Freakonomics Radio - 380. Notes From an Imperfect Paradise
Episode Date: June 6, 2019Recorded live in Los Angeles. Guests include Mayor Eric Garcetti, the “Earthquake Lady,” the head of the Port of L.A., and a scientist with NASA’s Planetary Protection team. With co-host Angela ...Duckworth, fact-checker Mike Maughan, and the worldwide debut of Luis Guerra and the Freakonomics Radio Orchestra.
Transcript
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Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the host of Freakonomics Radio, Stephen Dubner. Thank you so much.
This week, Freakonomics Radio is being recorded live at the theater at the Ace Hotel in Los Angeles, California.
Our show is typically produced in a studio.
Tonight, not only do we have the pleasure of working with a live audience,
but also live music.
So would you please welcome, in their worldwide debut,
the composer behind the music you hear on our show every week,
Luis Guerra and the Freakonomics Radio Orchestra. Also joining us tonight as co-host, the University of Pennsylvania psychology professor.
She's also the author of the great book, Grit, The Power of Passion and Perseverance.
Would you please welcome Angela Duckworth.
Angela, hello. Hi, Stephen. I'm dying to know what you're working on that we should all know about. I recently did an eight-minute
intervention. We asked students to give advice to other students. So we didn't give them money,
we didn't give them information, we simply asked them to help other kids. They answered questions about how not to procrastinate, how to stay off their cell phone in eight minutes. And then we followed them for a full marking period. And the students, just by being asked for their advice, got more motivated and did better in school.
So just telling other people what they should do with their lives makes you better off?
It's kind of, you know, not intuitive because everyone does that like all the time.
But in this particular case, the way we ask the questions, yeah.
I like it.
Angela, as you know, we sometimes play a game during these live shows called Tell Me Something I Don't Know.
And what we do is we bring on stage a series of guests from various backgrounds and
disciplines, and we will ask them to tell us something particularly interesting about their
field. You and I will then ask them some questions, and then later on our live audience will pick a
winner. The criteria are very simple. Number one, did they tell us something we truly did not know?
Number two, was it worth knowing? And number three, was it demonstrably
true? And to help with that demonstrably true part, would you please welcome our real-time
fact checker? He is the head of global insights at Qualtrics. He's the co-founder of Five for
the Fight, the campaign to eradicate cancer, Mike Maughan. Hey, Mike, first time in L.A. for us doing the show.
You want to tell us some little-known facts about L.A.?
So L.A. is a unique place.
It is illegal to drive more than 2,000 sheep down Hollywood Boulevard.
Shocking number of people have been arrested for that in the last two centuries.
The L.A. coroner's office has a gift shop.
Just weird. And while San Francisco probably wants to own it, LA is regarded as the birthplace of the internet because the first transmission
was sent from UCLA up to Menlo Park in 1969. Now, unfortunately, this is also the birthplace of the Kardashians and animatronic robots.
Win some, lose some.
Mike Maughan, thank you so much.
I think it's time to get started.
Our first guest tonight, would you please welcome, he is your mayor, Eric Garcetti.
Thank you.
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Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you Angels. Great to have you guys here.
Mayor Garcetti, we New Yorkers feel that we've got a pretty accurate picture of life in California, especially
Southern California. It's basically earthquakes, wildfires, and Kardashians. So I'm just curious,
is there anything else going on here generally? Well, we are looking at getting an animatronic
Kardashian. So the two things will come together soon. But no, that's pretty much the full sum of
this amazing city. It's a very simple place,
but I like to call it sort of an imperfect paradise. What, in your view, are the imperfect
parts that you are most concerned about? I think our biggest challenges are around poverty,
housing connected to that, especially homelessness, traffic, and transportation. And then I'd say the third thing that we kind of are faced
with is trying to figure out how we can take our pluralism and make that work. I think we do a
pretty darn good job compared to other places. Los Angeles, I like to say it's a place where
everybody feels like they belong. A lot of people like diversity and inclusion as words. I think
they're less good. You know, the hometown buffet is diverse. Inclusion implies someone's powerful and is including you. But belonging is like a
great equalizer. So let's talk about transportation a little bit. Most people from not here, like us,
when we think about LA, I think of it as a geographically massive place, which therefore requires a big
dependence on cars, which therefore means a lot of congestion. And then when it comes to public
transport, we think of slow buses and not many trains. So tell me where that perception is right
and wrong and what you're doing about it. Well, we used to have the best public transportation
system probably in the country, the red car and the yellow cars.
We can go through the conspiracies of whether it was the car companies and the oil companies who killed it off.
Go through those conspiracies.
Well, okay.
Speaking of Roger Rabbit, it's mostly not true that there was some conspiracy behind it.
We've always been on the cutting edge of transportation, and freeways actually worked for a long time.
It was 20 minutes anywhere.
We were building the future, kind of the way people talk about autonomous vehicles now, the way they talked about subways
before that. We kind of thought for a while, rail cars are so yesterday, let's just get rid of all
them because cars will be here forever. That led to a problem or two. But we're changing that. I
mean, we just passed the largest transportation initiative in American history at the local level.
We're going to be building 15 rapid transit lines at once. Today, we're already the third largest light rail line, but it's kind of like winning
the lottery today in LA. Like if you're lucky enough to live on that line and work over there,
and it might take you, you're like, wow, I won. We want to make that more than 5%, which is kind of
what it is today. Second, I think we're solving it by trying to plan better communities. We used
to segregate away where we work, where we play, where we live.
And now we're trying to build communities where you can actually walk.
And third, we're kind of on the cutting edge of technology.
We are saying yes to testing things here, whether it is connected cars and autonomous
vehicles, whether it's things like Hyperloop or the Boring Company.
Was that Elon whooping?
Yeah, that was Elon Musk.
If you look under your seats right now, there's actually a free Tesla key for everybody. You're a winner. You're a winner. I'd like to
fact check you are a politician for promising something. It's inspiring to listen to you.
But if there is one secular trend that is indisputable, when you look at generations
of young people who
grew up in the 60s compared to the 70s and then on up to the millennials, that young people are
getting more cynical and less trusting of politicians and political institutions. What
is your message to the young people today? Well, two things. You diagnose exactly right.
I think it's, I'm going to get fact-checked on this,
shoot. There's some polling company that every year polls America's trust in institutions.
There's 15 different institutions, and only three in America are above 50%. Police, just barely,
military, and small businesses. So journalism, way underwater. Not surprisingly, the White House,
way underwater. Congress, way underwater. People don, the White House, way underwater. Congress,
way underwater. People don't trust big institutions because we've read so many stories of
folks letting them down. Oh, I believed in God, but then I read a story about priests. Oh,
I believed in journalists, and then I came on this podcast. You know, stories like that where
your faith is just fundamentally challenged. But anyway, my message is that something like politics
isn't something that people like I own.
It's not about mayors or members of Congress
or your president or your governor.
It's about you.
You either exercise the power you have
or you cede that to someone else.
And every day at the local level,
I have this great brotherhood and sisterhood of mayors,
both in the United States and globally, who don't have the option to argue about stuff.
We have to address global warming because there's fires right next to us. We have to deal with inequality because it's on our street. So don't just leave it up to elected leaders. Get engaged,
get involved, and don't cede the power to Washington before you even exercise it. Mr. Mayor, I understand that your administration
moved LA City Mail to Gmail, making it the first, I guess, major city to have their email in the
cloud. Is that true? Yeah. Is it also true that you required all city workers to use the same
password, which is awesomemayor12345? Yeah, I mean, it's just the default password. You can
change it afterwards, but 92% of them haven't, so I enjoy reading their emails. Now, speaking of you knowing so well the
data, LA was recently acknowledged, I believe, as the best U.S. city at using data to drive
governance. Yeah, it's kind of like being the tallest building in Wichita, but we'll take it.
No, no, all kidding aside, we're proud of opening up our data and sharing it with journalists and hackers and people who can use this data. I mean, the positive sense
of hackers who can come in and do things to empower the city. Can you tell us something
that you learned through use of administrative data that otherwise either the identification
of a problem or the idea of a solution that you wouldn't have known? So everybody's watched Chinatown, the great movie, how we stole water from Owens Valley.
Owens Valley is what, who administers it?
It's a number of counties up there that are run by those supervisors. But Los Angeles,
the city of Los Angeles, I learned this, our land holdings in Owens Valley are larger than
the entire city of LA. And I realized we need to do something, especially because of the drought.
And I found out, here's the statistic, that 260 million gallons of water a day was going from our toilets and our sinks to the Hyperion water treatment plant right next to LAX. And we were
cleaning it up to no longer be contaminated and then flushing it out to the ocean. And that was about three times
the equivalent of the LA aqueduct. So what William Mulholland had engineered to come to LA,
we could essentially quadruple the amount of water in this town from those two sources by simply
recycling 100% of that, which we announced two months ago after working on this for a few years,
we would do and we will accomplish. But yeah, I mean, I think literally it was one of those moments where
if I hadn't read that number, I don't think I would have made that decision.
And I don't think we would have kind of done the biggest infrastructure
change to our water in 100 years.
So what were you like when you were, you know, 16 years old?
What was your social group? My social group was
theater nerds. You were a theater nerd. Yeah. There's 10 of us here and we all keep in touch.
Like stage crew? Thanks for coming. No, I was on the stage and I was kind of a budding activist,
I would say. I mean, I was this weird mix that's reflective of this city. I'm your average
Angeleno. I have an Italian last name. I'm half Mexican, half Jewish. I was
really into human rights. And I kind of found my place in those two things, like being in and of
the world, trying to pursue human rights stuff and getting on a stage when you're scared is,
I don't know, can we swear here? Sure. I mean, it's your city. You shouldn't be asking us if
you should, you can swear here. You guys can all swear tonight. Yeah, thanks. Appreciate it. Oh,
speaking of favors, Luis Guerra, our band leader, apparently has a few parking tickets.
Oh, I know. And I thank him for those.
Keep on doing it, man. We need that. We need that revenue. More firefighters,
you know, longer hours at our library. Keep parking.
So let me ask you this.
There are roughly half a million Democratic candidates running for president in 2020,
one of which is not you, many of which are less prominent than you, however.
So why not?
And don't please, if you don't mind, give me the standard answer about loving your current job and wanting to serve out your term, because we know that that stops no one else. I can only speak for myself,
but it kind of should. Look, in politics, people live so much of their careers oftentimes in the
future that they ignore the present and what they have. And that's not just for politicians. That's
all of us, right? We're always like, cool, I got an iPhone 8. Like, when's 9 coming out?
It is something that we have to discipline ourselves. And I went
through it and I thought I had something. I still would have something to add to it. But it's very
difficult to be the CEO of a city. And if you have a conscience kind of not run that city, if a
teacher's strike like we had in January breaks out or an earthquake comes, God forbid, life's long, and we'll figure out the future, I would say.
So from what I've read, your style of governance seems to be really collaborative, as opposed to the kind of command and control or shout and scream that we see in Washington a lot. If you
could sort of magically invoke one change in federal government that would produce more
collaboration, or at least less outright intransigence, what would you do? So in DC, we kind of have this, you know,
repeal and replace mentality. As soon as I can get into government, I'm going to just repeal
everything that the last folks did and replace it with my philosophy. And we see compromise as
some sort of dirty word. And I think that's really toxic. At the local level, we can't afford to do that. You know, we raised the minimum wage here in LA, but we also reduced
our city's business tax. Now think about that for a second. If you're a Democrat, you're supposed
to raise both of those things. If you're a Republican, you're supposed to lower both of them.
But we know putting more money in the pocket of folks who are going to spend it on Main Street's
good for the economy, as is lowering a city's business tax that we have based on gross receipts, which is anti-business. So if I could change one thing
in Washington, this is totally radical, but I would maybe get rid of political parties altogether. I
think our founders envisioned factions, not parties, and it's the most destructive thing we have right
now. Yeah, sign me up for that. So let me just ask you, this is an even less palatable idea to most
people than yours, but even if the
people going in have the best intentions, which I truly believe they often do, they want to serve
the public good, that once you get into the system, your incentives change, that rather than
long-termism, which we want for policy, you get involved in a lot of short-termism in terms of
consolidating power and getting re-elected. So from an economic perspective, I could see perhaps
aligning incentives better by, let's say, rewarding elected officials financially by setting up some
kind of revenue share that pays off over the long term if the projects that they work on
actually work out. Here's a way that you could sell that. Instead of talking about redistribution,
talk about the idea of pre-distribution. talk about the idea of predistribution. The idea
is kind of sovereign wealth funds. So maybe it's not a reward for the politician or the elected
official, but for all of us, in which I would have a stake too, that if we are able to do something
that has some payoff, we put 20% of that into some public good. But it's not just a check that's kind
of after the fact. Say we'd go back to state universities having free tuition,
not just something that we figure out afterwards
by taking more money from the super wealthy
or from corporations,
but actually something that's an investment at the front end.
So then I would have an incentive
because I do think it's a caricature
that people who are elected, you know,
get more and more disconnected.
I mean, we pursued the Olympics
and won the Olympics and Paralympics for 2028. And people are like, oh, well, you don't care about the Olympics. You're not going to even
be mayor then if there's cost overruns. And I say, no, I'm going to be worse than a mayor. I'm going
to be a taxpayer living here in Los Angeles. Most economists argue that when cities or regions go
for a big public event like the Olympics or conventions, World Cup, and so on, that usually
fiscallyally it turns out
not to be good for the city.
I know LA has successfully done the Olympics before.
Obviously you think it can work well here again.
Why?
Why is LA different?
Is it because of the existence of the infrastructure and so on?
It's our infrastructure and the way we do the Olympics.
So we've had it twice before.
In 1932, we turned a million dollar profit.
In 1984, we introduced a million-dollar profit. In 1984,
we introduced a whole new model with sponsorship and kind of saved the Olympics. The U.S. Olympic
Committee was broke, and we made hundreds of millions of dollars. It's the infrastructure.
And people do things like build a new railway to Sochi. Well, that's not like the Olympics. That
was a $50 billion or whatever it was, dollar railway that people put into the Olympics as
if that's the inherent cost of the Olympics. It's a boondoggle.
And you're getting your boondoggles in early now
so that they can't be attached.
No, better than that, we delayed till 2028,
let Paris go first in 2024,
and we negotiated $160 million up front.
So $16 million a year has been going into doubling
the number of kids who get swim classes.
And African-American, Latino kids,
over half of them don't know how to swim, and it's the second leading accidental killer of kids who get swim classes. And African-American, Latino kids, over half of them don't know how to swim.
And it's the second leading accidental killer
of kids under 12.
So, you know, we are putting into public good now.
And the main reasons why LA can get away with it
and other places are right to avoid it
is we're not building an Olympic village.
We're using UCLA.
So we're just renting those rooms.
We've got all the infrastructure.
The most expensive stadium in human history
has been built without public subsidy
in Inglewood here for the Rams and the Chargers.
We're going to use that.
We have the Coliseum.
We have the Staples Center.
So we're just renting the incredible sports facilities
we already have here.
We have a velodrome.
We've got tennis courts.
So most other cities are smart to not bid,
but we hope to get the Olympics to kind of chill out
on needing to build so many new things.
So the moral of the story is the Olympics should only be held in Los Angeles.
Correct.
There's one question I want to ask you, and we ask this to a lot of substantial people.
What's something that you believed for a long time to be true until you found out that you were wrong?
Well, I mentioned it a bit already.
I think that I was
one of those Democrats who always thought you can never lower taxes. And I think that I've seen in
practice that businesses do make their decisions based on where taxes are. That's definitely one.
I think the other thing, I used to think you could dismiss people's fears and that, let's say,
in a town hall meeting where people don't want a homeless shelter in their neighborhood, that it
was okay to just say you're wrong or that somebody's racist about something,
or this, that, and the other. And I realized over time, you have to kind of
understand people's fears, that they usually come from a real place,
and until you understand that, you can't transform it.
Mike Maughan, the mayor, told us a lot of things about Los Angeles.
Any facts we need to be concerned with?
So a couple of things that are interesting.
He was rated one of the top five most dateable mayors in America,
despite the fact that he's married to the incredible Amy Wakelin.
Thank you. I was going to say, I'm not dateable at all.
I did want to say one thing about diversity, which was interesting. There is a large study
that just came out that ranks LA itself, not greater Los Angeles, as the 63rd most diversity
in terms of racial and ethnic diversity. It moves up to the eighth most diverse city
when you take into account income, education, language, industry, class, age, religion, etc.
The most interesting thing I think you talked about
was how hometown buffets also have diversity.
You'll be interested to know that in Canada,
some buffets offer jellied moose nose.
In Japan, you can get tuna eyeballs.
But most impressive was a man in Springfield, Massachusetts,
who ate all the diversity and was kicked out of a buffet
after spending more than seven hours on site
eating more than 50 pounds of food.
Oh, my God.
So it is possible to get all the diversity at once.
Thank you, Mike Maughan,
and thanks especially to Mayor Eric Garcetti of Los Angeles.
Thank you all.
Thank you. Our next guest is a seismologist
at Caltech, and she's a leading authority on earthquake risk. Would you please welcome Lucy Okay, Lucy, it was so interesting to me that people clapped for earthquakes.
So tell us something we don't know about earthquakes.
Let's start there.
I think most people think of California as a place with a lot of earthquakes.
The reality is we don't have enough.
Now, maybe that's only something a seismologist is going to say,
but we can look at the geology and see how many we should have.
And especially the last couple of decades have been particularly quiet.
We call it an earthquake drought.
And the only downside of it is it leads to complacency.
People think that this is what we have to be ready for,
and we need to remember that in the long run we get more.
Very interesting. So for 20 years, that time scale is probably just not significant when you're thinking earthquakes, yes?
On the larger ones, that's right. And actually, if you want to see some really interesting debates, watch geologists try to do statistics.
A lot of us struggle on how to do it correctly, and we argue over it. But if you go to small enough earthquakes,
then you have a lot of them. And it's statistically significant that the last 20 years is quite a bit
quieter than the previous century. So quick two-part question. I want you to tell us about
earthquake prediction and how it's changed over recent decades. And then related to that,
what can you tell us about the probability
of a big bad earthquake, let's say in California,
in the next, let's say, 10, 20, and 50 years?
Okay, I'll start with the last one and just say
the big earthquake on the San Andreas,
7.88, something like that, is absolutely inevitable.
Just give me enough time.
Enough time, we're talking decades, centuries, what? 7.88, something like that, is absolutely inevitable. Just give me enough time.
Enough time, we're talking decades, centuries, what?
Well, all right, so we average 150 years. Can I just say, you sound a little too excited about the probability.
I don't get to create my own experiments.
I have to wait for what the Earth is going to give me.
And, you know, I came in here in my first decade.
We had a lot of earthquakes.
We had Whittier Narrows.
We had Northridge.
We had Loma Prieta.
And then for the next 25 years, at the end of my career, nothing, right?
I miss them.
But I realize that not everybody else does.
The problem is, is that the pattern really is random.
I can give you a rate.
I can do the earthquake climate, if you will.
But what we don't have is the particular storm.
You know, when the rain's coming in tonight and my iPhone says there's a 50% chance of
rain starting at 11 o'clock, that's because they can measure the cloud coming in.
There's nothing that has to come in for the earthquake to happen.
Or if there is, it happens for every earthquake.
And there's an average in an earthquake once every three minutes in Southern California.
So what do you mean that it's random?
Do you really mean that it's random?
Yeah.
Statistically, as far as we can tell, it really is random.
Now, you think, OK, we're building up the stress on the fault.
The earthquake should happen when the stress is built up. The problem is, is that the earthquakes actually happen
at stresses much smaller than the breaking strength of the fault. And it's like, if it
goes unstable, then we go into a different mode and dynamic friction is much weaker than static
friction. And so the timing is controlled by when you happen to get a little break just
somewhere on the fault and it goes unstable. We aren't actually building up to the full strength
of the fault. So does that mean there will never be a time where we can really predict the
earthquakes? I believe we will never predict earthquakes. Now notice my qualifier. I'm a
scientist. I don't say absolutes. The fundamental is do 1s and magnitude 7s begin in exactly the same way?
If they do, there's nothing to predict.
You don't want me to predict the 1s.
And as far as we can tell at this point, the 1s and the 7s start the same way.
I know you're excited for the next big earthquake because it'll keep you busy,
which is not a bad reason to want an earthquake.
But most people, I would say, would probably rather not have a big earthquake
for obvious reasons, loss of life and damage and on and on and on and on. So let's talk
a little bit about, I guess, what you'd call earthquake risk management, right? Tell us one
smart thing and one dumb thing that California has done to manage earthquake risk.
So a really smart thing that Mayor Garcetti did is listen to
me. He invited me to City Hall. We had a long discussion. We ended up creating a cooperative
project where the U.S. Geological Survey, who was my employer at the time, put me in City Hall, and together we created a resilience plan. The two biggest things,
generally, we know which are the bad buildings that are going to fall down, and we have mandated
repairs. The owners have to spend the money to fix those buildings so they don't kill people.
And what kind of money are we talking about for that?
Billions.
Retrofitting, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, there's about 15,000 buildings involved.
And it's paid by the owners, right?
And if it's a rent-controlled apartment,
then it's split 50-50 with the tenants.
But they're not allowed to put the whole cost onto the tenants.
The concrete or a commercial building,
the owner pays for it and he can change his rent as needed.
Or he can choose to tear it down.
Can I ask, you said that the seven is inevitable,
like Superman, the first movie, like the, I mean, what does this look like? I actually watched that
movie with a class of geologists. We got thrown out of the theater. We can look at the geology
and Los Angeles is moving to San Francisco. In just 5 million years, we will be a suburb of San Francisco,
right? And that is inevitable, and it's not going to be stopped. Plate tectonics goes on.
The question is, are we going to take the next step in it tonight, or next year, or 50 years
from now? And these policies that are, you know, building the right infrastructures,
do these apply to seven-level earthquakes?
Absolutely. We do pretty well in a magnitude six, right? We have had sixes that don't kill people.
So we are gradually building it up. I mean, it's all a relative thing. We absolutely could have
a city resilient to it. We can't stop all damage. We could do a better job with our water system.
You know, all that Los Angeles aqueduct he was talking about, it crosses the San Andreas Fault
in a wooden tunnel built in 1908. And the tunnel is nine feet in diameter, and the expected fault
offset will be 12 feet, so it won't exist after the earthquake. Okay, Mr. Awesome Mayor, what have awesome mayor. What have you done about that? They are planning the engineering solution now.
How much greater is the risk of dying in an earthquake in California versus, let's say,
New York? Not much. We have a lot more earthquakes, but you have a lot worse buildings.
There was a study that said, what's the expected money to be lost in the different
urban areas? Los Angeles is number one, San Francisco is number two, Seattle is number three,
and New York is number four. I understand that earthquake insurance is not required in California
and that roughly just 15% of property owners have it. Should it be required? That's a different policy question than science,
but it is going to hurt our economy very badly.
You can look at what happened to San Francisco in 1906.
It was the only city that mattered on the West Coast in 1905.
That earthquake happened and essentially destroyed the whole city.
The next decade is the biggest growth decade in the history of Los Angeles.
People gave up on San Francisco and came south.
Their economy went down for decades.
And you can argue that San Francisco never regained its position.
Mike Maughan, Lucy Jones says the big one is coming and she can't wait.
Did you turn up any facts that are worth revisiting?
There is, in theory, this sliver of land between the fault and the ocean that will break off and then L.A. would slide past San Francisco.
So that's a real thing. I'd bet on that.
In five billion years. Yeah, well,
sure, but what's time? On a positive note, earthquakes are the only natural disaster
not affected by climate change. Lucky us. A few things to add. We are in this earthquake drought.
We're also in a drought of moral leadership, human intelligence, and good Nicolas Cage movies.
Mike, thank you, and Lucy Jones,
thank you so much for being on our show tonight.
That was great.
It is time now for a quick break.
If you'd like to attend a future taping of Freakonomics Radio Live,
visit freakonomics.com slash live.
We do have upcoming shows in Philadelphia,
London, and Chicago.
We will be right back.
Welcome back to Freakonomics Radio Live.
I'm Stephen Dubner.
My co-host is Angela Duckworth.
Our live fact checker is Mike Maughan.
And we've got live music tonight from the Freakonomics Radio Orchestra,
which includes composer and bassist Luis Guerra.
On drums, Mike Longoria.
On guitar, Jimmy Messer.
On horns and strings, Dan Weinstein.
And on keys and good vibes, Khalil Sabah.
Would you please welcome now our next guest?
He is executive director of the Port of Los Angeles, Gene Sirocca.
Gene, I understand the Port of LA is the biggest container port in the U.S., bringing in 37% of imports. Is that about right for starters?
Combined with Long Beach, we bring in 37%,
but we account for about a fifth of all the traffic that moves in the United States.
Wow. Okay. So I'd love you to tell us something we don't know about the Port of L.A.
and us being neither port people nor L.A. people, that could be pretty much anything.
One of our biggest exports is air.
Air?
Empty containers.
Oh, is this about China?
We're pretty dependent as a nation on imports.
So we've got a balance of about two imports to every one export.
And the balance of those containers, we work around the clock to get
back to Asia so they can get the next round of imports. So this is containers deadheading their
way back to China to fill up to send us more junk. That's exactly it. Gotcha. Okay. So what are the
mechanics, let's say, in logistics and costs of shipping full stuff versus air? Well, if you're
shipping a lot of air, you're losing money. So you want to make sure you have round-trip economics, bringing imports in and exports out. And even if you have to overreach
and get a little more market share in an area that you may not have the relative strength in.
I am curious about the empty versus full ships. How has that ratio changed over the last,
whatever, five or 10 years? It's remained pretty consistent. We as a country have outsourced our
manufacturing since the late 70s, early 80s. And us as consumers want to go find the product as
quickly as we can. And we're going to keep doing that because the price points are so great.
But what we've seen is that right now, the largest export from the United States to Asia
is waste paper. I thought that was changing, that China is accepting much less waste from us
for recycling.
Yeah, the green fence policy.
This predated all the debates that are happening
between Washington and Beijing today.
But the idea is exactly as you said, Stephen,
to try to clean up the waste products
that we ship back to China.
Now, waste paper goes back, gets refined,
and it makes those corrugated boxes that ship our TVs and our washing machines back here to the U.S.
Big question. We're kind of in the middle, maybe, of a historic confrontation between the U.S. and
China on trade and tariffs. I'm curious to know how this whole political chapter has been affecting
business at the port. The numbers at the port today are at record highs. You look under the hood, it's a little
bit different recently. We've seen a lot of imports advanced to get underneath the tariffs
or taxation. And we've seen a paucity of exports or really a precipitous drop of exports because
the retaliatory tariffs and the fact that those goods aren't as marketable as they have been in the past. A drop in the exports because they don't want the stuff to
get there with the uncertainty of knowing what the retaliatory tariffs will be, or just because
it's already taken effect here? A little bit of both. Yeah. When things are going on in D.C. or
Beijing, when there's disagreements and so on, your logistics must run on a very, very, very long
time frame. And I'm curious to know know when the butterfly flaps its wings in one of
those places, how long it takes to get to you. Yeah, realistically speaking, it takes about six
months of thought that goes into bringing cargo back here to Los Angeles. So there's a merchandiser
somewhere with a big retailer in the Midwest that says, I want to buy 20 million widgets. They put an order into a factory. Those goods are manufactured. They're put into the
supply chain and moved all the way through and get here to LA. So when you and I decide that we want
to go online and buy something and get next day delivery, all of that has taken about six months
of thought beforehand. I understand that the port caught more than 1,500 kilos of meth
that was being smuggled to Australia.
So my first question is, isn't meth really easy to make
and shouldn't Australians be able to make their own?
Was that question not in your purview as a port?
No, no, I wouldn't claim to be an expert there.
Okay, well, let's talk about contraband generally. I'm curious about port security. So tell us what you're willing to
about people doing what they shouldn't be doing with your ships coming in or out. Yeah, port
security is one of the biggest aspects of what we do on a daily basis. We have one of the nation's
only sworn and civilian police forces. They work directly with all the allied agencies and imagine from the FBI to the CIA, Secret Service,
all kinds of folks to share intelligence
and try to stop the bad guys.
There could be anything from getting into our systems
to find out where our money is flowing,
how bank accounts are used both here and overseas
to get ships to move in the wrong direction
and cause havoc, all of the above and much more. And who's doing that? Bad guys. Mike Maughan, Gene Sirocco, who runs the port of
L.A. America's port, Stephen. America's port. Gene Sirocco has been telling us about the ins and
outs of the port. Anything worth calling our attention to?
So you mentioned that in January, the port caught a lot of meth that was being smuggled to Australia.
The drugs were hidden in metal boxes labeled as loudspeakers.
Now, to Stephen's point, making meth apparently isn't that hard.
Don't worry, I opened an incognito browser to look at this.
There are four primary ways to make meth in the U.S., but they have a totally different method that the Mexican cartels use,
so it all depends on the flavor you like.
Last month, a large Australian newspaper ran a headline that says,
Meth remains our country's illicit drug of choice.
Exclamation point. They're very thrilled about it.
So there you have it.
Gene Sirocco, thank you so much for joining us tonight.
It is time now for our final guest.
She works at the Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena.
And she is specifically with a NASA division
called Planetary Protection.
Would you please welcome Mujige Stricker.
Mujige, welcome.
Thank you. It would seem that your division, planetary protection, has something to do with fighting off, let's say, potential asteroid strikes that would devastate the Earth.
Is that true?
That is the actual number one thing that people usually think, but it is wrong.
So what I do is I focus on the microbial scale and protecting other planets from humans, making sure when we explore other planets,
bodies, asteroids, that we don't contaminate it with life that we find on Earth, especially
if there may be life that exists there.
It is so interesting that we're more concerned about polluting other planets than ours.
Did we do anything wrong with the previous moon landings?
You know, the astronauts, when they came back from the moon,
they splashed down in the ocean.
And if there was something on the outside of the container
that really could harm humans,
we would have been dead right there at splashdown.
But what do you do, though?
Like, you can't go through a car wash on your way back down from space.
What you need to do when you bring something back,
humans back or samples back,
you need to do a lot of great creative engineering to have capsules within capsules or a sterilization
device so that you can prevent anything bad to come back to Earth. So is this mostly about Mars
2020? Yeah, so my job is specifically focused on Mars. Mars 2020 is going to go to the surface of
Mars, collect samples, and for the very first time,
package them in a way that they can come back to Earth.
We've never had a sample return mission from Mars.
Okay, so let me ask you this.
You don't sound like a very excited person, I have to say,
but what would really, really super-duper excite you
about Mars and getting stuff back?
Yeah, the most exciting and ultimate goal is,
you know, we're searching for life. And to be able to find signs of life and actually definitively
find a smoking gun, that would be just an exciting dream come true because it would answer the big
question, are we alone in the universe? So what do you actually do in your job?
So a day in my life would be sitting in a very small room with a bunch of engineers, scientists, and say,
okay, we're going to plug in the face of the rover onto the body of the rover.
And before we do that, planetary protection, do you need to sample the hardware?
So we would go in with our sterile swabs, our wipes, and we would actually scrub or swab the actual surface and go to the lab and see what microbes are present on this component.
What do you think about the microbes that you may encounter elsewhere and what are the either dangers or potentially benefits of those?
So part two of my job, planetary protection, is when we bring samples back, we have to make sure that it doesn't
harm humans. So how do you do that? How can you tell? So one method that was actually done is
for the moon rocks, is feeding it to chickens. I'm not sure why they selected chickens, but
it's just one of those tests. How do you prove that you're not going to kill anybody? So I imagine that this is, you know, such a specific career that not a lot of girls and
boys think that they're going to grow up to be part of the planetary protection lead for Mars.
So, you know, how'd you end up here?
I actually didn't know planetary protection existed until I was working on my PhD.
So I was working on plasma sterilization,
and they had a project that used plasma
to sterilize spacecraft surfaces,
because it's really tough.
You can imagine when you're innovating
these new materials and new spacecraft,
a lot of these aren't capable of going through
high-temperature heat sterilization processes.
So they need other alternative methods.
Plasma was one of those alternatives.
So as an undergrad, I studied physics. And before that, I was just a little kid that watched Carl
Sagan's The Cosmos. And so that really put me on the trajectory of, I want to be an astrophysicist.
This is what I want to do. And instead of playing in the summertime, I would take classes. Started
college at 16. And I was like, this is what I want to do. So,
get out of my way. So, can I ask you, though, just to be clear, there are some people at NASA
who are protecting us from the asteroids? Yes. Don't worry. They exist. They're doing their
things, you know. Can you give me some detail on that when you say they're doing their things? And
also, you're called Planetary Protection, which I find to be a very misleading title. I'm not going to lie to you. So what are
they called? They're called Planetary Defense. Yeah. Because they're defending against the
asteroids, the impacts. So let me ask you this. When you find microbes, whether in your lab or
maybe somewhere where a spacecraft is being assembled, whatever, and you try to identify the microbes,
do you ever find something that hadn't been previously identified?
Yeah, it's really great.
So the old school days, you know, back when planetary protection started,
it was very culture-based.
That means we would take a sample, we would grow it up in the lab,
and based on whatever grew, we would identify it.
And now that we've fast-forwarded to DNA-based analysis, we've seen
so much more. If you look at the soil, 0.1% of microbes in the soil are even able to be grown
in a lab. So it's just a tiny sliver of what exists. So yeah, we discover so many new things.
There are actually hundreds of new species that were discovered just in our assessment in the
Spacecraft Assembly facility. No kidding. Hundred, over a hundred. hundreds of new species that were discovered just in our assessment in the spacecraft assembly
facility. No kidding. 100. Over 100. And then once you make that discovery, do you try to find it
elsewhere on the earth? Yeah, that's the beauty of DNA sequencing and databases that are accessible
worldwide. There was one microorganism we found in our clean room, and the same type popped up in some lake or cave in China. So we're kind of 23
and meeing all of the bacteria that exists around the world. And what does linking that information
actually get you? How does it advance the science, or what does that enable you to do that otherwise
wouldn't have been possible? So for example, a lot of the medical devices industry, if you go in and you get
a colonoscopy or an endoscopy, right, and you want to make sure that they clean it off and everything
is kept nice, right, we discovered that in the process of sterilizing these devices, they use
something called a biological indicator. This is the hardiest, strongest champion of microbes
that if we kill that, we've killed everything else, right?
And so this biological indicator has changed over time because we've discovered these new microbes.
And in our clean room, we've discovered a microbe that knocked off that biological indicator, that gold standard.
So I've read that you once appeared on a reality TV show called King of the Nerds.
This is true?
You have really great researchers.
And we've also read that part of the competition
was to compose and perform a nerd anthem,
and that your anthem was called Nerds Are King.
Is this all true?
Yes.
So I believe that our band has found Nerds Are King online,
and they're willing to back you up
if you're willing to sing it.
You good with that?
That sounds great.
You call me a nerd
like it's a bad thing
but the world is our kingdom
and nerds are king
Represent it for the geeks
Who get put down
Nerds are new, cool
And we run this town
Mike Maughan, fact check that.
That was good.
Okay, so I think the most interesting thing I found
was just the way to apply for a job in planetary protection.
Under job qualification, it lists the following things.
Frequent travel, doesn't mention that it's to Jupiter and Saturn.
There are only three technical qualifications that you need.
One is advanced knowledge of planetary protection.
Two, demonstrated experience planning, executing, and overseeing elements of space programs of national significance.
Three, demonstrated skills in diplomacy.
Probably because you never know when you have to negotiate with aliens.
Thank you so much, Mujigay Stricker. That was just great.
Thank you.
And could we please have one more round of applause for all our guests tonight? It is time now for our live audience to tell us who their favorite guest was tonight.
Maybe it's the guest that you would most like to hear from in a future studio episode of Freakonomics Radio.
Let's remember the criteria.
Did they tell you something you did not know?
Was it truly worth knowing?
And was it demonstrably true?
So who's it going to be?
Eric Garcetti, the mayor of Los Angeles.
Lucy Jones, who both calmed and frightened us with her earthquake expertise.
Jean Sirocca, who runs the port of LA, America's port.
Or Mujigae Stricker, who helps protect various planets from various microbes
and also composes anthems to nerds.
While our live audience is voting, let me remind our listening audience that the entire
archive of Freakonomics Radio can be found on the Stitcher app or at Freakonomics.com.
Okay, the audience vote is in. Once again, thank you so much to all our guest presenters and our grand prize winner tonight for telling us
about planetary
protection, Mujigae
Stricker. Congratulations.
Mujigae,
to commemorate your victory, we'd
like to present you with this
certificate of impressive knowledge.
It reads, I, Stephen Dubner, in consultation with the great Angela Duckworth and Mike Maughan,
do hereby attest that Mujigae Stricker told us something we did not know,
for which we are so grateful.
And that's our show for tonight.
I hope we told you something you didn't know.
Huge thanks to Mike and Angela, to our guests,
to Luis Guerra and the great Freakonomics Radio Orchestra.
Thanks especially to all of you for listening this week
and every week to Freakonomics Radio.
Good night.
Good night.
Coming up next time on Freakonomics Radio, we head north to San Francisco,
where we hear from the president and co-founder of Lyft,
also an engineer who's looking 10,000 years into the future,
a hydrologist who's been mapping the world's water supply,
and a microbiologist who's been working on a new form of birth control.
So sperm will never get into that crazy motility mode.
And they just keep swimming.
They have no idea that they are so close and so far away.
That's next time on Freakonomics Radio.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Dubner Productions.
This episode was produced by Allison Craiglow, Morgan Levy, Greg Rippin, Harry Huggins, Zach Lipinski, Corinne Wallace, and Dan Zula. We left Matt Hickey behind
in New York to hold down the fort. Special thanks to Andrea Johnson and KCRW for their partnership
on the show. Also to the historic and wonderful Ace Hotel Theater. Our theme song, Mr. Fortune,
was originally recorded by the Hitchhikers. It was
performed here by Luis Guerra and the Freakonomics Radio Orchestra. All other music was composed by
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