Into the Impossible With Brian Keating - Fighter Pilot's Stealth Secrets to DOMINATION: Hasard Lee: The Into the Impossible Podcast (#317)
Episode Date: May 23, 2023#F35 #StealthFighter #HasardLee "Being able to regulate your emotions, regulate your stress, your self-talk is really important. The Air Force has moved to this human performance aspect -- all pilots,... as soon as they show up, they start this sports psychology training that we've adapted to flying fighters and that carries with them throughout their career." — Hasard Lee In his first book, The Art of Clear Thinking, veteran USAF F-35 Stealth Fighter Pilot Hasard Lee distills what he’s learned during his career flying some of the Air Force’s most advanced aircraft. With gripping firsthand accounts from his time as a fighter pilot and fascinating turning points throughout history. As a fighter pilot, Hasard believes that his primary task is good decision-making, and he believes that with the amplification of technology, that skill is more important than ever before. In the book, Hasard reveals powerful decision-making principles that can be used in business and in life. Hasard spent his career flying both the F-16 and F-35. In 2016, he was selected as the 'Top Instructor Pilot of the Year' for the Air Force's largest F-16 Combat Wing. In 2017, he returned from Afghanistan where his squadron dropped the most ordnance since the opening days of the war. He's flown 82 combat missions and has 4 Air Medals. Hasard has the distinction of being the only fighter pilot to ever employ two different types of jets in combat on the same day. Hasard has one of the largest defense channels on YouTube with over 100 million views find him @HasardLee Transcript and additional resources here: https://app.castmagic.io/share/9f2615b9-d1ef-449f-b93f-df3dd3abf884 Subscribe to the Jordan Harbinger Show for amazing content from Apple’s best podcast of 2018! https://www.jordanharbinger.com/podcasts Please leave a rating and review: On Apple devices, click here, https://apple.co/39UaHlB On Spotify it’s here: https://spoti.fi/3vpfXok On Audible it’s here https://tinyurl.com/wtpvej9v Find other ways to rate here: https://briankeating.com/podcast Support the podcast on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/drbriankeating or become a Member on YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmXH_moPhfkqCk6S3b9RWuw/join To advertise with us, contact advertising@airwavemedia.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're going out with potentially 100 other aircraft and it's multi-domain, space, cyber, ground, sea, everything working together against an enemy that is also multi-domain as well.
So I would say if you really had to boil it down, 10% is dogfighting and how good your hands are.
The rest of it is being able to coordinate these large forces of exercises.
And typically it's the fighter pilots that are planning these exercises.
If you boil down my job as a fire pilot, it's to make decisions.
and I think it's more important than ever now.
Welcome listeners to this supersonic episode of Into the Impossible,
where we take you into the cockpit with two top gun fighter pilots,
Hazard Lee and Ariel Kleinerman.
At supersonic speeds, pulling up to 9Gs,
U.S. Air Force F-35 fighter pilot major Hazard Lee has to make a lot of split-second decisions.
tested in 82 combat missions, Major Lee honed his ability to react under intense pressure
and came home to train the next generation of stealth fighter pilots.
In this episode, your host, Brian Keating, also an accomplished pilot, gets to geek out
on what it takes to pilot F-16s and fifth-generation F-35s as Major Hazard Lee discusses his
first book, The Art of Clear Thinking, a stealth fighter pilot's timeless rules for making
tough decisions. Please keep into the impossible in your feed by subscribing and following.
And for some extra credit, jump over to our YouTube channel at Dr. Brian Keating, that's DR. Brian Keating,
where you can see the video version of this and all our episodes. And please subscribe there too.
Do you want to hear more from high performance individuals like Ariel Kleinerman and Hazard Lee?
Please, let us know what you think. In the form of a room.
review like this one from Audible.
Profound yet accessible content, amazing guests.
This podcast covers the most important topics on science and technology, often with a
philosophical angle.
Professor Keating, a cosmologist himself, together with the most brilliant minds on different
subfields of science and tech, dive deep into their topics.
And now, strap in and check your six for this supersonic episode of,
of Into the Impossible with Brian Keating and fighter pilots Ariel Klanerman and Hazard Lee.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.
Open the pod bay doors, please, hell.
Welcome to all three of you joining out there, wherever you may be.
We're joined today by two special guests and myself, Brian Keating, your host, your fearful host,
of the Into the Impossible podcast discussing the,
impossibly delightful, delicious, enjoyable book by today's guest, Hazard Lee, which is called
The Art of Clear Thinking.
And I'm joined today by a very special guest, live in the Into the Impossible Studios, making
his first ever podcast appearance.
And this is, all right, my good friend, Lieutenant Commander, Ariel Kleinerman, graduate of many, many
disciplines in places, but including, and not limited to past guest on the show, David Spurgle's,
Princeton University, Ariel, welcome to the podcast.
Thanks.
Pleasure to be on.
Thanks.
And it's a very auspicious day to have a hazard on the podcast for many reasons.
One, it's when this comes out, not the live version, which is coming out today, it will be the release date of his first book, the Art of Clear Thinking.
And hopefully there'll be many, many more books to come.
It's been endorsed by many, many people that are just incredible.
But I want to point out past guest, astronaut and doctor, Scott Parasinski, who's an incredible human,
being. My mom, you know, fell in love with him when he was on the show. I'm sure she'll fall in
love with Hazard as well. Hazard, welcome to the show, Major Hazard Lee. How are you?
Brian, thanks for having me. This is great. It's a great to have us here. I love this book.
This has been such a treat to read it and to really plow into it both as a private pilot
here in Southern California. A big fan of the Air Force, or my stepfather was a academy grad back
in the 60s, flew tankers and Phantoms in Vietnam. And there's a lot of the United. And there's a lot of
of that in this book, as well as lessons learned, for individuals of all kinds. But you know,
I'm a scientist and your father being a physicist. You know all about that. And the science in this book
is what really stood out to me and made it so delightful and such a quick and easy read. But the
storytelling is what really stands out in this magnificent book. So the first question I have,
you know, we have a segment on this show. Whenever an author honors me by coming on, I always ask
them to judge the book by its cover.
Something you're never supposed to do, right, Ariel?
You're never supposed to judge a book by its cover.
What else do you have to go on if you've never written a book before?
This is your first book.
So we do a judging books by its cover where we ask you to go through the title,
the subtitle, and the cover art, if any.
And the most important thing I want to ask you,
why did you choose the art of clear thinking, not the science of clear thinking?
So take it away.
Help us judge this book by its wonderful cover.
Yeah, I love that because that's the first thing you see.
when you go into a bookstore.
So yeah, I really wanted to show that there's a lot of books on decision-making
out there, but this is one through a little bit different of a lens, somebody who is,
you know, in the hot seat making these decisions.
So for me, it's a little bit more of an art than a science, although I talk through both.
So there are opinion-based decisions.
There are database decisions.
But for me, when you're actually in the moment, when you don't have time to fully analyze
and process every single variable in detail, a lot of it comes down to the art of making a good
decision. And I think a lot of people struggle making decisions I did growing up. It wasn't until I
became a fighter pilot and really found a good framework for making decisions. And I think as,
you know, Ariel will say, and I'm interested to hear your take, when you fly, especially when you
solo, as soon as you take off, you know that you're the only one, your decision making is the only thing
that can get you back to the ground.
So for me, as soon as I solo,
it really changed the way that I see the world.
So that's something like that is important.
And I wanted to convey that with the cover with the F-35.
I am an F-35 pilot.
So that's where the plane came from.
And then a stealth fighter pilot's timeless rules
for making tough decisions.
So I wanted to showcase a little bit of my bio in the subtitle.
So some of it was technical.
Some of it was, you know, as I talked to you, opinion-based decisions.
But I think it, you know, I mean, I'll leave it up to you.
But, you know, I'm pretty excited for what me and the team at St. Martin's Press came up with.
Yeah, it's really a tremendous accomplishment.
The reason I didn't mention, but the reason Ariel is joining us today is he is a retired lieutenant commander in the Navy where he flew the Super Hornet.
So we have, you know, actually two real-life American heroes on the podcast today.
And I brought this bag here, which I got from an author by the name of Russell Monroe for his recent book.
He makes this cartoon called XKCD.
And it's for use in case of motion discomfort.
And I solicited questions from my audience.
But the first thing I want to do is point out, today Hazard, you may know or not know, is the 33rd anniversary of the release of Top Gun.
Today, May 16th.
So it's an auspicious day to have a Navy fighter pilot on as well.
So I want to turn the first question over to my friend Ariel, and I think we had kind of a similar discussion over a lunch, at least at one point.
I remember hearing from my neighbors here in San Diego, John and Martha King, that the day you become a pilot, your identity has changed forever.
So I want to ask, as a fighter pilot, as a fellow fighter pilot, what came away from reading this book?
What kind of commonalities do you perceive between maybe Air Force, stealth fighter pilots, and following the super horn?
that you engage with. What kinds of similarities are there? And are there any important
differences that a layperson like me effectively would not take away from this, from this
wonderful new book? No, one of the things I enjoyed is I created mental bottles for myself
as I went through training, things that I thought made me successful and how I approach problem
sets. And then I found that hazard did a very succinct job of putting that down and writing
much better than I've ever done.
But these are models that I developed through flying and then also instructing.
I also, that was another part of the book that I really liked was the stress on instructing
and how to be an effective instructor.
I found I didn't get a solid background into how to be a proper instructor, and I approached
it with the wrong mindset at first.
And over time, through trial and error, kind of came to a similar area that hazarded
as well of, you know, trying to reinforce the student, build them up, approach them from a different
aspect as opposed to what we do pretty frequently in the fighter community, which is evaluation.
It's every, every flight is essentially a test.
But, no, I found the book to be, you know, the quick mental math problems.
I had a fun, it reminded me, I would often, my students would be there with a whiz wheel,
which is essentially an analog computer for calculating distance time.
fuel and I would do fun games with them with like, hey, I'm going to do this in my head.
You do it on the whiz wheel.
We'll see who does better.
And inevitably, using very similar techniques to what Hazard puts in the book, I would come
up with a better answer than they would get two minutes later on the whiz wheel with their heads
down, low situational awareness.
So Hazard, one of the things that I took away is that there are these different, you know,
kind of ways, mental models, shortcuts, et cetera.
But one thing I always remember hearing from, I think it was from a fellow F-18 pilot.
of Ariels, which was, you know, if you're relying on hand-eye coordinate, you know,
people say, oh, hazard, you must have like this phenomenal hand-eye coordination.
You could just make split-second reactions.
The book, I came away at the very different perspective.
And I wonder, how much do you rely on that, you know, on kind of the base primal limbic
system versus deep ingrained systems, training, thought processes, acronyms, et cetera.
How much is physical, mental?
And if you could give us a breakdown, like, I came away very interested in your training.
training routine. Both for both you guys are in an exceptional shape, the shape that I can only
aspire. I'm lucky hazard, because unlike you, I can, I'm always pulling like two Gs. I'm,
you know, I've got, I've got enough mass on me that I'm always pulling two G's. But anyway,
tell me, please, what is the physical and mental relationship? How much is hand-eye? How much is
intrinsic innate? And, um, and how much do you have to rely on actual cognitive processes versus
physical works? Yeah, that's a great question. So a lot of people think that when we take off and fight,
thanks to movies like Top Gun, which is a phenomenal movie,
but that it's this one-v-one cage match.
We're going up, we're pairing our best pilot and our best jet,
going against Russia, China's best pilot, and their best jet.
But it's really, it really is that system's thinking.
You're going out with potentially 100 other aircraft
and it's multi-domain, space, cyber, ground, sea,
everything working together against an enemy that is also multi-domain as well.
So I would say if you really had to boil it down, 10% is dogfighting and how good your hands are.
The rest of it is being able to coordinate these large forces of exercises.
And typically it's the fighter pilots that are planning these exercises as well.
So we'll plan them several days, sometimes several years out with, you know, dozens, sometimes hundreds of people all trying to align towards this common goal of overall mission success.
So it's a lot less than it used to be.
If you go back to World War II, we have a lot.
lot of systems and sensors in place. You're using that F-35. It's a flying system. It's a flying
computer. It's phenomenal how well it can do that. And if you're busy just yanking and banking the
whole time, you're losing that cognitive processing ability to be able to maintain situational awareness.
So about 10% hands. You still have to have good hands. We're still training to dogfight.
It's something that is very possible, but it's a lot less important than it used to be.
You talked before we start recording, and then Ariel will have a question about your ace for
versus the Oudalup framework.
But you talked, we were chatting and I watched on your Instagram feed.
By the way, everyone has to follow his YouTube channel, his podcast, and his Instagram is
just, you know, it's just like you live vicariously through Hazard.
It's just so delightful.
But one of them is a video with one of my heroes, Tito Ortiz, is, you have CMMA, just
an incredible guy's huge.
He's probably my weight, but, you know, 1% body fat gets in the commercial.
I guess a civilian G machine.
I forget the name of it, Hazard Rettels in a second.
And he, you know, G locks at, or we should explain what that is, but he passes out at like
nine Gs and I'm like, you know, hazard.
You're like, yeah, that's just, you know, breakfast for me.
But talk about just the physical, you know, training.
What is like routine?
You're going flying, you know, in the morning.
And a lot of my listeners are astronomers.
And we might not think, oh, we got to really be ready.
It's life or death.
We hit the telescope.
But sometimes we have to sleep.
You know, if I'm using a telescope like the KECTELsco, 10,000 an hour, you know, if I'm not at my cognitive peak, it's going to be a tremendous cost to my grants or to my funding agency.
How do you deal with the physical demands of your highly intellectual pursuit?
You know, the brain uses most of the calories in the body when it's at rest.
But do you have a physical training routine?
And do you have any tools or tips techniques to get sleep when it counts?
That's really important.
And then, Ariel, I want you to ask about the Udu, versus A's.
Yeah, absolutely. So flying a fighter, a lot of people are like, you're just in a seat, how difficult could it be? But we are pulling upwards of 9 Gs, 9 times the force of gravity. So right now I'm at 1G I weigh about 200 pounds, 230 with my gear on. At 9 G's, that's over 2,000 pounds of force, just crushing you into your seat. And, you know, as you saw, Tito Ortiz, one of the most fit people on the planet, ninth person ever to be inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame. He wanted to come out and see what fighter pilot training was like. So we put him into the NASDA.
Star Centrofuge. And this is all credit to him. He wanted to do the full fighter pilot profile. He didn't want the old man, you know, kind of tour of it that only goes up with four Gs. So nine Gs, nine times the force of gravity. He ended up G locking. So that's a G-induced loss of consciousness. So with the forces that were pulling, it's vertical. So it's pulling the blood out of your brain and putting it into your extremities. And it's doing it with enough force that it can rupture your blood vessels.
So after a flight, it'll look like I have chicken pox on my arms and my legs,
and that's from that pressure of the blood eruption, those blood vessels.
But the real threat is passing out.
If you lose enough blood, you'll pass out.
And at the speeds we're flying, typically we're going to be oriented with our nose down in full afterburner.
So that's 40 plus thousand pounds of thrust, pointed pretty much straight down.
And you'll be incapacitated for about 30 seconds.
And at speeds we're flying, it takes about 20 seconds to impact the ground.
So unfortunately, we've lost about one.
pilot a year to a G-induced loss of consciousness where they pass out and they impact the
ground going, you know, 800 miles an hour. So it's something that we really focus on. And it comes
down to physical training, it comes down to nutrition. So just being, just being 3% dehydrated can
reduce your G tolerance time by 50%. So you have to stay hydrated. You have to eat well. You have to
work out with your legs a lot. How we're flying, it's typically pulling a lot of Gs resting for a little bit,
pulling a lot of G's resting for a little bit.
So it looks a lot like hit training.
So we'll do a lot with that.
And this is probably the biggest thing that's changed in the Air Force over the last 10 years.
When I first joined, it was a little bit like golf might have been in the 90s.
You had a lot of John Daly types, people that were really talented, good pilots,
but they didn't treat human performance seriously.
And I remember some of the instructors early on saying, you know, you didn't really have to train for Gs.
Just go out and smoke a cigarette before your flight.
that would reduce your, shrink your arteries and your blood pressure.
So, you know, over the last 10 years, we've really focused on human performance because of all those people dying.
And so we now have nutritionists that work with us.
We have physical therapists because you do have a lot of back and neck issues.
A lot of people have to retire early.
You have to sleep is a huge factor, as you mentioned.
So probably the average fighter pilot could pull 10, 10.5, maybe 11 Gs.
but each one of those things if you're dehydrated,
if you have a lot of stress,
if you didn't sleep well,
it lowers the bar for you,
and it just takes one time of going over your limit
that can unfortunately end you.
So sleeping is a big thing.
We'll sometimes have briefings at five in the morning.
When I was flying in Afghanistan,
I would fly the graveyard shift,
so I would go in and I would fly from 11 p.m. to 5 p.m.
We do have some drugs that were prescribed for,
extreme things like that, dextra-infetamine, but, you know, it's not the best thing to take continually.
So for me, getting a good night's sleep comes down. It's probably what most people have heard,
getting off your devices, having a routine, exercising during the day, and then having a sound
machine is important, especially if you're on that graveyard shift. Everything seems to conspire against you.
It's probably something that you experience being in a telescope. And I'm sure they want to maximize
the amount of time they can use that.
So when you're working in the middle of the night,
everything, especially if you have kids,
conspires against you to try and wake you up in the morning.
So having blackout curtains, keeping the room cool.
So all the standard stuff that people have heard,
but I think it's just staying disciplined
and making sure that you're checking all those boxes.
Well, you've got to, you know, kind of take up the mantle of my friend
and local celebrity jaco willing here.
You've got to start making supplements,
I see that in your future.
Ariel, you and I were talking about Uda.
you were trying to explain what Uda is
besides, you know, it sounds like a character
in like an Upa Lupa.
But what is this in the ACE framework
that has, or can you compare and contrast
those? And how could we apply
those of us that are, you know,
just flying Microsoft flight simulator?
Yeah, so the Udo Loop was developed
by John Boyd, one of our most famous fighter pilots.
I believe he also helped
lead the team designing the F-16
and I'm sure Hazard could correct me
being an F-16 pilot here.
But UDOLUPE is observed,
orient, decide, and act.
And then Hazard,
your ACE framework is the
assess, choose, and execute, correct?
Correct.
I'm wondering if you could kind of walk us through
how you, you know, what are the differences,
what are the improvements on the Udalaup model
with the ACE framework?
Well, I don't want to say there are any improvements.
The one thing about Air Force pilot training
is that we're not really,
taught on what John Boyd, the history of John Boyd. I have his book over my shoulder. He's,
you know, one of the forefathers of decision-making theory. So he's done a phenomenal job. But I think
the Air Force is unique in that it doesn't really adhere to dogma. So we take whatever we can
and are always moving forward. And so Boyd had a huge impact in it. But he really isn't taught
per se. And unfortunately, he didn't write a book. But anybody that goes to Air Force
pilot training and goes through fighter training is taught a framework similar to the ACE Helix.
So assess, choose, and execute. So in order to be able to consistently make good decisions,
you have to first be able to have a high fidelity understanding of that problem. So as pilots,
we call that the cross check, being able to see which variables are important, discard the other ones.
So I talk in the book about finding the nonlinear ones that have an exponential return.
For instance, ejecting lots of things to do.
Most important thing, just slow down because it does not increase linearly,
but it increases force increases exponentially with speed.
So being able to assess, then choose.
So part of choosing is being able to develop a lot of courses of action.
So that's where I have a chapter about creativity in developing those courses of action.
A lot of people choose to skip this step and just they want to act.
And, you know, there's a lot of reasons for that.
One of the big ones is that it's tough to measure progress when you're brainstorming.
So people just want to pick something and start moving on.
And then lastly, being able to execute on that decision.
So there is a lot of psychology here when we're flying missions in Afghanistan.
And there might have been a thousand people that touched that mission,
from spies on the ground to satellite operators, to people in the chaos, to
tankers launching from other continents all to get you on target on time and so there's that's a lot of
pressure a lot of eyeballs on you it's not like the old days where nobody can monitor you so everybody's
monitoring what you're doing and so there's a lot of pressure and being an instructor i've seen a lot of
students choke and so it's uh about being able to control your emotions and being able to execute
while under pressure so that's the the framework uh that we use as fighter pilots both you guys are
instructors and you know, that's kind of self-identification for me personally as an instructor
in addition to being a father and, you know, hopefully a decent husband.
But instruction comes up a lot in this book.
And when I think about instruction, I think at least at my profession, hazard of being a professor,
things haven't changed in over a thousand years.
You know, back in the year 1080 in Bologna, Italy, the first major university in the West,
that's still in existence today.
there was a guy and he would stand up with a piece of rock and scrape on the wall up here and, you know,
and he'd scrape in front of on another giant piece of rock or slab of stone and, you know, how much is, how little has changed in, you know, a thousand years.
And we don't even have things like simulators and things that have really advanced knowledge.
But I wonder, when I think about education, I've spoken to some of the greatest educators in the world, including Carl Wyman, winner of the Nobel Prize, who's devoted his career after winning.
that I'm appell prized to teaching how to teach. And he called education modern-day professoriate
class, kind of the equivalent of medicine in the era of bloodletting and leeches. And I wonder,
you know, where do you see the future of education inside the cockpit? We were talking before the
show aired that, you know, that when you put on the helmet, you guys, you know, claim that you
lose 20 IQ points. I say, you know, that leaves me. 50% brain power. 50% brainpower. Okay. So that
then leaves me at negative capacity. I find the same thing in front of
of a chalkboard. You know, I'm sitting up there, stuff I could do, you know, sitting in my sleep,
probably, and then I'm in front of a class of students and trying to scrape some stuff on a
chalkboard. But it comes down to, you know, kind of different platforms of education that
roughly align with Maslow's hierarchy of needs at some level. But I wonder what you guys think
about the following proposal. If it's so effective to teach according to Maslow's needs, you know,
and have physical safety, to have, you know, emotional safety and support, what if you could
kind of, you know, do the opposite and see the, you know, so I've often thought in the
simulator, we should have, like, an M-80 go off. Like, when you crash the simulator, like, I do it
for fun, you know, I'm going to fly underneath the Golden Gate Bridge and my F-18 and Microsoft
flights, but if I really, you know, if there all of a sudden was a joy buzzer that went off
on my butt, you know, maybe I'd have more visceral reaction. Hazard, what do you think the future
of education inside the cockpit and outside of the cockpit? What do you, what would you
propose to bring it more into the modern?
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era. Well, that is a great question. And that's what I worked on on my last assignment in active duty.
So pilot training had not changed that much in 60 years. And with the F-35, it was a big opportunity.
We had multiple communities coming together, A-10, F-22, F-15. Luke Air Force Base is also an international base.
We had Dutch, Danish, Norwegian, South Korean, everybody coming together. And the F-35 is going to be the backbone
of our air power for the next 50 years.
And so we had a once in a career,
maybe once in a lifetime opportunity
to reimagine what pilot training was going to be like
for flying the F-35.
So we actually had a lot of those questions
that started with what's our ultimate goal
to build a F-35 wingman
that can survive and thrive into the late 2030s.
So that changed what threats were worrying about.
And we used a lot of technology.
So one thing that was interesting is we,
as you said, have used simulators quite a bit over the years. These simulators now are incredible.
They are $50 million pieces of art. They are domes that are two stories high just for one simulator.
And the cockpit's exactly the same as the F-35, and then it's on tank tracks, and it rolls you
into the middle of this dome. As one general said, this is a monument to human engineering.
So they're phenomenal, but, and they do have their place.
But the problem is we didn't have anything that was less fidelity.
So students would learn the way they always did, memorize textbooks.
They'd have a little bit of time in these simulators because they were so expensive, we can only have a few of them.
And then they'd go fly the F-35, which is $50,000 an hour.
So one thing that we came up with was having a spectrum of devices.
When a student is learning how to start the jet, they don't need this monument to human engineering.
We gave them gaming laptops, something easy, something quick to get out.
there we declassified it so that they could take it home with them gave them
hothass hands-on stick and throttle we came up with other devices well virtual
reality devices that were a step up and we were flying with 360 cameras in the
f-35 security aspect was was difficult even though you know it doesn't sound that
difficult and then they'd be able to to play back we do a lot of flame out landings in
the f-35 they'd be able to see exactly what that site picture was as opposed to the
old way of doing it using a dry erase pen on a sheet showing you know how to do it so they could
actually see the site picture of experience instructor doing it and then we started layering in
some other things like overlays of where the instructor was looking how they were doing it and now
I've been working with some the basic pilot training they're testing some new things
using AI to be able to find some key trends and what the student is doing
And it's not, you know, 100% solution, but it can find a few things that it thinks the student might be screwing up.
And then an instructor can look at that and say, oh, yeah, he is screwing that up or can choose to discard it.
So Air Force pilot training has really changed drastically in just the last five years or so.
All right.
What about training from your perspective, from Navy perspective, perhaps?
JTAC was probably where I was most recently involved in.
And we had the same issue, $20 million JTAC SIM, which actually went down.
because there were some issues with the contractor.
Alternatively, there was a former seal who, I think his name's Brad Den, who developed an augmented reality.
And then they were working with guys out of Hollywood to create a four-dimensional platform
where you would actually feel the platform would move as bombs dropped near you,
danger close, you'd actually have a heat wave just to increase the intensity as you're in that process.
And also becomes much more affordable and mobile.
We took some of these platforms with us to Iraq where now the J-TACs can do practice their training, practice their calls in, you know, anywhere, almost anywhere you have a room.
You can now start training.
So we talked to Ainsert earlier about your encounter with, you know, heavyweight champion Tito Ortiz.
But you also trained at the United States Air Force Academy.
And that was part of your undergraduate curriculum.
you were you studied boxing you took uh you were you know took up the hobby but it became part of
this book and i assume a large part of your mentality and there's two there's one quote that you
use but there's one quote i was surprised you didn't use so one quote you use is no plan survives
first contact with the enemy and the uh and the quote that i was surprised you didn't use given your
boxing heritage uh was uh the famous fighter pilot mike tyson who said everyone has a plan
until he gets hit in the face.
What can ordinary people maybe that aren't as fearless, heroic as you take away from the similarities
between dog fighting and physical fighting?
Are there commonalities?
Are there ways to keep your cool so that you don't lose as much of your plan or you don't, you know,
lose your plan altogether when you step into the room with a, you know, with a formidable foe like
Professor Tyson?
Yeah.
I love that.
We're all, yeah.
Just kidding.
Yeah, there's a lot of commonality there.
And, you know, as I talked to, I, the Air Force Academy is located in Colorado Springs,
which is also where the Olympic Training Center is.
And I talk about a chance encounter I had with a sports psychologist.
And we really worked on staying in the present moment, visualizations, self-talk, all those,
you know, kind of things that it wasn't something that I really focused on as a boxer.
I really wanted to just work on the technique.
but this emotional side of things really made a big difference in my boxing.
And so I applied that to Air Force pilot training because Air Force pilot training,
they're stressing you to the limit.
They want to see how you do when you fail.
And so they will make you fail at some point or another.
And so there are a lot of great pilots there.
We had commercial pilots that were flying for American Airlines before.
So they had a tremendous advantage over people.
But at some point in the curriculum, you get to a point where you have not.
seen that side picture before and you will probably fail and so what they wanted to do is see
what these people's character was like and so that boxing sports psychology background and training
gave me a big advantage there i mean it gives me advantage in any high stress situation because
there is a narrow ban of excellence if you go too high talking the book the air force has done a lot
of studies where if you are too stressed out you really start losing as as we talk 20 iq points
but it changes based on what you're trying to do.
So the biggest area where it decreases is your spatial intelligence,
understanding where different things are in space,
and that's huge for flying.
So that's the first thing to go.
High stress can help you with some moderate to easy tasks
that you know that you have down pat.
So there is a benefit to stress, but too much,
and it really hurts you flying.
So being able to regulate your emotions,
regulate your stress, your self-talk is really important.
And that'll plan, as I talked to as the Air Force has moved to this human performance aspect,
all pilots, as soon as they show up, they start this sports psychology training
that we've adapted to flying fighters.
And that carries with them throughout their career.
And I've seen a big difference.
In the past, there'd be students that would be flying with.
They'd be great, and they'd make a mistake, and the train would leave the tracks.
And so now they're a little bit better at being able to,
to be able to regulate themselves.
You don't want to be worrying about a past problem.
You're dedicating bandwidth to a past problem that you can't affect now.
So you need to be worrying and using that bandwidth towards solving the problem that's in front of you.
I had an instructor when I was puttering around in a Cessna 152.
Actually, it was a 150.
I can't even fit into that anymore.
But I've had a bunch of kids, so I have an excuse.
And, you know, he used to say when I make a good landing, he would compliment himself.
because he felt it was the instructor that ultimately had to take credit.
And as you point out, many times in this book, sadly, many pilots have been lost,
including people that you've known and loved, and you too are, you know, and we, you know,
our hearts break for them.
But you say a piece of all of us goes with them and we're responsible at some level.
I wonder, you know, how to not internalize that and how to kind of move on.
I remember reading a wonderful book by David Mindell.
It's called Digital Apollo.
and it's about all the techniques, technology that both went into the Apollo landing missions
and the technology that came out of it for civilian news, including the autopilot.
And it turned out back then in the 50s and 60s, they could have landed the Apollo landers,
all of them, the Eagle, whatever, they could have landed themselves.
But they built in the capability that, you know, the lunar command module pilot
could actually take over at the last minute if he needed to.
And they found that every single pilot, even when,
the footage would later prove them wrong, would say, oh, at the last minute, I saw a crater,
I saw a big boulder, I saw an alien, no, no, I didn't see any aliens, but I saw this
out of a corner of my eye, I had to take over. And it's because they said in the, Mandel makes
a point in the book that landing is kind of like the consummate, ultimate expression of the pilot.
In other words, that's the most piloting thing a pilot can do. So of course they want to take over
and do this thing and land it and not let some stupid computer. How do you teach your students to
like to view an autopilot, these augmented systems as not a threat to their masculinity
or femininity.
There's a lot of female fighter pilots, as you guys both know, well.
But how do you let them overcome and see it as a partner?
And I'm going to obviously dovetail into AI and augmented stuff.
How did you like handle that?
To teach them that actually no, it's not a diminutization.
I can't speak.
Diminishing your own capability as a pilot.
It's nothing negative about you, but instead it's something that should be welcomed.
Did you ever encounter that, Ariel?
Not, I mean, probably the best example.
We were forced to actually land manually behind the boat every night to get practice, but there was a time where my skipper specifically said,
I want everyone in the squadron in the next week to do a, what was a, a little blank,
anyway, there's an automated approach, and I'm blanking on the name of it right now.
now, where the plane takes over and flies you in into the wires at night, which as most people
could probably imagine, landing behind the boat at night is never really fun.
You're descending into a dark, black abyss.
You only have a couple lights behind the boat.
The boat's moving away from you at 30 knots, and it's moving up and down.
So it's never a fun process, and it's definitely one of the most stressful things that you do
as a Navy fighter pilot.
And that night, you know, I selected in autopilot plane is coming down.
And, I mean, it was the nicest approach I've flown.
And it was humbling.
It's like, yeah, that this thing can actually do it better.
Now that system's not always reliable, so you still need to rely, you know, develop the skills as a pilot yourself.
But, you know, you slowly start incorporating these systems.
You start noticing that, yes, this is, it's value added.
Now I can, you know, after a seven-hour combat flight, I'd be a little bit less worried.
about coming back to the boat because if I am having, you know, we talked about go pills,
which I generally tried to avoid but would take if needed. Now as you're coming back to the boat,
you can go, okay, hey, if I'm not on the top of my game anymore, I have this backup option.
If this backup option is working, it's going to get me on. I'm going to have my midrats,
which is our midnight meal, probably one of the most important meals on the boat and one of the main
motivators to get yourself onto the deck. So Top Gun Maverick would never have happened if that existed
back in the Tomcat days because the guy that Maverick leads onto the boat at night in the
weather, he could have just said, screw Maverick, I'm just going to go myself.
Ended up at Top Gun, the rest would not be history.
Hazard, any way to advise students or, you know, and I'm asking self-interested as well,
it's not threatening.
You know, it shouldn't be a diminishment, as I say, or try to say, of your ability skill set
or identity.
Is there any tips to kind of help the psychological factors?
Yeah, that is interesting question.
And by the way, in the F-35, it's so precise, the guys landing on the carrier are wearing out the skid pads because it hits every time in the same spot.
But that is interesting question.
The 15 now has that same landing system.
Yeah.
Like, I think it's magic carpet.
But, yeah, I think I think of myself as kind of a modern fighter pilot, you are organizing and utilizing all this technology.
So I don't see a lot of people staking their masculinity on being able to manually.
do maneuvers. It would be interesting to go back and talk to some of those Apollo pilots,
because they probably grew up in the 30s, the 40s when it was fully manual biplanes, you know,
that they were learning how to fly on. But now I think it's just so ingrained in us.
When I was going through pilot training, you know, I grew up with real basic video games,
Nintendo, all of those things. And we could process a lot more information than my instructors.
And my instructors would say your class, you know, just can understand this a lot better than
than I can retain more information.
The same thing today.
So we're getting kids that are in their early 20s, and they've grown up with an iPad in their crib.
And so the F-35 is essentially a flying sensor.
There's two giant iPads in front of you.
You can talk to it, and it does things.
Augmented reality helmet.
So I don't think there's that necessary barrier to being able to rely on technology.
Every once in a while I'll see a student that likes to manually get the setup parameters done,
for BFM and you know if they can do it I'm I say more power to you but usually they'll screw
something up and I'll say look you can you know have the option of relying on the auto throttles
it's not a it's not a knock on you do that so that you have more mental bandwidth to be able to
focus on something that matters do you ever find that some of those lost skill sets uh end up
being important. So I'll bring it from the last three years I was working as a J-TAC, and we had these
devices that would kind of give you a pretty good gods-eye view of the battlefield.
But there'd be occasions where, you know, I set a target that was right below a giant red
water tower. And they'll be down there trying to figure out how to prosecute this and get the
pilot's eyes onto the target when it could be as simple as looking up, looking at your
environment going, hey, do you see the giant water tower?
that's, you know, on the coast here.
And the pilot would immediately get there.
So sometimes I found that the technology can be detrimental and that you do get,
if you get too soaked into it, you start losing situational awareness of the overall picture.
Absolutely.
You just want to, you want to start at the big picture and work your way down.
So if you're heads down, working through sub menu because you're focused on that,
and that's kind of the process that I talk about in the book, work at the big picture,
get a rough approximation of what the solution is,
and then you can always refine that later on.
I think that that is a problem,
especially new students that can't necessarily prioritize as well
or absorb as much data as well,
is that they glom off on the radar.
F-16 was a really big problem
because it didn't have any sensor fusion.
Your brain was a sensor fusion.
So it was a rat's-ness of technology
from the 80s, 90s, 2000s.
And so unfortunately,
we had six times the C-Fit controlled flight
into terrain where pilots either passing out or is flying low and is misprioritizing and running
into a mountain because they're working the radar or the, you know, radar warning receiver.
So as a pilot, I think, always work at the big picture and then go down from there because
you can get yourself into some big, big problems if you do it the other way around.
So a lot of the counterintuitive wisdom in this book comes from the, as I say, counterintuitive
of realization that many things in life are nonlinear, that we expect, you know, kind of doubling
the output when you double the input, but many of these things are exponential and worse.
And one of the things that you don't mention in the book, but it kind of instantly came to my
mind was also this anecdote from aviation, which is why is the 787, which cost less and, you know,
took maybe shorter to develop, why is that proving better for the airlines than the A380, these
giant, you know, 500 passenger behemoths. And the reason that I've heard comes down to a very
counterintuitive thing, which is that, which is that the A380 has so many people on it,
that it's very difficult to envision that one of those 570 people at max load is not going to have
a heart attack or some other kind of emergency versus, you know, maybe 250 on a dreamliner. It's
less, maybe a third less or what have you, different configurations. It's less likely to have an
emergency. Now, when you land because there's an emergency, you're limited because of the time you
have to rest the brakes, if I'm not mistaken, before you can attempt a takeoff again. So the
A380 will have to be on the ground longer because it's heavier. And these kind of the dwell time and
the brake heating and stuff goes as the cube of the mass of the plane or something like that.
So trying to optimize it to carry more passengers is actually detrimental. And so airlines are
finding they can't get as many sorties, can't fly as many people net net because of these nonlinear
factors. And yet the human mind is very poorly adapted to this. We're used to seeing, yeah,
if we struggle twice as hard, well, if we run twice as fast, we'll get away from that tiger or
whatever. We don't see many nonlinear things. So how do you inure people or get them a custom hazard
to thinking nonlinearly? Is it a matter of heuristics, of rules of thumb? What kind of advice do you
have for people dealing in the corporate world, perhaps they're going to read, love, and digest this
wonderful book? To recognize when you're dealing with a power of
law situation and then apply the art of clear thinking. Yeah, I think the biggest way is to graph the data.
It's a simple tool that's been around for thousands, hundreds, if not thousands of years.
So being able to graph the data and it just pops out to you. So that's what we do for most of
the different relationships that we have when we're flying. So our relationship, our energy management,
going back to John Boyd, is grafted. And we can just overlay that with enemy.
fighters and we can see where our jets have an advantage versus another jet.
Same thing with when we're trying to geolocate SAM threats.
What we're doing is we're doing a lot of different tactics.
We're all sensor nodes and being able to neck it down behaves nonlinearly.
So being able to just graph the data, I think, is the single biggest thing and being aware
of how extreme nonlinear events can be.
So, you know, everybody's heard of the grain of rice on the chess board or the doubling penny.
It just, you know, gets to a tremendous amount very quickly.
So I think even people that understand those linear relationships, it's good to continually refresh and understand that because I think we are relying more and more on technology software or something that is very nonlinear.
These jets, we will get a new software load.
And in one case, overnight, everything got 25% better.
So it unlocked the gun.
We could pull more Gs.
So software is something where, you know, two average people does not equal one good person.
So you can find somebody that is 100 times, 500 times better than the average person.
And it can have a tremendous effect on how capable you can be on the battlefield.
So I think these relationships play out throughout every aspect of our lives, not just,
in the cockpit.
Did you have
like that?
No.
So we have a bunch of questions.
I just want to take a little pause
to refresh and let everybody know.
We're talking with Hazard Lee,
who not only as the author
of this wonderful book,
The Art of Clear Thinking,
also has a podcast,
which I am devouring
a phenomenal YouTube channel
and most delightfully
so that you can like live
that Instagram lifestyle.
His Instagram channel
is off the hook.
I hope you guys will follow him there
and also on LinkedIn,
in where he dishes out daily doses of business acumen and wisdom.
Also, one of the, well, I should point out, you're the first guest that's, that's, you know,
I've had on astronauts.
I actually had on Jessica my ear, who may be the first woman to walk on the moon's surface.
She's a PhD graduate of UCSD, it turns out.
I had her on when she was on the ISS flying overhead, you know, a little bit faster than you
you guys can fly, but only for now.
And that was, that was about three years ago.
I don't have that, but she didn't read from, she doesn't have a book, but she didn't read from
the audio book in the cockpit or in the ISS. So you were to be commended for that.
It's so, it's really fun when you're listening to an audio book and you've been hearing
hazard and it's kind of calm draw. Then you hear him over the intercom system with the book
and he's got some pictures of himself on his Instagram feed doing just that. So thank you for
that hazard. So when you're conveying that in the book, it really feels like you're in the
cockpit. How did you, I mean, this is a first time book.
talk about your writing process.
Are there commonality?
We have a lot of authors that listen to this podcast.
Talk about are there commonalities?
Are there ways, you know, tools that you use besides begging the forbearance of your lovely wife, I assume, and your kids who you acknowledge in the book?
What are?
How did you work to convey that and do it so spectacularly well in your first ever, you know, kind of your first sortie out of the box?
Yeah, it was incredibly challenging.
So this is ultimately is the end of a six-year journey.
So the reason I started the Instagram and all of that is because,
so I had gotten back in 2017 from Afghanistan.
And so I started to, it was a really busy time.
We were really active out there.
And so I was writing down some of the stories and decompressing that way
while I was waiting for F-35 training.
So I was like, you know, it would be interesting to write a book.
And it turns out if you don't have an audience, you know,
you're not like a celebrity or something,
you really have no chance of writing a book.
And so I was like, well, maybe I can do a podcast.
And that coincided with another thing.
Luke Air Force Base was looking for a speaker on Memorial Day
to talk about loss and some things like that.
And there's a teacher in the crowd.
And she was like, my students have to hear this.
So I started speaking in classrooms.
And so those two things coincided.
And I started a podcast because there's a digital way to get things out.
And that evolved into the YouTube.
and the Instagram to be able to promote that.
And I was able to get a book deal.
And it was exciting.
The book deal part was exciting.
It was like getting drafted by the NFL.
We got into a little bit of a bidding war.
And that was the last time I heard from anybody for a year.
So I spent over a year, I spent actually over 500 days in a row writing the book.
So every morning I'd write from this office about four hours every morning.
And it was just brute force.
To start off, I would look through some authors I really like.
Atoll Gwanda is a really good one.
Checkless Manifesto, if you haven't read that, it's a fantastic one.
So I would look at how he interwoved stories and just break down every sentence, every paragraph, every chapter.
Same thing with Malcolm Gladwell.
And after that, I was off to the races.
I'm a slow writer.
I would write about 500 words a day.
Sometimes it would be 1,000, 2,000, and then I would come back the next day and say,
oh, this is terrible and have to delete it.
But most authors say that the key to writing a book is to just get a crappy first draft
out there.
And that's what I did.
What they don't tell you is now you have a crappy first draft and you still have a lot
of work ahead of you.
So I went through nine revisions to really hammer this book and to condense it and make it
make it as precise as I could.
So it was an amazing journey, very painful, but in a good way where, you know, you're, you're
proud of something you've done.
Yeah.
Well, that really leads to growth.
And again, I think they say about writing a book that it's years of bored and punctuated by moments
of sheer terror.
Or that's only when your kids come in the room.
The C and A stands for Choose.
I wonder if we could highlight and maybe we'll bring this in if YouTube doesn't give us a copyright strike.
You know, one of the best ever songs about decision-making is, of course, Rush's living in the
limelight where it's said that even when you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice.
I don't know what the other lyrics are. I won't sing it because I have gotten copyright strikes
before. I remember saying for my stepfather, who's an Air Force grad, as I said, and also in Vietnam,
he used to say, you know, you could be right and you can be dead. So meaning that you could,
the air traffic controller can be telling you to do something and you feel like, well, he or she is
authority, I'm going to have to do it.
She's, but I'm actually right and, you know, and take the, take the initiative.
But maybe sometimes they're right.
And you can make the right choice sometimes.
It'll leave you dead, even though you did it.
And that night, you know, my stepfather Ray would say, you know, the controller's going to go home.
He's going to cry to his wife and say had a bad day.
And next day he'll be back at work and he'll be dead.
So how do you, you know, you know, handle those situations?
How do you know when you shouldn't choose?
Sometimes the best option is not to choose.
And I'm sure you guys have both heard this.
saying, you know, like the first thing you do when there's an emergency is they used to say to the pilots in World War II, you know, wind your watch, you know, mainly take a pause, take a baby. How do you know when to make a choice and sometimes when not to make a choice? How do you know when to execute the sea or not to see, if you will? Yeah. Well, in the F-16, actually, there is still a wind-up clock in there. So I talk about how instructors would say, you know, wind that clock. Another saying is, uh,
you can always make something worse.
So you don't want to just start jumping to action.
So yeah, being able to, I think, assess leads to figure out what choices of action,
courses of action that you are choosing.
So when you're looking at the assessment, it follows a diminishing return law.
So you can stick around for, in the case of flying, two minutes, five minutes,
trying to figure out the decision.
But at some point, you're the point where you're spending more time trying to assess that
decision.
You should probably make some sort of decision.
And hopefully it resets that diminishing return law.
And you start gathering more information.
And then you can make another decision there.
So I think the key is discerning between is this something irreversible or is it something
that you can update later on?
If it's irreversible, you want to spend more time making that assessment.
If it's something that you can reverse, it probably makes sense to.
gather the information, make a decision, reset that diminishing return law, and then to go from there and keep iterating as you're moving forward.
Yeah, like Patton's quota. A good plan. Executed violently today is better than a perfect plan executed tomorrow.
So sometimes, you know, same in aviation, like flew a lot of single engine aircraft. If something goes wrong with the engine turn, get towards a field, now start assessing your problem set.
But yeah, once again, you know, F-18, same thing.
Like, we had two engines.
There was nothing, almost no emergency that required in immediate action.
Like, make sure you're going to shut the right engine down.
Make sure you're going to.
Right, you were saying once, you know, like a lot of pilots pull the wrong engine and they do the shutdown, right?
That doesn't happen to hazard because he's flying single engine.
You shut down the engine.
Yeah, but you can always lose that engine.
So, you know, you're always five minutes away from having to outrun the Taliban.
man. Talk about the phenomenon of tunnel vision. When you have this kind of get theiritis,
I always say to my wife, you know, the most dangerous things I'll ever say when I'm puttering around
the little Cessna is I'll be home exactly at 5 p.m. You know, because when you do that, you're committing.
You've got, you know, the sunk cost fallacy. You've got to make it down. I'm going to let her down.
You know, she's going to, the dinner's going to get cold and, you know, I don't miss many meals.
How do you guys deal with that tunnel vision, that monomaniacal focus? What are some tools, tricks for
mortals to deal with tunnel vision and and getting breaking out of that again the hard part is maybe
you know one of these guests that I hope to have on one day Derek Sivers he used to say things like
you know if knowledge were all that was required we'd all be billionaires with six pack abs so it's not
just knowledge how do you know when you're in the tunnel how do you know how to punch out of that tunnel
any any ideas guys it's yeah I can go so you know you don't rise to the level of your expectation
you fall to your level of preparation.
So I think a lot of it comes down to training yourself
and inoculating yourself to that stress,
both being prepared for that moment
and understanding all the aspects of it,
but also from a kind of a meta-skill of understanding
how to withstand that pressure.
So I think working out is important,
even if you're a scientist and you're not using your muscles,
it's a stress there that.
that carries over in your ability to be able to manage that stress.
So I think that's one aspect is being prepared.
And what we do when we're flying training missions
is to make it far more complex and a lot more difficult
than it is in the battlefield.
We try to push ourselves because there's really no way
to replicate how stressful it is in combat.
So you can push yourself as much as possible there
so that when you get to combat,
it's a little bit less difficult than if you didn't do that.
Secondly, some minor tips.
One is a lot of students have issues when they're refueling for the first time.
So we'll have airborne gas stations essentially.
And it's a fully manual maneuver.
There's essentially an airliner full of fuel, hundreds of thousands of pounds.
And you pull up behind it, and it's really easy to crash into it and cause a giant fireball.
So a lot of students are really nervous.
The tip that we give them is wiggle your fingers, wiggle your toes, because you start really clenching everything,
clenching your jaw and you know you can reverse that stress by wiggling your fingers,
wiggling your toes, taking deep breaths. We use, it really depends how much oxygen demand you
need, but an easy heuristic is box breathing five seconds in, hold five seconds, five seconds,
five seconds. But the big thing is just not hyperventilating. So trying to slow down your
breathing as much as possible. And then lastly for me, it's literally expanding,
that tunnel vision. So looking out of the corner of your eyes, it's called tunnel vision,
you know, not just because cognitively you're focused on a single thing, but you actually,
your vision shrinks down. So I find when I look out of the corners of my eyes and open that vision up,
I start to detach and breathe. And that's a really important thing when you're showing up at
close air support, firefighters, the troops on the ground are under a lot more stress than you are.
So when we show up, we have to be that calming force detached and be able to think through it because they're dodging bullets down there.
And it's our job to be able to make good decisions and to be that calming force that's detached from what's going on in the ground.
Yeah, I'll add the only thing I'll add is also command climate.
So in your wife's example, it would be, you know, making sure that she understands the danger if she gives you a hard deadline.
and you see that in commands as well.
Like there are times where a skipper or someone is a bit more totalitarian and authoritarian wants you to do what they want you to do.
And that can drive you to make those tunnel-like decision-making.
So making sure that everyone's on board that, you know, in the end, you're the aircraft commander.
And they understand it will respect the choice that you end up making.
So, you know, you don't make it to dinner.
Yeah, hopefully you don't hear about it for the next week.
That's right.
And if that's the worst thing that happens on a flight, that's nothing to be too ashamed about.
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We just haven't found the steps yet.
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So has there's undoubtedly millions of people watching this, you know,
on either one of our different platforms.
They're thinking, look, you guys are commanders of, you know,
multi-million dollar aircraft.
I think, what, the F-35's close to $100 million a unit.
Is that right?
Yeah.
So what can he possibly teach me?
You know, I'm running, you know, a sticker business where I do, you know, wallpaper and paint supply.
So, so has it, talk to people out there.
What, what are the commonalities?
What are the lessons, the teachings, the learnings?
That's just an ordinary person, not a superhero, not, you know, one of my questions from my audience, which I'll ask now is, you know, how do you feel that they used your image for Buzz Light Ear and your persona, but they don't give you royalties?
Okay.
So you're like this magical superhero, you guys.
But it's an ordinary, you know, man or woman, a car dealer in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
What are they going to take away from this book?
Yeah, so I try to distill it down and it's decision-making.
If you boil down my job as a firepot, it's to make decisions.
And I think it's more important than ever now.
The average person burns 90 watts of electricity, and yet the average American is burning 12,000 watts.
And that powers the technology that's leveraging the decisions that we're making.
So I think decision-making is one of the most important skills, and yet it's not taught.
I think from a leadership perspective that we are moving from era of management, which came out of
the Industrial Revolution, managing hundreds, if not thousands of people in a factory,
to now, I think it was Bloomberg was saying, Bloomberg Finance was saying they expect a billion-dollar company
to be run by three people in the next 10 years.
So that is due to leveraging AI.
They expect to be an AI company.
Leveraging technology.
So three people versus in the 1800s,
it probably took 100,000 people to be able to run
what would have been a billion dollar company.
So technology is leveraging the decisions we're making.
It happens when I'm flying my jet.
I can travel 100 times faster than I could by foot.
I can carry 100 times more.
I'm literally thousands of times more capable than I could be on my own.
Same thing with your phone.
it can do the job of dozens of people from just a few years ago.
Car, you can go 10 times faster.
Modern combine harvester, you can harvest crops hundreds of times faster than you can by hand.
So it really comes down to being able to make good, precise decisions.
And that's something that applies to everybody.
Yeah, absolutely.
So in a few minutes, I'm going to go teach myself and I'm going to apply the lessons learned.
Hopefully my students will think clearly.
So we're going to reach the moment.
We're going to ask some rapid fire questions.
from the audience. So I hope you'll indulge us a little bit hazard with some, some quick answers
and so forth. Okay, so this comes from, oh, by the way, thanks for pointing out the billion
dollar company. That's good to know that Stuart and I, my super producer, we can do the job of
three people, which is two people, and become a billion dollar podcast. So Stuart asked the
following question, are these myths? I'm going to go through a couple different things. As a fighter pilot,
are you living dangerously? Do you ride a motorcycle? Do you need to have perfect
vision and is Chuck Yeager kind of your avatar hero? So first of all, do you have to, are you a
dangerous person, dangerous living person? Not, not anymore. I think grown up, I really wanted
to do something risky, but now I see it as more of a risk versus reward system. So most of the
time not, but I'm not afraid to get my hands dirty. You're at a motorcycle? Motorcycle, no. It's not
worth it to me. It doesn't cross that risk versus reward threshold. Do you have to have 20,
to be a stealth fighter pilot?
Great question. No, you don't.
So that's a big myth that was true back in the day.
I fly with people that have contacts, glasses, and have done LASIC.
Is Chuck Yeager, I used to joke about this.
You know, when you get on Southwest Airlines flight, you know, you're flying around the pilot.
You know, we're going to cruise up Vector 74 or up to the coast.
Oakland will start our decent.
And I'm like, you're flying this thing.
You push a button, you know, 30 seconds after.
know I have a lot of pilots that listen to this podcast. Love you guys.
Is he your avatar, is Chuck Yeager? Do you have, who's your hero? Who are some of your pilot
heroes? I would say John Boyd. Chuck Yeager, definitely for what he did and being able to get
in that cockpit of the X-1. But I would say John Boyd, that would be the one that I would want to
go back and see. So, yeah, that's part of the one.
What about you, Ari?
Probably I had Robin Olds and then a bunch of the Apollo astronauts who were, you know, started their life off as fighter pilots.
That's true.
Okay.
Hazard, what enemy aircraft do you still fear the most?
Still fear.
Fitch and fighter aircraft.
So there are a couple ones out there.
2.57, J20.
So those are the more advanced aircraft out there.
But mass also matters.
People understand that.
How many aircraft do you have?
The 1,000 F-35 is rolling off the line right now versus these other countries only have a few amount of them.
So mass matters.
Would you fly with a completely artificial intelligent pilot wingman or wing woman or wing?
Whatever.
Wing it, wing thing.
Would you feel comfortable with that right off your wing?
Depends how good it is.
So yes, I would if it could prove itself.
So I don't have an ideological issue with that.
I think we have a long, long ways to go to be able to replace the fighter pot.
I think we'll be here for a long time.
But I do think we'll have some AI wingmen that can help us out, and that's going to be a good thing.
You talk a lot in the book about the F-117 Nighthawk, which was only one or two.
One, I think, malfunctioned, and one was shot down by a combination.
I'll leave it.
I hate when you go on a podcast as an author.
The host asks you,
well,
just explain all your greatest stories in the book.
And I'll give my audience a free audio book version of it.
No,
no,
we're not going to do that.
But you'll have to,
it was really gripping.
I could not stop listening to that portion of the podcast.
F-117, I've heard,
is being resurrected even.
There's one out here in Palm Springs,
if you ever want to come visit us in SoCal,
we'll take you out there.
There's a perfect restoration of it in a hardened bunker.
But anyway, what is the secret to its success?
I mean, it was designed in the 70s.
You talk about that.
The B2 is allegedly maybe more stealthy, but it's also more massive and bigger.
But the 117, they seem to have gotten it right the first time.
It's even more stealthy than the F-35, right?
So why did they retire it?
Why not just keep it around?
It was just old technology.
So they couldn't model curve services.
So if you look at it, it's very angular.
So it is his old technology.
The stealth coating took a lot of maintenance.
There wasn't great avionics in it.
The weapons load out wasn't great.
It didn't have an air-to-air capability or a very good one.
So there are a lot of issues with it.
So it wasn't maneuverable.
So, yeah, a lot of issues with it.
There's really, you know, no tactical use to keep them as of now.
And I think I told one of my sons once that the that the F-14, which is his favorite plane, he has two desires in life.
He wants to be an F-14 pilot and a rabbi.
And I said, I think that's going to be tough because the only country that still flies them is the Iranian Republican Guard.
I want to ask both of you guys, what is in your dream hangar if I could lay upon you that billion dollars when you turn the professional's playbook into just a money making revenue source hazard?
you buy your dream hanger, what's in it?
And then I'm going to ask Ariel the same question.
So F-16 is still my favorite aircraft.
So I recently had a chance to fly with the first civilian F-16.
So they exist out there.
So I'm definitely going to have an F-16 in there.
There's a new company called Blackshaped that are making carbon fiber tandem aircraft.
They're kind of like the Ferraris of the sky.
So I'm going to have one of those in there.
Got to have a P-51 or some sort of warbird.
You're getting me excited.
So, I mean, I'm going to have to stop there.
I'd have a lot of planes.
The wife would not be happy.
All right.
Ariol, what about you?
Having gotten one flight in F-16, I can, you know, definitely back him up on that.
Amazing aircraft.
P-51, for sure.
Extra 300 was a lot of fun to fly.
I'd probably also put some sort of Dolfstream so I could fly my family to ski trips.
Hazard, as you know on modern podcasting, it's important to talk about AI.
We talked a little bit about that.
And you also, I want to refer folks to my friend James Altoucher's podcast with you, which is just, you know, James sets the standard for many of us out there. He talked a little bit more about that there. But the other thing, the other two mandatory topics, AI, chat GPT. And then there's also Bitcoin, which, you know, we're not going to talk about Bitcoin. But then the third topic, we have to talk about alien encounters. I am not at liberty to talk about the alien autopsies that I've been a part of or might not have been a part of. What do you make of the,
recent NASA-funded
UAP, which
is led by David Spurgel,
President of Simon's Foundation, is the
benefactor behind most of my research.
So I have to be kidding. I love David, and he's
completely intellectually honest.
He was my advisor back in college.
And he was Ariel's advisor at Friends and University.
Oh, by the way, Ariel's call sign is
Pi.
Pie. And he would have to read out
all, you know, all digits.
I never read out the digits because the middle four
decimals are my pin number at the ATM.
Hazard.
any encounters, maybe not extraterrestrial in origin, but anything that you could not explain
or understand during your historic career.
So I'm not going to say I ever ran into aliens, but there are a lot of things that you see
in the air that you don't have a full understanding of.
So you'll see things on the radar.
You'll slew your targeting pot out and see dots out there.
So you do see a lot of things like that.
I'm not going to say that they're aliens.
because really as fighter pilots, you're so focused on the mission at hand.
I think the same thing happens when you're driving.
If you're on a long road trip, you see a lot of things out there that you're like,
I don't know what that is.
It's kind of a glint off the mountain face or something like that.
And you don't have the time to go deviate and go check that out.
So I have seen a lot of things that I don't fully understand,
but I'm not prepared to say that there are any sort of aliens.
They might have been just some sort of, you know, balloons flying around, things like that in the middle of a mission when you're too busy focus on that to really give full attention to this.
What about you and your buddy Ryan Graves?
The balloons is actually probably my closest was I picked up some weird radar returns, locked them up, intercepted.
It turned out to be balloons.
And then another time right after launch on a carrier, picked up a radar hit.
queued my 9x, it got tone, ended up doing on left to left with an Iranian drone. But no,
sadly, Ryan and I were squadron mates. We're still good friends. I was at his wedding.
I unfortunately never saw the stuff that he got to see. So even though one of the battleships
out there was the Princeton, right? Okay, we're almost at the end hazard. I thank you for your
patience and your indulgence. When you're flying by wire, one of the most famous examples,
Again, we're not going to get into it because it's such a cool and amazingly applicable to any domain aviation or not.
The story of the Airbus crash that leads off the book Air France, I believe it was, back in 09 and 10.
Fly by wire.
Is that something that's really removing the stick and rudder, the Chuck Yeager?
Is that diminishing the pilot's aptitude at all?
Not at all.
So fly by wire is something we've been doing since the 1970s with the F-16, and it is pretty eye-watering.
now. So in the F-35, we're running a continuous model of the aircraft line. And when I put in
the input, it's not necessarily the flight controls that are making the traditional flight controls
that are making that happen. The jet will figure out the best way to do that. And the best example I can
use is in that first top gun, when Mavericks in that flat spin out to sea out of control,
we do that routinely. Like, we will do that on purpose and have precise ability to increase. To,
to increase the spin rate or less.
So, you know, you can never do that without a flight control system.
So it really makes you a better pilot.
Now, the extension of that of AI and stuff like that, there's a lot of issues.
But in terms of just a pure flight control system, it's very beneficial and makes us a lot
more agile because these jets would go out of control.
They're fundamentally, they're unstable system.
So you need those inputs from the computer to keep it flying.
Okay. A few more questions here. Did you have a comment, Ari?
I have a sort of controversial topic for the A10 versus F-35. And I was kind of curious as to your perspective. I know the Air Force has been trying to get rid of the A-10 for a while as someone who did a tour with the J-TAC found the A-10 to be an amazing aircraft.
Curious to as to what your thoughts are on replacing the A-10 fleet with the F-35.
Yeah, that's a good one. Definitely controversial.
It really depends on what we're doing.
So if we are pivoting towards great power competition,
like the National Defense Strategy is saying,
then I think we have to be prepared for a higher-in battery.
And you can see it playing out in Ukraine.
Any aircraft flying low is getting shot down.
And so I had a chance to do an interview of an A-10 pilot at Nellis Air Force Base,
their test squadron there.
And they're saying they're not planning on shooting the gun ever in these guys.
conflicts. So now the A-10, you get rid of the gun, the primary thing, because it's going to have to
fly at high altitude because those man-portable air defense systems are going to be shooting
them down, even though there's a lot of armor. There's a lot of those man pads out there.
So if we are pivoting towards this great power competition with higher-in threats, then it probably
makes sense to either, you know, kind of mothball the A-10 or to downsize it, depending on how the
finances look, but it's probably not going to be that survivable in these conflicts.
Last question for both of you guys that I've studied this in great detail.
Can Ukraine win this conflict without air superiority?
Can they do it with drones?
Ariel, I know you've thought about this a little bit.
So is a drone, you know, kind of a DGI war?
Is this a new theater class weapon?
Or how can they win a war with that?
I mean, no war has been won without air superior, at least in my silly.
understanding military history.
So correct me if I'm wrong.
So is air superiority necessary, if not sufficient?
My fear with Ukraine more is that it's become a war of attrition.
And without being able to go after the supply lines from other side, you're just going to
continually grind down your forces.
In terms of air superiority, I think Ukraine can probably get its territory back without it.
I haven't given this too much thought.
where air superiority would come into a nice,
would be a benefit would be that ability to go into enemy territory
to take out their nodes, to take out their fuel supply,
ammunition supply,
all their logistics chain that gets their troops into the battlefield to begin with,
and obviously there are limitations on the scale of that war.
Great.
And Hazard, any thoughts from you on air superiority's necessity?
Yes.
So as long as they can prevent Russia from having
security, I think they can win. So that's my specialty is the suppression of enemy air defense. So
in Top Gun 2, the missiles along the canyon walls, taking those samsites out. And so Russia has failed to
do that with Ukraine. And so Ukraine has prevented Russia from having air superiority. So as long as we can
keep those SAM sites by Ukraine operating and having missiles, then I think there's a very good chance
of Ukraine being able to hold off.
Well, Hazard, I want to ask you if there are any other topics that you'd like to talk about
before we close out, and I start to apply these lessons, not to lethal lessons, of course,
but to my class.
Anything else that you want to mention besides the podcast, professionals playbook, your
LinkedIn, Instagram, YouTube channel, which is an inspiration, and this wonderful book.
It was really a gift to me as a, not just as a pilot, you know, aspiring to, to
sometimes have a grease or landing, but also to be a better leader, manager, and think more clearly.
Can you let me know?
Any other things you'd like to bring up?
No, that was it.
This has been great.
I really appreciate you having me on.
I'm really happy that you enjoyed the book, and especially the audio book.
The audio book, I just bought your book.
I need to get the audio one.
Did you record it yourself?
Not my first book.
My second book, I did some of the audiobook.
And my third book, it's one third of the 23 hours.
hours of conversation of Galileo is me. So yes, it is a treat to hear your actual voice. And
I really appreciate the artistry of it. And not surprising for a book with art and its title,
Hazardly, your inspiration, your hero, people compare you favorably to Buzz Aldrin, Buzz Light
Ear, and you're a phenomenal writer. This is just such a treat. Thank you for your service,
both of you gentlemen. And thank you for all for joining us on The Into the Impossible podcast. Remember,
you can always ask me questions and ask hazard questions about the book. He loves to interact
on Instagram, especially LinkedIn as well. And please do keep in touch, Hazard. And I hope you'll
have many, many books, courses, as I said, supplements, you know, just give me a little cut.
And especially motion sickness bags like our friend Russell Monroe. We need some hazardly branded
motion sickness. In all honesty, Major Lee, thank you so much for joining us on the Intent
Impossible podcast.
Thank you, Brian. This has been great.
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