Lemonade Stand - Are We Getting Dumber? | Ep 003 - Lemonade Stand 🍋

Episode Date: March 20, 2025

This week the boys deliberate whether our cognitive capabilities are declining, analyze Mark Rober's Tesla video, and solve America's issues with The Jones Act.Recorded on: March 19th, 2025Clips Chann...el: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCurXaZAZPKtl8EgH1ymuZggAudio Listeners can hear us:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0Yz44z9z3t8VQu4WRmsrs6Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/lemonade-stand/id1799868725Amazon: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/7d7e1f54-49a3-4082-81e8-f70bfe1ace63/lemonade-standiHeart: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-lemonade-stand-269417962/Follow usTikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@thelemonadecastInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/thelemonadecast/Twitter - https://x.com/LemonadeCastThe C-suiteAiden - https://x.com/aidencalvinAtrioc - https://x.com/AtriocDougDoug - https://x.com/DougDougFoodEdited by Aedish - https://x.com/aedisheditsNew takes on Business, Tech, and Politics. Squeezed fresh every Thursday.#lemonadestand #dougdoug #atrioc #aiden Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:30 Did you know that if you go to X.com, the Everything app, and you submit the winning college basketball bracket for March Madness, you could win a trip to Mars. And this is a real thing that's on Twitter. And so what I'm thinking is because we have a big audience now, if every one of our viewers, we all submit a different bracket, but we put Atriarch's name, then one of us will win, and then Elon will kidnap him
Starting point is 00:01:52 and send him to Mars and we'll finally be rid of you. Is that what you're thinking? Wow. I'm thinking after our episode last week where you defended Elon Musk, he reached out and hired you as an ad man to promote his various... He's like, don't worry, whatever he submitted, he will win the contest.
Starting point is 00:02:06 I do like that it says, it says win a free trip to Mars, but then after that best bracket wins 100K, kind of, is it, so do you get both or does it imply that if you put together the best, are you going to show up to Mars with no money? You're going to be broke?
Starting point is 00:02:22 I would hate to be broke. No, he puts it on Mars. It's like ready player one. That's where he leaves his inheritance on Mars and then the rest of humanity has to go get it. He's been weirdly quiet about Mars. Have you noticed in the past few years? Because he kind of, you know, the whole thing with him blowing past Tesla deadlines?
Starting point is 00:02:37 Used to be blowing past the Mars deadline. Yeah. And we'd be like, we're going to Mars this year. We're going to Mars this year. He did say something. And we've left it behind. I think today. He said Mars in 20 years, maybe 30.
Starting point is 00:02:50 I'm not only kidding. He told, he said it was like five years. No, four years ago. Like four years ago. Finally a realistic timeline. I was talking it. We have this Discord now that we started the show and I think I put in
Starting point is 00:03:04 that chat, I was like, as much as an Elon hater as I am, part of me gets excited every time he drops the Mars deadlock. Oh, dude, I mean, the Mars would be sick. I want that to have it in my lifetime. It would be sick to go. You like, no matter how much you hate Elon, like you've got to admit that when the starship caught
Starting point is 00:03:20 with the two chopsticks and the spaceship landed. It's awesome cinema, right? Yeah, it was so good. I mean, the win-win would be if Elon goes to Mars. Did I get my dream? Andy's farther away from me. Elon and Etrauk and Mars together.
Starting point is 00:03:34 You two chopping it up. A buddy cop, Phil, where we have to learn to get along. And you have 100K in your pocket. Because I won the March Madness bracket. Telling your kids, I showed up, Mars, only 100K in my pocket. Turns out you couldn't buy anything with it. And I built this future for us. I do have a few topics I want to list for the audience before.
Starting point is 00:03:57 I don't want to hear it. I don't hear it. Stop. You don't even want it. No, before you tell me these topics, what? This is a nice thing that I'm doing. I need to do a nice thing for you, okay? Oh. I need to do a nice thing for you.
Starting point is 00:04:07 And that nice thing is that we need to talk about safe spaces. I think. Actually, you know, I think Perry has this thing. I think we need to talk about how you need to use an iPad. Okay. You need to figure out how to use iPads. It's the hostility. You're bringing that over from the other podcast.
Starting point is 00:04:21 Now, if you guys don't know at home, Aiden is also part of another podcast called The Yard. Okay, I'm happy to say their name. and they bully him a lot. And I didn't notice this, but they pointed this out. I don't if you could pull up the tweet from, let's watch this.
Starting point is 00:04:35 Let's watch this real quick. This is what they show up. I use Google Translate to talk to my Uber driver. I know. I know. Okay, freeze for him right there. He says, I use Google Translate like my Uber driver and then pauses like a dog that's about to be beaten.
Starting point is 00:04:47 Because they make fun of him so much for just talking to Uber drivers on that podcast. They make fun to me for talking to people. Period. So I was just like instinctively. I was like, yep, hit let it hit, and then you guys just didn't say anything. Look at his face. He's afraid. You don't have to be afraid here.
Starting point is 00:05:04 It's what I'm trying to tell you. This is the safe space? You can tell me the topics. And now I can tell you the topics? Okay. I'm excited to tell you the topics. Well, everyone, this week we're talking about how is everyone getting stupider? Yeah, you would talk about that, you bitch.
Starting point is 00:05:22 Hey, yo, hey, oh, dude. Dumbass. You're just talking about safe spaces. I'd like this to be one. That was the first two episodes. I was really, just getting real long. I was really settling into my safe space.
Starting point is 00:05:35 And also the fallout of Mark Rober's suspiciously timed video. It feels like he listened to our app and then kind of just pumped that out. I think he stole your content. And some drama that's been going on in the wake of that. And then also in this era of protectionism
Starting point is 00:05:52 in the U.S., I wanted to bring up a little law called the D.S. Jones Act, which is really interesting, just to help demonstrate some of the costs of enacting, you know, even good intentions behind protectionist legislation, talking about something that isn't tariffs for once in the context of protectionism, too. And also, we want to do some follow-ups on comments and people's feedback from the last couple episodes. We've squeezed that in, too. Yeah, it sounds awesome. About the Jones Act is really funny because you guys were talking before
Starting point is 00:06:20 the pod started about how, like, isn't it crazy how things like that are so effective? And then some people don't even know what it's about. And I was like, I have no idea. I have no idea. So I'll be the voice of the people on this one trying to learn about the Jones Act from you. I haven't heard about this. But I think you wanted to intro, right? Your topic was the first thing.
Starting point is 00:06:39 I do. I want to call you stupid. And I want to call you stupid. And I want to call Perry stupid. And I want to call myself stupid. It was a safe space for like maybe 15s out, by the way. All right. So before you do that, why don't you spend 30 minutes pulling up a tweet to call it stupid?
Starting point is 00:06:52 I don't need to do that. Okay. We've got it. Can you find a tweet that calls a stupid and under an hour? Better than that. Okay. A Financial Times article asking, have humans past peak brain power? That's sort of the opening topic here I want to talk about is, well, let me ask you a sincere question first.
Starting point is 00:07:08 I'm going to ask you even first, because I have a specific example. Do you think you're smarter or dumber than you were when you made this video in 2012? Do you think you're smarter? Be honest. When you made this video, are you smarter or dumber? it's a little mark, but I'm really happy. On the whole, I'm smarter. But it's closer than I'd like to admit.
Starting point is 00:07:30 Okay. So that's sort of the theory here is that beginning in 2012, adults and teenagers have reported marked declines in their ability on math and reading scores and their general ability to concentrate. Difficulty thinking you're concentrating, difficulty trouble learning new things. Around 2012 is when it starts to decline. And it's been measurably rising or declining in this case ever since. Wait, so up until... Science reading math, numeracy literacy.
Starting point is 00:07:58 What is a little surprising to me is up until 2012, you're saying that it was still trending upwards on the hole, or it was like stagnant and then it dropped. Like, do you know? I don't have the data. I mean, it looks like 2006, 2012 is pretty flat. Yeah. But I would say the 2000 that we peaked,
Starting point is 00:08:14 but like it's been rising, flattened out, and now it is declining as of 2012. And, you know, that's, I think, I don't, do you have any thought? like Doug, what's your first thought? When you, when I... First thought, I think you and I graduated around 2012. We hit the seek, baby.
Starting point is 00:08:29 That's what's the fucking God, dude. Truly representative of the cognitive decline. I mean, I've thought, so I talked to a teacher friend of mine about, like, kids and what's been going on. I think we, as we talk about it, probably need to separate COVID.
Starting point is 00:08:45 My friend who's a high school teacher was saying right now, the last, the way he phrased it, the last wave of kids who are really messed up by COVID are finally like starting to leave the school system. They got rid of them. Yeah, but like, they are so messed up.
Starting point is 00:08:58 And the way he phrased it was like, these are kids who justifiably have no sense of authority when it comes to like schooling or teaching or parents or anything because there was this two year period where they were just at home and could do whatever they wanted. And he said, as a teacher, there was no way to discipline anybody or stop them from just playing Minecraft all day long.
Starting point is 00:09:15 Right. And so the structures that we were told as a kid of, you have to listen to your parents and go to school and do these things just completely collapsed. And so he said they're like kind of getting used to it again. And like people, you know, the younger kids who were younger during COVID are now sort of like back into like the way our education. Yeah. Right.
Starting point is 00:09:33 Of the rhythm of how we have traditionally done things. So it sounds like that is really messed things up. And then I, for me, there's a broader question of like, is it a good thing that our school system is dramatically changing? Because my sense from this article is less that people are dumber and more that people are not doing well on our traditional way of grade. intelligence. Well, I wanted to dig in. What is the, is there more information here about like the context of why this is happening or how this is measured? Like what is the rest of the nobody has an exact answer on why. But they posit some couple things. One is that people are reading less than average. So the decline of reading is pretty dramatic. Again, right around
Starting point is 00:10:15 2010, 2012. And I want to say 2010 is the year that is the year that smartphones took over 50% of the population. Once you say phones bad, everyone listens or mine, but that is like the obvious conclusion they're leaning towards. You think phones are good. You get to be the villain this episode. Yes.
Starting point is 00:10:34 No. He's the phone's good. I can't believe. Aden says he thinks phones are good for kids in the comments. No, I want to be phones bad. So phones, and generally it says like our ability to, it's not like reading is getting specifically worse or mass to do worse.
Starting point is 00:10:48 It's that our ability to process information. Like take in information, process it, And it's almost like when your brain turns on and has to work a little bit, we've sort of pushed past that. And they point to a lot of things. One of them they say is not even that it's phones, but it's infinite scrolling on media.
Starting point is 00:11:05 Yes. So where it kind of like, anytime you get in discomfort, you just move on the next thing, your brain does not get comfortable sitting in the discomfort of thought. Could I, yeah, go for it. Could I posit my, I'll give my, anecdotal theory on this.
Starting point is 00:11:20 Because this is something that I've thought a lot about self-reflecting. I feel dumber in some ways than I used to be when I was younger, actually. And the biggest thing that I noticed was as I've gotten older, my ability to speak in the way I want and instantly come to the words and ways I want to describe things and explain things has gotten less sharp over time, particularly in, I would say, the last like five to six years. I feel like I was actually better at finding the words to explain things and speak to people when I was younger.
Starting point is 00:11:56 And I think that tracks really directly in my mind with the amount that I read. Because I barely have read up until this year. So maybe before this year, I had not read a whole book in maybe five or six years. And my habit of reading like every day obsessively has been gone since basically the, beginning or middle of high school. And I think reading in general, or maybe if you intently listen to audiobooks,
Starting point is 00:12:27 I think there is some scientific support for listening to audiobooks actually is very similar to reading. I think the problem is are you actually paying attention to what you're listening to in the same way that you have to pay attention when reading? Right, like I've seen Ludwig listen to audiobook
Starting point is 00:12:45 and it's not. His eyes are glazed over. You can just phase out while something happens to be on, right? But if you are intently listening to audiobooks, I think it might be, it might be the same. And I think that is the number one thing I could point to in my own life is when I was reading every day, I think I had a way better vocabulary and quickness in the way that I was able to, like, access and explain things. But that aside, my other part of this that I think absolutely has to do with this is it is related to phones. phones are like the way this problem is dispersed in my mind. But the constant like activation you can you have access to all the time by scrolling things like TikTok, Twitter,
Starting point is 00:13:32 Instagram, anything, or just the internet in general. Or for me, it's, it's YouTube. Like I listen to a ton of YouTube and podcasts and how I, I have to listen to those things almost all the time. I always am putting something on. And I think when you're pushing your brain like constantly and you are constantly giving it, it's constantly in a state of stimulation, I think things that stand out are fewer and farer between and things become harder to retain and memorize. Like a lot of the way that you memorize
Starting point is 00:14:04 or like hang on to things is strong emotional responses to those things. So if you, if, say I did something wrong. Like I did, I, I betrayed. you in some capacity. And there's two versions of this playing out. The version where you don't realize anything happened
Starting point is 00:14:24 and we never talk about it. Is he admitting to something? And I've hidden it from you for years and you don't really know about it. That version is every day your life is worse and I'm watching you. Watching you suffer and you have no idea it was me. It was me this whole time.
Starting point is 00:14:41 But there's some big lesson like there might be something that I have to like learn from that or take away from that that I might not take away because there's no big emotional moment that forces me to confront it. But if you got mad at me
Starting point is 00:14:58 and we got into an argument, like a real argument, which we've never really done before. We will. It would be very distinct and fresh in your mind. That's something that heavily influences memory is like the emotional, maybe the emotional state.
Starting point is 00:15:12 I'm sure there are better ways to describe this, but basically the state of being that you're in, when you're consuming the information. But if you're in like a constant baseline state of information being spit at you all the time, and there's nothing to differentiate it from every other moment of your day, it's really hard to actually remember and retain it.
Starting point is 00:15:34 And I've been talking about this a lot with some other friends because I think my memory has gotten worse, and I was like, I don't think I have like early onset dementia, or something like that, I hope. I think it's just a consequence of the way that I am constantly engaging in messages, consuming media. Like it's a consequence of my phone, my job, all these things. Is this something that you've experienced?
Starting point is 00:15:57 Or what's your experience with this over the past, let's say since 2012 to now? Post phones, post. I'm too weird of a person, I think, to have a baseline that I can compare against. I think this is a relevant enough time to bring up this tweet I saw. Okay. So this is a teacher who talked about the current state of education and basically saying what you are saying, Aidan, so we can start it. That's the old CEO of Twitch.
Starting point is 00:16:18 I think that you guys don't know what's going on in education right now. That's fine. Like, how could you know unless you were working in it? But I think that I think you need to know. So here is exactly what it's like right now working in public education. First of all, the kids have no ability to be bored whatsoever. They live on their phones and they're just fed a constant stream of dopamine from the minute their eyes wake up in the morning until they go to sleep at night.
Starting point is 00:16:41 Because they're in a constant state of dopamine withdrawal at school, they behave like addicts. They're super emotional, like the smallest thing sets them off. And when you are standing in front of them trying to teach, they're vacant. They have no ability to tune in if your communication isn't packaged in short little clips or if it doesn't have like bright flashing lights. That's actually the way harder part for me than just the outright behaviors is just being up at the front, talking to a group of kids who have their eyes open. They're looking at me, but they're not there. Yeah, and that's the core of it, right? Which is wild.
Starting point is 00:17:18 Pretty damning and sounds horrible. That's a wild statement. Then the response, which I think is interesting. So I saw this response from Emmett Shear, the old CEO of Twitch, and he said, I'm not sure if this is true, but weirdly if it is, which is just awesome opener. Wait, one image here thing. I used to work with this guy. He would be in meetings where executives are presenting him important things they've worked their whole month on, and he's on his
Starting point is 00:17:40 phone playing Harstone. This is a fact I will stand. So for him to call out He was breaking out of the psychic prison Yeah So in response to this This teacher explaining how difficult education is right now He says, I'm not sure if this is true But weirdly if it is it kind of gives me hope
Starting point is 00:17:59 Blur out the judgment and details And it sounds like a generation staging a jailbreak from psychic prison So there is an argument That I don't necessarily agree with That the way our schools and the way our everything has been structured, education-wise, is very much about turning the average citizen into a cog, into a broad cog that can fit into any machine. And I think arguably, that is not a good
Starting point is 00:18:23 system for majority of people, particularly in our modern society, and that maybe it is a world where we want to have more specialized tools of, you know, AI education or tutors or whatever that aren't just like, we're going to jam you into this box, check all the boxes over the course of high school. Emmett's take is a bit, I don't know, psychic prison feels like a bit much. Yeah, I feel like that's a little extreme. I think the maybe the like less extreme version of the argument that you're saying, that makes, I actually think that makes sense. I think the argument of like making school more specialized and allowing kids to like focus on particular areas that are their best suited for or they're most likely to succeed in is an approach that, uh, not only like
Starting point is 00:19:05 some schools, uh, are able to take in the U.S. But like if you ask, uh, if you look at education systems in other countries. They often let kids do that, like in the later high school years especially, right? I think that is very disconnected from the consequences of kids having phones. There's two paths, right? There's one of just saying that schooling needs
Starting point is 00:19:28 your overhaul in general, which has been true for a while, which is like a lot of kids get left in the cracks. A lot of kids aren't set for this rote memorization learning. It's not physical enough for young boys. I've heard like they don't get enough outside time, especially, that's like, there's like aspects of schooling that could be. But if we were having this argument about education in 2007 before iPhones existed, that argument would be the same.
Starting point is 00:19:47 It was the same thing back then. But also there's the dopamine addiction. Yeah. It seems different. And I'll say as somebody who, so I didn't know this. I got an ADHD diagnosis like a year ago. And I'm not about to blame like all of the bad things of my life on ADHD to preface. Publicly.
Starting point is 00:20:05 You'll do it privately, but not. But when I talked to, but when I talked to my parents, I didn't know that they knew. I had ADHD as a kid. And they... Do you not see that video? It's obvious. What happened to the safe space? What the fuck happened to the safe space?
Starting point is 00:20:23 All right. And talking to them, like my, like, I think about the... When I was a kid and I didn't, I wasn't allowed to like watch TV on weekdays. I wasn't allowed to play video games on weekdays. I could only... I could read basically.
Starting point is 00:20:41 And I, that constant, like part of having ADHD, I think is your constant seek for stimulation, basically. And it is hard to focus on things. And for me as a kid, that that ended up getting like captured in books and comic books. Like that was, I just read constantly. I would take a book everywhere with me as a child so I could read every moment of every day. Or I would listen to audiobooks on tape and things like that. And it's, I think there is, you know, I think about what would have happened if I had like a phone instead and just free reign on the internet, which I didn't really have until like mid-teenage years.
Starting point is 00:21:23 And I think it would have been really, really bad for me. I would have turned out way, way differently because my effort and focus and success would have been like completely diverted from like how I grew up. Obviously that's extremely anecdotal. This is like a very personal experience to me, right? But I do think on the whole, access to like this all the time, like when you give, like I think a really good video on the effects of weed came out.
Starting point is 00:21:53 Because a bunch of like weed research has dropped in the last couple years, like post-legalization. And a lot of the consequences of weed can now be looked at in like the long run. and there is, turns out there is really, really bad cognitive effects from like constant or like even small use of like weed, particularly for children. Like it not so much for adults. I'm not here to like edgy, like say like stop smoking weed or something. But I think this seat is the villain. Yeah, that's the villain. The idea, I'm saying the idea that having this device with you all the time that is constantly like pushing and stimulating your brain,
Starting point is 00:22:37 And giving that to someone who's like young and developing especially, the idea that it has a no consequence at all is, is ridiculous for one. Like it would be crazy to have an opinion that it has no impact at all. You want to take away people's phones and their weed. Yeah, no phones, no weed aided. Honestly, if they're under 18, I, maybe. I don't know if I take it away.
Starting point is 00:22:58 Yeah, I would, I wouldn't have learned anything in high school. Already had a hard enough time paying attention with like, 100%. It was so hard at night. And like having a GameCube at home. let alone fucking Fortnite on my phone and clips. Like, I would be destroyed. I completely agree.
Starting point is 00:23:13 And they have data on this. So I'm not remembering the study exactly, but they've done studies on schools that have effectively, again, a lot of schools try it, but not effectively. But effectively banned phones. And it helps. And when they do, it helps. Scores go up.
Starting point is 00:23:26 I just want to point out for the audio listeners. I got a call from the telemarketing. In the middle of that sentence and had to put his phone down on his lap. Go ahead. Sorry. Can I play a quick in my phone. a Fruit Ninja because I'm getting bored. I'm getting fucking bored. In the middle
Starting point is 00:23:41 of the sentence reached out for his phone and looked down away from us. I even talked about this. I talked about a similar thing recently on, we do a little advice show for the yard like Patreon. And on, we were talking about vices. And I think a huge thing for me was
Starting point is 00:23:56 how compulsively, literally addicted I was to Twitter for years. Compulsive motion of opening the app, scrolling. You close it. Open it again. Without thinking, close it, literally open it like a second later, doing that all the time.
Starting point is 00:24:11 And I think that's what kids have access to. And this story from this woman online, right? That's not a study, but this, I have heard this story so much from so many people who teach that phones have like destroyed the classroom. And if we were to go back to what I think is a valid argument actually,
Starting point is 00:24:32 which is what Doug was bringing up at the beginning, I think that is, again, totally true. Like ways to transform and shape education to make people be as successful as possible and escape the psychic prison, if you will. I think that's totally valid. It's just separate from fun time. I can lead into your things real quick. I want to say something.
Starting point is 00:24:53 So in that article, you don't have to bring it up. I'll just say it ends by saying because this all started around 2012, it's very obviously not an evolution. We're not getting physically dumber. Our brains are not cognitively dumber. So it is having to do with, like, the way we're learning, the way our environment we're in, the way the access to the phones. And it means it's changeable, which means, you know,
Starting point is 00:25:12 the hopeful thing of it is like we can change it. Our policy or whatever we do can make it more likely. So you have this idea here from becoming an alpha. Is this? Andrew Tate's school? Is this the solution? Wait, is this Andrew Tate's Forbes? These are Alpha Tate's three commitments.
Starting point is 00:25:31 Okay, all right. Tech Bros. I'm sorry you had to wait a whole 25 minutes. about AI, but we're back into AI, dude. All right, let's talk about how AI is going to make everything better. And there's literally no downside, right? I can't think of any. Okay, so I think there is an important premise to start with,
Starting point is 00:25:46 which is that one-on-one tutoring of a student is shown to be vastly more effective. And there's been a lot of studies by this. I found one about from the University of Chicago. But the difference between having a teacher in front of a group of people who is giving the same lecture and the same broad lesson to everybody versus a one-on-one tutor is massive difference. And we all know this, right? That's why rich people pay for tutors for their kids and then it always makes them do way
Starting point is 00:26:12 better in school, right? So if we agree with that premise, which has been known for decades and decades and decades, if we could transform our education system to be more like a one-on-one tutor experience, that could have incredible benefits for kids. So there are now studies going on with basically people using AI LLMs to have an AI tutor, essentially. So this is in early stages. These are going to get way better. But even there's some studies in Nigeria and Ghana. One of them is crazy. In Nigeria, they had students in a six-week program for one hour a day after school. They talked to this LLM chatbot to help them learn English.
Starting point is 00:26:49 And they tested that at the end. The six weeks was equivalent to two years of typical learning. That is how big of a difference having a tailored experience was. They did math in Ghana. kids were given an hour of this AI math tutor on WhatsApp. And over eight months of doing this, one hour a day, it was an extra year of learning. Like these are crazy gains when you can tailor education to a specific person. So Alpha School, I only found out about this recently, it's this school in the U.S.
Starting point is 00:27:16 There's like nine campuses, something like that. And there's some like prominent tech people who's like kids are in these things. Their premise for their school is there are two hours a day of actual schooling. Two hours a day of not be, don't be a beta. Yeah. Let me have not be a beta.
Starting point is 00:27:32 You crush a brew. You sling dick. You smoke that marijuana. They know at Alpha School. You don't know the shit about weed ate it. They smoke fucking. No, look at Lulu here, 10 years old. She shows up every day.
Starting point is 00:27:46 She hits the bongs. She's a fucking alpha. And you don't get that. You're right. You're right. She's an alpha. So this school, their premise is you have two hours a day. That's it.
Starting point is 00:27:59 of really tailored learning. Their teachers are no longer considered teachers. They are guides. And their goal is to be these one-on-one mentors with each student, which are offering support and guidance and motivation for the student to work with this AI tutor to have really tailored education to them. And the testimonies from kids are like, like this one,
Starting point is 00:28:17 I don't have to stick to just second grade. I can learn third and fourth grade content too, right? Like kids can go at their own rate for all these different topics. And then the rest of the day, they spend doing all of these whatever activities they're interested in. so they could like try to run their own business or they do some sort of outdoor activity or pottery or whatever they feel like whatever's going to make them the biggest alpha. So this is interesting. I only learned about this recently, but apparently the results of this are insane. Like the
Starting point is 00:28:40 the scoring that these kids are doing is vastly higher on average than a traditionally educated kid in the Texas region. And it's wild to think that like two hours and I imagine myself in school and like how much of schooling was me just forcing myself through this slog. And if it was tailored to me. Like now, I learn it like a hundred times the rate I used to because I tailor everything to my interests and largely use AI to help me do that. And I'm, I'm very optimistic about us potentially transforming education that is separate from phones, which I don't think kids should have in school. So I want to say, I just want to say, I have used this. I mean, I was doing it before, but you go to go to, no, I don't go. I'm actually not in alpha school.
Starting point is 00:29:21 I'm actually in beta school. I'm in beta school. It's different. I sadly talk to the, what's it like once you broke out of the Matrix? But you sort of put me on to this, and I've been doing it more, and it works. It's legitimate. I'll put in an article that I want to talk about on stream. I'll have it summarize the whole thing, but not summarize it. I'll have it quiz me. So I'll read the article, and then I'll put it into a thing.
Starting point is 00:29:42 And I'm like, hey, just check my knowledge. And if you do the voice mode, like, I have a conversation about the article. And if I'm like, this is my takeaway. They're like, well, actually, you know, it'll like correct me or like, it's like a really smart person I'm talking to that knows what I'm trying to learn and just gives me feet. I mean, I can actually see what you're talking about. I've tried it for stand and it does work. And that way when I go live and someone asked me that question,
Starting point is 00:30:01 I've had this, like I'm prepared for it in a way that I couldn't have done just by myself reading. Like it does, there is potential there. The rate at which I learned, I've learned history, programming, a new language, like learning Japanese are all easily 10 times the rate at which I used to learn things 10 years ago. Using AI. It's just feedback. It is wild. It's not just feedback.
Starting point is 00:30:21 It's that it's custom tailored to you, right? Imagine a teacher who's explaining the art. article to you, but there's 30 people who all have their own questions. And you get lost. And what I'm lost on, I get an immediate answer. Right, right. And you can tailor it to you. I mean, imagine, again, kids who are like, my teacher friend was saying, like, kids don't seem to be as motivated nowadays.
Starting point is 00:30:38 And what I would hope is that AI tools or whatever modern education tools we use, whether it's AI or not, can be tailored. So this kid who's terrible at focusing on math, it can be rephrased in some sort of game that's related to Fortnite or their favorite characters or a weird, like, movie thing in a way that actually gets their attention, right? at a level that matches their specific type of learning. Right, right, right. Right.
Starting point is 00:30:59 Right. Have you, Doug, have you seen The Wire? Yes. Dude. Okay, I don't know if you know. Aidan can't go 15 minutes in real life without bringing up the wire. He forces it into every conversation. It's because it's a great show.
Starting point is 00:31:13 And we've made it two whole episodes I thought without this problem and now it's bad. It's a great show. Okay. But you might remember, you've seen The Wire. Have you not? Yeah, I've seen the beginning of this. I've seen it through your description of every line. The famous.
Starting point is 00:31:26 The famous scene at the beginning of season for when Snoop is buying the nail gun in the store. And the whole thing is that like Snoop, you know, had Snoop grown up in maybe a better environment is actually a very intelligent person who knows what they need, knows how to ask questions and has like a very in-depth conversation of like how I specifically need this type of tool that would be best suited to hide the bodies in vacant buildings. Yeah, they're buying a thing to hide dead bodies. bit. And I, this is a silly example of, I do think like catering, catering like knowledge and learning to specific situations that best fit,
Starting point is 00:32:05 like the kids so that they best understand them is totally the way to go. Even like just having individual time is so important. Like I remember when I was a younger kid in like fifth grade. And I think there was a brief period of time where I went to a private school. And in that school, there was like a subset of people within the class that they pulled out of class to like work on basically like the next grade's worth of material because we already knew the existing material. We were nerds. Okay. So, but at, you know, at public schools, those opportunities were like few and far between, at least at U.S. public schools, right?
Starting point is 00:32:44 And like I said, when you look at public education in a lot of other countries, they start to take these more like refined approaches to different students. so that they're working on something that they are more invested in. I think that this is kind of awesome. Yeah, it's pretty cool. If you're doing this through, I don't know, in a classroom that is like deployed by the teacher or the school rather than like on the, at the kids like phones at an individual level. Right.
Starting point is 00:33:14 I think that's, this is really cool because I think at least as if you took this all out of the world of like technology and you just go back far enough in time, I think again, these were the same conversations about education that people are having like 10, 20, 30 years ago about how to help students succeed. And this is like a tool that allows that to happen. I want to talk a little about the negative sides of AI though. It's not this in education. And I've been hearing this all over. There's a good article about it, but also I've talked to my chat, like come up and some stories.
Starting point is 00:33:41 And the level of cheating, especially in college level courses right now with chat GPT is ramping. Yes. It is, it is viral. You're saying they're breaking out of the psychic prison. And maybe that means the whole system is just, it doesn't work in this area. But like the structure of it is still there and it's teetering. It's not.
Starting point is 00:34:01 Teachers are frustrated. They're grading like 80% pat-GPT papers. They know the student did put no time into. And the students are also reporting that like, okay, so let's see your student and you want to try hard. Well, you're worried that if you don't use AI to cheat, you're going to fall behind this kid that does. And your grades worse.
Starting point is 00:34:20 If you're in college, you're literally, suffering because of the curve. Right. Yeah, there's a curve. And then also, like, you hear the stories of like people graduating. It's a tough time now to find if you get bad grades, you're where you're going to graduate and not, so you're like almost incentivized hard to cheat because the thing can write better than you on a lot of things. Right. So now it's like this race to the bottom where everyone is cheating at all time. It's getting exponential. And now they're going into job interviews and they're cheating in those. Like they're, they're having the AI auto listen to the job question and then just reading the end. I mean, it's getting, it's getting, it's breaking the whole.
Starting point is 00:34:52 system. It's breaking like every way of measuring human ability and talent and that structure that existed before. And I don't have the answer, but like that is a downside of a man that's coming really quickly. Yes. Well, I think this is a longer term strong positive. Yes. Yeah. Okay. That's my I'm not going to pretend like, no, AI is straight up destroying our current education system, like straight up. And I think there's a world where we can go, okay, long term, this like things like this alpha school could be really positive. I, I have an education from one of the best computer science in the country and a computer science degree from it. And I think that education quality was
Starting point is 00:35:25 pretty bad overall. And I am not heartbroken if the fairly shitty way of having us learn and test our learning knowledge, which had almost no correspondence to who went on to actually be successful and make an impact in the world, I'm not that heartbroken if that system fails.
Starting point is 00:35:41 I'm not that heartbroken if doctor, if professor Brian Harvey can't fucking grade our scheme projects as well anymore. I don't give a shit. I don't give a shit. 15 or 12 years later? Yeah. Well, no, he's got this famous,
Starting point is 00:35:54 he's got this famous video about not cheating. And he's right, morally, like, obviously morally, I'm not supportive of cheating or anything, but, but it's, it, the current structure is fucked for sure. And I think what I hope and think,
Starting point is 00:36:06 is that we can, we can push it towards these really tailored experiences. But it's not, I don't, like, the, the, the paradigm of like, all the kids go to high school, and then they take the SAT, and that number is how smart you are.
Starting point is 00:36:18 It's like, that shit is going to end. Yeah. That's going to end. It's going to be your specialized in certain things, and you can pursue those things with a lot of, like, individual focus. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:27 I think this actually comes back to the first episode when we're talking about AI in a way because, but this is hitting education, I would say, sooner or more heavily than the way it's hitting the job market. No, it's like a, great train. Like,
Starting point is 00:36:41 yeah. It's the same issue. When we were talking about how, well, what is the consequences of like AI on the future of the way we work, right? And the big consequence is like, well, AI is going to replace all these jobs, but if those people can't move to new jobs because AI is also capable of replacing those jobs, then there's this catastrophic effect on the way
Starting point is 00:36:59 society is structured right now. Yeah. And but it's how, this is the same situation. It's like new tool is not like complementary to the way education is currently structured. Or has been done for decade. I mean, for a long time. But the deconstruction is happening already. So I think the answer, like when I think about how what I fucking.
Starting point is 00:37:20 learned in business school is basically nothing. You went to business school? Yeah. Oh, dope. I went to business school and I studied finance and I studied marketing. Damn. What's your based? I, nothing, almost nothing of what I learned is applicable or helpful in my life.
Starting point is 00:37:37 Except for, and all of the experience that I gained by being in university was I leveraged a lot of university resources to like start to start a business and run esports events. Yeah, doing actual things is the, The only way to learn. By like running that company and I don't like regret going to college for those reasons. Like I did learn a lot through those ways. And there were exceptions in my classes where I learned about stuff that I thought was really interesting. But overall like I didn't take that much away from it.
Starting point is 00:38:07 And this like tailored education experience. Yeah. I mean for kids nowadays it makes no sense. For the average young person going to college right now, it's like the price has only gone up. Yeah. The quality is going down. everyone's cheating. Like the quality of your degree means less
Starting point is 00:38:22 because there's so many false positives people are cheating to it. It's like it's this really tough time to be figuring out what the fuck to do. I mean, I don't envy people who are younger. People are like 18 right now. It's like insane. I'm really learning more about it
Starting point is 00:38:37 by talking to some of them. And it's like I don't. I feel like in 10 years, maybe we figured some of this out and they're having a good, but I feel like this window is so bad. This window sucks. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:48 I, again, don't want to downplay that. Yeah. And they have parents like telling them, will you just do this? Or what, you know, like parents that don't understand how much it's change. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:38:56 It's just interesting. I think this specific use case is really, is really cool. Like I, to me, if this is, like I think about the language learning example you gave, uh,
Starting point is 00:39:06 like you have been learning Japanese. That's how Ludwig's been studying Japanese. And in the time that he said he's been using chat ch pt, it is from my outside perspective as somebody who knows like a little Japanese, like very little. from studying it in college is, oh, wow, he's improved a lot in the period of time that he's been using that instead. And I think there is really cool use cases of it. Because as somebody who's the, you know, from that first episode, the AI scrutinor, if you will, I hear to scrutinize
Starting point is 00:39:38 and like, I do think the cheating epidemic right now is, is terrible. Like the situation is literally devolving before us. I, I'm really excited about something like this. You heard the Steve Jobs quote, this is a long time ago. It was like him talking about the future. And he's like,
Starting point is 00:39:54 Alexander the Great learned everything he knew from Aristotle. Aristotle was like his private tutor. And he's like, one day we'll be able to put all of Aristotle's teachings into a computer and create a digital Aristotle that can be anyone's tutor.
Starting point is 00:40:07 And I thought that was really, I mean, first of all, it's incredible foresight for 84 or when he said it or whatever, but like there is something to that of a kid having the compounding knowledge of the world privately for whatever, like, whatever you're interested. If it's Japanese or whatever, I mean, that is cool. I do see that being a positive thing
Starting point is 00:40:25 once it can get figured out. Once society adapts to it in a way. Yes. That's what I said in the first episode, new technology, it's destructive at first, and then you start getting the gains. And we are currently in the destruction phase. And it's going to be hard and scary and terrible.
Starting point is 00:40:38 And I, again, to repeat myself, I am not saying the terrible stuff isn't happening or won't happen, but I just want and hope that people can also acknowledge how much good there is down the road and then hopefully we try to maximize that, minimize downside. That's, yeah, but it's fucked right now, for sure. It's just tough. I mean, if you're
Starting point is 00:40:55 18 or you're like, you had high school and COVID and now you're dealing with cheating and college. Yeah, it's bad. You're just getting fucked. I'm trying to reach for like what might be, like what are more negatives or like what is the potential argument to this use case specifically. And if I
Starting point is 00:41:11 Maybe if I was a teacher, I would be seeing this and be, one, maybe a little insecure about my job and be like, am I, is this the process of me like getting replaced? What place do I have in this system now? Do, you know, does AI, does a teacher turn from a person that stands in front of a classroom and teaches like a group of 30, 40 kids into somebody that's basically like an AI manager? And maybe emotional support or someone who can handle the human side. have is pretty decent. So it's at Alpha School, teachers shift from traditional roles like grading and writing lesson plans to supporting students emotional and motivational needs and teaching life skills.
Starting point is 00:41:50 Just like, yeah, I mean, that's a, you know, very optimistic description. But in theory, like, yeah, and those are the most impactful teachers that I had as not the ones who wrote really good lesson plans. It's one that we like really tailored to me. Right. Yeah. Yeah. I will say it's, I think it's really important
Starting point is 00:42:06 for there to still be like guidance and structure from the school. because when I was in high school, I had this class I was a part of that was you could get into instead of English. And it was called, this is out of public school too. It was called Rise. I forget what it stood for. But the idea was you had the autonomy within that class to kind of decide whatever you wanted to work on. And the dramatically, I would say good examples of how that time was used was one girl that graduated a few years before me worked really hard. opened like a coffee business using the time that she was in that class and then she got into like an Ivy League school. And there was other examples of people in that class becoming really successful. I think I struggled a bit more in that environment. Like even though I was a really successful student at that age, I fucked off. I spent like half of that. I spent like half of that year. First year down like finding YouTube music and learning how to like I basically spent a bunch of time learning how to pirate music at school because I like, I basically spent a bunch of time learning how to pirate music at school. Because I like, That's alpha right there.
Starting point is 00:43:14 It's not to say that that program didn't have any use, but I feel like that that's like, that was supposed to be this opportunity for me to grow and succeed in a direction that I couldn't in a normal class. And I think that opportunity is really important, but I could have used a little more guidance. Yeah, a little more structure, a little more guidance,
Starting point is 00:43:33 especially for some kids, that makes sense. Who else could you use structuring guidance? This show? This show. Let's move on to, Guys, it's been... Drama, drama, drama. Almost 43 minutes.
Starting point is 00:43:45 I'm sorry, tech bros. We are now moving on to Tesla. Let's talk about Tesla. It's time for Doug Doug to call out Mark Rober. Yeah, you need to do it. First of all, we need an enemy for this podcast. Yeah. All good podcasts have enemies.
Starting point is 00:43:57 Okay. This, it's interesting... Interesting timing. Because last week, we talked a whole lot about Tesla versus Waymo, which is basically the difference between cameras in a car versus cameras and LIDAR car. LIDAR being lasers that shoots
Starting point is 00:44:12 around and it can like see what's going on irrespective of whether there's light in the camera or there's fog or whatever else. So what, two days later I think? Mark Rober, giant science YouTuber, if you don't know, very family friendly. It makes this video where he compares Tesla to another
Starting point is 00:44:28 company Luminar who makes LIDAR. So basically he just does a bunch of tests of this exact thing. Of a car Tesla. The timing was crazy. Yeah, timing is crazy. Of a car that just does cameras versus a car that has this LIDAR system built in. And so he puts out this video, and somewhat predictably,
Starting point is 00:44:44 the Tesla fails several of these things, and the LIDAR system succeeds at all of them. For example, if there's, like, super bright lights in the car, I forget exactly which ones Tesla fail that failed like half, but like super bright lights, or rain that is falling from a bunch of hoses
Starting point is 00:44:58 that completely obscures the vision, right? And then the last one is he went through a fake cartoon painted wall. So he's like, and if you're looking at the video, you can see it. He drives through a wall that is painted to look like the background. This is not something that happens
Starting point is 00:45:14 in real life, but the point of this is like there is a physical object on the road and the laser, LiDAR system absolutely can detect it, but the cameras can't because the cameras, it just looks like the road is continuing, right? So he did this test and it's very fun and dramatic. I thought it was interesting the response to some of this.
Starting point is 00:45:30 So this was one of the most prominent criticisms I saw. I don't know who Sawyer Merritt is, although in his bio it says, investor of Tesla, so I think he's slightly biased. Sure. But there's, you know, the timing of this was so interesting. And he posts this video.
Starting point is 00:45:45 Mark Rober posts this video and then on Monday Tesla stock drops and Luminar stock, who makes the LIDAR that he showed off, increased 25%. Oh my God. It's a 10 million view video. It's a big... By two days later, it peaked at a 50% increase. So...
Starting point is 00:46:01 Let's see, Mark Rober, why don't you post your Robin Hood account? Yeah. So Mark Roberer says, He followed up and he had to be due to criticism. He was like, we did not receive money from Luminar. But Luminar stock goes way up. What Luminar does, they don't make cars, but they make the LiDAR system that they're trying to sell two cars.
Starting point is 00:46:18 So they're trying to make like a standalone LiDar system. So this guy, Sorry Merritt comes in and is voicing some of the big criticisms against this video, Mark Rober does. The first up is that he doesn't actually use Tesla's full self-driving technology. He uses autopilot. So autopilot is like every Tesla car basically has this. and it's like a highway driver assist. It just keeps you in the lanes and whatnot.
Starting point is 00:46:41 And it is supposed to break and stop you from hitting things. But it's not full self-driving. There is, as of the last like five years, there's full self-driving, SFD, that Tesla's have, and that's the new thing that is meant to be self-driving. So right out the bat, it's kind of strange. He just straight up didn't use Tesla's advanced system at all. He used the old one from five years ago
Starting point is 00:47:00 that is not meant for things like this. There's also inconsistencies in the video, so he like posts this clip on you, due to criticism of him driving through the wall with the Tesla. The Tesla just smashes through it. But he activates the autopilot mode like three seconds before going to the wall, like really late. And that impacts it. Whereas with the LiDAR car, they activate it way down the runway and there's like tons of time for the car to realize there's a wall there. Not only that, he posts this raw footage and says like, this is the raw footage. That's how you know I didn't fake this. But then in the video, there's a different clip where he activates the autopilot earlier in the runway at a different time.
Starting point is 00:47:40 So basically, they did multiple takes and then spliced them together in the YouTube video, which is just kind of strange and weird. And there's other things people, you know, being like, why was there a child that you ran over afterwards? And obviously, the answer to that is it's dramatic and fun. I was going to say, number five was dumb to include because it's like, it's just kind of funny. Yeah, it's for the YouTube video. He's a good YouTuber. Yeah. So it's, I mean, okay. I really, I think the point is like he, I think Mark Rober's an extremely talented guy.
Starting point is 00:48:08 I don't think this was well intentioned, but it is, I think, objectively misleading. The video is titled, Can You Trick a Self-Driving Car, or Can You Fool a Self-Driving Car, and then does not use Tesla's full self-driving capabilities. And then basically stacks the odds against it and doesn't give a whole lot of clarity around like, hey, we're doing a bunch of tests and we are giving Tesla as many disadvantages as possible. disclaimer again. I don't love Tesla and Elon Musk. God damn. But I am at least voicing some criticism. And so, you know, this, I would go so far as to say most of the people criticizing this are clearly angry Tesla investors who want to believe the Kool-Aid. You know, I'm not convinced this is some big scandal or whatever. But it was kind of weird and interesting how much of a market impact this video for Mark Rober had, as well as the fact that objectively, he gave a lot of disadvantages to Tesla. It's a little weird. So that was a little bit of my thought was you, you as a YouTuber making this video might not have been paid by the other company, might not necessarily want Tesla to be the party to fail. But if both cars just handle both situations equally fine and you don't put any effort into it past that, you've made a pretty boring YouTube video.
Starting point is 00:49:24 Right. And I think from an entertainer's perspective, I can understand why. he might have made these decisions if the criticisms are accurate. Right. And I, it's, it kind of starts to walk this line of like, how much duty do you as like an entertainer, but also like a science YouTuber that I think commands a lot of respect within the space. Yes.
Starting point is 00:49:46 He's a NASA engineer or was a NASA engineer. Like, I'm going to do my best to defend Mark Rover here. But I do agree that I think the most damning criticism to me is that you should have used full self-driving. Right. That's by far the biggest. He literally used the outdated system that is not meant to be self-driving
Starting point is 00:50:04 and made that his comparison in a video called Can You Fool Assault Driving Car? You want to test the latest in grace. And I have a Volkswagen that came out a few years ago and I have this system like that keeps me in the lanes and stops me from hitting cars.
Starting point is 00:50:20 You know what I mean? But I wouldn't expect it to succeed in this situation. So I think that's, yeah. So here's the core thing is like first of all, what his result bolts line up with is essentially equivalent to what you said in your breakdown of LiDR versus cameras and there are different capabilities and different strengths.
Starting point is 00:50:36 Yes. Including fog and bright lights. Yes. And so it is reasonable that if this test order rerun again, even with FSD, this could still be a problem with LiDR versus cameras. Like it needs to be tested again. Most likely the results would be the same. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:49 But the fact that he disadvantaged Tesla unnecessarily, it's just like, why did you do that? Like now there is so much criticism because genuinely it's not fair. Yeah. And then the only other thing I want to mention is a lot of people are pointing out, like, if you see right here, see the rainbow road goes on. Yeah. It's, he turns it on late, for sure, but it's on, turns off. And that is because people are postulating, and this is, I read a good article on this, is that Tesla's have been shown in multiple instances to automatically turn off before an accident to change the, to, to muddy the waters around whether autopilot was engaged during accidents. Dude, it's like when Disney takes the body.
Starting point is 00:51:30 he's out of the park before they're declared dead. Oh, that's good. I don't know if they, this is rumored. This is rumored. If you pause this footage, yes. When Mark Rober drives through the wall, it's just Mark Robber driving. Yeah. Autopilot's off.
Starting point is 00:51:45 So fucking check me. I know. That works. That has been shown. Like there was a Tesla that drove into a, it was a white truck and I thought it was the horizon or it was a blue truck that was horizon. They drove into it. And the person died.
Starting point is 00:51:57 But they said autopilot was off at the time. you're laughing a lot of this guy's death, by the way. It's really fucking. I'm not touching you. No, if I was a truck driver, I would not paint my truck to look like a horizon, like some fucking lunatic. It's a bad idea.
Starting point is 00:52:09 I agree. I would bait people into killing themselves in my truck. It's probably not the smartest trucker move. But this guy dies, and every time this happens, they kind of muddy the water. It's like, autopilot wasn't engaged at the moment of crash.
Starting point is 00:52:22 But it was engaged, you know, seconds before. And it like, if it's too late to break and it's, but it's still context of collision, it does turn off. And they say it's for the reason of like, let's give back to the humans. They have last chances.
Starting point is 00:52:34 But it feels very muddied the water. So while I agree with you, I really do, I was kind of disappointed because like I feel like Mark Rober had a real chance to like have an open and shut slam dunk. Yeah. On LiDAR. And instead, because of these errors, it like, it muddies the water. So no one can. But I, I also think like this points out, like this footage is pointing out what a lot of
Starting point is 00:52:54 court cases have already shown, which is like this is a real thing that Tesla was getting investigated before, before Doge wiped out a lot of. the investigative areas that we're looking into this. That's just coincidence. That's just coincidences. Oh, allegations. So I don't know. I'm ambivalent on it.
Starting point is 00:53:12 I wish they would do, I mean, he's getting so much pushback. Maybe he will do a follow-up or do some kind of like more strenuous test or maybe. It's interesting. Yeah, super interesting. I would love to like know more detailed. But there's a whole other topic, which I would need, I don't know enough about, which is the legal side of full self-driving, which is if a full self, if a full self, If a Waymo hits and kills a person, who is at fault?
Starting point is 00:53:34 Like, who, what happens? Like, we just put the car in jail? Or is it the engineers? Or is it like, what happens, man? So that's a whole crazy thing. I got this video recommended after your talk last week. I guess I was just looking more into it. And it's like a Waymo that's getting pulled over by a cop, a cop on foot, a cop on foot in his full uniform is like stop.
Starting point is 00:53:52 The Waymo stops. And then like a little driverless pizza delivery bot is like rolling by. The guy gets distracted. And then the Waymo just fucking peel it. out of there. It's like, how do you? He doesn't know what to do. He's like an old cop. He has no idea how to deal with all these robots around him, just moving on their own. The world's getting so crazy.
Starting point is 00:54:10 Things are changing so fast, though. It's, uh, it's interesting. That's so funny. Anyway, what do you think will happen? I don't, I don't know what Mark Rober does next. I don't even know if he's upset about it. The video's doing great. I feel like Mark Rober criticism, the problem is that even if the pushback is
Starting point is 00:54:30 really big. It's kind of like when Mr. Beast gets flack, it's, you're, you're pretty insulated. Like at the core of it, even if a million people are shitting on you, you drop the next video to like 10 million plus people that have no idea this drama even
Starting point is 00:54:46 exists. Right. And that's, that's like Mr. Beast is like kind of a state. That's not no, I don't think it's, I, there's a lack of accountability in that. But Mr. Beast is kind of like run to that level, right? Where it's like even if the internet, there's a huge pocket of the internet that's up asadad of him. It's like
Starting point is 00:55:02 100 million people still watch the next like yacht video. Right, right, right. Because they just don't even know that this is a controversy in the first place. And this is I mean, all things considered, this is pretty niche. This is not a huge deal, but it isn't interesting as this conversation goes on with cars and whether we should have LiDAR in
Starting point is 00:55:18 them or if Tesla can pull off this thing. And Tesla is saying right now that they're going to launch cyber cabs in June of this year. Like, that's in three months. In 25? This year, yeah. This year. So supposedly in three months in Texas, they're going to be launching cars that don't have a driver in them, which is, from what we are aware of, way too soon.
Starting point is 00:55:39 And so this is an ongoing discussion. I think it's going to happen and be very relevant over the next couple of years is like, what exactly are our standards as Americans or humans who are near cars to like how good it has to be? You know, it's going to be so interesting. And one more thing I want to say, because you, I mean, you put me on all this, is that, you know, you made the story that Tesla decided early on that LiDAR was too expensive. Yes. And when they made that decision.
Starting point is 00:56:05 And again, too expensive and also technically not the best solution. Sure. Like cameras just focusing on that. Right, right. It's both, which is important to recognize. But yes. But when they said that, my understanding is that LiDAR was like as expensive as up to $15,000 of additional shit you got to put on the car.
Starting point is 00:56:20 Yes, yes. And now at the time of Luminar and all this stuff, the cost is going down to like $500 to a grand. Like, it's dropped dramatic. It's that cheap? It's gotten way achiever. It used to be tens of thousands, and now it's hundreds is the estimates. Wait. And so in the future, you can imagine it getting insanely.
Starting point is 00:56:36 You know, if that continues, we get it down to... Even if it was at that price, like, if that's the price that it takes to add on to a system to be that safe, then... Well, think of the shareholders. He's making a good point. Wait, that's a business major. I'm actually switching right back to death. Yeah. Yeah, I mean...
Starting point is 00:56:51 On my side. But it feels like a needless cost... cut when it's getting this cheap. I think the LiDAR stands are the LiDAR stands are starting to make waves. I don't know. It feels having a moment. It's worth reiterating because I think a lot of people miss this point is that it's not just cost.
Starting point is 00:57:13 It is the bigger argument is that having your engineering team focused on just a vision approach is going to allow you to do it more effectively than to spread them out across a bunch of tech that has to coordinate. That is incredibly hard to do. So it's not like you just stick LiDAR and you got plus one stats in your car. Like, it becomes much more complex.
Starting point is 00:57:32 So I just want to, yeah, yeah. So I just want to reiterate that. Like even if LIDAR costs. Doug is my AI tutor trying to make it like. Yeah, yeah. This is good. Maybe I didn't understand this. And then I wanted to stick Lider on like my Honda Civic.
Starting point is 00:57:46 And I can, no, it drives itself now. I just paid the 500. It just works. I put LIDAR. As far as I can tell, if LIDAR costs one dollar, Elon would not put them in Tesla is because he thinks the better approach to actually achieving full self-term. driving is to have a simpler vision-based approach that you just get that way. Again, he says it's
Starting point is 00:58:03 a software problem, not a hardware problem. That's it. That's the thinking. That's the thinking. One more thing, anti-LIDAR thing I want to say. This is my most pro-elon argument yet is I read that one downside of LIDAR is that if everybody has LIDAR, they interfere with each other. So if every car in the row was using LIDAR, the amount of laser, I mean, that sounds so boomer, I don't know. The amount of lasers out there might interrupt the data collection or cause a problem. Again, I don't know if this is true. But my understanding is that LIDAR could be conflicting if there was like everyone doing it all time. Again, we'd have to look more into this.
Starting point is 00:58:37 But that could be a problem down the row where we go, oh, Lidar's great. And then there's causes its own issues. But then all the cars are crashing all the time. It's kind of cool, though, like Fast and the Furious. Do you think we could ship all of the LIDAR lasers using a fleet from the Jones Act? Oh, my God. Which was created after World War I to help preserve shipping lanes in the United States. I didn't know we were doing with a professional year.
Starting point is 00:59:04 That's the thing about the Jones Act, Doug. We wouldn't. We choose not to do it because of the Jones Act. I don't know what you guys are talking about. I like it. I like us not getting into this so we can have something that me and you know. Yeah, like a little secret. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:17 Referencing around it. Like, oh, the Jones Act. Oh, this is classic. Classic Jones Act. You put on earmuffs. I don't think you deserve. this. Teach me about the Jones Act AI Tudor.
Starting point is 00:59:28 Teach me. Your AI tutor is loading his Jones Act. Well, I thought this would be interesting to talk about because I've heard about this law coming up in a bunch of videos explaining shipping logistics in like different parts of the U.S.
Starting point is 00:59:44 So I watched a video about like, oh, how Hawaii handles there like shipping between islands or from the mainland. And then a video about basically the decline of portals. Rico and how the Jones Act affects Puerto Rico. And then I was like, oh, this is really interesting. And I think at a time when like a, you know, a tariffs especially, but I would say protectionism
Starting point is 01:00:05 in general is a big talking point of, you know, the Trump administration, fans of Trump, like the idea that we're isolating as Americans and becoming better independently and we don't need to rely on this like global economic system anymore, things like that. So the Jones Act is it started in 1920. It was put in place in 1920 in the wake of World War I. Okay. The Jones Act is a law that requires any like water-based shipping. So even on a river to be done by a ship that was built in the U.S.
Starting point is 01:00:41 owned by a U.S. company and crude only by Americans. USA. U. Very, very pro USA law. And the idea was in the wake of World War, War I. Sorry, any ship that's delivering to America. Or what do you mean? Any ship, so any ship that is delivering goods between American ports.
Starting point is 01:01:02 Okay, I was like, because China wouldn't send a ship here. Okay, sorry, any American, America to America. So the way, the way this law, an example of how this law affects things now is say there's a Chinese shipping company, right? Yeah. And they have a boat that they built in Korea. Okay. And that boat picks some stuff up in Long Beach. And it is not allowed to pick up stuff in Long Beach and then bring it to Seattle.
Starting point is 01:01:28 That's illegal. Nowhere else in America. Nowhere else in America. Can they make a round trip to Cuba and stop there? Okay. So that's the weird thing is yes, technically. If they interrupt the trip by going somewhere else first, they can then go to America. No, but they don't.
Starting point is 01:01:47 Because there's not a ton of use case. where that is super effective. There's a similar law that applies to passenger boats and they do do that. So that's why all the ferries that go from like Washington to Alaska stop in Vancouver. All of them. Just a- They have to like ping pong between countries. Because they're not they're not on Jones Act compliance ships. That's so funny. So basically the idea was if we put this protectionist law into place, the US will always have a thriving like maritime shipping industry
Starting point is 01:02:18 that is not only good for America on the whole, but is good for like military and like security reasons. So when we get into a big naval war, we have like a shipping fleet to deploy. Okay. But what they didn't plan for is that... And there were no downsides. They were, and there were no downsides.
Starting point is 01:02:37 And that end of the episode. The arriving American shipping industry. The problem we've arrived at is they didn't expect global shipping to like blow up as much as it, as much as it did in the future after the fact. And the... I love his cute little notebook. They make fun of him on the yard so much.
Starting point is 01:02:56 For the notebook? Yeah, because they never seen him like this. So they watch this show and they're like, he's got his little... Usually he's talking about piss and shit and farting. I like the yard. Disney comes just like mystery science theater. They're just watching our show,
Starting point is 01:03:10 making fun of Aden the whole time. That's all they do. But ships started getting built in other places outside of the U.S. because it was way more cost effective to do that. Can I say that? Yeah. 55% of all shipbuilding globally is done in China. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:03:30 Dude, get this? As of 2018, and this was the trajectory, it was still going up. 91% of shipbuilding happens in China, Korean, and Japan. So the entire like shipyard industry, like ship manufacturing industry in the U.S., it just doesn't exist anymore. All of these companies went out of business. And they don't have enough Jones Act compliant clients
Starting point is 01:03:54 to like keep a business over. There's enough demand from that. So it was funny because when I was reading through this, there was like the paper that I was reading was from 2020. And it was talking about how few shipyards are left in the U.S. that even make these types of ships anymore.
Starting point is 01:04:10 And it was like, and one of the few remaining ones is about to close. It's called like the Philly Shipyard. So I was like, looked up the shipyard, the name of that shipyard now, the Hanwa, Philly shipyard. A true American institution. In 2024, it had been... Don't talk shit about Philly, the Eagles, or Hanwa shipping. It had been bought, it had been bought by a South Korean company. Oh, sorry. Yeah. It's South Korean company. So isn't it, that's, that's, it was really funny to like,
Starting point is 01:04:40 oh, that happened. It got bought out. And the consequences of this in, in, short are that we have a really limited supply of compliant boats that are even able to fulfill this purpose anymore. They're more expensive to use. So for any goods that like Hawaii has to get, for example, or coastal states in general, the price of goods shipped on those things is like really, really expensive because there's only a couple companies that even do this type of shipping. So there's way lower supply. They're way less efficient. And they charge way more. because they basically have monopolies on the industry. No competition.
Starting point is 01:05:20 And this grand, like, shipyard industry that was meant to produce, like having this giant fleet and all these companies, like, protected, actually has crumbled and fallen apart. And the people that suffer the most are, like, a really explicit example is the Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico and, like, devastated Puerto Rico a couple years ago, right? And they were turning around ships for the Jones Act? And yeah, and that was a big thing. It's like they couldn't get emergency supplies because the Jones Act affects those ships.
Starting point is 01:05:54 And they had to, they were requesting to like lift the law for a period. And Trump eventually caved and lifted it for a week. But he said basically the companies that benefit from this like really don't want us to do this. That's like, and during Hurricane Katrina, they did the same thing. It's like this law is so harmful that during disasters, they literally temporarily remove it. Right. Otherwise, a few companies will surcharge. But even like day to day, like things like fuel, supplies are either way more expensive or less accessible.
Starting point is 01:06:24 Or these places turn to maybe foreign countries instead because they can offer those goods at a way lower price. So you're losing like the economic benefit from that. Yeah. And then also anything that you would ship over water that might be cheaper normally gets pushed into like other transportation industries in the U.S. that are like further burden. Like the supply of shipping space in the U.S. brought to you by like things like trucks, trains, etc. is stretched thinner because the boats aren't really an option. So I see two options.
Starting point is 01:06:54 One is we as a podcast advocate for the repeal of the Jones Act, which would be pretty cool of us. We do like a really powerful. Or two, we start an American-owned shipping company. Take advantage of this monopoly situation. That's what our Patreon tier is. You get to ride on our boat. You get to be the crew on the boat. As long as you're an American citizen.
Starting point is 01:07:14 You have to pretend to me. We'll give you an American flag shirt. They pay us to work on the boat. So we can undercut the current monopoly. This is big. Why didn't any of the boat companies think about this? Like, think about this. Think about our plan.
Starting point is 01:07:28 Right. Why didn't they make a podcast? If the boat companies had just opened to Patreon and asked people if to work for them. They could have made some real money. But the reason that I was thinking about this a lot and why I thought it was interesting is because while the benefactors of this would be the remaining people that get to...
Starting point is 01:07:48 You work on ships in the U.S. and keep your job. Because honestly, if foreign companies were competing, the remaining shipping jobs that exist here, albeit very few, wouldn't exist at all because they'd be getting out-competed by who actually staffed ships now, which is like Filipino and like Indian workers who are much cheaper to pay. Right. And the boats cost way less.
Starting point is 01:08:10 And the boats cost way less to make. half or a third of the price or something to pick a boat in China or Korea. For better quality. Yes. It's like we just have old, shitty, expensive boats that you then have to use to move something from Puerto Rico to Florida.
Starting point is 01:08:25 Yeah, that's what we have to. And the new, an example of like an industry that existed, basically existed way smaller scale back then is like natural gas. They get moved around on big tanker boats. American tanker boats do not exist. There are none.
Starting point is 01:08:43 It literally doesn't exist. So a place like Puerto Rico that might be able to get like natural gas, which we produce, I don't know if you know this, we've been drilling. I do know that. We've been drilling. We've been drilling. We're kind of a natural gas goats. A lot of dubs for Americans.
Starting point is 01:08:56 You can send American gas to Puerto Rico at like a really cheap rate, but because this law exists that you can't do that. And then they, so they, a lot of that excess gas would get sold to like other countries and then Puerto Rico's buy their gas from other countries. Dude, there's so much of that happening. There's so much of like, we put, like, a restriction on buying Russian oil or something, and then Russian oil just goes to India and then goes from India to say, you know, like if Europe restriction, they just go to India and then sell it to Europe.
Starting point is 01:09:24 The circumvention of tariffs is so interesting. Or like Vietnam is, like, thriving because it is not China, but you can just put something from China to Vietnam, slap a sticker on it. Yeah. Like, there's all this ways of getting around tariffs and protectionism and, uh, it's interesting. Okay, so, okay, with all this.
Starting point is 01:09:41 being said, I think we can agree this rule's not working, but I personally think that America having some sort of shipbuilding industry is valuable, especially in a world where, you know, they're at tensions with China. Having all of it there is kind of boogie in that world. So
Starting point is 01:09:57 do you have any thoughts of like what you would do to do, could you solve this problem for everyone? Yeah, if I could just solve this quickly right now, this like huge geopolitical issue. Well, that's the thing, right? It's like this law actually has nothing to do. It's not working. it didn't protect it didn't work and uh and and and so we're we're in a worse spot yeah this makes
Starting point is 01:10:16 no sense compared to even even back then i i don't i don't really have the answer like you'd have to like you why do i listen to the show if we're not going to solve the shipbuilding crisis in america why are they tuning in a day the only thing i can think of is on the patreon you would have to the solution is right on the patreon you have to do the tier up if you're watching the solution is on the Patreon, you have to do Tier 3. We'll tell one person on our boat. One lucky tier 3 subscriber who works on the boat.
Starting point is 01:10:47 And we'll whisper it to them as we send them off into open water. I think I would love to hear a better approach or answer. The only thing I can think of is stuff similar to like the Chips Act, right? You have to subsidize and like
Starting point is 01:11:02 basically invest and spend a bunch of money to make making a ship in the U.S. enough to make it competitive. That's the only thing you can do. From what I know. And my understanding is arguably it's like, so this is what we're doing
Starting point is 01:11:17 instead of the government subsidizing a shipping industry is we force Americans to pay more to get their stuff shipped. And particularly like Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Alaska, just have to pay way more for all their shit because it has to be shipped on these boats that are old and expensive and there's not many of them.
Starting point is 01:11:33 And so the biggest advocates to repealing the Jones Act are Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Alaska, anybody who doesn't live in the contiguous United States, because you just have to pay way more. So arguably, instead of our government subsidizing our shipping fleet, it's Puerto Ricans. Like, subsidizing our shipping fleet and just paying. Taxing these three states to give the money to small dying shipping companies. Right. Right. Like it is ridiculous. Which are like price gouching and. Yeah. And you put it that way. It's kind of like.
Starting point is 01:12:02 Like we have Hawaii is like a very important state that everybody loves. And then we're just like, yeah, but we're going to make it super expensive for you guys to get anything. It's like it's wild. I would lean more towards a straight up government subsidies because it just I just don't think it makes sense. And I know free markets have downside, but like in this case, I would rather our shipyards have to compete. And we have a smaller amount that are actually good rather than what we have, which is a bunch of expensive, slow, shitty fleets. And then everybody's paying more for stuff. I just don't see how this benefits. There's a there's a funny story about, Hawaiian farmers choosing to air in cows to the mainland
Starting point is 01:12:41 instead of using boats because of this law. That's like a far sidecar. Three cows in first class. That's what the Wright brothers were imagining. They're like finally, Hawaiians can get their cows easily to California. Yeah, it's not like it's all roses on the other side of this. It's like, okay, well, what happens when you let like full competition take place?
Starting point is 01:13:05 It's like, you know, there's a bunch. of scrutiny of the quality of work conditions on boats and the low wages you get to pay these people from the Philippines in India that often staff these boats. It's not like the other side is like filled with good. It's just that there's a bunch of people in the U.S., particularly in those places that suffer because of this decision. And the only people that benefit are the people who have the monopolies on the remaining shipping left and like the people who have jobs at those shipping companies. And at the individual level,
Starting point is 01:13:41 I'm sure they would like to keep their jobs. It's kind of, we didn't talk about this on an episode, but we did talk about this together. It was the efficiency of ports in the U.S. versus like the efficiency. Oh, we did that like, our first conversations where we were like thinking about this doing this podcast.
Starting point is 01:13:57 Yeah. Yeah. And it's a, you know, there was a big, it was when we were at the dinner, like where we were talking about like what we wanted the show to be. And I thought that conversation is very similar. It's like obviously people want to keep their jobs and do not want to suffer in the wake of a decision that would like repeal this law, right?
Starting point is 01:14:15 But how many people are suffering on the other end because this law exists? And the other side for sure. I think it's like, I don't know the number. I believe it's like either 100,000, between 100,000 and like a couple hundred thousand people are employed with by the Jones Act shipping stuff. So it's like you lose that. And that's not insignificant. Yeah, that's a lot of people. But then, you know, again, the other side of the coin is there are millions and millions and millions of people in the United States and various areas who are paying way more basically so that those people have jobs.
Starting point is 01:14:41 And it's like, is that, dude, the other thing that I would be more stoked about repealing the Jones Act if Trump was not burning all of the bridges with Japan and Korea, who are the only ones who could make our ships if we go to war with China. You know, it's like, I generally am all about free market. but then when you also burn the bridges to the rest of the market, that is like... You have to be able to make it yourself. Right. You can't do both. That's one thing I've read about a little bit, which is bigger conversation,
Starting point is 01:15:12 but like if we go to war, as far as my understanding, like America is completely porked right now. Like we can't build ships. We can't build most of our stuff. All the raw materials comes from other countries. So like, we just would not be able to build things. And then I don't know if that helps or hurts
Starting point is 01:15:26 that if we repeal the Jones Act and then there's more competition. I don't know, man. It's a little dire. Regardless, hopefully there's no war with chatter, right? Regardless of that, I think this Jones is not doing what it was intended to do, which is protect American shit building. I'm actually pro.
Starting point is 01:15:41 You're trying to get it over with? It's the villain seat. Drop in the comment. You always are talking shit on my man, Xi. He? He's the go. No, we're buds. Have you seen my Discord profile picture right now? Do you see this? Yeah, you're with profile to like a communist flag with Shijun.
Starting point is 01:15:58 Somebody like drew me hanging up with Shijimper. with the yard and Chinese flag waving below us and F-35s flying above us. I know what's happening. He's a sleeper agent from China here to destroy our shipbuilding industry with this big propaganda
Starting point is 01:16:15 American ships. The law is so bad. It's so bad. It's all right. It's all right. It comes in here with this. It's so bad. He's so bad.
Starting point is 01:16:27 Comes in with your little white book trying to spread your lies to the youth. But yeah, I just thought it's, one thing it was making me think of as a final note and I would love to hear if people in the audience have like more thoughts about
Starting point is 01:16:42 this too is this something that had I think obviously good intentions were fell apart because of like other factors outside of the law that it could not control. And then the complete purpose of the law was like totally.
Starting point is 01:16:58 Deverted. Yeah. Yeah. So I do wonder if There's, you know, when you look at protectionist legislation in the future, what are the, like, the little loopholes and potential consequences of, of, of that. So, I don't know. It was interesting. Doug, you had some drama. You had two drama that's like, we can end this on some juicy-ass drama.
Starting point is 01:17:15 Yeah, let me hear this drama. Okay. I don't know what this topic is. I have got juicy drama in the world. D-Doddun. Of HR SaaS companies. This is not juicy. This is juicy.
Starting point is 01:17:26 This is juicy. Guys, buckling. Our software as a source. service. Right. Like Adobe subscription? No, like they help with payroll. Like yeah, it's like you get payroll. Wait, he's actually got me hug. Okay, right. Aiden's actually got me hooked. Put it on your mouse. I have to browse that shit. Aiden's going to
Starting point is 01:17:44 know about all the HR drama and you're not you're not. Yes, sir. I'm not talking about it. Sign me up. What did Gusto do this time? Oh, okay. All right, this is all I swear this is all real. I'm not exaggerating. Okay, there's a bunch of HR companies. You got workday. Right. Everybody loves work day. I mean, they all hate it. But any, any major company has some sort of HR software. It helps with
Starting point is 01:18:04 like employees and contracting and payroll and all this other stuff, right? All this like not very fun stuff. But there's a huge business. Okay. The two of the newer players are Rippling and Deal. Deal spelled D-E-E or sorry, D-E-E-L.
Starting point is 01:18:20 So deal. So these two, they're actually both grown really rapidly. They kind of specialize a little bit in one thing versus the other, but for the most part it's like, here's all the HR tools you need for your business. They're evaluated most recently, it's like two years ago, at 12 billion and 13 billion. They're like neck and neck. Okay.
Starting point is 01:18:37 And they're like ultra competitive. Okay. Okay. And so you might think, yeah, who cares? That's not very interesting. They start beefing, okay? They start to like pretty aggressively pursue each other's customers, right? Because they go for businesses, you know?
Starting point is 01:18:50 And so they're like, they go Nike is, I think, with deal. So Rippling goes, it's like, hey, we're, we should come over to Rippling. We have a better business, all this stuff. And so at some point recently, deal, and I have it up here. Oh, I'll accept all the cookies. deal, one of the two services, they post something called Deal versus Ripley.
Starting point is 01:19:07 This is on their website? This is on their website. This is kind of wrong. It's like if you went to Coke's website and it was just Coke versus Pepsi. Then pouring a Pepsi in the trash. Yeah, that'd be? Guys, trust me, this is the least dramatic against. Okay, okay, I'm excited.
Starting point is 01:19:21 So this is the start. Deal, the HR company posed deal versus Ripling. And they're like, we have all these entities, integrations, payment methods, get started. Here's the companies. deal is rated higher than Rippling and 74% of the shared markets.
Starting point is 01:19:33 It's just this straight up, hey, here's a comparison. This is so funny. It's like the comparing product graph. It's a comparing of like their two subscriptions except it's their company checking every box and rippling failing over and over and over. It's like automate IT operations, X. No, they can't do.
Starting point is 01:19:50 It's kind of like a Mark Rober video though, right? Yeah, right. All right. So deal throws out a punch, right? And so Rippling strikes back. How do you think Rippling would reply? You might think they'll make their own page. No, no, no.
Starting point is 01:20:02 What Rippling did is they introduce a snake game. And so they make an actual game of snake where you move around and you have to get little items, right? And they say, don't buy snake oil. Deal claims to be a one-stop solution for your global payroll needs, but their customers pay the price. Play this game to find out the difference. And then as you play this snake game,
Starting point is 01:20:25 I don't know if I can play it on this iPad here, but it shows a claim. Oh, I can't. It shows a claim from deal. And then when you go and you get it, it shows you the actual thing that they said. Deals marketing claim, pay anyone anywhere in minutes, reality could take days to run global payroll.
Starting point is 01:20:41 That's brutal B. As you play the snake game, each one unlocks a letter for the word mislead. At one point, somebody from Rippling Post a screenshot, one of the executives from Deal played the game and sent in feedback, which is suck a dick with a big dick askie art. So they start, they're not full on beefing.
Starting point is 01:21:04 They were always competitors on the market. Now they're just full on making these insane things. This is the Kendrick versus Drake of like, of payroll services. Of payroll services. Except they're, yeah, they're both.
Starting point is 01:21:15 Guys wearing a Patagonia vest. Yeah. So it's getting pretty intense, right? And you're like, all right, this is funny. And then on Monday,
Starting point is 01:21:23 two days ago, the CEO of Rippling releases a tweet. And he says, today, Rippling sued deal. What? Our lawsuit alleges that deal cultivated a spy
Starting point is 01:21:33 at Rippling and orchestrated a long-running trade theft secret or trade secret theft. Okay, so let me break down what exactly goes on in this very detailed lawsuit where they break down what happened. They turns out at Rippling, use Slack, and they have logs for
Starting point is 01:21:49 everything somebody does on Slack, including which channels they search for and look at. And they find out that they think a spy and a new employee who keeps searching in Slack for deal stuff. So he joins Rippling and he just starts searching in every
Starting point is 01:22:05 single channel for anything related to deal and any customers that Deal has. And searching for like customers that Rippling is trying to get from deal. So he could leave it back and they can stop. And so they're like, we think we have a spy. This employee has nothing to do with this job, but he keeps looking into what deal is doing. Okay, so
Starting point is 01:22:22 they're like, we want to see if this guy is actually a spy. And so, um, they honeypot him. And they make A fake Slack channel called D. It's like D defectors. Yeah, D defectors. They make a new Slack channel
Starting point is 01:22:40 that didn't exist. And they send a letter to Deals chairman, CFO, and general counsel that says, hey guys, just so you know, Deal, us at Rippling, we have a new Slack channel
Starting point is 01:22:50 where we talk about all the stuff we have on you. And if you ever mess with us again, we're going to release all of it. Literally just Honeypot, make this up, right? Within four hours, the alleged spot,
Starting point is 01:23:01 is now searching for this new channel which was made specifically for this. So the honeypot works. This guy who is maybe a spy immediately starts searching for this new channel that has not existed a day before. It is all made up.
Starting point is 01:23:15 Okay, it gets better. They go to the High Court of Ireland and they get a court order that they're going to go take his phone. They show up to his desk with a court examiner, like a court-appointed person who is legally authorized
Starting point is 01:23:29 to detain this guy. and he runs into the bathroom and locks the door and tries to flush the phone down the toilet. So the guy is banging on the door saying, you are violating court orders, you have to come out right now. He refuses to respond. After a while,
Starting point is 01:23:49 he finally comes out, and you can see here the quote, he says, if you take another step, you're violating court order again, and he says, I'm willing to take that risk. And then he flees the premises.
Starting point is 01:23:59 That's crazy. So the spy got away. And he took his phone with him, so they didn't get the phone. They even, in the lawsuit, they're like, we looked through our plumbing system and did not find a phone. So they went and looked for it. Okay, so this is insane. I told you, the most dramatic thing. And the response from Deal is-
Starting point is 01:24:19 fucking crazy. Right. This is HR companies. And so, Deals response so far, this is two days ago, said weeks after, okay, so they tried to go back on the offensive. And this is basically the end, but weeks after Rippling is accused of violating sanctions laws in Russia. And seeding falsehoods about deal, Ripling is trying to shift the narrative away. We deny all legal wrongdoing. And so they're like, oh, yeah, Rippling?
Starting point is 01:24:45 Well, you guys are selling to the Russians. And then it follows up in one of the articles. However, deal itself has also been accused of violating sanctions against Russia, according to a lawsuit filed in Florida earlier this year. So both of them are accused of violating sanctions in Russia, which they're using to distract from the spy, which has been stealing trade secrets from Rippling. It is insane.
Starting point is 01:25:06 It is 50 times funnier than it's HR software's a survey. It's the most boring industry with the most scandalous shit going on. Oh, maybe. That's fucking awesome. Shouldn't have made fun of Gusto before this. They're doing fine. They've got hit man.
Starting point is 01:25:23 They're doing fine. Who do you think, who do you think blew up in our own street? Deal, bro. The deal spy. Probably to cover up a different thing. I can't wait to follow up. What's the,
Starting point is 01:25:37 is the spy gonna get arrested? I know. Like, is he running? If you're a deal and you hire a spy, this guy is the goat. This guy really didn't crack under pressure. I know.
Starting point is 01:25:48 He ran, he tried to flush his toilet and then ran away and said, I'm willing to go to jail for this. Wild. Yeah, I was thinking it was like, surely your job at the HR company
Starting point is 01:25:57 is not worth all this. It just can. Right. Like, you're not, it's like, you're not fighting for like the security of your countrymen. You're, there's no. There's real life spies you've cracked these. Exactly. There's no like a nationalism,
Starting point is 01:26:13 like, or security at stake or something. It's, it's for payroll. Men used to go to war. Now they fight for HR companies, right? We need something to galvanize our youth because they're just going to do this instead. They're going to scroll on their phones and they're going to go be a spy for deal. The funniest thing about this to me is that they sent this letter, this honeypot letter to deals. It's, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's
Starting point is 01:26:38 it's, they sent this to only the top people at deal. So this, one of the top people at a senior person at a 12 billion dollar HR company is personally orchestrating a spy in their competitor and telling them, hey, we just got info about the D defectors channel. Go check us the infactors. Okay. Oh. You think the yard. Artile or figure out who our spy is in their discourse?
Starting point is 01:27:04 What? No, nothing. I just, I hope they don't murder and kill our spy because they're figured it out. It would be like a huge. Okay. Is it realized?
Starting point is 01:27:14 I'm going to get a letter. The yard has found some incriminating evidence against lemonade stands. How did you find this story? Yeah, what did you hear about this? Is Twitter? Man, this is wild. That's where the hot stuff happens.
Starting point is 01:27:29 That was a great. everything at, man. Yeah. You can go to Mars from watching basketball. You can learn. You can learn about lawsuits. It's really covering all the bases right now. Do you guys,
Starting point is 01:27:39 I figured it might be nice to close out on a couple, like, you know, we wanted to follow up on a couple topics from the previous videos. Just to, yeah, quick things.
Starting point is 01:27:48 Check out of the comments. And I think it's what we're saying that. I think all of us have spent a lot of times reading some of these great comments people put in the last two episodes. Yeah. Yeah. We've been responding and something in there.
Starting point is 01:27:59 And it's been great. I think we super appreciate it. That was like the number one thing we were looking for for this for the show is like well thought out interesting perspectives and thoughts. People have it on this one, I'm sure. That's cool. I think from the first episode, because we even touched on it again in this one was the, you know, people dealing with the consequences of going through the education system during COVID. And a lot of people. I think that was probably the thing we got the most personal like responses and anecdotes about it.
Starting point is 01:28:24 And I would say the pervasive sentiment was basically negative. talking about their experience. And a lot of people saying things like this. The conversation on socializing post-COVID really resonated with me because it was a junior in high school in 2020 and can definitely attest that it altered my abilities and desires to socialize. I was already really introverted and instead of trying to fight against the isolation, I basically took advantage of it as a way to get used to not needing peers around me. I know now that this is probably a mistake and I'm paying the price in my social life for it now that I'm in college. I don't know anyone who also went through the hyper isolationist route as I did,
Starting point is 01:29:04 but I'm sure they're out there. And from reading the comments, I think that that experience was very, very similar between people. A lot of people kind of maybe not even necessarily having the worst time during COVID, but then coming out of it and then trying to get back to normal and then realizing that everything is fucked up. Ironically, the isolationists, there might be the most amount of them. Yeah. Yeah. It's the most there's ever been.
Starting point is 01:29:30 But I really appreciate it because we got a lot of personal stories that I read through related to that topic. And a lot of stories really similar to that one. The one thing I wanted to follow up about from the last episode was on when we were talking about, you know, self-driving cars and the potential of like robo taxis and also the idealistic structure of cities with trains and things like that. A few people came out and said that we're just a bunch of city guys. And we don't get it. And our public transport utopia and the fact that we like trains, all I think we're generally in favor of like, oh, trains are nice to have in cities and a good way to get around,
Starting point is 01:30:09 seem to think that we don't think cars should exist in rural America. And that was actually a surprising amount of comments. I wanted to clarify something because I thought it was a good demonstration of what I call good faith versus bad faith arguments. Oh, shit. Okay, all right. I didn't know where you were going. Okay, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:30:28 I'm buckling in. But I think it's a really simple example of like, I think people jump to the conclusion that because I want like more trains and less cars in cities. Have you heard that? No. If you say I like pancakes, someone on Twitter will say, we fucking have against waffles. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:30:43 What do you eat about waffles? Exactly. This is what bad faith is. Is when you are listening to us explaining a topic or like, talk about something and we miss an aspect of the conversation. Like something doesn't get touched on and you assume that because it wasn't touched on that we disagree with it, that we inherently have the opposition opinion to you. Well, just to clarify, I do want to take your car away. If you live in a rural part of America, I would like you to ride a horse because that's my image of like a cool
Starting point is 01:31:11 rural area. And that's like you should have horses in rural America. That's my. So I think you should like if I get something wrong, give us the benefit of the doubt. Assume I'm right. Assume that you have it wrong. Right. Yeah. And that's just some basic common decency. Just believe Doug. Just believe.
Starting point is 01:31:27 You got a microphone. Believe all dogs. Yeah. Yeah. There's a microphone. Yeah. I have more subscribers than you. And there's a reason.
Starting point is 01:31:36 That's why I was in you. Right. Right. Right. That's true. Okay. Yeah. There was also obviously a lot of people.
Starting point is 01:31:42 There was a, the comments weren't as frequent as I thought, but the people we were making fun of that were going to be like Doug said. Tesla. Chill. Like there was a couple people like. guy. And it was always like a flag of like you didn't make it to the part of the one, you tuned out at the beginning of the episode.
Starting point is 01:31:57 Dude. But two, two, you just ignored the part, the bombshell you saved where you're like, and I sold all my Tesla stock today because I don't believe this. I guess it's one word, I says on my stream and I said this in the comments. I respond to some people that said this. When you're taking the position of like trying to find some defense of what Tesla is doing, it's the harder one for the audience that we're going to attract and have. Right. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:19 It's harder to do. It's very easy to be the guy that's like, hey, it doesn't suck. You know, and everyone's like, yeah, yeah. Yeah, it is actually easier to condemn the guy who did the Nazis. Yeah, it actually is easier. And we don't even know what it was. Yeah, that's true. That's true.
Starting point is 01:32:31 And it makes for a much better podcast to have people hiring differing opinions. You know what? My heart goes out to all the people in chat who I like, I think we should strive to have a couple, like, uninformed, loud people. Yeah. You know, that brings light to the comment section. I actually thought a good litmus test for this is if you've made it this far in the episode when you, and you have a comment you want to make,
Starting point is 01:32:57 put two asterisks just at the end of your comment, whatever it is, and it's just a sign that you heard this part of the episode. I just want to see. You're trying to do the deal thing. I just want to honey pot the comments. No, no, no, no, no, I just want to see. This one time, I won't ask for it again.
Starting point is 01:33:13 But that conversation came up a lot, and I thought I'd clarify as like, I think, I don't know if, I've ever met anybody in my entire life that has said, let's get rid of all the cars in like rural America and suburbia. Like legitimately has that opinion. No, I don't know either. And I was like, so why would that be ours? And, you know, the idealistic form of these things, I think, is like, okay, well, you have a really good public transportation system that lets people basically choose to have a car or not if they really want. Right. Because I think the way cities are structured now, like in L.A.
Starting point is 01:33:46 No choice. In L.A. You basically have no choice. In practice, like, it's not literally a tax, but it is a tax on every person. Because you have no choice, you have to pay for your car, pay for your maintenance, pay for your insurance. And those are expenses that, I guess, freedom, I don't know, the freedom of choice is giving you. Like, it's not really a choice at all. And the idea is, like, providing city infrastructure that frees up people from that, people from that decision.
Starting point is 01:34:13 And on that note, I'd like you to leave your angriest. comment you can. As we wrap up episode 3 of 3 of elimination. Put three hashtags before it. If you got this far in the video. Secret three hashtag. People who just clicked out and made their
Starting point is 01:34:28 comment right after I said that. If you're a three hashtagger, you can go reply to the two asteriskers and you can be like, you aren't committed at all. You're weak. If you're a three hashtager, first dibs on the Jones Act boats, you just get the spot. Come out.
Starting point is 01:34:43 All right. Oh, is that the last one? I think so. That's pretty much it. close it out. I did actually bring Atriac a lemon this time. He will eat the entire thing. You were going to eat this whole time. That's what I've been telling my stream that you're going to eat it.
Starting point is 01:34:52 No, but I've been, you've been saying off camera that it's going to be you. I also bit the styrofoam one. I'll split it with you. All right. Thanks so much for watching everybody's great episode. See you next time.
Starting point is 01:35:03 Oh. Oh. It's just, oh, no. It just can't be pleasant. Oh, that's a little one. Get your app. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:35:13 Okay. Not hungry. That's gross, dog. Are your eyes watering? Good episode. Good episode, boys.

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