Lemonade Stand - We're Not Paying | Ep 008 Lemonade Stand 🍋
Episode Date: April 24, 2025We launched a Patreon! - https://www.patreon.com/lemonadestand for bonus episodes, discord access, and many more ways to interact with the show. First 2 episodes out now! This week... Atrioc educates... us on student loans, Doug rides a train to Vegas, and Aiden solves social media! Episode: 008 Recorded on: April 24th, 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 New takes on Business, Tech, and Politics. Squeezed fresh every Thursday. #lemonadestand #dougdoug #atrioc #aiden Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the
lemonade stand. I have a couple things I want to
talk to you guys about before we
into our main topics, which I think are pretty interesting and contentious.
We got free speech.
Trains are contentious.
A lot of people are.
You have a contentious theory on trains that you're going to bring up.
I don't know.
I'm assuming.
Wow.
I thought it was actually pretty straightforward.
You're in the village here.
You got 400 pages of notes.
That's not going to be like a train is there's going to be something here.
And then I'm talking about student loans.
Before we get to that, there's a couple like little just happened stories and I wanted
to get your guys's thoughts on them.
Number one, yesterday I watched Elon Musk's, uh, code.
press conference to the world
because the news had been kind of bad about Tesla lately
and he had to get everybody back on track.
Yeah.
And the main takeaway was that he's,
he's not stepping down, but he said,
hey, by May, my work at Doge is basically done.
I'm easing it out, like I'm passed off to people
and I'm going to be focusing more on Tesla.
I mean, thoughts on that.
He's going to be passing it all off to big balls.
Yeah.
Big balls will take it from here.
The balls have grown big enough.
So did he say, like, is he totally done?
No, no, no.
I think that would have been an omission of defeat or like...
Right, right.
But I think he was trying to tell the market like, hey, don't worry.
So the government is fixed.
Yeah.
Dude, they made it so efficient.
It's such a shot of time.
Why didn't no one ever think of it?
Our budget deficit is just gone.
We are just, we're just loaded of money.
Yeah, country's saved.
I'm shocked how he did it so quickly.
So it is interesting.
It matches how Elon does things in general.
This is my understanding from interviews I've heard about Elon,
of people who've worked with him, which is that he kind of bounces around to like one thing at a time.
So he's not like, he's not like a traditional CEO. He wakes up and he works nine to five at Tesla.
He kind of has like, Tesla has a big problem in the warehouses right now. We are, our, what is it?
Our shipping line is like having issues at this certain bottleneck. I'm going to go in there 15 hours a day until it's fixed.
And now I'm off to SolarCity or whatever it's called now. And now I'm off to Neurlink. And now I'm off to Doge.
And so seemingly he's been doing that with Doge where he just went super hardcore all
in and then maybe he's done with his little like sprint of it and he's coming back he's coming back
yeah so it matches up with the way he works supposedly but it's still weird it's i think it just
comes back to like they're just not communicating what's going on in doge well and no it's like
nobody really knows and the only thing that communicating is like we took away this like we took away
a lollipop from a trans child but like but they're not like it's just this like hyper politicized stuff and
there's nothing about like here's what's going on
broadly in the military budget.
And what we're cut, you know, it's like,
I have no idea what's going on.
That Lipop cost $2.4 trillion.
They added to that little spreadsheet,
and they're like, yep, saved it.
Oh, either, I, okay,
as someone who hasn't followed super closely,
the way that he actually has stepped down
and stepped into roles, like, formally,
I get this idea,
just having passively watched
that he has stepped down from all of his position,
at certain points.
It may be,
maybe not literally
losing the position,
but didn't he,
he like stepped down
from Twitter after a while
and then he would wind up
back in control.
Like he goes through a lot
of versions of,
hey,
should I do this thing
or should I step away
from this thing
and then goes back to it
and then lets it go again
and then goes back to it
kind of like what you're saying,
but it feels a little more,
yeah,
it feels so much more informal
and also the fixations
aren't just companies.
They're like playing Diablo four
sometimes.
Or tweeting.
I mean, tweets
hundreds of times a day sometimes.
Yeah, he tweets a lot.
Which, you know, really could take your time on.
Does your shirt say global financial crisis on it?
That is so fucking sick.
Yeah, it says 2008 global financial crisis.
That's the sickest you've ever seen.
There's a gift from slime.
Wait, that's badass.
I, yeah, I'm fucking think this is sick.
I don't even know where to get it.
I can't even tell people just cross it out.
Like, you're like your T1 tattoo.
Damn, that's cool as hell.
Sorry to interrupt.
Yeah, I mean, I don't have any.
I don't think I have any thoughts beyond that.
Like, it doesn't fall out of expectations of what I expect from him.
I also don't feel like he wouldn't be somebody that I would expect him to say in a few months that he's coming back to Doge or something.
Okay.
Let me, a soft counterpoint is that, you know, the Tesla earnings report yesterday was horrendous.
It was, it was bad.
Like, sale, car sales way down, profit down 71% year over year.
generally just declining on all measures except for,
and you've told me about this,
was the mega pack batteries.
That was the one part of-
which is cool.
They're doing great on the Tesla.
And the good part about the batteries,
if you don't mind me jumping in,
is that you can use those things for,
like I could attach them to my house for my solar panels.
You can use them in a bunch of different cases, right?
It was just the battery industry as a whole
is like super important and kind of its own thing.
And so arguably that's its own business within Tesla,
which is kind of different from the cars.
It's just obviously super related.
And it does seem more important.
I don't know if you guys know, but China has banned the export of rare earth minerals out of China at all.
And they control like 90% of the supply.
And Tesla is like they don't have this built yet.
And they're a big overpromiser in general.
No.
You stop that.
But they have been talking about and are maybe the closest to building a lithium refinery in Austin, Texas.
And we can't refine lithium anywhere outside of China, really.
So they might this battery thing might be a possible success area.
of Tesla. I'm not going to deny that. But everything else is down. The car company's doing pretty
poorly. And so I think when he's sitting back from Doge, it's like not a normal, like,
I lost my fixation. It's like, hey, I have to reassure the people that have valued my company
at nearly a trillion dollars that like I'm going to be here setting this ship right. Well,
okay, because it's worth reminding like the existential thing coming up for Tesla is,
which we've talked about is do they get full self-driving, right? Is can they release full
self-driving vehicles into America and have them work properly? And then if
So they have this giant fleet that already exists and they just dominate the market immediately.
Right.
And that's the entire premise of their valuation is like they're going to become the player.
That and robots.
That and robots, yes.
Robots is a little more of a moonshot without much detail.
But at least with the full self-driving, it's like it's out there right now.
People have an idea of what it is.
And then the main thing is this year they're trying to launch it in Austin, right?
June.
He's what he said on the thing.
Yeah, he said in the call.
June, it'll be available.
So my suspicion is the reason he's stepping away from Doge is because he has this pattern again of he
has like six companies that he leads, right?
And with each one of them, he like goes to one and gets obsessed with it for a period to fix whatever is the most urgent thing.
And then he moves to the next one.
Right.
So he's kind of like focused on whatever he thinks is most important.
So him coming back to Tesla, it could be, oh shit, I need to save stock.
But it could also be, okay, this launch in June arguably is the make or break for Tesla, right?
Because if this totally flops and it sets the company back three years of doing full self-driving and Waymo comes in and eats their lunch, right?
That's the end of Tesla, at least as a gigantically value.
company, right? So I would guess, I mean, that's, that's soon. That's in two months, right? So from his
perspective, if he's like, there is an existential threat coming to my company, Tesla, in two months,
because if this launch fails badly, like we are just screwed overall, that would explain the shift
away from Doge, right? Yeah, I think you said that so well. Yeah, I agree. I think if this flops,
if the June thing is just a mirage or there's a bunch of accidents or it's a big flop,
the damage to Tesla would be catastrophic. In June, their plan is,
to release a whole bunch of cars into the wild that don't have drivers.
And right now this isn't tested anywhere.
Like this isn't a thing that they have approval for anywhere else.
It hasn't, so.
Wait, they do, they don't have approval to do this?
No, they're coming up in two months.
How does the rollout work?
I guess I don't know specifically.
They're starting in Austin.
This is going to be the first city they try to operate as Waymo is currently doing.
So the point is this is going to be the first time anywhere where they are allowed to have cars
driving around without people in them, without somebody at the,
wheel. So that's the big jump. And that's going from L2 to L4, which is like the categories of
self-driving. So it's this big deal to go up to that point. You have to have a certain level of
redundancy and security and it working and all that stuff. Right. So this is the big test. It's in two
months. They're going to put all these cars without people into the road. And then if they go
kill a bunch of people in a week. If day one, there's a phone video of this thing hitting a wall,
like Tesla will crash. Yeah. Like 80% will, like 80% will be.
drop. I have a question. Why would that be the case? Because, you know, not to be too
dumber about it, but I feel like there are videos of cases of automated driving, making mistakes
or taking control of the car, and then hitting somebody or getting in some type of accident
already. Like those videos exist of Tesla's. Stock hasn't, you know, that's not the reason the
stock is going down. Because they have, they have plausible deniability of saying, we are, so,
So there's categories of self-driving, and basically they are, they're saying, we're at the point where there's still a driver.
And that gives them a degree of leeway, right?
So even if the car then go hits a person, it's like, well, the person was there and they should have supervised it, right?
The instant you jump to unsupervised, Tesla is fully responsible for it, right?
Like, it's like when we talked about the Mark Rober thing, there's this argument that it's not clear if this is what's going on, but that Tesla deactivates the self-driving right before a crash.
So they can technically say, like, oh, wasn't us.
Yeah, exactly.
We technically weren't at control.
They don't have that argument the instant that there is no driver.
So the stakes are much higher.
And then there's, you know, so a company you might have heard of that does self-driving is called Cruise.
And they were maybe the dominant player.
And they were in.
We're both thinking of the same thing.
We both know somebody who worked there.
Okay.
So they were in San Francisco and they were doing well.
And then there was this one really prominent accident where it just one time.
It drove over.
It just drove over a.
pedestrian and wouldn't move.
Now, to be fair,
that didn't get off of her.
Dude, we should.
I think, yeah, I know about this.
Yeah, yeah. So the, there is actually
additional context. That sounds really bad. It is really
bad. But that person was hit
by a different, a human
driving a car who like hit this pedestrian
who then was like on the ground and a cruise
a self-driving car came by
and was like, I'll help this situation and like
drove onto the pedestrian. So
it didn't cause the situation.
It just made it way worse.
This is the cruise PRs at the scene, like talking to the best relationship guys.
This is not our fault.
Yeah, you were laying there from car accident.
Yeah, we have a friend who lost all of his stock.
If I was the person that was hit, I would be more mad at the first guy.
I would be, if I was picking.
If I was starting the blame here.
It's like when your friend, like you get pushed and your friend's like holding you back and he's like, let me go.
I got him.
You know, like the cruise is there to keep him down.
Make sure he doesn't do anything rash.
Don't do anything rash.
Right.
Don't assault anybody.
The conclusion of this.
This happened in San Francisco.
I forget if it was like last year of the year before.
That got cruises a license to operate driverless cars in San Francisco revoked.
Since then, the CEO is left and GM has shut down Cruz entirely.
So there's technically there's still some piece of it.
The cruise as it was, which was like the self-driving fleet that was in San Francisco, is gone.
And GM is not pursuing.
So a single high-profile accident ruined, I mean, not entirely, but rapidly facilitated the end of
this self-driving car company. The CEO of Cruz is not best buds with the president and in all the
regulatory. Oh, yeah, yeah. No, it's different. He's got a little more power to not get shut down on things.
You know, it's not coincidence. So they're launching in Austin, right? It's like in Texas and it's a blue city,
but still, you know. But yeah, so that big moment is on the same. Big, big moment for Tesla.
And clearly he's seen some impact from Doge. We didn't really talk about the political backlash,
but I think that's part of it. The sales are down clearly in blue state, especially in Europe,
especially. So we'll see how it bangs up.
But anyway, things that are also down or up are your student loan bills.
And I want to talk about this because...
Good transition.
Thank you.
That's why I get paid the big bucks.
I want to bring this up because it's a brand new, very interesting story.
And I guess brand new is an interesting way to put it because it's been a crisis building for four and a half years.
Oh, yeah.
Well, basically in March 2020, I don't know if you guys remember, there's a thing called COVID.
Fake.
Fake, fake.
So we're saying it didn't even happen.
It didn't even happen.
But because of all the fake hoopla about it, they canceled student loan pay.
Essentially, you can't default on a student loan.
You don't have to pay.
There's no default.
There's no credit check.
There's nothing.
And over the next four years, they never brought it back.
And so people got very used to not paying.
And then about a year ago, under Biden, he's like, they lost the court case to basically
try to cancel all student loan debt.
So he's like, hey, you got to pay your debt.
But if you don't, we're not going to do anything.
That was essentially what we're saying.
We're not going to report it to credit agencies.
So there's no.
So they came out and said, we will not like persecute.
That was the way, it wasn't phrased so directly like that, but that was the idea.
It's like, we're not going to change anything around how reporting is done.
So if you don't pay, the consequences are not really there.
And so people didn't pay.
Payments did resume, but only, I think, 38% of borrowers got back to current.
We started back to paying their, there's their payments.
So we end up where the majority, you know, 62% or whatever, are not paying their student loan still.
Now, under Trump and the new administration, they are really like, no, you have to pay.
It's back.
And so a month or two ago,
they started default reporting again.
So you get your credit score hit.
And I have an editor who just said that,
yeah,
like out of the blue,
I got a huge credit score hit
because he was defaulting.
Like just,
did he know he was defaulting?
I think he just didn't think about he was paying.
You know what I'm saying?
It's just been years.
It's been four years of no consequence.
So they just kept on not doing it.
And now big credit score hit.
So that's happening to a lot of people right now.
You can see the,
I looked at Google trends of people's,
Googling like credit score hit or student loans, it's like spiking. It's like,
people are like wondering what's going on. Then as of May 5th, which is coming up,
they're going to start garnishing wages. You're going to actually get a hit with
official collections and default. And so when that starts becoming part of it, people are
suddenly in an oh shit moment where they have to pay. And over the last four and a half years,
people have, again, most people in America live paycheck to paycheck. They have planned their
budgets around not paying two, three hundred, four hundred dollars extra a month. This is
is going to be, I think, a really big shocker impact to a huge broad swath of like millennials,
like people who are in that student loan range who are going to have their budgets hit pretty
hard.
So I'm, yeah.
I forget the number, but I was following up on this story this week too.
And I think it's either, it's between like 60 and 80 million people have student loans in
America.
It's a giant portion of people.
That's a lot.
You want to fact check me?
Yeah, I'm going to fact check you in that it's, I think there's five million.
who are going to be hit by this.
Oh, by this specific issue?
By the garnishing?
By the garb.
Five million borrowers,
and of those 38% are current.
So I don't know how many have student loans.
In total?
In total.
But these are the people who are like in trouble.
Can we get a Perry fact check on
the number of people in the country?
43 million?
Yeah, I was like, dude, it's way more than five.
I'm sorry.
You are actually correct.
It is five million borrowers in default.
Yeah.
So five.
million are affected who will be have to well okay so there's like 40-ish million who have loans out yes
five million of them are becoming and default means uh over 90 days past like unpaid nothing paid yeah
yeah uh that's not even they like aren't paying at all it's just not in the most recent 90 days it's like
yeah okay so this payment this change is happening at one of the worst times that it could be
happening at because outside of the general i think economic stress that is going on for
a lot of people at this specific moment.
This is also happening at a time
when the Department of Education is being gutted.
And they're the inflection point
and for all the communication
to do with these loans.
So that department,
although not necessarily the holder of the debt,
is responsible for communicating to borrowers
how they make their payments maybe
or maybe how your loan may have changed,
like if it changed,
owners or providers over the four-year wait period. And now, because the department has been
gutted and there's way less employees to deal with all the incoming tickets, basically, like,
if you call, you're on hold for way longer, it's really difficult to get answers about your
specific loan or the situation that your balance even stands in. And this is all happening at once
because of the delays that have led to this point. Yeah. And I mean, even in my personal life,
Like my girlfriend is still paying off of her student loans.
And she just realized recently that she has to fit this into her monthly budget.
Absolutely.
I don't,
did you guys have student loans.
I did have mine,
but I like,
I dumped like all of my money into paying them off in like the first two years out of college.
So I paid mine off,
but we did not pay off my wife's because we thought Biden would cancel it.
Yeah.
We've been waiting and waiting.
And so we paid it off two days ago.
After I started reading the story,
I was like,
we don't want any trouble.
That was kind of the other big part of this along the way, right?
Is there was all these news stories about the debt cancellation or changes in the way they would be paid or maybe the amount they could be reduced by.
And I think anybody who was paying attention to the news over the past few years was basically hoping that significant changes to the debt that they hold would happen.
And now we've arrived at a point where very little has actually changed.
We just added a bunch of time and then a bunch of people who forgot that this is a thing that they have to pay for in their life.
life. And now we're arriving at the worst possible moment to add this expense onto everybody at the
same time. It's really bizarre to cut the Department of Education while the Department of Education
says you all need to repay your loans. It just feels shitty, right? Elon, Elon, why did you make
these cuts? If they feel like they're happening at a bad time, sorry, sorry. He's not on Doge anymore.
The car company needs my help. I'll come back to this as soon as possible. That's
I do, I think ultimately is because a lot of these changes, like, were not executed with any sort of plan from what we can tell, right?
Like, the community, you, you bringing up the communication point at the beginning is representative of that to me.
It's like the communication around the way that this was approached, the purpose of the agency.
It doesn't seem like the messaging or the intent matches the action or results really at all.
Right.
I'm on board with like modernizing government infrastructure and software.
I think that's that's clearly overdue when you hear about how a lot of these things are done.
I can't speak specifically to the Department of Education.
But so I read a Bloomberg article about this where a woman was told that she's like behind payment.
She was like what?
I didn't know that I was because they had shifted loan like the loan had shifted to a different company.
And then it's trying to call the Department of Education the whole times are 11 hours,
which is like even if you call first thing.
in the morning. You can't, you literally
don't get taken care of that day. And it's
like, so she can't do anything. Eleven hour
whole time is fucking crazy.
There was a, there was a bit
I was listening to earlier in the week
about this about how from the other side
of the perspective, for the people that do remain
at the Department of Education, for the people that
pick up the phones and read the emails and are
dealing with this, they
don't have the information, the time, or the
tools to answer all of the questions.
Like there's the remaining employees who
want to help people or they want to do their
job, but they're in a situation where they have to deal with thousands and thousands of income
emails that they are not necessarily equipped to answer. There's a world where they do a major
infrastructure refresh so that they can handle this without as many people. And that obviously
didn't happen, right? They just like asked everybody. And the idea that you're going to ask what is a call
center. Yeah, it's very, very ridiculous. We talked about this in passing after we recorded the last
episode and a story I want to cover another time is what I think when people have this idea of
making the government more efficient it does feel very vague it feels ambiguous it's like okay we
agree that it's inefficient in some ways but it means different things to different people what does
efficiency actually mean and I think an example of what Doug's talking about is uh there's
in Estonia they've spent a bunch of time basically digitizing the entire state like the every
thing to do with like government bureaucracy and operations is something done over the computer
or digitized. And a lot of the layers of getting something done from like a bureaucratic perspective
are just very much simplified by the fact that they have a very strong digital infrastructure.
And so for example, like if me and my fiancee want to get married, the process to get married
is like literally clicking something on like a government website. And that is like what verifies
and registers our marriage. Like within the, within the context of the state.
And I think there's a lot of like basic changes like that that like, oh, we could work on the underlying tech
infrastructure of this agency to make the incoming tickets for all of the people that are going to
have to start paying their student loans more efficient and easy to navigate.
And also like from, you know, from a borrower's perspective, you know, I got my student loans
when I was 18.
I really didn't know how they work.
I couldn't name the company that I was paying who like owned my debt.
like the way I interacted with that process at that age, even applying for them in the first place, was very ambiguous and confusing.
And I had to like make multiple accounts over the course of my, the duration I held that debt to like be able to view and make the payments on it.
I moved a bunch because I was a young person at the time. So like the letter is going to the correct address of where I lived at the time like wasn't handled well.
You know, partially on me for not updating my address with like the loan providers as well, right?
But none of this process is simple or easy.
and it comes at a time in your life for most people
when you're young and don't know how to navigate responsibility
in the first place and also don't have it a lot of knowledge.
And then this process is also extremely complex.
Or a lot of money.
Yeah, I mean, you mentioned this,
but this is like one of the biggest complaints
is that a lot of the student loan debt is passed around.
It is sold between companies and different companies
who are all have their own individual ways
of trying to contact you or collect or send mail
and nobody can keep track of it.
You're often getting a letter informing you
that you've got a new provider for your student or a payment
for your student loan debt.
And if you're not checking your mail
or if you're somebody who's mostly digital,
that stuff is coming at a time where you can't keep track of it.
So the rollout's pretty bad.
I mean, I think the takeaway,
regardless of just fixing it,
is that there's going to be a bit of an economic shock, though,
is that $300, $400 a month in,
which is the average student loan payment,
is a huge hit to your budget.
It's like your rents going up 30040.
You know, it's insane.
And people are not able to factor that in.
So there's gonna be knock on effects.
Like there's gonna be downturns in spending
or people were not.
I mean, we already saw people are 60% of young people
going to Coachella are using buy now pay later.
They're using Klarna.
Like there's just not, the math is no longer
mathing on a regular person's budget and loans.
I think a really basic example I can think of
is if you've been used to
not paying for years and you sign maybe a lease that has your rent on a spending, on a budget
that you can afford. Well, you can't change, you're in the middle of your lease. You just can't change
that. You've literally built an aspect of your life around the lack of that expense. And I think
some people would swoop in and say, well, these people like lack personal responsibility or
something like that. I don't think like policy decisions should be made on that, on that basis.
especially when you're talking about 5 million people being affected by this change.
But also, even just in the broader economy, there's 40 million people in the U.S.
with student loans, right?
So that's 40 million people who suddenly are not spending, what, a hundred, a couple hundred
dollars every month on other parts of the economy, right?
That's like a huge, in the context of we're going into a maybe recession with all the craziness
going on.
It's not great to have an eighth of the country suddenly not spending nearly as much money.
debt servicing.
Right.
I'm paying loans.
Like,
it's not good.
You want them taking out loans
to go to Coachella
so that we stimulate the economy.
You don't want them paying,
this is,
you don't want them being responsible.
I want the young people
to make bad decisions in different ways.
In different ways.
Right.
In ways that benefit someone.
I think what would be interesting at some point
and probably it's too broad
of a topic right now is just the obvious issues
with student loans in general,
which is like predatory loans and all that
and the fact that,
like once,
Once staty, sorry, go ahead.
I was going to say, I think this is, can you,
don't be afraid to dive into that.
I think that's a great part of this topic,
and I think you should talk about it.
Sure, I mean, it's not beyond that.
I mean, this is, I'm just given the most, like,
lukewarm takes here, like,
giving predatory loans to students is bad.
And then, so I think the, you know,
and I'm not like an expert on these things,
but the key element that I understand
that makes these brutal is if you are a student
and you take out a loan, right?
And the interest rate is like 8% or 6.5, I think.
So you get a 6.5% of you're an undergrad.
grad. And so if you got a $100,000 loan, you're paying $6,000 every year in interest, right?
But then if you don't pay that, that interest that you didn't pay gets added to the total
amount you owe. And now the interest is recalculated based on that new amount, right? So for every
year that you don't pay off the interest, which might be a lot of money, the amount that you owe
is growing, right? And this is why you hear those horror stories of people who are paying their debt,
but it never actually goes down because it keeps compounding. So that in theory could be okay if the
taking out these loans, we're consistently being compensated well. And immediately out of college,
they can actually start paying these things off. The stat I saw right now, 40% of college grads in the
US right now are underemployed. And what that means is they make less money than they should with
their degree. So if they get a degree and the expectation is with this whatever, you know,
economics, you should have this amount of earnings. 40% of college grads are making less than that.
And maybe it's some entry level job or it's a job that doesn't require college degree or whatever.
They still have the massive student loan.
But they still have a loan that is set up with a structure that assumes you are paying off the interest immediately
because if you wait to pay it off, it keeps growing and you are just fucked long term, right?
And so this thing just makes, to me it makes no sense in general for students,
but also in particularly in a world that we now live in,
where a college education doesn't guarantee you some awesome job.
And it feels like I know my parents, certainly my dad would always say to me like,
oh, well, once you go to college, like you're going to be set.
I don't know about you guys, but when I went to college at my orientation, they were like, you are here now and you have made it. You're one of the elites and you're going to be great. I'm not kidding. They did not tell it to me at Arizona State. Okay. They did. Things were different. We all did a, we did a kid stand. So, so at Berkeley, which is a high end school, their attitude to the students was like, you fucking made it. That's literally the orientation of like, you are one of the elites you've made. And it's like, first off, it's not.
that good of a school. And then secondly, there was no follow-up at all that's like, hey, here's what you should do in college to make sure it's worth it. Right? There wasn't any indication of like, hey, just so you're aware, if you study history, that's really cool. But the amount of job opportunity is going to be different than another. There was none of that. And I think private schools have more resources, my understanding, to support students and give them that kind of guidance. Not at public schools. We didn't get shit. So at no point where my friends, for example, who are like studying English,
you know, some of them were like, wanted to go be a history teacher. And that's great. And they're doing that and they're having, they love it. And there's other people who thought, oh, well, I'll just get a degree in whatever kind of interest me. And then we're really confused coming out of college when they were not showered with job offers. And I feel like I've heard that story from a lot of people in a lot of colleges. And so I think we can't have a student loan system that puts compounding interest and assumes that just by having a degree you will automatically be making this huge amount of money. I do like the old person in advice.
of like go to college, get your degree,
and then walk up to where you want to work
and hand them a resume.
You went to college.
You went to college?
Young man, you're the VP of sales.
Welcome to Google.
Yeah, welcome to Google.
What can I say?
Like, it used to be a huge deal,
and it's really not now.
It's the entry point.
But if it's the entry point for most jobs now,
it's like, then you can't justify
having a loan with the interest compounding
every year and just growing out of, yeah,
it's insane.
If anything, it should be like reverse compounded, like later it grows bigger when you presumably are farther in your career.
But to do it at the beginning is insane.
And what's wild is over the past 20, 30 years, you could say that the value of college at best has been even.
Like the education is not radically better.
No.
But the cost is radically higher.
It's like triple to quadruple the last 40 years.
The school is, yeah, four to five times more expensive.
And yet the schooling, the value of the schooling is not four times better.
In fact, if anything, it's like you're saying, it's worse.
My education was worse, straight up.
Like, yeah.
I mean, the value of the degree on the market is like less valuable,
but you're paying more for it.
So, like, I think a lot of young people,
when talking to old people in their life,
parents in their life,
there's a huge disconnect between what they're seeing around schooling,
where schooling is becoming very marginally a good idea.
Like, you do have an earnings potential increase.
There is a benefit to it.
But it's like you're paying so much more
for that tiny privilege.
And the risks of it going wrong are so much higher.
Schooling has become a way less certain bet.
And then if you are, like, you know you want to go into teaching.
Like, you're not going to be able to pay off the fucking interest, right?
Yeah, so it's like the loans are in.
Even in that case where you are really sure you want to go into an industry that isn't as well paid,
but you're passionate about it.
That's great.
But then you can't justify this anymore.
It doesn't, it makes sense.
So I think what I am concerned about is like with student loan forgiveness,
that was a big thing during the Biden administration, right?
that was discussed.
And now pretty clearly
the Trump administration
is not going to be doing that.
No.
They seem to have a vendetta
against students.
I mean, you'll see.
There's their woke.
I have an honest theory
because again,
Trump with his tariffs
and a lot of things,
he has a lot of tough talk
and then a bit of a back down
whenever the consequences come.
I seriously think there may be
a return to like no,
no collections or something
back to the status quo
because the reaction is going to be such a
negative one.
There's going to be such a,
negative backlash to when these start, the wages started getting garnished. The credit scores
are already falling. There's millions of people feeling negative effects immediately and they're
going to be angry about it and the economy is going to take a tumble. I think he could back down.
I could see that happening. But either way, yeah, we're in a, I don't know where you guys stand
on student loan forgiveness. I have a tough, I think we should do it, but I have a tough time.
It feels like, it's definitely a big bandaid. Yeah, one generation gets a nice out and then what the
next person who's buying another $80,000 agree is like, they're going to expect the same thing.
It has no effect on the underlying problem. Yeah, there's a bigger problem. Is what I think the main
problem. Yes. What I was alluding to and is very much the issue of like this is clearly not
working as a system. Student loan forgiveness is just like these select people are getting reprieve
from this shitty system. And let's just keep the system going. It's like, dude, no. And almost worse because
if you're someone who follows that forgiveness and you're like, well, okay, I'm going to take out
this big loan, but it will get it forgiven.
Because we know what happened last time.
So now everybody's taking even larger loans,
making the problem even bigger,
expecting, you know, at that point,
you should just free education.
It's something,
where you can go,
which would be an interesting way.
The countries have done that.
But you have to,
I think it's better to announce that up front and do it
than try to like play piggyback with these loans.
And gamble on that happening.
On your financial future.
The which administration will be in charge
by the time I'm done with school and also.
Yeah, you have to,
you have to coin flip on who's,
who's president?
when you graduate to see whether or not
you are in debt for life.
Dude, coming out of college,
every class of every year,
spinning a roulette wheel on whether or not.
People getting purposely held back
until they get.
Where did you go to school?
You said you went to a public school?
You went to Berkeley?
Berkeley, yeah.
Were you an out-of-state student?
No, no.
You were insane.
So in-state was like 10 grand a year,
so it's like very affordable comparatively.
And then out-of-state's like 35 or something like that.
We're all public school success stories.
All in-state public school success.
Yes.
One of the rare Berkeley success stories.
And there's so few.
There's so few.
Well, Doug, I'll have you know.
They didn't let me into Berkeley.
I applied.
This is, yeah, I...
I would also, just at some point,
like to hear you guys experience with student loans.
I was fortunate my parents were able to pay
for my college education.
So I didn't have to do student loans.
I know a lot of friends who have.
Do you guys feel...
Do you feel like the system was predatory for you?
Do you feel like it was worthwhile and you're glad the system is in place?
The system is absolutely predatory.
And I have a great example, I think.
So for me personally, I applied through FAFSA, I think, to get assistance with paying for school.
My parents said they weren't going to pay for my school.
They also couldn't straight up.
What is FAFSA?
FAFSA is the like federal student aid program for just for all people applying for college.
The idea being that if you are.
low enough income. This program also enables you to pay for school basically through a grant,
I want to say, or a scholarship rather. So if you fall below a certain level of income,
but you're able to get into a school, then it will give you money outright that isn't a loan.
But most of the time, FAFSA is a way to get loans. If you fall in a more like middle income,
like upper, lower to like middle class background.
basically. And that's what I would call my family at the time is middle class. So my parents did not
have enough money to pay for my school. But according to the FAFSA application, the government said
they had enough money to pay for school, which means that they'll offer you loans. And what they do
is at a personal level, because you don't have much of a credit history at that age, they offer you a
small amount of loans individually. And then if you need more, your parents can be the guarantor
for like a way higher additional loan.
And then I took,
I maxed out the loans that I could get personally, basically.
And that is what allowed me to pay for most of my tuition,
both years that I was at university.
Because my state, in Washington,
there's a program where you can go to community college
during high school.
So I finished two years,
and that was like basically free, which is sick.
And I finished two years of college in high school, graduated,
and then only had to go to university.
for two years.
Yep.
And so that was how I saved enough money to go to school.
It's like I got my two years of student loans for that.
The problem with that system is I didn't really know, and I think I had a better idea
than most of my peers did at the time, that how much money that was and how I would pay it
back.
And it wasn't even in the grant scheme was not that much.
I had $15,000 in student loans.
And that was basically, that was three quarters of my tuition each of those years,
I want to say.
My tuition each year was like 11 or 12K.
Yeah.
And then you have all of your like living expenses on top of that.
And the issue is that one, that was a really like limited amount of loans.
And my parents weren't even willing to like sign for additional loans anyway, if I recall.
And I, looking at all the students around me, I picked an affordable in-state option with a
limited amount of like loans that I could take out as an individual. And I still like had to work,
I had to work in college to pay off like the rest of my living expenses as well. Right. Because
you had a smaller loan. Yeah. Whereas most of the people around me, a lot of them applying to out of
state schools, which is cost way more, even if you're going to like a public institution, right? Like if I
had gotten into Berkeley, which I didn't, I would have had to pay, I think, 35 or 40
a year in tuition as an out of state student.
So wild. Yeah, which is, which is crazy.
At 18, you know, to be signing up for
120,000 plus in loans. Yeah. And it's such a
huge financial commitment that you have very
little ability to understand the scope of what you're
signing at the time. A lot of people don't know what they're going to do.
Like you, you, the college is where you're supposed
to figure out what you want to do. So you don't know
where you're going to be going into, if you are, you know,
if you're going into, I don't know, physics or something,
where you're likely to be able to pay that off.
Yeah. Sure, but most people
don't know until they get there. I think you're just pressured your most a lot of people are
pressured their entire life that they have to go to college. College is your way to success.
Get into college by any means do all these things to get into a good college and then you spend
whatever money it takes to go there. And oftentimes that can be an extraordinary amount of money.
The particularly predatory thing that I saw was a lot of those people looking at out of state
schools or private schools, one, were down to pay for that amount of tuition somehow, and those
tuition amounts are way, way too high to begin with. It doesn't make any sense that school costs
that much, and it's only gotten more expensive since I was applying, right? Then to top it off,
I think this is, I remember my girlfriend at the time, she was getting accepted into all these
private schools in like the Pacific Northwest that had these expensive tuitions, right? But those
private schools, they hand out, they hand out scholarships like it's,
no business. So imagine you have got into some private school that costs $40,000 a year in tuition,
but then they tell you, hey, we're giving you a scholarship for $20,000 a year. What does that mean?
It means your tuition is still $30,000 a year. And I remember her and a bunch of people around me
being so excited by the scholarships they were getting. And even at 18, I was like,
this makes no sense. You are getting, it's like they are, it's like, it's like,
I mean, maybe respectfully,
I was looking at a lot of kids
who I knew academically
were like, fine, basically.
Like, they're not putting in that,
it's not like, I'm...
Give us names.
And GPS.
And they're getting massive scholarships
to go to private schools
that set their bar for tuition
so high to begin with.
It's like a fake discount.
It's like giving a coupon.
Black Friday sale.
Yeah, exactly.
It's a fake sale.
And I think that's the misleading part
is like there's all these
mechanisms in place to like sell kids on the experience of college and sign off on this giant
number that they don't deal with until a later part of their life because you have no way to
understand the scope of that decision at the time namely not only in the money but like not knowing
what you actually want to do with your life right and but all of these like societal pressures
are like pushing you in that direction at the same time and then it's the it's the type of loan with
the compounding interest that is the worst possible loan if you aren't able to pay it off early
and like consistently be hitting interest.
So the whole thing is,
I do want to bring one little nugget of this
that is worth talking about,
which is that a part of this
comes from policies that were at least good in theory
that may have backflash,
which is the idea,
similar to the housing crisis,
which is, you know,
the idea that everyone needs to go to college,
it's a really good thing.
If you're back in the 60s and 70s,
college tuition was relatively cheap,
and it's because nobody would give a student
this kind of loan because they don't think
they'll pay it back.
unless they had a clear plan for what they were going to do.
But then the idea was we need to get more people to go to college.
So we're going to make student loans federally guaranteed.
We're going to back it up.
We're going to basically give a loan to anyone who wants one.
And what that did was it allowed anyone with any plan to go to college and take out
basically as much money as they wanted.
And schools respond to that by saying, okay, well, if all of our counterparties in this negotiation
have an infinite bank and they're 18 and they're dumb, we can just keep raising prices on everything.
It doesn't matter.
And that's what they did.
And so we've had 30 years of, again, price appreciation.
And as the amount goes higher, people just borrow more and more and more because it's been guaranteed.
So I want, you know, I think there is a part of this where I think an idea that was made in good spirit, in good theory, with good idea.
Yeah.
Has had a pretty profound negative consequence on every student later.
And I would, I don't have any thoughts on that.
The one thing I come back to a lot, and I know that there's talks about this.
and so maybe this has already been pushed or considered in some way I'm not aware of.
But the thing that fundamentally feels important to me is that colleges should have some degree of
accountability for whether the degree they offer is going to be able to cover the loan in any way.
And like, they can't be fully responsible for the life of a student that comes through their college.
But the idea that a college is say, hey, we'll charge you $200,000 to come to this private university
and we'll happily sell you a degree that there's no real evidence you're going to be able to pay that.
back in any way, shape, or form with no due diligence of, like, no due diligence of, is this person,
like, is their family able to cover this in any way? Like, is there any way? And you're just
setting them up in this horrible situation. And the university is just like, sure, man, come on
through. We'll take 200K from your loans and just, we'll ship you off. They have no responsibility
at all. I don't know how that works. The mechanics of that would be extremely difficult and
and maybe overly burdensome on universities. I mean, they're selling it to the government.
Like, who's giving the 200K? It's usually the government is in the program. That's like, that's
giving you, your guarantee.
loans. No bank would give you that $200K because they don't think he'll pay it back.
Yeah.
Is the idea. Or they'll give it to an exorbitant interest rate that you probably wouldn't take.
So it's...
I feel like any subsidy system like that, I don't know if you would call a loan.
Demand subsidy is you're, you just participate in all the colleges like raising the prices
at the same time.
That's why I feel like you need to push towards something that is basically near free or
like taxpayer funded.
Yeah.
But even a move to a system like, I think I'll start.
Australia's student loans basically work with,
I think schooling there is cheaper to begin with,
at least cheaper than the US,
but their loans don't,
the interest doesn't build until you have a job post-
college.
Like the interest is frozen,
and then you don't have to make payments
until you have a job of a certain income threshold either.
So a system in place that, like, doesn't,
the loans still need to be paid back eventually,
but only until the economic conditions
of your situation post-college actually meet
like a certain threshold,
which I think would be an improvement on this system.
Yeah, no, that sounds way better
because that at least alleviates the doom scenario
where a person comes out of college.
They don't know what they want to do
or can't find a job in those first couple years,
and then they're just building debt that whole time.
Yeah, I mean, that sounds way better.
Yeah, or college is free and pay for the government
but it's at a certain, you know,
even if the government said,
hey, we're going to give everyone,
she wants to go to college a chance,
we're going to give you 20 grand,
or whatever it is,
If it's a flat fee, then some colleges will adapt to that and keep that their price.
But if you make it so, you can take out any loan at any amount and we'll guarantee it,
then of course the other party in that negotiation is going to just raise their price every year constantly.
Because there's no, they have nothing to lose.
They don't care that you're in debt.
Yeah, I wish there was some, I don't know the mechanics,
but I wish there was some kind of pressure on universities to bring down prices.
Because right now there's no incentive for them to do that.
I think public universities or at the very least, like community colleges need to be free, basically.
they need to be at near no cost for you to and offer all of the same, like, you know, facility.
I went to a, like, I'm sure you guys feel this way, maybe not.
But when you go to a big state school, like I went to the University of Washington.
My school was incredible in terms of resources available to me.
And I really liked it there.
I think if those types of institutions are basically free and are taxpayer funded,
then you create something that is super competitive in the rest of the space for all the remaining
like private schools, kind of what we were talking about last time.
Like it forces all of the remaining private institutions to offer something particularly valuable
in order to pay to go there.
And I think that's really important.
I think also something, I'm not going to like pretend that like my university experience was
on par with my community college experience, but I do think there's an issue in the U.S.
of in the culture of pushing everyone to go to college,
there is kind of a stigma around going to something
like a community college or a technical college
or in like trades or programs.
Like there's this cultural shift
that I'm not really sure how you start to create.
I think it's kind of happening now
when you talk to people.
That's what I heard.
Of understanding that college
isn't the be all end all fits everybody scenario.
I do think it is really, really important
for everybody to have,
some type of additional education in their lives and make that widely available. But it coming in the
form of what university usually presents itself as is maybe the bad part. Because I don't think it's
bad or shameful to go to a community college, especially considering how much cheaper it was.
Yeah. Like I basically got the first two years of my post high school education basically for free
because of a state program. And it saved me literally, like if we did the math, it saved me,
the 18 year old 18 year old 18, $40,000.
That's what it saved me.
Life change.
And not in loans, not in like grants or scholarships or whatever.
I just did not have to pay that $40,000.
It was a huge part of why I'm here where I'm at now.
Because I was just two years further in my education because of that.
So I'd look to things like that.
And then the remaining, you know, private universities,
whatever value they can present are like forced to price themselves
at something more agreeable.
And I think more programs and money encouraging people to go into like technical or like trade programs are is really important too.
There's another, there's a video I was watching it about this.
I want to say like six months ago from Polly Matter has a view like a breakdown of like US education over the decades.
And somebody, I mean, please dig into this more.
Don't just take me at face value here.
But there's a site that there's a stat that's been cited.
a lot. Not in this video, but in general, I'm sure you've heard, that your lifetime earnings
with a college degree compared to lifetime earnings of people who just have a high school education,
right? And you can see the difference in the graph. And this is supposed to be the proof of
how a college education is so valuable. But what this accounts for is all of the people that
have their college degree, like completed it and got into their career and compares against
it completely foregoes the population of people
that go into college, pay for a few years,
and then drop out, which is a huge amount of people.
It's like an incredible portion
of everybody that goes to college
is people who just don't finish.
And those people actually are financially worse off
than people who just started working after high school,
which is interesting.
And I think we have a problem in the U.S.
where so many people are flooding into like traditional four-year institutions with like no plan
paying all this money when there's so many more avenues for success we could encourage.
And to top it all off, all of them should be more like affordable and encouraged options.
Not even affordable.
Like I would advocate for free.
But like using Australia as an example, that's a step in the right direction too.
Like policy changes to loans like that.
Yeah.
I mean, if you in the comments have your own, especially if you're in different countries,
student loan system, I would love to hear more about what you think works and doesn't around the
world. I think it's something I want to dig more into. And then also, last thing you said, and we should
go to the next topic, but I have heard, and I've seen this in my chat, and I've seen this from
articles I've read, is that there's a stigma changing, especially among Gen Z men towards
trades, in that it's becoming more socially almost acceptable or cool or something to talk about
going into other than the college. I think the college thing, people are waking
up, at least in some, you know, 18-year-old way.
Yeah, this is kind of a raw deal.
Like, people are starting to realize,
they're seeing older siblings,
people that have graduated,
who can't find a job that are spaying these student loans.
There's a greater awakening that, like,
many of these are not great deals.
That guaranteed success in the way they thought they were.
And so there is a social shift happening.
And I want to hear more about that.
So if you have thoughts.
However, you have a topic that's about government
actually may be doing something good.
Oh, there we go.
And we need that in our lives.
So I want to hear about this.
Ladies and gentlemen, for the next topic,
We're going to talk about the bright line train in Florida.
That's right.
What is that word?
Truck.
What is that word?
Train?
Truck.
He said truck.
He said truck.
He said truck.
He's a Ford F-150 in Florida.
It's a moving box.
We have trucks all over this great country.
They have all of the states have trucks.
Imagine instead of having to get in your Tesla full self-driving car, you get into a big box on a
track and it drives.
You don't have to do anything.
Sounds dangerous.
Risky.
Sounds European.
I would like it.
Vangly European.
I don't like it.
For the first time in like 10, 20 years,
America built a new train corridor.
It's along the eastern side of Florida.
It goes from Miami down the south up to Orlando at the top.
It's just incredible service.
And it was made entirely by a private company.
Thus proving once it for all that the free market is better.
Let's in for all.
Thank you everybody for watching.
Let's see you next time.
Have a great.
Have a great time, buddy.
Lenin rolling in his grave at the Brightline train.
So this is the story.
Brightline is a company that made this big train.
235 miles on the eastern side of Florida going basically up and down the whole state.
It costs $6 billion.
That is not that much.
By comparison, it's a good chunk of change.
It's estimated that California high-speed rail is going to cost $128 billion.
Jesus Christ.
So you can do the math there.
20th of the cost and about like half of the distance.
I have a big question.
Yeah.
How long it take the bill?
That's my big fucking question.
They started it in 2013.
They started building in 2014, done by 2023.
Nine years.
Nine years is a long.
By comparison, California high speed rail funding started in 2008, I believe.
That's when the bill was passed that we were going to pay for it as California residents.
And it's 2025.
And we built no functioning track.
Okay.
So compared to California, that is great.
Compared to China, I think they built longer than that while we're,
speaking.
That's true.
Okay, that's cool.
So there's a couple interesting things about it.
One is just to be like, yeah, we did a thing.
You know, it's like when you have a like a really, I don't know, like a really
earnest but dumb dog who finally like picks up the toy that you've been throwing
and you're like, good job, right?
It's not the most impressive thing, but you're proud of them.
So proud of America, we built a train.
But the really notable thing is that it's from a private company.
So it's bright line and you can look it up.
And in fact, you don't have to.
I'm going to do it right for you.
So it's this company in Florida.
I don't know if they're headquartered there.
But again, this is this huge success?
So is this live now?
Like you can ride this train or is it now?
That's awesome.
Yeah.
Really?
That's awesome.
Yeah.
It is like from everything I've seen people are really happy with.
It's really high quality.
It is not loading on this website.
People like this stuff when it exists in their life.
So, you know, website has a little bit to go.
Oh, well, there we go.
It's got complimentary Wi-Fi.
Yeah.
So the, it seems really.
It seems really great and it's getting a ton of usage.
So, you know, a little bit of like numbers here.
Launched in 2018, like the first leg started.
They had a yearly ridership of 580,000 people.
By 2023, 2 million.
By 2024, 2.7 million.
So it's like rapidly increasing.
And this is, you know, Florida doesn't mean a huge state.
It's growing rapidly.
They're also now going to expand it from Orlando, which is kind of, let's say, roughly.
In the north of Florida, if you don't really know, over to the western side to Tampa.
so it's going to connect all the major cities of Florida
or most of them. So this is this really
incredible success case and it costs them
$6 billion. And so then the question is
wait, they're a private company. How did they do that?
That's sort of unheard of
almost anywhere because the investment
the investment that is required
to build something like a train is so
obscenely high up front that nobody is able
to do it with private market.
Brendan is struggling. I didn't want you to say
a damn thing. You took the iPad for me.
I burned it off. It's so annoying.
I was almost unfathomable.
It is not unfathomily.
It is because it was working fine
and Doug was using it.
I was using it in front of me.
You took it away mid-presidentation.
Let's see what trades.
Tucho!
I grabbed this iPad and I had no issues with it.
And that's not why we are discussing things.
And I checked the price going Boca Raton to Orlando
in a short trip.
$80 a guess, that's not bad at all.
Yeah.
If you want to make a Disney trip
and you're in Florida,
you can get on this train
and it's way, way cheap.
Yeah.
$44,
I guess,
if you leave at APM,
that's crazy.
Right.
So,
like Disney World and Universal
are one of like
the premier
travel destinations of the world,
right?
And now it's like,
you can get there
and then you can take a train
down to Miami.
It's like,
this is really incredible stuff.
And then there's also
cool stuff of like,
they're also,
this company is making
additional revenue
by basically building
cool infrastructure
around the stations.
That's partially how
they're able to do this
in a way that's sustainable
is they're saying,
okay,
at each one of these stations,
these are going to be
in places
that weren't necessarily super high end before.
So, for example, in Miami, it ends in this section of Miami that's like of downtown Miami that is,
there wasn't a lot going on there.
And, oh, yeah, it was formerly a drab corner of downtown.
And so now they have this station there and there's all these towers around it that are really high end that they're developing
with like 800 rental units and all these commodities from Alice Robertson,
a city agency Miami downtown development authority is like,
the private sector can move things faster sometimes than government.
The station went up like magic.
It seems like they were just breaking ground and now it's beautiful and they're talking about the architecture.
Pretty soon we're going to have a service here unlike anything we've ever seen.
So a lot to like laud of this company that has actually done a lot well.
So then the question is how did they do this as a private company?
Because trains are, you know, insanely expensive, $6 billion as much as that doesn't sound like a lot compared to California high speed rail.
That is an interesting amount of money.
There's no private company that's just going to drop that willy-nilly if they are like sure that there's going to be a return.
And so the secret here is that they didn't actually do this all private, really.
What they did, yeah, is they did public activity bonds.
Do you know what these are?
No.
Mr. Business.
Ain and I got to teach Mr. Business here.
I don't know what bonds are.
Tell me about pabs.
A bond is when you take out alone.
Pussy ass bitch.
Let's let me explain.
Like when you use the iPad.
If you know what a Pab is, let's hear you explain it.
You're making a big talker.
What's a pub?
It's a public activity ball?
Uh-huh.
You know the title?
No, we call it Paa.
Let him speak because I think you are teaming up here.
Uh, or private activity bond.
The idea, though, is that in order to raise money as a private company, you have a bunch
of ways of doing it normally, right?
You could take investors that take like ownership shares in the company and they,
they give you money that way.
You could issue stuff like, I guess that's basically selling stock is,
Is going to shark tank.
You could have an IPO and have the public buy your stock potentially.
Or you could issue bonds that you promise to pay interest back to people on.
You could do that.
However, why would they buy those bonds if they could just buy secure government bonds instead
that they don't have to pay tax on the interest rates?
Yeah.
But you do a higher rate.
In some cases, but you don't want to pay a higher rate because it would be more expensive.
You wouldn't want to do that, would you if you were the company?
How do you get this low rate?
So the government has the ability to basically stamp this sticker of approval on the bonds issued by a private company and say these bonds are tax-free.
It's like your parents being a guarantor to your student loan?
No, no, no.
They're not a guarantor, at least not on paper.
Oh, he's got the notes.
Let me see what to correct you.
So let's see what we got.
Well, okay, so very explicitly they're not.
And that's why they're cool.
So the government is not on the hook.
So let's do the scenario.
I am bright line.
I want to raise $6 billion for a train.
Yeah.
It's crazy amount of money.
I'm going to sell bonds.
What that means is I am offering people the opportunity to loan me money.
And in return, I'm going to pay you back your money.
And every year you'll get some percentage back, right?
This is typical bond loan stuff.
Yes.
If you are interested in buying a bond for me, typically when I'm paying back interest every year
and you're making that profit from the bond, you have to pay taxes on it.
So you're getting some cut of whatever money you would have made on the bond.
But if a government issues a public activity bond, the government says, look, we'll issue the bonds.
We're not guaranteeing it, okay?
But when you get interest payments, Atrioc, you don't have to pay taxes.
It's tax free.
So what's critically important here is the government just issues these bonds on behalf of the private company.
And basically it says whoever buys these bonds, you don't have to pay taxes in the future.
So if this company fails, goes belly up, I still lose my money.
You still lose your money.
The government is not on the hook at all.
Yeah.
But it's tax free.
It's tax free.
So the only cost to the government is that they are going to lose out on the tax revenue that they would have made from these bonds, right?
So it is, there is tax revenue that is being lost.
But then the hope is if this allows a company like Brightline to raise $6 billion that they probably wouldn't have otherwise, but they're basically being encouraged by this government forgiveness of the taxes on the interest, then you as an investor are like, oh, I actually would invest in that.
That allows the project to get built.
and now long term is generating way more money, more activity, more tax revenue for everybody.
So in theory, it is a win, win, win.
Yeah.
So there's also an asterisk on this.
Okay.
In that this idea rests heavily on the idea of the government picking partners that are expected to fulfill the project, right?
And in the case of Brightline, great success story.
It worked out, right?
There is an issue where in the past the government has not selected the best private partner, right?
It's not really in the government's interest to let the bond fail, which is part of the...
It's a bad look, right?
Yeah.
So there have been cases, and I had a specific example that I didn't write down.
I'm sorry.
But there was another infrastructure project in the country a few years ago where the underlying project failed.
The company was unable to pay off the bonds.
And the government still stepped in, even though they weren't the guarantor.
Because if they didn't step in, then the value of the perceived projects down the line,
would be lower.
And the likelihood of the projects
that they stamp in the future
being funded by the private sector
would be lower.
So if there's no faith
in the performance of those bonds,
then the utility of this falls off.
It's kind of fucked up though.
I understand that it's a risk of the bond.
That's like now everyone in the future
when they invest are calculating the fact
that they'll probably get bailed out
by the government.
I agree.
And I don't know,
I don't know how often that happens.
I'm just saying there's examples
of that being the case
for those reasons.
But in theory, the government is not supposed to be on the hook.
Okay. Can I bring up the big question that I have about this public-private thing, though?
Yes.
This is awesome, and it was built.
And I do think if it was easy-ish to build a train, the cost of it is not so much the problem.
And then many private companies would step in and build trains in America.
The problem is that how did Florida get past the NIMBYs?
Without a government telling you that you can eminent domain this land or whatever and put a train down,
that's why we can't build the train.
The train gets blocked.
And the reason the California one is blocked at every stage is like somebody sues
or there's some area you can't go through or you can't have to build it like in a weird zigzag.
So I don't understand how this solved that problem.
That is why usually you need a government for a train
because they're the only ones who have the authority to be like,
we're going to build a train here.
You can't.
I don't know.
That's my.
So there's a few things.
The majority of the stories that I've read about Brightline looking
into it are largely, aren't we fucking awesome, we made a train? It's like government and bright line and
people talking about the fact that train got built. So there's not a ton of criticism of it.
And then the follow up to this, which is what is exciting right now. Actually, let me get to that
first. So the follow up is like they are now doing Bright Line West and let me actually take the
iPad back. So this real quick, if you look at the screen, this is what the map looks like right now in Florida.
You can see it goes from Orlando all the way down to Miami with a bunch of different stops and it's also going to go west
over to Tampa, which is another main city.
So, like, it is a really, really incredible infrastructure for Florida,
which is this huge growing state.
For America.
We don't have this.
For America, right.
A European fan watching is like, this is a cute thing.
Right, yeah.
Or whatever, like.
And so they are now doing Brightline West.
So the same company is making a actually high speed rail.
The one in Florida is not technically high speed.
You have to go, I think it's above 124 miles per hour.
I have this written somewhere.
but they are going to make a train from Las Vegas to Los Angeles.
For people who don't live in the Southwest like we do,
Las Vegas,
I'm sure you're aware of,
huge destination city.
And Los Angeles,
massive,
massive,
massive city in the U.S.,
you know,
15,
20 million people,
whatever it is in the greater area.
It is an incredibly popular travel route
to go from Los Angeles to Vegas.
People go all the time.
They go for parties.
They go for events.
They go for conventions.
Non-stop.
And there's basically one highway
which is the 15, which if you've ever done this route,
you know, it's this long strip of desert.
And then if there's an event or anything going on,
tens or hundreds of thousands of other people
are also driving into Vegas.
And you just get stuck for like six hours
in the middle of desert on this two-lane road.
It is a truly miserable experience.
It's awful.
Yeah.
And so, you know, a lot of people have done this.
There's some crazy number.
Okay, yeah, here we go.
Nearly 50 million annual trips occur between L.A. and Las Vegas.
85% of them by car.
Oh, my God.
This is an insane number of people doing this drive from L.A. to Vegas, which without traffic,
it's like four or five hours with traffic. It's like eight. It's just too bad. There's no better
way than driving. Yeah. That's it. We keep as a society.
Brightline has said, like, we think there's an opportunity for a train there. The fact that they've had
success in Florida really helps them out. They're going to be doing all electric zero emission
trains. It's going to be proper high speed with up to 200 miles per hour. It's going to be like
a two hour, 10 minute drive train ride instead of this, you know, four to six hour. There's
going to be 10 billion, again, this is from them, $10 billion in economic impact,
thousand permanent jobs.
For me, as a California resident, I'm going to use this.
They started building in 2024.
They're aiming to get it done by 2028 by the Olympics.
This is happening now and it's going to be done soon.
Incredible.
And so then the question is like, how are they doing this?
Because California high speed rail has utterly failed and has been, you know,
literally like 20 times more expensive.
So a couple things they're doing well.
One is they're doing, they're using existing transportation course.
orders as much as possible. So one, this is a major advantage to their credit versus California
high speed rail. California was trying to build a new train system through the whole country,
through the whole state, right? And that was going to use some portion of track that's already
built, but also lay a whole lot of new stuff. In Florida and then particularly here, they're
basically going to use the median of the highway. So they're going to build trains that go
alongside or basically next to the freeway that's already there. So they're not doing like
1800s people are
like mining through the mountain with pickaxes.
This is like they're using the existing
infrastructure and they're building the train tracks there.
Being stuck in Coachella traffic and
watching the Las Vegas Shidcon San
go by on your right.
So it's, they says they're going to do this on the
median. So my understanding is you're literally going to
be like on the way to Vegas for EDC
and you're stuck in stop and go traffic
and you're going to see a train shoot by 200 miles
an hour. And all the people in there
are drinking because
it doesn't have to drive.
So that's one thing.
They're also, they've just been smart around which routes to pick.
So the California high speed rail project, massively ambitious.
This one, their quote is they're going for routes that are too far to drive but too short to fly.
So they're specifically trying to get these like more narrow things.
And then the other piece is that they're private.
And so to some degree, they are deeply incentivized to just make sure things are moving at all times.
They can work and get done because if they aren't getting things done, the project stops, right?
It's done.
Whereas with California high speed rail, it's like, is cost balloon, the state, the federal government will just try to shore more and more money in.
And so there's kind of no hard stop to, you know, how they deal with restrictions.
But, you know, ultimately it's hard to know.
The fact is they've operated operated really well in Florida.
It seems like they're going to do that.
I mean, this is really cool.
I'm glad you bought this story.
This is very interesting.
Yeah.
I like their strategy of going for, you know, relatively small wins to get like to get momentum.
people that's yeah it's cool. And what's so cool about, so I think what's really valuable about them doing this and trying to do it in a very achievable way is then that addresses the PAB concern you were talking about Aidan, which is, so this public activity bond, what is so great about is the U.S. government isn't on the hook. So with this one, Brightline West, this is a mix basically of it's, I believe six billion right now. It's a mix of public activity bonds, that type of bond we talked about earlier and the federal government just giving them money. So the, the, during the Biden,
an administration department of transportation gave the Nevada department
transportation who's like spearheading this three billion for the project so
this is a mix of these public things but it's still going to be privately operated and
run it's basically the funding is coming from these things and so this if you are
California or or the federal government you're like this is great we have a
company bright line who succeeded in Florida we're going to do these public
activity bonds where we issue the bonds on behalf of them but even if they completely
fail and fuck this up the government does not have to pay it's simply bright
line who's on the hook. And now there's even collateral they can say of their existing train line.
And then the more that this works, you know, hopefully this train, it seems like it's going
well. The more that they build this and it keeps expanding, the more credit they have with,
oh, we're actually going to deliver on the public activity bonds. And so right now, I mean,
supposedly, according to them, they're like, we have up to 10 billion more public activity bonds we
can issue. They're rationed by the government. So we have up to 10 billion more. And it's like,
so they're just cruising. They're doing,
credible at this. And I think this is a really interesting mechanism of government basically facilitating
private companies to do a lot. To be clear, this wouldn't have happened without government support.
The public activity bonds were what allowed Brightline to create the Florida stretch. And it's what's
allowing them to create this stretch. But then the private company gets to run this in a way that
is beneficial to all parties. Right. And even if they fail the government, the taxpayer is not on the
hook. So I think it's a really, really interesting system. And one, I like a lot.
There's obviously situations where you want the government to just fully fund a project.
But ones like this where they can come in and basically unlock the ability for a private company to get started and then they run it from there on the responsible, I think is incredibly valuable.
So I just think this is really interesting.
I want to look more into the land that they got for the Florida one.
It seems like this one, it makes, there's like a lot of desert land.
They're just building right along the highway.
It seems like easy to get to.
No one's in the way.
They're actually leasing it all from Disney.
Disney owns it all.
Disney benefits, I guess.
I just went to go to Orlando, easy.
They're picking easy wins.
And also, it's worth, it's worth clarifying here.
If you look at the map, it's not going from Las Vegas to L.A.
It's going from Las Vegas to Rancho Cucamonga, which is about an hour east of L.A.
So it's funny.
Half the trip would be drive.
If you were in West L.A.,
I was going to say, half the trip is driving to Rancho and then on a train to Viz.
Dude, the drive to Rancho is so long, dude.
So it sounds like it's from L.A., but it's not.
really. And if you're wondering why, it's because, well, it suddenly gets a lot harder to make a train
if you're going from Rancho Cucamonga, which is like you're getting into actual city. It's not a
desert into the heart of L.A. They're talking about potentially extending it to Union Station. So
L.A. does have a train from Union Station in downtown to Rancho Cucamonga. So in theory,
you can drive from West L.A. to downtown, which is like 30 or 40 minutes. Then you get on a train
there to the Bright Line Station, which would be another, I don't know, 30 minutes. And then you take a
high speed, yeah. And then you take the high. Yeah. And then you take the high.
high speed to Vegas. So this is actually a good example of like, it's not like they're going for
the most ambitious things where they have to get a bunch of land rights. They're going for the easy
wins. But I would much rather this happen than no trains. This is really cool. We made a thing.
And I think Americans experiencing the benefit of trains is so good to get momentum for trains.
But I just, I'm usually the guy that's like, you know, let's get some more competition private
tech or stuff in here. I think for trains, if the government is not deeply involved for the high
density areas, you can't get it done.
They have to override the ability of everyone to sue you at every station.
Yeah.
When you're, otherwise you can't.
Or they don't.
And then the thing doesn't get built.
Doesn't get built.
Yeah.
Exactly.
So,
and then one final thing before we move on is just the numbers on this in terms of cost is just
truly mind boggling.
So Brightline Florida, they built the whole thing for $6 billion.
And it's 235 miles.
That's about 25 million per mile.
So per mile of track late, about $25 million it costs.
Okay, so then Brightline West, this one, it is more expensive.
So it's going to be $12 billion in total for 218 miles.
It's about $55 million per mile.
California high speed rail is going to be $256 million per mile of track.
Because it's better.
And it'll be the best damn train this state's ever seen.
Which, and again, just remind people.
So I do think, I do think one thing to know on this, at least as far as the Florida project goes,
is that they didn't,
and part of the reason why it's not high-speed rail
is they used a lot of existing train infrastructure there
and built on top of it.
So there was like rail in places that was used again.
I think part of the reason why this project is more expensive
is because they're building out new track to support it.
The other thing that's interesting here is a part of this success story
is, I mean, depending on how you look at it,
is that the stigma around public rail in the country
and funding public rail projects,
oftentimes because you'd need to go to the public to vote on it
or to find a way to fund it.
I think people have very low expectations
for the government's ability to execute a project like that.
I think pointing to something like California high-speed rail
as an example.
People look at that, people look at the inefficiencies
of something like Amtrak,
and they're like, hmm, this feels like a waste of money.
I don't really believe in this.
I'm not willing to vote on it.
But the beauty of this project is that it kind of cuts through,
that by utilizing a public, like a public action through these public activity bonds and to greenlight
a privately operated project that allows a lot of people to see it in a new light that ultimately
results in a new train being produced. And I do think the pushback there could be, oh, well,
the government should just be able to do this. The government should be able to build trains and
high-speed reel effectively in this country like governments do in a lot of other places.
But the argument against this is that we have tried that for decades.
It is in America so far and not because of not because it wouldn't be successful or that
it couldn't be successful in some way. It's just that we have tried for so long. And rather
than continuing to ram our head into the wall, hoping we figure it out, let's try something
this way and build something. Hybrid approach. Which I do.
think is cool. I would rather, it's like, I would rather see the best version of this done a different
way, but I'm wrestling with the reality of what those projects have looked like in the United
States. And I rather have something like this, even if it goes to Rancho Cucamonga.
I will say one big knock to this project that I admittedly was excited about until this moment
is if I'm being honest, if I'm in like West L.A. or like North L.A., I can,
buy like a $70
like Southwest flight out of like
Burbank to go to Vegas.
Like driving a Rancho and getting on this train
is not. If you're living Rancho, you got
this. You have this in Ontario Airport.
You're living the dream. But the problem
is for people who don't know
L.A. very well, Rancho Kukamonga
as somebody who used to live there a long
time ago, is far away.
This would not be a convenient
thing to get to. And I think that is the one
letdown. And it sucks that
even for Brightline, this company that is managing
to navigate this so successfully.
They can't find a way to like make this project get further into the city.
Not blaming them.
I wonder what the barriers are because that makes me sad as someone who would love to like
more consistently use this.
I mean, I can imagine every inch you go deeper into the city from Rancho, the lawsuits would
just skyrocket every single inch.
So this is so cool.
I think this is really cool.
And the fact that people in Florida are getting on a fucking train at an affordable price
and using it and enjoying it and perhaps change.
Changing their views on trains is awesome.
I hope it's a cultural shift.
Yeah.
Even if this thing only goes to Rancho Cucamonga,
it's like there's going to be some percentage of people who go,
this is fucking awesome and hopefully will be more receptive to other train projects.
I mean,
you said it only takes two hours.
That's what the finish.
Two hours 10.
Yeah.
That's fucking amazing.
Yeah.
I would still do that.
I would drive Rancho.
I love trains.
Let's go gamble in the event.
If you haven't figured this out,
I'm a big train fan.
No,
this is really cool to see the way it's working out, though.
Well,
You've been speaking your mind, Aidan especially, and that segues us perfectly into your topic,
which is free speech.
I don't think we should hear about this.
Aidan's got a lot of dangerous opinions.
I do.
I do.
And he's been trying to silence me.
We've all been trying to silence you, but I want to hear you speak loud and proud about free speech because you wanted to say it.
Time to shut this whole show down.
It'd be funny.
If in the YouTube edit for this, your mic is muted the entire rest of the show.
Okay.
There's a loud bleep.
I don't have as much to, I want this conversation to be somewhat open-ended.
And I was thinking about a way to introduce this for a while.
But we exist, I think, in general, I think most people have this idea that free speech is very important.
It's something that we all value, I think regardless of whether you are in the political spectrum,
most people that would argue that free speech is important.
I think the way people employ that value somewhat selectively in certain situations,
people take it in different directions depending on maybe how they feel about certain things
or like what they believe. But in general, people like having that as a baseline. There's not a lot
of like, let's repeal the First Amendment people, you know? Sure. But we live in a time
where the internet exists. And I think this has magnified the use of speech and the way we view speech
in many, many different ways.
What I would point to is like an argument
that I've heard against guns
or like in America and the Second Amendment
is they wrote this when the musket had to be reloaded
and it took two minutes
and now we have like automatic rifles
and obviously they weren't writing about that.
And I would kind of argue
that in the context of writing the First Amendment
the way speech exists in society
has just changed.
a lot. I'm not saying that's bad or good. I'm not telling you guys which way to fall on that.
It's more like we kind of have the machine gun equivalent of speech in terms of how you-
Twitter is the AR-15 of speech.
Kind of, yeah. The way you can wield and distribute speech online is drastically different
than the way you were able to communicate with people hundreds of years ago.
So when I tweeted a picture of Jack Black in a Lakers outfit yesterday saying chicken jockey,
I want you to think about how much, how much time and effort it would have taken to distribute that same piece of information.
Me and Ben Franklin making pamphlets of chicken jockeys.
Distributing it on horseback with the picture of Jack Black at the Lakers game.
It would have been quite an undertaking.
You're correct.
And I think with the way we view speech online, the way like the way people choose to wield it, a lot of companies that operate the platforms that we talk on,
or governments have chosen to moderate and look at speech in different ways.
So even within one company like Facebook, right?
Years ago, they were in the direction of like fact-checking, direct content moderation,
and even with all those things, massive issues within the way that Facebook handled speech.
A famous example, I would say, is the Rohingya genocide, if you guys don't know about that,
where I think it was in Myanmar, there's an ongoing,
genocide of Muslims in the country
that is primarily
or like largely,
sorry, largely linked to
hate speech towards that ethnic group
spread on Facebook. It was a huge
thing that came up during
Mark Zuckerberg's
first set of congressional
trials or like interviews he did
like years ago.
And then now they
have gone in a completely
different direction where Mark Zuckerberg announced
that they're getting rid of those fact checkers.
in America and content moderation, and they're moving in the direction Twitter did with community
notes and choosing to moderate speech in very different ways. They're pulling back a lot of the moderation
and saying, we're going to allow a lot more. And that's also the direction Twitter moved in in terms
of how much they allow on the platform, right? And then there's also messaging apps that have taken
very different approaches to this. So one app I would call out is Telegram, very famously,
does not really moderate any of the messages or content being sent on that platform. A lot of the
appeal of the platform is that you're sending private encrypted messages to only the people you
intend to send them to. And that security is part of the appeal of the platform. But the tradeoff
when you start having something like that is, oh, well, surprise, who has groups and like message boards
on telegram or who's distributing information via telegram? Well, ISIS, you know. Criminals.
Drug traffickers, child traffickers, all of these like criminal enterprises that have taken
advantage of the fact that there's no moderation using this tool, right?
So I, with and part of that, an interesting case in France recently that I kind of wanted to
sign this off on is Pavel Dirov, who's a Russian guy, who's this guy who made Telegram,
who originally made like the Russian version of Facebook, basically, then he made Telegram later.
He was arrested in France in 2024 on the charges of basically lack of, not a lot of, not
By choosing to not moderate Telegram, they charged him as liable for a lot of that.
That you're facilitating that content on the platform, right?
There's a lot of directions this conversation can go, but I want your guys's opinion on general,
you know, first thought opinions on free speech online, not free speech in general necessarily,
but free speech on the internet.
And how you guys think that should or should not be moderate.
I know that's super
five minutes. I think we can solve this.
We might have to go a little over.
We might go a little bit over. We'll solve it.
We'll solve it. We'll solve it. We'll solve it in five minutes and have a couple
bonus minutes at the end. And then a beer because it'll be easy.
Yeah. What do you think, Doug?
So I think first off there, there's probably a distinction that's worth mentioning
between legal and illegal speech, right? So illegal speech is, you know, if you're
planning a terrorist attack.
like that's, for my understanding, you can't do that in the U.S., right?
You can't, so there's a difference between saying, like criticizing a political figure in a distasteful
way versus saying, we are planning to blow up an embassy, right?
So there is a distinction there.
So I think the telegram thing is probably more about, are you facilitating people doing illegal
activity versus somebody, you know, saying a bunch of slurs on Twitter or Facebook or whatever
it is, or like, or criticizing a race, like with the example you said.
That's not illegal, as my understanding, is to criticize, at least, I don't know in that country, but in the U.S.
I mean, that's one of the questions to answer here, right?
In that country, it's not, right?
The idea of, like, spewing hate speech about one particular race and then that resulting in violence later on towards that group,
maybe the speech might not necessarily have been illegal.
And then on the other end, right, states could choose to be way heavier in what they treat as illegal.
Like China has a way more strict policy
around what you can post on the internet there.
Right. So yeah. So then obviously the question is
within the bounds of legal speech,
if for example you were criticized, I don't know, if you're saying
a bunch of racist shit all day long,
and then there's a bunch of
action and illegal action by individuals against that
racial group, are you responsible for it? Right.
And that then is where it gets really murky of like
that's legal speech, but then
should it be allowed because it's, you know, dangerous
or has knock on consequences or whatever. So
I think it's, there's an obvious separation of like,
I don't think ISIS should be allowed to plan terrorist attacks using American infrastructure or software or anything like that.
Within legal-I actually think ISIS should get on WhatsApp.
It's weird that they're on Telegram.
That is true, yeah.
She should get on Instagram.
She's just be on a more available platform.
It's confusing to sign up for telegram.
It'll be a lot easier for recruits.
Pipeline into ISIS.
It's like if they're having fun on Instagram, like if they're sipping a martini or something in a well-shot, well-lit environment.
So I have a couple core points.
Okay.
So the one thing, I mean, I think really the question is like should tech companies and or the government stop certain viewpoints from being expressed on these platforms?
So we've seen examples of this, right, where that did happen during what Trump administration and Biden, right?
Where there was some degree of like Twitter saying we're going to what was the thing they did?
They like marked it as like, this is sensitive with COVID, right?
Yeah.
It was like so multiple social media platforms said, okay, this isn't.
this isn't a legal speech saying you're questioning COVID or whatever,
but we're going to mark this and de-de-reach it, right?
Like reduce the amount of reach.
My concern, I tend to be more of a free speech absolutist.
My concern is that if you're deciding that certain viewpoints are dangerous and need to be censored,
a human being has to make that decision.
And that means, in most cases, either an unelected person running a tech company,
like Mark Zuckerberg, I'm not a fan of that personally.
I don't like the idea that that guy just gets to decide what everybody is.
saying and thinking, particularly given that they've been illustrated to just kind of like flip,
flop back and forth with whatever the political wins are. Mark Zuckerberg has very explicitly done that.
Or somebody like Elon who's just, you know, extremely political, right, then like having that be
the viewpoint that he's doing everything. Or you have politicians doing it, deciding what is allowed
or what should be censored. And in either case, it's like, that sounds great if your team is in charge.
like if you feel like okay there's a really dangerous section of speech going on right now let's say about race
and your team is currently in charge of the government you're like we should take action to go against this
at least in our political system where we are not a dictatorship at some point that changes to the other
political party and then they just start persecuting against whatever your team wanted right
and we see that right now that's currently happening right over the last four years like
things the government facilitated the censorship or encouraged of things like covid or let's say trans
rights, things like that, where those type of subjects had diminished reach on a number of social
media platforms.
Unclear exactly how involved the government was.
But that was the case, right?
I mean, my understanding is that for the specific issues you're citing, at least, I would
say at least the COVID one, basically during the, I don't know about the Trump administration,
during the Biden administration, there was pressure to remove disinformation from these sites.
under, and I think this is, this is part of the conversation is, it can be taking, the, the action and
inaction can be interpreted in bad faith like both ways, right? The issue is that they're,
they're trying to do their job, which I would argue, which is save as many lives as possible,
prevent this like disinformation about something like ivermectin spreading, which is,
if you're listening to this podcast right now, and you think ivermectin was a adequate
response to COVID. I promise
you. At 5K patrons, the underlying
study. The underlying study,
I know what you're thinking, even if you look to the studies,
I know what study you're talking about, you're talking about it all started
with the study in Egypt. All the data was debunked.
I promise you. I promise you, you're wrong about that specific thing.
I can't spend a bunch of time on that right now.
But they basically asked for disinformation
about COVID, the COVID vaccine,
and like remedy, like
unproven remedies to COVID to be removed from the site.
They couldn't legally demand that they do that from my understanding.
But they pressured them to do so.
And then, I mean, loosely I understand that they complied.
Like, they basically complied with the pressure to do so.
And there's a question of like whether or not it's ethical for the government to do that.
And it feels so, I don't know, it's weird.
It does come down to the person in charge or like what your viewpoint is about things.
I would argue.
So real quick, just to follow this up.
Just example right now.
Trump is now in charge, right?
and that admin is,
administration is in theory,
also free speech,
but they are cracking down
on your ability to criticize Israel, right?
Like that's now,
it's like,
if you're a university
and you're allowing this type of protest on campus,
we're going to remove federal funding, right?
So they are like,
they're doing their own sort of like,
we want to stop certain types of free speech
and we're going to take these actions against it.
And I'm not a big,
I would rather we just say,
look,
we got to do free speech and improve this through conversation,
which we can get to more of why I think that's,
that's better,
rather than saying whoever is currently in charge gets to decide what's allowed or not,
that feels like a really bad slippery slope.
And I have a hard time imagining how you trust people in charge to do this over the long term.
I tend to agree with you, but I think it is interesting that we are in such a challenging time digitally,
in that it's not just people in good faith saying their opinions on what they want.
Yes.
but that you can create at scale, now with AI,
realistic sounding bots to push any narrative.
It's much more easy to influence many, many, many, many people.
And so it's such an, I don't know the answer.
This is why I don't have a thought out solution to it.
I'm sure the YouTube comments will determine the answer.
Whatever the most upvoted comment is of this episode is the answer.
I think if you actually think this issue through,
it's borderline impossible to answer, at least right now.
Like basically fully accounting for this principle that we all value, but in this internet landscape,
with everything in the future coming towards us, how can you really like think the issue through
and come to a solution that we're all happy with?
I mean, there's not.
I think that's the simple way of putting it is like there is no perfect solution to this problem.
One big thing that I think about, if I go back to my machine gun analogy, is even if you
you're communicating in something
in good faith online
and it's not a message that
is meant to be
nefarious, it's not
something be expanded on
upon by
bots, you
still, things
being able to spread through an algorithm
and delivered to people
selectively or the way content
can spread online
is so much different
than writing a book
or a pamphlet or speaking to somebody.
Like it was back in the old day.
And I think that's the danger to me.
And I realize that who is the arbiter
of what is dangerous is,
and it is kind of the impossible question.
I want to bring up this grabs.
That's the issue.
Because you'd have to assign a person
to make that call.
This is Anastasia Maria Lupus.
I don't know who she is.
I actually think she's got pretty wild views,
but this is her views on X.
As you can see, you know, hundreds of thousands per day.
And then right around here, December, she has a few with Elon Musk.
And then that's her views now.
They just instantly drop.
And so there's a very clear, if you look at this chart.
Did you just draw some random line?
Just drawing that penis I was trying to drop.
Yeah.
And so you can see with this line.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, we're finally using the tellistrate.
Oh, dude.
The reach plummeted instantly.
And it feels like there's a back.
back-end thing there where this guy now has the power, if not to eliminate this person's
freedom of speech, then their freedom of reach.
Yeah.
To where they cannot.
And again, I probably don't agree with anything as you said, but I'm just saying it's an
interesting thing from a free speech absolutist to be able to cut someone's ability to get an
audience.
Yeah, he's not a free speech absolutely.
Yeah.
Of course.
I think we're going to agree with that.
I mean, this is, this is a problem.
It's like the algorithm is another layer on top of free speech where, uh, is it fair
to ask the question,
is it fair to ask the question,
what right does she have
to that platform?
This didn't even exist
30 years ago.
Free speech was written,
like free speech,
the constitutional amendment
was written so long before.
To what degree is this?
Are you entitled to this?
Again, it's a private company.
They can do what they want with it, right?
I think that's a fair point.
The problem is,
as we enter into a more digital era,
it's like saying if the government cuts off your access to your phone
or if you don't have access to a phone or internet
that's fine you don't need that but it's like in modern society you do
I can't I see the direct I think for me this is right
I'm coming at this personally phone and internet not akin to Twitter
maybe not Twitter but I'm saying if there's only three major social platforms
at which all of our town square has become yeah
your ability to not speak on those is suddenly a major limiting factor
and your ability to get your voice heard.
Yes.
And then all,
I mean,
I think we have a very interesting case study of this,
which is Trump,
which is that after January 6th,
he was banned from all the major social media websites.
And we all had this exact same conversation, right?
So one of the,
I think that whole experience actually made me feel more strongly
about the importance of free speech
because it felt great in the moment.
Okay, Trump isn't on Twitter saying these,
saying this kind of rhetoric anymore.
and then over the next four years
he comes with this absolutely unbelievable political comeback
and is now in control of like the entire government
doing crazy shit, right?
So he is an example of where de-platforming
utterly fails because you don't stop his speech from happening.
You just sort of make him a martyr
and then just like festers in other areas, right?
And so I'm not convinced based on that case
that we've saw and the unbelievable level of bounce back
that happened after that,
that de-platforming somebody from these tech things
is even a way to stop those views.
use. It reaffirmed the, you know, admittedly, probably very naive belief and hope that the way
to solve these things is more conversation, not less. Again, I acknowledge that's probably very
optimistic. But it's, when you see something like this, it's like, dude, even in this example
where you had Trump and, you know, let's say you think he's, this was, you know, this was critical
to saving America from what he was saying. It didn't work at all, right? It completely flipped this
and got him so much momentum. Same with Tucker Carlson. Tucker Carlson. Tucker was like,
like, you know, the most influential Fox host, they deplatformed him, or they fired him.
AOC had a tweet that said it was something along the lines of deplatforming works.
We got Tucker removed.
And I was like, okay, let's see what happens.
And now he's this wildly successful podcast host with no, with no bars on what he's doing.
There's no, like, limits anymore.
So it goes in interviews Putin, right?
And so that's another example to me where, like, it's viewed as like, this person is dangerous.
Let's shut him off from the sort of mainstay digital.
town squares, let's say, and that doesn't seem to stop them at all, if anything, it does the
opposite. So that's, again, it affirms for me, like, I think it's got to be more conversation,
not this thing right here, where you can see on the Telestrator, it went down, if you look very
carefully. Yeah, this is obviously so nuanced. It's tough because I, yeah, it's the nuance is that
a lot of the speech I hate and wish it didn't exist. Right, right. Also, I really have a visceral,
like, gut reaction of distrust or distaste when one person,
or one government can silence me or someone.
I don't like the idea of having any limit.
I don't like the idea if I said fuck Trump or fuck Elon on Twitter
that I could be deplatformed or silence or have my de-reach decrease.
I don't like that idea.
It makes me uncomfortable.
And I wish no one had that power to unilaterally decide.
Except Mark Zuckerberg.
And he'll have it because he's got a cool hair now.
Only Mark with his new look though.
Well, yeah, only if he's got the chain and the windsurfing.
I don't want Pab of Mark Zuckerberg telling me what to not say.
Okay, I have a couple of responses to that.
The first thing is that the argument you're making can be made both ways.
And I think that is what makes this problem so difficult to deal with.
Is that if you ban speech or you de-platform people,
you immediately feed into the conspiratorial narrative that you're subjugating information,
you're pushing one side down and not allowing them to like have the time to talk and you create a martyr out of a figure you've deplatformed.
And you prevent other people from engaging with them and helping suppress that growth.
And you potentially fuel the movement of whatever it is that way.
But the other problem is if you don't do anything and you don't moderate, the way the platforms are structured does not do anything to allow the discussion.
you're asking for to happen, in my opinion.
And we can see that.
The example I gave you was the Rohingya Genocide,
which is this devastating genocide in Myanmar.
And that was on the other scenario
where basically no moderation was happening.
Facebook's big problem was outside of English-speaking Facebook,
the moderation was very poor for a very long time.
So none of the hate speech that helped fuel that genocide
was being looked at or moderated.
for a very long period of time.
It was what allowed that situation
to spiral and build out of control
or a huge part of why that was.
And I think you can point to a lot of other...
Like, if I were to use the COVID example,
I would say if they didn't do anything
and you didn't take any action at all,
well, are you letting the algorithm feed
and build these conversations about this topic
and this bad advice that harms people so directly?
I think it's why it's so difficult.
There's no win in either of these situations.
Both of them allow the problem to fester
and build in different ways.
And I do think that ideally
talking about things
over extended periods of time
is how you gain understanding.
You can almost say that podcasting
is how to change the problem.
Exactly.
That's well said, Doug.
So don't listen to any other media.
Just listen to us.
And the issue,
with that is the way the platforms are structured,
the way the incentive structures work,
doesn't feed into that at all.
I think it feeds into way more polarized opinions
and arguing and existing within the echo chamber
you already exist within.
It does not promote long-winded, like difficult conversation.
Yeah, I mean, you could say the deeper problem
is social media itself.
Yeah.
You could say that that...
Yeah, they design on a software level
how conversations get serviced and go...
And then the deeper problem in that is
the human brain.
You know,
is so susceptible to monkey brain
when you get angry
you get interested in your...
And these situations,
like they don't...
It's not that removing the internet
necessarily solves the underlying problems.
I think human monkey brain is like at...
And like terrible people
have been able to push their agenda forward
and move...
create movements with thousands or millions of people
at many times throughout history.
They didn't need Twitter to fucking do.
do it. I'm not, I'm not ignoring that.
I think Paul Pot had Twitter. I'm not 100% sure, but I think he was mobilized.
He was way ahead of the game. I think he was dank memes on Twitter.
That was just in TV. It was before.
I, I just think, uh, there, it, it, I almost want to loop it back to the authoritarian,
benevolent authoritarian conversation from like one of the first episodes where part of me is like,
dude, the best solution is like
the right guy.
The right guy.
You know?
But nobody will ever agree on like who the right guy is
or whether or not the right guy can be corrupted.
You just want to be subjugated.
We get it.
Dude, I just want to Lee Kwan you to come back.
What can I say?
But that's, it's kind of,
it's a silly conclusion to come to, right?
If we give him a Trump gold card,
we get him over to America,
we get him to start taking over?
Easy.
Bring back to life.
And then, I don't know.
Obviously, this is like a, it's like a core tenant of like democratic society and like getting along with your neighbor and voting on things and figuring things out.
Like that is, any communal society that is dependent on the other people around you, I think deals will have to deal with this problem in some way, right?
There's just, it's so big.
You know what shocked me?
Have you seen that if you go on, let's say, for example, Instagram or TikTok and you see a viral, first of all, your feet is already algorithmic.
So you're seeing things that you most likely will agree with.
Right.
But what I found out is if you click on, let's say,
this is a viral video of a guy playing a video game,
I think, and the girlfriend like takes the controller away or whatever.
Yeah.
This is a viral video.
And then some girl was explaining how she saw the same video on her app
and then on her boyfriend's app.
Not only were they getting the video for different reasons,
but the top comments were algorithmic degenerated.
So he scrolls into the top comments and it's all saying,
wow, what a bitch or whatever.
Like it's already feeding him.
he feels like that's the opinion of the world.
Like that's the top most weapon comes.
She looks into it and it's like,
wow,
this guy's another loser or whatever.
Like she was getting different top of it of comments.
So not only are we not able in a town square on what we see,
but we're also being fed the idea that the entire world is behind us in these opinions.
You don't even see dissenting opinions on your,
that's crazy.
I mean,
that is a recipe and that's what we're in of complete polarization and disaster.
I don't,
that's the deeper problem I think of all this.
It's exacerbated.
It exacerbates all the existing problems that, you know, all of these problems with free speech exist no matter what.
Yeah.
But it's social media amplifies.
By like a thousand.
Yeah.
It really is like kerosene on the small match.
And that's kind of what I mean is like what I was alluding to with my question here is what I'm not saying Elon should be doing that.
I don't like it.
But what right does she have to that platform in the sense that maybe we shouldn't have social media at all?
Like I don't know.
To be honest.
And I know that's not going to happen anytime soon.
And I know I'm on a podcast that utilizes the internet to publish itself and make money.
That's a little different.
I do think that I do think that social media is maybe low, like maybe we just all shouldn't have it.
And that should be the agreement.
Yeah.
I think we've discussed it, but just to explicitly tie it to the way they're made, the algorithm that runs a social media platform is a machine learning algorithm that is trying to optimize for keeping people on the site and engage.
right. So every time it over time is trained on how people are behaving on the website and every time
somebody clicks certain types of content or engages with it, they'll be like, oh, that's what this
person wants, that gets more people, that is a good. We reward the algorithm. And then what human
beings get triggered and titillated by is angry conversations and tribalism and things that you
already agree with that hits you against another group. And so if you are a tech company and you're
like, we want people to use our software, you're going to let
the AI algorithm, push everybody in that direction because that will make your app bigger.
And then, listen, the reason the title and thumb of this episode is something about us
freaking out over student loan or something and not a nuanced discussion about trains
and free speech is because of Albright.
Can we try that?
Can we try it out of discussions on trains?
Multi thumbnail.
Okay, can we, okay, give me an hour, okay, on like Saturday, where we change it to a nuanced
discussion about trains and we see how it goes.
We just see how it goes.
We see how it goes.
Wait, I
This actually, I have a solution.
I think I can wrap up this whole thing
and I have a fix.
You know it's a discussion about trains
where we're all going.
Oh, train?
We scrap,
Mr. Beast in the window.
We scrap all of this.
We get rid of all the social media platforms.
They're all gone.
All of these private companies are gone.
We get the government runs social media
and they give it to one institution.
Amtrak.
Amtrak runs our social media platform.
It's just updates on trains every day.
745 new revival.
And it like doesn't work most of the time.
And the only discussion happens at the comments.
The comments on like the northeast corridor train is running 20 minutes to like,
fuck you,
Elon.
It's just like,
you can only communicate to the comments section of updates about rail delays.
We solved it.
Or if we're ending social media,
we did solve it.
It's like to communicate with another person,
you got to put a letter onto the train and it gets taken to their house.
You have to utilize the network of trains and send written letters.
Okay, yeah.
So an Amtrak run train-based postal service instead of social media.
Yeah.
That's all that.
All right.
Can I end with one.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think it is informed my hope for more conversation being good.
Have you guys heard of Daryl Davis?
He's this black blues musician who is famous for having a bunch of Clu Klux Klan members
leave the clan because of him.
You might have seen, there's like, there's videos about it.
I do know about this guy.
So he is, I think, just incredible.
And so he's, he basically has, you know,
over this career of like doing music,
started to interact with Klu-Klaas clan members
and I believe the southeast of the country.
And then started to just be friends with them.
And it was,
he literally just was like,
let me come to my place.
Like, let's just meet my family.
Let's talk out or let's talk this out.
And just has had these long conversations.
And over the course of many years,
there's, when I last heard of this,
a couple years ago,
was 200 people had left the clan because after months or years of talking to him,
being friends with him,
they were like,
this doesn't make sense.
My racist worldview does not line up with what I am seeing and engaging with this person.
With this lived experience with this guy.
And if you listen to him talk,
he's done various interviews and stuff.
He's just like,
the key is to you can't go into these conversations trying to change their mind.
You have to be genuinely interested and listen to them and understand.
And then over time,
your natural presence and your natural perspective will help challenge their point of view.
but it takes the willingness to just truly empathize with them
and try to understand their point of view.
And it's the absolute antithesis of social media, right?
Dude, in every way.
It is one of those things where it's like you hear about this guy
and it's something that you could never like ask of somebody
or recommend that they do,
but the fact that he's doing it is like so admirable.
And then he has like the, it's funny
because he probably doesn't look at it in this way,
but like such crazy result.
It's like, okay, well, you changed these, like, 200 people's minds and, like, took them out of this.
There's, like, notable, a clan leader that left and left a vacuum in this one area of the United States of leadership for the Klu Klux Klan because the leadership was leaving because they were friends with Daryl.
And he has these robes that they've given him.
So he's, he's the robes.
Yeah, he collects the robes.
Like, Pokemon cards.
Like fucking scalps.
KKK spouse.
He's killed, dude.
His KD ratio is crazy on the KKKKKs.
His K-Convert ratio is fucking crazy.
I think it's like a heartwarming story.
It's beautiful and it's one of those things I come back to of like I
probably naive and oversimplify,
but I just,
I hope and believe that increased conversation with people,
even who you deeply disagree with,
even who have horrible fucking views like the KKK.
It's like,
hopefully that's the best way because I don't,
I don't know of any other success story like that of changing people
minds. I don't think social media is necessarily going to change that guy's mind in some rural
part of Georgia who joined the KKK. Yeah, I don't think social media is. I don't think social media
is the way, I think that the only way you can change people's minds about anything is like
connecting with them very, very deeply. A really effective. We create a Daryl Davis AI and send it to
every KKK member on an optimist Tesla robot.
Hey, I'm Daryl Lidders.
I have a question in the episode briefly.
When they did the big announcement,
when they had the big event and they had the robots,
those were just people in the robot costume.
They weren't people in the robot costumes.
They were people remotely controlling the robots.
Oh, okay, so it wasn't a real robot.
It was a real robot.
But there's a guy in a...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
Paying the guy $15 an hour to operate the barrisso to robot.
The way...
We were automating it.
Darrell Davis is remotely controlling the robot.
He's talking to every Klan member.
I feel like it loses some of that human connection.
Yeah.
No,
I think we can commoditize this for sure.
That's a good idea.
I think on that note,
with the student loans and the free speech thing,
because those are like,
I think deeply personal topics to everybody,
also, you know,
if you have a really nice anecdote
about Bright Line, too, to be honest.
Yeah, deeply personal.
Feel free to share it with us
because I would love to hear people's opinions
about one, free speech.
This topic, which one is one that's so dynamic, I think.
One about your student loans, because I know a ton of people are in the prime, like, age
demographic where you're dealing with that right now and what your personal stories with
that are.
And if you've been on any cool trains recently.
Oh, real quick plug for the Patreon.
As a reminder, that still exists and it's growing and there's a bunch extra stuff there
and more stuff coming.
We're doing an extra thing every month, I mean, every week, excuse me.
Yeah, last episode was a good.
We had a really good talk about Steam as a platform and gaming monopolies.
And the guy I worked in the game with dropped in, left a huge comment to give him his thoughts.
It was pretty cool.
Nice.
Yes.
Good stuff.
All right.
See you guys.
Problem solves.
Bye.
