Camp Gagnon - How Close Was Iran to Nukes Really?
Episode Date: March 10, 2026Dr. Ivana Hughes from Columbia University joins us today to discuss the serious threat of nuclear war, what the fallout effects would be, and to explore other interesting topics…Welcome to CAMP! �...�️Shoutout to our sponsors: Shoutout to our sponsors: Ultra and Hims & Hers Gett 15% OFF For New Customers With Code “CAMP” Who You Visit http://takeultra.comFor Simple, Online Access to Personalized and Affordable Care for Hair Loss, Visit: http://hims.com/campWant the even WILDER theories?SIGN UP TO THE PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/cw/CampGagnon👕🧢 Shop CAMP Merch: https://camp-rd.com/collections/ufo🎟️ 🎫 Comedy Tour Tickets: https://markgagnonlive.com🎩👽 Daily Dose Of History: https://www.dailytodayinhistory.comTimestamps:0:00 Welcome to CAMP1:51 Nuclear Fallout Effects + Nuclear Winter24:00 Power Behind Nuclear Explosions36:13 World Without Nukes + Theory of Nukes52:19 Fear of Nuclear Threat57:29 Close Calls of Nuclear Destruction1:10:04 Politics In Nuclear Decisions1:25:01 Disarming Iran’s Nuclear Arsenal1:38:18 Andromeda Galaxy Time Dilation1:40:26 UFO’s & Nukes1:43:30 Economics of Nuclear Threat1:51:13 Future Hope#podcast #mystery #interview #foryou #horror #knowledge #history #science #campgagnon #educational #warzone #war
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's like creating a miniature sun on Earth.
You don't even have to kill us all.
We'll just kill each other.
But human civilization is going to be gone.
This is Dr. Ivina Hughes.
She's a chemist at Columbia University and the president of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
She's advised on nuclear issues tied to the United Nations,
studied the real world fallout of nuclear testing, and spends her life thinking about one uncomfortable truth.
The fact that a tiny group of humans controls the fate of the entire world.
We often talk about nukes like they're just big bombs, a mushroom cloud, but that's not what actually kills you.
What matters is what happens after.
Firestorms, ashes, darken skies, and potentially even nuclear winter.
And here's the part that should bother you the most.
The fate of the planet doesn't sit with the voters or with the people of nations.
It sits with maybe 10 people.
We're told that this system is safe because if everyone has nukes, everyone will be calm.
But this system only works if everyone stays rational forever.
And history suggests that that might be optimistic.
And today, Dr. Hughes explains what a nuclear bomb would actually feel like, what the colors
would look like in the sky, how the heat would actually affect your skin.
She also explains how current war is happening right now in Europe and in the Middle East
are pushing us closer to a nuclear disaster.
This episode is absolutely fascinating.
Dr. Hughes is brilliant and extremely eloquent, and I really enjoyed hearing her
perspective and her passion for humanity.
So if you were interested in the global state of affairs, the most up-to-date information on nuclear wars and nuclear technology, and why it matters to you and maybe just a glimmer of hope about how we can actually overcome this.
Well, this is the episode for you.
So sit back, relax, and welcome to camp.
Ivana, thank you so much for joining me.
Thank you for having me. I'm thrilled to be with you.
We spoke about a year and a half ago about the existential threat of nuclear war.
And when we spoke the first time, I had mentioned to you that I came into the conversation fairly naive.
And after our conversation, I had a fundamentally different perspective on how truly existential the threat is.
And how of, you know, all times to live in history, this is the moment that I'm brought into.
And, you know, like we've eradicated diseases.
Childhood mortality is down in many parts of the world.
But yet there is this technology that looms almost as a cloburness.
hanging over every single person on this earth that is in the control of, you know, a small
number of people that could effectively wipe out humanity. So today we're going to rehash,
you know, some of the things from our previous conversation that haven't changed, like the threat
of nuclear war. And we're also going to kind of discuss the current, you know, status of where
things are, kind of the state of the world. And if that nuclear, you know, doomsday clock is kind
of ticking closer to midnight and what that really means. And old.
Ultimately, ideally, we come away from this conversation with some idea of how big this is and what we can do.
You and I, you know, as just regular people and where that kind of leaves us.
So I guess maybe the first place to start is just kind of painting a vivid picture of what nuclear threat is and what exactly a nuclear attack on the United States would look like.
Because I think for many people, it feels like a really far away problem.
So if you could paint the picture, what would the, you know, minute by minute kind of scenario be?
Thank you for having me again.
I know it's not an easy or actually not the most fun conversation talking about nuclear weapons,
but I think you put it really beautifully that we are living at the time of so much progress and just so much opportunity and hope for.
humanity and a better future. And at the same time, here we are on this gorgeous, beautiful
planet with, you know, wars erupting with countries, you know, in conflict, overtly, covertly
tensions all over the place. It's really not a good time. And on top of all of this is really this
technology that in some sense we've been building for now 80 years and technology that
throughout that time has quite literally threatened to destroy the planet. I don't mean that
the planet itself would disappear. The planet would still be there, whether or not it would
be livable is a really big question mark. And certainly, I think that a nuclear war on
this planet would actually most certainly destroy human civilization. Whether all humans are
wiped out is a question, whether all life is wiped out is a question, but human civilization is
going to be gone. And so what is that picture? That picture starts with an understanding that
currently in the world, we have 12.5,000 nuclear warheads in possession of nine different countries,
the United States.
United States and Russia have the most nuclear weapons.
Actually, Russia has a little bit more than the United States.
They're both at about 5, 5.5,000 nuclear warheads each.
So the rest of the states, they have them, the other seven, much smaller number in the mostly low hundreds, would shine up to about 500 today.
And each of these nuclear warheads is, most of them are far more powerful than the bombs that were used on attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
So in July of 1945, the United States had three nuclear warheads.
It used one of them in what's called a test, the Trinity test in the deserts of New Mexico,
actually had devastating consequences for a local population.
Let's set that the site for the moment.
And then it used to in attacks on Japanese cities of Hiroshima Nagasaki,
and in those attacks on the order of 200,000 people died.
between the two cities.
Which, just to put in context, that is a time when there's only three nuclear warheads that exist.
That exists in possession of one country.
And that resulted in fundamentally changing the polarity of the world.
It affected the global power structure and resulted in the casualties of 200,000 people.
Absolutely. And the humanitarian catastrophe that unfolded in both Hiroshima and Nagasaki is just really unimaginable.
I mean, these were human beings that were vaporized, right?
So in the, right, by the epicenter, both of these bombs were airbursts.
So they were exploded about 500 meters above the ground.
So they form a fireball and then that, you know, energy dissipated.
When we talk about this fireball, the fireball is basically has the temperature of the sun.
It's like creating a miniature sun on earth.
And so people were quite literally people buildings, you know, quite literally vaporized.
So just turn kind of like your, you know, water on the stove disappears, right?
And then obviously as you moved further and further, farther and farther from the epicenter,
then you would have people with third degree burns.
you would have destruction from just the blast, the destruction from the energy that goes into the blast.
And then on top of all of this, you also have radiation.
And again, this is just one single bomb.
Hiroshima bomb was the equivalent of 15 kilotons of TNT.
So that's 15,000 tons of a chemical explosive.
So that's how we sort of underestimate.
understand how powerful these bombs are. My telling you how much uranium or plutonium is in a nuclear
bomb wouldn't give you that sense of just how powerful they are. But again, today we have
nuclear weapons in these arsenals that are dozens, if not hundreds of times more powerful
than those early bombs, and there's a total of 12.5,000 of them. And we know that if something like
a nuclear war were to occur, and let's even just for a moment take India and Pakistan, both of which
have about 150 nuclear warheads and estimated on average to be 100 kilotons. So it's about
seven Hiroshima bombs equivalent.
If those two countries were to use their entire arsenals in a nuclear war, it's estimated
the 130 million people would die just from the attacks.
We also know from Hiroshima and Nagasaki that basically the day of or just in the immediate
aftermath of the bombings, a certain.
number of people died, and then within months, the number of casualties basically doubled
from the impacts of radiation. So if you have this 130 million, you know, the day off,
that's like people who are vaporized or blown apart, et cetera, and then you would have casualties
from radiation as well. But that's not where the impact of.
nuclear war ends. In fact, last year when there was a, it was just three or four days, a
conflict between India and Pakistan. And I think there was, there were some comments on the
internet, why would we, why do we need to worry about, you know, let them do whatever they want?
Well, it turns out that if they go to a nuclear war, that's going to impact the entire
planet. How is it going to impact the entire planet? There are two major effects. One is nuclear
winter. That is the fact that if these bombs are used in attacks on cities and there are widespread
fires as a result of the explosions, those fires would produce so much soot that would go into the
atmosphere and then block incoming sunlight, reduce temperatures on the planet, and reduce them
to such a degree, the food would begin to, food growing would begin to fail, agriculture would
begin to fail. And within two years, it's estimated that actually more than two billion people
would die from starvation around the planet. That's just India-Pakistan nuclear war.
Not even including the chain of proxy alliances that these nations have.
Not including, not just, they call it in these scenarios, limited regional nuclear war, right?
So India and Pakistan do their thing.
Nobody else gets involved.
And of course, we actually don't even think that's what would happen.
But just to illustrate how serious this is.
And then there's another level where the U.S. and Russia would essentially use,
one-third of their current arsenals each, and that would end up with 360 million immediate
deaths followed by over 5 billion people dying of starvation. That's really the end.
And these are estimates. It could be much worse. Maybe it could even be better.
but this is at the level of a collapse of human civilization.
There's something else nuclear weapons can do that doesn't even require you to explode the bombs on cities and kill women and children and so on.
It's called electromagnetic pulse.
It's when you explode a nuclear warhead high above the atmosphere, about the 100 miles,
up into, away from surface, and you explode the nuclear warhead, and it basically sends out
this radiation that then interacts with particles in the atmosphere and creates something
called the electromagnetic pulse, which ends up shutting down electricity in entire regions.
It's estimated, and we've known this since the 50s, like we've known this for a long time.
It's estimated that you need just three such weapons to shut down electricity over the entire United States.
And that's not a blackout.
That's not like, oh, we lost electricity and it's coming back in three days or five days or seven days.
It's not coming back.
That's electricity.
That is not coming back.
you don't even have to kill us all.
We'll just kill each other, right?
Like, can you imagine?
Right.
Can you imagine this society without electricity?
Where's the food going to come from?
Logistics, supply chains, global banking.
Everything.
Everything collapses, right?
Where's your money?
Yeah.
Right?
If there's no electricity, you don't have any money.
I mean, it's almost, it's almost too much to even try to figure out.
But that's, that's the kind of.
of thing that nuclear weapons can do and why they're so dangerous and why they really represent
this, as you so eloquently put it at the beginning, this existential threat that's looming
over all of humanity.
Yeah.
And that's been doing that for 80 years.
Yeah.
I mean, again, I just, I'm in exercise and kind of like prepping for speaking with you,
I put myself in the shoes of trying to like really feel what it would be like to be in a
where a nuclear bomb went off, you know, 10 miles away. I was, you know, 20 miles away from the blast
zone. And it's really horrifying. Like, I even found, like, a little bit of a write-up that kind of
can paint that picture, like, really vividly. And I implore the audience just to imagine
whatever city you're in, whatever place you're in, just imagine you see this light. And it's beyond
the, it's not the sun. It's, like, beyond brightness. It's nothing you've ever comprehended
before. If you're in the blast zone, you're immediately eviscerated. You don't even know.
know that it happened by the time you're dead. And as a quote, I think maybe you mentioned last
time we spoke, that the living would envy the dead. Yes. Yes. Is sort of how people, I think,
around Hiroshima described the fallout. That quote specifically comes from Nikita Khrushchev,
who was a Soviet leader and who negotiated with President Kennedy during the Cuban Missile
Crisis, and they also negotiated the limited test ban treaty and so on. But
it's that recognition that this is just this is not something we want to even think about.
I actually admire you.
I'd love to hear the description that you offer to read.
I admire you for thinking in this way.
I think about nuclear weapons all the time and I really, I just kind of refuse to think about
what would happen.
You know, there are novels, there are films, there are other things.
And for me, it's, I somehow have this feeling that what I really want to spend my kind of intellectual and emotional energy on is what can I do to prevent this from ever happening.
Of course.
You know.
I think you're maybe more aware than the average person of just how horrific this may be.
Yeah.
No, no.
Like, that's how I felt like even thinking about it.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
I've read descriptions that if you held your hand up, you might see your bones through your hand.
that there's literally like a radiation effect that if you're somehow outside the blast zone,
you're going to see your bones inside your own hand.
I know.
And from that moment, then all of a sudden, the heat.
Yes.
And you wouldn't even hear it at first.
You would just see this bright light.
You would probably feel the heat.
And it's like you mentioned, the hotter than the sun.
Yes.
Think you've burned your hand on a stove top.
It's incomprehensible.
It's nothing.
Like, the air immediately, like, would thicken.
Yes.
It would, it says here it literally would almost feel solid.
The exposed skin would, like, respond immediately.
Yeah.
You, like, the air around you would ignite potential.
Like, literally the oxygen would have a chemical reaction.
If you're breathing in the air, your lungs might eviscerate from just the oxygen around you, basically.
what would even happen with the oxygen in presence of that high heat?
Yeah, so this is actually a really interesting question
because back before the very first test that was conducted in July of 1945,
the scientists were actually worried that all the nitrogen in the atmosphere could ignite
and that there was one in a million chance that they would actually destroy the entire planet.
Just with one test.
Just with one test.
And they went ahead and did it anyway.
So that's the, I think the, I think the, it's really, so much of this is about the specific
scenarios.
What's the bomb?
How many are you using?
How, you know, where is it going and so on and so forth.
I think it's, the primary effect I really worry about is you create this fireball.
It might be a mile across.
And that's, you created a miniature sun on earth, vaporizes everything.
And then you kind of go into these concentric circles farther and farther and farther out.
It's the, those fires, you know, how far they're going to go, I mean, really far.
but also really depends on how this all plays out.
I think a lot of the times we're imagining one nuclear weapon attacking New York City.
Russia has intercontinental ballistic missiles that can carry 10 warheads.
Why not one in Brooklyn, one in Staten Island, you know, two in Manhattan, you know, Queens, whatever, the Bronx.
And you could create these miniature suns everywhere.
Now imagine how those miniature suns are going to actually combine, right?
What's going to happen in between, even if they're sort of separated.
Right.
So there's a lot of that fire, the soot, I was talking about nuclear winter earlier,
other things that would be radioactive isotopes.
you know, really contaminating the environment for hundreds and even thousands of years.
But then you also have this destruction of the ozone layer, a kind of nitric oxide-type
compounds that are produced that destroy the ozone layer.
And then that ends up in like the scenario of the U.S., Russia nuclear war, 70% of the ozone
layer is destroyed, right? So I think last time you asked me about people building bunkers in
New Zealand. I mean, good luck. Even if New Zealand is still hospitable to food growing,
and maybe the radioactive isotopes haven't contaminated everything and you come out of your bunker
and the ozone layer is 70% destroyed, that's not just about the fact that you're going to get
skin cancer, fine, you'll cover yourself. It's going to destroy the plants too. The food is not going to
grow also, the food also can, which is benefits from the ozone layer protecting us from
UV radiation. So it's just, it's such unimaginable destruction in so many different ways,
which is what makes these weapons so different really than anything else we have. You know,
my kind of general approach to these things is to talk about peace, to talk about diplomacy,
to talk about, and all of it is horrible.
Don't get me wrong.
The, you know, people dying and being injured daily by the thousands in Ukraine, what we all
have seen, you know, happening in Gaza.
There are other wars.
Yeah, Sudan.
You're talking about Sudan.
Exactly.
But in all of it, really just in so many ways, so devastating that we as humans,
could come so far in so many ways that we can, you know, write, you know, beautiful literature
and compose, you know, beautiful symphonies and do, and have the ability to have this conversation
and then people can listen to it from any part of the world.
I mean, so many amazing people about us as humans.
And the war is currently going on just in my, you know, for me, just really break my heart.
But the nuclear war threat is something like it's on a different scale.
Right.
Even compared to the immense suffering that's still taking place in so many parts of the world, it's just, I cannot imagine.
I recently gave a, it's like an interview, but almost like a.
a lecture mixture with another scientist named Stephen Starr. And Stephen, at the end of our
presentation, said something like, don't national or political goals would be worth destroying,
you know, all life on Earth. Like, couldn't we just agree with that one statement? Wouldn't it be
so simple to agree with that one statement? And then once you take that statement and say,
yeah, you're right. There's nothing.
could justify destroying life on earth, then we have to kind of, you know, dial back and figure
out what do we need to do to make sure this never happens. And, you know, to me, the answer is clear.
We have to eliminate these weapons because as long as they exist, they will represent this
enormous, enormous existential threat. And of course, if we go from having 12 and a half thousand to having
a thousand, that would be much better, right?
It will clearly be better.
So how about we just agree we need to keep reducing them?
And then, you know, we can also talk about what it would mean to eliminate them.
Right.
Yeah, I mean, we've done it before, right?
I mean, we, at what you said in the 60s, there were.
In 1986 was the height, the maximum number.
It reached 70,000 nuclear warheads.
So we've, you know, we've basically eliminated more than 80% of that arsenal.
We're just really now.
But what's so dangerous about where we are now is just how bad the relations are
between different nuclear powers, between, you know, countries in general, the sideline.
and I refer to it as emasculation of the United Nations isn't helping.
We need far more cooperation and far more just respect for international law.
Because if we disregard having agreements, having a UN charter, having state sovereignties,
having, you know, once all of that goes away, we're back in the, you know, middle ages, right, where anything goes.
And, but now we're not just in the middle ages with, you know.
Yeah.
Swords and Lansons.
Exactly.
Exactly.
We're now in the middle ages with nuclear weapons.
And really, the consequences could be not just, it's even hard to find the right word, you know, catastrophic, devastating.
It's annihilation.
We just don't even have the right language to think about what that would actually ultimately mean.
I think, again, I don't want to harp so much on the visceral picture of what it would be like to witness.
But Chris, would you mind just pulling up a picture of one of the nuclear bomb tests or just a video perhaps?
Because I just think maybe for someone that's their first exposure to what a nuclear weapon is, again, it's one of these things like when people talk about like,
billions of dollars. Like it's almost difficult to fathom.
Billions. Like, oh, like a millionaire and like a billionaire, like they're close. It's so
different. It's so different. And I think people think like, oh, I've seen, you know, war footage
on, you know, the internet of, you know, Ukraine or, you know, in Palestine, whatever.
This type of nuclear attack is fundamentally different, categories of difference. Absolutely. And I
think we talked about this last time I described the energy yield difference.
between something like a chemical explosive attack,
like the Oklahoma City bomb,
that was the equivalent of two and a half tons of TNT.
And then you go to the Hiroshima bomb,
which was 15 kilotons of TNT.
So that's 6,000 times more powerful than the attack
on Oklahoma City, which killed 168 people,
destroyed the federal building,
destroyed buildings and destroyed and damaged buildings in the 16 block radius.
So a huge amount at the time, I think it was something like $600 million worth of damage.
That's 1995.
That's more than 30 years ago.
And then you go from, then you go to Hiroshima 6,000 times more energy.
And then you go to something like the Bravo bomb.
Maybe if you just look up the Bravo test, the Bravo bomb was the U.S., the largest hydrogen bomb, the U.S. ever tested in the Marshall Islands.
It was 15 megatons, so a thousand Hiroshima bomb equivalents.
So that's six million times more energy than the Oklahoma City bombing.
These are compounding scales that the human brain has a difficult time.
Of course.
with these compounding numbers.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
And it's, it's, you know, that mushroom cloud was 60 miles wide.
It was 25 miles high.
I mean, it's an absolute monstrosity.
Imagine that kind of an area just covered by the mushroom cloud.
Maybe this is, yeah.
So this is from Vegas PBS, just showing the size of this.
And this is 1954.
1954, March 1 of 1954.
bikini atoll, it vaporized an entire island in the atoll.
I mean, the, like, it's, it's, it feels sci-fi.
It's almost-
Absolutely, absolutely.
And not to mention the light and the heat and then the shockwave, this massive wall of
pressure.
Exactly.
I keep talking about the energy, and it's also what happens to that energy.
And so some of that energy goes into exactly 50%.
goes into this shock wave, the blast, 35% of the energy goes into heat, and then the rest goes
into radiation, either the initial radiation, which is both neutrons and gamma rays, or radiation
fallout, sort of the energy that ends up being produced from the radioactive isotopes that
are produced from the explosion itself.
So it's just a, it's an enormous amount of energy and then everything that happens with that energy is just absolutely unimaginably dangerous.
And then we have these long-term effects of, as we keep talking about, ozone layer destruction or nuclear winter, or something like, again, if you're, if you're really in it, right, to do, to have a nuclear war, maybe you're attacking all these citizens.
and so on, and maybe you're also doing the explosion,
you know, 100 miles above the surface
and actually destroying the electrical grid in the country.
One of the interesting things is that our,
the U.S. government has protected the nuclear command and control centers
from an attack by an EMP, by this.
electromagnetic pulse, but not the rest of our electricity grid, right?
So, and that's also one of the things where it's like the good news is we could protect
the electrical grid.
The bad news is we haven't done it and, you know, with Congress and funding and this and that.
I mean, it seems like a real no-brainer.
Clearly they're concerned because they did.
protect the nuclear command and control from such a possibility.
Yeah.
Hey, we're going to take a break really quick because I need to talk to the fellows.
All right.
If you're a woman, you can skip forward.
I don't really care.
But guys, I want to talk about one of the most probably demoralizing things that can ever happen to you.
All right?
You're in the bathroom.
You're brushing your teeth.
You look up in the mirror and suddenly you realize my forehead looks bigger than it did before.
Well, the thing with that is that men don't go bald overnight, right, Christos?
Anyway, it's sneaky, okay?
it's like, all right, well, the lighting here is a little weird.
And then you're like, I just, I just, you know, took a shower.
So, of course, you know what I mean?
Or maybe my barber just actually pushed it back.
And then one day, someone tags you in a photo and you're like, what is going on?
And the worst part is that most guys don't know what actually works.
I mean, there's a million oils and, you know, all sorts of things like potions on the
internet, basically, that are going to claim to help you out.
But the reality is there are doctor-trusted ingredients that have been trusted for decades.
I mean, truly, they've been studied for.
for years. And that's why a lot of guys are using Hems. All right. Hems makes it incredibly simple
to get personalized hair loss treatment online. You don't have to go to the doctor. You don't
have to take off work. You don't have to drive across town. You don't have to sit in a waiting
room thinking like, well, everyone knows why I'm here. You know what I'm in? Through Hymns,
you get access to prescription hair loss treatments with ingredients that actually work, like Phanastri,
monoxide, the actual stuff that's going to actually help your hair loss. These are clinically studied
ingredients that can stop further hair loss. And even
can regrow hair in as little to three to six months. So it's amazing. And the best part is that's
100% online. You literally go to the website, do like a little consultation, you explain your
situation, and a licensed medical provider reviews it. And then if you qualify, they send you
treatments directly to your door. No hidden fees, no surprise costs. It's not going to cost you
an arm and a leg. You get real treatment designed around your goals. So for simple online access
to personalize and affordable care for hair loss, weight loss, and more, visit Hems,
com slash camp that's hymns h i ms dot com slash camp c a mp for your free online visit hems dot combs
camp featured products include compound drug products which the fdae does not approve or verify
for safety effectiveness or quality prescription required see website for full details restrictions
and important safety information individual results may vary based on studies of topical and oral
monocid and finasteride let's get back to the show what's up guys we're going to take a break
real quick because i got to ask you a question are you the type of person that just wait
wakes up in the morning and immediately like hits your vape or gets a coffee or throws in a pouch
because you just want to feel anything at all. Like you just throughout the day, you're like,
okay, coffee pouch, coffee pouch, vape, coffee pouch. I mean, to be honest with you, that was me.
Like, I was just going from cold brew to pouch to cold brew to pouch all day. And my heart
felt like it was going to explode. Like I was just like felt strung out like all day, truly.
I was like just kind of anxious and I didn't even know why. And I was trying to like eat clean.
I was lifting weights. Meanwhile, I was also chemically nuking my nervous.
system. And that's why I started these ultra pouches. I'll be honest with you. I found these on my own.
And then I reached out to the company. I was like, hey, I'll love to work with you guys because I love
what you guys do. Ultra is amazing because it's nicotine free and caffeine. And it still
gives you that focus and energy. It's really the best. I'm like, okay, there's no nicotine or caffeine.
I was like, well, what is it? Well, basically they partnered with neuroscientists to put together a blend
of like neutropics and adaptogens to actually help you focus and get energized and kind of help
with that oral fixation, no ditty, without like the jittery crash. So it's got like
L-theonine, Infinity PX, Alpha GPC, Vitamins B6 and B-12. And I'll be honest, they taste
great, they make you feel great. And I don't know if it's just me or what, but like I truly
feel like I'm more locked in when I'm taking them and there's no crash. And the craziest thing
is that, you know, sometimes I'll still use nicotine. It just helps me cut back. And I feel way
better. Now, caffeine and nicotine are going to wreck your resting heart rate. It's going to
make you feel anxious if you're taking them all the time. And on top of that, it's
it's going to destroy your sleep.
So that was my biggest issues.
I felt cracked out.
I felt anxious and I wasn't sleeping that good.
But ever since I've been taking an ultra, I'm still getting that same little kick.
I'm getting that thing to do throughout the day.
And I just feel better in general.
Ultra is absolutely amazing.
And if you're interested in checking them out, I have great news.
You're going to go to take ultra.com.
That's T-A-K-E-U-U-R-T-com.
And you're going to use the promo code camp.
And you're going to get 15% off when you use that code.
That's take ultra.
dot com and use the code camp for 15% off and when you check out they're going to ask where you heard about
ultra just please tell them that we sent you over at campgagnon it really helps us out a lot thank you guys
so much feel better sleep better get less anxious but stay locked in now let's get back to the show
i mean we're trying to visualize that society post you know some type of nuclear war and again
there is no society like the world is just fundamentally different we've reverted to a quasi like
you know, like village state where like there's probably small communes of people trying to scrape
together food and water. Much of the water is contaminated. There's radiation effects that are causing
sickness and illness across anyone that's unlucky enough to survive. And people have, I've even just
read online, people have kind of, you know, pointed out that, oh, like this nuclear winter idea
is a theory. This is theoretical. We don't know if this would happen. It might not. And to me,
I'm like, that doesn't really change anything for me. Like, it, you're absolutely right. You're absolutely
right. Let's say, okay, nuclear winter is completely bunk and, you know, we have a hundred
nuclear warheads go off around the world. Still, we're talking about, you know, probably more likely
thousands of nuclear warheads go off in the world, yeah. We're talking about hundreds of millions
of people dying. Absolutely. From the blast, from the outside impact zones, from the radiation,
from the, you know, water supply being poisoned. I mean, like, to me, that doesn't change it at all,
really. Because again, the question ultimately to me is, should, you know, 10 people, maybe we say
50 people if we count like their courtiers and their, you know, people on their staff, 100 maybe,
should they be in charge of and have the capability to kill hundreds of millions of people?
We need to get you into the nuclear disarmament movement to make all of these points.
Just a couple of thoughts. One is the currently, there is a UN
mandated study of effects of nuclear war. A group of scientists, I'm actually not, I'm sort of
adjacent to this effort because I'm on a scientific advisory group to the Treaty on the Prohibition
of Nuclear Weapons. This is a separate group that was just established in the last few months.
And the last time the UN had such a study of what would the effects of nuclear war be
on the planet, beyond humanity, was like the late 1980s.
Everybody in some sense, I wouldn't say everybody, but most people fell asleep,
including, you know, organizations and so on after the end of the Cold War, right?
So now we've, at least some people have woken up to the reality of this, of this.
And so there is such an effort to understand the consequences of nuclear war in today's world.
Because, of course, compared to the 1980s, obviously the weapons are different and all of that.
But it's more so that we do live on a different planet, the globally, the way in which we, the connections between different societies.
the globalization, the way in which you know, you walk into your grocery store here in Brooklyn
and then you buy, you know, beef from New Zealand or something.
I don't know if you buy beef, but whatever, right?
So what would that look like, right?
What would it look like?
And that's definitely now being considered in a very serious way.
On the nuclear war is just a theory.
First, I have to say one really significant thing.
which is when people dismiss the word theory.
Now, in everyday language, maybe you and I would have a conversation,
well, I have a theory that if I do this, you know, then this will happen.
That is not the meaning of the word in science.
A scientific theory is something that we have been really, you know,
thinking about considering looking at for a long period of time, typically,
But it is something that describes a wide range of phenomena and for which there is experimental evidence to support it.
So I would even say at this point, whether I would call, so for example, quantum mechanics is a theory.
Gravity.
Exactly.
Einstein's formulation of gravity is called general relativity.
That's another theory.
quantum mechanics is why my phone works and your phone works and your iPad and all kinds of things, right?
So you can call it just a theory, but basically is responsible for so much of our technological development.
So same thing with people dismissing evolution by natural selection.
It's just a theory.
If there had been a biologist since 1859 when Darwin published his theory of evolution by natural selection,
if there had been a biologist who was able to disprove what Darwin first proposed,
they'd be like the most famous scientist in the world, right?
because they would have supplanted something that was so fundamental to everything we understand in biology.
So the idea that something's just a theory kind of just in general needs to go.
On nuclear winter, what I will say is that in 1980, scientists had figured out what happened to the dinosaurs or to the large dinosaurs, non-bird dinosaurs,
66 million years ago.
How come they all, you know, disappeared?
And there had been efforts to try and understand this.
And basically a series of discoveries, desperate discoveries, all led to this initially
hypothesis.
I would now call it a theory that an asteroid hit the earth near what is today Yucatan
Peninsula.
changed initially it's all very hot, but then you get this impact, you know, the fires and the so
sunlit and so the planet becomes inhospitable to life, the large dinosaurs just have no
food, they die out. Turns out that was a good thing for us because the small mammals that could
burrow underground, that could hibernate, that could survive of very little food.
they ended up, and at some point, the conditions on the planet vastly improved.
The planet was back to its kind of normal, you know, climate cycle.
And those mammals, over millions and millions of years, evolved.
The last common ancestors we have with chimps and bonobos lived about seven million years ago.
And since then, we've split from them and went on our own way and our own path to evolution.
Okay, so 66 million years ago, asteroid wipes out the dinosaurs.
The scientists discovered different pieces of evidence that pointed to this.
And then thought something like the iridium layer, the iridium came.
It's a very heavy element that would only be present in the core of the earth.
It doesn't exist on the surface.
And so why did you have this layer at just the right time?
just in one place, deposited globally. So eridium, and then there were glass ferules that they found,
and then they found a crater in the Yucatan, near the Yucatan Peninsula, you know, 200 kilometers
across, I think crater, just all fits. Everything fits for this is why the dinosaurs disappeared.
And the scientists, some of the scientists involved in this work began to wonder whether there was
something that could happen today. Now, these kinds of very large asteroid impacts are thought
to occur once every hundred million years. So chances that we have one, you know. Another 30 million
years. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Chances are very, very, very small. Right? We can live with that. Right? We can
live with that. Another existential threat would be a super volcano. We also don't think that that's going
happen in our lifetimes or in the coming hundreds or even thousands of years.
We spoke about 1816 that year without summer.
Yes, yes.
And that's Mount Tambora.
That's a relatively small volcanic eruption that did change the climatic conditions for several years.
But in 1816, a year without a summer, it snowed in New York City in July.
And this actually impacted.
people really starved around the planet because the food growth was very much reduced.
So in thinking through these other threats, natural threats, scientists basically realized that a nuclear war,
and at the time this was 1980, we probably had 50 or 60,000 nuclear warheads at that time.
The peak ended up in 1986, as we said, at 70,000.
And so they just realized, hey, if we had a nuclear war in which you used a lot of these nuclear warheads.
And it's very important for people to recognize that when we talk about something like the nuclear testing,
So in the Marshall Islands, they would do these tests, you know, vaporize an island, right?
But then there was not, you know, it's just like ocean around.
So they weren't creating massive fires, right?
They were choosing these sites of where to do the tests very deliberately not to create massive fires.
If you're doing this in the context of a war and you're actually attacking a, right, you're attacking military installations.
you're attacking cities, there are lots of things that will burn in those cities, including
human beings.
And so that's the amount of soot that is produced.
And that's what they realized in the early 1980s, wrote a paper, a group of geologists got
together.
And then they got actually Carl Sagan to be interested in this.
And Carl Sagan was on that original paper in Science magazine of proposing nuclear winter.
as something that could occur as a result of nuclear war.
Sagan went on until his death.
He died sometime in the late 1990s,
really was a kind of spokesperson for this idea
and very much a proponent of science as a means of progress
and very much a spokesman for people.
peace and for disarmament and against nuclear weapons.
But from the very beginning, they were being attacked.
A lot of this was attacked at the time.
Soviet Union, of course, was a communist regime.
This was disregarded as communist propaganda.
You'll still see, you know, some of that.
Like when I talk about it and people write comments to, you know,
interviews or podcasts or whatever, you know, it's,
this is communist propaganda.
And the government really has been trying very, very hard to set this research aside
and to pretend like this is not real.
The truth is that the close, the more research we've done, the more we think that this is real,
there has been a tremendous amount of progress in kind of climate modeling because the goal was to understand global warming, and so that those climate models have improved over the decades.
This is now, you know, four plus decades since the initial discoveries.
And on top of it, the scientists have been able, for example, to compare.
within their models to compare things like wildfires in Canada and so on, and to say,
this is what we observe and does it fit with our models.
Now, of course, you know, to your original point, like maybe it's just, maybe nuclear
winter is just all wrong, right?
and life will continue to flourish on the planet,
really after hundreds of millions of people die
and potentially we have no electricity.
Like if that doesn't bother you enough
and you feel that discrediting nuclear winter
is like the way to, you know,
to keep justifying nuclear weapons,
then, yeah, go ahead.
That's how I feel.
I'm like, okay, maybe, you know, 10 billion or, you know,
five billion people don't die.
Maybe it's only a couple hundred million.
I'm like, still, I just don't know
of a small select group of people that don't care about the individual interests of humans on Earth should be in charge of that type of power.
And really, Mark, it's a little worse than that because what you're saying is, you know, the nine, you know, heads of state of the countries, they have nuclear weapons and so on.
If just one of them starts the chain, our understanding is that one nuclear weapon will begin the chain.
of course, what actually happens in a nuclear weapon and lead to a full-blown nuclear war.
And so it's not even that nine of them get to decide the future of not just eight billion
currently alive, but future generations as well. It's one, one person. One of them makes a
deliberate decision to go with an attack. And when you have conflicts,
in wars between nuclear powers or nuclear powers are indirectly involved.
Of course, this is a possibility.
This deliberate attack is a possibility.
And again, some people will dismiss.
No one's crazy enough.
Well, if you trust all of them, then, you know, good luck to all of us.
But that's not even all.
It could end up happening because of a mistake.
It could end up happening because you think you're at.
under attack and you do decide to attack. Or it could be an accident. We've had so many close calls.
And I just, in many ways, some real experts on understanding risk and understanding what's
happened and how close we've gone. Many of them quite simply say, we've just been lucky. It's not even,
you know, that we've been smart or the nuclear deterrence works. We've really been lucky. And the more
time that passes, the more we learn about these incidents in which, you know, something really, really could have gone wrong in the past.
Yeah, I mean, if during this conversation, we both had guns pointed at each other, you know, I don't think you would pull it. You don't think I would pull it, but it still would make me very uncomfortable to have a loaded gun pointing at me. And maybe you knew that if you pulled it, I would also pull it and we would both go, so you won't do it. But still, what?
of neither of us had a gun pointed at each other. I know. I know. Daniel Ellsberg, so this is,
you probably know the name. Dan was the person who released the Pentagon Papers in 1970, which led to
basically led eventually to the end of the Vietnam War. The Pentagon Papers really revealed
that the U.S. government was aware that it was.
not winning in Vietnam and that it was open, it was lying to the American people about how
that war was going and what the prospects for winning that war were. Dan Ellsberg ended up
after that, he ended up basically standing trial and then it was, it ended up being a mistrial
because the prosecution had, this was during Nixon, had, I believe they broke into his doctor's office, his psychiatrist's office, and as a result, the judge dismissed all charges.
And he ended up spending, he passed away in 2023, I want to say.
He ended up spending the rest of his life really talking protesting and talking about nuclear
weapons and so on.
And he said that all these governments, they have nuclear weapons, actually use nuclear
weapons every single day. And he said, they use them like a robber uses a gun when they pointed
to your head, exactly to your point, right? Like the robber doesn't have to pull a trigger,
right, to be using a gun, right, and telling you, give me the money, whether you're, you know,
a store clerk or whatever. They just have to point it at your head. And that's what we have
been doing, in some sense, the U.S. has been doing that for 80 years, and the other countries
that acquired nuclear weapons afterwards have been doing it for less time, but nevertheless,
they've been doing it. And the question is, what kind of a planet can we really have if our,
even if we, for a moment, assume that this notion of nuclear deterrence works, right? I'm pointing a gun
at you, you're pointing one at me, you know, that if I, you know, if you should, I'll shoot,
so we just both stay restrained. Even if that works, what kind of a relationship do we have as
human beings, right? If that's the basis for the relationship between different countries,
I think we're really in trouble, right? One, because it could fail, and if it fails,
it's catastrophic.
And two, because it quite simply cannot be the kind of cooperation that we need to address
climate change, that we need to address pandemics, that we need to address AI.
I know you want to talk about AI.
I mean, we have some real challenges on this planet.
It's a beautiful planet.
It's got, and we as humanity have done so much and have so much potential to do.
do more, but we also do have challenges. And imagine the you and your neighbor, right,
were constantly pointing at gun at each other and yet at the same time needed to fix something,
I don't know, in the hallway or whatever, in the front yard, backyard. It's just like,
how are you going to do that? If your entire relationship is based on, I'm going to annihilate you
And it's not even a gun at each other's head.
It's like a bomb in each other's, you know, homes, right?
Like, I'm going to destroy your entire home.
Yeah.
And I have this button I can use to destroy your home.
How much can you get done if that's the basis of your relationship?
I think that's the other piece.
And then the third piece is how much money we spend on these weapons, right?
Yeah.
And maintaining and developing.
And maintaining and now modernizing and now there are new, you know, new intercontinental ballistic missiles and new submarines and submarine launch missiles and new types of bombs and warheads and pit production.
I mean, it's just unimaginable.
Could you steal man the argument for nuclear deterrence or mutually assured destruction, as people put it?
Because I think, you know, there are probably many people justifiably saying, like, there's been two nuclear bombs that have gone off, you know, against a nation with civilians.
And in 80 years, that's basically all there's been.
And, you know, that's pretty good.
So maybe it is working.
And maybe it does actually make the planet safer.
Could you steal man what that argument is?
Yeah.
So that's an argument.
That's basically the basis for all of this, the justification for the possession of.
nuclear weapons. And it really, what it does is it ignores two kind of fundamental truths.
One fundamental truth is that nuclear deterrence could fail. And if it fails, it is so catastrophic.
Are you really, are you really sure that this is worth it, right? That what's your plan B? How are you going to
actually deal with it failing. The other piece that it ignores is what I alluded to earlier,
all of these incidents, whether it was really stupid accidents like a U.S. and a Soviet submarine,
both carrying nuclear warheads, you know, colliding, planes carrying nuclear warheads,
colliding, planes dropping nuclear warheads in South Carolina and North Carolina. One time I
was talking about this and somebody wrote, she's wrong. We didn't drop a nuclear warhead
in North Carolina. We dropped it in South Carolina. Turns out we dropped it in both Carolinas.
Poor Carolinas. I know. Exactly. That seems personal at that point. Yeah, yeah. I might have been a
scientist with like an ex-wife or something else. I mean, the number of its dozens of incidents and we're just
talking about the U.S., like the declassified materials from the United States.
In 1983, two really major incidents.
One is called Abel Archer.
It was a NATO exercise where NATO had decided they wanted to kind of up the notch in
terms of how realistic it would be.
So for the first time they involved, I think, heads of state.
And there was some other kind of improvement.
to how the exercise plays out. Meanwhile, the Soviets are thinking, they're preparing for nuclear war.
They're literally loading nuclear warheads onto their bombers and ready to send them out.
And luckily somehow, you know, the back channels worked and they didn't go into nuclear war.
That same year, there was a detection by the Soviet.
again of basically there was an alignment between satellites and clouds that in the Russian
detection system appeared like five incoming missiles heading for Russia.
And this one captain, Stanislav Petrov.
Yeah, yeah, Sinislav Petrov is there.
He ends up seeing this.
And instead of passing it to his superiors, he decides to just keep watching it.
He's sort of reasons that, you know, if the U.S. were attacking the Soviet Union probably wouldn't start with five missiles.
It would probably start with a whole lot more.
And he just basically doesn't end up doing anything.
And sure enough, they realized that this was a false alarm.
later on those detection systems were adjusted for this alignment of clouds and satellites and so on.
But, you know, a real moment where a different person, we keep saying it's lucky,
maybe it's just that he was really smart and just did the right thing.
Maybe a different person had been there and said, we're under attack.
And they then attacked the United States.
United States sees that it's being attacked and retaliates and we're all gone. I was actually
alive in 1983. I know you were not, but, you know, it's not like ancient, ancient history.
And we don't even know about things that have happened in the last X number of years because
those are not declassified. Some of these things we only know because of the declassifications
that have taken place since then. And then, of course, it was on the screen. This was
Well, the Cuban Missile Crisis is the really famous one.
There was a kind of combination of diplomacy, diplomatic efforts happening between Kennedy and Khrushchev,
but also behind the scenes that nuclear warheads were already in Cuba.
And there was a Soviet submarine that was, you know, deep underwater and was actually experiencing a kind of, it's not an act.
actual attack, but they call them depth charges, where it's sort of like, like you think you're
under attack, but you're not really under attack. And in that submarine was carrying nuclear
warheads. There were three officers on board. Two of them wanted to launch the warhead because
they thought nuclear war had already started.
So they, and one of them, another Russian name Vasily Arkipov, said, no, let's not launch.
And that was in the midst of Kennedy and Khrushchev, you know, trying to negotiate how to get out of this crisis.
Yeah, it's just, again, I'm finally now at this point of my life, maybe having children has helped.
I'm just realizing just like the threat is not.
like a regular bomb. It's not like a gun.
It's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, imagine, okay, no more nuclear weapon, but we put a
massive explosive device in the center of the earth. And it's, it literally, if you push a
button, the earth will crack apart and everything will eviscerate and we'll all float into
space and gravity will cease to exist. And every person dies. And you give 10 countries,
Russia, India, Pakistan, France, America, China. You give all the, you give all
them the button. Is that a world we want to live in? Like, is that really the situation? And then I also
consider like, okay, let's say you have four teenage boys and they're all in your house and they're
all fighting all the time. And you say, okay, here's my solution. All of you are going to have an
explosive bomb put into your backpacks and you all can control each other's bomb. And if you guys
fight each other, then this person can just explode you at any point. As a parent, would you ever
want your children to have this type of technology to kill each other if they have a disagreement?
Like, would you really think, like, oh, that'll keep my family safer if they all have a bomb in
their backpack? Because, like you mentioned, you could accidentally push the button. You could be
looking for your pencil and accidentally hit the detonator and kill your brother. And I don't know,
maybe it's because of, you know, I grew up with a Catholic worldview. I'm like, is this what God
wants for humanity? Like, I know there's many people out there listening that might be secular and I respect
that. But imagine there is a God. Is that that? Is that the God? Is that the God? Is that you know,
this what God would want for humanity? Like if you don't want this for your children, is this what
God wants for his creation? To me, it's like, I just don't understand like the, I don't understand
the argument of like, yeah, if everyone has it, we're safer. To me, it just breeds, you know,
discoordination and a lack of, you know, compliance and, you know, real good faith cooperation.
And furthermore, it also just opens up potential, you know, honest mistakes.
that lead to the destruction of humanity.
Yeah.
So either situation isn't great, and there is a third option,
which, again, I get myself wrapped up in, you know, the real politic of humanity.
And I'm like, yeah, human beings fight.
And, you know, violence has existed for as long as humans have existed.
And we are going to continue to battle each other.
And there's going to continue to be conflicts.
So it just sort of is what it is.
And it's a little reluctant and it's a little sort of like, you know, aloof, like, you know, it exists.
But I do try to imagine a world where we say this cannot exist.
We have to all of us.
And we come up with some type of global treaty that somehow reinforced by some type of institution
or some type of, you know, united force, which again, I understand these things result in bureaucracy
and, you know, unfair advantages, et cetera.
But what if that world is real?
Like, what if that world could actually exist?
And to me, it's just a decision that humans can make.
Yeah.
And it feels maybe a little crazy for people to think like, no, humans have always fought.
We've always fought each other.
There's always going to be violence.
But to me, I'm like this type of violence, this type of technology is just too egregious for any person to have.
What's up, guys?
We're going to take a break really quick because I'm going to talk to the gentleman that listen to this program.
So if you're a woman, you can skip forward.
That's fine.
Now, I want to talk to you guys because I don't know if this is happening to you, but I'm at like my late 20s, you know, about to turn 30 next year.
And I'm starting to feel it.
You know, I go to the gym and I'm doing the same workouts that I've done for years.
And somehow gravity is stronger.
Like, literally, I'm doing the same chest workout.
I'm like, this is harder than it was five years ago.
And then it starts happening other places.
Like, I'm feeling more tired.
And my workouts are slower.
And my motivation is like a little less.
And I'm like, oh, it's probably because I had a kid, right?
That's probably why I'm just tired.
And then I ask my other friends that are also 30.
And they're like, no, no, this is just a thing.
It turns out a lot of men start losing testosterone around the age of 30,
roughly like 1% every year after that.
And no one ever tells you that. You're supposed to just wake up one day and realize like, oh, my body's not running the same program that it's been going on for the last 30 years of my life. And that's why I started taking Mars Men. Mars Man is awesome. And I genuinely take this, okay? And what I learned is actually it's really interesting. Your body still produces testosterone, obviously. Okay. There's a protein called SHBG that can basically lock it up so your body doesn't really use it. It's like you basically have all the money in your bank, but like you lost your credit card. Okay. And Mars Men is designed to, you're
to basically free up that locked in testosterone so your body can actually access it and you can start
feeling better, more motivated, and have more energy.
It's awesome because there's no injections, no crazy synthetic stuff.
It's not going to mess up fertility, all right?
It's just natural ingredients that are designed to support energy, strength, and focus.
To be honest with you, here's what's in it.
It's Taggat Ali, Sheila Jeet, Vitamin D, Zinc, Boron.
All right, these are just regular vitamins and supplements that help with testosterone production naturally in your body.
You can just go buy them.
You don't even need this.
You can just go buy these ingredients.
But the thing with Mars men that makes it so nice
is that they've already done the work
to put everything in the proper dose all in one container.
All the ingredients that you need to support your healthy testosterone levels
are all in this bottle right here.
It's not like caffeine where you spike and crash, all right?
It's more like your body's just used to feeling
how it's always felt running the way that it always has.
Your workouts feel stronger.
Your recovery feels better.
and your energy is just way more consistent.
Thousands of guys are already seeing the same thing that I'm seeing,
which is that, you know, I have higher energy.
91% of users actually have higher energy levels.
It's made in the USA, third party tested,
and they're even giving you a 90-day money-back guarantee.
So literally, there's no risk in trying it.
And for a limited time, our listeners are going to get 50% off for life,
plus free shipping and three gifts at men go to mars.com.
You guys heard that, right?
This is like an insane value.
Men go to mars.com.
50% off.
off, three free gifts when you check out, and you're going to get a 90-day money-back guarantee.
It's unbelievable. You're getting half off, and if you don't like it, you just give you your
money back. And when you check out, they're going to ask where you heard about Mars men.
Please tell them you heard about them from me and the good people over here at Camp Gagnon.
Now, let's get back to the show.
I, Mark, I really couldn't agree more. I mean, you're absolutely dead on. Just a couple of comments.
One is two actually pieces of good news.
One piece of good news is that it really is a political decision.
So I also actually am concerned about global warming, climate change.
It's really what's happening is the globe is warming because we're emitting greenhouse gases.
Also doing nuclear bomb testing also.
Well, no.
You don't think that contributes?
I don't know.
I have no idea.
Yeah, I mean, first of all, it was a while ago.
The warming is currently, we've actually understood for a very long time that greenhouse gases make our planet livable.
If it weren't for CO2, our planet would be much, much colder.
It would actually be minus 15 degrees Celsius.
It's probably, I don't know, minus 20 degrees Fahrenheit.
height.
So today feels like.
Right.
I know.
But on average, across the globe, that would be like a frozen earth, right?
So greenhouse gases are great.
The problem is that in the last 150 years, and in particular in the last several decades,
we have been increasing those greenhouse gases very rapidly, and that that is resulting
in increased temperatures on the globe, which are then having these other side-deaf.
of, you know, sea level rise, you know, fires, all kinds of impacts and really impacting
life on the planet, impacting us humans. We primarily live near coastlines and so on,
but impacting other life on the planet as well. So the global warming problem is real.
solution to global warming is non-trivial. There are several routes we could go, and many of them
are, you know, promising and so on. But politically, some of them are really difficult.
Even if we agree, you know, to have, for example, solar energy, the kind of technical things of how
you distribute that energy, how you store it, battery storage, all of that, some of that is non-tebrate.
trivial. The thing about nuclear weapons and that being a political decision is that once the
political decision is made to eliminate them, eliminating them isn't actually that difficult.
So that's the really good news because we already said if there were 70,000 of them in 1986
and today there are 12,000 and a half thousand, that means we were able to eliminate them. Some of
Some of that was actually used to fuel, you know, nuclear power plants.
And some of it is just the dismantlement.
And then you still have the waste problem and so on.
But much better to have a waste problem from, you know, nuclear weapon, you know, material than to have them blowing up, right?
So the one piece of good news is it is a political problem and humans can solve political problems.
Again, it's something we created and something we're able to dismantle.
The other piece of good news is that we do have a treaty, actually.
It's called the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.
This is something that diplomats have been working on for many years.
So that said that treaty currently has 99 states, UN member states that are either party to the treaty.
That means they've gone through the kind of process of ratifying the treaty.
That means their national legislation typically did something.
Or they have signed the treaty.
So more than half of the UN member states.
Are the nine that possess nuclear weapons part of the treaty? No, they're not. And the big question is how to get them to that table. So from my perspective, the U.S. really has an absolutely fundamental role to play in all of this. We were the first to develop nuclear weapons. We're the only country to ever use them on cities full of women and children. And we wrote the playbook for the nuclear testing era. We were in the
Marshall Islands, six months after the attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, asking the people
of Bikini Island to move so that, you know, we could test nuclear weapons in their islands.
I mean, just really, really devastating history.
But that's our legacy.
That's what we, the United States have done.
And then everybody else, in some sense, you could say follow suit except for the use of nuclear
weapons in time of war. And so my view is that the United States really has a role to play
in leading the world. Now, how do you lead the world? I love your example of, you know,
what parents would do with rowdy teenagers and so on. To me, leading the world is always and must
always be about setting an example, right? If you're a parent who's a parent who's a person,
on their phone all the time and you tell you that same teenager not to be on their phone all the time, it's not going to happen, right? Like, how do you as a country lead on, you know, having a world that is free of the nuclear threat, which I would argue is most acute for the United States? I imagine the world free of nuclear weapons in which the United States is actually.
actually much safer because we've got the oceans, we've got the geographies on our side,
we've got the conventional military as critical as I may be of, you know, the spending
and everything associated with that. This really could be an incredibly safe country. And in fact,
with nuclear weapons, we're incredibly vulnerable and we're vulnerable to, um,
a very small and relatively poor country called North Korea,
because they now have about 50 warheads,
and they have intercontinental ballistic missiles
that are estimated to be able to reach any part of the United States.
So forget all the morality and ethics and responsibility.
Forget all of that for a moment and just say that actually,
we'd be better off in a world free of nuclear weapons, so that's what we're going to do pursue.
And then you have to put yourself into what does that leadership look like?
How do you lead by example?
How do you show respect for other states, for other countries?
How do you show respect for international law?
I don't think we're doing a very good job, especially at this time.
But we really, in some sense, haven't done a good job on that in a long time.
The U.S. really has this now, you know, 80-year history since the end of the Cold War of playing this role of, you know, world policemen and being involved in all kinds of conflict and all kinds of wars.
I mean, there are estimates out there that of its entire history.
you know, 250 years, the U.S. has not been involved in wars for less than 20 years of that, right?
So that's not a good, you know, kind of backdrop. But we could change. And part of the way where changes have happened in the past is by one having a just,
public that's aware, and two, having a general public that gets really engaged on these
things. When it comes specifically to nuclear weapons, there really were two periods of progress,
is how I would put it. One was the 1960s, which gave us the partial test ban treaty. That's what
basically halted all the atmospheric tests. So all of this,
you know, fallout that went all around the planet, right, was halted. It was primarily U.S. and
Soviet Union tests that were the largest. The UK also stopped testing in the atmosphere as a
result of this treaty. This was in 1963. And there was a tremendous amount of public engagement
on this. At the time, from the Nevada test site, there was fallout.
that had reached basically all corners, essentially going from Nevada, going east.
So just because of how the winds are in the United States, very little of it went west of the
Nevada test site, most of it east of the Nevada test site.
And there was this effort to actually document, speaking of your young child, to document
strontium 90 in baby teeth.
And this started out at Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri.
It was actually a group of mothers who became very concerned that their babies were
drinking milk, which contained strontium 90s.
Strontium 90s is a radioactive isotope.
It's similar to calcium, so it ends up in the milk.
and then it gets incorporated into baby teeth.
And they were doing these analysis and finding strontium-90.
Mother's parents were sending when, you know, the tooth fairy visited a child.
They would send these in little, you know, packets.
They would send the baby teeth labeled with the date of birth.
and they actually found a kind of correlation between when a child was born with respect to the atmospheric testing that was taking place and how much strontium-90 they were finding in their teeth.
Just unimaginable.
But in any case, that ends up being a kind of real public engagement effort that also convinces Kennedy to pursue the partial test paper.
Treaty, and then that takes place in 1963.
And then by 1968, we also had the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Then the 70s were, you know, very turbulent, Vietnam, all kinds of other things happening.
And then by, you know, in 1980, Ronald Reagan comes back on Wednesday election, and he is, you know, going full on.
you know, Cold Warrior, nuclear weapons, and so on.
And in 1983, Reagan watches the film the day after.
You should watch it sometimes.
I actually watched it not that long ago.
I didn't think it was very good.
But apparently in 1983, this really made a strong impact on people.
A hundred million people watched it.
There was a TV movie.
The 100 people, million people watched, including Reagan, made a big impact on him,
and he decided he wanted to do something about nuclear weapons.
Prior to that, a million people walked in Central Park in June of 1982 against a nuclear arms race.
So you have this.
And then by 86, you know, Reagan and Gorbachev are in Reykjavik, and their actually.
discussing eliminating nuclear arsenals, which sadly didn't happen because they ended
up disagreeing over the missile defense system that Reagan had hoped to build called Star Wars.
Nowadays, actually, Trump wants to build a Golden Dome.
It's just as doomed as Star Wars was back in the 80s and just not a good use of money.
and it's really only going to actually fuel a nuclear arms race rather than constrain it.
But in any case, back to my original point, we need people to understand what's at stake
and we need them to engage.
And we need to make, we also need to make progress on these more fundamental issues of war
and peace because as long as, you know,
these countries are in such either open or indirect conflicts,
they're not necessarily going to be sitting down discussing,
let's eliminate all nuclear weapons.
But that is quite simply what has to happen so that, you know,
my children who are older, but your son, so that they can have a future.
We need them to have a future.
And I also, you know, you don't have to have children to think that this is
important. I mean, the ultimate survival of humanity has somehow got to be something that people
actually not just become aware of, but actually are ready to do something about.
I mean, in the current state of, you know, the world, geopolitically speaking, you had a recent
conflict with India and Pakistan that we mentioned, both nuclear powers. And that could have
become a calamity. And thank goodness it didn't.
And maybe partially, perhaps, to Trump's credit, but also a lot of global cooperation, that stopped.
Yeah.
But now we have, you know, a war with Iran that seems to be brewing.
And between, like, the America, Israeli, Iran kind of triad, all of these countries seem to have some version of nuclear power.
I mean, obviously, we don't have full transparency on what that looks like.
But that conflict in particular is that of supreme concern for you right now.
That conflict is very, very concerning.
So, of course, last year we had the 12-day war between Israel and Iran with involvement
by the United States.
Of course, the United States has nuclear weapons and has had them, as we keep saying, for 80 years.
Israel also has a nuclear arsenal of about 90 nuclear warheads.
It is thought that they had their first operational nuclear weapon by 1967.
And Iran does not have nuclear weapons.
Iran has had nuclear power for decades.
At one point, they probably were pursuing nuclear weapons development, and then in the early 2000s
seemed to have stopped.
When JCPOA was,
this is the Iran agreement on their nuclear program
with the United States European Union and so on
that Trump walked away from,
when that agreement was in force,
Iran was enriching their uranium only up to three and a half percent.
That was the limit.
And that put their, that essentially put their ability to build a nuclear weapon probably to, you know, 10 to 15 years away.
Trump comes into power, tears the JCPOA.
And prior to this conflict, Iran was enriching uranium up to 60%.
Now, you don't need 60% for nuclear power, but it's also probably not, you could make a nuclear
weapon with 60%. It wouldn't be a very good one. Typically, you'd go to something like 90s.
So, reaching to 60% on their part was a little provocative. At the same time, it is sort of
ironic, right, that the United States, the country that first developed nuclear weapons,
use them and so on, right?
It's telling Iran you can't have a nuclear weapon.
It is also ironic, especially ironic, for Israel to tell Iran you can't have a nuclear
weapon because they have a non-declared arsenal.
They're not a party to what's called the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and PT.
In fact, I'm sure some people will say, well, you know, of course the United States can tell
Iran they can't have a nuclear weapon because both are part.
to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.
And then some of that is, I would say that that's, in, I would even concede that point, yes,
the United States is a party to the NPT as a nuclear weapon state.
Iran is a party to the NPT as a non-nuclear weapon state.
So in some sense, they both agreed to that arrangement.
At the same time, the United States actually isn't doing what it's supposed to be doing under that treaty,
which is eventual disarmament.
That treaty has been enforced for more than 55 years.
And the U.S. as well as the other four states recognized as nuclear weapon states
haven't been doing their, haven't been fulfilling their end of the bargain, which is not just nuclear,
but eventual total and complete disarmament.
That's an article in the treaty called Article 6 on disarmament.
And so the irony here is specifically these two countries telling Iran, you know, you can't have a nuclear weapon.
Another irony in that particular, how that crisis played out with the use of force, with bombings and so on, is that you probably could have achieved more by renegotiating another deal with Iran.
rather than attacking Iran.
And I think it really fundamentally speaks to this problem of the, and it's in some sense,
how the general conversation has changed, right?
Away from talking about disarmament is something that all countries need to do versus
talking about nonproliferation.
Well, we can't allow, you know, North Korea to have nuclear.
weapons, well, they do now, or we can't allow Iran to have a nuclear weapon, as if it's nuclear
weapons are only bad if they're in, and this is frequently kind of used, you know, bad hands,
right?
Like, we can't let nuclear weapons fall into the wrong hands.
There is a quote by a U.N. Secretary General former U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon,
who said something like there are no right hands for the wrong weapons.
And that's really what I subscribe to, this notion that we need disarmament.
And at some level, like if there's a nuclear war and civilization is destroyed, then, you know, small groups of people survive and live under who knows what kind of circumstances, would it really matter who started it?
Would it really matter why they started it?
It's different than like the gun argument because people will say like, oh,
a good guy with a gun can stop a bad guy with a gun.
And whether you subscribe to that philosophy or not,
I can understand the point.
Like if I'm on the train with my wife
and some crazy guys attacking us,
pointing a gun at us,
and someone shoots that guy,
I'm not going to be that mad about it.
You know, like, of course, it's a tragedy,
but at the same time, my life is in danger,
and now it's not.
So it's okay.
But a good guy with a nuke
doesn't stop a bad guy with a nuke
because the nuclear bombs still go off
and then it still results in, you know,
some type of global calamity.
Yeah.
We were talking earlier just about what that world would look like.
And there's a really, I think, very deep quote by Einstein, who I think this was from 1946.
He said something like, I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, right?
Because like, who knows what we're going to, you know, discover.
But I know the World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.
So just this idea that we're just immediately going to go back to who knows what, you know, phase of human existence.
But human civilization, what we've built.
And it's incredible how actually how short human civilization is in the span of existence of our species on the planet, estimated it about 250,000 years, right, for homo sapiens.
And then 10,000 years being generous of agriculture, maybe 30,000 years of like cave paintings, 10,000 years of agriculture and just several thousand years of, you know, organized societies and, you know, what we would really refer to as civilization.
And here we are, you know, 80 years into the nuclear age.
we're going to destroy all of that.
And the 250,000 years of our species is in the context of probably about, you know, close to 4 billion years of existence of life on the planet.
Again, like these are incomprehensible numbers.
You and I can't really imagine what it means that life has existed on the planet for 4 billion years.
Yeah.
Sometimes it's a fun experiment that I like to think about because I love like ancient civilization.
and, you know, like ancient technology,
like, oh, how did they build the pyramid?
Stuff like that.
I find it very fun.
But I like to imagine, like,
what if human beings existed two billion years ago?
And what if we developed similar type of societies
and we developed nuclear weapons
and we destroyed it?
And we destroyed it all.
It's possible.
And that the entirety of that existence
of, you know, humanity's first stint
just got washed away by the sands of time
and ice ages and meteors
and we sort of restarted.
And now it's just kind of ironic.
Like I imagine from the perspective of an alien that's watching Earth and has the totality of human existence, they're like, oh, they're on the nuclear part again.
Like they failed this four times before.
They built great societies and then they destroyed it all with these nuclear weapons and they had to restart.
And then they restart again, again, whether or not this is true, probably not.
But it's just a fun experiment to kind of think like from an outside perspective, they might be looking at us going, what are you guys doing?
I'm guessing that we would have evidence, some kind of evidence of that in the geologic record,
but it is really interesting to think about it.
You know, astrobiologists think a lot about, you know, our, so we live in the universe
that has a hundred billion galaxies, and our galaxy has about a hundred billion stars in it,
meaning, and it's a fairly typical galaxy.
So 100 billion galaxies, each of which, let's say, on average, might have 100 billion stars in it.
That's one followed by 22 zeros of the number of stars.
When I was first in college and even in graduate school, we sort of didn't know whether the solar system was special in terms of having planets.
And now we've discovered on the order of thousands of exoplanets, it seems that nearly every star has planetary companions.
Exactly how many, it doesn't matter.
But even if you call it on average, one to ten, right, it's again, even just one per star means one followed by 22 zeros planets in the universe.
So surely there's life somewhere else.
The question is how far are they from us in order for us to actually meet at this day and age?
What's up, people? We're going to take a break really quick because I want to tell you about a sponsor we have that I'm so stoked about.
Yes, it's Chubbies. If you never heard of Chubbies, I've been wearing these since legit, like late high school.
Yeah, I'm so stoked. I started this podcast because I wanted a deep dive on crazy stuff in history and just, you know, random wormholes that I got into on the internet.
and now I'm working with a brand
that I've literally worn for 10 years
because Chubby is one of those brands
that you put on and you go,
oh, this is comfortable.
They're like the OG, like I'm going to the beach,
I'm chilling on the boat,
I'm walking through Soho in the summertime shorts.
I mean, they are the best.
Their stuff is super breathable.
I mean, the stretch is like, oh, G.
They're like one of the first ones that started that.
I mean, you can actually move,
you can sit, like you can exist without just being
absolutely swamped.
And they don't just do shorts.
They got everything.
I mean, they got polos.
They got...
sweaters. They got anything you can imagine. And it's all that wrinkle-resistant, quick-drying,
anti-microbial greatness that basically makes all their stuff, you know, the most, basically the
mix between like, I'm the most comfortable I've ever been. I could go to sleep right now, but also I'm a
functioning adult that looks amazing while I'm at work. And great news. This is the 15-year anniversary,
and they're bringing back the originals. These are literally the shorts that started the entire thing.
Same iconic fit, the same in-seam options. And that same end-eam options. And that same end-esion.
like, y'all, I'm just going to pull up and, you know, crack a brew on a Friday, that type of vibe.
So whether you are weekending, weekdaying, going to the beach, barbecue, or just living your life,
Chubbies has you covered.
So for a limited time, Chubbies is giving the listeners of this program 20% off with the code
camp if you go to chubbies shorts.com.
That is 20% off your order with the code camp, C-A-M-P at chubbies shorts.com.
I mean, if you guys trust anything I ever say, Chubbies is fantastic.
The shorts are truly amazing and you're getting 20% off.
What are you waiting for?
Go check them out.
Now, let's get back to the show.
There's a galaxy that is two and a half million light years away from us.
It's called the Andromeda Galaxy.
If we had telescopes that were powerful enough that we could zoom onto Andromeda, zoom onto some planet,
some star in the galaxy and some planet orbiting that star.
And we see whoever is there or whatever is happening there.
We would see that planet as it was two and a half million years ago
because the light that our telescope is receiving from there
has been traveling to us for two and a half million years.
And same for them.
If they look onto the planet,
They see some, you know, ancestors of humans from two and a half million years ago walking in Africa, like literally walking upright in Africa.
Homo erectus was about two and a half million years ago.
And they would have no idea that you and I are having this conversation, right?
Just impossible.
That's just plain simple physics.
I don't know.
They might.
I don't know if it gets there that fast.
Again, all of it, the speed of light is the ultimate speed limit.
Nothing can travel faster than the speed of light.
So when we're separated by such vast distances in space, we're also separated in time.
And as your biologists talk a lot about, right, so like could we meet some other, right, civilization or have evidence?
or, and they always included in their kind of considerations is the idea that these very advanced
civilizations ultimately always self-destruct.
And so that's a little bit of a problem.
Maybe foreshadowing.
It's a little bit of a problem for us, too.
This is going to be outside of your scope because you are an esteemed academic at a prestigious university.
but are you familiar with the sort of UFO discourse around nuclear weapon testing?
Oh, you're going to ask me something that I should have been looking at and I haven't.
No, no, you probably shouldn't be because you're doing legitimate, like, you know, trying to save the world work.
So I don't want you to be going off into alien territory.
But it's an interesting kind of thing because I speak with a lot of people that have either, you know, they claim to experience UFOs or they've witnessed them or they do.
research on classified government documents, things like that. And it's, I find it fascinating. But
many of them will talk about the amount of sightings of these types of craft around nuclear testing.
Now, some people say like, oh, that's probably, you know, other military craft because these are around
sensitive military sites. Maybe it's espionage from foreign countries that are spying on our military,
you know, nuclear testing. But there is a theory within the UFO community that these are
some type of entities from a distant galaxy that using some type of quantum entanglement are able to
move through space and time faster than the universal speed limit, et cetera. And they are
witnessing humanity creating these weapons to destroy themselves. And it's interesting because-
They're going to save us? Well, they're going to maybe just watch. And I've heard many theories
from different people. And now we're in sci-fi land. And I think part of this has even been picked
up in like Star Trek, but like if there are other, you know, life forms out there and maybe
they're similar to us in some way, they might be, again, this is their theory, might be looking
at Earth and saying, are we able to cooperate with them when they have weapons like this?
And are we able to interface and communicate with them? Because what if they tried to attack us
with these weapons that would be, you know, dangerous to us on a different star system or in a different
galaxy, et cetera? And it's just interesting that there's, it seems like, you know, it seems like,
some type of citing inference or correlation with nuclear testing.
And a lot of the modern UFO discourse exists around these, you know, the age of nuclearization.
I find it fascinating.
I know this is going to be off-rooting for you.
I just don't know enough.
My, to sort of, you know, really offer a kind of pushback on this, my senses, no way, you know.
And so that's just, you know, kind of the opening statement there.
I was under the impression that I saw some headlines, but again, I didn't really look into this,
that actually the government was trying to mislead people into thinking that there were UFOs to kind of steer them away from actually figuring out what the government was doing,
on whether it's nuclear testing or military.
Project Stargate, I think, was like a sciop done by the government.
Yeah, exactly.
Oh, yeah, look at this.
Yeah, exactly.
So, you know, and you have to kind of wonder, I think, just more generally, about the way in which our society, especially in more recent years, has been so divided on so many issues while the issues.
while the issues of the economy are really, you know, so difficult for so many people,
I think the, you know, the stock market may be going up, but that's certainly not helping
most Americans.
And I think these war and peace issues are really, really serious.
And it's quite simply not something that we seem to be.
Maybe, you know, there was a lot of public discourse around.
Gaza, certainly that one, you know, has, you know, attracted a lot of attention for, you know,
for a good reason. But at the same time, just generally interrogating what our government is doing
in terms of not just nuclear weapons, which I see as a kind of pinnacle of this militarization,
but just in general, there's a relatively new book.
by Ben Freeman and William Hartung called the trillion-dollar war machine.
And the details that, you know, and this is our, we both pay taxes, I'm sure.
This is, you know, our taxpayers' money, a trillion dollars going into what's called defense
spending, but it's really war spending.
And the book is, was, I mean, at some level, I kind of knew all of this, but just to see it documented in such detail about kind of the way in which all of the different players are all on the same page, whether it be, you know, Congress, whether it, arms manufacturers, think tanks, universities, Hollywood, you name it, like everyone's in the same.
know, the famous military industrial complex, like, it's so much bigger than just military
and industry.
Like, everyone's in on it.
And then there's, like, so much about kind of the way in which the money is wasted and
projects are constantly delayed.
And then they still don't deliver what they're supposed to deliver and they even put
our troops in harm's way, like, all of it.
And again, it's a trillion dollars.
We don't have discussion, right?
Like we fight about so many things that are kind of, you know, and I don't mean to imply that they're all unimportant.
But we fight a lot about sort of cultural issues.
And that seems to take up all the oxygen.
And then it comes to something really fundamental about like how a huge percentage, 60% of our discrecent.
spending from our taxes, how that gets used, and on nothing less than life and death
plus the, you know, possibility of ultimate destruction of the planet, right?
And we just don't have that as like this constant debate, constant discussion, which I think
it really somehow needs to become.
I know it's not fun.
I know it's more fun to be like, oh, you know, Trump did this or that.
He's great or he's not great.
But we somehow need to get back to where our awareness is, I mean, ultimately and fundamentally,
I really think that American people have really good people.
That's just been my own experience.
I've been living in this country now for over 30 years.
I came here when I was 17 as a foreign exchange student.
You know, I wanted to come.
It was a dream for me to study at the U.S. universities.
It was, but it went beyond that.
It was also a dream to come to what I saw growing up as the country of freedom and respect for the individual and democracy, right?
The first world's democracy.
And here we are, like, you know, 30 years later, I made it all worse.
It's all my fault. It's all my fault. Here we are, you know, and where is the state of that democracy? How are decisions being made? How are we being represented both in Congress and in the executive branch? A lot of, and I will just completely set aside any political opinion of what Trump does or specifically what he does.
does, a lot of what he has done is by executive order. That's not quite how democracy is supposed
to work. And even when Congress does pass legislation and so on, a lot of times it's not the
legislation that the American people are interested in. There's overwhelming support in this country,
for example, for universal health care. Do we have legislation on this? I don't think so. Is President
and Trump doing an executive order to put this forward?
I don't think so.
So I think it's a little bit in some sense I talk about the nuclear issue
partly because not many people are talking about it or not talking about it enough.
But I also see it as a kind of pinnacle in so many ways.
And if we can really find a way to solve that issue, then so many other things could be within reach.
And if we can kind of revive that notion of, you know, engagement in the political process, not just by voting once every year or two years or four years, right?
and not just by arguing on social media.
Like, can we somehow find a way to get behind an issue
and not even see it as political or partisan, right?
Can it not, you know, my big dream on nuclear disarmament
is that it starts to be seen as the ultimate pro-life issue, right?
Because what else could be more pro-life than not wanting the life,
from the planet to be destroyed.
In a matter of minutes,
we didn't even talk about this this time, right?
In a matter of minutes,
like, how could we be in that situation?
And who really wants to sit with me
and tell me that a world without nuclear weapons
wouldn't be a better world?
I'd be super, you know, interested in having that discussion
with someone who really disagrees,
who thinks that what I'm saying just doesn't.
doesn't make any sense and we must have nuclear weapons in perpetuity.
Well, then we're going to, you know, blow ourselves up eventually.
Be a good discussion. I would listen.
It would be a good discussion.
I mean, I think a bunch of points that you mentioned, I think, ring true.
I mean, one, nuclearization is extremely profitable.
And I think keeping the world on the edge of their seats that at any moment we could all be
eviscerated, I think does put a ton of money into, you know, this sort of vague, you know,
military industrial complex we've talked about,
that I think a lot of people do profit from this heightened sense of anxiety
and constantly being at each other.
I think it is a profitable industry,
and that a world of, you know,
kind of more harmony and peace is probably less profitable.
And I think that our current profit motives
probably lead us to these positions in a lot of places.
And to the political point, I mean, it is,
I do see it as like a nonpartisan issue that, you know,
it's not like, oh, I don't want this president.
or this president. I don't want any president. I don't want any head of state anywhere to be able to
eviscerate humanity. And I think to your point, like the executive order thing, I'm less
concerned with, you know, what Trump is going to do tomorrow, yada, yada. And I think, again,
it's frivolous in the grand scheme of humanity's demise. But I do think the executive order
position does create a really scary paradigm where maybe it's not, you know, Trump that'll do it.
Because, I mean, we'll look at Obama that did executive orders and Trump did more. And then what if
there's someone three presidents from now that truly is a tyrant truly is some type of demagogue
that wants to utilize the precedent that's been made in the past to then do something catastrophic
and i think that is to me like the biggest looming threat is kind of the precedent that these
kind of orders make and yeah at times i feel hopeless because i'm like what can i do like what can
i really do right like i'm just i'm a comedian like i have no i have no sway no influence but i guess
I'm curious what you think. To me, the thing that I lean on that makes me feel better to this hope
conversation that we had is, you know, I hope for a better world. I hope that humanity is
intelligent enough, that it's conscious enough to want to preserve itself. And I hope that the
people in charge don't want to rule over ashes and that they want to have thriving societies and that
they love humanity as much as I do and that they would want it to persist. And it was part of me
that also hopes that there is a God that is in some way divinely guiding these things.
And again, that is just a hope that I have.
And in terms of what I can do, like, you know, I can spread awareness and discuss it with people
and have it like in my mind when I'm considering elections and things like that.
And I don't know, this is maybe trite, but to me, the thing that gives me solace is just
tending to my garden.
This is kind of a stoic idea.
But like, Mother Teresa says, like, if you want to change the world, love your family.
And if every person on earth just loved their family, I do think that the ripple of that.
Like, think of a, you know, Putin or, you know, Kim Jong-un or Trump.
If they loved their family so much, then maybe they would think twice about using these types of weapons.
And maybe they would really consider a disarmament because if you love your family and you love your grandkids, you don't want them to live in a world where this is a threat after you're gone.
So I don't know.
What do you think about the hope issue?
Absolutely. I mean, yeah, the hope.
So I want to address the hope issue.
I just want to make a point about something you said earlier.
I totally agree with everything you said.
On the profit motive, I have to think that those people also have children and grandchildren.
And if not children and grandchildren, you know, that they also think that humanity,
that it's not just about whatever profit they're making at this very moment, right?
But that it really should be about the future and ensuring a future for humanity.
I think in many cases, I think people have, it's the buying of the nuclear deterrence argument.
I think that's been most detrimental to disarmament.
The notion the nuclear weapons keep us safe, that disregards, you know, the what if it fails, right?
What if nuclear deterrence fails?
and that disregards these examples of actually we really got lucky and so on.
So I think it's convincing people like that.
I think they sleep at night because they think that actually what I'm doing is a good thing
because it keeps the United States safe rather than recognizing the this is, as you
described so beautifully, this thread that looms over all of us.
I talk a lot about, you know, because people ask me what they can do.
And I think, you know, in your case, you're doing more than plenty, certainly by raising this to your viewers and listeners and having them be aware of really where we are and just why this is such an important issue.
so I thank you for that.
I think in general for people,
it's knowledge I really do think is power.
It's all about learn, learn, learn,
because when you learn and the more you learn,
and I can tell you,
I've been interested in this question
for about 15 years,
for some of that time,
not as intensely as I am now,
the last, since August of 2022,
when I became president of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation,
that just really gave me a new kind of sense and level of responsibility
and also opportunities to talk to people and to be in places like the UN and so on,
that has really raised the stakes for this for me.
But I can't tell you over this entire time,
like, I still learn new things about nuclear weapons every single day,
like quite literally, whether it's the history, whether it's the science,
whether it's someone mentioning some policy that I hadn't read about or, you know, details of a treaty or whatever it might be.
So it's just, I mean, I think that it's one of the most exciting things about being a human being is this ability to learn.
And the world is such an interesting place.
And there's so many things to learn.
And I don't care if you like learning about history or music or whatever, like just be passionate and learn.
So when it comes to a new.
nuclear weapons, people just need to know and learn more.
So learn, learn, learn.
There are lots of resources out there.
My own organization, the Nuclear HPs Foundation, we recently released, the Learning Hub
that has a lot of resources, but there are other organizations and places to go and read
and books to read and so on.
Toomsday Machine by Dan Ellsberg, Annie Jacobson's Nuclear War, a scenario people have
and read it.
There are
even recent films,
well, there's the day after,
which they can watch on YouTube.
This is a great movie that you love.
From 1983.
There was recently on Netflix,
a House of Dynamite,
which kind of has
a very similar
storyline to Annie's book,
but nevertheless,
it's absolutely
worth people's time.
It's on Netflix.
They can watch.
It really kind of puts into perspective this idea that this could happen in a matter of minutes.
And it kind of plays that, you know, it's a 19-minute, you know, time frame plays that from different perspectives
and what happens to people in different places and situations and so on.
So it's learning.
Another thing, you know, we've got to get that democracy back.
So how do we get a democracy back?
We let our elected officials know that this is an issue important to us.
People can write to their representatives.
People can talk to them about it.
People can write to President Donald Trump.
Praise him for his past statements and the necessity of denuclearization.
Just say President Trump, I'm so happy to hear these words from a U.S. president.
We haven't heard these words.
I am happy to hear it, to be honest.
Exactly. Absolutely. And praise him. You may not agree with him on everything or you may not agree with him on many things. Or maybe you like everything he does. I don't care. Tell him the denuclearization is a great idea. How about we wrap up some of these wars first? And then we work on how the U.S. and Russia, the first step has to be the U.S. and Russia coming down from their 5,000 plus nuclear warheads.
when everybody else has a couple hundred, for example, they're not going to come down until
U.S. and Russia makes some progress.
So, you know, letting people in charge know that this, once you understand that this is important
to you, I think is really one of the key issues.
Another issue is that people, you know, they're often local initiatives, there are cities in this
country that, you know, have back back in the 80s in 1982, if you look at photos from
the Central Park rally, again, a million people in Central Park.
Can't, you know, hard to even imagine.
You know, with these banners carrying banners, Vermont towns for a nuclear-free, you know,
world, like there were just, there was engagement in many, many, many.
many levels, local kind of, you know, town, city, you know, state government efforts,
as well as organizations working on these issues, religious, you know, groups and movements.
And there's just a lot that we could do in some sense organizing in this day and age would be,
even easier than it was in, you know, early 1980s.
And but what we really need for that is for people's awareness to go way up.
We really need people to understand what's a stake.
This is the future of, you know, all future human generations.
This is, we're not just talking about our children and grandchildren.
We're talking about no one after that.
And we need to make sure that humanity can outlast the nuclear age
and that we can, in some sense, put the genie back in the bottle.
Well, Ivana, thank you so much.
I know that I told you that this would be a shorter episode, but I think I lied.
We had a wonderful conversation.
I really appreciate you being here and just, yeah, using this platform to share your message.
Truly, I'm inspired by your love for humanity.
and I wish more people had that perspective.
I think humanity is worth fighting for.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Thank you for giving me the opportunity.
And it's really such a pleasure to talk to you.
Thank you so much.
And if there's anyone watching at home,
if there's anything that I missed
or if you have a legitimate kind of pushback
to this idea of disarmament,
I would love to know what you think.
Drop a comment.
I'll read most of them, be civil, be nice to each other, right?
You know, we're all human beings.
And yeah, maybe if, you know, if someone has a thoughtful response, you know, we can go through it at a different time and read what the arguments are.
I would love that. That would be actually my favorite. I mean, this is what I, you know, when I'm not advocating for nuclear disarmament, I teach college students. So I love the back and forth. So I'd be totally down for that.
As I think Aquinas, maybe, he says that the truth doesn't fear interrogation. So if you have a good argument, I would love to.
know what it is. Just again, be civil, be thoughtful. And, you know, throw a source in there.
If someone said it better than you, you can just link to that. I'll check it out. But thank you
you guys so much for tuning in. Thank you, Ivana, for being here. And let's do it again soon.
Thank you for having me. Absolutely.
