Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - JRE 424 Joe Rogan Experience Review of Gad Saad
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Hey guys and welcome to another episode of the Joe Rogan Experience Review.
Awesome to have you guys with us for this episode.
This week we are reviewing episode 2263, Gadd Sad.
Gadd Sad's back on.
I always like to see Gad on.
That's a great name.
He's awesome.
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setting up some Q&A's and some fun stuff. So it's just a great way to support the
show. It helps us out. We love it. So cheers. All right, Gad Sad, what's he up
to this time around?
Um, it was a great conversation.
It always is.
I mean, he's just so fascinating and so well-prepared. I mean, there's never like a lull in the conversation.
He's always coming up with interesting points and breakdowns and his memory is.
Immaculate.
I mean, the details that he puts in.
I don't know if he goes with a bunch of notes.
I don't remember seeing any.
He just is that kind of collected
when it comes to his communication.
But on top of that, you know, a very smart guy.
Yeah.
Opens up a little bit about children and like raising them and you
know highly intelligent children for one. And I've often thought about this he
mentioned that you know they some kids get to college like really early
sometimes you hear that and whether they did like AP or they were home schooled
they tested out whatever and you know they're finishing their degree at like 19.
And it sounds amazing, that's a gifted child.
But I've never really considered the parts
that they're missing.
Like they may be that intelligent,
but they're not gonna be socially that mature
and clearly probably physically different.
So I wonder how that changes the whole college experience for them.
And I think about it in terms of like, let's say our kids or a friend of ours kids is really
advanced.
Is it the best move to kind of push them ahead or just just let them stay where they are and do very well?
Yeah, I I think there's a balance there of
Challenging a child academically, but also like you said following the trajectory the appropriate
Emotionally, you know emotional like trajectory of like where they're at and making sure that that's being accounted for in their success.
I personally, I mean I graduated on time, I just was young for my class, so at 17, ended up moving away before I turned 18. And I struggled my first year away, you know, and I was only three hours
from home. But it was, I just wasn't emotionally mature enough. Like I wasn't ready for being
alone. I wasn't ready for managing my own time, you know, entirely. And every child and every,
you know, young adult is different.
But I would say some of the fault here I think lies in, I mean, obviously being in high school
can be fun.
Some people have a really great experience and some people don't.
Some people have a really poor experience.
We've talked in the past a lot about bullying and the traumas that come with being in the
public education system, the potential is there. But I think a lot of it, parents lean too much on the public education
system to help their students develop emotionally. And it just isn't there. I mean, they're teaching
them curriculum. They're teaching them, be know, be on time and, you know,
go from class to class kind of thing, but they're not teaching them how to like, be
adults.
Yeah.
And, you know, it's one thing to teach a smart kid concepts that are kind of above
that standard age, right?
Complex math or some science or something like that. But is it really appropriate to expect a child to act more adult than his age?
Yeah.
That to me just sounds like just act the way, like a good way for your age.
Yeah.
You know, you don't want a little kid acting like, you know, an old man.
It's like, just be a kid still. Like you're not expected to be able to
communicate with 20 year olds. Like you're saying the 17, go off to college, you really didn't feel
prepared. And you knocked two years off that. Sure, you're academically smart, but that doesn't mean
you know how to do a lot of other things or you're even really capable of doing that.
Yeah. And then, you know, like my personal story, I moved home, I took two years off
and two years later, I was really ready. I was ready to be by myself. I was ready to
live alone. I was ready to get good grades. I was ready to like make something of myself
and had like a mindset of like wanting to be successful and not just, you know, oh, I'm just gonna like go from,
you know, being in high school
where everything's really easy.
I mean, academically, I did not have a hard time.
Well, it's not easy for everybody.
Well, no, but I'm just saying like,
my personal story, it was really easy.
Like I didn't try very hard.
And then I got to college, I'm like,
oh, it's gonna be the same thing.
But there's all these other distractions of,
what's going on in college, partying and so on.
And I was like, oh my gosh, I actually have to try.
I'm not ready for that.
And so while I was like good, ready academically,
I just wasn't like prepared for the changes.
And I didn't have like the emotional support there,
with me every single day.
But I also think there's some element of this where back to like my kind of quarry with
the public education system is starting children too young, expecting things of them. And you
know, starting children with curriculum at age four and a half, five, that doesn't
feel really right to me either.
I mean, it's not play based in American public schools.
And really children need like learn so much their play.
And so in my mind, really everything should be delayed in America a couple of years, right?
Like you know, children really shouldn't be able
to move away from home at 18.
Like almost no 18 year old is ready for that,
is emotionally mature enough for that.
Neither are they intellectually like acute enough
to make the decision to take on student loans.
Yeah. Right?
But again, you can't generalize.
I couldn't have been at home past 16.
It was impossible for me.
I was like, get me out of here right now.
And that was probably after two years
of already wanting to go.
So, and it didn't necessarily mean I was prepared for it,
but I did all the things that you needed to do
once you were gone, make it work and keep an apartment
and bare minimum, I guess, you would call it.
So it seems like the solution here is personalized approach.
There's gotta be some way to test the emotional
and maturity of a student
and sort of gauge their next steps based on that.
Yeah, yeah, it's the individualized experience.
I mean, that's also very important,
back to the gifted child thing.
They're gonna get so bored if they're in a classroom
and they're kind of teaching to the middle of the class.
It's just gonna drive them nuts.
Switching gears a little bit,
Gad talked about the scientific process.
And this kind of surprised me.
I mean, he's a guy that
has done a lot of research. He has published papers and helped students do it, work with
grad students, PhD students, so on. And one thing that he said is that scientific studies,
even including the meta-analysis, which are like, Harvard does a lot of these,
they're very well respected, peer-reviewed scientific papers that are a collection of
a ton of different papers. So, you know, you're thinking, oh wow, this finally has to be the
answer. But Gad was talking about the null effect, this effect where if you're going to do a
research paper and the conclusion is that there's no significant difference or change,
I can't remember exactly how he defined it, but you don't see the result that you hypothesize
for, that paper is often not published because it's just, I don't know, not interesting,
not compelling, you know, people don't want to put, I guess there's extra time and effort that
goes into the peer review process. So none of those papers are counted. So you're only getting
a bunch of the ones that represent the change and even adding those together, you don't have the full
picture. And that was really quite surprising to me. I had not
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PM Eastern Time. Yeah, I mean, this feels like a huge problem in the world of psychology and the medical
field.
Studies that are published that only talk about strong effects, right?
There's maybe an inaccurate consensus of what is happening in that topic, right? There is, there's maybe an inaccurate consensus of like,
what is happening in that topic, right? Like if we only think
about like the, the like one end of the spectrum, right? It's
sort of that like placebo, not the placebo effect, but like if
you start thinking,
which it's basically like cherry picking picking really. Yeah. So a good bit of science is that you incorporate
all of the data points.
Right.
Now you may get some that are called outliers
that you don't average in to your line on the graph.
But if you're looking at it in terms of how many papers
it takes to make a meta analysis and then
the potential null effect papers that were never written that contradict all of this
that are not calculated in, I wonder really what difference that makes.
Yeah, I mean the data is evidently skewed, right?
Maybe it's related to why so many pharmaceuticals or meds
are really not that effective or, you know, ultimately they're not very good for your health
or there's a bunch of side effects. It just seems like a system that could be cleaned up.
Yeah. And hasn't been. And honestly, it's great that somebody like Gadd talks about it because you don't hear this. Right.
Just hear, oh, peer-reviewed paper, here's the facts, as best we know it, believe this,
and try not to question anything.
Yeah, I mean, this concept is, I think, I mean, it's well known, right? Like you don't want to,
like with any medicine or any mental health treatment, you don't want to basically talk
about like anything negative
or that may not happen.
You only wanna talk about what will happen, right?
So in marketing, they would say,
oh, Ozimbek, it'll make you lose weight
and it'll lower these things.
This is what we know will happen, right?
For sure that we've intended for it to happen, right?
But they're not gonna advertise,
oh, there's a 40% chance that nothing's gonna happen
or that you're gonna have negative side effects.
Like think about how skewed that would make the usage,
right, maybe with something in our world
like ozambique, not so much.
But if it was a mental health treatment
and there was all of these potential negative
or just like non-effective side effects, right?
Or just like non-effects. It's like
who people may decide to not go through with something for that reason. And they're definitely
not going to talk about those in the marketing aspect of it.
Right. If like screaming at a patient that, you know, falls in the category of a percentage
of clients that have had no positive effects from therapy.
And the screaming works.
And it's like, great,
do that with all the people like this.
Yeah.
And then you count that as successful,
but you don't count in the other 90% of people
that got screamed at and actually it got way worse.
Yeah.
And they didn't like it.
Right.
And like, I'm afraid that didn't help them.
So we won't count that.
Yeah. Well, I think there's like't help them. So we won't count that. Yeah.
Well, I think there's like also this concept
of like context, right?
Like, and sort of wording that can impact
how someone understands something.
And this is definitely that, you know,
leaving out the potential opposite effects
or the potential opposite, you know,
results of something just to highlight what you want.
You know, it's-
Sounds like politics.
Exactly, exactly what's going on.
Sneaky, sneaky.
Sneaky, sneaky.
But you know, it's affecting our overall understanding
of so much around us.
And I think it's really important
that we all keep this concept in mind
when we're talking about,
oh, well, I feel so confident that this treatment
or this medication or this activity is gonna work for me
because I've read that it works for so many other people.
It's like, yeah, but that's only what you're seeing.
You're not seeing what they don't want you to see.
Right.
You know?
Yeah, yeah.
Talking about kind of sneaky behavior and Joe
was very diplomatic with his stance
on talking about the Mike Tyson, Jake Paul fight.
So he saw the fight as did many, many other people.
It was very popular.
Crashed Netflix.
He said, yeah, he said,
I'm happy for both of them.
I'm glad they made a good amount of money.
Um, I, I'm sure he's talking mainly about Mike who really needed it.
And he has a lot of respect for Mike.
He said it looked more like a sparring session than a real fight.
And I happened to agree.
Now there was a lot of talk online and, know, a lot of MMA and boxing kind of analysis
guys that I do respect that really came out and said, listen, if this was faked, you know,
like that's a huge legal problem because this is boxing, you could bet on it.
Just the idea that they would have somewhat rigged it, it just impossible.
Like the legalities, all the rest of the things.
However, you go watch that fight and if you know something, and I don't know a
ton about boxing, but you know, I've seen plenty of boxing matches and how they
move and it's just like, it looked very amateur and very protected.
You know, there was, there was not even a dangerous swing that
missed from what I can tell.
And, and a lot of people saw that too.
A lot of people were pretty frustrated after the fight and, you know, it's
not like everybody is a boxing expert. It's like like people know bullshit when we see it I think I know literally
nothing about boxing and I knew from the moment it started this is not real look
at look at Mike like he's how old in his 70s and he's fighting this person who
somehow has become like one of the best
boxers of our time, you know, maybe not that maybe that's subjective, you know, where he
Paul sucks. He's not even okay, but he's very popular, right? And he is, I mean, just in general,
like, in terms of your his physicality and everything, like he's got something there, right?
But he, yeah, it was obviously staged.
Tyson could have punched his head off at any minute.
Just at any minute, you could just tell.
He was winding up and it was like,
he's just so much more technical than Jake Paul,
even being old.
He would have just knocked him through the ring.
And probably potential to really hurt Jake.
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So he wasn't down for that.
See, I don't know.
I kind of see it differently.
I see it as they knew that it was going to bring an audience.
Jay Paul is in it for the numbers.
He's not in it to really be, like I said,
for the best boxer of all time.
Yeah, he wants money.
He wants the money.
And he basically proposed to Mike. This is how I envisioned it went down.
He proposed to Mike and said, I won't knock you out. I won't hurt you. I'll let, I'll
make you look good, but I'm going to win and you're going to make this much money. And
Mike's like, I'm in. And I mean, I just see it as Mike was struggling and Jake Paul was like kind of pretending
to struggle. I mean, that's kind of what Jake said at the end of the fight. I don't know, right? I
don't know either way. It's like maybe that was how it went. But something was off. Even for Jake
to say, Oh yeah, I just, I pulled some punches. I didn't
really want to, you know, hit him, which, you know, you can kind of respect, but it's also a boxing
match. A lot of people are watching. Like, you know, give him a few more body shots then.
People can take that. It's not going to give him brain damage.
Yeah.
But.
And then, I mean, I think Mike, this is not verbatim, but he essentially said afterwards,
I don't care that I lost. I don't care if I lost. I basically did it for the money. And, you know,
that just goes to show, I think it was all staged. I think, you know, obviously we wouldn't have known
what would have happened going into it. Like, but it was going to go one way or another. And it being orchestrated by Jay Paul, we know, I knew who was going to win,
like one way or another.
Like, I would say moving forward, he's a good bet.
If boogies are taking bets, then because they probably are rigged in his favor,
um, you know, unless it's like an actual young boxer that can box, that's the
only loss he's had.
And even that was, I don't know if it was close, but it was close enough.
Yeah.
He didn't get knocked out even by that guy, but yeah, he'd be a safe bet to bet on.
Me personally, I will, I'm sure I'll get around to watching some highlights of his
next fight, but there's no way I'm sitting there on Netflix and doing that whole
thing.
It's just, yeah, absolutely not worth it.
It was so much time and, you know, just a massive letdown, honestly.
Jumping over to something that Gad was saying, kind of like the psychology of billionaire
spending habits, which I found quite interesting. So, you know, he's talking about people that are kind of newly wealthy,
you know, probably everybody has somebody in their life that's like that.
They, you know, they got to buy the BMW or they get the big house.
And, you know, this is new to them.
They're showing off.
Maybe they're even, you know, keeping up with the Joneses.
So they're really stretching their budget, that
kind of thing.
Then you've got the millionaires you see on TV, the rappers, the actors, whatever, they've
got to have all the flashy cars, all the flashy gold chains.
It's like very much a, what would it be, peacocking type thing.
It's like, look at me.
I'm obviously rich.
I'm obviously wealthy.
But Gad was saying with billionaires, look at me. I'm obviously rich. I'm obviously wealthy.
But Gad was saying with billionaires, a lot different, like you don't often see them driving a Ferrari, you know, or even a supercar or it's like, because all of
their peers can literally buy everything that they want, anything that they want.
So there, then it's no competition.
You're not really showing anything off. Even
if you go and buy a really big house, which often the billionaires will do, they're not
really posturing that house against their peers because they can all buy a mega castle.
They could probably buy like a block of Manhattan.
Yeah. I mean, you look at the billionaires right now, sort of like that billionaire space
race concept. It's like, that's something that a single person with $1 billion is not
doing. Right? That's true. Someone who has $200 billion, they're trying to get to Mars.
I wonder, I wonder what Bezos and Zuckerberg think, thought when Elon bought Twitter for like 40 billion.
Like that's such a ridiculous move in terms of finances and a risk, you know, it like
halved in value right away.
And Elon was just like, yeah, no worries.
Here you go.
Yeah.
There's that and it's done.
I wonder if they look at it like,
oh, he is seriously bowling.
Like there is nothing he can't purchase if he wanted to.
I think with, when you get to this point,
to that point, not this point,
we're nowhere near that.
But you know, the-
What are you talking about, I'm a billionaire.
Okay, okay.
But like the, you know, this concept of like influence
and like namesake and like, you know,
what Elon has done sort of playing into
and getting involved with the presidential election,
this recent 2024 presidential election.
I mean, that's not something that just anyone can do.
You need not only money.
I mean, he's not something that just anyone can do. You need not only money. I mean, he invested like 80 something billion
or whatever to get Trump elected.
Million.
Million.
And he's increased his wealth by 160 million since then.
Who has?
Elon.
Oh no, he's increased it by billions.
Okay, but so like the return on investment.
He got to half a trillion dollars in his stock value
shortly after.
So he invested 80 million to get Donald Trump elected.
And within like a week after him getting elected,
his wealth went up 150 billion, right?
Something along those lines, regardless.
I don't think that was his primary motivation though.
Do you?
No, well, what I'm saying is that that's a different level of wealth that
Like in this concept that his peers, you know
I mean other than like maybe three people five people on the planet could even imagine getting involved in right?
And so 40 billion here and there it's like, yeah, okay
Like I have the potential to increase my wealth
so drastically with my influence, not just money, not just, you know, intelligence, but now it's
influence. It's all of these things that he has his fingers wrapped into, you know, social media
and now politics and the space race and, you know, AI technology, like he's done it the right way.
And like, it's this formula that almost no one can replicate.
And obviously he's a unique human being.
He's so incredibly unique and special.
People are gonna talk about him for centuries to come.
But he, yeah, I mean this concept of a $300 million yacht
is like to him, whatever.
He's out here building things for humanity.
Yeah, why would you give a shit about a big yacht when you have your own rockets? Yeah,
the starships that can land on not that he can like fly around in and with his buddies,
but I mean, it's ballers. Yeah, I mean, you even think about like, like the billionaires, the way that they dress,
like Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos,
they just wear like t-shirts,
like they're not even like dressing up
in anything flashy, right?
They don't wanna be known for that.
They wanna be known for what's inside their head.
They wanna be known for something bigger.
Zuckerberg does have a bunch of super dope,
expensive watches. Well, of course. Yeah. But you know,
you think about like when, when, uh, uh,
like a musical artist makes their first 10, 15, $20 million,
they still out and they spend it on flashy things to sort of indicate that they
have this. Yeah.
And it's like Kanye said to Dave Chappelle when he got to billionaire status
and somebody asked him where his gold chains are and he's like, billionaires don't wear gold chains.
That sounds like a really sick rap line.
I won't go into too much detail on this, but my family has been involved with some of the
work that my family's done, essentially essentially developing real estate for like this market,
maybe not like the Elon Musk market,
but those in the billionaire sector,
but more in like the multimillion,
those that are between 20 and $300 million in wealth,
very, very wealthy people.
And on the development side,
not really having any personal connection with them,
but what has been noticed about it and what I've personally witnessed is,
those that have 20 million, you know their names.
Those that have 300, 500, 900 million dollars,
they don't want you to know their name.
You don't know who they are.
They're unassuming people.
Oh, they're very private.
They're very private.
And you don't know anything about their families.
They don't have Wikipedia pages about them. They're not private. They're very private and you don't know anything about their families. They don't have Wikipedia pages about them.
Like they're not celebrities that have,
the celebrities actually have less money typically
than a lot of these individuals.
You just don't know who they are.
That's interesting.
It is.
I mean, it makes the most sense.
If you get the mega money, you don't need the attention.
No.
Like people are after, they love to hate on that.
They like to get your money.
They like to sue you if they can.
Yeah.
Another concept with this is like old money, new money.
And being in the UK for a few weeks or two months
that we just were like, we learned,
we heard a lot about this, like,
oh, those that have the old money,
it's like they have older things. They drive vintage cars, you know, like, but they're not out being obnoxious
with their money. And like you, those that have new money, it's like, it's almost like
frowned upon. It's like, you're a nuisance kind of.
Yeah, there's weird class stuff like that. Yeah, for sure. And I'm sure the behaviors
are different because, you know, if you're coming from, like you're a lord.
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Beautiful anonymous changes each week.
It defies genres and expectations.
For example, our most recent episode, I talked
to a woman who survived a murder attempt by her own son. But just the week before that,
we just talked the whole time about Star Trek. We've had other recent episodes about sexting
in languages that are not your first language or what it's like to get weight loss surgery.
It's unpredictable. It's real. It's honest. It's raw. Get beautiful anonymous
wherever you listen to podcasts. Right? Or a Duke or something. Then your family's used to having
money. They have all the lawyers and financial advisors and trusts all in the right place,
advising you on how to spend and where and what polite societies to be in. I mean if you just rolled up in the dopest
Ferrari or a you know a super pimped out BMW it doesn't really fit that lifestyle of those people.
They probably just go to Monaco and gamble. They have this concept in fashion, in designer fashion of like, you know, like the masses want something that says Balenciaga on it.
Right?
So the designers.
Okay. You're talking to zero percent of my audience.
Okay. I'm just saying like, you know,
anything that says the name brand costs a fraction
of what something that actually was represented
and of the brands, like designs and style is, so you know a bag okay Michael Kors do you know Michael
Kors there's all of these things out there that say Michael Kors on them and
those cost $100 a piece but something that's like a true genuine like my
design by Michael Kors like you know product you don't even know that it's
Michael Kors and that's just like, product, you don't even know that it's Michael Kors. And that's just
like an example. I mean, there's hundreds and thousands of different designers out there,
but it is that sort of like people that have less money want to show that they have money.
And once you have it, you don't really care. It's more, it's less about the status. It's
less about the awareness that you are wearing something specific or that you have something.
It's just, you're doing different things with your money.
I think there's a lesson there for anybody with any level of money though.
It's just like, you know,
don't feel the need to show off because no one gives a shit.
Like no one's really envying you at all because you have a nice this and that.
And if they do, they're, they're just thinking that kind of same way.
It's like,
I've done it before. I bought a car that I thought everyone would think I was cool if I bought,
it did nothing. It was expensive. And, uh, I learned from it and I won't do it again.
And you're never going to have another.
It's just like, not going to do that. But, um, back to Elon and kind of things that he's getting
involved in, um, Mark Zuckerberg as well,
and there's a lot of talk about it in the White House, is AI and where AI is going and
Sam Altman from chat, GPT.
That whole world's been kind of thrown upside down with the release of, what was it, DeepMind
or DeepSeek or something. What is that
Chinese app called? I think it's DeepSeek. Yeah. Yeah. And I heard that Texas is trying to ban it.
If you go and use it on the desktop, which I did recently, it is like the format for format copy of chat GPT.
I mean, to the point where I've used chat for a while now,
you know, period, you know, just sporadically here
and there for things.
And when I brought up the DeepSeek page,
it is DeepSeek, right?
I've got to double check this.
Otherwise it just sounds dumb.
Come on.
All right, I can't find it.
It doesn't matter.
But yeah, I knew how to navigate the page immediately.
There was just no surprises.
And that's a really smart way to grab a bunch of people
that want to check out your technology.
And what was it called?
DeepSeek.
DeepSeek, okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And you know, if it is not just that they stole the format,
which is very clear that they did that,
it's like no doubt.
Yeah.
But if it's stolen tech, did they hack in?
You know, how did they get it?
Do they have people on the inside?
What does this mean for...
I think the AI community is shaken because they were sure that the US were ahead of this.
I don't want to say arms race, AI race, but maybe not.
They might even be doing it with much cheaper technology.
Yeah, it's so funny even I can't remember what the name of it is, but the little icon
when you search it, it like almost looks identical to the chat GPT one, but it's different.
It's like black and white and like swirly black.
Like it's, it's scary similar.
And then they have a different icon that's like it's actual icon, Favicon, that's what
it's called.
Right.
All of this absolutely terrifies me.
All of these platforms in general, the concept that AI is coming to be, quantum computing,
we're on the verge of that. Those combined will be unstoppable.
And I mean, obviously, I know that if you can learn to use it for your benefit and get
ahead of it, then you're going to be okay. I just fear that not only myself, but so many
people are going to get left behind by this and just get overwhelmed
by the possibilities and the potential here. And there's obviously so many implications
of this in terms of global security, control, and just power dynamics.
It's super important that we have countermeasures and the only ones are other
smart AIs that can stop attacks and hacking stuff from, I mean, it's going to be wild.
They'll be using this stuff to fight wars for sure.
And we don't know what the capabilities are.
It's turning into like robots with guns and drones that explode with hacking AI.
Well, yeah, I think it's going to be all just like technology wars, essentially.
You know, like, I mean, our, our like no people die.
It's just like a bunch of it's just hacking into each other's systems and, and, and, and
you know, stalling our operations.
I mean, we can't, you mean, people won't get paid,
logistics will shut down.
Literally, they can just shut down our country
if you can hack in and make enough happen.
And-
Well, they say about the power grid, that's a big concern.
Yeah.
Like being able to turn off our power so quickly,
we're all screwed.
Yeah.
We're useless once the power goes out.
Apocalyptic style, we're all screwed. We're useless. I mean, that's like, how goes apocalyptic style, like we will fall apart. And I mean, America being as vast and
as sort of independent and, you know, people having so many, what's the word, like opinions
and in general, and like thoughts and sort of like autonomy in their thought, like, it's
going to be fucking chaos if our power goes out,
if our internet goes out, if our access to government
systems goes out, what will happen?
Obviously, if you have billions of dollars
and you can be like, I'm going to Mars
and I'm just gonna bypass this whole issue,
that's one thing, but the average person,
even above and below average, we're all fucked.
Yeah, basically everyone.
Well, this is why Zuckerberg, I think,
just spent like 200 million on a doomsday bunker.
And I'm sure a bunch of them are doing it.
I'm sure Elon has one.
Just because they have so much money, they could do it.
Maybe then they're even thinking,
look, we're not going to use this, it's not necessary.
But it makes you think.
And of course, like there is no easy,
there's no solution for the rest of us that is comfortable.
There's no comfortable solution.
No.
You better hope that other groups of people like you a lot,
otherwise it's death.
Yeah, I just, I see this point where combat is irrelevant,
you know, individuals, I mean,
a human life is going to be measured in,
I mean, basically to nothing,
like the impact that a human soldier can have
on technologies like this that are so vast
and think 20 times,
20,000 times quicker and deeper and harder than a human.
Combat is gonna not exist.
It's all gonna be intelligence.
Robots and drones.
Robots and computers and drones.
And yeah, I mean, obviously I think nukes are still an issue,
but that's still, that's all technology based.
No one's picking the nuke up and put load and stuff in it.
It's not like, it's all just ready to go.
It's just a button.
Drones with tiny nukes.
Yeah.
Nukes that just blow up one house.
Oh yeah, it's terrifying.
Absolutely terrifying.
I don't want to be, I want it to happen after I'm gone.
Let's get on to some of the like weirder parts of the pod
in terms of, you know, what are the odds or the coincidences?
They mentioned a few novels and this kind of blew my mind.
And I was curious what, you know, the listeners thought of this
when they heard this on Rogan's pod.
There's a couple of books.
So one is by Werner von Braun, 1950s novel.
And it's about this person named Elon that takes the humans to Mars and then basically
becomes like the president of Mars.
That's wild. Now, Gad took a good guess and was like,
maybe his dad read the book or someone read the book
and then they named Elon after that.
Fair enough.
But Joe brought up, and I was thinking the same thing,
like, yeah, but so what?
You can name, I could name my kid Jordan. He's not
going to become the best basketball player in the world, right? It's just, it doesn't
matter. Or I can name him Maximus Decimus Meridius. He's not going to be.
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The gladiator that saves Rome or some other civilization,
as much as I would like that to be true.
Yeah.
But then it did turn out that Elon's dad
did read that book, liked it, and named that character.
But still, the coincidence,
like the idea of fate with it all, or just like a foreseeing, foreshadowing,
like it's madness. It is. I mean, when they first started talking about it,
my mind, because this is my first time I've heard of it, I'm sure people listening,
you know, listeners have, this has come across your feed all before. I mean,
this wasn't brand new. But my mind went to that, there has got to be some explainable
coincidence here with the name.
If, I mean, it was a novel, it was a public novel of a public figure. You know, he was a rocket scientist, whatever.
There is also probably some like influence
that this person, like if Elon's father was a scientist,
was interested in these things,
maybe named Elon after this person.
Maybe Elon was aware of it,
even though he's indicated supposedly on his social media
that he's like, oh, what are the odds?
Like, what's the coincidence?
Like he didn't know, I'm sure he knew where he was named after. Most people do. And, and it's sort of
because of his father's interests and sort of this like namesake that he was that he had like,
he had kind of led into a life and an interest of science. So it's not like a pure coincidence that
he has some involvement in science and
technology, right? So there's, there's definitely some things that have led him to the fact
the whole Mars thing, I think definitely is
astronomically low odds. Yeah. That you would name them, set them on this trajectory. And
then they also happen to become the richest person ever lived and the most likely person
to get to Mars.
I guess in the same way, another book they talked about Ingersoll Lockwood's Baron Trump novels.
So novels about someone called Baron Trump. Now it's reasonable to believe that maybe Trump knew
about this book and liked the name Baron and thought that was cool. Or someone in his family knew of these books,
you know, because you would know books that have your name in it.
But they're from the 1890s and some of the predictions are like kind of eerily
similar to this person's life.
It is. I mean, I think both of these are very interesting.
They're very thought-provoking,
um, you know, the, the fact that the character had a lived in a castle, Castle Trump. Well, that was the name of the book.
Right. And, uh, his mentor's name was Dawn. This one feels like more,
I have more questions about this one than,
not this, a Warner Vaughan bronze novel,
in connection with Elon.
And Don was from Manhattan as well.
Yeah, yeah.
And I mean, those eyebrows go up,
thinking about Trump's family.
And then there's the next book called the last president and
The parallels are even more kind of unsettling and to think that that
You know Baron is possibly not
Planning this in the future or his dad's planning it for him.
I mean, if you think of his sons, the other two that are a bit older have not
really stood out as the kind of leaders that could become president.
Maybe, maybe they can, who knows, wild world.
But it feels like Barron could be kind of trained and put on that trajectory
to a higher degree almost. And he's very young, but there's just something about his role
in the last election that's like, okay.
Yeah, that's what I was going to say is his role and his sort of like being involved with
the campaigning, like that says a lot about one, his enthusiasm, his interests,
but also his potential for building a life in politics, whether it's a career being a
career politician or finding a role, you know, like Donald Trump has where he's built businesses,
he's you know, built his empire, he's got his celebrity, you know, accolades that he's
got and then he's decided this is what's next for him.
And who knows, Barron could be bigger than his father.
He could be wealthier than his father.
He obviously is intelligent.
He's got a good foundation of, you know, education and resources.
And he may do better than Donald Trump.
And he could be a president, you know, a president in the future.
The concept of the last president,
that's a bit scary. I don't know exactly. I obviously didn't read the novel and what that
is indicative of in terms of the storyline, but yeah, it's definitely unsettling and very eerie,
the parallels that exist here. Yeah. Yeah, that one was unusual.
I really don't know what to think about it.
I mean, even Elon's one is, it's just like,
you know, they bring up that whole idea
of the simulation theory.
Is it that?
I just, sometimes it makes you think, and it's fun.
It's fun just to be like, look how weird that is.
That's fricking whatever.
I mean, where do you go from there?
Yeah.
They talked a little bit about consumer behavior,
marketing stuff.
I mean, that's kind of, Gadd's talked about that before.
A little bit about political correctness, free speech.
Gadd is very outspoken and gets away with a
lot because that's kind of his personality.
He's a tenured professor.
He's not getting fired for that.
He's unusual in academia because he's not very left leaning.
He pushes back a lot on, you know, the pronoun woke stuff and says what he needs to,
which is I think why Joe connects with him
and respects him a lot and why he resonates so well
with Rogan's audience and is so often back on.
And he's written a book, right?
Let's see, I have a note Yeah. The sad truth about happiness, eight seekers for leading the good life, kind of breaks
down how happiness isn't just about success or wealth.
And it's tied a lot to personal freedoms, you know, comedy humor in your life and being
authentic and sort of embracing your authentic self. He talked a bit about
cancel culture and like how hyper sensitive people can be and how it's
sort of like people have a hard time expressing themselves nowadays without
sort of any pushback. And that can really in turn affect your wellbeing, like not feeling
like you can actually say what you want and put your true authentic self out there and
feeling like you're always having to like appease those listening and those out there
that you want sort of in your corner.
You don't want to offend anyone.
We've walked the line for so long
trying to not offend people.
And I think as, there's definitely a correlation
and he may or may not talk about this too much in the book,
but just hearing him talking about this, you could visualize the correlation between this, you know, politically
correct political correctness and woke ism sort of increasing and like popularity and
in like influence and people sort of self like identifying as like someone who follows
that like religious like a, and the deterioration
of mental health in our country.
Like, if you don't feel like you can just be yourself
without judgment, which is sort of contradictory
to what the whole woke-ism argument is,
it's like, oh, don't put people down for who they are,
but it's like, I can't say that I have a problem with something because it's going to offend someone else. And it's
like, but then I can't be who I am. Right. Right. Or I can't say, I just don't understand
something. But then you're like, oh, well, that means you're a bad person. That doesn't
like, that's like just creating one problem, you know, fixing one problem and creating
another.
Well, yeah, you don't want to live in a world where everyone is intentionally trying to
hurt your feelings or insult you. But at the same time, you can't move the bar to where
everything you hear insults you or offends you, because then you're stopping every single
person from saying anything at you. Even the idea of the microaggressions where it's like, oh, it's
tiny aggression. It's also very relative to the conversation, you know, and it's individualistic.
It's like you could mean your very best not to upset anybody and be very careful about
what you say, but you're just trying to talk about some complex ideas
that are based in reality. Somebody can find offense to that if they are sensitive enough. And that's kind of what's happening. It's almost like a victimhood mentality that's being encouraged
under this careful umbrella of like, no, it's all about including everyone and their uniqueness and their,
no, it's just within the rules and the parameters that you like.
Yeah, fall within the narrative of what they want and everyone will be happy. But that's like just
obviously not the truth because there's no one's ever going to fit like our, our country and the
people within it are never going to align entirely.
And so-
Yeah, it's almost, not that it is like this,
but it's an example like communism.
Before it was tested, it sounds really nice
that everyone shares everything
and everyone has a piece of the pie and no one goes hungry.
And then time after time it's been tested
and it was a disaster.
And I feel like this experiment will turn out the same way each time.
And you know, right now you're seeing a shift.
There were a lot of votes.
Yeah.
People went, I think I've had enough of that for a minute.
That's a lot.
Yeah.
I don't want to deal with that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The sad truth about happiness.
So it sounds like a great, great book.
Let me check it out.
All right.
So that was it from us and Gad.
Great episode.
Love the guy.
Looking forward to checking that book out.
Everyone listening, thank you so much as always.
You guys are the best.
Thanks for the support and we will talk to you soon.
Cheers y'all. [♪ music playing, sound effects of the show
Beautiful Anonymous changes each week. It defies genres and expectations.
For example, our most recent episode, I talked to a woman who survived a murder attempt by her own son.
But just the week before that, we just talked the whole time about Star Trek.
We've had other recent episodes about sexting in languages that are not your first language
or what it's like to get weight loss surgery.
It's unpredictable.
It's real.
It's honest.
It's raw.
Get beautiful anonymous wherever you listen to podcasts.