Lemonade Stand - It's Still Shutdown | Ep. 032 Lemonade Stand 🍋
Episode Date: October 8, 2025Please note: For a video version of the podcast, please check it out on YouTube: https://youtu.be/acwCoMV8jTE On this week's show... Aiden invests in the weather, Atrioc buys the Treasury, and Doug...Doug does his best Bono impersonation. 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: 032 Recorded on: October 7th, 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 0:00 Trying to Flip the Curse 3:04 Government Shutdown 4:51 Dept. of Education 7:13 Dept. of Treasury 8:24 Dept. of Housing and Urban Development 10:12 Dept. of Agriculture 13:06 Dept. of War 15:45 Dept. of Justice 17:53 Dept. of Interior 18:45 Dept. of Health and Human Services 20:34 Dept. of Homeland Security 21:48 Dept. of Transportation 28:16 Rapid Fire 32:00 Percentage of Actual Cuts 34:53 Republicans and Democrats 52:21 How long will it last? 1:01:47 H-1B Visas are now $100k 1:21:29 Music Industry vs AI Companies 1:32:45 Outro New takes on Business, Tech, and Politics. Squeezed fresh every Wednesday. #lemonadestand #dougdoug #atrioc #aiden Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The government is dead.
Opening on the blank is dead.
That can't be our recurring theme.
No.
It's too risky.
It's too risky.
We have a lemonade stand curse.
We have a problem with a curse.
Aidan,
my goal today actually is to flip that curse into a blessing.
Okay?
I figure we always try to talk about good news
and then bad news happens.
If we talk about the government shut down extensively today,
the law of irony will flip it
so that it's ended tomorrow and didn't mean anything.
I actually feel like we talk about bad things all the time,
and I don't know if that's an accurate assessment of the Lemonade's Day curse.
All I'm saying is I think the curse is trying to make our show seem wrong in some way.
Right.
So if we're like, this is the biggest story, the government shutdown, then by tomorrow it'll be.
Usually what happens, we talk about breaking news.
And then minutes after we post, it majorly changes.
So it's possible the government shutdown gets worse.
But most likely it will get better within a few minutes.
You just said the wrong thing.
Now it's going to flash forward.
Yeah.
Now you can't acknowledge that.
He explained the plane too much.
Yes.
And now the great.
Now the Nazi witches are going to curl their monkey paw.
Ladies and gentlemen, we are in day seven of a government shut down, which is poised to become perhaps the longest one on record.
I have no basis for that statement.
Yeah.
I was going to say it.
I was like, so just so you're aware, the longest one, 34 days.
34 days.
Okay.
So 34 days.
Right now it's been seven.
Yep.
That's the info you went off of.
My info I'm going off of is that.
We're closing in.
Everyone involved is seeming very intractable on making any progress.
Something I'll give to you.
We've been in a, the shutdown is now longer today than it was yesterday.
And if that keeps up.
It'll never end.
Right.
Right.
No, I saw a quote today.
Prophean Senator Jim Justice called it Groundhog Day, as in they're showing up every single day.
And they're saying the same things on both sides, making no progress and going nowhere.
So I don't know how that breaks, especially because both sides seem incentivized with their base to make a stand here to fight.
So I'm just saying we're in day seven.
I don't see a clear path.
Maybe there is a clear path that Doug's going to explain to me how we get out of this.
I think Jim Justice, he needs to, it'll keep repeating until he figures out how to get AOC to fall in love with them.
That's what we need.
We need a Romeo and Juliet type of situation across the aisle.
That would actually be awesome.
And then as they both kill themselves, like we all come together.
in morning.
Finally.
It's kind of like a 9-11 situation
that reunites the country.
By and person.
The love is so beautiful.
Right.
We're all shedding tears.
But I think when this happens
and even in my memory,
right, this has happened a handful of times now.
Although the last one,
the most recent one
hasn't been since 2018.
It was 18, 19.
And that was the longest one.
And there were three in 2018,
which maybe is why it feels like it's happened so often.
I think that,
big questions that jumped to mind is
what does this actually mean
when the government shuts down
and why is it happening?
I'm glad you asked Aiden
because I brought my best government
attire from home.
Why is your government attire like a Bono outfit?
This is all I had.
I couldn't find sunglasses and I look more
like a gay Colombian drug dealer than a
government employee. But this is the best I got.
And a shirt t-shirt with me on it.
This t-shirt says Trader with Aidan's face.
That is a beautiful shirt.
I will give no additional context.
Now, when the government...
When the government shuts down, by definition,
you don't have enough money to fund everything, right?
That's like the whole point,
is Congress hasn't decided how much money
the government has to fund the government.
So as part of the executive branch,
there's 15 departments, which you've probably heard of before,
like the Department of State, the Department of Treasury.
So there's 15 of them.
And you basically have to decide that the whole area needs to decide
what gets shut down and what doesn't.
And so we are going to simulate that exact same scenario in an oversimplified form with these five one dollar bills.
Gentlemen, you are now the president and the OMB, the Office of Management and Budget.
Because one for you or for me.
When this shutdown happens, you, the OMB, you need to decide the rules and the agencies decide the details.
The president is going to say, yes, I approve of all this, but technically it's not the president that decides.
And so what I wanted to find out is you, the average person listening at home, does it matter?
Is the Department of Interior shuts down?
Does that do anything?
So I've brought 15 departments for you gentlemen to consider.
Okay.
For each one of these departments, you have five total dollars.
It costs a dollar to keep the department running.
Otherwise, the rest of them are going to shut down.
Okay, this is just like what they're actually having to decide right now.
Why do we have government budget problems of every department costs $1?
Yeah.
Again, slightly oversimplified analogy here.
Let's start with the Department of Education.
Again, you can fund five out of these 15.
total departments. Would you guys spend a buck on department of education? Hold off on that. We have
homeschooling now. Yeah. Also, I've been studying ever since our conspiracy episode. I don't know if you
notice. There's an all-seeing eye on this dollar. And that explains how they've been controlling
us through education. Wow. So we don't need this. This is what we don't need at all. I think we're
listen to me and listen to YouTubers. And that's going to get us in the good spot. So I think this one
I would definitely not fund. So you know what? I actually would, I think the average person is not going to
suffer too much from this. Unlike the name, the Department of Education doesn't manage schools or
anything. It's not like a school is going to get shut down. They don't do that. They're managing
overall high-level policy and grants and things like that. The main thing they do that would affect
people, student loans. They have to approve student loans. But even the student loans themselves,
it's not like that shuts down. It's just new ones being approved. So in this, let's say,
hypothetical month that you guys are deciding to not fund the Department of Education.
Nobody's getting new loans. But honestly, not that bad. Okay. I heard that,
You still have to pay your student loans,
but there's no one you can call it.
For help.
Right.
If you're trying to be like,
there are some very funny things
about the department being shut down.
For example, a little side tangent,
a group of unions representing federal employees
has sued the Trump administration
because they don't want to be laid off
by the Trump administration.
However,
the unions are stuck in a cycle
because the Justice Department
would handle those lawsuits
and the Justice Department was deemed not essential
and isn't handling them.
So they just,
can't sue the government right now. That's so sick.
Wait, one quick question. So
as far as like consequences or
impacts go, we're talking in the context
of like immediate effects. Like for the
expected, you know,
maybe seven,
20, 30 day period that this could be.
Because traditionally shut downs
aren't very long. Like I said,
the long, right? The longest
has been that 34 day one. And that's
the longest by like 13 days.
Yeah.
So we're describing like the
immediate fallout or effects of this thing. We're saying like to you the average person at home,
if the government ends up shutting down for 15 days, like for me, you know, I wouldn't really
care. Normally doesn't seem like it affects me. That's what we're trying to decide right now.
Yeah. What do you guys need to do to make sure the average person doesn't have their life
ruined by this? Okay, we cut the Department of Education. You cut Department of Education.
All right, easy. We got a Treasury. What do you think? Is that worth a buck?
I think so. Now, why do you think that? I just feel like if we, if we,
lose the treasury, we're going to lose the value of this very dollar that I'm spending on other things.
And that's a great point, because the Department of Treasury is the one who pays for literally
everything and collects all the money and balances the debt. So we would immediately, so you are
paying for it. Let's just say, okay. No, no, no, we have home treasury now. Congratulations.
We have rising rates of home. We have a treasury at home. Okay, yeah. All right, I'll take that
dollar. Congratulations. We are keeping one of our government departments alive. It's the Department of
Treasury. That means we can continue to collect money, including taxes. That means we can spend money on
literally everything. It's not very helpful to shut down the Department of Treasury while
keeping other departments open because then you can't pay anybody anyways.
That does. Okay. Also, the entire global market is underpinned by our bonds and debt servicing
and that all falls apart. So that is pretty definitively the most important one. I take it,
this is one of the ones that's deemed essential in real life. Yes. In real life, this is one that's,
that has by far the lowest number of people who are laid off or furloughed, meaning they don't
have to show up to work.
All right.
This one.
I don't know what the fuck.
This does.
Department of housing?
What do you guys think?
Department of housing.
Who cares?
Is any average person
affected of the department of housing?
I never heard anyone complain about housing in this country.
We actually solved it this last week.
I don't know.
If anybody read the news in the last week,
you saw the headlines about how housing's been solved.
So that's a bit of a relief.
I will say,
though,
get a stress off everybody's shoulders.
Aidan, if everybody is constantly complaining about housing,
then how good good this department be?
That's true.
How much could they be doing recurrently?
I don't think we fund it.
Maybe I, okay, this would be my thing here is,
I don't think we're known for the scale
of our public housing services.
And so it feels like a market that,
it feels like an agency that wouldn't be providing
the most compared to the other agencies
of which we have a lot to get.
We only have $4 more.
So I feel, I feel pressured to say no to this one, admittedly.
Okay.
All right, we are not funding for the next two weeks.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development.
It feels so definitive when he writes it.
Like, oh, I can't even go back.
And that means that 10 million Americans no longer have rental assistance and will most
likely go homeless.
Because this covers us things like Section 8 housing.
There's about 5 million families, 10 million total Americans, 70% of whom are seniors,
children, or disabled, who will now suddenly not.
have rent assistance and will probably be evicted.
Hey, if the government shuts down only two or three weeks,
maybe they aren't evicted by then, huh?
You're sure it's looking remarkably prescient.
Can I take it back?
You cannot, no, we've ripped every rent assistance.
They've been furloughed and fired and.
Hey, you know, maybe the other departments are going to help more people, right?
It's only 10 million.
Okay, Department of Agriculture.
What do you guys think?
Does that sound important?
I mean, it, um, I, you know what?
I do think food is.
a big deal, but my guess is the problem of agriculture is mostly biggest around giving huge
subsidies to large factory farms. Yeah. And I feel like the, for the time period that the shutdown
is likely to exist in, your subsidy not being paid within this, let's say, four week period
doesn't seem that pressing. Like it feels like you should, we should be able to get through a net 30
invoice here. I think so. So I'm going to say no. No. All right. We are dropping Department of Agriculture.
And for the most part, your intuition was right. It's a lot of like high level regulation around farming, around food production. The problem is twofold. First off, you've got food safety and inspection. So no food will have any quality checks of any kind going forward. But fingers crossed, no food crisis. The other thing is, ooh, there are 20 million kids who won't get lunch anymore at schools. Also, in 2024, there were 40 million people on SNAP, which is the,
the food vouchers like food program.
That's under the Department of Agriculture for some reason.
But we'll?
Snap is under Department of Agriculture, so is kids lunches.
I don't know why that's the case,
but 40 people, 40 million people no longer have
Snap assistance to eat food.
You're gonna have a lot, a lot, a lot of the country now,
a little shorter food.
No worries.
Okay, he is running to the other side of the room.
He has, is found his own...
Are you finding extra money?
Wallet.
Because a little thing called tariff revenue.
just came in. And in real life, Trump is proposing to use tariff revenue to fund SNAP in the meantime.
Okay. All right. And probably to give bailouts to farmers. So we're going to use this five bill. Hey,
buy yourself something nice. Okay. This is the only time you get to use tariffs because. And you know what?
Some of those extra soybeans while you're at it. Yeah. First, yeah, you are right by the way. It's like farmers
getting subsidies and stuff like that is a big part of it. But, uh, okay, fair. We'll say tariff revenue is
unexpected and you guys get to fund the SNAP program, which by the way, um, what is tariff revenue?
been so far? Because I know what SNAP costs in 2024. It's, it's probably over SNAP, right?
800 billion, something like that. Okay. Snap's actually a trillion last year. We spent a trillion
dollars on SNAP? This is a report from the Department of Agriculture last year.
Wow. Trillion bucks. So, so. Don't buy yourself something that. Yeah. Yeah. So tariffs are great.
That would be all of the tariff money to get 80% of people to have food.
It's crazy because he's promising so much with this. He's promising like, it's the
The tax revenue is supposed to cover everything.
It covers everything.
It's this magical.
It can't even cover snap.
He's like, we're going to give everybody to make a $2,000 dollar check off
tariff revenue.
Tariff revenue is gone.
That's off the table.
You still got four bucks, though.
Okay.
We're all right.
Department of defense, now known as the Department of War.
It is the military.
What do you think?
Now, this is one of the things where we are oversimplifying the analogy.
This is more expensive than the other ones.
But let's assume it costs the same amount.
Would you fund it?
Or could you just say, hey, everybody,
Let's chill for two to four weeks.
You guys got this.
Here's what I'm thinking.
The obvious answer is we don't fund this one
because in a month we're not going to need it.
All right?
However, I feel like this one has 10X the employees of every other one.
And if they are furloughed and not paid,
it is so many people unpaid.
But at the very least, I rip this dollar and half.
I give it half its dollar back.
I mean, I don't know.
This is a tough one for me because I know we have all of these bases
and we have all these employees.
Military bases.
Even hospitals.
I think Veterans Affairs is a different department.
Veterans Affairs is a different department.
Okay.
That helps.
That helps.
So maybe we...
You're not throwing veterans on the bus by doing this.
I think it's...
It's only a few weeks.
It's only a few weeks.
How bad could it get?
How bad could it get?
You're not funding department of war.
Are you serious?
Okay.
We do not have a military.
No military bases,
no readiness whatsoever if there's any kind of attack
on the United States.
This is a fingers crossed kind of moment.
nuclear deterrence, that's gone now.
China might go for Taiwan, Russia might go for Ukraine,
but if we could hold out for three or four weeks,
come on, they're not going to move that.
It's a four week window.
It's a four week window.
And you were right, by the way,
there's about three million people employed by the military.
That's what I figured.
It doesn't make any sense.
A lot of people.
Okay, I think the main exaggeration
of this segment also is that
in actuality, all of these things
can be partially funded or, like,
we're just saying yes, no, flatly.
Right.
And we're getting rid of the entire thing.
We're taking it or leaving it.
Yeah, and we have $4.
And we only have,
and we have $4,
which does fund it fully in this exercise.
But that is,
there's an amount of people
you can put on leave.
You know, it might be 20%
for one department on leave,
unpaid leave.
It might be 80% for another department.
That's my understanding.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think in the real world,
it's a sliding scale of how much they get cut.
And I think you're going to show it to us at the end.
I don't know,
I don't know. I sure did remember to get that graph ready.
He sounds confident.
Which A. Drag will probably get that graph.
We have it. We'll take a look at.
Yes. This is simplifying things. At the same time, this is a simplified version of an actual
thing that they have to go through, which is to decide what are we shutting down during this
period. I mean, these are real decisions they have to make, even if it's not quite, you know,
this high level. Okay, well, we don't have a military right now. What else could we potentially
cut? What do you think about Department of Justice?
Okay.
You want to pay this?
Well, like the anecdote
you already provided,
I think I'm kind of in the camp
of you would,
am I crazy?
You would not fund the DOJ?
I don't want to fund the DOJ.
You don't want to fund the DOJ.
That's what I've decided.
Where is we,
you have no sense of justice?
None.
I think it should just be my call.
I think,
yeah,
okay,
we'll run it through Aiden.
Yeah,
actually it's fine.
We're going to,
what happens did we cut the DOJ?
All right.
So if you cut the DOJ,
it's, you know,
it's the laws
that aren't being enforced
anymore. But here's the thing. Most laws, statistically, they're enforced at the local level,
at the state level, right? So the federal government, they take on like tens of thousands of cases
a year, but that's kind of a drop in the bucket compared to the millions of cases that are taken
in the justice system across the whole thing. And we're also not talking about the judges. That's
part of the judicial branch. So this is the United States government being able to sue or take cases
against people or companies that are doing illegal things. Now, the issue here is that, kind of by
definition. A federal crime, something the government will broadly go and put this case up for,
is somebody who crosses state lines, as in it's a big deal. These aren't little tiny things. This
might be a massive drug trafficking ring. This might be massive cyber criminal or financial fraud.
This is going to be potentially something incredibly huge. It might be anti-monopoly stuff,
as we talked about with Lena Con. So is the world going to catch on fire if the Department of
Justice mostly gets shut down? No. You just have to.
have to hope that there aren't any major, major, major,
high impact cases that are going to be kind of screwed because they're out of
commission for a month.
I mean, I feel like the DOJ, the last big case heard of them going after was like,
um,
Ty Lopez,
the Lamborghini guy because he bought Radio Shack and did a Ponzi scheme with it.
I mean,
that guy's not good.
I'm glad they're getting them,
but I can wait four weeks to get him.
I think that's legitimate,
although I'm sure people at the FBI who actually know the type of horrible shit that's
happening all the time would be like you guys are insane.
This is an insane thing to do.
People and everyone, these agencies are going to be
mad about every guy. Because of course.
Okay, all right. That being said, Department of the Interior,
come on.
You want to rain at the gable?
You guys get a shit about this? Come on. He's trying to bait us.
You want to just randomly gamble on this one?
He's just going to be super important.
Come on. You can tell by his face.
You know what this. There's a bison on it.
We don't know a bison.
Department of the Interior. Congratulations.
Your national parks will continue to be staffed.
And that's about it.
So that is by far the least impactful one.
I got a level with you.
We're doing a terrible job.
What do we keep so far?
We have the treasury.
Oh,
wait,
good news on this.
Good news.
They also coordinate things like permitting
for the federal land,
like if farmers want to graze on it
or mining rights.
So that they don't do it themselves.
They issue permits.
Yeah.
When you go to Yellowstone,
you think of us.
When you enjoy that beautiful nature.
When you enjoy that vacation,
you think an old age rock a man.
All right,
this one is a wash.
Nobody cares about the Department of Health.
Fuck it.
This is health and human services
led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
I cut it.
You cut health?
Okay.
Well, how much,
yeah,
with each of these,
I'm thinking about
how much like boots on the ground
day-to-day effect
does it have?
Like, if we lose this for 28 days,
how problematic is that?
Just here we're Medicare and Medicaid are under this.
There's been some anger.
Tell you what, we cut this.
They have to make it.
Here's the question that I wanted to answer.
Yeah.
Medicare and Medicaid are managed by the Department of Health.
Yeah.
But if the Department of Health goes away, does everybody stop getting health?
Are they the ones doing the health?
I will answer that question shortly.
You must guess.
Are they doing the health?
I defund it.
No.
We're dropping the Department of Health and Human Secretary.
This is actually, I think, a smart decision.
I mean, smart in the context of an emergency, obviously.
Yeah.
Because, yes, they oversee.
Medicare and Medicaid, but what many people are not aware, the government isn't personally
managing people's health plans. They're not personally, they're not hiring the doctors that
take care of people. They are, they're overseeing and approving the private companies that will
be paid by the government to do this work. So over the course of a month, the people on Medicare
and Medicaid, most likely they'll be able to continue getting health, continue to get services,
continue to get insurance. They just can't resolve any problems and there can't be like major
updates. Also, hopefully there's no pandemic, because that is the CDC.
We're doing a lot of fingers crossed.
It's a huge four-way gamble right now.
I won't say in this world.
I'll see you kept sitting getting health and I was like,
yeah, just getting your health.
Just get health.
I was more thinking like from a doctor or a pharmacy,
but yeah.
All right, what do you guys think about Department of Homeland Security?
If we cut the military, I'll definitely cut Homeland Security.
Yeah, I mean, this is like the baby brother,
the Department of War, I feel like.
This is going to stop, China's invasion of Taiwan.
We're already gamble.
That's my read on it.
I'm prepared to be very wrong.
The only thing here is a couple,
so Department of Homeland Security,
it's what the name suggests.
It was made after 9-11.
It's for internal threats,
not external threats.
And so that includes border protection and ice.
That's gone.
Border protection is gone.
TSA screening for the airports.
That's gone now.
Faster lines.
And that is,
well, actually the opposite.
That is currently happening in airports right now.
This is a real one.
FEMA, the agency that deals with disaster.
Astor response.
So if there's another hurricane or something horrific.
And cyber security infrastructure.
Oh,
and one other one,
US Secret Service.
So our politicians are going to get much more agile.
Agile.
They're going to be very,
a little skittish,
you know,
like a rabbit.
We'll just do a lot of Zoom calls for more weeks.
We'll do Zoom town halls.
Well,
unfortunately,
you also lose cybersecurity infrastructure.
So we'll have some hacked Zoom town halls.
Department of Homeland Security is dropped.
Okay.
What about Department of Transportation?
People got to get around, Aidan.
They got a, they got to get around.
This is actually, people don't know this.
They have a direct internet line to control anybody's car at any given time.
So imagine that goes away.
Yeah.
You're dropping this?
No, I think I'll pay for this.
You pay for transportation.
You're getting the Department of Transportation.
Well, you have one more dollar.
You do what you want with it.
Fine, fine.
You take it.
You take it.
There's like six more.
Okay, you do buy Department of Transportation.
This is a good decision because this is air traffic controllers.
Oh.
If you don't have this, nobody can fly.
That being said, the rest of what the DOT does is not really a day-to-day thing.
It's like overseeing the broad railroad system, the broad, you know, like airport system and whatnot.
But I assume the operations, like with a lot of these things, I think a common theme here is oversight of these things at a national level, but the local level, say the L.A. Metro would continue operating.
Yes.
Because it's its own organization.
with the highways. They oversee the broad planning of highways. They don't manage the highways. So the average person for the DOT like getting shut down, they're not going to care. The only thing they will care over the course of a month is airplanes crashing. But we do need our air traffic controllers. In the real world, air traffic controllers are not getting paid, but are still working. But you could. But they'll get back pay.
That's right. Yeah. They're not getting furloughed as in, you know, I mean. Correct. Yeah. But even furloughed employees get paid. Right. Right. So anyway, yeah, it's.
It's bad.
This is happening right now.
And again, like to what we mentioned earlier,
certain parts,
large chunks of the Department of Transportation
are just told to not come into work right now.
Air traffic controllers,
they're like,
please come in.
But you're not paid for the time you're furloughed, though,
I thought.
That's what I thought.
But there's a law in 2019
that says they actually do get back pay.
For all the time they were...
Yeah, I mean, let's double check.
I didn't have time to, like, deep dive into it.
This is a good thing to check on
because this is a twist in my understanding as well
was that they're all.
are, there's a bunch of people during a shutdown
from all of these agencies at differing percentages
depending on the agency that get essentially laid off
for that set period of time.
They don't work and they don't get paid.
And then there's a portion of people
who continue to work to operate
or do their job at the agency.
I thought those people are also not getting paid,
but then they get the back pay for their work
that when they come back.
I thought the people that do not work
through that time period, do not get back pay.
That's what I thought too.
And there was a law passed in 2019 that furloughed people who aren't working will get back pay.
So I believe that your law is correct.
However, there is a White House memo going around suggesting that not all government
shutdown workers will receive back pay.
Donald Trump was asked about it and he suggested that not all furlough workers would get.
It depends.
Okay.
So we don't know what that means.
Yeah.
And that's my understanding as well.
Historically, before 2019, if you were furloughed, the idea is, look, we're just not paying you.
But please come back to work in the future.
Now furlough also means we're going to back pay you, which is basically not furlough.
So it's a little confusing to me.
But the Trump administration is trying to push back against that in order to save money, to lay off people, etc.
It's interesting because in 2019, the law you're talking about, it was signed by Trump.
Yeah.
That said all furloughed employees will be paid for the period of the lapse in appropriation.
so they'll get their back pay,
which is interesting.
There might have been different
political motivations
at the time
because the shutdowns
in 2018 were prior,
were,
that was because the Democrats
didn't want to,
they didn't want the,
the spending bill at the time
to fund the border wall.
There was a big dispute over it.
That was the December,
like the into 2019 shutdown.
Here's a direct quote.
Trump,
when asked at the White House
on Tuesday afternoon
about back pay for those workers
said,
I would say it depends on
who we're talking about.
For the most part,
we're going to take care of our people.
So that's a big question mark.
I don't, um, it's got to, in that scenario,
it's got to suck to be one of the guys who has to keep working now.
That's what I was going to say.
Because you could have just gotten a vacation, right?
Just make everybody go into work, dude.
If you're going to pay them back anyways,
yes, it's wild that they're going to get paid back that they don't work.
That's just the worst of both worlds.
I don't understand.
We don't get the services and then we're not saving any money.
I would actually prefer if I'm paying the taxes for it.
If you're going to get paid either way, like please do the thing.
Please give people snap money.
This seems so obviously.
that there must be something we're on misunderstanding.
Do you know what I mean?
Like there must be something we're missing here.
That was my thought and I learned about that like two hours ago and I was like,
I don't have time.
I got to knock it out these other things.
So, you know, look, we can explore it more later.
But yeah, there's people who are currently not working by the normal standard set in 2019
should also be paid back once the actual budget is passed by Congress that says who is
getting what amount of money.
Interesting.
Yeah, I mean, on this specific example of transportation, I'm sorry, of, uh, yeah,
I was flying this weekend and I was thinking about in the air. I was like, man,
the air traffic controllers that are working right now are not getting paid. I mean,
they'll get back pay. Right. Right. Assuming this. But it's a wild thing that somebody who's
determining whether your plane crashes isn't being paid. And then Burbank had to shut down.
This is, you know, near us in LA was not able to operate and a bunch of planes were delayed because
they were understaffed. Yeah. So like they're, you know, even with the situation of like,
I will pay you in the future.
Like, not everybody's going to show up.
Like, it's just, so this is all happening in real time right now.
The threats are also to they are going to be permanently laid off.
So again, another quote is,
asked Tuesday how many permanent jobs in the chopping block.
Trump said he'll be able to say in four or five days,
if this keeps going on, it'll be substantial.
And a lot of those jobs will never come back.
Yeah.
So, you know, like, again, I have a friend I was hanging out with this weekend who is
furloughed from his job in the government.
I don't want to say where.
but, um, and he, it's a very stressful time.
Like they're,
they're trying to figure out what's going on.
They have like work that they,
it's like larger project work that is sort of still going on,
but they're being told not to work.
And they don't know what type of bag pay or what they'll be receiving.
It's weird.
It's a weird spot to be in that it.
It's funny to hear from a person in that situation that it's basically as
ambiguous as it is for us sitting here.
Yes.
They're like getting weird emails from their managers and trying to figure out what to do.
But it's, it's all day to day to.
day. They don't know. Uh, yeah, I don't know. It's a weird spot to be in. All right. Let's,
let's wrap this up and do a really rapid fire. Okay. You got a dollar. Like, $2. Because
then we'll talk about the political maneuvering of all of this, right? This is just what happens
with the government shutdown. It's like, what are the different parties arguing for? So let's rapid fire.
Commerce. Department of Commerce. Do you fund it? I'm taking it. You're taking it. I'm
taking the department. Okay. Okay. Okay. Uh, what? You've got no, nothing. Uh, you've got one
$1.
Congratulations.
You get to keep doing weather forecasts.
The Department of Commerce?
It does the weather and patents and trademarks.
So that will not stop during the next month.
Congratulations.
Not take it defunding the Department of Commerce and then pirating a bunch of Nintendo games.
What are you going to do about it?
There's other things like they produce all the national statistics.
So a lot of commerce is based around the information that comes out of the Department
of Commerce.
but I would argue one of the less impactful.
Wait, is the BLS ladder up into commerce?
Do you know that?
I was going to write that down.
I forget.
I'm fairly certain, but that might be labor.
I think it's labor.
Okay.
Well, that's defunded now, I know,
because they're not releasing the jobs report.
Yeah, that is for sure defunded.
Okay, Department of Energy.
You've got $1 and another $4.
Four.
See, now it's tough because I have to gamble.
Show us, do it.
Let's do a, give us a spread.
No.
Cut, cut energy.
Okay.
Cut energy.
So this is fine.
Because we don't need it.
The thing is, again, they're not maintaining the energy themselves.
It's overall grid stability.
However, they literally do make and maintain nuclear warheads.
So those are out of commission.
We're already not doing war, Doug.
No, that's a good call.
Okay, Department of Labor.
Department of Labor.
We're going to.
No, we're cutting that.
We don't need those fake statistics that they kept making up.
True, true, true, true.
A big one here, OSHA is going to be gone.
There's going to be no workplace standards or regulations whatsoever.
So it's like this.
Oh, shut up about it.
How about that?
Does this a fingers cross situation?
Oh no, now no one will find me for having the
2024 work poster up in the office to the 25.
I don't know if you've seen a local moves his office.
They worked them to the bone and they don't have safety rails.
Shut up.
Stop saying that publicly on the show.
Okay.
I'm gonna, I'm gonna say last two.
Okay, you got to pick which one you fund.
And I, we ran out of printer in.
You show this one.
It's just Department of State.
The Department of State or the Department of Veterans Affairs.
You've got $1.1.
What do you choose to fund?
No, and you, Ed.
I have to.
The Department of State?
Department of State?
I think I'm going to fund
the Department of Veterans Affairs
because my understanding is they employ
a ton of people
and this is health care
for a considerable amount
of individuals.
That is a great choice.
Not only do 400,000 employees work
at the Department of Veteran Affairs
which is the next biggest after the actual military.
They literally do manage the health care
of the veterans. So unlike
Department of Health and Human Services,
which pays a bunch of private people to do all the health care.
Department of Veteran Affairs literally is taking care of 9 million veterans.
So that all falls apart immediately.
So good call there.
That's one that's extremely untenable to cut.
Department of State,
this means that the entire rest of the world can't interface with the United States whatsoever.
We have no more diplomats.
We have no more embassies.
You can't get a visa into the country.
You can't get a passport.
But good news.
We don't have a military anyway based on your guys's budget.
So it's not like we could do anything.
Anyways, Department of State is gone.
So, ladies gentlemen, that leaves you with a pretty,
oh, you got the interior.
We got the interior.
We got transportation.
Treasury.
Veterans Affairs.
And oh boy, oh boy, the Department of Commerce.
And I also funded Snap with tariffs.
This is a pretty damn good.
So this is not bad.
That's a hell of a government right there.
Not a lot of safety, but a lot of ability to fly to farms.
And they don't know if we have nukes or not.
I want to, I want to touch on something.
I think we should show the graphic.
on screen, you know, for audio
listeners, this is tough to summarize because
it's a lot of departments and a lot of numbers.
But I,
the actual number of
employees, uh, or federal
employees through each of these
agencies, the number that are expected
to be furloughed and then,
uh, the, I think just the percentage.
That's the percentage of the employees that are kept on to
continue operating them. And, uh,
my, my initial question when we were talking about
this episode was when you choose to keep funding a bunch of portions of these agencies,
how is that actually paid for?
Is it just your, the government is shut down until a new budget resolution is passed?
And then all of that back pay for the employees during the previous time period needs to
be supplied anyway.
So you're essentially agreeing, you're making a decision that no matter what the budget is going
forward, all of the people that are continued to be asked to work are going to be paid
somehow in the future once we have agreed on a budget resolution. Is that how it works?
I mean, that's what I thought, but what we find out today is that based on that 2019 law,
everyone's getting paid. Yeah, which doesn't, it feels like it doesn't make any sense.
It's actually, it kind of shakes up my whole understanding of how shutdowns work in that we are
not saving any money in this shutdown. We're not saving any money, but we're not doing anything.
Yeah, we're just doing less.
The people of the United States are just getting less services as two parties fight.
And quick for audio listeners, let's just kind of go through.
So Treasury, so we did this exercise that's oversimplified.
But in the real world, this is what's happening.
There's all these departments.
And to call out some of them, the Treasury, they are furlowing almost no people.
So the Treasury, they're just continuing to fund.
Veterans Affairs continue to fund.
They really wanted Homeland Security.
That one stayed around, apparently.
Same with justice.
But then on the other side, they almost fully cut education, almost fully cut
Environmental Protection Agency, which is sort of different than this.
Commerce is out, labor is out, housing and urban development is out.
So kind of on a high level, you guys roughly matched along with what the government is doing,
which is saying, look, of all these departments we have to manage, like, we're going to
mostly leave this one's intact, and these are just going to be left to the wayside.
While having to pay them back to the future anyway.
That's so wild to me.
Yeah, I don't know how it's going to play out.
I mean, so yeah.
Can you imagine being, because the.
The Department of Education is one of the ones
where most of the people are being furloughed, right?
Yeah.
So in this scenario where the back pay is owed,
imagine being one of the 10% of people
of the Department of Education
who has to keep working.
I don't want the vacation.
You're doing extra work, no extra pay,
and everyone that got the vacation is getting paid.
Maybe.
Well, why don't we use this as a transition point
to talk about what both sides of the aisle are doing
on this and what they're leveraging?
Yeah, that's a good question.
Because one of the things that Trump has been saying,
The idea is that, you know, you furlough people, they aren't showing up to work because you don't know whether the government.
Congress hasn't decided how much money we're going to spend over the next year.
That is fundamentally what's going on.
So we're not going to spend the money yet until we know that the money has been by law allocated.
So the furlowing is happening to say some people we just have, they need to show up to work.
We're requiring it.
Other people, we're going to pay you back later.
And what Trump is doing as part of this is saying, I'm going to have to lay off a bunch of people.
but that seems like something he wants.
Like this is basically an excuse.
It's like a threat to help push these negotiations.
You feel like it's more of a threat?
My sense is that because that's not necessary,
like he doesn't have to do that
because they aren't being paid right now,
regardless of the furlough thing.
It's not costing the money right now.
It would just be like,
this is a chance to shrink the government,
is my take on it.
Maybe.
I mean, it sounds like they are being paid.
There's like 400, I mean,
this makes sense to what I heard.
There's like $400 to $500 million a day
of back pay of money.
accruing. Right. That is like owed. But it's what you just said, specifically the layoffs.
Like he keeps talking about, I'm going to have to start laying off a bunch of people. And that
would be a substantial departure from what normally happens in a shutdown. So there's like this
whole political game unfolding around this right now. So earlier in the year, there was a similar
opportunity for the Democrats in Congress to not pass a budget resolution in order with the opportunity
to shut down the government by doing so. Right. And they, a lot of the Democrats,
at the time wanted to do that to slow the Trump administration and the Republicans in power.
But there was disagreements as to whether or not this was the right timing to do so.
Because if you don't, because this was early on in the year, if you don't allow Trump's admin to sort of unfold,
then they have an easy blame during a shutdown of, see, we can't even take any action because the Democrat,
and the Democrats are more likely to become the center of.
of blame for that. But now we're far enough in the year where so much of what Trump has done
is polling so poorly with the Republican support behind him, the Democrats now feel like it's their
opportunity to take a stand. And I think there's this view of the party being very wishy-washy
and having no backbone, and this is their opportunity to do something substantial and fight back.
And it's one of the few pieces of leverage that the Democrats actually have, which is not
passing this.
And they have three stipulations as to why they're saying they're withholding their
approval of like the budget stopgap that they they vote on.
So the three things are one, they want ACA or sorry, they want affordable care act subsidies
that are set to expire at the end of this year to be extended or made permanent.
at the end of this year, there's a bunch of,
there's a bunch of affordable care act subsidies
that were approved a long time ago
that allow people to enter the market
when they're purchasing healthcare for themselves
through the Affordable Care Act.
And this is not Medicare or Medicaid.
And it's the way that a ton of people,
about 22 million people,
access affordable health insurance in the country right now.
And through the expiration of these subsidies,
people's premiums are expected.
to jump a ton with an average of a hundred and fourteen percent increase hugely dependent on your
level of income so if you're lower income and you're buying subsidized ACA healthcare you're looking at
maybe you're jumping from literally paying nothing to something like 35 to 65 dollars a month
which is still a big increase if you're not making a lot of money but if your middle income
like say you're making like 65 thousand dollars a year right and you purchase your health
through the ACA, you're looking at a huge increase in your premiums over the course of the
year, maybe a 10 to 20K increase in healthcare premiums to maintain the same plan that you are on
now. And the Democrats are saying, we cannot allow these subsidies to expire. You need to continue
to fund them and make them permanent. That's the first stipulation. You look like you wanted to hop
in. No. I have a quick thing. It's these subsidies were not that long ago. They were, they were
enacted in 2021 during COVID. And so during that point, Biden and Democrats had Congress and everything,
and they said, we need to expand basically the support we're giving to people through the ACA because
COVID is causing all these issues. And then they extended it through 2025. It was initially just
supposed to be two years. So it was meant to be temporary. Then the next year, they extended it to
2025 and said, we still need lots of support for people. So it's supposed to end now. In theory,
that was started as a COVID era, like help people during this pandemic.
and now Democrats are saying
this should just be permanent
and that's the contest.
And then for the second stipulation,
they want to reverse the cuts to Medicaid
that came in the big beautiful bill
which we've already talked about
on the show before,
but Medicaid saw a bunch of cuts through
making it more difficult
to be eligible or prove your eligibility
and saving money that way
and the Democrats want this reversed.
And then the third thing is a commitment
from the White House
or the executive branch,
to no longer make unilateral decisions
on pulling funding from agencies
that was approved by Congress in the past.
That's like Trump's favorite thing.
It's one of the favorite things right now, right?
But their thing with this is,
there's a general idea that this level of oversight
or changing of funding to agencies made,
like I'll say years ago,
funding to these agencies decided in a budget bill is decided by Congress. Now, during this administration,
the executive branch has made a lot of executive orders or decisions to defund or freeze funding
for things related to these agencies. And Congress has a problem with this, even some Republicans,
because it's like, these are decisions that we debated and voted on and passed, and now you are
unilaterally making decisions about how that funding should be allowed to continue when we already
did this the correct way through Congress before. Also, if you continue to do this, any new
agreement we come to about budgets means essentially nothing if you can just hand-wave anything off
as the executive and make a unilateral decision about changing it in the future. So there
needs to be some sort of change or commitment for that that will no longer be the case.
These are the three things that Democrats are seeking right now.
You know, why, while that sounds like a good idea, why is that part of the budget? Why is that part of the
budget?
I think it's not necessarily a part of the budget.
This is the only piece of leverage.
This is the first substantial piece of leverage that Democrats have right now that they
can use to push Republicans around.
It is a political move.
I think there is sort of a public facing argument from Democrats that I've seen that this
is very focused on health care and they've picked health care to stand their ground on
because they feel like it's the one issue they really can win.
on against Republicans right now.
But overall, they're looking for any opportunity for a political win in a climate that has
basically the most discussed or dislike of Democrats, even though, you know, even if Trump's
approval ratings are low, the Democratic Party's approval ratings are ridiculously low.
I think they're even lower than Trump's.
And from a Republican perspective, the pushback here or what they're looking for,
first they the big thing that they're holding in contention is like if you do this we're going to lay a bunch of people off a bunch of people are going to lose their jobs permanently and that's the stick they can wave in return and like really blame Democrats because they're making an effort to blame the shutdown on Democrats right now like yeah quick funny thing about that Trump has already announced that the officials in charge of layoffs have been deemed essential they still got to
their jobs.
They're showing up to work.
Well, how can you lay the people off
if the guy's laying the people off?
You need the layoff guys.
You need to fund the layoff guys.
You need to fund the layoff guys.
And then there's even
an argument here that Republicans
are quietly happy for the shutdown
occurring because they want
better ground to stand on
for these layoffs to happen anyway.
Trump, from the executive position,
wants to cut more federal jobs in general.
but doesn't feel like he has the public confidence or goodwill
to continue making these cuts.
But this is a situation that may allow them to do it
basically without the same pushback that they would get otherwise.
But I think that's up for contention
because a lot of Republicans are flat out saying
that it's bad that the government is shut down
and we didn't want this and they were fighting back
against the Democrats to have it up and running again.
And then the last point, or one more point I saw about this
were the Republicans are pointing out
that when they were in the minority under Biden,
they never said no to one of these stopgap bills,
stopgap funding bills during the previous Democratic administration.
They're like, even when we hated Biden,
we weren't doing what you're doing right now.
And this feels unprecedented,
or we didn't do this to you guys,
at least in this exact type of budgeting situation,
And if you look back, like the most recent shutdown
before this was in 2018.
Yeah.
And the Democratic argument on the other side is
these times and the decisions that this executive
is making are so unprecedented
that this action is absolutely necessary
to take at this time.
And I think if you go further back,
you can also make the argument that Republicans
have caused different shutdowns in different scenarios.
So there's an argument to be made there as well.
And then the very last thing,
was another item of, well, these health care programs were funding, were being abused by
illegal immigrants, which is sort of the headline version of the Republican argument of why these
programs are like wasteful or shouldn't have been, shouldn't have existed in these facets in the
first place. I've spent some time looking this up. This is complicated, but the headline is
very misleading.
There's a very,
very long-winded explanation
of there's
the way money is like given
out to states and then used
people who are like illegal
or like undocumented could
be using programs.
But the vast
majority and what they're really
saying is
most people who are here
through some legal protection
like say you're here through
like asylum or some other case that protects your legal status in the country, even though you're
not, like, maybe you're not on like a visa or a green card or something like that. You have some
legal status in the country. This administration's aggressive policies and views towards those
types of people that are often getting deported or no longer have that protection. Those were the people
who had access to these programs in the past. Because if you're flat out like illegal, quote,
quote, or just undocumented, then you weren't supposed to have access to any of these programs
in the first place that are the healthcare programs in question. But they're available to people
who had legal or protected status through different programs that the Trump administration no
longer respects. So this is a very large distortion of the abuse of these systems that Republicans
are claiming exists. That's what I could find. I can't, you know, I read something,
much more long-winded than that,
and I'd encourage you to read more about it.
But to me,
this headline is a very dishonest read
of the way these programs are being used.
And we've, I think to end this,
these programs saved money,
like the Medicaid cuts saved money
primarily by making it difficult
for eligible people to access the program.
They were like,
you're just making it hard,
for people that would get on
who have a legal right to be on it
and you're just making it
giving more friction to those people having access to it.
So that's the political game that's unfolding.
Yeah, you know,
I think what's interesting here
is not so much the specific programs
they're fighting about,
but that they both no longer feel
that there is any incentive to cooperate.
I think they both have a political,
I mean, they're both already polling,
Congress as a whole is polling so poorly,
both parties.
And they can't even go much,
this is one of the argument that I saw.
Like, they can't even go much lower.
And Democrats have no power outside of this.
They don't have anything in the House or the Senate
or the judiciary or the presidency.
They have nothing.
So this is kind of their last lever.
And so for them,
I think the party split 50,
50 on whether or not they should negotiate, but like it's a way higher percent than it's ever
been. And they, they risk so much by looking weak than they would by not negotiating here.
I mean, I think they're trying to negotiate in some way.
And then Republican side, there's no advantage for them to give in either.
They can get some things they may want about cutting.
And also, it gives them kind of a scapegoat, which is as the government is being more, the
pulling of government is going down, people are getting more or more upset.
this gives you a sort of a little bit of an out.
You can be like, hey, we're trying to do stuff.
This is like slowing us down and getting it off our mission
that was going to go great.
So I just don't see either side having a real incentive to switch,
which makes me think, you know, knock on wood,
this could change by tomorrow.
But it seems like this is going to be a longer shutdown
than we've seen normally,
but longer than the average one.
I don't know if it'll make it to 30 days.
I don't, maybe not.
But I don't see what the breaking point is
because people are upset,
but they're not any more or less upset
at the other party or this party than they were before.
People are just generally rising in anger.
I don't know.
That's the vibe again.
I wonder if you have a different thought on it.
Or there's...
I think so.
I mean, one of the big things, so again, you know,
Democrats are using this as what you said,
is basically the final lever.
Like, they're not in control of Congress at all.
They don't have Supreme Court.
They don't have the presidency.
And they're just being like outmaneuvered constantly.
And then the big beautiful bill,
which you talked about earlier this year,
they did a reconciliation bill,
which basically allowed that to be passed
without 60% of the Senate.
So they got in the,
these like massive cuts.
And so the Republicans have just done what they wanted,
asterisk for this whole time.
And it feels to me like if the Democratic Party doesn't hold here and they give in,
they're like,
all right,
fine,
you can cut all the Medicaid.
We're not going to stand up for this.
Like,
they're real fucks.
Like that's,
that's the last bastion of like we have some kind of influence.
And given that they're polling and everything is so low already,
it feels like they are not going to give in here because it's going to be like
somewhat existential to their party.
I think there's a very,
very pervasive idea.
I would say fairly so that the Democrats are basically a bunch of soy cucks with no backbone.
Like to say it politely.
And I think the party has come around and recognized the fact that people view them in this sort of like sad,
you never fight back and do anything sort of way.
And they need to do something substantial in order to come across.
And this is their gamble, right?
It might not pay off.
I don't know if people come out of this 30 days from now applauding the Democratic Party.
maybe they will
maybe they won't
but I think they're
part of the reason
why the approval rating is so low
is well Republicans
they don't like the Democrats
obviously
but I feel like most Democrats
or most left-leaning people
in general
do not like the Democrats
like the
have you seen the
the Chuck Schumer quote
during this thing
about the letter
have you seen this?
No it's like him talking to the news
and they're asking him to shut down
and he goes like
yeah so I sent Trump a strongly word
letter. And he realizes what he's saying sounds so fucking ineffectual. So in the middle of his
sentence, he's like, well, we're not a letter. I demand it. You can see him recognize the talking
points they're trying. Like you can see that people who for their entire career in politics,
their 70 year career in politics have been this very like kind of sterile like both sides.
We are now trying to be a Trump-esque figure and just failing badly.
Chuck Schumer trying to be like, hello, fellow kids. It's so bad.
Maybe it's just since they got to do something.
My outlook is similar to yours.
I came in this one kind of feeling,
oh, this might be the longest one we ever have.
And we did this whole exercise of, you know,
which ones would we save?
And, you know, within the realm of let's keep this four weeks
or under within the expectation of past shutdowns.
But I think this one feels like it can go longer.
And then the pain, I imagine that it's felt
when you extend this to maybe more than a month,
two months, three months.
I don't know how long it could be.
be just having this many people who are on federal payroll,
not having access to a paycheck for that long,
people will be upset.
They will demand attention to this in some facet
that people have to be held accountable to some degree.
If you start walking with enough people's paychecks
in that you just take them away,
there's no, that's when people will be the most upset.
So that's what I read.
I read that around the 30 day marks,
is when it becomes a real big fucking deal,
because that's when paychecks would normally,
I think your monthly paycheck would normally arrive.
And when that doesn't get there,
shit starts becoming unable to get paid.
So there was an interesting thing that happened during the last one
because it was the first one that surpassed 30 days.
A theory or a feeling that one of the reasons they finally had to cave
and make a decision was the air traffic controllers.
Because although they were supposed to be coming into work,
and I think this has already happened
at Burbank Airport,
people just started taking their sick leave.
And they're like, I'm not going into work.
Like I,
for anybody who doesn't know,
air traffic controller is a famously stressful job.
You work insane hours.
Extremely stressful job.
And people,
and if you're not getting paid
for such a long period of time,
people just start calling in their sick days
or not showing up and saying,
basically,
you know,
you see a spike in sick days all of a sudden.
They're soft quitting.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
enough air traffic controllers choosing not to show up during the last shutdown was like one of the last big things that happened before they finally caved and like made a decision together to get the budget through.
And I think, yeah, again, because air traffic controllers have mortgages to pay to.
If their paycheck doesn't arrive, their life starts to get spiraling unwind.
So that's where I think this gets, I mean, listen, I think both sides are getting.
more negative polling from this.
It is not positive from any American, I think,
on the ineffectiveness of government,
but it's going to come down to who feels like
they're getting the worst PR deal
that is going to have to cave.
I did have this thought when I was going over it
of, I think I agree with the Democrats
taking this stand and making this decision.
Like from a political strategy perspective,
I do think it is better for them to do this than nothing,
but then I thought about how, dude, if I'm not a person who like reads the news and listens to the news every day,
and I'm not in tune like with what's going on to some degree,
and also I'm in the privileged position of having like a financial position that isn't affected by this at all.
Like if I was just a normal person who wasn't tapped in, then I would be, I would not be applauding the Democrats here either.
I would just be like the government shut down, fucking figure it out.
Like I would just be that.
I think that's what most people are saying
in general, even if they have a side.
I think, you know, I understand
the fight for the ACA subsidies.
I get it and I think this is a fine spot
to take a stand.
I get the strategy.
But I overall feel like,
fuck!
I feel like I get so frustrated.
Because like, well, I think the fear of the,
this is a big thing.
The ACA subsidies are probably the most substantial thing
that people could see change
in their daily financial life, right?
Yeah.
So if I'm one of these people
that sees a giant increase
in my premiums for my health care, right?
These subsidies don't expire until later this year still.
You have yet to feel the effect of those expirations happening.
So you, from a democratic strategy perspective,
you're like gambling on these people's understanding
that their health care premiums would have gone up in the future
but never actually did.
You need to like, you need,
that needs to be so valuable to people.
And some people, that's what I mean by tap in though, right?
Like if you're not paying attention,
if you're just not paying attention to this at all
and you just pay your health care every month
and the subsidy is part of what keeps it low,
but you don't give a shit about politics.
And it never actually goes up
because this whole situation plays out.
What part of it makes you reward the Democrats for that?
No, but if you don't give a show of politics,
you probably haven't even felt the effects of this yet.
You probably, the strutdown hasn't trickled into your life.
No, but that's what I mean.
is like just statically, your opinion of the Democrats is pretty low.
And because none of this is affecting you yet, including the subsidies going away,
if it all ends and the subsidies continue,
nothing about your opinion of the Democrats has really changed if you're that person.
Do you see what I'm saying?
So let me rephrase that.
They need to wait for those people to feel the pain and the Democrats come in to rescue them
and reinstate their benefits.
Yeah.
But if that doesn't, if there's never a period where it's actually lost,
everybody will keep living their lives and go, why the fuck was it shut down?
Exactly, exactly.
There's a world where the stronger strategy for Democrats is actually wait until the end of the year.
People lose their health care coverage or subsidies, and then Democrats are like, we are arguing to, and you could actually do that because you can do a continuing resolution, which means the government is funded at previous levels for, let's say, three months.
You get through the year and then you be like, then the Democrats can go, hey, all of you people on these subsidies, if you don't help us and we don't get this through, you are screwed.
You will feel it right now.
I don't know if that's, you know,
ethically the correct choice or even strategically the correct choice.
It was just one thing I saw is like this feels like a hole where the value you say you're
bringing here,
most people might not even recognize.
Yeah,
the average person is not going to fucking know what any of this is going on this.
I think Marjorie Taylor Green even is flipping.
She's flipping her vote.
She's flipping to be on the Democratic side for this because of these subs.
She has two kids,
she says that are on this health insurance that are going to have their premiums triple.
And she, like,
And she's like deep, I think people are aware of this.
I don't think it's completely unknowledgeable.
And I also think if you're someone who doesn't pay attention to any of this
and not affected by health care,
once this catches up with you,
once some kind of guard,
you can't go to a national park or the lines of the airport or too long
or whatever this catches up to you.
You generally overall are going to,
I mean, if you listen to the messaging,
you'd be like,
maybe I blame the Democrats,
maybe I'm Republicans.
But at the end of the day,
you also go, I am tired of the chaos.
You end up blaming the administration overall.
just because I don't care whose fault it is.
Like it's you have the power and we're not,
which is a larger,
I think they're being hurt just as much.
Highly edited anecdote here,
but a cut of like street interviewer in the city
asking people who they blamed on the shutdown.
I don't know what city it is.
That shapes the opinion, of course.
But I do think there's a general opinion here
of people know that the Republicans
have control of everything on paper.
You're the guy in the office,
you have the Supreme Court,
and you have controlling,
Congress and the government shut down, fucking figure it out Republicans.
Like, I do think there's a feeling of that, for sure.
And so that's what I'm saying.
I think this is still politically somewhat strong for the day.
Like, I think they both can play it.
And that's why it's, that's why I think it's so long.
I bet you guys, $5.
That it ends when the Republicans agree to the Medicare things, but with a bunch of
stipulations that describe how illegal.
immigrants absolutely cannot qualify, even though that has no real impact.
That's not what's going on, but that allows them to claim.
We have solved the problem and we made sure the Democrats wouldn't give it to the legal.
That's a great prediction.
That is like, because they've, that's the building.
Both sides get some kind of W.
Which is funny, because to be clear, Democrats would be getting the entire W, but Republicans
would get the like visual double.
You know all those illegal immigrants who are on health care?
They're gone now.
And it's like, yeah, they are.
They are.
Yeah.
That's a lot of money to bet.
That's last one's terror for any of day.
Quick, quick final thing.
Number of days before the shutdown ends.
Go.
Oh, this is good.
Fun fact.
When we recorded a second test episode,
Doug and A-Trak both thought the Ukraine war would be over by now.
No, not just by now, by March.
By fucking February.
I thought day one.
He promised me.
I don't get it.
He did say day one.
Why doesn't he furlough Putin?
I'm saying 33 days.
Unironically, I think 30 days.
33 days. It'd be so fine.
Price and right rules, 34.
Okay. I think Trump's going to make a big deal about how it's not the longest shutdown ever,
and he's going to say we need to end it before that.
It's all optics.
I'll go now, see, I kind of want to go in that pocket too, but now I'll go high.
I'll be the high guy.
I bet it will be a historic 45 days.
Damn.
I got a nice window here.
Close without going over.
I think I have the best window, to be clear.
I was going to go like 31, but then you said 33.
Speaking of illegal immigrants.
Don't look at me.
Braider.
Braider.
Yeah, wait, wait, we were talking H-1Bs.
There's another big...
Oh, yeah, I wanted to talk about H-1B visas.
No, I actually...
There was an obvious softball to you.
No, that was a really good softball,
and I'm just, I'm tired.
Also, it doesn't make sense.
They're not illegal.
They're also...
They're nothing illegal about it.
I wanted to talk about H-1B visas,
which is something that people
might know changed recently.
I've been wanting to talk about this for a while.
I've heard that illegal aliens are getting H-1Bs.
They're signing up for them in droves.
That's what I've heard.
And this actually makes them legal.
This is a way that illegal...
No, no, that's the illegal H-1B visas.
That's what it's all about here.
I heard Mogul Mooghs been firing hardworking American workers.
You keep talking about what we do at Mogul Mooghs.
And I don't like that.
H-1Bs.
Because it's like I tell you these things in confidence
and then you come on the podcast.
I need content.
So I like to tell your secrets to the world.
Right.
Can you bleep out what you said earlier?
Just put some of the words randomly.
Okay, for people who don't know what H-1Bs are,
these are visas for, quote,
specialty occupations.
Basically, jobs that require a bachelor's degree or hire
in a specific specialty.
Like, your degree has to be attached to what you do.
Easy example.
You get a job as a soft,
software engineer at a big tech company, and you have a bachelor's in computer science. And this is the
type of visa that you would need to move and work in the U.S. from another country. And, you know,
other common jobs that might use this. It could be an accountant. It could be a doctor. Unlike,
it wouldn't be somebody who is like a cab driver or like cleaning staff or someone like that.
There was a big change.
Trump recently announced that they raised the application fee for this visa from a peak of $5,000 to $100,000.
100 racks, baby.
Insane.
Yeah, big deal.
I mean, there's a lot of turmoil around H-1Bs.
People, I think rightly in some cases, have felt that they are being undercut on their wages by H-1B workers.
And then H-1B workers have often felt the system keeps them tied to a single employer trapped
in that job and unable to negotiate for better wages.
So it's like a weird double bad situation.
Yeah.
The way this works is you enter basically a lottery for the chance of actually applying for the H-1B.
And there is a limit on how many of these visas can be issued per year.
I think it's like 65,000 a year to people with bachelor's degrees,
and then another 20,000-ish set aside for master's degrees and higher, specifically.
And the main...
What's crazy is there's a lot of gaming of that system.
I don't know if you know.
I looked into the H-1Bs a while back.
So let's say Google, you want to hire a software engineer from India or something.
China.
So what you'll do is you will...
First of all, submit as many possible entries in the lottery as you can.
So even if you, you know, submit more than you need so that whenever you get, you can apply.
But then also you will hire like a staffing firm that is also basically their main job is to constantly submit thousands of entries into this lottery.
Yes.
And then once they get their share of like 50 or 60 or whatever, then you can hire through that staffing firm.
So it's like it's like a numbers game and a money game where the biggest companies can overwhelmingly use loop.
polls to get as much of the lottery H-1Bs as they can.
And historically, the intention behind this is to take some specialty area in America
and that's underserved by America's labor market and get people to fill those roles.
And that's the good intention behind it.
It's like, oh, we don't have enough people that specialize in this type of work.
Please let's get them here so that our companies can grow and get talent that they need
to be successful.
H1Bs like underpin most software big tech companies.
It's an incredible.
Many H1B visas and often the smartest people in the given room are H1B visa holders.
So the change to 100K aside, up until now, the issues with these that I see is if you're on this visa, right, you can only work for the company or the job that sponsored your application.
So if I get a job at Google with my H1B, I can't just freely go see.
seek a job elsewhere. I also need Google or whoever my employer is to sponsor my green card,
which is my permanent residency in the United States, if I want to seek that out after a few
years of living here. I think it's five. And your H-1B is good for three years, but you need to
keep that job with that company. The issue is that you as the employee, you don't have a lot of
flexibility to go freely, like, negotiate and seek out other offers, right? And relative to the
field of jobs you could be getting elsewhere in the U.S., you might be underpaid because the friction
to you go to freely go seek other work is so high. And the company also doesn't have a ton of
incentive to sponsor your green card because as soon as you're issued the green card or permanent
residency, you can leave freely and not worry about them being the holder of your H-1B anymore.
So that's on the worker side, one of the prospective issues of these visas to begin with. And then on the
other side, while the intention is to fill, you know, underserved markets within the U.S.
labor market, uh, as these jobs or markets like kind of ebb and flow in certain spaces,
right? So in a sector like tech right now, tech in the last few years has been downsizing.
We're out of the period where people are hiring a ridiculous amount of people into,
into tech workplaces, right? So there's an incentive to, uh, lay off.
of like higher cost or like higher salary,
local American like salaries at the expense of maintaining
or continuing to hire H-1Bs at lower salaries.
And in general, from what I could see,
there is a historic,
H-1Bs have historically been used like correctly.
They seem, they seem appropriately used
and have like, like, studied, not out-competed,
like local labor markets in the U.S.
I think I would disagree.
Like, I did some research on it and I found a lot.
I mean, I guess I got on the stats.
Maybe I don't have a hard stat.
But I saw a lot of examples of, especially like an accounting,
Disney fired their entire accounting department,
replaced it with H1Bs.
Like there's, I've seen multiple big companies lay off a lot of people to replace it.
And the only point is the lower labor cost.
It's not like, so I don't know.
The loose idea that I got here is that this system has been potentially,
increasingly abused as time has passed.
Yes, the meta gets figured out.
Yeah, and especially as, so if we were to use tech as an example, right,
when tech started exploding in the U.S., the number of available positions,
or like the talent demanded greatly exceeded the amount of people in the U.S.
that were even educated to do those jobs, right?
But then we have this whole reaction internally to pushing software engineering,
computer science degrees, coding boot camps.
There's a whole industrial reaction within the U.S.
to educate and push people towards this exploding field, right?
But then over time, the explosion in that field
levels out or maybe even turns in the opposite direction.
And now all of a sudden you do have all this American labor
that is educated and able to do those jobs,
but can still be laid off at the expense of hiring those H-1B employees, right?
Yeah.
So it depends at like what stage and like the cycle or like what level your,
your business is at or how many of these like lottery spots you're able to get or
gain.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
All villain chair.
I don't hate immigrants actually.
So I think they.
I was just about to say,
I was just saying I'm strongly pro immigration.
I just think the H1B system specifically is like rife with abuse.
It is a, it is just a way to have undue leverage over a worker from a different region who you
can then pay less than the local going rate in America.
No, I think the core problem with this is that everybody loses, basically, right?
Like if, I think the-
No, the companies benefit, to be clear.
The companies are extremely-
All the normal people are-touted people.
Losing people.
Right, you get talented people for less money and they can't leave
and they have no negotiating leverage.
It's great for-if-you-R-M-Rexor-M-Gor-B.
Yeah, I think a good change to this would be
if H-1B holders could basically freely seek other employment
or freely seek other related employment while they were.
Yeah, there's like two things, right?
There's the 01 visa which is like a super talented person
who's really good at their job.
They can get an 01 visa, which has more flexibility.
That's the streamer reason.
And that's what some of the street.
That's what Linkus has.
And that's become more and more chosen as the route to go.
People have gotten way better.
There's like systems now where you can,
they'll have the right thing and figure it out
and we'll help you get an 01 visa.
That's been happening for top tier tech talent
who don't want to be locked into the age.
1B system. So that's happening. And I think an expansion of that and a better funding of that and a
better understanding that to get more people. If people really are talented, we want to come to America,
you should be our number one priority to get them to be a little worker. So I agree with that.
And the second thing is this idea somewhat on its face makes sense, which is the idea that like,
if there's a hundred thousand fee, then you're only going to get truly down to people for your H1B.
You're not going to get someone who you can just underpay. You're not going to get an accountant.
You can pay 45K instead of 60K from, you know, a different country. That's the plan.
That's the idea.
I get the idea in theory.
However, in practice, this law has a carve out,
which is the White House can waive your application fee at any time.
So in practice, what it means is everyone has to go through Trump.
Every big company now has to go through Trump
to get their H-1Bs at a discounted rate,
not to pay 100K per.
And, you know, what happened when this rolled out
is they said it was 100K retroactively.
So every company was freaking the fuck out.
Oh.
And they were saying to all their H-1B employees,
employees do not fly in.
Like, stay over there.
We'll figure this out.
Don't.
So there's a lot of chaos and panic.
And then Caroline Levitt came out and said, no, no, no, we didn't mean retroact.
We meant like starting now for the future, which was a back pedal.
And now, but they're saying with a carve out through the White House.
So that like most things that this administration does, even if there's a kernel of something
that they're attacking, the execution is either grifty or chaotic.
And in this case, both.
So there's the chaos and then into the part where.
requires you to go through him.
Well, it seems like the big pain points
that I can see from this is,
with that being said, right?
If you're Amazon or Google,
you're one of these companies
that was kind of seen kissing the ring
and the buildup to the election anyway.
You might have the relationships
with the White House
to go forward and negotiate that fee down
for your company, right?
But places that will be hit in different ways,
like a huge source of healthcare labor
is H-1Bs,
like for nurses or doctors,
or doctors.
And this is areas where we're like famously understaffed,
where we're still hiring in a job market that's terrible,
right?
The one sector of the economy that's still hiring and looking for people.
And if you work at like a smaller healthcare institution,
like a smaller like local hospital or a smaller network within health care,
you might not have the leverage or the connections to negotiate those application
fees down or even talk about.
those application fees being lower.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, I think that's the problem.
It's a two-tier system where those with connections and those that kiss the ring
and those that have something to offer, the White House,
can get better deals on labor now, which is, again, crazy.
I want to add one more crazy thing that I didn't know.
I didn't hear at all about this until I read more.
And so about 70% of H-1Bs issued are to people from India.
And when this announcement was made, there was no significant change in the American stock market,
but there was a big shift in the Indian stock market in reaction to this message, which was wild.
And I think because so many people, like Indian diaspora that are in,
the US, like if you get one of these jobs, right,
and you have this visa, it's, you know,
part of the reason why you are getting this job
is even relatively the American market
if your salary's low, right?
It's probably much higher than what you were earning back home.
And you send money back home to your family
and that helps, you know, stimulate local economy
or local business in like wherever your family lives in India,
inadvertently, you know, being attached to like Indian, Indian companies.
And there was a reaction in the Indian stock market
to this change being announced.
And I thought that was, that was pretty wild.
There's huge companies that have made a business,
I forget the names, but these IT companies
where their whole thing is basically.
And yeah,
I know that we're talking about it.
It's an H1B.
It's so perverse onto how this whole idea is supposed to be,
which is they're basically just,
they apply for as many H1Bs as possible.
They just try to get as many as they can.
It's almost entirely Indian workers.
And then they are then just offload that
to major tech companies for a fee.
It's a fucking racket.
It's terrible.
So, you know, again, I'm super, super pro, you know, positive, skilled fair immigration, but I do agree to H1.
I mean, you know, the big counter argument is, is what you already addressed, which is like,
we need super talented people to keep winning as a country.
That's like the, that's the foundation of America, right, is getting the best and brightest
people to come to America and build it.
And then particularly with all the fervor around robotics, AI, et cetera, it's like,
AI is shockingly high leverage if you're a really.
brilliant person, right? If you're like one of the smartest people, it's like that person can have
such an outsized impact. So you want them here really bad. It's 74% India, 11% China and then 1%
Canada. I know. Isn't it a crazy? It's just basically India and then a little bit China.
Yeah. Yeah. Again, the percentage of these visas every, these H-1B visas every year that go to the
largest tech companies plus two gigantic Indian staffing firms is like,
I want to say it's like 80.
It's like I saw the stat and it was it was shocking.
Oh, you can see your Amazon, Tata Consultancy, Microsoft meta, Apple, Google, Cognizant, JPMorgan, Walmart, and Deloitte.
And like these combined are like all the H-1Bs.
They're pulling almost all of them.
And then Tata Consultancy gets a massive number of the H-1Bs.
And then they sell subsidiary like accounting services to like all these different companies in America that can then just sell lay off their entire accounting departments.
So it's just the way it's being here.
used is like systematically just undercutting wage pressure in America.
You know, it, yeah, there's no benefit.
Except for the companies.
Can I talk about, I want to, that one kind of tangential immigration thing related to this is,
so a bunch of people obviously do get green cards eventually, right?
Like, eventually.
Not everybody does, but, and once you have your green card, you could apply for citizenship.
but when you have your green card,
there's a quota system
on how many people from different countries
can become citizens off of their green card.
And these quotas don't scale
with rates of immigration or population of countries.
So obviously, like, if you're from Denmark,
like you'll be on your green card,
I think it's five years.
Or maybe you need five years to get your green card
and then I think you can apply for your citizenship
like right after that or something.
But if you're from Denmark,
we don't have enough Danish immigrants
coming to the U.S. to get anywhere near the quota.
So you can just apply and then become a citizen.
It's relatively quick as far as U.S. immigration stuff goes, right?
But as you can imagine, based on this number,
dude, people are on their green card from India
for like 15 to 20 years right now
because of where they are in the queue within that ladder.
Because we don't scale or scale or,
change it at all, which seems absolutely ridiculous to me. No, I just feels like a really broken,
underfunded corrupt system that has so many, like, abuses and loopholes for the biggest
corporations and not benefiting average Americans on immigration. The life is hard for the
immigrants coming out. I mean, maybe they're making more money than they'd make, but they're,
they're in a disadvantageous position at every step. They're like, yeah. I think you just have so
little negotiating power once you're at that company that employs you, right?
You can, you're, you know, you're putting in a spot where you probably feel obligated to work longer hours, do more to keep your job.
If you get fired, you lose where you live.
Exactly.
It's so, yeah, I mean, I have friends who have an H1B.
It's, it's, and what I would say is, um, dude, one of the pure proofs that, like, this is not being used in the way it's intended is that part of the law is that everyone who h1B is required to have made a job posting and try to find, they can't find, at this.
they have to prove they could not find a qualified American candidate for the role.
That's like part of the law on H-WM-B.
Yeah.
And so the way they get around this is so obviously fraudulent.
Like they have so many ways of like they'll only post it in the newspaper.
Yeah.
Like you have to require to mail in a letter with your resume.
Like it's like the ways they get around like contest law.
Like there's so many ways they do that so they can make sure that like no one can actually apply
except for the candidate they want to underpay.
This is another thing with like time passing in the system being abused
more.
Yeah.
It's like early on a lot of these,
like catchalls,
the way you're supposed to prove
that you couldn't have hired
an American in this person's place.
Yeah.
It's like these things started off
more honest and effective
at the beginning of this program.
Yeah.
But as time passes,
it becomes more and more distorting.
I feel like that about so many things
in government in general.
It's like,
it's like a video game meta.
It just gets,
people figure out how to,
how, whatever the law gets made,
it's like a countdown
until somebody figures out to abuse it.
And that's why you need wise leadership
that updates and then fucking,
Trump dropped a balance patch
except there's micro transactions
to go to the old version.
Dude, true.
It's paid a win.
It's paid a win.
It's paid a win.
And there's already a lottery system
involved.
So it's like you're already cracking.
You're already cracking packs,
dude.
Trying to get a five-star accounted.
Fucking InfoSysk gets approval
to keep doing this without the 100,000.
I mean,
yeah, that's crazy.
I mean, do you have a, do you guys have any more of those?
I think I said what I said.
Yeah, I stand by it.
I don't have anything else.
I wanted to move on to, do you want to talk about,
we have two AI topics we can end on.
AMD, open AI thing that just happened that you wanted to talk about,
or generative AI news that has also come out recently.
I would love to hear what Doug says,
because I'm going to form a clip on the other thing anyway tonight.
Oh, there you go.
All right.
So you linked me an article by the FT that I read,
which is about the AI music companies,
working on licensing with some of the big music publishers.
And this was very light on technical details,
which I found concerning.
But it was very much like the music companies are saying,
okay, during the internet era with Napster and LimeWire,
all this pirating, it was this huge thing.
The amount of share the music industry had in totality
dropped like 60, 70% as a result.
Like they just got cratered.
Right.
They got wiped out by the internet, never fully recovered.
And so they're like,
we understand that AI is a similar existential threat.
We got to get ahead of it.
So we are talking with licensing deals.
And the thing I saw one of the quotes is like,
we want it to be something like Spotify,
where every time an AI song is played,
if it utilizes our music,
then we would get a cut.
I mean, that makes sense, right?
Or similar to sampling music, right?
If you use a sample.
And the AI companies, at least in that article,
didn't comment on it in any way.
They're just apparently in communications.
So for this specifically, it's interesting because
generative AI in general.
It's not, some people,
People seem to think it's like you're sampling music. If you make an AI song, it's not like it picks five songs and combines them together. It has been trained off of millions or case of images, billions of pieces of data that it slowly trains on. And so when you ask it, go make me a cool EDM song. It's not going and saying, I'm going to get Justice's song and sample it. And I'm going to get Scrilex's song and sample it. It's similar to if you said, hey, the weekend, the artist. You just released a new album.
everybody you've ever taken inspiration from
and any music you've ever listened to in your life,
you need to give them a cut of the money
because that technically influenced how you made your new thing.
It's like, how on earth would you enforce that?
So it is interesting that the AI and audio industries
are talking about this because to me,
this doesn't feel tenable at all.
And at the other side,
I definitely want us to move to a world where if you create content
and that is used by an AI company to train their model
who then goes and makes things,
I think you should be compensated for that.
And that's the world we seem to be moving towards
with like the New York Times licensing,
Reddit licensing,
various other companies are saying,
hey, AI companies,
you can use our stuff if you pay us.
But at the same time,
the idea that the music industry is like,
yeah, we should get a little credit
every time somebody makes a song.
It's like, that doesn't make sense
because on the technical level,
that's not how it's working.
A model is being trained off
of millions and millions and millions of songs,
which turn into a math equation
that can sort of reverse
engineer what a song is.
True, but I mean, it's being trained off of the songs they own, right?
Those songs are being ripped without permission.
Yes.
And being trained on them.
You know, it's interesting.
I mean, it's a complex thing.
And this, this article made me think like,
music industry, you don't understand how AI works.
No, they didn't understand the internet either.
Right.
They're probably going to get screwed on this.
And they're confidently saying, we're not going to be left behind on this one.
We know it's a big deal.
And it's like, you don't sound like, one of the quotes is literally like,
if a song is played that uses our music, we should get credit.
That's literally every song.
Again, to train an AI model, you train it on all of the music that slowly tweaks a formula.
That would mean every single song in existence that it's been trained off of is used every time technically.
So it doesn't make sense.
I do agree.
It's a weird, intractable problem that applies to all of generative AI, and I don't see an easy solution to it.
And we're seeing this problem on a bigger scale.
We talked about the AI slot feed.
SORA launched, and they had an opt-out copyright law program, which basically
said, if you don't want us to steal your stuff and make Rick and Morty or whatever,
then you come and opt out, but we're going to do it otherwise, which is not how copyright
law works. Can you do that with crime? Like you can rob a bank, but they have to let you know.
All the banks in the area have to opt out from me robbing them.
Dude, you're covered. So they did that for one day, literally one day, until they got
10 billion legal calls. I mean, I think the W. W.W.E. was the one that led the most because
they were getting their stuff pirated or whatever. Yeah. And so Sam Altman backtracked. And now
everyone on the SORA Reddit or whatever is complaining because they're getting so many more
we can't make this because like you're trying to make anyway so that that's happening but you know
I mean I get what you're saying Doug in that it's training on everything but I've been scrolling
Sora to test it out like they're creating South Park episodes yeah yeah yeah have the voices and
and the drawings and then I heard like it was outputting the actual unchanged stranger thing
soundtrack like as it was yeah yeah so like there's clearly some yeah no it can't
And that's what makes this so complex and weird.
It's like, so let's say that you want to say if your AI uses our copyrighted content explicitly, like it.
And when I say use, it would recreate it.
But let's say it recreates SpongeBob or the Stranger Things soundtrack.
In that case, if it's clearly recognizable, let's say your company has to try to identify it in some way, we get credit.
And maybe you do that.
But then the question is, again, if I say make a song that is inspired by the weekend, that's not going to be the actual sample.
I think that's a much time.
And then again, this is how real human creatives work.
I'm inspired by people all the time.
I don't have to give them my YouTube revenue
because I was inspired by a cool hitman video you did it or something.
Which is in a real case.
Like I, like, you know, so it's a real case?
You're going to have to pay me.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, jokes on you.
It didn't work very well.
All right?
People didn't think it was that funny for GTA 5.
It's so, it's so challenging.
So that would be an easy one where you say,
hey, if the AI recreates a recognizable piece of copyrighted content, you have to pay. That's easy.
The much harder version is where it's Sponge Man instead of SpongeBob, and it looks similar, and it's a clearly inspired show.
And at that point, you know, what is the difference between inspiration and ripoff? That's so hard to find.
I think this is going to be such a, such a battle. Yes.
Like, everyone is gearing up. And like you said, I think what I've read too is they all, they have fresh pain from the
internet. They remember how they got screwed. Right. And so they're throwing every dollar, like all the
movie industries. They're, they're lawyering up. And then the AI companies have even more money,
substantially amount more money. They have billions. Yeah, they just make money appear by just saying the word
AI. And so that's an infinite money well. And so they're both just about to go crazy. I mean,
I don't know how it's going to play out. I'm definitely going to keep trying to follow it pretty
closely. And currently, I see no good solution. The most obvious thing is going to be the AI companies
pay a license to be able to train their models off of the library.
And that is already happening with a number of companies.
But there's, you know, as we've talked about it before in the past,
there's huge lawsuits right now that are going to be determining this
about whether a company can say,
I shouldn't have to pay you in the first place because it is transformative.
Also because right now, all the AI models,
the really good ones that everyone's are using,
are through a few, you know, mostly big,
mostly American companies that they can still negotiate with.
But once the tech gets more,
and everyone can run shit locally on a deep seek like,
like, you know,
a open source model.
China can and will make a model that does this exact same thing,
and you will not be able to stop it.
And you can run it locally and then make as much copyright as you run it,
and then put it on TikTok.
Like it doesn't,
it's going to be such a problem.
I don't really understand how to.
I don't.
Yeah, it's a wave coming for all these companies.
And I don't understand how to.
It kind of feels like there's no winning.
Like it for,
for those companies.
It's,
this is Sam Altman's blog, by the way.
It's,
it's,
Very funny.
It's worth a read.
It is him after one day of Sora.
Recognizing how this is not working how he planned.
It's first him saying, hey, rights holders, we're not going to do that opt-out thing.
That was mostly a goof.
And we're going to have a thing where we can share the revenue with you.
We're going to figure that.
We're working on it.
That's him realizing like there's legal pressure coming immediately.
The second thing is him saying like, hey, we really do have to make money on this, though.
People are making way more of these than we thought.
And most of them are not getting as many views as we thought, which is.
very funny because it's very expensive to make.
Like the GPU time to make a video.
And we thought about this from our first discussion.
Also funny because he said this exact same thing several times.
Yeah, like on every product launch,
which leads me to believe that and other people as well
that this is not an accident, that it wasn't like,
oh God, no, no, copyrighted content.
It's a very deliberate strategy to put it out there,
get it a ton of attention.
So everybody's like, holy shit, what's going on?
And then you get to pull it back and go, I'm sorry.
Sorry. I'm sorry.
But I do think, I mean, I don't know if they,
expected how much of the traffic would come from people just yonking this stuff off SORA and putting it
somewhere else where they can't monetize. Like how does Open AI make the money? It's off of compute time.
That is their current plan. So it's the creation of it. Yeah. But I was saying this on stream,
but you know, have you ever been to like meme generator.com or whatever where you can like that is
not a profit? That's a small business. It's a very small business. If they become the GPU meme generator,
is that really enough to pay for the
I mean potentially
trillion dollars they need for the right
Not that much but you know counterpoint Adobe right
Adobe is a set of tools to be able to make things
And if this is a different tool where you can go and say
This is the type of video I want to create
You don't have to pay 50 bucks a month for Adobe
Maybe
You're just gambling on enough people paying for the tool
Because it's a creation tool
The social media is the vehicle to advertise the tool
Basically it's like if I keep seeing
If I it's the same thing with like the
the Ghibli profile pictures.
It's like those things spread everywhere
and everybody's like,
how do I make mine?
Then they go seek out.
They're trying to be Adobe.
They're not trying to be YouTube.
And that's a really important distinction.
They're trying to say,
hey, do you want to make things like this?
Come to a website and pay us to make it.
Adobe's money comes almost entirely
through big long form corporate contracts.
Like most people, regular people pirate it.
Or they find some way of using it.
Like it's not, you and me paying for Photoshop
know how they make their money.
They make their money
because they sign a deal
with Microsoft or whatever
for a big corporate contract.
You actually sign a big court.
You sound like me,
you sound like me explaining to my parents
when I was 15
why I was okay that I stole Photoshop.
They're not coming for me.
Adobe knows you steal it
and they want you to use it
so that when you grow up
and get a job in the industry,
you require your corporation
to buy this license.
So maybe this will work,
maybe enough corporate people
need to use AI to make Sponsobbubb.
I just,
how is a company going to function?
If you can't,
by the way,
Some of the best ones, Marioed in a cop chase going down the side.
A lot of cop chases.
A lot of cop chases.
Every coach has been arrested.
Every person, dude,
Michael Jackson is stealing my fried chicken.
Incredible.
I mean,
there are amazing videos out of this.
There's a really good one of Sam Altman
breaking into Studio Ghibli's headquarters,
grabbing all the papers off of Miyazaki's desk and running away while he's chased by
Miyazaki.
That was chef's kiss.
There's a huge trend around Sam Altman,
the creator, committed crimes, which is so funny.
funny.
Internet's undefeated.
Guys,
that's our stand.
I do look forward
to seeing how this plays.
I agree with you
that it's going to be
an epic legal battle
for generations.
I don't know how it's going to play out.
I want to see Nintendo
get involved so bad.
They're the SWAT team.
When a certain line gets crossed,
Sam Hoffman's going to be
in the crosshairs of Mario's
Delta Force.
It's been on the opposite side
of the Nintendo one so many times
and I just want to see it play out.
I want to see it play out the other way.
I've seen Mario smoking weed
and I've seen all this stuff on.
Here's the three.
thing. This is all, it's all good.
It's going to be really interesting, fun little battle until
Deep Seek launches, deep seek video,
and then all hell breaks loose.
Because there's no ability to enforce
it at all. I'm safe.
I'm safe.
Why are you safe with the...
It's going to come pre-installel.
Never mind. I'm actually more compromise.
And that's why this shirt wraps up our episode.
Aiden is a traitor.
From me, Brendan and the traitor.
Thanks for watching Lemonade Stan. We'll see you next
week. Bye-bye. Bye.
