Lemonade Stand - Good News! (and some not so great news) | Lemonade Stand 🍋
Episode Date: June 12, 2025This week... Aiden drives around his neighborhood, Atrioc gets his steps in, and DougDoug is as healthy as a horse... We launched a Patreon! - https://www.patreon.com/lemonadestand for bonus episodes..., discord access, a book club, and many more ways to interact with the show! Episode: 015 Recorded on: June 11, 2025 Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCurXaZAZPKtl8EgH1ymuZgg Follow us TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@thelemonadecast Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/thelemonadecast/ Twitter - https://x.com/LemonadeCast The C-suite Aiden - https://x.com/aidencalvin Atrioc - https://x.com/Atrioc DougDoug - https://x.com/DougDougFood Edited by Aedish - https://x.com/aedishedits Produced by Perry - https://x.com/perry_jh Segments 00:00 Horse Electrolytes 2:30 LA Protests 14:15 Renewable Energy 22:00 Buy Now Pay Later 27:30 Gene Editing 40:30 Synthetic Blood 45:45 Switch 2 1:01:00 Cancer Treatment 1:08:30 Advancements in Nuclear 1:15:30 Minimum Wage Increase 1:25:00 Outro New 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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I think we need a little more
energy on this show. I was looking up
what is the main reason, the most common reason
that people are low energy and it's dehydration.
And so,
I got us
a tub of certified horse
electrolytes that we're all going to take a big
sip of right now before we start our
good news episode. Is this? Yeah!
All right, so one scoop of this
is for a horse that's in like a hot human area.
Horse electrolytes. It's certified four horses. That's so gross.
Can I actually drink this?
Oh, I don't. It looks really good. It looks not really dangerous.
It's really dangerous.
It's electrolytes.
Doug,
I wouldn't tweet this to a horse.
We need a horse mentality
in this podcast if we're going to win.
When horses hunt in packs,
the other horses are ready to jump in if one falls.
That's the attitude that's predatory
and they don't hunt in packs.
It's clumping very intense.
Do they hunt in packs?
They don't hunt in packs?
I think I believe in.
I'm going for.
It's clumping.
You go always, guys, why don't we all take a sip
of our horse?
Oh, God.
It's not.
Oh, my God.
It's really just,
it looks like moon's saying.
It doesn't.
It looks like moon sand.
Bro, every week Doug's like, don't worry, I got a cold open.
This is very bad.
It tastes like I'm drinking like ocean water.
Dude.
That is, this is your morning routine?
Every morning.
Oh, this is nasty.
And you're deeply sick.
Guys, what are we talking about today?
Good news.
So much good news.
It's a good news episode.
The good news episode.
The most well-tied, it's good news.
news episode in history. It couldn't have been better. I'm so glad we announced it ahead of time on the
previous Patreon recording and spent all week prepping on it because it's just the week was full of
good news. There was nothing else but good news. So when we planned this, we knew. Dude, you got to stop drinking
that. I'm not. I've tasted that. You should not be drinking more. Don't keep drinking that. I put four scoops
in life. It's really bad. If you collapse mid-episode, I know exactly why. Or if I have the best performance,
Ever, we'll know.
We'll know.
You'll be podcast like a god.
Right, right. And they're like, all right.
Every week we have to fucking keep up.
Like immediately within a week,
Joe Rogan is fucking pounding on.
Horse electrolytes.
That's what...
It's spreading throughout the industry.
A whole jar of horse electrolytes.
That's what Lee Kwan you drink every day.
That makes sense.
That is a...
I'm having the dose if I'm a heavy horse
in a hot, humid environment
plus one extra...
Could you actually damage your...
Like, this is not a normal.
God is so gross.
That's me having liver
failure is bad news. This is good news week.
It's also funny you said we need to be more hydrated.
When I drink all of my water and yours,
that's true. I'm hydrated enough. You're the guy,
you've got a lot. I've got plenty. I'd argue you're too hydrated.
Yeah, if anything, I don't need horse electrolytes.
Look. Okay. Obviously, this is coming in at a weird time.
We did say we were going to do a good news episode this week and we prepped that
and something happened over the weekend. There have been,
some large protests and demonstrations in Los Angeles over ICE immigration raids. And we don't want to
leave that untouched, especially since we live here. For me personally, it's like right in the area
of where I actually live. And we just wanted to cover that at least a little bit. It's still something
that's unfolding. I think there's going to be more protests this weekend. And I think there's a larger
topic of the way immigration is being approached in this country that we also want to spend
some time talking about. I think that's going to be our conversation, a longer conversation
on the Patreon today and something we're going to talk about in the future. But since this is
happening in our neighborhood, we just wanted to touch on like the details of like what's actually
going on because I feel like I see a pretty big discrepancy between, you know, what's happening
in my area versus what is getting chatted about online.
So if you somehow do not know over the weekend,
there was a protest in downtown L.A.,
specifically around this place called the Federal Building,
in reaction to some ICE immigration raids that had happened,
I think just a couple nights before.
And the ICE had come in with other federal officers, it sounded like,
and arrested more than 40 people
and then had brought them from different areas of downtown LA
and then had brought them to holding in the federal building
because the federal building has like a jail or a prison.
Yeah.
It's like it's crazy because when you drive through downtown LA
there's kind of this one big building you'll go by sometimes
and you're like, why does that look like a prison?
And then eventually I realized it just is.
So in reaction to that, these protests break out.
It's happening in this area that it's near,
Little Tokyo, which is like our Japan town.
And I guess the main thing that I wanted to talk about,
because I have gotten as many texts as I did when the fires were happening.
From friends, from family asking me, most of which don't even know I actually live in the area.
They just know I live in L.A.
And I think the rhetoric around this protest right now is that L.A. is being like burned to the ground.
and I cannot express enough
that it's just not what's happening.
This protest and what has been happening
is confined to basically
a series of like four blocks
around this building
and while there have been
periods of time over the past few days
where that area has gotten pretty crazy
if you didn't read the news
and you didn't live and walk through that area,
you wouldn't know this is going on
to be totally honest with you.
And I think my frustration
has been seeing the way people talk about the protests online,
particularly Trump,
the opportunity he's used to become so inflammatory with it,
not only sending like Marines and National Guard in as a reaction to it,
but continuously pushing this narrative that L.A. would have been burnt to the ground.
He will not remove troops until it is safe there.
and I drove,
I drive through that area.
It's fine.
There's graffiti.
Two blocks away people are in a cafe.
Like it's, yeah.
Exactly. Exactly.
And I feel like the main thing
I wanted to compare this to
was the fires earlier this year.
Because the fires,
shit actually was hitting the fan.
It was fucking crazy.
There were down power lines.
The sky was red.
There were multiple fires in the city
that you could see from all over.
I remember, we all had friends who evacuated or lost property.
I lost power.
A lot of people were affected.
Soot over everything, like all through the middle of the city.
Literally entire neighborhoods burnt down.
A coworker and a good friend of mine and his wife lost their home.
And if you stood on the north side of L.A. through those fires, you could actually,
if you turned to your left, you could see the Palisades fire.
If you turned, like, if you were just standing up, you could see the fire that was in Griffith or near the Hollywood sign.
And then if you look to your right, you saw the giant eaten fire near Pasadena.
It was surreal how crazy it was.
And I feel like the news cycle in response to this protest is just blowing it way, way out of proportion.
And that's not to belittle, I want to be really specific in that I don't want to belittle the reasons people are there because I think that fight is like very, very just.
And we'll talk about the reasons why people are there more.
but for the actual,
I think people have this perspective
that our city is crumbling
and it's just nowhere near that.
Yeah, amen, man.
I think the amount of misinformation
I've seen on this thing online
is insane.
So I went to the protest.
I was there in person
and I remember I was under
the Shohei Otani mural
in Little Tokyo
was where they had one of the lines set up
and people were talking about
how Shohei Otani
had said they should lock the protesters up
because I looked it up
and there's a viral tweet
with 100,000 likes where he says that.
It's from talking baseball, not a real place.
It's made, it's completely made up.
And then Ted Cruz is tweeting videos from 2020 saying,
wow, L.A. doesn't look very safe.
It's not, I mean, there's just,
and it's all going mega viral
and the retractions or the follow-ups are getting like one,
one hundredth of the.
So, yeah, I mean, I went there.
I walked around, you know, right on the line in the,
in the, in downtown or the corner of like second
in San Pedro,
on Little Tokyo, there's like, I don't know,
there's graffiti and there's people
yelling at the line or honking.
Yeah.
But it's like, it's four,
it is like four blocks.
And then it's,
it's nothing else.
So I just want to say it is exaggerated.
And then I want to zoom out a bit and then,
then we can, you know,
we don't spend right on it.
And then we get to the good news.
There's a lot of good news.
It's just,
I,
my take here is like,
if you flashback one week ago,
what was the news cycle?
It was Republican infighting
over the big beautiful bill.
It was,
Elon Musk calling Donald Trump a pedophile.
It was bad economic data coming out about like, you know,
people aren't hiring, housing sales are way down, like what's going on?
And that news cycle was all over the cable news,
which we know Trump is watching every night in the White House.
And so to reset the new cycle conveniently,
now there's an easy target, which is the most hated state, California,
most hated city in California, L.A., unpopular Ameri-Carran base.
And he's picking a fight with that and making the whole new cycle about this
off of like, you know, four images,
and people shouldn't burn Waymo's,
I 100% agree, but like that is the one image.
And again, all those Waymo's were on one street and one spot.
At one time on one day.
I think, I also, I don't think,
I don't think it's cool to burn Waymos.
I don't think it's doing anything to do that,
at least personally.
But it, but it's frustrating seeing that zoned in on,
like the rioters and protesters are causing incredible,
amounts of violence when that to me is the kind of the only thing that's happened.
There are a couple other like minor infractions, but when you're talking about a protest that
goes on for days over the course of the weekend, no one, people are just protesting, blocking
the highway for a bit to me that is so disconnected from the rhetoric that is being spewed about
it. Did you guys, because you guys both were there for periods, did you see any of that
destructive because you're saying it was contained to the four blocks. Do you feel like those four
blocks it is as destructive within those four blocks as being portrayed or is even within that
area, it's not at all. I went back the next. I've seen the same picture of the guy waving the
Mexican flag on the car like a hundred times. It's just like that seemingly. That is the one picture
that's being used to like inflame and justify. Again, that picture plus the word insurrectionist is
What is being used to amplify, like,
the possible invocation of the Insurrection Act.
And insurrection is like a revolution.
Like, you're trying to overthrow the government.
That is not anywhere close to what's happening on the ground
if you walk around.
And so it is, it's frustrating to hear this.
And it feels like, like, Orwellian, like a double speak.
Because I know that's not what I'm seeing walking around.
And again, it's like if you were only allowed
to upload a YouTube video,
if all of the comments were not stupid.
If nobody could post a stupid comment,
that's what it feels like in that,
like, if you can't have a protest
because somebody is going to do something stupid in it,
then you can't have a protest.
How could you ever protest?
There's going to be somebody
that takes too far as stupid.
But 99.9% I'm being serious.
I talk to people I walked around
are just upset at the way ICE is acting,
which is like a reasonable and American thing to do.
You can have that position.
I think if you guys want a clear perspective
on what's actually happening on the ground,
a ton of people have live streamed the protests while they were there.
So there's Vods to go back and watch.
Or if the protests continue this weekend,
go on Twitch and watch people actually there experiencing it.
Because I think it gives you a way better perspective
on the time that it takes for anything significant to happen
if it happens at all.
and gives you a good perspective on how almost like literally 99% of people there are there because
they want to stand up and gather for a cause. They want to use the most basic part of the First
Amendment, I feel like. So I just wanted to stress that. As you follow this story, because I think
it's going to keep developing and the protests are going to keep happening, just remember that
it's a little different in person. And do your best to get a clear,
a clear picture of what's what's actually going on.
I think if you guys are happy,
I kind of want to move into the episode we prepped
before all of this was kind of happening.
We started prepping good news stories
because so many topics on the show
have been particularly downtrod in a dumer lately
and don't worry, I'm sure we'll get back to that.
Yeah, we'll have plenty.
Yeah, we're like that meme of like the priest
trying to pray and there's the woman next to him
I'm like, yeah, we're trying, right?
We're trying to look at good news this week,
but yes, it's hard.
Yeah, so I...
Clearly you guys don't know that meme.
I didn't know the name.
I did. I do, I do.
I just put that up, so I don't think it's crazy.
I know the meme.
But also, I don't think, here's the shocker.
I don't think it's dead hard.
I think our human brains are drawn to,
uh, danger or negativity or something.
And I think there has been a lot.
Yeah, we're of the danger of this drink rather than the upside.
But honestly, when prepping for this week,
you know, there's a lot of good stuff going on.
It's just balanced out.
It's just hard to make a...
So I think...
I don't know who wants to start,
but I think we all brought
some cool stuff.
I mean, me and Doug both locked in a one topic,
so...
Let's do you.
This is just nice and fucking simple and great.
If you pull this up, Perry,
in 2024, 94, 92%
of new power capacity across the world
was renewables, which is incredible.
So as much as, you know,
the climate feels like,
I think, an intractable, gigantic thing.
We really are, as a world moving towards renewables.
So this chart from emberenergy.org shows where the new energy that is being created,
the clean energy is coming from.
So solar and wind, right now there are kind of smaller percentage,
but solar and wind are growing rapidly, basically.
And that's, I think, one of the broader stories that I would really like to dive into
at some point is how much potential is in solar specifically.
For a myriad of reasons, one of the main ones being like, you can make it in a factory and
then you just ship it out somewhere and put it all over the world, whereas it's a little
more difficult with, let's say, a nuclear power plant or, you know, wind turbines or whatnot.
where you have to build it in the field.
China is installing more renewable power
than all other countries combined in 2024.
So even China, who is like one of the dirtiest countries
in terms of carbon emissions,
is like really aggressively developing renewable energy
and is basically the ones making all the solar panels.
That's my understanding of China is they're building nuclear.
They're building wind.
They're being soldering.
And they're coal.
They're doing everything.
They're literally just like, we want all of the energy.
Yes.
Yeah.
But yeah.
Yeah, I think it's estimating.
that their peak emissions are going to be hit either this year or next year right now,
this idea that they're building so much renewable infrastructure that they're going to be curbing
the total amount of carbon emissions they release.
And so India is on a pretty good track as well.
Like they're making...
Well, especially cool because like the more it's used, the more it drives the cost down,
which makes it easier for other countries to get in on it.
Like, it's cool.
Yeah, I agree.
Yeah.
So like with solar, for example, the manufacturing costs are just plummeting.
So over time, it becomes easier and easier to, for example, you know, you could power, I don't know the exact numbers on it.
But a huge percentage of, let's say, America, if you took a giant chunk of New Mexico, right?
And you filled miles and miles and miles with solar panels.
And so these types of things of having massive and massive quantities of renewable energy that is not harboring the climate.
Like, this is possible.
Like, not only in our lifetimes, like potentially the next decade or two.
So it's really encouraging how much cheaper and more accessible this stuff is.
becoming and how many countries that traditionally have been pretty dirty are aggressively moving in this direction.
As somebody who lived in Arizona, that place during summer is God's mistake. And human beings should not live there.
So I think everyone should have to leave in summer and we just blanket it with solar panels, the whole thing. And then power the country for the year.
Arizona just becomes a solar cell.
Or like last week we talked about Australia taking one for the team. We put it in the Australian out back.
The world all powered off the Australian out there.
is our battery.
Yeah.
Who else has got good news?
Oh wait.
You want to follow the mess on this?
Yeah.
So what I think is particularly crazy about this is the rate at which this has been improving.
I think climate, I think we were so used to, especially growing up, climate change being,
news being so bad for so long.
Yeah.
The idea that we're actually making pretty rapid advancement in the direction of improving it is,
uh, one, one crazy to me.
Like 40% of electricity in the world.
being made from clean sources now is absolutely surreal.
And then at the scale of growth we're at,
because I think it was 30% in 2023, I wanna say,
like we're improving so rapidly.
A lot of individual countries becoming closer to that
like 70% or 80% mark instead.
I think there was a stretch of time where
there was a six month stretch last year of,
I think it was Uruguay, it's Uruguay or Paraguay, forgive me.
I think it's Uruguay.
Everyone in Paraguay's furious at you.
Where their entire grid.
Just absolutely burning your poster.
They did all that work and you gave it to your own.
I know.
Unbelievable.
They spent like six months and 100% renewable for like their entire grid.
I thought that was insane.
If it's Uruguay, that's using the Chinese power plant that's like breaking.
I think.
I might be getting the country strong, but anyway, yeah, go ahead.
We might be mixing up, or it could be the same one.
But besides outside of that progress, like what the future looks like, right?
So if you look at the scale of emissions in the world, you know, there's the emissions related
to creating electricity, and that's why this is such a big deal.
But there are other raw emissions for things like heating, for example.
So burning something to run a heater to heat a home.
That's a ton of emissions in the world.
Or burning fuel to run a combustion engine, so transport works.
These are the other large sources of carbon emissions in the world.
So at first glance, you might be like, well, we're whittling down electricity and like making
that more and more renewable, but we still have these huge outstanding things, right?
But the cool thing about those is more and more technology is developing in those areas
that is moving those things into the pool of electricity.
More and more things are being electrical powered.
And that is where we're focusing like all of our renewable effort, if that makes sense.
Yeah, totally.
The last thing I wanted to wrap this up with was if you look at where we were estimated to be
by the year 2100, have you guys ever heard of how we estimate this?
damage of climate change through the degrees Celsius,
like average warming around the world.
Like, oh, if we experience two degrees of warming
or three degrees of warming, this is a way to gauge
the consequences of climate change
because every tenth of a degree or every degree
that we increase by, the consequences of climate change
become more and more grave, basically.
You know, affecting things like food supply,
dramatic weather events.
And with the trajectory we were on
in like 2000,
we were expecting to have
four degrees of warming
by the end of the century
which would be disastrous
like cataclysmic
doesn't sound so bad on a cold day
and
and
but now we've managed to
with where we're at right now
we've managed to bring that down
to an expected like 2.7
to 3.5 degrees of warming
which admittedly still isn't great
in terms of its consequence
but that's if we
continued from where we're at right now.
Like the rate or the amount of renewables
that we have at the moment.
All these predictions just like draw straight lines, right?
They find out what, but then everything in real life
happens exponentially.
Yeah.
Once the incentives align, suddenly you go from very little solar to a lot of solar.
Like once the price point exists, that it becomes the best option,
suddenly it just explodes.
Like that's the way things just seem to work in the real world.
And that's how it's happening now.
Right?
Like, this is, like,
things like solar
drastically increasing
in such a short period of time.
And then we'll see the benefit from that
as this technology continues to improve,
the projections of the warming
over the course of the next 80 years
are going to continue to get way, way better.
And, I don't know,
that's pretty fucking sick.
It's nice to read a story
that was so definitively,
like, yes, we're making human progress.
Yeah, this is incredibly good
for the future of Earth.
This is so inspiring that we are successfully moving in this direction.
I love it.
Yeah.
That's funny because I want to do a good news story that's so much smaller scale and not important.
No, it's also bad, dude.
No, what you think was-
You guys are talking about how incredibly good this is for the future of Earth.
After years, I'm going to talk about how we're saving babies with science.
I feel bad.
I don't feel like this is not fair.
No, so what's the most important thing?
No, the babies can wait.
What do you got to get off your chest?
Do you guys know how our credit card works?
Can you explain?
What happens when you...
It's like, for example, you could use it
to pay for the treatment
that would save a baby's life, I assume.
Is there other things you use it for?
So you would get the treatment now
and then pay for it later, right?
Does that make sense?
Buy now.
You could buy it now and pay for it later.
Okay.
Yeah.
Well, it turns out,
buy now, pay later is exactly like a credit card.
And so in Australia, they finally said,
hey, we're going to regulate it like a credit card.
Which means, buy now, pay later,
in Australia, at least for now,
this could spread wider, is being fully regulated like a credit card because that's what it is,
which means, you know, there's credit score impacts if you don't pay, which is bad,
but also that they have to actually do credit checks for renting it out so they can't just give
people loans that they can't afford to trap them in a predatory cycle.
Like, it's progress because what Wall Street likes to do is every few months they reinvent the
concept of debt with a new name and then avoid all the regulations for the last way they called it
debt. Such a good idea. And buying out pay later is finally catching up to that reality. And
people are like, wait, there's just no different and needs to be regulated the same way. So that's
a good thing. I wonder if they're first movers on this because after pay is an Australian
company, right? So their hold or their impact. I feel like that has to be one of the reasons
your first to act. It's like this company exists within your borders and it became popular there
first. And it's popular. I think like 40% of Gen Z on Australia or like using B&PL or whatever. It's
It's a big number.
And I think they're realizing that this is just shady debt.
It's just like, and a lot of people are either unable to make the payments because they
were not given a credit check when they sign up for it or there's no consequence.
So people are just loading up with it and then deleting the app.
Not being, right?
Which is going to cause systemic financial problems.
So Australia is at least like getting ahead of it.
I think over here maybe we'll just let it run until it causes a big problem.
But in Australia, at least they're getting ahead of it.
I think this could be a good marker.
I think this is a good story.
That's what I'm saying.
It's not a big deal.
It's not changing the world.
But it's cool that somebody's proactive about financial problems.
Did they make any notes on how does this work if I'm already signed up for the app?
Are they going to have to retroactively credit check everybody?
That's a good question.
I don't know the answer to that.
I assume yes, because the regulation is not like you get a freebie.
You don't get a grandfathered in.
Everybody gets grandfathered in.
I assume your account must now be credit checked to see if they can.
afford to give you the limit that they've been giving you.
Which is,
it's just,
I don't know.
By not pay later has been a funny topic for me forever because the name is so funny and stupid.
It's just,
it's just dead.
How would they get away with it not being treated as a credit card?
It's so baffling to me to just use a funny name.
Like what's to start to stop them from Australia being like,
hey,
we have a new thing that's called like,
zoop,
Zoop,
pay in two weeks.
And then they're like,
hey,
that's not buy now pay later.
That's our two weeks.
Zuper system.
Like, what is, I don't understand
if it was that simple to make an
unregulated debt market.
It's so bizarre.
Zoop,
Zoot sounds awesome, by the way.
Right, I would and have been using
this.
Zip Zip.
It feels like if those
those flying cars
that they're making for the L.A. Olympics,
if those just didn't have to be
subject to any regulations or loss,
because it's not a play.
It's not a play.
You know what it is?
It is the Arabian
scene where they look at the rule book,
there's nothing that says a dog can't play basketball.
It's implied.
It's implied, dude.
Like, we don't need to have a specific rule for this name of the thing you're doing.
It's all under the umbrella.
Yeah.
So I guess I'm the ass.
We'll kick an airbud out, though.
Is there a rule that says you can't give credit loans to dogs?
Because that's maybe our loophole.
Oh, my God.
If we lend them to the dogs, then the owners can take custody of the funds.
You know, Chensy and millennial pet spending is like,
the most lucrative.
They're just,
it's on the rise.
Well,
this is kind of a,
this is a good news.
I guess,
I'll just stop it there
and not say why it's bad news.
We could jump out on the industry
and give pet loans to dogs.
And then,
or then we have the airbud defense.
It literally does not say in the Australian,
Perry,
can you check,
can you scan the entire new Australian law
and see if they do mention
that this applies to dogs or not?
It's airbud in his later years
and he's giving predatory loans to other dogs.
Airbuds still.
But he's in Wall Street.
He's in
J.B. Morgan.
J.P. Morgan Chase the
ball.
Oh, damn, dude.
You got the Michael Burry binder in that one scene
at the beginning of a big short.
He's just sitting at the table with four bankers.
Like, oh, you can give me the loan. It's fine.
It's pictures of cute dogs.
Mailmen.
Mail trucks.
Please, flip the pages for me.
I don't have phones.
Guys, don't we're talking about saving babies?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, so this is a few weeks old.
But there is this gene editing technique called CRISPR that came to prominence in 2012.
Very cool revolutionary biology thing where basically we figured out, we learned from bacteria
how you can basically snip a part of a DNA strand.
So it's a big deal because we didn't have a way to micro-edit DNA before this, but we just
found this bacteria that's been doing it and then like basically figured out how to copy them.
So you pair this protein with an MR or not MRI, a G RNA, and you pair these together and it goes to a specific spot of a human's DNA and then it snips the DNA and then you can recover it in some way.
So that has been conceptually really amazing over the past like decade or so, but hasn't really been used on people yet.
It's still mostly in trial stages of like, in theory, we can change people's genetics to do various things, but we don't.
This is very difficult in practice.
So then a few weeks ago, there was a baby who was born with CPS1, which is this basically extremely serious genetic disorder.
Okay.
Untreated, you've got like a week and you die.
Jesus.
And treated like aggressively, like the baby's living in the hospital for months or years, they're maybe going to survive with severe neurological damage.
So this is like an incredibly severe disease that is caused by a genetic mutation, like one gene that is basically wrong.
It's like hundreds of people get this year.
it's not massive, but this baby was born with it, I think about nine months ago, and immediately
upon being born, they recognized that it's this horrible genetic disease. And this team set out to
try to solve it using CRISPR. And so instead of the normal, like, decade to develop something custom,
they did this over six months. And these doctors said, like, such speed to producing clinic-grade
CRISPR for genetic disease has no precedent in our field, not even close. These steps traditionally
take the better part of a decade, if not longer,
but they managed to, essentially,
map the exact genome of this baby
to map exactly what their DNA sequence looks like,
find using computer modeling,
the exact spot that was mutated in the genetic sequence,
design a molecule through GRNA
that can find that specific spot
and then cut it and cause the body
to basically replace it with healthy stuff,
and it worked.
So they saved this baby's life a few weeks ago in May.
This is the first time ever
that CRISPR has been personally.
and used on an actual baby. So they were able to, like, modify this thing, a genetic
treatment for a specific person. And they're saying now that it's done, future treatments could be
a lot cheaper by an order of magnitude, at least, is what one of the doctors said. So,
CRISPR is maybe you've heard of it, if you've followed biology at all. Incredible potential to this
thing. Like, for example, in theory, we can cure Huntington's disease, which kills like 250,000
people. I don't know if that's a year or in general who have it, but that's fatal. That's a single
gene mutation. We could like cut and cure that. Alzheimer's risks. You could find the genes that
increase the risk for Alzheimer's, edit those, which I think many, you know, tens of millions of people
every year who are dealing with that. Curing HIV. HIV's crazy because it gets into your DNA. Like,
it embeds itself into your DNA and we could in theory have CRISPR that goes in and like snips it.
And then even the designing, the changing people's genes before they're born is where it gets kind
of crazy sci-fi. And there's a famous example of this in 2018 where this scientist
in China just went solo and just edited embryos.
I don't have you guys heard about this?
That scared me.
No, no, no, this is still good news.
So he talked to patients.
He, like, found some people like couples who, like,
one parent had HIV and the other didn't,
so the baby's at risk for HIV.
And then he edited embryos and then implanted them into the women,
and one of the women had twins.
And he went to jail for three years
because the entire scientific community was like,
what the fuck, man?
I remember this.
Yes.
It's like...
Yeah.
Deeply unethical shit.
So, but the wild thing is,
it could work, you know?
And so, while there's many ethical questions right now,
and CRISPR isn't perfectly precise,
there's various things.
You know, one of the things to remember is that you have a copy of your DNA in every cell.
So it's not like you go and change one cell.
You sort of have to get the changes to propagate through the whole body.
So there's challenges with that and making sure it hits the right thing.
But in theory,
our lifetime probably accelerated by what just happened with this kid, we could have designer
babies where you, that's not what I, oh, the good news. This is good news. Where, and these are all
you, you're Trojan horsey. No, no, no, no, it's time for another wacky segments. Okay. It's time
for would you mod your baby? No, what it? Okay. No, no, no. You wouldn't, you wouldn't
slide your doctor of 50 to give him green eyes. That I don't really. This is, this is possible.
Okay. This is hypothetical. This is theorized to be possible. You, you, you, you mod, you mod,
your baby, you snip, you snip a few genes, and they only need five hours of sleep every night.
Pirate software, another content creator, is, I've talked to him about this. He only genetically
needs four to five hours of sleep. His body functions perfectly finite. He's talked to doctors about it.
He, that's why he streams like 20 hours a day. He just literally, he's one of the, he's one of the
actual people. Yes. Okay. No, no, no. So, pirate software.
He'll be like, yeah, I only need six or like five hours. Yeah, they're like, right.
They're like zombies. They're exhausted. Yeah. But they just do. But they just do.
do it. But there is, like, there is a... Yeah, I just drink two monsters every day and I'm good.
Yeah, no, no, no, no. No, he, so he genuinely operates as well as everybody else, maybe even
better. The dude's crazy in terms of like how much he works, how much he does. Four or five hours
of sleep. Would you do that? Would you give that to your kid? No, I would be annoyed. I won't get
any sleep because my kid's up all the time. That's a good point. I'll modify to give him 18 hours
of sleep and then I can... Okay, all right. Wait, follow up because this is, I think, relevant for you.
This is, again, this is legitimately possible, potentially in our lifetimes, potentially in our lifetimes,
potentially in the next decade or two.
You edit the jeans so they never go bald.
First of all,
this is a powerful gene.
I don't think you can edit.
I think it's deep in there.
It's impossible.
They can't crisper this out.
That kid's going bald.
Dude,
who makes me think of is like
some rich parent
is going to make their kid
LeBron James.
Yeah, absolutely.
And he's going to show up
to my kid's youth basketball camp
but he's going to be seven foot four at 14 years old.
Okay, so let me get into that.
So here, the next two are,
these are real serious things
that I think are a little more genuinely,
as a parent, consider this.
Okay.
If you were told that you can enhance their brain power,
there are genes related to memory and learning
to where your kid could have a stronger capacity
or learning things for mental processing for memory.
Would you, let's say the risks are mostly gone,
obviously this is some high risk thing, probably not.
But would you give your kid that opportunity?
Let's say 20 years from now.
So I'll give you my answer.
It is similar to me to like taxes,
where I don't want it to be each person's individual moral choice.
Whether or not they pay more or they use the best methods they have to pay less taxes.
I just wanted to be enforced that if we all collectively decide as a society,
that this is kind of weird
that we just don't allow it.
I don't want to have to be in the hospital
and have to check the box
of whether or not I decide
if my kid is going to be
competitive.
A posture of scenario here.
There's a bit of a,
there's a bit of a doomer scenario.
We're getting off the rails.
Oh, it's the good news episode.
Okay.
But if you say it's just about brain power.
Say we're only talking about that.
It's to increase your cognitive ability
and how much you remember.
is the only thing we're talking about for the moment.
If you regulate that in your country
and then other countries choose not to regulate.
People are flying to China to have a...
I wasn't even thinking about that.
I was just thinking about how
if there's another massive nation of people
where this becomes regular
and they just outclass your group of people
in every way because they allow this
but your country bans it.
Dude, this is fucked.
Right.
If you like right now,
you're like, I'm struggling in the world
and my parents, they could have...
It's the good news app, dog.
It's like a circumcision, you know?
You trust.
It's like my parents curse me with this foreskin
and I wish they'd picked differently.
Okay, last one.
You could, this is, again,
this is possible in our lifetimes,
make them taller, more handsome,
change skin and eye color,
change facial symmetry,
like a character creator in Skyrim.
Would you handcraft your child?
child to be an Adonis or do you let them be an ugly piece of shit like natural.
God, it's so funny.
Imagine the scenario where everybody's doing this, but you just let your kid be ugly.
That's the thing.
If he kind of based.
If everyone looks the same and you're like, yeah, I'm fucking up.
No, you obviously.
It would like a state.
I think this is exactly.
It's like rip jeans.
It's like rip jeans.
This is the exact line that people talk about all the, this is the end game of what
people talk about with the risks of this stuff, which is like the genetic.
The changing cosmetic, genetic things,
and I hadn't really thought about the cognition thing as much,
but you just fundamentally,
this is just eugenics.
Like this strays into you too far into eugenics,
and you can't do this.
I think you lose too much of humanity.
Like, that's the simple way of putting it.
I don't know,
that I realized that me relaying that platitude
on lemonade stand of the podcast,
does it solve the problem down the line?
I don't know how we'll deal with this one.
I'll re-ground it in something that is just genuinely positive.
I think the immediate use for this type of stuff that we're going to see soon
is identifying genetic defects in babies and just simply eliminating a lot of preventable disease and challenges.
So that's going to be the first step before you start modifying eye color or anything like that.
That stuff's a little more down, way down the road.
But in our lifetimes, I think there's a real, I mean, like, if I have a, if I have a, if I have a
child, which I don't know if I will yet, but I was told, hey, we can go in and stop them from
having sickle cell anemia. Like, that's, that's a big fucking deal. And I absolutely would do that.
And this is going to be something soon that we're going to at least have the option for. And
there's weird ethical choices, but I, man, to prevent horrific disease, is exciting to me.
I would never want to give up on the opportunity to deal with stuff like that. I think condemning
children to a short
lifetime of suffering
and not pursuing it when you know
you could is terrible.
The regulation around it will just need to be
so strict and standardized.
And I think it will be so important for there to be
some sort of globally unified approach
on the issue.
Because it's one of those things where
once it gets out of the bag somewhere,
it's people are going to want to
it in the same vein. The tax example was good. This idea that when you let it come down to individual
choice and morals, there are inevitably a subset of people that will make the decision to do it.
And that lets all, all these other people do it behind them because their logic is I'm just trying
to keep up. Right. I'm just trying to be fair. And then, yeah, there's just, there's such
long-term horrific consequences from the technology,
but in the short term, I think,
in the direction, like, why are we starting
with something like this, right?
It's because this is what people primarily
want to use the technology for,
and I think that's important.
Yeah, there's incredible, just straight up medical potential.
And fortunately, that's what's going to come first
before we have to debate the big ethical questions.
Like my final question, which is,
let's say you're in the hospital,
you just delivered your baby,
and you realize Ludwig's son is next to you in the bassinet,
and the lab technician comes over and nudges you
and like, hey, you want to edit him a little bit?
Do you edit Ludwig's child to make him bald?
No need to.
Bro, he's turning 30.
You're going to see it.
You're going to see it.
That's wishful thinking.
It's hiding in there.
That's wishful thinking.
It's holding strong, bro.
I can't even joke about it.
You don't just increase the slider on your kids' height, decrease Ludwig's
kid's height just a little bit, you know?
You're a good friend?
I wouldn't consider it, by the way.
I wouldn't even suggest it.
We regulate it really closely unless it's for pranks on influencers.
Yeah, that's fair.
If it's just a prank, then I think it's acceptable.
If it's a prank, you can do it.
That's a comfortable.
And if it's an influencer, we all agree.
It's worth making fun of them.
It's fun.
Yeah, I think it's all right.
I mean, listen.
We save some babies' lives.
Yeah.
We'll save many more babies' lives and alleviate an enormous.
Saving a baby life is cool.
A enormous amount of human suffering.
I can't think of a negative on that.
We'll be reduced.
Although I could villain chair it.
The villain chair.
I got a health-related one.
I got a medical one.
Again, I'm coming in with small scale.
All right.
I just like nice little wins.
Small wins.
Okay.
A team in Japan has just announced a breakthrough on the development of synthetic blood,
which is all blood types at once can be stored for much longer and can help alleviate the
lack of blood at many, many, many hospitals around the world.
There's a systemically under donated the amount of blood we need,
especially in certain blood types.
And so they made this breakthrough where, again,
I don't have the right word for it.
Hemoglobin vesicles, they take,
right, I know what they do is they take old expired donated blood.
That's over three weeks old.
And they add like this, I don't know,
lipid coating to the blood that allows it to take oxygen,
like a regular red blood cell.
And it makes it apply to all blood types and has no viruses.
So it's like just,
safe and clean and good. Now,
announcements like this happen all the time,
and sometimes people are like,
well, nothing ever happens of it. Like, you hear about it and then nothing happens.
And the reason I thought this one was interesting is because if I had said this in 2022,
it would be like that.
But they actually tried it in 22, 100 mil liters of blood in a bunch of patients to test
if there was any negative effects.
And it's now been three years and there was no negative effects.
So now they're progressing to the next trial where they're doing a much larger,
like it's like 400 or 500 milliliters and seeing it again.
But if that holds like a,
did for the last one, then really we're just there.
And they have the ability to create on-demand large amounts of synthetic blood that could
save a lot of lives, especially in places that have not a lot of donating infrastructure.
Like rich countries have a lot of donating infrastructure, a lot of poor countries don't.
So I think that's like generally pretty cool.
Like everything I can read about it was pretty cool.
But you can villain.
Yeah, I think the major consequence here is that anime and manga will no longer have a reason for their characters to
communicate their blood type.
And I feel like that'll make,
that'll just destroy a bit of the culture.
The culture and the content there.
Have you ever noticed that?
That's,
is that a thing in Japan?
Yeah,
some Asian countries,
they have like a,
they have like a personality type
associated with your blood type.
It's like a,
it's like a meme.
A horoscope.
You know,
like you have like,
yeah,
horoscope or like right brain,
left brain or blood type became a thing.
It's like,
oh, you're,
you're this type of person.
Yeah,
I don't know.
So I guess you could be like
the synthetic type of person.
He's like, cool with everybody.
I'm synthetic.
You're chill.
I'm a synthetic.
I just, I've been in with a viver.
I'm a viper.
I'm a kind of a low blood tier kind of guy, to be honest.
Sometimes I get up in the morning.
I just think, oh, this is bad blood right now.
That's because you drink horse electrolytes every morning.
The electrolytes haven't currently seeped into the blood yet,
but I'm thinking I start mixing it with the synthetic juice that the,
you just inject it.
It's a slurp juice that the Japanese are making.
Do you, do you know, so I don't know much about it.
about blood types, but one thing I kind of know is that if you have,
oh, is it O negative or your blood type is O,
then you're the type that can donate to everybody
and anybody can use your blood.
So are they like recreating that or is this its own new thing?
That's the value of this is that you don't have those restrictions.
So the synthetic blood would work with everybody.
Yeah, it works everybody.
Yeah, so, and because that's one of the biggest challenges
of donating bloods.
Like my mom is O negative and then as a result,
people pander and like hunger for her blood.
And so she donates blood a lot.
They hunger for blood like vampires.
Getting like election texts,
but about your blood all the time.
Wait,
can I ask,
what,
can I guess your guys is blood type
based on this Japanese?
My personal,
yeah,
go for it,
yeah, yeah,
okay.
So,
Doug,
you are confident,
self-centered,
and unstable.
You really had me in the first half.
You're typo.
I don't actually know, but you're not sure.
I don't know either.
You don't know your blood type?
You know why I don't?
It's because I went to Nepal when I was 18 for a while,
and they're like, you can't donate blood for a long time, man.
Like, seriously.
You have demons blood?
So they're just like, you're low-tier blood.
But on top of them just disliking me-
What do you mean? Low-to-to-blood.
Like it's an item in World Warcraft.
It's gray colored.
It's not even purple.
I just have sludge.
Yeah.
They told me I actually just have sludge in my name.
It's just mud.
What are you guys talking about?
No, no, no.
So if, I mean, at least at the time, I was told, like,
because there are potential diseases that are prevalent in Nepal,
and this is like 10, 15 years ago,
that you genuinely can't donate blood for a long time.
So I've not had a reason to explore whether I'm,
I see.
Donatable or not because I was exposed to whatever was there.
Well, I had Aden as Type A here, but I just don't know.
If you guys were to find out, let me know.
We'll know if we know what this personality test is correct.
Well, it sounds like this is, we've just run the test, and I am Type O, actually.
Sounds like we actually know.
Yeah, I guess we do.
This is so funny.
I got a little business win.
Or at least something interesting, I thought, was the Switch 2 just came out.
Okay.
And the Switch, the Previous Console, the Switch, one, sold about $100,000.
55 million units, which I think it is either the best-
Good news.
Nintendo made some money.
Let's go.
Big Nintendo.
They're either the best selling.
I think the Switch has surpassed the PS2 as the best-selling console of all time,
if I'm not mistaken.
It may not quite come to that threshold.
I didn't know this part.
The Switch one had made $100 billion in revenue with a B for Nintendo over the course of its,
over the course of its life.
which was surreal to me.
But the Switch 2 is, as of this recent release,
Nintendo's best and fastest selling console ever.
3.5 million units in four days.
And the next closest that I could find
looking at their sales data for the previous consoles
was the Wii when it came out,
and that managed to sell 3.2 million in about a month.
This is faster than the Wii?
So this is faster,
faster than any other console or handheld they've released.
Okay.
That is surprise to me.
Can you pull up the chart you had earlier, Perry, of the sales?
I think that's interesting of the just scale of it if you pull this up.
So, I mean, just for people to get a sense.
The PS2, which probably a number of people in our audience never saw our experience,
is crazy.
It's unbelievable how much it's sold.
Just an absolutely behemoth.
And so the fact that the Nintendo Switch even got close is like pretty insane.
I mean, you can see the other consoles here.
It's like, it's like nothing.
The Wii was one of the most popular ones ever.
It's 100 million.
PS2 was 160 million.
It's crazy.
Being a GameCube kid in the PS2 era, dude, you were isolated.
GameCube isn't even on this.
It was so sad.
You have to scroll down for a minute.
It was so sad.
Everyone was talking about the new PS2 game.
Halo.
Yeah, or Halo or Xbox 2.
And it was like, yeah, I've got the, I've got some,
I got Smash Bros.
So that was it.
go ahead.
Do you guys get one?
Okay, but I want to villain chair this for a second.
Okay.
I was going to villain chair every good news story today,
but I realized that would be bad.
So I'm just that's funny.
So I'll just villain chair this one.
All right.
Gamers complained loudly and vociferously
about the Switch 2's price increase,
which I think largely was due to tariff negativity.
But they were saying,
we're not gonna,
we will make our stand here.
All right,
we're not buying this higher price.
Obviously,
knew that was going to be bullshit
because gamers never hold their word on that.
They always go for promo.
But it's crazy that a console that is now more expensive
and has literally one game
can blow everything else
that it's already previously out of the water.
It's like Nintendo does not have to try at all
and they can just move units on these things.
That's crazy to me.
It's like what is the...
You used to have to have like three big launch titles
and like really push for it.
Now it's like, jack up the price, no game, deal with it.
And everyone's like, yes,
Please, master, please, sir.
When I went to go pick mine up at,
I think I got mine from Walmart,
and mine had been dropped off there,
and I watched a bunch of people come in while I was waiting,
trying to buy one,
because they were sold out for the ones
that were just regularly in stock.
And the mixture of people that are walking in,
like the age,
like a lot of older people, to be honest,
that I do not think are the people
in the YouTube live stream announcement,
complaining in putting like the sleeper emoji when the game comes on or like the price gets listed.
I think there's just a huge disconnect between the angry gamers online and who is actually buying the product.
I agree. Yeah. I just think it's funny that, yeah, I don't think this is a good launch on things considered.
Like I think the console's cool, but there's nothing, unless you're a real Mario car guy.
Yeah. I mean, I know you hate Mario and Nintendo.
but I do actually have to agree that it's,
I don't seem much of a reason to go buy.
Essentially, Nintendo launched Mario Kart World
and everybody is paying $800 for it.
That is basically what happens.
Like they've sold 3.2 million copies of Mario Kart World
that happened to cost $700 or whatever it is.
I also don't understand the craze.
Like, I'm excited to eventually get one.
Yeah, I'll get one eventually.
Yeah, it's cool, but I'm also baffled by.
I'm just surprised there's this level of like,
FOMO, like, I gotta get it day one
so I can't play Mario Kart.
Some of these people are...
I'd be fucking stupid about it.
You did it.
I'm like, you're a Mario Kart guy.
Like, I get it for you
because you still play Mario Kart Wii
20 years later. You're like a...
You're a Mario Kart guy. But like, like, for me,
I like Nintendo, I like the Switch. I play Mario,
I'll play Zelda. Well, I got a fucking
weight in line and best buy so I can buy
Mario Kart World playing on my couch for 20 minutes.
Like, I'm just bored.
It's crazy. I thought something that was interesting.
I was just watching
this like Bloomberg piece on how their strategy has evolved.
And I thought about it, how Nintendo has always taken a different approach to the other
companies where instead of iterating on the previous version of the console, they try to
create something novel and new.
They basically take a big risk and don't follow the success of the previous console at all,
right?
And they've kind of followed this wave of one console that does really well and then hitting a
console that doesn't do very well.
The biggest example
is we to Wii U. Nobody knew what
was happening. Terrible name.
You know, we sold over 100 million
units. The Wii U sold like
13 million, which is crazy.
Yeah, crazy, crazy love.
And this is the first time
that they've taken the previous
console and just created
an upgraded version, but as a
new console entirely.
And it's interesting that they're not,
they learn their lesson,
I guess, and they're not taking a risk,
which is also sad in a way.
But when the Switch had come,
I remember when the Switch came out,
I had a fleeting thought of,
how could you really improve or iterate on this concept?
Because it's replacing all of your handheld devices,
and it's replacing your home console.
So what direction can this really move in from here otherwise?
And I kind of like that they just upgraded the version.
Maybe I'm a Nintendo soy company.
Everybody likes it.
I think it's, I mean,
the magical thing is they had a,
successful console for once. Like they won. They won a generation. And so they're like,
let's just do that again. Yeah. Like I think, you know, the Wii was successful, but they...
They won that generation. They dominated. I, my understanding is they sold a lot of consoles,
but most people had a really, really low attach rate. So people bought it for Wii sports.
Right. And it's so that people didn't actually buy games. If they, they didn't sell that many games.
So I think they crushed that era though, because they had the DS too. And the D. The DS is the best
selling video game device ever. Yes.
D.S is a massive hit.
And I think the Switch is kind of like a spiritual successor
in a way of like a console mix with a DS.
Anyway, I just think like it wasn't,
I think every rational gamer was like Nintendo,
please don't do a Switch you.
Please don't do something weird or wacky.
We like the Switch.
It was selling well up until the Switch 2.
I mean, Switch has been incredibly successful.
Just do it again.
It's still selling well because the packaging is confusing
and people are accidentally buying Switch ones.
Props to them for just,
Making the name scheme simple, too.
Just putting a two on the end of it.
God forbid you go the Xbox route.
Oh, my God.
The Xbox 920XLX.
I don't even know what it is.
I literally could not tell you what the Xbox model is called right now.
Did you see the handheld Xbox they just announced?
No.
It's like the AISRog Ally Series X friendship edition.
It's fucking.
It's ridiculous.
It's ridiculous.
I don't know who's in charge.
What demon is in charge at,
at Microsoft of naming is just cackling
in his fucking Iron Throne.
That's crazy.
But it's crazy.
Even went back to Xbox 1, right?
Or my hallucinating that and mixing that with
Battlefield and Halo and everything else.
It was Xbox versus PS2 and they did pretty well.
And they were worried about Xbox 2 versus PS3.
Oh, our number's one lower.
So we have to just fucking throw it out the window.
They should have just taken, I don't know.
I mean, Xbox 1 worked is the problem.
That was like their best generation.
360 work.
I'm sorry, 360.
Yeah, 360 is where it worked.
360 was basic and cool.
Yeah.
There was an understanding that Xbox 360 was the next console.
How do you follow 360?
720.
720.
Then what 1080?
Yeah, yeah, that's what, Nvidia does.
No.
Well, you work there.
No.
While you work there.
Nvidia has a clear naming scheme.
20 series, 30 series, 40 series, 40 series, 50 series.
You're dumb as bricks.
Told pretty well.
Hold pretty well.
Got a bonus that year.
I want to quickly, if you pull this up, Perre, with our funny little stock game we've been doing.
First off, we're currently up $7,000, which is crazy.
The three of us continue to be first place with Atroch actually last of the three of us.
Well, great little handshake there for us.
But one of the things I thought was interesting, on top of, you know, if you go to Dougdugg.com
slash stocks, you can check out these numbers.
Everybody kind of has like their winning company.
And Ludwig's is Nintendo.
Nintendo's up 36% since January.
And I think what's interesting,
it's not like the stock market
has that much importance
to Nintendo as a company,
but a lot of we invested in Nintendo
when they had already announced the Switch 2.
Everybody knew the Switch 2 was coming out.
And somehow, and what is kind of confusing to me
is how much the perception of Nintendo's value
as a company has increased since then,
even though nothing has really changed.
In fact, all they've announced is kind of like,
yeah, we're going to have a Mario Kart game,
and they didn't really launch with anything else.
and somehow their company is just perceived
to be doing so well
beyond the expectations of a couple months ago.
And that is interesting and confusing to me.
So somehow they're just crushing it.
I think it was because they started cracking down
on smash tournaments.
That's what it was.
A couple tens of billions of value increase
once they started cracking down.
You can't want on Edens
garage tournament with this custom stage.
Yep.
Now that the tournaments don't have UCF at it,
I'm confident I can put another million in.
I mean, my understanding is that, you know, the market is forward-looking and it's trying to predict the good and the bad outcomes.
And as it got closer to reality of the launch, they were worried like, oh, if they have a high price, we might not buy it.
People are buying it.
Selling super well, it's going to do a few million units.
Well, it did above expectations.
But this, it was up this much like a month ago.
No, yeah.
As you get closer, the reality became more, more apparent.
How much people are excited for it.
The buzz was there.
People were excited for it.
The launch window was open.
They're going to dominate this into the holiday season.
the, you know, it's all working out
in the way Nintendo wanted.
They've got my hands tied, dude,
because I was getting excited
about the Switch 2 after I got it
and I was talking to friends.
And I was like, yeah, like,
I have Breath of the Wild on it.
I can play, like, from my old console
and I can pay $10 for the upgraded
Switch 2 version.
And it runs at 120 FPS now.
And like, it's really smooth
and the picture quality looks really good.
And then Nick looked at me
and he's like,
isn't it crazy?
You're excited about that?
That's how low of a bar they're setting.
And I was like, yeah.
They set the bar low, bro, and they just tapped it in.
I don't know.
There was a funny conversation.
We work with Kelby, who is our sales guy at Mogul moves.
And one afternoon, we had like an hour-long conversation about what the value to
rent, what amount of money would Red Bull pay Nintendo to have Mario hold a Red Bull game,
like in ads?
Like, how much do you think that's worth Kelby?
Do the math for me.
And then he's posturing different scenarios.
He's like, well, can there be a Mario flavor too?
Dude, we're like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Replace the wing cap in every Mario game with a Red Bull.
And he chugs it, gets actual wins.
And then that's good.
I'm going to be honest.
That's the marketer right there.
That's going to move you.
I mean, they're so carried by their IP, right?
That's the one thing they really, really have over everybody else.
is like you have, I think Mario,
this may have changed
because I remember looking at this
like probably like eight years ago.
But Mario was the most recognizable figure in media,
like when polled globally or something.
So if you took a bunch of company IP basically,
if you took figures like Pac-Man and Mickey Mouse
and all of these different things,
Mario was recognized by like 94%
of people.
They could look at a picture of Mario
and around the world
and say, that's Mario.
A Japanese-created Italian plumber
that fights a monkey named Donkey
became...
Yes, sir.
Became the world's...
And also, yeah, that's Nintendo's core thing
is like, even in the dark times
because every six years
they're in dark times.
They have Mario, Zelda, Pokemon.
They just have a few franchises
that are so good
and they have such great developers
for those games
that even if nobody else is making games for their consoles,
they can weather the winter.
And then they can bounce back when they hit the right stride.
I mean,
Pokemon is the single biggest media franchise ever.
Yes.
Of all, you know, so that's, yeah, they got something.
It's crazy that kids today are as enamored with Pokemon
as I was when I was seven years old.
I was recently.
That's crazy.
I always remember, uh,
it's also crazy real quick that like our friends today
are as enamored with Pokemon.
as they were when they were seven and have not grown up.
I'm sorry, that was mean.
I don't like Pokemon.
I never liked it.
I don't get it.
No, I were a Digimon guy.
You were a Digimon guy.
I want to like it.
I do.
And I can't, and my cold, dark soul just can't accept the beauty of Tombo on or whatever.
I get it, Doug.
You engage consciously with the media in front of you.
You know, you understand that.
It's too easy.
I don't understand.
Can we CRISPR a pigeon to become a pigeon?
Yes. I want to say
you? Were you there when he said this?
When he confessed that when he was a child
He thought Pidgey was real.
He thought Pidgey and Widdle are real.
And he will when CRISPR gets involved.
These are going to be real thing.
Pikachu's going to be my friend
as I dreamed when I was a child.
If you loan me your dog for a few years,
I'll turn him into Pikachu.
I can't take that risk.
Just give me some kind of living creature
that's important you.
I can't take that risk with you specifically.
I'll find a nice Japanese scientist.
Like that guy in China for a little bit.
Let me go wild, dude.
I have another story.
Oh, yeah, okay.
I was just because before you would take my baby.
I was just thinking more about all the cool.
I'm just thinking about all the sliders I would be changing.
But yeah, go ahead.
I have another good news story.
This is kind of a weird one.
Well, it's just good news, but it's almost obvious.
But I, there was a, I'll explain it.
There was a big cancer conference in Europe, specifically.
You said cancel culture?
Cancer conference.
Actually, it was in Chicago.
I'm sorry.
In Chicago, recently, they had a cancer research conference where a bunch of doctors came out.
And somebody came up with a well-done, peer-reviewed, long-term longitudinal study about exercise as a treatment for cancer.
Basically, as in comparison to, it's for colon cancer specifically, and it was in comparison to chemotherapy.
Okay, they just, they just compared it.
And, you know, what often doctors will do is they will say, you know, remember to exercise.
Or they'll give you like, this one was like, we're going to try treatment where you are a signed a personal trainer.
You have to specifically do this number of things four or five days a week.
They tried it.
It was shockingly, remarkably proven effective.
And it got a standing ovation from all these cancer researchers who are showing that like consistently taking care of your health, going on walks, doing high intensity exercise or whatever,
is like one of the body's proven best ways
to actively fight disease.
This case specifically of colon cancer.
And by the way, what they mentioned in this is like,
there's no reason you can't now do both.
Because they should, like, I think it had a 5% increase
in survival when they did the chemo.
And it was like seven or eight with the intense exercise.
You can combine the both and have, you know,
again, the examples of these is like one in 12 people
who would have died will now survive.
I'm sorry.
get a phone call from my cancer research buddies.
Getting canceled.
Actually, the study,
studies blown wide open.
Yeah.
It's not true.
So this is comparing people who are exercising
with the assigned parameters that you said.
So there was three groups.
One of them is like chemotherapy,
just the standard thing.
One of them was like they gave them
the normal thing they tell them,
which is like, take care of your health,
do exercise.
And then one of them was like,
they took it seriously.
And they had government.
So they had the hospital funds applied to,
you get a personal trainer,
and you're going to have a regimen.
And what it's basically saying is that people that did that,
it really was remarkable, the impact.
In a way that got all these cancer researchers standing up.
Are those people also doing chemo, though?
Or are they doing just the same?
It was a comparison between chemo and the exercise.
And the exercise people had a higher result.
The chemo was effective, but, you know, it's a small percent.
This is the late-stage colon cancer.
like 5% more survived from the...
Anyway, I'm not saying it's the world's most positive news or anything,
but it's just interesting.
And I think there's a positivity to it
that I think a lot of the doctors were saying,
which is like, hey, if we can get this proven
to the point where it unlocks funds
or unlocks, you know, health insurance funds or whatever,
this could be a big deal because anyone can do it.
There's not danger to it.
There's no downside to the exercise.
it's pure upside.
And if it has the effect that it does,
which is higher than chemo,
and you can combo it with chemo,
I mean, you can get a lot more people living
and they're healthier.
And it can help just unlock a larger trend of like,
this is important and has great positive knock-on effects.
It reminds me of when we talked about medical,
the medical episode,
you know,
one of the takeaways is an enormous amount of the health problems
that we have in America
are chronic health problems
that are largely from people,
not taking care of themselves, right?
And that's the truth.
And it's in ways that they can
that are just hard, eating healthy, exercising,
not smoking, et cetera, et cetera.
And so the more of this evidence that comes out,
I mean, something my mom would drill into me
over and over growing up
is like how critical this stuff is
and how hard it is for doctors
to get people to stick with this stuff and do it.
So the more evidence there is,
it sounds kind of silly and obvious,
but the amount of benefits for cancer
with everything is just so ridiculously high.
That is the exact line in here.
I want to bring this up.
It says knowledge alone is likely to be insufficient to allow most people to make meaningful
and sustained change.
So this evidence,
this proof where they can start treating exercise like a drug where a prescription is filled out,
a trainer a lot in the schedule adhered to,
can make a massive.
It's like if this was an announcement of a new drug,
the level of positive effect it had would be a massive breakthrough.
Like, holy shit,
we had been something crazy.
But it doesn't even cost money.
Someone can't patent it.
They can't own it.
all you have to do is just put someone on a schedule and make sure they stick to it
and they're going to have much better health outcomes. That's cool. I mean, it's much better
than a world where this stuff doesn't work where you just have no control. You need some kind
of crazy new drug. If you don't get it, you're dead. Doing it like a prescription. I've never
heard that concept. That is really interesting. I thought it was cool. It's very hard to get people
to having doctors I spoke with. They're basically like, yeah, you can tell patients to do stuff.
And then most of the time they come back. You know, it's like, I go to the dentist every six
month and he's like, hey, you using that retainer at night?
And I'm like, nah, next time, though.
And that's, that's what it's like.
You know, and for, you know, in my case, it's not that big of a deal if I don't wear
the retainer.
But it is a really big deal if you're not, you know, exercising, particularly if you
have these diseases.
So it reminds me, it reminds me of a tweet that was like, uh, those people who tell
you to exercise and sleep more to deal with your depression are so annoyed because that
shit work.
Yeah.
And, uh, I think it, it's, it's.
The coupled, you know, stuff like that, or I've been told the number one way to defend against
developing like dementia or Alzheimer's later in life is just exercise. Like that is the number one
documented thing you can do to prevent it later in your life. It's crazy how broadly applicable it is
and it feels like such a given, but it's just something that is really, really hard to instill in people.
I'm trying to be better about it right now. I'm in a phase of life this year where I'm
I'm trying to be more disciplined
and just make sure I do something like every day.
And it helps.
Like just like just, you know, anecdotally,
lower anxiety, better appetite, better sleep.
Things just automatically improve in your life.
It gives you this a way better baseline.
So to know that it could have as far reaching benefits
as something like this is awesome.
It's three extremely simple things.
It is diet, sleep, and horse electrolytes.
I am wired.
I don't know if you guys notice.
I've been like stepping underneath the table.
Part to with this article is that cancer is 99% cured when you just mainline horse electrolytes.
Yeah.
I wonder what mine tastes.
No.
I'm taking more sip.
What is your point?
Mine looks like a brick.
It looks like.
You just ruined the iPad.
Zamboni.
No!
It's 20 minutes later.
I am pumped and ready to pod.
Let's go. You got another one?
You really just drank the rest of it off of the table.
We all cleaned it up and he sat there chugging the entire rest of the...
No, let me finish this.
Well, we do have a couple more good news to all over to add this off on.
I found a cool one from today, which was the World Bank ends its ban on funding nuclear power projects.
Yeah.
Wait, this is like a bigger story.
This is happening all over the world.
There has been movement, broad-based movement in Europe, in America, in Asia to like re-examine nuclear and get projects moving.
And as someone who's a big supporter of it and think it's like incredibly high power, low emissions and zero emissions, like just an incredible way towards energy security and freedom.
and it's awesome.
It's cool to see countries of the world recognize that
and move towards it in a broad-based way.
Yeah, I was surprised by the amount of news
I've seen around this this year.
And even in the past month,
I feel like a lot of stuff has been moving in the same direction.
I have a question for you.
Say I'm listening to this.
And I'm like, Atrak, you never think about the nuclear waste
and where they're going to put the nuclear waste.
Yeah, I would love to talk.
I wish we'd do a whole episode on it.
We should do a nuclear episode.
just broadly, the amount of nuclear waste is really small.
All of it in the world would fit in like a football field up stack three times.
So it's like just understand that.
And so many of the innovations in nuclear recently are able to reuse that nuclear waste.
So I can go way deeper on this and I can do all pride of it.
Just generally, it's not like I'm not aware of nuclear waste when I'm pro-nuclear.
I'm like, that doesn't exist.
I am not thinking that everyone's turning into Spider-Man or whatever.
There's like, I believe that there is simple cost.
negative solutions for this, and that it does not make this incredible energy source not a good idea.
That's my opinion. That's where I stand on your thing. Yeah. And there's two cool things that are
semi-related to that. One is PBR is a new type of nuclear reactor, which uses, uh, I forget, I believe
it's uranium. That's blue ribbon. Yeah, it's PBR that you drink that and you get a nuclear energy
to, like, go out and have fun. Dude. And then we capture that energy. We go to a club. We go to a club, we go to a club,
and the increased energy in the club is captured. And they put them on a hamster wheel.
Yes, by a turbine is captured, and we use that to power the brewery that makes the new PAPS,
and it's actually infinite energy generator, yeah.
Because you get good times and you get good energy.
Yeah.
Do you actually, do you actually, peri, can you look how about PBR actually stands for?
But I think it's pebble-based reactor, I want to say.
It's some of the core things, it's uranium spheres instead of these rods.
There's hydrogen that cools it down instead of water.
But one of the key features is that, yeah, pebble, oh, pebble bed reactors.
One of the key features is that it, it,
doesn't melt down.
One of the problems with nuclear, you know, the big scary things is like Fukushima,
Chernobyl, right?
Like, if the nuclear power plant melts down, then that's where the radioactive material
starts shoot down into the world and get hit in the chest with a bunch of protons or neutrons
or whatever.
But with PBR's, the idea is that if power shuts down, if there's a disaster, it will
immediately start cooling down.
It doesn't heat up past the point that it starts actually, like, destroying the facility
and breaking things.
So this was tested in China recently, and although there's some guys.
skepticism about it.
Sounds like there's real promise there.
And then the other is small modular reactors,
which instead of making one giant nuclear power plant,
you make it essentially in this like template form that's smaller.
And that has a bunch of merit.
There's a lot of research about that.
Well, I'm sure we can dive into it at some point.
Kind of like a solar panel on your roof vibe.
Like you'd get your own nuclear power plant.
Just stick it on my roof.
More like a town would get it.
Yeah, I don't think it's for individual.
Yeah, it's not for individual homes.
Unless you're running 400 switch twos to play.
Because you're afraid of progress.
Because I will say, in that case, the nuclear waste is a concern.
If everyone had one.
Do not want that, like, on your wristwatch.
That is an issue.
But small modular reactors, the idea is, like, right now with nuclear, it's really hard to build them.
Because, like, you've got to commit, whatever, $30 billion to make some giant power plant from scratch.
But if you turn it into a template that can be quickly made and also, like, scaled up or down, depending on the size of a city, that's really valuable.
So actually, this reminds me that Britain just hired Rolls-Royce, which I didn't know they make,
power, but they're basically, they want
to bid to start developing nuclear, small modular reactors.
Nuclear small modular reactors, that's hype.
Yeah.
A bunch of companies, I mean, some companies, like, I think
meta is just buying a nuclear power plant
full stop outright.
Oh, because they wanted to use the power a data center.
Yeah.
So there's just a lot of, there's a lot of progress
and innovation happening in nuclear right now.
Rolls-Royce nuclear?
How's a Gucci?
Gucci nuclear, do it?
Why don't all the fashion brands,
of Europe
get into nuclear.
Dude,
that would be so
funny if
if LVMH
just pivoted
into nuclear energy.
Dude,
they ditched all
of the clothing behind
and then,
what's it,
Bernard Arnault?
Yeah.
I think,
and he just becomes
a nuclear guy.
What's the brand
that's like way
overpriced and stupid?
All of the LVMHMH
brand.
Most of them.
No,
like the biggest
stupidest one.
It starts with the B
B, I think.
Balenciaga.
Like,
imagine a Balenciaga
nuclear power.
plant. It's just like, it makes no sense. That I wouldn't, I would not trust them to deal with
the waste because they would put the waste in like, in like ripped jeans that just like shoot
radioactive material. Just dug name it off cool shit. Dude, you mentioned Fukushima. I mean, even
Japan, which after Fukushima was just one of the, I think the most recent large nuclear
disaster, um, they put a law that was like stopping the lifespan of their nuclear reactors.
They just repealed that law. They just realized as they got closer to the timeline, it's like,
it is such a big part of their energy mix. It's so helpful. It's. It's so helpful. It's
so efficient that it was a panic mode that they didn't. They got rid of it. So it got,
it's just happening even in countries where it's been affected, um, because you can't
argue with the numbers on it. It's cool. You know, it's also great news about that.
Yeah. Countries that have a tendency to do not super cool human rights things. Okay. Like Russia,
uh, that's, you know, it's largely what powers them. Like Russia has, you know, so much of their
economy is based around selling gas to Europe. You know, it's like the more that every country around the
can become self-sustainable via solar or nuclear,
and energy stops being this, like, resource you have to, like, fight over.
It's like, it enables countries to not be dependent
and enable other, you know, despots,
whatever you want to call it.
So I think there's some real, there's so much good stuff
coming out of renewables as an increased and nuclear and all this.
Yeah, I mean, there's follow-ups to that because as...
No, no, no, no nuance to what I just said.
No, I'll just say, because I have a fault to the follow-up.
The follow-up people both say is like, well,
a lot of uranium comes from Russia.
because they have the spots.
But it's worth noting,
follow up to that,
is that uranium's actually extremely widely available.
It's actually very naturally occurring.
It's just nobody's bothered to build up all the processing in mines
because there's not been huge demand.
And as demand increases,
there's going to be a lot more creation of that.
Yeah.
Worth noting.
Anyway, is that your last one?
You got any one more?
I got one more.
Okay.
I got like 10 minutes.
Yeah.
Cool one.
Senator Hawley,
Let's see if this iPad still functions after, oh, okay.
Well, I guess I lost the main one, but Senator Josh Hawley, who is pretty far right,
proposed a bill just this week, basically proposing a $15 federal minimum wage hike for America.
So right now, minimum wage is $7.25, right?
Not $7.50.
Oh, yeah, there we go.
And so this is proposed, and I think the reason that this is relevant,
this isn't pass yet, but this is something that a lot of senators,
you know, Bernie Sanders notably has been pushing for something like this for a long time
of increasing the federal minimum wage.
Basically, the minimum wage by the federal government has not increased in decades,
even though the cost of living has increased dramatically.
And I hadn't really strongly looked into this much before,
but, you know, the counter argument against minimum wage that, for example,
people generally on the right, the conservatives will say,
is that if you increase the minimum wage,
that's going to be past the point that a lot of,
especially small businesses can sustain and manage,
and that will force them to lay people off.
They won't be able to hire as many people
because they have to pay them more.
And therefore, you're going to lose a huge number of jobs.
The Congressional Budget Office estimated
that a $15 minimum wage could eliminate anywhere
from 2.7 million jobs all the way to zero.
Wow.
Yeah, which is really helpful, yeah.
But it would lift 900,000 people out of poverty.
So basically critics are saying,
like, you can't just force companies
to pay a certain rate.
is not a good idea. The free market should take care of it. That's like the core argument,
particularly given that the cost of living in San Francisco is vastly different than a small
town in Missouri, right? And so to federally force this, it doesn't make a lot of sense rather
than states doing it. And so some of the cool things I saw, there's a different couple
studies over the years that looked at the actual change of employment when states or areas
of the country increase their minimum wage. So there was a pretty influential one from 1992.
which is they looked at New Jersey,
increased their minimum wage from 425 to 505,
checked like 400 fast food restaurants,
and there was no reduced employment at all.
And then there was another one,
this one from the Washington Center for Equitable Growth,
which, you know, slightly biased towards increasing minimum wage,
but still did this study that from reading through it for a little bit,
it seems really grounded.
And basically they studied how two states,
California and New York,
doubled their minimum wage,
how we went up to like $15 of the course of about a decade.
And so they looked at all these interesting pieces about this. And what I thought was particularly
interesting that they conclude. So when you increase the minimum wage, in this case for these two
states, and they increased it to $15, they looked at what actually happens to that increase
cost that the business has to expend. They found that it doesn't actually reduce employment.
There is no disemployment that resulted in these areas. And they compared all these different
ones. But what ends up happening is those costs get split. About 50% goes to customers. So the
businesses raise their prices. So about half those increased costs goes to customers. And the other
half goes to just less money, just less revenue. And the point, the conclusion of this was
all of these different, in this case, fast food restaurants, all of these different fast food restaurants,
none of them fired people. They just ate half of the cost and they passed half the cost on to customers.
And what that implies is that it is not a perfect free market, is that these companies clearly can afford to pay their people more and just take a hit on their profit.
And the argument of minimum wage shouldn't be increased because the market will find perfect equilibrium.
In case after case, it's been shown, no, these companies can do this.
They actually can take this hit.
Of course, there's more complexity to it.
Maybe some small mom-and-pop shop business can't do this in some town or whatnot.
But I thought the studies around this were particularly interesting.
and then the fact that this is gaining traction
on the Republican side of the aisle
and given that Republicans are really trying to
get more of a foothold in,
let's say, working class people
and really resonate with them,
I think there's real potential
that this actually makes some waves,
which would be really cool.
You want to go first?
No, you go first.
All right, well, I'll say,
this guy, Josh Hawley,
has been someone I've had an eye on for a while
because he is really polarizing to me.
Okay.
In that...
I know nothing about it.
No, no, no.
I'm not...
I'm just saying,
Like sometimes he'll say it like the coolest thing I've ever heard.
And then sometimes he'll say like, we need to have the Bible be the only thing taught in school.
He is a true like, yeah, it's that.
It's this guy.
Yeah, it's that guy.
Okay.
And, you know, it's just funny.
He is part of this new wing of Republicans that are like weirdly aligned on a lot of pro worker stuff like with Bernie Sanders.
He was pro Lena Kahn.
He was one of the few Republicans that wasn't like trying to.
So he's injured.
And sometimes they'll say something about workers that I think is really cool.
And I agree, raising the minimum wage makes total sense.
We have a lot, a lot.
I mean, I read a book called Goliath that's about just the amount of monopoly capture we have
on so many different markets in America, even things like cheerleading.
Like you wouldn't think about that, but if you have a daughter who's in cheer or son
in cheerleading, like it all goes through like one company.
So you have to pay these absurd things for all the equipment.
And that company has an exclusive contract with like every school.
It's like we just have so many things that are monopolies.
And so the idea that it's reaching natural equilibrium on wages is not true.
People don't have a lot of options in a lot of fields.
So anyway, I think he's just an interesting character.
And I guess I'm happy in general that people on both sides of the aisle are starting to
like handshake over the fact that like he mentions in this article, we need stronger unions.
We need more minimum wage protections.
I think you would also agree that like we need to have predictions from wage theft.
people get their wages stolen all the time
or like it takes a long time to get them
or there's delays.
All this stuff is beneficial.
So even if I am not handshaking up
most things he says,
like I agree on this.
Well, here's Aden to Villan Chair,
raising the minimum wage.
Why we shouldn't do it.
Okay.
Yeah, I don't actually think we shouldn't raise it,
but I do think there's something to be said
about the utopian version
of what the minimum wage is meant to accomplish.
So I think it's Denmark doesn't have one. They just don't have a minimum wage. And the reason this is the case is because they're really high percentage of union participation. So part of the issue with minimum wage on the other side of things is that when you set it at a flat amount, it never scales at a rate that matches the productivity of labor and the economy. So as soon as you set the minimum wage, it immediately starts getting out.
paced by whatever forces are pushing what, let's say, the correct market wage should be above
that, whether it be just inflation or other things in the economy. So your minimum wage is aging.
And that's why the 725 is so crazy, right? We've gone 20 years where our dollar is worth
significantly less than it used to be, but people can still be getting paid the same amount of
money. And I thought something was interesting there is like the report we had up, I think it had
the word monopsony in the title, which we had covered on the book club episode that we did.
This idea that the market is, most markets are not necessarily monopolies, but share strong
characteristics of monopolies because of how few players exist within the space. And because that's the
case, labor is not able to effectively negotiate what the actual value of their work is.
examples being that if you live in a small town in the year 1900 and all that town does is mine coal
and that's the only job well you don't have a lot of leverage to negotiate your salary and uh the way to
counteract this or to have a greater uh impact on valuing your work is negotiating as a group or negotiating as a
union so in a place like denmark which doesn't as far as i understand really have a minimum wage
because like 95% of workers are in the country
are in a union.
And the unions are constantly negotiating wages up
in tandem with the other things
that are in effect in the economy.
Now, do I think that's a comprehensive,
easily sloganable policy
to push forward in the United States?
No. No.
I don't think that change is going to come before
and I'd rather fight for something basic
like, can we at least get it to 15 boys?
Yeah, that makes sense.
I think there's something we said
about this not being an effective long-term solution
to what it's attempting to fix.
And I'm glad you pointed out the things that you did
where we can see that there is a negligible impact
on employment like people say.
But I'm hoping that the long-term solution
in the U.S. one day could be something more.
Yeah, because it's a backstop.
Like this is this should not be the driving factor
of how people are paid is what the federal government is saying.
I mean, most states is not, right?
Because there is just...
Most states have a higher...
We talked about this a bit.
Most states have a higher minimum wage to begin with,
and then the percentage of workers that are paid
at the minimum wage is fairly low.
I think it's like below 10% or something.
And I think for what it's worth,
that doesn't mean this won't help a lot of people.
I think we're about to see,
like going from 725 to 15 is such a dramatic jump
that there's a ton of people in the middle there
that are going to be boosted up along the way.
Yeah, I hope this goes through.
We'll see some data.
Probably won't, but at least it's the right, it's the right direction.
And then I think what's valuable here is like in the Congress, right?
It's so we're so split and so like 50-50 that you only need a few people from the other side to get things to happen.
So I think that's where it's really compelling that you're getting Republican sport for this as well.
Yeah, I just like seeing movement on some pro-worker stuff and anti-monopoly stuff.
It was a lot of good news.
That was some good news.
I actually feel, yeah, it feels nice.
Like, yeah, the world isn't all terrible.
Yeah.
We did fit in some bad news in our condition.
Yeah, we managed to fit in some bad news.
A couple things started out of bad.
Would it really be a lemonade stained with that a little bit of bad news sprinkled?
With that a little bit of spice?
It's the spice of life.
Whether it be CRISPR eugenics or the number of people that'll get arrested at the protest this weekend.
You can be sure that you'll get your dose of bad news every week.
Thank God we solved it.
I'd be a little depressed.
Yeah, I'd be worried if we didn't solve it.
But if you want to join us for,
for our extra hour we do every week.
It comes out on Mondays.
You can go to patreon.com slash lemonade stand.
I think this week we're going to talk a little bit more
about the circumstances behind the protests
and the immigration as that story continues to develop.
We also do a ton of extra shows
on the second tier of the Patreon.
We've been doing our book club,
which was super fun.
And our watch-along,
our extra show where we respond to comments.
So if you're interested in any of that,
we're also getting very near our subscriber goal of 10,000
where we go to China,
and a trip to China.
Meet Xi Jinping.
Hash this whole thing out
because this trade deal stuff's been going on.
10K subs to hash it out with China.
We'll hash it out.
We'll get the rare earth minerals.
We'll bring them back.
I'm bringing a lot of suitcases.
And I'm smuggling it in Vividia chips.
High chance that we're arrested by the end of it.
Let's be real.
And I feel obligated to communicate.
Don't drink horse electrolytes.
Well, that was a bit.
He's looking pretty.
It's energetic.
No.
Look at my,
how flush my skin is.
Might be a little pale.
You look very sickly.
Adverse health consequences.
If you drink.
Oh, one more thing.
You know, on the Discord,
which you can join if you join the Patreon,
there was like an insane amount more good news.
We didn't actually,
we brought our own stories
and we didn't get to get to the,
oh no, a lot of these were from Discord.
So thank you, thank you everybody who's submitted.
It is a next.
Yeah.
We've been getting a lot of great feedback every week from that.
from their region,
from their country,
for our singing in good news,
and it is from all over the world,
and it was very fascinating to read through.
So if you want to join it on that,
it's all positive rather than our situation,
which is positive.
Check that out on the Discord.
Yeah.
All right, we'll see you guys next week.
Next week, baby.
Bye.
