Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - 409 Joe Rogan Experience Review of Elon Musk Et al.
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let us know what you think cheers like oh you know maybe like a couple years of
pay would be good and then they could take a vacation, they could take another job and get
double pay. I mean, it's like, it's not like a, it's not gonna create an
economic crisis. I think it's actually gonna be really good, I think, because we
can, you know, people can move to where they're making products and services
that are more useful to their fellow human beings.
The problem is if someone has like a 25, 30 year career of being institutionalized, you're
essentially like a part of the government system.
You've sort of programmed your life and your career to be a part of this bureaucratic system.
And then you're like, no, you have to go out and compete in the free market.
You're like, oh. That's scary to people, but you have to be valuable.
You have to actually be valuable.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Uh, I mean, let's look at like, you know, yeah, there we go.
That's, um, Elon Musk sitting down with Joe Rogan.
We're here to review it.
Um, and that's, that's Elon talking about his efficiency program that he wants to do
under Trump.
There's going to be some tough days ahead potentially.
He is going to find jobs that he thinks is redundant in the government.
He's laying out his ideas for packages for what they will get, maybe two years of pay so they can get
double pay or just take a vacation, take a break, get the resume together, go figure
something else out. But that, you know, they end with an important point. They've got to
be valuable. You know, working for the government isn't the same as the private sector. Maybe
they, many of these people won't be ready. It's, uh, it's interesting.
But anyway, Elon and Joe got into everything on this podcast. Really.
I mean, very much centered around the election, of course. Uh, but Elon talks
about video games, Twitter, the government spending, even peanut, the squirrel
managed to make its way in there.
And it's full of some of his predictions
and dare I say theories slash conspiracy theories
towards what is happening with these parties
in this election right now.
So yeah, really cool conversation.
Let's get into it.
Um, they open up by talking about how Elon is one of the best players in the world.
A game called Diablo, which is very difficult to achieve.
That's a popular game.
Yeah.
Um, I looked at the list of the top 20 because I was like,
maybe this is just bullshit and some weird brag, like weird nerd brag. Um, turns out
from the accounts that I saw, um, yes, he's on there. And, um, I just went over to chat GPT and I was like, what kind of time commitment would it take to be that good at a game and therefore be in the top 20 list?
And chat GPT estimated between 40 and 60 hours of gameplay per week to be rated, ranked that high.
There's no way that Elon can put that time in.
No way. No way.
No way.
So he's just that good that he can just play a few hours
and still be ranked that high.
It seems like an unusual thing.
I mean, listen, is it that surprising?
Elon is already fairly unusual guy.
You know, it's pretty undeniable he's quite talented.
But yeah, some like unusual skill sets this guy has for sure and you know going to video games they discussed how
There's there's value in video games for him and it kind of calms him down
It's a way to escape because of concentration
He has to put all his thoughts into it.
So it's like, gets him away from,
God, the amount of stress that guy must have.
And it also gives him some feedback.
Like how tired am I?
How well rested am I?
Am I functioning well?
Because he can see from his gameplay,
like I'm just not on task right now.
And, you know, and they even mention a study
that has surgeons being something like 30% more effective
or making 30% less errors.
Yeah, something like that.
If they play some video games, that's phenomenal.
All surgeons need to be playing video games.
Yeah, that was so interesting to me.
I mean, I'm not super familiar with the video game world.
I found it, you know, of course, interesting that Elon, one that he uses his real name
on the games like everyone else seems to have like some like, you know, name like, you
know, game name.
No, he does. He has his game name, but it's still connected to his actual name.
Gotcha. Gotcha. But I just, you know, I've never really played these games. I don't know much about
him, but like he seems to be very into them. He's the only American on the top 20, of course.
Or like one of two. Yeah. Like it's like all people from, you know, China and mostly Chinese
people, I believe
less errors than the like when they play video games than those who don't.
And he was like, why is this not part of like medical school training? Like, why are we not doing virtual, you know, play and things like that?
Like if it's that simple, why are we not doing it?
Well, you know, it could be that it's, this is fairly new research, you know,
and with anything it's like, is it cause and effect?
It's like, oh, it's related to this.
Maybe those surgeons are doing something else
that also makes them good at, you know,
maybe they just have this like real need
to be working with their hands.
Maybe woodworkers that are also surgeons are very good.
You know, it could be like a bunch of things like that.
But it makes me wonder like what other professions
could benefit from video games.
Yeah. Yeah. like what other professions could benefit from video games.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, anything that has, you know,
kind of like really fine motor skill,
precision movements, you know, things like that.
I mean, there's, it's just interesting research
to look into for sure.
I'd really like to see where that goes.
Joe was very excited about the Elon's purchase of Twitter,
brought that up.
I mean, I was pretty sure Elon had been on before
since he bought Twitter, but maybe Joe,
maybe because time has passed and we've seen the effects
of it and what it's done for Twitter.
You know, not everybody likes it,
but some people like it a lot.
People that are in very much into free speech and reduced censorship. They they're a big advocate of what he did.
And Joe had a chance to thank him and said, thank you for doing this.
Yeah, I think it was a huge move.
And Joe, I think he really believes truly that that Elon did something special that and something important for for us as you know, just people that get to use Twitter really.
Yeah, I mean, it's we were talking earlier about like the evolution of social media's involvement in political elections and like at what point it really became political and quickly I mean, I think there was a article I read that said in
In the UK is kind of where it started and Instagram was like super influential
Back in 2015 and it didn't even come out until 2011
So within four years of Instagram coming out
It was like a big tool for developing, you know, or for influencing elections
through, you know, reaching a younger audience, essentially.
Yeah, there's a lot of power there.
A lot of it, and you know,
I think there's a responsibility that these companies have
when they are these like platforms
where people seek and find information
to have it be open, right, from from both sides and to not restrict the information.
And that's obviously a huge topic during this election is censorship and and
making sure that that you know the freedom of speech is preserved.
The right to have freedom of speech.
I am yeah I think it was really interesting to listen to them talk about
that because to Elon he's like I didn't have a choice basically Like he just felt so compelled. It didn't matter what the cost.
It was like, if we, he didn't have this. Well it obviously didn't matter. It was massively
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Yeah.
I mean, he just did it.
Look, there's like two things at play here
that are important.
One is there's always the argument
that do the social media companies not get the right
to censor who they want to?
It's their company.
Like does this fall under freedom of speech?
That's one issue alone.
Yeah.
Second to that is when the government steps in to try and control the narrative and the message, like they did with Hunter Biden and the laptop
and suppressing that, you know, that Elon talks about communication from like if Harris wins, then not only would there
be bigger boycotts of Twitter, probably according to him, that there may even be a move to try
and shut it down.
Yeah.
You know, and that kind of government censorship is not the direction you want to go.
Right.
It would be bad. It, no matter which party does that.
Yeah.
You know, and it's easy to say as well, Oh, well, she won't do that.
Or how would you know?
Or like, it's unlikely to happen, but he's pretty sure it would.
And he runs it and he's giving warnings.
Um, the big thing about his interview with Joe, which I found interesting,
he makes some bold claims, right?
And we're going to get into some of those things.
But what's important is there weren't a ton of articles rebuking
these claims very heavily and media is almost all left leaning.
And that makes you think, wow, is there something to it?
Is it maybe harder to dispute these claims then,
then you know, you'd think.
Yeah.
I mean, yeah, it's interesting that you mentioned that,
like the, you know, many of the majority
of the mainstream media is
sort of controlled by left winged people.
I don't want to say controlled, but like infiltrated with them, right?
Like they're people that tend to believe in those ideals and the, you know, we're having
this discussion post campaign, three days post campaign.
And yet the, the, this podcast with Joe and Elon happened like the day
before, right? So it was like, yeah, it was a few days before the election. But you know, now, even
within these three days, like there's been a lot of talk about how the Trump campaign did not go
through those mainstream media platforms to advertise and to promote his campaign. He took
an alternative route, like going on the Joe Rogan podcast.
Yeah.
You know, there was a-
And many big podcasts.
And a lot of them, I mean, between him and JD Vance, they probably went on like 12
different podcasts, like big, some of the biggest podcasts in the world.
It's, if you added up all of the views, and I mean, Rogan would be probably 40%
of all the views for all the different,
you know, whether it's Apple, Spotify, YouTube, X, all the ways that these shows
have released, it's like close to a quarter of a billion views.
That's huge.
And I would say that's conservative because they, you know, we know what
happened on YouTube where they were literally like messing with it, not letting it trend for, you know, like that whole thing.
I mean, Joe and Elon talked about it.
It wasn't trending.
The Trump interview was gaining over a million downloads an hour for literally two days.
I mean, that's an absurdly fast growing video.
Right.
I mean, like it's almost unheard of.
Yeah.
Yet it wasn't trending after a certain point.
You couldn't find it. And it really did. Once it came back and it was trending,
I think it stopped at about 37 million views. And once they got it back up again, it now is at 45.
Like it really took the wind out of the sail and slowed its progress down.
Now YouTube, supposedly their excuses, they're not sure why it happened.
There's some talk that maybe it was just that people were reporting the video,
meaning they didn't like it and they reported it.
So it automatically down regulated.
But who knows?
Yeah.
You know, they just seem like convenient answers.
I mean, it's the type of thing that as soon as, um, Joe said anything about it
to YouTube, they, it should have been an instant fix, a switch, and it just wasn't.
Right.
So, you know, it's hard to say, is that election interference?
Because obviously one side would say yes.
Another side would say no.
Um, but it's some funny business and it's not cool.
And you compare that to Kamala going on.
Uh, what's that other podcast?
Something daddy call her daddy.
I never listened to it.
Um, yeah, I mean, three quarters of a million downloads
in three weeks.
I mean, you know, this podcast has had bigger episodes
than that and we review another show.
I was interested to look up and see what the most viewed
YouTube videos were of all times.
A lot of, can you guess?
Most viewed ever? Yeah. I don't know. Probably like a Justin Bieber music
video.
They shark, shark, shark, shark. Yeah, it's gotta be that insane. Get 15
billion views on baby shark. I mean, it's not that important, but it's just crazy. And then you know some music videos,
Coco Melon is like number four or five. It's gotta be a bunch of kids. It is. It's just kids. Yeah I mean Miss Rachel, we
watch it on repeat so. The soundtrack to our lives. Yeah but I mean you know it's
it's a factor that played into this, and it's something that should be addressed, right?
There's no reason that these social media companies
should have like an unreasonable bias.
That's how I think the law should be structured.
You know, you can have a bit of a bias.
It's okay that the media is slightly left leaning.
Just be slightly left leaning though.
Don't be all the way to the point
where you're censoring the other message.
Because the people of the country
are gonna start figuring that out
and they're gonna get pissed off
and they're gonna lose trust in media.
It's why everyone goes to
podcasts for their fucking information now instead of the newspaper which is
wild because most of the big podcasts are comedians. We're like reverting back to
like when the radio came out it was like this progressive thing of like people
got to say what they wanted and play what they wanted and the news you know
went from being on a newspaper to where it was like a company
had to put a lot of effort into it to where it was like an individual just got on and
was like, here's what I think and here's what I know and here's someone else that knows
these things. And so like taught radio talk shows, you know, obviously eventually then
got bought up by big media companies. And now, and then we went to TV and social media
and now we're like podcasts are growing again and and particularly I think Joe's podcast is this open platform for people to come
and talk about their ideals, talk about their views, talk about what they know
that might be censored in mainstream media. And the fact that the Trump
campaign leveraged it, leveraged this this you know media form during the
campaign saved them a shit ton of money.
Well, that's a point I want to get to.
So I ran some numbers with ChatGBT,
and let's be fair, chat is often left leaning too.
But it came back with how much
the different campaigns spent.
It said something like 1.5 billion
was spent by the Kamala campaign.
That's an insane amount of money.
That's like unfathomable.
We'll think about it.
You're the Democratic party.
Yeah.
Imagine if this year they just said, you know what?
I don't think we can win.
The president is obviously, you know, not able to continue doing his job.
We've got to quickly switch to the vice president.
It's just too fast.
It's not going to work.
How about we take 1.5 billion and actually enact some of the, um,
changes that we haven't been able to do for the last four years. Right.
Let's go in and spend some money on inner city schools or poor people,
or just helping some social service. No,
they blew it all on Kamala to lose.
Yeah.
And that, I think they said it worked out to like $25 a vote,
per vote, that's basically how much it costs.
On the Trump side, and remember,
he won with an absolute landslide.
He was a landslide.
Yeah.
As far as elections go.
No Republican has won the popular vote for 20 years,
something like that.
And they spent half as much, 750 million,
which is like $12 a vote.
And again, it's leveraging, podcasting, it's smart.
And you've got to ask yourself, is this indicative of how each party would be spending in the economy?
Because if you're looking at it, if you're looking at two teams, and you need them to make money and
run an economy, right? Which one are you going to pick based on how they spent during the campaign?
Exactly.
You're going to say who got the most votes for the least amount of money.
And what is the difference?
Yeah.
Well, Trump's campaign and the right, it's significant.
It's undeniable.
You can be as mad at them as you want.
You can just hate the fact that they got in.
That's okay.
It's all fine.
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Everybody to have their opinion.
I totally get it.
But if you're looking at this just from the center
and you're not bothered either way, you're just like, well, this team was clearly more economically
intelligent. Yeah, there's a great post on Adweek on Instagram, at least is where I saw it, that kind
of breaks down the ad spin on traditional media outlets per campaign, you know, outside organizations and then the actual campaign themselves.
And then, you know, a huge topic in this election was efficiency in the government and spending
and the debt that we're carrying and all of the issues that we're dealing with in terms
of money and like our and in our economy and in
our country, where the money is going.
And Elon is hoping to play a big role in this.
We heard a clip about that at the beginning of this podcast.
If you look at the way that these campaigns ran from a business standpoint, you would
call it the customer acquisition cost.
And since social media and these alternative influencer networks have developed, the customer acquisition cost. And since social media and these alternative like influencer
networks have developed, the customer acquisition cost has decreased so significantly, I mean,
fractions from what it used to be. You know, every company costs 10 to $15 for a customer
to buy a product that costs $20. Now with influencer networks and these like, you know,
free media platforms where people are seeking out less filtered information,
basically, the customer acquisition cost,
just as you said, goes down so significantly.
And in their conversation, which we can get more into,
but like between Joe and Elon talking about
how Elon will increase the efficiency,
you know, he's talking about how Elon will increase the efficiency. You know, he's talking about like,
basically putting some of the government agencies
like turning it into like a,
like turning it to the private sector.
The private sector has to be more efficient.
They are more efficient because if not,
then they have no, then they'll fall to the bottom.
They won't succeed.
You know, in the free market, you know,
if you look at it like in a, on a micro economic,
in micro economic context, like companies that are efficient,
cost effective and you know, do good, they rise to the top.
And that's, I think something we need to remember
that like our government is not above state,
like economic principles, but because they're
essentially a monopoly, so they shouldn't be above them. But because they're the government,
they are a monopoly on some of these things. Like getting your driver's license. Why is it so
difficult to get your driver's license? Imagine if you owned a company, right? You have a laundromat
and your customers come in and they wash their clothes and there's all the quarters and da-da-da-da.
But imagine if your paycheck and the survival of your business has nothing to do with how many of those quarters come in.
That money you send off somewhere, but all your paycheck and the payment of the building is just paid by something else.
Maybe you're a trust fund kid or your dad pays for it and it just exists.
How hard do you think you work?
Yeah.
You know, you think you're going to go out of your way to create efficiencies
throughout that whole program.
Yeah.
I mean, you would just hire to outsource every job that you don't want to do
because you didn't have to pay for any of the paychecks.
Yep.
You know, there would be no profit loss tracking
that would be necessary.
I mean, many government workplaces are like that,
just because they can be.
I mean, I don't even blame them.
I would do the same thing if I was in those positions.
It's like, why?
There's no incentive to save.
And that's the big question, right? It's kind of the difference between the left and the right
right now is the left is like tax the billionaires, tax the rich people, right? They tried this in
England, they started taxing all the millionaires a lot more and 20% of the millionaires left the
country because they're millionaires, they can move. And it ended up being a net loss.
So great work.
And you've lost people that know how to make a lot of money.
Now I'm not saying that I don't believe
that very wealthy people should pay taxes
and pay their fair share.
I'm all for it.
They definitely shouldn't get away with paying nothing.
However, is that necessarily going to fix the
issue? If on the back end, the government is just spending and
spending and spending and it's just pouring out? Right? It's
like, why not just work from both ends, collect slightly more
taxes that are reasonable, and also tighten up? I mean, who
knows what the potential of running a really
efficient government looks like. Right. I don't know a country that does it.
You know, I'm sure America isn't doing it well. If we could do it, what, 30% more efficiently?
That's an incredible amount of money that we could save and put back into this country.
Yeah.
The big thing is this, right?
It's, and Elon was talking about it.
We've got the national debt and the interest that America pays on that is almost as large
as the defense budget.
Which is huge.
Which is huge.
And eventually those numbers will completely swallow up all of the money that the United States makes if we stay on the track that we're currently on.
And no one's been able to do anything about it. Now, who knows if Trump can do anything about it.
But this is a good start. That's something that's very serious.
Yeah. Another thing they kind of talked, they touched on briefly in terms of spending and money and the deficit that we're in as a country is tariffs. Trump has said a lot about you
know putting tariffs on goods and I think I really appreciated Elon sort of
cautioning you know Trump to do that. I hope I hope he listens because if you
look at it again from an economic standpoint tariffs do not always
typically don't turn out the
way you want, especially in the short term.
I mean, we're talking like we know fucking anything about terrorists to be honest, but
I mean, you know, in, in my, you know, education, I did do some economic, you know, several
economic, you know, economics classes and you, you know, subsidies work better than
tariffs typically do in raising overall like benefit like the benefit grows when you create a
Subsidy that is along was saying
You know raising a tariff can work, but you have to make sure the infrastructure is in place
Exactly, so destination you have to be careful because sudden changes in tariffs basically affects supply chains and so costs
Change overnight and so you can't overnight just say oh all of a sudden this product costs tariffs basically affects supply chains. And so costs change overnight.
And so you can't overnight just say,
oh, all of a sudden this product costs $4
to bring in from a country,
this piece of a thing that is manufactured in America
now costs twice or three times as much.
That's not really like,
the manufacturer is going to pick that up
not of the product that they use that small widget
or whatever for.
And so I really enjoyed listening to his perspective
on this and I really hope that he,
that Trump takes Elon's advice on this
and that he waits to like instill these tariffs
until there's some infrastructure
and does them sort of slowly because,
he says America is still the second largest manufacturer in the world.
And trade improves prosperity.
So specialization and the competitive advantage that some countries have in creating certain
goods, we don't necessarily want to walk away from that.
There is an importance in having sustainable jobs
in the United States, but we don't want to necessarily
say, oh, we can make every single product better
just because we've made it.
That's just not the truth.
I mean, some things will be more expensive.
And they will be more expensive.
And if we put tariffs on the products and the goods
and the pieces to make products in America, you know, the widgets, you know, so they call them.
But saying that it does sound like so then if you take a step back, the argument is
tariffs are bad, tariffs are good type of thing. But it sounds like it's more than that. It's somewhere in the middle. Meaning tariffs will work and maybe should be encouraged
slowly over time as we build back things
that are important for us to make here, right?
They often talk about the automotive industry,
you know, certain things like that,
maybe some warehouse jobs, like factory stuff,
making clothes, like who knows, maybe some things like that, maybe some warehouse jobs, like factory stuff, making clothes, like who knows?
Maybe some things like that and other things,
we just let it be done.
I mean, it sounds like microchip should be a big one
that they make back in the US again.
Because that was a huge issue during COVID.
So, you know, there's some element there
that will be useful and it will be interesting
to see the influence that Elon has.
I mean, will it be another example?
And what I love about it is Elon will talk about it.
He's not gonna ever hide or be afraid of Trump.
If they fall out, Elon will just say what happened.
And people, you know, I mean, he's somebody
that has gained a lot of people's trust.
Yeah, he made an analogy and I'd never heard it before,
but it makes so much sense that like,
when it comes to manufacturing, you think about like,
for example, like the car companies,
do you remember him talking about this?
That if you had a Japanese car company,
an American car company, and you thought of it
as the Japanese car company was they were all on a
boat and there's eight people rowing and one person steering in the Japanese company and then
on the American boat there's one person rowing and eight people steering because everyone in
America really like has big ideas they want to be the boss like that's like this pride thing rather
than getting the job done it's like who was responsible for getting the job done and like who gets credit.
So when, you know, historically when car companies
have failed, American car companies have failed,
it really has nothing to do with the quality of the product.
It's really like the, who, like there's too many cooks
in the kitchen.
And then when, you know, when the car company goes under,
they would fire the one person that rose, you know, like. And then there's still no one moving the company forward.
So yeah, yeah, it's, it's very true, you know?
And then some of this comes back to also, you know, that's bureaucracy in a sense,
right?
You've got too many managers and causing problems almost the same as when you have
too many rules and too many laws governing what is going on
for corporations, and Elon was talking about that.
He said it's hard to get things done right now,
because we've allowed these government departments
to get so large that they're making so many rules
that basically stop progress from happening.
And there's no better example than the DOJ lawsuit
that he's facing at SpaceX.
And this is so wild.
Like when he brought this up, I was like,
this can't possibly be true.
And you look it up and they do have this lawsuit.
And it's that Elon is prevented from hiring non-U.S.
citizens for security reasons, because SpaceX is, you know,
they have content, what is it? Ballistic missile technology,
right? So yeah, they can just fire missiles all over the
planet if they wanted to. And they also, and now being sued because of discrimination for not hiring immigrants.
And it's like, but they can't, there's a law for security.
The DOJ only gets to choose a few large lawsuits a year.
I mean, that seems to be directly coming from the Biden administration.
And that is just crazy. That's absurd. that seems to be directly coming from the Biden administration.
And that is just crazy.
That's absurd.
I mean, it's, it's like, it's just an attack.
Like it doesn't make any sense.
Surely they can put their energy into far more useful lawsuits to other
companies or just like their efforts into something more productive in general.
It's like, what are you trying to achieve?
That exactly.
There's like, no, what is the end goal? Like you're just
making trying to make an example out of someone that has a lot of
attention on them.
And well, this is why Elon warns during this podcast, that if
the right loses, it's gonna be dangerous for democracy, you
know, for a multitude of reasons. And this is just a few
of them. And that's a crazy thing to say in terms of just listening
to the election, because there are half the country
that are convinced it's the other way around.
Half the country is like, oh no, it's Trump
that will destroy democracy because he,
and they've labeled him a fascist or whatever.
And it's like, that's going to destroy it.
It's, it's just kind of wild that we've just got these complete opposite
ends of this conversation.
Yeah.
I think the, the polarization in this, in our political landscape
right now makes my head spin.
I'm sure I'm not alone in that.
And, um, I also believe strongly that,
in almost every scenario, there's three sides to every story.
And what we really only hear is like, yours and mine.
Like we hear what you have to say
and you hear what I have to say,
but maybe we're not always getting the truth
in what is going on.
And that's what I seek now.
I think everyone, when you are so loyal to one side
or the other, you can kind of put blinders on
and you can be like,
I'm just gonna go with this narrative.
But I think it's really important that we listen
to both sides of the story and sort of find in the middle
what the real truth is.
It's so difficult to do though, because, you know, to be well up to date and
educated on what's happening with politics yet also don't get sold on either
side. So that means you're really very neutral.
Like you really don't have an emotional connection to either side, yet you know a lot of
information around it. That's hard because it's the information itself pulls you to one side or
the other. It does, but I'm not saying you can't eventually pick a side or agree that one person
is more right than the other. But that's where the problems start because you just start becoming
pretty biased to the information you're hearing and then there's a tendency to demonize the other side.
Then you get into kind of an echo chamber
and it's almost a slippery slope then.
But I think it's just important to be like,
everyone is entitled to their opinions.
That's like the whole point of democracy, right?
Is that there's a potential for each side
or either side to win.
And it's echoing what the people want. Every four years it can change and that's why the two-party system works.
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He was not really politically active before this election, but he felt so.
He was a Democrat three years ago.
Yeah, he was, he was, and he was, he felt so inclined in this election,
particularly, you know, there was a lot of reasons, but particularly when he
realized what was happening with the immigration, you know, and saw the
statistics on the numbers of illegal
immigrants being directed into swing states that, you know, and they don't have voter
ID laws and things like that. And that, you know, that was happening as soon as the Biden
administration took over. You know, I'm curious what gets me about this topic is I don't see
a lot of rebuttal from the other side.
I don't get a, well, well, we see that that's what it looks like, right?
But here's what we say is going on.
We're not really getting anything from them.
Well, a big example of that is when he was talking about what's happening with the immigrants.
There's an app now where they're flying them directly to swing states. The government website that he talked about
from Homeland Security is showing who is going where.
Overwhelmingly in the future,
if they get the opportunity to vote,
they will vote for the left.
And they're speeding up their ability to get citizenship.
That to me sounds really sketchy, right?
Now, when John Fetterman was on,
the Democratic Senator,
the dress is kind of like he works at a gas station,
bless him.
He basically said, oh, well, I think it's, you know,
because of labor shortages, that sort of thing.
Even JD Vance said that. So maybe, maybe that is it.
But ultimately it is likely to lead to this other thing.
Likely, right?
And it doesn't sound good because like Elon said, if you change the swing votes
to all the swing states, I mean, to no longer be swing states, they're just all blue.
All of the elections then will be that way.
Our two party system basically collapses, right?
If there's no swing states, if there's no...
And to be clear, I don't want that to happen for the Republican Party either.
Right.
I don't want them to be able to guarantee that they can always take swing states through some action that is anything
more than just kind of politically, you know, acceptable political campaigning.
Right.
Right.
If you're just, you know, that's why I don't like the gerrymandering.
I don't like messing with it.
You know, they're all trying to hedge their bets, but this one seems
nefarious and pretty ugly.
And it's, it's a little scary because they've been very effective.
Tens of millions of immigrants during the Biden administration. I mean, that is an absurd number.
Yeah.
Well, if anyone out there feels like, or, or is confident that there's a better
explanation than that it's just nefarious.
And that it's corruption basically.
We really wanna know.
I mean, I-
Listen, I'm pro immigrant.
I'm an immigrant.
I love America.
I think it's the best country in the world.
And I'm so happy that I got to immigrate in
and it was hard work and it took a long time
and it's not easy.
And I want other people from other countries
to be able to do the same and to work into that position.
And you know, the answer is not just flying them
into swing states and giving them credit cards.
Right.
It's absurd.
No, it's not the way to do it.
Elon banged on about
Peanut the squirrel a little bit too.
Yeah, I don't know if I've been living under a rock or why I maybe I'm just too busy as a mom
but I didn't really know about peanut the squirrel until I heard about him on this podcast and
It's a it's comical, but it's also sad like it's
like this sort of like I would wouldn't say light-hearted to everyone but it it
it's the type of story that gets people riled up though does people know their
animals when you make the point though that this is what happened to John Wick
and it turned him into an it like an absolute savage yeah because somebody
killed his dog and he made four movies
where he killed the most people ever.
I mean, there is that like emotional gut response.
That's why that movie was so big.
Cause it was like,
and there's four of them.
Don't fuck with a man's dog.
It's the saga of him revenging his dog's death.
And I am really looking forward to whoever makes
Peanut the Squirrel's revenge movie.
Oh, that guy's focused on his OnlyFans.
Oh yeah, if you search Peanut the Squirrel on my iPhone just on Safari, top stories.
Republicans call to avenge Peanut the Squirrel's death at ballot box.
It's wild.
Bomb threats made to 12 New York DEC offices for killing pet squirrel.
It is heartbreaking.
Peanut the Squirrel owner denies using pets death promo only. It is heartbreaking though,
to have, you know, to hear that crime is up in New York.
You know, some of Elon's friends recently
have been mugged there and the police didn't arrest anyone
and don't come out to sort the crime out.
Yet they're kicking in doors, flipping over furniture
to eventually put down a squirrel.
It's like, what are you doing?
Like, are we keeping America safe?
Are we really keeping America safe right now?
Or are we just harassing citizens?
Like there is an argument to be made.
I mean, you know, this case is just kind of a bit silly in its own right when it comes
to a national election that ultimately affects the whole world.
I mean, does a squirrel really get to change the balance?
But it's the type of conversation
that people have been having.
Are we protecting our people?
Are we harassing them?
Are we prosecuting the right people?
Especially when you hear these stories
of letting certain people out of prisons and, you know, just, you know,
these like in California you can steal up to $900 of clothes or whatever it is
and they're not even arresting you.
And it's like, I want to know how much, how much government resources were put
into, how many people were involved, how much time and energy was put into this team
invading this guy's apartment.
Yeah.
And I mean, they didn't just like go in
and like execute the squirrel.
They obviously took the squirrel.
There was a whole story.
Can you imagine they have like,
they're in like the little cop meeting.
They've got a bunch of them.
They're all eating donuts and drinking coffee.
And they're like, all right guys, they're like like mapping out like, okay, you go up the stairs.
Bravo team does this. We got to watch all the exits. And then one guy is in there just put his
hand up. He's like, guys, this is a squirrel. Should we just chill out on the squirrel guy with
the cute Instagram? Yeah, it's sad.
It's sad that this is where our country has gotten to,
that that's something that we put resources into.
It's like, it's a squirrel.
There's like, I couldn't, I don't know what the statistic is
on how many squirrels are in our country,
but the fact that one of them got, made it,
and has a home, and is a domesticated animal,
why are we mad about that?
He's doing great.
I don't know.
Pina was doing great.
But yeah, it's wild that like to see Elon
genuinely getting upset over the squirrel.
That's the most emotion he showed
was talking about the squirrel.
He's pretty upset.
Maybe he's a huge squirrel fan.
I mean, that's clear to anybody that didn't know.
I want to end on this maybe something optimistic,
but maybe not.
Maybe this freaks everybody out too.
But Elon thinks in the next 20 years, everyone's going to have their own AI
robot humanoid robot.
And I think it's so true.
I think, I mean, is it predicting like the beginning of Terminator?
I don't know, but at a robot assistant, I mean, who knows what its capabilities will be in 20 years,
what you could outsource it to. I mean, it's your companion for sure.
Well, we do know you like to outsource things.
I'd love to outsource.
Yeah.
I just outsource the podcast to a robot.
Done.
Yeah. I mean, I think.
You could train jujitsu with it. It'd be badass.
What worries me about this and, and they talked a bit about like, is, I mean, I think you could train jujitsu with it be badass. What worries me about this?
And they talked a bit about like, is, you know,
he he estimated he thinks it's like 80 percent likely that like automation and AI
taking over like so many things and in responsibilities, roles, jobs in our
country, 80 percent likely it'll be a good outcome.
And, you know, in 15 to 20 years, you know,
in five years we'll see some progress,
in 10 years we'll see some, in 20 some more.
What worries me is we already have so many issues
with like protection issues, you know, like privacy,
things like that when it comes to technology.
And like someone's gonna have to own and operate
these robots like as from a software standpoint and it's like we're gonna have
this robot in our home with like the ability like around your family around
your animals around your children around all of your personal belongings around
weapons you maybe have stored in your home it's like all they gotta do is do a
little update on that software or whatever and they can you know They can track where we are in our homes using Wi-Fi
Why would they not put a camera in this robot and know literally what you're doing with on camera?
Here's the thing they might but this is also why it's important for these for companies
To not be connected to the government for the government not to be able to control them with censorship for the government itself
Not to have the power to be able to take control of your
robots.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, they're going to have to figure all that stuff out.
And personally, I'd rather have Elon Musk at the head of that than Bezos or
Zuckerberg or Bill Gates.
I just honestly trust him more.
I think he cares more about the human race.
Yeah. Like I just do. Maybe I'm wrong, but it just seems more genuine. The other guys sometimes
seem a bit weird. They just care about money. Look, takeaway from this is obviously Elon
super concerned about where the election goes.
Doesn't have to worry about that now.
They won.
I think he made $20 billion over the one day or two days since Trump was declared the winner.
So, you know, Elon's doing just fine.
He's almost at $300 billion.
Can you believe that shit? It's insane.
Yeah, RIP to Peanut the Squirrel. I mean real sad stuff and
It's gonna be an interesting four years to see what he's able to do
Will Trump work with him on these ideas? Will their relationship hold?
Yeah.
They seem like very different individuals, but maybe they can get some good work done.
Will you look historically, a lot of Trump's advisors and the relationship he has
has crumbled, you know, and they've come out and said, like, this person's not easy
to work with, I don't respect, you know, I don't think he should be in this role or
whatever.
And my hope is that it doesn't go that way because he's made a lot of really
good promises that he's going to fix these things.
And he's brought people on his team, like Elon Musk and RFK that have the potential,
really the the insight to do these things.
And it'd be so exciting to see if those, like I said, those relationships hold
and what they can do.
Yeah. The hope is he's been a president now.
At least he did that.
He has experience in Washington.
He does have a better chance
of putting a better team together.
And that's what it looks like he's doing.
And I hope that that works because it's,
no matter who wins, right?
Whether it was Kamala or,
I want them both to have really good teams.
Whoever wins needs to have a good team
that can get at least the best that they can accomplish done
because we all suffer.
Yeah.
I was gonna say, you know, if you,
even if the party that you didn't vote for,
the person you didn't vote for gets in,
you don't want them to fail.
Like you want them to do good by you, right?
Whatever that means.
Yeah, I mean, look, it's nice to have talking points to fail, like you want them to do good by you, right? Whatever that means. Yeah.
I mean, look, it's nice to have talking points where you get to slag off the
other, um, party that you don't care for, but there's always plenty of news for
that.
So you'll have plenty of reason to overall American prosperity is, is really
what you're looking at because, you know, it's like cut off your nose to spite
your face.
It's like, there are people out there now that hope that America does start to crumble
just so they can point at Trump and say, look what happened.
We told you.
And that's a nuts way of thinking.
Like it just is.
Well, it's self-destructive.
It's so bad.
It's so bad.
But anyway, let us know what you think about this, about Elon's role in the election.
Like, did his appearance on Rogan make a difference last minute?
Do you believe what he's saying?
Do you think that it's nuts?
We'd love to hear from you.
Go to our website, JREReview.com.
You can message us there.
Check out the blogs that we have, some good blogs.
And we'll talk to you guys next week.
Cheers, y'all.