okay, if you ordered one today,
the fastest that you can get it turned on is 2030. The fastest that you can get it turned on is 2030.
The fastest that you can get nuclear turned on is 2035.
So we don't have the ability to generate incremental electricity very quickly, but for renewables.
But then if you rip out the IRA, there's many parts of the IRA, by the way, that are just
trash.
Nick, I don't know if you can find it, but Barry Weiss found this
insane thing that made me so angry, which I'm happy to talk about,
which was like a 30 day grant process
that resulted in a seven billion dollar grant to some shell NGO.
Oh, this was throwing the gold bars off the castle.
But the other part of the IRA, this narrow part,
is what it did to reinforce tax incentives and tax equity,
which is a 200 billion dollar market that incentivizes that 90% of energy generation.
So my point is that when you start to get into the details, when the house, ways and
means community has to figure out what part to put back, this is going to be hard because it's like,
hold on, if you've got the whole thing,
now all of a sudden you take 90%
of the incremental energy generation incentives
out of the market, you don't have enough electrons.
There isn't enough electricity.
So then you lose the AI array, so you start to lose it.
I think the point is that we're now in the hard part
where the details really matter.
Listen, you got to start with the chainsaw.
We saw that at Twitter.
And by the way, Trump just tweeted it.
When we started this, he just tweeted this out. He said, guys, now it's time to get surgical.
He said this.
Perfect. Yes, that was the metaphor I was about to use. It's like, you know, you start
with you cut out the goddamn service now in Adobe subscriptions, and then you work on
something, you know, more deaf, and maybe that's where we are. IRA, just for the audience,
inflation reduction.
Can I just do a rant on this, on this pop up NGO thing? To me, this is like the worst of America,
and it makes me so angry. And I'll tell you my lived experience. So I'm on the other side of this.
I started a company with these guys from Tesla to make battery materials in the United States in
2019. We grind, we grind, we put in 10s, I put in 10s of millions
of dollars, we get a deal with a big OEM, and then you see these DOE grants. We
spent millions of dollars, we file a very detailed plan to build battery metals
and battery capacity in America. We got rejected, okay? It was an entire year
long process, we got rejected. We put it past us. We kept working. We found more
deals. We found a way to survive raise a little bit more money.
And then we applied again on some success. And we got 100
million dollar grant. Okay. That was that's what just happened
this year. But then yesterday I read and Nick maybe you can
throw this tweet up,
this Barry Weiss investigation.
Somebody in 30 days who was connected
to the democratic infrastructure
had some shell organization that got a grant
that was 70 times bigger than us.
Like we've made stuff.
We have deals with OEMs.
We had to validate it every step of
the way. We were rejected once. So our process to get a hundred million dollar DOE program
was two years. These people showed up in 30 days and got seven billion. That's just wrong.
Why didn't you put, why didn't you lead with DEI or something? You would have gotten a
billion. You just led with the wrong thing. You were providing a product or service people need. This is, this is why I don't
have any equity in there for the minerals. This is why it's so frustrating to build for
the government guys. This is what Palantir and SpaceX had to deal with. That's why they
both sued the government is that all the friends who used to be the CIO used to be the general
made the right donations, had the right kid on the board. It's all corrupt. And then it's
actual substantive people.
You have to work like hell.
How do they give $7 billion in 30 days?
What could you-
We're gonna find out.
You got a bunch of Democratic operatives on the board.
Well, let me challenge you guys on one point.
There are now claims being made by reporters
and by third parties that are saying
it is a new form of kleptocracy
with all the friends of Silicon Valley
installing their
friends and agency heads as undersecretaries and so on that's going to benefit Silicon
Valley investors, Silicon Valley companies.
Joe, Chema, J Cal, I mean, how do you guys react to the claims that there's now, you
know, this new kind of kleptocratic movement?
It's the old guard is gone, but now there's a new guard.
You have Palantir, you have And. So go ahead. You answered, Joe.
Let's talk about this. I mean, when we go to DC, when I go to DC, what I am asking is I want there
to be a fair competition. And if I win, I want my company to actually be able to win the contract
because the way it's worked for 20 years, like like EPROS, you can just raise $250 million this
week. It's a great company. We had a big contest four years ago, L3, Raytheon, Northrop. These guys,
in and out of government for decades, they've gotten tens of billions of dollars to the same
technology area. When we went head to head with them, we didn't just beat them by a little bit.
We shot down the hardened drones nine and a half times farther away. Same size, same power,
nine and a half times. Completely wiped the floor.
What was the cost difference between the bids? Like, are you saving us massive money?
Massive money.
I invested only 30, 40 and the whole thing at that point.
And they've spent billions and we have much cheaper, much better, not even a question.
And you talk to the and you talk to like at the time,
the chief of staff of the Air Force, the guy who wrote the four star.
And he says, well, Joe, this was written three years ago.
It looks like Raytheon probably did help write it.
And they required all these things and your way you're doing it.
I'm like, I'm like, yeah, I'm using a chip instead of a cathode ray tube.
That's why it's working so much better.
It's like, yeah, but it was written for the way they're doing it.
And I could overrule it, but it break a lot of glass.
So you'll probably win again in three years because everyone knows you're the best.
But it's too, it's too frustrating, you know, too stressful to give it to you right now.
Like that is that.
So, so, so what I'm doing is I'm not going and saying, give my company's money.
I'm saying, I'm saying make this actually a functional, logical process and give me a chance to win it from the best.
And that that is 100 times better for our country to push it.
How do you but how do you make that transparent? And how do you avoid there has to be massive
transparency? How do you avoid the perception of conflict and the perception of kleptocracy?
Well, it's acquisition. It's acquisition reform, right? So like this is a really important
story. You guys probably know we were in the Philippine jungles
in early 1910s, needed new pistols.
Our pistols were terrible.
They had like a one page thing what they needed.
There's six arm manufacturers competed.
That's how we got the Colt 1911 in like three months.
One by a large amount.
It's an awesome gun.
12 years ago, we had a 700 something page document
that the bureaucrats spent years on outlining
what they needed for a new pistol.
It probably needed to do DEI stuff. I have no idea. It's like this long comical document.
They still don't have a new pistol today. And so the way we do it is we have a very clear process
where it's very specific on the outcomes, not on the inputs and you have a contest and then you make
sure that you know it's not it's obvious who wins guys. It's not like we're like slightly better.
It's like we're shaming them. So the only way they can stop us is by playing these games because
we're just so much better.
I think that if you're in the administration or if you join some
part of the administration, whether you're a full-time employee or a GSE
or just a volunteer, there's going to be that perception of impropriety
or influence peddling.
That comes with the territory.
So how do you avoid it?
And I think that Joe is exactly right.
When the administration was getting formed,
one of the things that happened,
I had an opportunity to work with some of the folks
to write some proposals for what theoretically could happen
in some of these bigger government organizations
where there's just huge pockets of spend.
And where I spent most of my time is what Joe talked about.
How do you create open standards so that it's very clear what the competition is, so that
the rules on the ground can't get manipulated by people who are rolling out of government
into private industry or somebody has a very deep relationship because of lobbying. Those are the
things that pervert the clarity of what should happen because then what happens can be far afield
to that. So number one is I think knowing that this time around a different class of people are
going to be seen on the quote unquote popular side, it's really critical that all of us that are involved in this promote extremely
transparent open standards. Publish every RFP, publish every spec, publish every evaluation
criteria, make these things as mechanistic as possible. So for example, if you're going to go
and field a drone, there's an incredibly detailed set of data
that you should be publishing in.
It's not dissimilar to how an FAA asks for flight test data.
And you should be able to review that
so that then it can be escalated.
So that if somebody then gets a deal because of preference
and you think you're structurally better on the data,
there needs to be an escalation and a release valve
that says, hold on, this is just being manipulated. And I think that's how you fight back.
Yeah.
On not just this version of a potential winning side versus losing side, but forever in the future,
the government should be open, the government should be transparent. And every single point
at which they're making a decision and giving money should be measurable and known.
You guys got exactly right. There's transparency. There's oversight, obviously. every single point at which they're making a decision and giving money should be measurable and known.
You guys got exactly right. There's transparency. There's oversight, obviously, but there's
whistleblowers as well. And there's the role of the press in all of this to sort of fact
check it and to check in on it as a safeguard with the public getting engaged. And that's
one of the great things that Doge has done by having a Twitter handle. I can pull up, hey, here's what's going on with these licenses and make an example.
So that kind of transparency helps.
And then finally, we have to look at campaign finance.
That is where a lot of the appearance of improprietary exists.
Go back to this other thing, because that's a super important point.
Like it just occurred to me that if what you said happens, then look, the incentive today in America is to try to position oneself to have one of these roles.
And the reason is because David, of what you said, there is the chance to then preferentially nudge an opportunity your way.
Right.
Why do people sit on committees?
Why do people volunteer?
At least at that level. And if you introduce open
standards, then the real incentive to want to go do this should be because you actually are
patriotic and want to just help. So Chamath, I think you're right about the standards,
but I want to push back on the incentive today. I know a lot of the people who are getting into
this, and I really do think they're there to fight for the country. I don't say this like naively or something. These people really are there for the right
reasons for the most part. No, I know. I'm just saying generally over the last 50 years,
if you look at people, there is this implied sense. For example, Goldman Sachs had a direct
line to become Treasury Secretary. If you were the CEO of Goldman, you were the Treasury Secretary.
Now, don't you think that that was discussed
amongst partners at Goldman?
And do we not think on the margins
that that beneficially helped Goldman?
Of course it did.
We'd be naive to think otherwise.
My point is not that.
My point is just that going forward,
the best thing all of our friends could do
is just make it all open source and open standards.
That would be an incredible artifact, I think, for America. Joe, I think you telling us, hey, I trust
these people, they're our friends, you know, that works with all of us, because yes, we
know them, we know they're going to do the stand up right thing. And if you already have
a ton of money, like some incremental amount of money is not going to move the needle for
you. It's, it's, it's farcical for us to think that David Sachs is going to give up four
years of income producing, have to sell all his positions. And that is in some way
good for his balance sheet. It is not he's going to miss out on four years of AI and the massive
run up of our lifetime in order to serve the country. But I can tell you people don't believe
that just like, you know, you talked about the kleptocracy and the revolving door to Raytheon
or whoever that people have talked about forever. What you need is whistleblower protections.
Journalists going after this like Barry Weiss is doing old school journalism investigative.
The whistleblower laws are great in our country.
We need to keep reinforcing those.
But I'm going to go back to we need to limit campaign contributions.
We have to get rid of super PACs because these create the appearance of impropriety and the appearance of impropriety with trump's mean coin and that announcement on sunday for the crypto reserve was.
It doesn't help the mission here that trump is trying to get done so maybe you could speak to that because that's where the appearance of a party is great you got people like sailor who's doing his Bitcoin thing. He's going on Friday and you know, Sax will
Do a do a little bit here and announce some stuff on the program. Hopefully
but maybe you could talk about what you objected to with
the coins the meme coin and or the the announcement of the crypto reserve should our government and
after all this donations from
of the crypto reserve should our government. And after all this donations from massive people,
like I saw at the crypto ball,
all the people who were tweeted by Trump,
that looks terrible.
You tell me what you think.
I agree with you on the tweet.
You're sneaking two things together here though.
So I wanna be really precise, Jason,
cause let's be precise.
That's what we do here.
There are a lot of different possible ways
that people can help politicians.
And so one of them is if you're a celebrity,
like even all your guys show at this point,
you can, you can affect what people think.
That's definitely powerful.
Say more.
There's other ways that if you're part of a big union,
you're part of a government union,
that's a very powerful influence in our society.
If you're part of American Medical Association,
healthcare system,
the doctors and health systems are very powerful,
even without super PACs in our society.
And what a super PAC is, it's a form of free speech. And it's true,
wealthy people have the ability to influence things through that speech, but it's like
one of many. And so if you're cutting that, you're basically saying, okay, I don't want
Elon and Joe to have as much say there, but I do want to have even more say for the celebrities
and for the doctors and for the union members and government. So you have to realize you're
dealing with a complicated situation with lots of forms of power. I do agree with you,
as I said, and listen, I saw David and we gave each other a hug. I think we're all good, but I was
very frustrated with the posts of Trump mentioning specific coins. I don't know who was trading them
before. It just looks bad. Like we're finding all this grift, doing all these things where we have
the moral high ground. I agree. I don't want to give up the moral high ground with these silly
schemes. That's 100% the case.
Are you saying with like there's many forms of influence that you think super PACs and rich
people should be able to I think speech is important. I think million dollar 20 million
dollar donations you'd actually think that's fair for democracy. I actually I actually think
speech is very important. I think the ability for me to send out something and say guys,
I'm studying this. It's corrupt. It's been corrupt for 50 years. We have to all get together and stand against these health
systems, these crazy defense companies that have captured and broken everything. Like
I think my ability to speak and do that and to convince people is really valuable. And
I've, you know, I passed dozens of laws each year in these different States by convincing
people nothing to do with making me money, that these incentives and accountability are
wrong. I think that's a good thing that I'm allowed to do that. Should think I'm doing good. So when you say speech, you mean write a check.
You mean write very large checks. You have to be careful. So the reason the Supreme Court ruled
for super PACs is not just about giving, you're not giving them the money. You're actually speaking
yourself. So when Elon spends $300 million, he's actually spending it many times putting out his
own speech or he's putting out as you pay people to legal. What about you, Chamath? Do you think that Soros, Elon,
let's take the names out of it. Do you think there should be a cap on what you're able to
donate to super PACs because this does create the massive appearance of impropriety, whether it's
in crypto, whether it's on the Soros, on the Democrat side. This seems to be, I mean, I'm
in favor of there being more hard caps, whether it's 510 or 25 million, I think there
needs to be caps. And I think we should put a fund together for
the last two or three people and let them get that money from the
government. It's to run their campaigns like other countries
do.
I think it's important to note that this pendulum has swung
pretty wildly out of wax in Citizens United. Yeah.
And it's not, this is not a Republican thing, meaning there's a whole bunch of factions.
There's the George Soros faction.
That's true.
There's the liberal Democrat faction, lest we forget.
I think Zuck spent 350 million in 2020.
Oh yeah.
Then there's the Koch brothers faction.
And then there's what showed up this year with Elon.
So my point is there's all kinds of pockets of spending
in all manner of ways.
I think the question is,
should Citizens United have allowed this kind of spending?
And are we better off as a democracy for it?
And I think-
What does Jamaat think?
The reason why I would be in favor of going back
to the way it was, is that I think the biggest problem is the redistricting and the gerrymandering that happens
and the amount of influence that happens downstream inside of state and local elections.
And there are just places that are just so sclerotically stuck. If you look at the federal, despite all the spending, you still see at the
presidential level like pretty reasonable and healthy competition between two people. It's
much more difficult to see dynamism lower and lower down ballot. And so the reason to get rid
of Citizens United from my perspective is that you'd have much more
vibrant local state mayoral elections. Those things have huge impacts, I think, to quality.
Okay. So you and I are in that camp, Joe's in the other. Freberg, your thoughts,
you're the deciding vote here. It's two to one in terms of the panel.
It's not two to one. Well, you just said to me, you think we should go back is the way it was. The Supreme Court's on my side. So you guys are in trouble.
Exactly. Yeah. I mean, the point of this program sometimes is not just to is to take ownership
of your opinion and defend it. So I mean, we have, I want to see people own it here
in the discourse, or free bird, you can say pass, but you don't get to say nothing. Okay.
What does it mean to spend money on a political point of view?
Exactly.
What does it mean?
It means you can put in a book. I mean, the other side wanted to censor books.
That's the thing. Like, if I want to pay someone to make a book for me, if I want to pay 50 people
to go and engage the community so I can get some leverage on my time, if I want to pay 50 people to go and engage the community
so I can get some leverage on my time,
if I want to pay someone to make a website
to promote my point of view on something,
I should be able to do that.
And if my point of view is related to a vote
that Congress might be taking,
or is related to a candidate that's running for election,
or is related to taxes,
or is related to taxes or is related to some
other social issue, I don't know how you can kind of very clearly delineate the difference
between some kind of political party or some political candidate versus my having a point
of view on an issue.
If I care very deeply about animal welfare, which I do, and if I had enough money that
I felt like I could spend that money to influence people's point of view, to improve animal welfare through laws and through
candidates, I would spend that money. And I should have a right to do so. And I shouldn't feel
restricted that I can't go publicly express my voice, make websites, put up billboards,
put up posters, buy ads and papers telling people how wrong it is the way we treat animals and slaughter them and
keep them living for their very short lives in terrorist
conditions. I want to be able to express that point of view. And
so I kind of veer to this idea.
Can I ask you a question? Do you think that your money spending,
if the balance of power to get your view was to redistrict
certain places
so that then you could get a majority of people
that were ideologically aligned to you elected.
Would you do that as well?
There's no ads running.
This is about a different form of electoral influence.
Would you do that?
So not spending money, you're saying?
Like I'm not spending money to-
You'd spend money, but it's not for ads.
It's not for posters.
But how does that work?
How do you spend money to redistrict?
You get certain people elected by trucking people out to vote,
and then you get that person to join a coalition that then redistricts.
I mean, maybe trucking people out to vote as an action should be illegal.
That seems pretty reasonable to me.
Well, yeah, I mean, to your point, Freiburg, you asked, like, how do you define it?
What I'm trying to point out to you is for every dollar that goes into politics,
I think it's... I would ask you guys to just suspend belief that a hundred percent of that goes to ads.
And what I'm trying to say is, I would say a very small, not a very small 10, 10, 10
to 20 cents goes to ads.
80% goes to all kinds of shady stuff.
And this also can be the way you call it shady, but I would argue like, what if I want to
make a bunch of websites?
What if I want to make like, you know, have people go out and express the point of view in the town square?
You know, like there are other aspects of what you might. What I'm saying is that's fine.
That's in the 10 cent bucket. The 80 cents, what I'm trying to tell you explicitly is how it's spent
today is not in the ways that you think. I think that the fact that someone calls it shady might
be because they disagree with my point of view. And if they agree with my point of view, they might
not call it shady. I think the tactics today, point of view. And if they agree with my point of view, they might not call it shady.
I think the tactics today, look,
I play with the conditions on the field,
but if you look at them, meaning like using dollar incentives
to incentivize people, that's allowed today.
You can pay people to vote today.
Before we had our-
You can pay them to join a super PAC or something like that,
but hold on, let me just get Joe involved here.
So Joe, you heard Freebergs,
you're kind of in alignment, I think broadly.
But we can define some very specific things
that are obviously political,
like the window of when you spend the money.
Like telling people, well, because you could say
in the six, in the year leading up to the election.
Hold on, let me finish.
What if I'm not targeting a specific vote?
I get it, I get it.
If you're targeting an issue, that's one thing.
But when you tell people, she's for they, them, he's for you, that's clearly a political vote. I get it. I get it. If you're not, if you're targeting an issue, that's one thing. But when you tell people she's for they then he's for you, that's clearly
a political ad. Now you could take those ads, you could take canvassing, you could define
a subset of behaviors. And you could say you can raise up to this amount of money per person
in that way. That's me. Those things are explicitly political. When you tell people this is about
candidate a versus candidate B.
If you were to say this, we're not going to mention any candidates, but we're going to talk about your puppies
and you trying to increase your Q score here on the goddamn pod by saving puppies.
Don't be a f***ing animal welfare is a f***ed up issue and it's something that you shouldn't just dismiss like that.
I happen to be agreeing with you. I just don't like how many points you're scoring with the audience over it.
Did you guys see this thing on Instagram my wife showed me?
This is totally ridiculous. I'm going to save five puppies from my ranch.
Somebody save some cows.
Did you guys see this Instagram reel? My wife showed it to me. It's like of a
calf chasing a dog. And it cuts to this Asian guy and he's like, what's the big deal here?
What are we talking about? Like, you know, you want us to not eat everything, blah, blah, blah.
And then he realizes that they're talking about the dog versus the cat. Don't trigger free bird. Don't do that.
Don't laugh. I got 33 acres paradise. I'm going to save every animal in,
in central Texas. I'm going to eat them. And I would give you money to do that.
I got a deal. Actually, I actually, I with what Jamoth was saying about gerrymandering.
I think we could use AI for that.
It's a separate conversation.
It's discussing how it works right now.
However, Jason, the problem at the end of the day with defining what's political or
not is the boundary cases are really tough and you do end up needing effectively effectively
a censorship board.
Example is I write I write a book about the dangers of communism and it explains how it's
linked to things going on
today. And I like give it out at like, all these people are going to be voting. I mean,
there's just so many boundary cases.
Yeah, but if we just said you can spend up to 10 million a year doing political activity,
10 million a year gives you a cap. So you can only buy so many books and buy so many
ads.
It's not political activity. It's my art. This is an artistic piece about communism.
But when you put the book in and say vote for Biden, then we would say, okay, you put a vote for Biden stamp on it.
But you keep saying though, it becomes really complicated.
I just ran it through Grok and what the answer was is that 56% of all the spending
happens to be on ads and 44% of all dollars in 24 or 25 was spent on other.
Yeah. So there's the balance.
Well, so if you put canvassing in there, I bet you it's 75%. So if we just say for those two 24% of all dollars in 24 or 25 was spent on other. Yeah. Yeah.
So there's the balance.
Well, so if you put canvassing in there, I bet you it's 75%.
So if we just say for those two activities, put a hard cap on them, I would be for that.
But let's keep going.
Anyways, let's keep going.
We've got a bunch of tech.
I want to talk about the market.
Market's f***ed.
Let's talk about CoreWeave.
All right.
Gentlemen, we can't talk about politics all day, as exciting as it is.
Let's talk about this core we've IPO. If you don't know core weave is part of a new type of
infrastructure provider called Neo cloud. It's a fancy way of
saying using GPUs to build data centers. This is a really
interesting company because they got on to GPUs early and they
had a lock in on a large number of Nvidia GPUs. They've got 32
data centers with 250,000 Nvidia GPUs. As an example,
when Elon built the largest fastest data center, Colossus, that was 100,000. So this is, you know,
really, really a big company, they're going to do an IPO, analysts are estimating they're going to
raise at least 3.5 billion at over $30
billion. Their secondary was 23 billion in November of 2024. So this is cooking with
oil, they've got incredible revenue, by the way, 1.9 billion in 2024. But if you look
at two years ago, how much revenue they have, the growth is amazing. Nick put a chart in
here and post because it's like a 10xx I think each year or something crazy like that when I
talked about it on the other pod. But they're very
unprofitable, almost a billion dollars in loss in 2024. And
that's interest payments on a lot of their debt, they have
almost 8 billion in debt, huge debt load to buy all these GPUs.
And that has been the question we've been talking about here
Chamath is are these GPUs are these Neo has been the question we've been talking about here, Chamath is, are these GPUs, are these Neo clouds, fancy way of saying.
I'll give you a couple of factoids about CoreVue, which I find super impressive.
So the first question is like, you would say, why didn't AWS, GCP,
and Azure eat these guys for breakfast, lunch, and dinner?
And as it turns out,
they had one very specific
technical decision that I think was extremely valuable,
which is that these guys did not use hypervisors.
Explain what that is.
So a hypervisor is basically a middleware layer of software
that allows you to abstract units of compute
so that then you can make them available.
And instead, they basically allowed you
to write to the bare metal.
And this very native approach that allowed you to write to the bare metal and this very
native approach that allowed them to get a lot of traction. So it's a really interesting thing to
note that just that simple thing, like one simple technical design decision can allow you to build
what looks like, at least from the revenue perspective, an incredible business, right? So
kudos to them. Super awesome to see that you can still
maneuver around the big giants.
I think that that's cool.
I think the big question with CoreWeave is,
what is the period of amortization and the useful life
of these GPUs from Nvidia?
And I think that that question is up in the air.
As you said, Jason, a lot of their losses
are these interest payments.
And as long as that they have that calculated right
in their models that they used to borrow all this money
to buy all these GPUs from Nvidia,
this is going to be a killer business, to the extent
that they got that calculation wrong,
meaning we thought the useful life was 10 years,
but it turned out to be five.
This business is deeply underwater. So I think that
that's the bet. The bet is, they've built an amount of
headway, they're going to continue to do this good
technical engineering. But the other side of it is, is the
useful life right? Is the technology curve right? Is
Moore's law and all these other things? Will they work in its
favor or against it? And I think that's the people say useful lifespan GPUs three to five years before the
next generation is so much more powerful, especially in relation to power consumption,
that it's worth running it now with servers, old CPUs for running Facebook, it's a totally
different story. You can keep those running five to seven years before it's not worth running and you have to turn them off. What do you
think here?
You're right. There's an economic question on the power and all these things. I actually
know Brandon, he lives nearby me in my house in Montana. He's a really smart guy. And I
think the really interesting thing, you know, when they built this, I think it's relevant
going forward is these guys were commodities traders and they were originally buying stuff
to like mine Bitcoin and other stuff like that and they realized as commodities traders, there's like a certain supply and demand in
the market of GPU chips, but also of all the data centers, by the way.
And it's really, it's really interesting what they did is they locked down the full supply
of tons of data centers, tons of the power they needed, tons of the chips and they're
very, very thoughtful.
I mean, they're effectively, they're traders and they're very economic and I think they
have a lot of this stuff well.
That explains the technical decision because they have to have very low latency
throughput in order to transact efficiently as commodities traders.
I'm guessing as well.
Exactly.
There is one, Kilis-Heeyo here for this company, Friedberg. They had massive revenue growth,
but they have a dependency. 60% of the revenue now from Microsoft and Microsoft seems to have done this either it's unclear but maybe to service the open at a ideal where they needed to give them a bunch of infrastructure or it might be for Azure it's unclear.
People have been asking this question for a couple of years now but what do you think of a business with one client.
with 60% dependency. And this is how these things work, Jason,
is they just, one client tends to grow really, really fast.
And they're actually, you know,
so they do this orchestration framework called Sunk.
I know a little bit about it.
It's really easy for scheduling workflows
and batches and all these things.
I think a lot of other people are using really well.
They've just bought weights and biases, right?
Which like everyone uses basically.
It's a great buy.
And they're killer for training.
I mean, I think these guys crush in training.
Satya Nadell said that Microsoft was doing this maybe not
for a long term usage.
So, Freebird, your thoughts on CoreWeave.
I'm not as deep as you guys are.
I remember in 2003, I worked for nine months
at a private equity firm.
And I would cold call companies that
hadn't raised venture capital that were profitable and fast growing and see if they would take our money.
That's the business model.
And I spent a lot of time in the sector of businesses that were called speed doublers.
I don't know if you guys remember these companies.
2003 was before we all had broadband internet,
so a lot of people were using dial-up,
and you could pay $9.99 a month for a speed doubler.
And what it would do is it would basically on your browser set the server to be their
server and they had a cache of many of the popular sites on the internet.
So when you started browsing the internet on your computer, everything loaded faster
because they had really fast servers and you got these caches.
And these companies, dude, they were doing like tens of millions of revenue, high margin,
50% plus EBITDA margin, and growing like 100% plus a year.
And I remember we spent a bunch of time looking at these companies, this is right before I
joined Google.
And I was like, this feels like a transitory business.
It's like an arbitrage between where we were and where we're going.
And that's what ended up happening.
Many of them just cash flowed out, the founders took money, or they were able to get a really smart private
equity recap done, get some money out and run at some low multiple of EBITDA or something.
And so I worry a little bit about a business like this, where there's four or five companies
that are each doing $80 billion of CapEx this year to create infrastructure that effectively
starts to replace what these guys are
effectively offering out as a service.
That would be my biggest kind.
If I was to do diligence on this business,
that's where I would spend a lot of my time is like,
guys, what's the capacity going to be in a year or two?
Sort of like when broadband hit the internet,
you didn't need speed doublers anymore.
Do you really need to be paying as much as you are today?
Is there going to be as much demand?
How much is this going to get bundled in with GCP or AWS and so on in the future? So that would be my kind of macro hesitation
and caution on the diligence as I ran my diligence on this thing. You basically need an economist to
map this all out. It's the same question for data centers in a related way, right? Which you just
need to map everything. And I don't have those numbers. So you're right. It's a hard thing to
figure out. That's right. Well, the founders have controlled the company.
And they sold 500 million in secondary.
They sold a lot, maybe it's 150 each or something like that.
But they've kept most of their position.
They're smart guys, so let's see.
Yeah, they still own the majority.
I don't know them, so I don't want to speak negatively
about the business, and I haven't spent much time on it,
but I mean, I think that that's an important kind of arbitrage.
Yeah, what's the worst that could happen
if you speak negatively about somebody's business?
Jake, you tell us.
You've been telling us. Maybe you get more followers.
No idea.
What is it like to be on somebody's sh**less for a decade?
I don't know.
I mean, the ratings keep going up for this week in startups and all in.
So I'll take it.
Shout out.
Are you purposefully starting to dress up, Jake?
By the way, because I notice every week now you're wearing a button down and a jacket.
I had a speak at a
speaking gig, but my friends at Eaton reached out to me. So I
might be trying to do a little grid right now. Are you plugging
right now or a piano hasn't reached out but eat on shirts,
which I'm wearing right now. et on you know, the famous. No, no,
no, no, I got but I'm also saying Tom Ford's people reached out
and said, you know that lapel thing,
you can take that off if you want.
We'll have somebody come over.
So I just wanted to shout out my friends over there.
I have no commercial deal with them yet.
I'm gonna go ahead and shout out
the Keton, K-I-T-O-N jackets I've been wearing.
K-I-T-O-N.
Keton, very nice.
I would like to shout them out.
Finest jackets on earth.
I wear them all the time.
I love those jackets.
Just saying, let's move on.
Go ahead.
Also, yes, and Joe Lonsdale's outfits
are recently- By the Uygh done by the Uyghurs.
The Uyghurs in China, he gets them specifically made
for $17 each.
Well done, Joe.
I was recently sponsored by a company.
This service is incredible.
What they do is when you're flying into an FBO,
They can just put an ad in it, right?
They meet you at the FBO and they take your watch
and they set the new time for you.
So especially if it's a mechanical watch,
it's a very complicated movement.
Oh yes, this is very important.
Right, you know what?
I was flying to Malta.
You gotta be kidding me that this exists.
To Malta, and I had my watch collection
and they did this for me when I was flying
between Montenegro and Malta, absolutely.
I'm just trolling, I'm just trolling.
This is like four spy villains telling you
how to look at the world.
We should get rid of income tax. I'm sure everybody listening is like, hmm, really convenient. No income
tax for the billionaires and sent to millionaires. Good job, guys. All right, let's keep going
down the top.
All right, you know, we've been going back and forth in the group chat and you've been
talking about publicly, maybe Main Street versus Wall Street, and what's going on in the markets here?
Because there's EU bond issues.
We obviously, it seems like in some ways,
maybe the Trump campaign is not thinking
about the stock market as much as they're thinking
about the bond market.
Explain to us your take on markets right now.
Yeah, I think that there's three markets that are important.
There's the US long end of the curve,
so this is the 10-year bond yield. I think then there's the US equity market. And then
the most next important market are the European bond and equity markets together,
and I'll explain why in a second. But just on the first few, I mentioned this before, but I really do think we're in a secular shift
where I think the MAGA majority and the base of people
that can be a reliable voting block in the future,
as I've said before, are working in middle-class folks
that don't necessarily own a ton of stocks,
nor do they own homes, of which there's a lot. The second cohort are people
that are pro-innovation and pro-tech. And the third are patriotic business owners. I think that
cohort is very large. And I think that when the core strategists inside of MAGA figure this out,
one of the big takeaways is that they're not going to care about
the stock market in Wall Street and
a lot of the policies will be viewed through the lens of Main Street and I think that you started to see
this rhetoric now
One from Besant and we'll play this clip in a second and the second was just today from Trump himself
But Nick, do you want to play the Besant clip if you have it?
I think over the medium term, which
is what we're focused on, it's a focus on Main Street.
Wall Street's done great.
Wall Street can continue to do fine.
But we have a focus on small business and the consumers.
So we are going to rebalance the economy. We're going to bring
manufacturing jobs home.
That was the first one. The second one was just today, Nick, I sent it to you. Do you
want to just show it to these guys, which I think is really interesting.
So it says here, breaking news from, I guess, unusual wells. Trump has just said he's not
looking at the stock market.
Okay, so
I'm not sure I believe that, but okay.
So why is this actually valuable? Well, if we are incentivized,
if the government of America is incentivized
to implement policies that crack the equity markets,
it's actually really good in some ways.
Number one is if you deflate asset prices,
you also deflate inflation, okay?
And you- Give an example there for the audience
so we make it clear.
NVIDIA is ripping at all time highs. You are like, oh, wow, I'm so cash rich. You can go get a
margin loan. You take that money, you reinvest it in a second home and a third home. You sell some
stock, you start to buy cars, all this other stuff. It drives consumptive behavior that on
the margin isn't there if the markets were much, much lower
than this. So if you rebase the equity values that people have, what you do is you actually
depress the amount of free cashflow that they have to spend on other things. So it's a deflationary
tactic. How the bond market reacts to that is if the stock market goes down is you start to become a flight
to quality, right? Oh my gosh, there's volatility in the stock market. Oh my gosh, I don't want to
deal with the stock market going down. Let me just sell, take some chips off the table and buy 10-year
bonds. When you buy the bonds, the interest rate goes down. Why is that good for America? We have
$10 trillion we need to go out and borrow in the next nine months.
And so if we can pay 3%, 3.8%, 4%, we save ourselves trillions of dollars versus if we
had to pay 4.5%, 5%, 5.5%. So that's the second thing. And then the third thing is that right now,
what we had this week because of the Ukraine and Zelensky thing is basically Trump say, we are totally risk off this war.
And I'm not going to debate whether that's right or wrong, but that's what he said.
We're going to curtail the aid.
We're not even going to share intelligence.
They're on their own.
What did that force?
What happened this week was the Europeans had to basically circle the wagons and they said,
okay, we're going to step up. And what they announced was a four-year plan to borrow money
to invest in defense. What they also did, which was really interesting, is the UK specifically
said, we're going to borrow it in this clever little way. This is their interpretation. So that
it doesn't actually count in the debt to
GDP calculations of my country. So they're starting to play it. But then, so then how did the bond
market react to it? Nick, you can show it. They're like, you know what guys, if you want to fight this
war, obviously you're allowed to do whatever you want, but the cost that you're going to have to
pay is going to go up. This has been going up every day. And you're at a point now where this is
severe fiscal pressure on these governments.
I do not know how they sustain their deficits
and raise more debt.
So all of this is happening all at the same time.
I think Trump is pro Main Street, equity
markets basically do not get bid.
The bond markets respond positively. Yields go down. Good for America. They extract themselves from spending
programs like, again, it's more than a spending program, but I'll just say it in this context,
narrowly, Russia-Ukraine is a spending program that if you take off the table,
that balance of responsibility goes to Europe. And then
the markets are saying, this is not right. We want this war to end and we're going to
make it more expensive for you to litigate it. If you put it all together, it's a really
interesting moment in the markets I haven't seen in a very long time.
Joe, you think this is the refinancing of our debt is the end game here? There's like
maybe 10% of people who seem to have fallen in that camp when I
queried on these four group chats, hey, you know, if we can
depress everything, we lower consumption, we break
inflation even more, maybe people lose their jobs, you
know, less consumption. And rates go down, we have to cut
rates three or four times per pressure on the Fed, then we can
maybe refinance our debt, which is coming up some percentage of it. What do you think of that theory?
You know, Jason, Jamath has a lot of interesting thoughts here. And I think it's I think it's a
very smart analysis. I'm not fully aligned. It is true. Bond markets hate war, war is expensive,
war is inflationary. It's very clear Europe is going through okay, you know,
war is more likely for us to spend money that that hurts them. You know, in the US, I think the number
one thing that Scott Besson and Trump would want around this is to fight for Main Street,
like they said, but that really is, you know, the kind of populist energy we have right
now. And so I think they are focused on lower interest rates, lower interest rates, you
know, I have someone who works with me, their spouse, you know, as a real estate agent,
and then they're having a really tough couple of years because industry spiked
up, if you're going to trace down again, there's so many different places in
America where people start making money again with, with the title companies,
with brokers, with there's so many things that happen right with that.
And so it's, it's well, it's not just trickle down.
It's like, this is the part of the economy that that just really does start
to turn on and certain transactions can happen again.
And you're right.
It is cheaper debt.
That is that there's an advantage as well. So I think disinflation is very important.
And I think we have to find some way to get there. Chamath may be
right that it's worth hitting assets to get to disinflation.
That's something that Scott could be working on because of
all the debt. But it is it is true that
easiest, it's the easiest, it's the easiest. And we do. And we
do need it for sure. So and I hopefully I think there's some
other more clever ways to get there. But but but I do like
that. I mean, you said there's some more clever ways to get there.
Obviously, we don't want to see eight, nine 10% unemployment.
That's another way to get there. And we don't want that because
you know, Main Street equals jobs. Oh, what do you what is
your other ways to get there?
Well, the other ways to get there is there's two there's
really two right now in our society that are very positive.
One of them is a higher productivity through AI. I'm working on a ton of things
as our sure everyone else doing that like we're doing construction for much cheaper
right now.
Government can't do that though, right? Government can't be involved in that. That's up to us.
Yeah, we can make sure not describing David's doing good work. We can make sure not to screw
it up. There's a lot of people trying to screw it up a bit. So I think David's job is very
important there to get it.
Sam is not here, please.
And then and then the and then the second thing is actually cutting spend
like just giving out hundreds of billions willy nilly to Stacey
Abrams at all is very inflationary. And so so I think
I think cutting spend actually is a very positive thing, we
could do a lot more of that.
Freeburg, you heard the two gentlemen, what are your thoughts
on the refinancing of interest? As I've done before, I'm going
to give you incredible leadership credit for three
years ago on this pod pushing all of us to really think about
what would happen if the debt increased another 8 trillion,
which it did. And I think that influenced a lot of people in
our circles. And obviously, that's something that the
president took on when none of us thought he would any
president would ever take on that issue?
How much pain do you think Trump is willing to take with the stock market going down in order to
refind the debt? The debt? Is he willing to be incredibly unpopular? Is he willing to
deal with the criticism from Wall Street and from equity holders over some sustained period? And
how much would he be if it goes down the The market goes down 1020%? Do you
think he's gonna cry uncle or you think he's willing to take
that kind of pain free burp?
Like I said, I don't know about Trump. There's a, you know, I
would say 6040 I'd be right. 40% I'd be wrong. So I don't know.
People are here for that. That's actually a pretty good ratio in
poker. If you can win that many hands.
Yeah, I mean, I'd say 60%. He's probably different than Trump
1.0. And he's probably different than Trump 1.0
and he's probably less influenced
by the short-term rumblings about the market.
Okay.
And he's probably listening to Besant on this one,
although, you know, I think it's gotta be
a complicated relationship
between the two of them at the moment.
I do think that he is aware and I would imagine the administration
generally with Besant and others in kind of key leadership positions.
Are trying to make the case that if we can get rates down, we have an
opportunity to kind of refinance this $10 trillion that's coming due in the
next 12 months and get ourselves into a kind of more
sustainable financing position. There's still the fiscal
position, which is how are we spending money? And how are we
spending money over time that needs to be addressed? This is
the central question. You're totally right.
Let's address that specifically with Ukraine. You're a bit of a
hawk and American exceptionalist Joe
and we are looking at a situation where we spent 175
billion, there were some other numbers that Trump was floating
around that were incorrect. And they got fact checked 175
billion is what we're actually in for according to all
accounts. This was done, as I said many times on this very program and got laughed at and joked about done on a lease loan. Trump, because
these things were done on a lease loan, now has the upper hand with Zelensky, and he's
a great negotiator. And he said, we want 500 billion back. Don't need to make this about
dollars and cents here, because obviously, this is life and death and people's democracy, we're talking about their sovereignty. But that 175 billion, if he gets that
500 billion back, that's a 42% IRR in three years on this. Even if we just got our money back,
that would be fine for the American people. How do you look at the war in Ukraine, both financially,
and in terms of containing Putin, and finally, in terms of
our participation in NATO is a time for us to leave NATO, Joe Lonsdale.
Wow. Well, you know, Jason, Putin is a bad guy. That's number one. He's shouldn't have invaded.
Thank you for saying that. It's refreshing to hear it on this podcast.
You know, I do think the last administration mismanaged it. I don't think he would have
invaded with Trump as president. He certainly would have invaded with competent person threading him. And so, but you know, but now we have to have peace. And I do want peace. I don't think he would have invaded with Trump as president. He certainly would have invaded with competent person threading him.
And so, but, you know, but now we have to have peace and I do want peace.
I don't want to have the war continuing, but to get peace, you got to get both
sides to come to the table.
I prefer peace through strength.
I prefer being really strong on Putin and showing why he has to have peace.
But then you need Zelensky to be a partner for it too.
And I do think, listen, I do think Zelensky had the wrong idea on
the white house last week.
He should have been thanking them.
He should have come more humbly.
He should have actually been directed towards really wanting a peace.
And listen, I agree that Ukraine's a very corrupt country.
We may find out that he and his cronies have been taking a bunch of money.
I don't know if they are or not.
Either way, he has not really been signaling the right way to be open to peace and a peace
that does, I think, have to give up a little bit of Ukraine in order to get there.
I think that's the option on the table right now. And that's the direction I want.
What about the NATO question? What's the, you know, and thank you for being so candid here.
What's the the NATO outcome here?
Is it time for maybe Europe to just go it alone? Because they don't seem to like what happened last Friday at the White House.
They yeah, and and maybe do you think it's time maybe that we we bow out and let
them arm up?
This is really tough for me, because some of the people I
care about most in the world live in places like Germany and
around there, and I want them to be safe. I also think that the
historic relationship between the UK and the US is this very,
very valuable thing that we have, they shouldn't just be
tossed aside. These are these are critical, very longtime
allies and cousins. You know, I think Europe's in a very very bad place. It's very dysfunctional man
It's it's I did not see European civilization going the right way the next 20 or 30 years
I think JD's right to criticize them on on anti free speech on like, you know
Arresting people who criticize the Islamic threat like more than the people actually doing the rapes and stuff. It's crazy
This place is a lost their minds, you know, it's bonkers. So do I want to totally give it up? No. But do I
want to demand fiercely that the certain things get fixed, and to use our foreign policy apparatus
to make sure we fix those things if we're going to stay in the relationship 100%
What do you think, Chema? This NATO question seems like Europe is kind of signaling that
they're willing to go it alone. And should the United
States just say, okay, go for it, we're out? Because that's literally what Zach's retweeted
recently, just said, hey, we're out is your problem. And I think the administration's given
him free rein to discuss the topic. He talked, discussed it here for many years. What are your
thoughts? Should we be out on NATO? Well, I think the question is, when do these transnational organizations outlive
their utility?
That's the question on the table.
And it's not just a question for NATO,
but it's a question for a bunch of these other things,
the WHO, NATO, the United Nations.
There's many of these organizations.
What you've seen is that there are competitive organizations now that are
just as important, if not more.
So if you didn't like OPEC, well, then there was this OPEC plus plus thing.
If you didn't like how the Europeans and the Americans did intelligence
gathering, then all of a sudden five eyes came out of nowhere.
If you didn't like the G7, there's the bricks, right?
So there's this tendency for the world to create these startups, to try to
challenge and competency as the conditions on the ground change.
I think the most important thing right now that Europeans need to do is
acknowledge this one critical fact.
The individual governments
of Europe are vibrant and powerful. The European Union itself was created almost without any real
teeth. And so what happened is the folks there started to pass inordinate numbers of laws.
And that has made it really complicated to be a European company, a European citizen.
And that has to get sorted
out. What is the real decision there? Is it about being Italian? Is it about being European? What
is the separation? And I don't think that that's clear. And I think once they figure that out,
all this other stuff is much easier to figure out.
Well, you also have, yeah, other organizations, Interpol, right? We have that. You have the UN.
I mean, it is maybe time to just re underwrite each of them.
Freebright, what do you think?
I think that there is a viable case for a peaceful transition to
kind of a multipolar power dynamic. And if you're a
techno pessimist, you're going to have a point of view that there
are more limited resources available to humans on Earth, and therefore we have to have influence
to access those resources. If you're a techno optimist, you will believe that through AI and
automation and all these other technologies that we could spend quite a bit of
time around, that we are going to have abundant housing, abundant fuel, abundant materials,
and generally an abundance of everything that one particular group might demand or need. And you
don't need to go be an empire to access the resources that your people are demanding.
And what I mean is the mining industry is a good example. There is this discovery,
which I think we put on the docket for the Science Corner today, of a giant thorium reserve in
Inner Mongolia, which can be used to make a thorium molten salt reactor. And there's enough
thorium in this reserve in China to produce enough energy for 60,000 years of consumption
based on current consumption rates.
I saw a fantastic presentation this week by a startup
that's using AI and other sensing technologies
to identify new rare earth deposits
in the crust of the earth
that we have absolutely no visibility into today.
And many of our assumptions about how much availability there is of certain rare earth
metals is wrong, and that there actually may be many, many, many orders of magnitude more material
available to us to mine. And the technology for mining is getting better, the technology
for discovering these deposits is improving and so on. So in that world where suddenly I can make all the food I want, everyone can be fed,
there's plenty of land, there's plenty of housing, there's plenty of water, there's
automation and robots that are serving me and all this sort of amazing stuff that's
coming this century.
Do I really need to be having a freaking conflict with Russia and China over access to some
jungle or some plot of land on the other side of the planet?
Or can I live sustainably in my country
and everyone's going to be generally happy?
So I think that this idea that maybe the US exits NATO
and the US dials down its level of conflict and opposition
to Russia and or China is a pretty reasonable
and I would argue maybe even a techno-optimistic
point of view.
And we may find that in the next couple of years,
we start to really believe it.
And if we start to believe it,
all the things that we're fighting over today,
you don't really need to fight over anymore.
Except for the expansionist intentions of individuals,
which is a sociological phenomenon, which
may still continue, but I'm not sure that you need to be investing as much resources
as we have historically.
So I would argue maybe NATO in a multipolar world of abundance isn't as necessary as it
has been in the past century, which was a world that was limited in resources, fighting
for access and a growing global population, particularly in a developed world in the West, that's made it a necessity to maintain US primacy and
US policing of the world. And I know others might have a point of view that's a little
bit different. I mean, I think this is I think actually what you're talking about is a Star
Trek beautiful version of abundance in the world. If these rare earth minerals create
unlimited energy and your energy independent, you look at the
world differently. And Joe, we certainly in America, look at the
world differently as we're all Gen Xers here, basically. We look
at the world much differently now since we have energy
independence than we did under Bush and these farm wars, you
know, in the Middle East. Yeah.
I mean, listen, yeah, and I'm one of the most optimistic people.
I call myself the American optimist, Jason, as you know,
a great podcast.
And this is called American Optimist.
None of us have been on yet.
Yeah.
That's pretty sure.
I'm going to get you on.
Thanks.
We live together now.
I mean, had Saxon, have you had Saxon at least American optimist?
People are too busy to come on.
I'll try to get you.
I know for forward besties got it.
Okay.
All right.
I got to work on it.
Listen, I would love AI to get to the point, I think it will, where it starts to accelerate
growth where this energy stuff can be mined more easily.
But until, I'd say until we're at at least five, six percent growth because we are going
to the post-caricity world, we don't know what is coming.
I do still think global trade really matters.
I do think global security for ourselves, like we don't want random people with nuclear
proliferation.
So there are issues that are going to affect all of us. But I think Dave makes a really great point that it is becoming
less important over time. It's true. Let's talk about this chat GPT. I guess they came out with
4.5. It was such a dud. I didn't even realize that they launched it. Chamath, you monitor this or
Freeberg, did you try it? Because I've been using grok as my default now, then Gemini, then chat GPT. That's my order right now.
Because I wanted to see how good grok is. And man grok is really
caught up. And I don't have an interest here in you know, I
don't have equity in any of these companies. I own Google
in the public markets, but I don't know the other two. But
pretty amazing. Yeah. What do you think of this 4.5 dot and
what it means, Chamath?
Well, I use them in the company building context
and specifically at 80, 90,
because of what we're building.
And what I would tell you is that,
I think Anthropic just continues to do an incredible job.
I think Cloud 3.7,
it just kicks ass.
Oh, you're on Clawed, you're using on the backend, yeah.
We use it for a lot of automated code generation.
And it's models on code generation,
I think are just exceptional.
They are the best in market.
Then what I would say is as a consumer,
I've mostly flipped my usage to Grok 3. And the reason is that it's in line
with where I consume most of my information. It's elegantly integrated inside of X.
Yeah, and to point this out, to explain it to people, when you're in Twitter, now X,
on the top right-hand of a tweet, there's an X AI button. When you click it, it just gives you the
full context of the tweet. So I was reading one of Dara's from Uber's tweets about autonomy, I guess they added two more partners.
When I clicked it, it gave me more than I ever could want. It was almost like a deep research
of the context of a very short retweet he did. And I didn't have to cut and paste and form a question.
So owning a social network equals instant and here we're going to show it with Joe Lonsdale's, where he says, Hey, listen, the
you know, the crypto tax fills like taxation to me. And look,
it goes and finds four web pages, you can see there, it
tells you which ones Wikipedia and CNBC amongst them. And then
it gives Joe's position. This is like very elegant. There's a
super elegant. And I think there's a small tweak to this.
Okay.
That Elon and I were talking about actually on X, which is
then just the nature of being able to analyze a post for its
veracity becomes really valuable.
That extra little thing when it's available, I think will
have a really big impact on how people use it in this context.
So I use Grok for the consumer applications.
For all of our code
generation, we're using Sonnet 3.7. It's exceptional. Which is Anthropix, which is doing a major round of
funding. Got it. Okay. Yeah. And I think like the thing with the GPT-4.5 is that it's kind of like
good. Now here's a tangent. Let me just do a small little rant, which is we're at the bleeding edge
of where these benchmarks are useful.
Meaning part of why Jason,
maybe you weren't necessarily watching this as closely.
And I think where the media
and the sense-making organizations get confused
is they don't know now what to say,
because they'll say,
hey, look at how I did on Swybench,
look at how I did on Imo,
look at how I did on Amy.bench, look at how I did on IMO, look at how I did on Amy.
And the problem, the dirty little secret of these
model makers is that these guys are so trained
on the evals that they're overfitting.
And all this overfitting basically makes it
pretty unreliable.
And so-
What this means to translate into plain English
for humans listening is they basically are optimizing
for the test that are the benchmark, which is kind of
like a person in high school or, you know, optimizing for the
SATs. It doesn't mean they're gonna be great students, but it
may mean that they just spent a lot of time taking SAT tests.
Yeah, so we have we have one problem, which is that I think
it would be very valuable for the industry that it be solved,
which is that we need to have extremely difficult and always
changing third party, independent,
verifiable benchmarks. Oh, that's a great idea. Like the safety tasks for cars is that's not run
by the companies. Got it. Less about safety, though, more about capability. Sure. And I think if
we're reporting on that, then these leaps will mean something more than what they are today.
Right. So when Alibaba pushes Gwen this week,
it was an exceptional model.
It's probably one of the better open source,
if not the best open source model out there.
Deepseeks I think is also quite good.
It doesn't get any press anymore.
So I think we're starting to get to this place
where there's such abundance
that actually people are just kind of like overwhelmed
with all the choice and they don't know how to differentiate.
This is like a hundred Michelin star restaurants
opening up in your city.
You just don't have enough meals to eat.
We're basically drowning in abundance to Freeberg's point.
I don't think we understand exactly
how golden this golden age is in terms of technology.
Distribution becomes really important.
I think that's why- Absolutely, we discussed this, right?
Grok inside of Hex is very valuable,
but also I think Google just said
that they're gonna drop an AI button
right into the front door core search page.
I don't know if you guys saw that, but they said that.
No, Google's doing it.
When you're logged in, you will get the snippet at the top.
Inside of YouTube, they're doing summaries
of the chat and the comments.
And then you think about what meta could do.
They already put the AI box up there,
but they'll knock some of that off. No, I they already put the AI box up there, but you know,
they'll they'll knock some of that off. No, I'm not Google
front door, like google.com. Does anyone use that anymore?
Shredding? Well, I mean, Google searches are still going. But
and Facebook is about to launch a competitor to chat and Gruk.
Yeah, well, they're gonna do a straight up a standalone app.
And the thing that they are so good at is whenever they launch
an app, it doesn't matter when they launch it,
they'll just get it to a billion people.
Yeah, I mean, that is super-sharing.
All this, I think, leads to so much abundance.
What I'm seeing in startups,
I was the first investor in a company called Superhuman,
very elegant software,
luxury software for email productivity.
Give it a shot.
What he did was... Stop. I didn't mean that's a superplug here.
But anyway, I'm so in love with the company and the founder. I
just had them on this week in startups. It's like one of the
best product minds I've ever met. Keep your ordinary and
superhuman. Now because it's gotten so cheap to do AI that
they are composing in this beta I'm in all of the replies to
your email in real time on the back end and you can see potential drafts. They summarize
everything even if you never read the summary. That would be cost prohibitive six to 12 months
ago but now it's a no brainer because they're paid software. It's like so this is going
to get very interesting very quick. Joe your thoughts on this abundance.
Yeah, I'm actually building something on email,
like you said, that works with your team
to automatically plan like, you know,
create reports on everything that comes in
and route it for you.
Because a lot of our friends, when you're a CEO,
you basically become a traffic cop.
It's actually, the email is going to do it for you.
It's going to be really nice.
But listen, I'm invested in Grok 3
and I'm biased towards Elon.
But you know, a lot of our companies
will build on top of multiple of them as well.
And I think you're talking about Cogen,
and Cognition, a lot of my companies using Devon.
It's actually just like crushing it.
This stuff's getting like 10, 15% better every month.
It's really amazing.
It's good for companies like that.
I'm mostly at that level where I'm like using all of them or using a bunch of them.
So I love the fact there's all this competition
because this makes it cheaper and better for me me for all my companies I'm building.
And it's not slowing down is the other piece of this.
No, it's getting better. It's scary. Actually, I thought I would I thought I would ask him
to and it hasn't. So no,
that's that's the part that's so fascinating to me. And then there's a really interesting
ripple that I don't know if you guys are aware of yet. But journalists who have been losing
their jobs at a tremendous pace are now being hired by data aggregators
to come in, look at queries. Let's say you had an expertise
in agriculture, Friedberg, they'll pay you and I actually
saw one of these job descriptions, 40 bucks an hour
to sit there and answer questions about agriculture,
look at answers, and refine them and do reinforcement learning.
We're going to have a new job class, which is people who train AI's and people who
fact check AI's and refine AI's. And this could be a 52 $150,000
a year job. Because every time you make the AI a little better,
everybody on the planet gets to benefit from it. This is an
extraordinary new job career. I don't know what it's going to be
called reinforcement learner. I don't know, freeburg, you get the last take here. Great job on the abundance
angle which just pushed a really great discussion here. Wrap us up with your thoughts on these
LLMs and the pace of AI.
I just agree with Chamath. I think it's like you got a lot of great stuff here. It's changing
every week. I'm not paying attention to the details anymore. New models come out every
week. This is like when
the internet launched new websites, you know, like this is
this is carrying us forward. It's impossible to dissect and
predict what's going to win when and why right now, what are you
obsessed with in the AI front? Is there are there things I use
chat GPT research a lot.
The deep research right where a bunch of web pages.
OK, and you're paying, that means the 200 bucks a month,
or you have a certain-
I pay 200 a month, yeah.
Yeah, no, I find it very good.
Yeah, and then we build everything at Oholo on GCP,
and we run a bunch of different models.
That's Google's cloud for people who don't know that right now.
Yep.
And then we run models.
They're incredible, yeah.
Yeah, lots of different tools, but it's awesome. Hey, as we wrap here, we're following our muse here
at all in whatever the besties are most interested in, we are
going to bring you the audience along with us. So Freberg and I
have been obsessed with content creation and media. So we're
doing a little media summit at South by Southwest. Apologies
that it's sold out. And then Chamath, you know, he likes this F1.
He's a big F1 fan.
I've never been, I'm really excited
that we're gonna be throwing the best party at F1
Saturday, May 4th.
I am coming.
I'm securing the bag.
As long as I get the bag, I'll be outside.
You know what?
I'll just go to 11, give me my bag
and I'll go play a tournament. I'll go to 11 and have a steak and that's it's a it's a it's a club. I'll get I'll pop some bottles
at 11 while you guys are F1. You can photoshop me in. But the fans can come and our community can
come all in.com slash events for all the details. And if you want to party on Saturday night,
big party, it's gonna be fun. We're throwing a big party in Miami around F1, and we're gonna do a little stage show beforehand,
cause it's gonna be awesome.
And we're gonna celebrate my birthday,
because I'm not gonna be able to make it in June.
Can I wear my Apple watch?
Can somebody loan me a nice watch for F1?
I can't show up with an Apple watch.
Anybody kinda?
You're not allowed to wear an Apple watch to F1.
Okay, I'm gonna put my Apple watch in my drawer.
I've never been to a four wheeler one.
Tell me which watch to get.
I want a watch that cost 25 to 75 K.
What's a good starter watch for Jake Al?
That's like an appetizer.
That's what my watch has as a watch.
Um, your watch is watch watch thing.
What should I buy for a hundred dimes?
What do you got there?
You can get a decent Patek for a hundred now.
It's like they've gone down.
Yeah.
It's yeah.
I mean, everything's collapsing.
Like she shouldn't be able to snipe something here.
It's deflation. Thanks to Trump and AI, right? You can grab
absolutely. Whatever somebody give me a suggestion.
Get a good mechanical watch. Not an automatic mechanical.
Anybody wants to sponsor me for watches and get a mention here
on the show. I will get the hell out of that. Jason at
calacanis.com for life.
I just got a text from swatch and tutor.
Oh, swatch watch. I used to wear actually in the eighties.
I don't know.
Freeburg definitely had a ton of those Casio watches, right?
Did you have the Casio where you would do your...
The G-Shock is a great watch.
I'm talking about him with the calculator watch.
I have that. I remember it was $50. It was a really big deal to
afford it. It was worth it. You play the game, it's starting to stop it as fast as you could.
That was fun. Exactly. You remember that? Yeah. I had one on the chest. I was doubling down.
I recently bought a G shock on Amazon as kind of like a memento to
hold up and my freaking daughter stole the G-stock.
It's apparently, yeah.
It's a cool-
Afrey Burke, we can all bet on this.
What calculator do you have on your desk right now?
How many calculators are on your desk now?
How many can you reach?
How many Casio's are within reach?
There's only one calculator that matters.
Only one for me.
Yeah, okay.
HP 17B, there's only one calculator.
TIA 82, what are you talking about? I got my TIA 89 still, 89 for me. Yeah. Okay. HB 17B. There's only one. What are you talking about? I got my TA 89 still. 89 for me.
Oh, now you just told me how, how you're younger than me, Joe. Now I know you're four years younger.
I am. That's true. Point of privilege actually. It was the 81, 82 transition that was like a big deal.
Yeah. You know what I was doing when you guys were on your calculator? I can't even imagine. I was
in McKinley Park in Bay Ridge getting to second base. All right, enough.
Allin.com slash events.
Did the guy consent?
Absolutely, absolutely.
He was a really hot dude.
Please, we have two genders, folks.
There's an executive order.
I read it.
All right.
All right, my Trump grade for the week is C for chaos.
A for effort with Doge.
Let's try to get back to a B President
Trump. We'll see you all next time on the all in body boys. Thanks, Joe. Thanks, guys.
That's fun. Bye bye. All right, everybody. We're suited up. We're suited up because the
czar the wolf of the White House is here. My brother, David Sachs, we were trying to
get you on the program, you were going to make a drop in to talk about all this great
crypto news coming out of the White House. And let's face it,
this was a some people saying chaotic, some people say intense,
this is a pretty amazing, intense week for the
administration. So we'll get into a little bit of that. But
you're here specifically to talk about the crypto reserve. So
welcome back to your program,
the All In Podcast, David Sachs.
Good to be back.
I see that you've suited up here.
Yeah, I mean, I figured,
I was, for people who weren't here for the pre-show,
I get on, Sachs is wearing a white shirt and a tie,
I'm wearing a blazer and a white shirt.
So I'm like, ah, I gotta go put a tie on.
He's like, ah, J. Kyle wore a blazer,
I gotta go get a blazer.
So then we came back and here we are.
Well, look, I just have to correct one thing.
I think it's been a very smooth week at the White House.
The president has lived up to one of his campaign promises.
This is not something new.
I remember you go all the way back to his national speech
during the campaign and he reiterated this many times
that he wanted to create a strategic Bitcoin reserve.
Sometimes he called it a digital asset stockpile.
What we've ultimately done here is both.
He also in his week one EOM crypto,
you guys remember I came on the show to talk about that.
He asked our President's Working Group on Digital Asset
to evaluate the idea of a reserve or stockpile.
And we made a recommendation
and this administration is moving at tech speed.
It's really great to work for an administration
where you can actually get things done
and things move quickly.
We made our recommendation
and then we worked with the lawyers to implement it
and the president signed it last night.
But this is fully consistent with everything he's always said.
Agree on that.
I guess the one criticism that you're gonna get
when you go face the media, so I'm not supposed to put it here,
is the order in which you're doing things.
Sometimes Mr. Trump is very expressive on the social
medias, which is better than let's say the previous
administration, which just wasn't available and in
cognitive decline. So I guess the the the question of he
announces something and then you guys explain it deeper. Is that
the optimal way to do this? Should we not worry about it?
Should you come out with like more official stuff? I guess that's the move fast break things that we are
used to in Silicon Valley. But that people, you know, whether it's in business, are maybe a little
concerned about that things are maybe different now in the White House and in how we're running
our government, maybe you can expand on that. Have you ever considered that maybe you just had
an overreaction to a tweet?
Well, okay, so if we're gonna place the blame on me.
Well, I'm just saying that.
I wasn't the only one.
The original crypto OGs were like, wait a second,
why is he picking these three and not these three?
You know, so that made a lot of people
putting myself out of it, like, whoa, what's going on here?
Is he picking favorites?
And that's, I guess, everybody's big concern. So maybe you could asway.
Yeah, we're not picking favorites, obviously, except I will say this, we do think Bitcoin
is special. And I can get into the reasons why that's a great thing. Yeah. Well, I mean,
Bitcoin is the original cryptocurrency. It's the first one. It's the only one that doesn't
have an issuer, right? It's very decentralized. It's, you know, crypto, they call this the immaculate conception. We don't really know how it got here. We don't know who's it. It's the only one that doesn't have an issuer, right? It's very decentralized. Crypto, they call this the immaculate conception. We don't really know how it got here. We don't
know who Satoshi is. It's almost mystical, you would say. It's the most valuable one. It has a
$2 trillion market cap, and it's the most secure. It's never been hacked, right? So we're now over
15 years into this journey, and there's been a lot of people who've been skeptical along the way,
and there's been a lot of ups and downs. But here it is. I mean, I remember back in 2011, I think it's the first time I bought a Bitcoin.
I think it was at $120. Now it's at $90,000. Again, there've been all sorts of wild swings
along the way. But this thing just keeps chugging along. And you can think of that
$2 trillion market cap as like a $2 trillion bug bounty.
If there was a way to hack this, there's every incentive in the world.
And by hack, I mean like to double spend, create basically a counterfeit Bitcoin, I
guess would be the way for people to think about it.
And so the security-
It is a miracle.
It hasn't been compromised.
I think we can all say that.
Well, I don't know if it's a miracle.
I think it's exceptional design.
And so I think what you could say is that it's been
tested in a very robust way and there's been every incentive to basically break the encryption
and it continues to chug along. And so I think the price has gone up as the protocol has gotten more
acceptance. And this is another point is that Bitcoin is most widely accepted as a store of
value throughout the world. So we do believe it should be treated special. Now, that being said, we're also creating the
digital asset stockpile. So all the other digital assets-
Yeah, explain the difference between these two. So there's a digital asset stockpile,
that's the picker. And then on the other side, there's a strategic reserve for Bitcoin,
because we do acquire Bitcoin, we, the United States of America, when we seize from terrorists, you know, criminals, etc. we do seize these. And then we often make
the mistake of liquidating them when maybe we should be holding them. Yeah. So it's like
that architecture.
So we have the reserve, we have the stockpile. So the reserve is just Bitcoin. The goal is
long term preservation. Think of it as like a digital Fort Knox for digital gold. We want
to put the digital gold in there. We want to keep it secure.
We never want to sell it. That's the goal of the reserve. And you're right that we've made the
mistake in the past of selling this stuff. At one point in time, we had about 400,000 Bitcoin on the
federal balance sheet. We sold roughly half of that for something like $360 million total.
If we had held all of that, it would be worth just that the portion we sold would be worth over
17 billion. So we made this mistake of prematurely selling Bitcoin when we should have held it.
We don't want to make that mistake with regard to the rest of it.
We think there's around 200,000 coins left on the federal balance sheet,
but the truth is that nobody knows because we've never done a proper audit.
So part of what this executive order provides is that we're going to do for the first time
government-wide accounting of the digital assets that we actually have.
So digital assets emerge in some department. I don't know, the FBI sees this. Some of the
CIA sees this. I don't know which organization winds up having them. They're going to be
legally required to report that and then put them in the reserve.
They'll be legally required to report it
and then they'll go in the reserve
if there's a final adjudication.
So, you know, obviously if those coins could go back
as restitution to victims,
or if the person who they were seized from
wins their court case and gets them back,
they're not gonna go into the federal reserve.
But if there's been a final adjudication
and a final forfeiture, yes, those will go into the reserve. Anyway, that's Bitcoin. Okay, so then you got the
stockpile. Let me just talk about that. So first of all, like I said, we don't know exactly
what digital assets the federal government has. I've seen reports that it might have,
for example, 50,000 ETH, which is Ethereum. But again, we need to get to the bottom of
that. When we figure out exactly what the assets are, we're going to move them into the digital stockpile. The purpose of the stockpile is
responsible stewardship. It's a place for safekeeping. It's a centralized, you could say,
account under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury. And the Secretary of the Treasury
will figure out how to maximize the values of these holdings. Now, there's a couple of important
differences between stockpile and reserve.
So one is the reserve, the executive order actually provides
that the secretary of the treasury will not sell the Bitcoin.
Okay, we're prohibited from selling the Bitcoin.
There's no such prohibition with respect to the stockpile.
If the secretary of the treasury decides
that's in the long-term interest of the US
to rebalance the portfolio or change the portfolio, the Secretary has the discretion to do that.
Okay, which makes sense because there's a long tail of crypto, we might see something
that we don't have the ability to predict the future and we don't have the staff to
sit there and look at these assets every day like a fund manager wouldn't say, huh, what
do we do with these?
What percentage should it be of the overall stockpot of the overall holdings? So maybe the decision with the theorem is, hey, this thing's waning. We just put
it into Bitcoin because we know that's the more solid one. Yeah, that's what I'm reading into it.
Yeah. I mean, I think that that's that's largely fair. I mean, look, I think that the stockpile
should be subject to good portfolio management, right? Unfortunately, we have a Secretary of the
Treasury who is an extremely successful former hedge fund manager
So he's gonna figure out the best way to manage these assets and we give him the flexibility to do portfolio management
Whereas like I said, he has to live and die with what he does
He has to make those decisions and that's gonna be you know, part of how he's evaluated by the president
So hopefully he's gonna be sharp about that, right?
But the reserve is different right the reserve is just digital for Knox now
There's one other important difference between stockpile and reserve.
So with respect to reserve, the the EO provides that the secretaries that I'm talking about, Treasury and Commerce,
they're allowed to figure out strategies to accumulate more Bitcoin for the reserve if those strategies are budget neutral and don't cost the
taxpayer anything. Okay, so it's possible that we could, I'm not saying that we will, but it gives them,
it authorizes them to acquire more Bitcoin if they can figure out a way to do it that
doesn't impact the federal budget or the deficit or taxpayers. Right.
Okay. Well, I had a very simple suggestion for this, which I'll float up the flagpole
here and see what you think. You probably, we've talked about it on previous all ends before you want it. How about a simple
crypto tax? You know, crypto wants to be legal. You're the crypto czar. Crypto wants to be
regulated. They want the rules. They want the rails. Simple suggestion from your bestie. Why
don't we charge every transaction in the United States 0.01% just about one bit in that native currency.
So you want to trade some Solana for Ethereum for XRP, whatever, you know, put in whatever names you want there.
The government says, hey, you want to have a great vibrant system here.
We're going to need to take just the most modest of taxes, de minimis, in fact, in the native crypto and put in the stockpile.
This seems to me like a very, that's always how taxes
start is that they're very, they're described as very being
very modest. You know, when the income tax started, it only
applied to like 1000 Americans. Yes, the legislators swore up
and down that it would never be applied to middle class people.
So I don't particularly like the idea of new taxes, even if it's
it's promised that they just won't affect people very much.
That sounds burdensome to me. But look, we have very successful-
Well, this would, and just so you know, this is, would be like more like a sales tax that
would be handled by Coinbase, would be handled by Robinhood, would be handled by those platforms.
They would administer it. It would be a transactional tax, not an income tax. So if you have a bunch,
it's not a wealth tax and a seizing tax, but I'll let you percolate on it.
If you can convince, if you can convince the secretary of the commerce or the secretary
of treasury to run with your idea, then it could potentially happen. I mean, they have the
flexibility to figure out budget neutral ways to accumulate Bitcoin. I don't know what those ways
are going to be, but they're creative. They're very successful businessmen. And if they figure out
a way to do this, then it can be considered.
That's the
Okay, well, I'll be in the commissary later having lunch with you can introduce me. So
let me just give you a fastball here. Well, we'll see if it gets in the strike zone. The
appearance of impropriety is what people are concerned with the picking of winners and
losers. President Trump was the crypto president, he went and he gave that famous speech, I'm going to get rid of Gary Gensler, we're going to make it legal.
And to his credit, he has fulfilled that promise.
Which means, hey, the donor class on that side said we're going to back the crypto president,
not the anti crypto team.
Which means a lot of people who are on the Twitter and the socials have donated a lot.
They have a lot of holdings.
So this appearance, which you've now I would give you credit have cleaned up lot, they have a lot of holdings. So this appearance, which you've now,
I would give you credit, have cleaned up here.
Hey, there's two different things going on here
and we're not using taxpayer money.
We get all that.
But the appearance here is, hey,
maybe somebody's gonna benefit.
Of course, they came after you first for that,
without the facts.
You were very clear.
You cleared all your positions.
You sold everything.
You divested.
So let's make that clear to the dumb-dumbs who are just trying to say that you're personally. Let me address that. Yeah,
please. Because this is ridiculous. Yeah. Well, people came out right away and were saying that
somehow I was engaged in a scheme to pump my bags or to basically create exit liquidity for myself
and billionaire stuff like that. You have to understand that those accusations, I mean,
they're accusing me of a crime. And serious crime and they're doing it with no
evidence whatsoever. So these things are basically it's mortal
slander, slander and defamation. In any event, what they didn't know and what I then
proceeded to put out there is that I sold all my cryptocurrency prior to day
one of the administration because I didn't want to even have the appearance
of a conflict.
And by the way, I could have waited.
I didn't have to do it like that, but I decided to do it and take it upon myself to do that,
because you just know that when it comes to crypto, there's going to be a lot of fluctuations
in the market.
You never want someone to be able to point at one of those fluctuations and say somehow
that the cryptos are benefited from that and create a conspiracy theory, which is exactly what basically happens
So first of all, I got rid of all my cryptocurrency prior to day one
Craft also sold a craft is the venture firm that you funded right?
It's done a lot of great work supporting founders here in so we basically sold
I think it was around 200 million dollars of crypto of which around 85 million
Dollars was personally attributable to myself.
And we cleared that before day one, pay taxes on it,
and basically so there wouldn't be a conflict.
So then the smear shifted in another direction was,
okay, well, maybe he doesn't own crypto,
but he's in crypto funds, okay?
And so they pointed to, you know,
Bitwise and MultiCoin Capital,
and I was also in Blockchain Capital.
And so then the fund managers came out and one by one all said, actually, David called
us over two months ago and said, he's going to need to divest from our funds.
And so we also did that.
So you know, I think basically they've kind of given up on this.
But look, it's very easy for people.
Why let the facts get in the way of a good slander?
Seriously, you know, full disclosure, you know, you when
you saw me doing the Sequoia Scouts program said, Hey, why
don't you do a fund? I'll be the anchor, I'll be your first LP.
I mean, one of the most generous things you've done in our
relationship. And I had to have a call with you, you know, weeks
ago and say, Hey, okay, you're going to divest. Okay, fine. No
problem. No, it's not not a problem for me. You sell the
assets to somebody else. So the way people understand how this mechanically works, when you're
in a fund, you have no sex cannot tell me what to do in the
fund, he just put money in it, like I put money in other
people's funds, they go and invest and 10 years later, you
get a return and hopefully that return in a venture firm or
private firm beats the markets, public markets or whatever. But
then you can also sell that interest to somebody else. So
mechanically, it takes time to sell it at 50%, 25% off. And it's painful. You will lose,
I estimate you're going to lose, you know, I don't want to be gratuitous here, but eight,
nine figures by serving the country for a couple of years. And not only that, the great irony of
this is the one thing holding back the industry is regulation,
over regulation of AI and nuclear regulation and crypto. You're going into fix the two things
that were number one and two on all of our agendas in Silicon Valley in terms of getting returns the
next four years. So the sacrifice you're making is extraordinary. And you're making it a better
environment, a regulated environment for the rest of us to do commerce. So I just want to point out that you're losing like double here.
Right? Well, let me let me just underscore something you said.
Your service and I don't know how much to pay. How much they paying you for this job?
What do you get paid like 50 grand, 100 grand?
I'm an unpaid consultant to the government.
Really? Is that actually accurate?
You get no money.
No, I don't want I don't want anything.
This is costing you money.
No, of course it is. But it's it's it's an honor to serve and it's an honor to be asked to serve.
And in particular, it's an honor to serve this president
because he really wants to make the country great again.
So that's why I'm doing it.
But yeah, look, I think it's a lazy and stupid narrative
to say that the reason why someone
who's already successful in business
goes into government is to somehow make more money.
I was making money before.
This involves a substantial disruption of my business interests and I have to divest a lot
of those business interests and in divesting I have to be either a taxpayer or I have to take a
significant discount and it costs you money. So, you know, it's just a lazy narrative that people
create but there's no truth to it and just to underscore a point that you made a second ago,
you were one of the funds I divested from,
not because you're a crypto fund,
but because you might have a crypto position.
We went through, I think, the launch fund's holdings,
and I think there was something crypto-related in there.
And so-
We have one or two that pivoted into crypto, yes.
Right, so I just didn't wanna have any problem there, so.
Listen, this is the nature of the politics we have.
People are, you know, it gets very personal.
You know that better than anybody.
And so, you know, that's why you're here.
And hopefully we can clean this all up and let people know that,
hey, the intent here is good.
So just to go back to one other point you said about not picking winners and losers,
I think that's a very important comment that you made that I see as fundamental to my job. I mean, look, I think we do think that Bitcoin is special for
the reasons I said. Beyond that, we do not want to be in the business of picking and choosing
winners in the space. And again, if some other digital asset could prove that it's as
decentralized and as secure and as widely accepted as a store of value as Bitcoin, then
maybe it could be elevated in the same way that Bitcoin has.
I mean, I'm laying out the criteria for you.
But look, beyond that, we don't want to be picking winners and losers in the space.
And that's not my job.
I mean, my job is not to be a regulator or to anoint which ones are good or bad.
It's to basically be a policy advisor for innovation.
And I'll just tell you the way that I see the, you know, all the digital assets in the space is that what's fundamental is disclosure.
If you're an issuer of a digital asset, you need to disclose, you know,
all the material facts about what you're doing and those facts have to be accurate. You can't lie.
My view is that if you, if you the issuer, lie about something,
the government should come down on you like a ton of bricks
because that's fraud.
Okay, but as long as you do this in an honest way,
people should be able to trade these things.
I understand that you think a lot of them are garbage.
You might be right.
You could express that view in a trade,
but as long as everyone has been above board
in terms of disclosure,
people should have the right to trade these things.
And some are gonna make money, some are gonna lose money.
It's about the freedom to basically trade,
to hold these assets.
The government doesn't wanna get in the way of that.
It just wants to make sure that the information is out there,
that it's honest.
And if people lie in order to profit,
I'm all in favor of going after them.
Well, and we already have a regulated market as an analogy.
And when you tell a lie and you know, we already have a regulated market as an analogy. And when you tell
a lie, and you sell a share in a company, whether it's a private or a public company, the SEC has a
term for that. It's called securities fraud. And we, you know, have this new type of device. It's
very innovative. It could be an NFT, it could be a trading card, it could be an actual utility token,
where you burn it in use of a service, or it could be anything. It could be whatever the person describes it as. But what's important is there's an entity with a group of people, I think you would agree, who have said we have ownership of this we're incorporated here in the United States, not in Panama, not in the BVI, not in some, you know, other place where maybe they're a little faster or looser with regulations, you got to be here in the have to be insured in some way maybe there has to be a board like there does in Delaware or in an LLC there has to be some person where the buck stops
and if you lie
while committing a transaction or taking money for an asset would be securities fraud. And yes, people will come down on you like a ton of bricks. And if you promote things, and you
don't disclose it, well, we have rules about that as well. We
saw many celebrities get pinched last time for tweeting about
cryptocurrencies. And this is the stuff that I think has to
stop. I think it should feel more like what we do in angel
investing, the private companies and in public companies. So
that's your job. When are we going to see
that framework emerge? Because here you're only like 40, 50 days into this, I think.
When do we see the actual bones of a framework? So if I want to do J coin and I want to make an angel investing coin, or I want to do something fun, an NFT collection for all in or something,
when will we have the actual rules of the road? And that's going to be
multiple agencies, right? Yeah, what you're describing is is known in Washington or the
the area of policy that you're describing is known as market structure. And market structure
is about providing a clear framework for market participants. It would define what is the security,
what's the commodity, what's simply a collectible, you know, it's property, but it's not a security.
And then what are the rules for each category? That's known as market structure.
There is a bill that passed the last Congress in the House, but Biden basically, he didn't veto it,
but he basically, he and the Democrats stopped in the Senate, the Democrats did. It was called FIT 21.
And it was authored by French Hill, who's now the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee. So
we expect that he will be introducing a new version of his
bill, probably in the next few weeks. I don't think I'm
breaking any news by saying this. I think people expect it. And
that's going to provide the framework for market structure.
It's going to provide a lot of the definitions that you're
talking about. Now, I agree with your sentiment,
but I will say that I might have a different view than you
of what is the security, what's not.
I mean, to me, collectibles are not securities.
But if it's a collectible, you've
got to disclaim that, look, this has no intrinsic value.
That's a collectible.
Think about a baseball card.
A baseball card is a piece of cardboard.
It has no intrinsic value.
But the value comes from basically other collectors
being willing to buy it from you.
And you could just say that that's irrational or whatever.
But so look, I think as long as people disclaim
that this coin has no intrinsic value,
they should be able to issue meme coins.
It's a separate question why people would wanna buy them.
But look, in my view, that's very different
than someone who goes out as an issuer and says, I'm issuing a token or a coin that has lots of
functionality and has lots of value. And you'll hear some of these guys even say that, hey, our
token is more valuable than Bitcoin. You should value it more highly. Well, if you're promising
that and you're saying that it's going to have certain functionality, you better be telling the truth about it.
Yeah, then we start getting into the Howey test and people can go look that up if they
want.
What I will say is there's an educational process that has to come in here, which we've
gone through as the United States, when people would buy interest in mines, people would
buy interest in gold claims, oil fields.
And that's when a lot of these regulations came out in the 20s around accreditation.
We've spoken about this before.
It's a pet peeve of mine, but I think there should be an
educational framework here. And I think there should also be
some nuance that you could work on specifically with this group
of being clear that when you have a ticker symbol associated
with something, or you do charts associated with something, you
know, it starts to smell like a dog looks like a dog, it's
quacking like a duck. But then in the terms of services is, Hey, this is
a collectible. I think there needs to be some ground rules, which maybe it says, Hey, these
need to be presented in a certain way at the top level. So the nuance of disclosure is
so important. When I tweet something, if it was an advertiser or a sponsor of all in or
this week in startups, or any influencer, or you did the
would you do this? And you said, I love, you know, this brand,
you and I both were well, you were an investor in eight sleep
by him. If we were to tweet about that, as investors, we
don't have to disclose. But if we were paid for that, the FTC
has rules you have to put this is a paid partnership, you
cannot confuse consumers. And I think that's where you're going to
have to do a little bit of cleanup work and structure as
well as the disclosure and how this appears. And then also,
maybe the educational system. So you know, if you want to own a
firearm, if you want to drive a car, if you want to be, you
know, a beautician, and listen, we can talk about over
regulation, you got to take tests, man, it would just be so
much better if consumers can take about over regulation, you got to take tests, man, it would just be so much better if consumers can
take, you know, like a 50 question test, just to say, Hey,
they understand what we're talking about here in terms of
diversification. So they don't yolo their entire mortgage in
house into one crypto. So what are your thoughts on those two
issues, disclosures, how it's presented, and then accreditation
and maybe a path to accreditation, sophisticated
investor test is how I refer to it for all Americans because 90% of people can't participate
in private companies.
Your thoughts?
Well, disclosure is the key.
Like I said, I mean, these projects should have to disclose certain things.
I think, for example, the token cap table should be disclosed.
Who are the insiders?
How much do they have?
When are they selling?
You know, that's that's information
the market should always know, in my opinion.
Easily done with the technology
lauded by the crypto community, the blockchain.
This could just be on the blockchain.
This was always the problem we had
as venture capitalists with.
Hey, this is a token project.
Who owns the tokens?
Where are they?
When can I sell?
When can you sell the insiders?
Yes.
Yeah, I don't think you have to disclose
everyone owns a token.
That could be hard to comply with, but I't think you have to disclose everyone owns a token.
That could be hard to comply with, but I think you should have to disclose.
Over 5%.
You should have to disclose the insiders and their sales plans and their lockups.
And I would also say how new tokens get created.
I mean, if this is a fully centralized token where they can just admit more,
people need to know that because there's no scarcity, right?
But if there's somehow an enforcement mechanism and there's no scarcity, right? But if there's somehow an
enforcement mechanism and there's enforced scarcity, then that's a different story. So,
yeah, these things have to be disclosed. And by the way, I think the market structure bills
will do that. There's a version of this in FIT 21, last Congress, I think it'll be the next one.
And moreover, the SEC is looking right now at these rules and they're going to create
their own frameworks. They're doing an excellent job. What's the new SEC chief? I was doing some research on him. He's a really pro, actually.
More Americans being able to invest in privates, private equity, etc. And he's given speeches
on it in the past.
So the person who's been nominated for the new chair of the SEC is named Paul Atkins
and he has not been confirmed yet. The confirmation hearings still need to happen. Separately,
Hester Purs, who's a commissioner at the SEC, is in charge of... I know Hester. I've had her on this week in startups
a couple of times. She's great. She's excellent. She's very well informed. And she's very sharp
taking the lead on all the crypto related stuff. So I trust her and I trust the SEC to produce those
detailed frameworks that you're talking about. Yeah. I think that my role as call it innovation
policy advisor is just to kind of make sure
that we have the big picture right.
And I'm very confident that the SEC, the CFTC and the legislators, they're going to figure
out the balance here.
Sacks, you got to go.
Really proud of the work here.
Congratulations on cleaning this all up and presenting a really thoughtful plan that we
can all ask you hard questions on.
Appreciate you taking the hard questions here on the podcast.
And good luck when you do the rest of the media circus.
I wonder if I'm going to be the hardest questioner of you.
And for people asking, yes, I'm wearing a suit because I am now
joining the administration. Big announcement.
I'm the official podcaster, the official moderator of the Trump White House.
I'm just kidding. People actually believe you. All right, man podcaster, the official moderator of the Trump White House. I'm just kidding.
People actually believe you. All right, man. Listen, I got a
joke. But good. All right. Love you, brother. We'll see you soon. Cheers.
All right. Bye.
All right, everybody. I'm obviously super conflicted. Sax is my friend of 20
years plus we're partners here on the all in podcast. And of course, I'm
rooting for the administration. But I got that journalist blood in me, I always want to call
balls and strikes, I'm gonna as you just heard, ask hard
questions. So if you're wondering where I'm coming from,
I'm going to ask her questions to my friends, because they're
doing important work for the American people. And for the
rest of the people on the planet, Candley, these are
important decisions that sax is going to have to make about
crypto AI that Elon's making with Doge, I'm gonna ask her
questions. That's the way it's going to be. And so I'm really
excited that they're coming on here, they're going to take the
hard questions for me, but they're done in a certain
spirit, which is, yes, they're my friends, but they got an
important job. So they do have to ask answer the hard
questions for the American people. And I'm also curious,
and we're all curious where they're coming from.
So I feel so privileged that they're choosing to come on all in to face those
hard questions. We'll see you all next time. I'm going all in And it's said we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it
Love you Wesley
The queen of Ken Wong
I'm going all in
What your winners line?
What your winners line?
What your winners line?
Besties are gone
Go 13
That is my dog taking an audition for driveway sex
Oh man
Oh man
My habitat sure will meet me at the...
We should all just get a room and just have one big huge orgy cause they're all just useless.
It's like this sexual tension that they just need to release somehow.
What?
Your.
Beak.
What?
Your.
Beak.
What?
We need to get merch.
Besties are back.
I'm doing all this.
I'm doing all this. I'm doing all this. I'm doing all this. I'm doing all this. I'm doing all in I'm doing all in