Lex Fridman Podcast - #458 – Marc Andreessen: Trump, Power, Tech, AI, Immigration & Future of America

Episode Date: January 26, 2025

Marc Andreessen is an entrepreneur, investor, co-creator of Mosaic, co-founder of Netscape, and co-founder of the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz. Thank you for listening ❤ Check out our sp...onsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep458-sc See below for timestamps, transcript, and to give feedback, submit questions, contact Lex, etc. Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/marc-andreessen-2-transcript CONTACT LEX: Feedback - give feedback to Lex: https://lexfridman.com/survey AMA - submit questions, videos or call-in: https://lexfridman.com/ama Hiring - join our team: https://lexfridman.com/hiring Other - other ways to get in touch: https://lexfridman.com/contact EPISODE LINKS: Marc's X: https://x.com/pmarca Marc's Substack: https://pmarca.substack.com Marc's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@a16z Andreessen Horowitz: https://a16z.com SPONSORS: To support this podcast, check out our sponsors & get discounts: Encord: AI tooling for annotation & data management. Go to https://encord.com/lex GitHub: Developer platform and AI code editor. Go to https://gh.io/copilot Notion: Note-taking and team collaboration. Go to https://notion.com/lex Shopify: Sell stuff online. Go to https://shopify.com/lex LMNT: Zero-sugar electrolyte drink mix. Go to https://drinkLMNT.com/lex OUTLINE: (00:00) - Introduction (12:46) - Best possible future (22:09) - History of Western Civilization (31:28) - Trump in 2025 (39:09) - TDS in tech (51:56) - Preference falsification (1:07:52) - Self-censorship (1:22:55) - Censorship (1:31:34) - Jon Stewart (1:34:20) - Mark Zuckerberg on Joe Rogan (1:43:09) - Government pressure (1:53:57) - Nature of power (2:06:45) - Journalism (2:12:20) - Bill Ackman (2:17:17) - Trump administration (2:24:56) - DOGE (2:38:48) - H1B and immigration (3:16:42) - Little tech (3:29:02) - AI race (3:37:52) - X (3:41:24) - Yann LeCun (3:44:59) - Andrew Huberman (3:46:30) - Success (3:49:26) - God and humanity PODCAST LINKS: - Podcast Website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast - Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr - Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 - RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ - Podcast Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrAXtmErZgOdP_8GztsuKi9nrraNbKKp4 - Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/lexclips

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 The following is a conversation with Mark Andresen, his second time on the podcast. Mark is a visionary tech leader and investor who fundamentally shaped the development of the internet and the tech industry in general over the past 30 years. He's the co-creator of Mosaic, the first widely used web browser, co-founder of Netscape,
Starting point is 00:00:22 co-founder of the legendary Silicon Valley venture capital firm Andresen Horowitz, and is one of the most influential voices in the tech world, including at the intersection of technology and politics. And now a quick few seconds mention of each sponsor. Check them out in the description. It's the best way to support this podcast. We've got Oncord for unifying your email stack,
Starting point is 00:00:46 GitHub for programming, Notion for team projects and collaboration, Shopify for merch, and Element for hydration. Choose wisely, my friends. Also, if you want to get in touch with me for whatever reason, go to lexfreeman.com slash contact. And now onto the full ad reads. No ads in the middle. I try to
Starting point is 00:01:05 make this interesting, but if you skip them, please still check out the sponsors. I enjoy this stuff. Maybe you will too. This episode is brought to you by Enchord, a platform that provides data focused AI tooling for data annotation, curation, and management, and for model evaluation Once you train up the model on the data that you curate in this conversation with Mark Andreessen we actually discuss what he calls kind of like the trillion dollar questions and one of them for AI is How effective will synthetic data be it really isn't an open question? How effective will synthetic data be? It really isn't an open question. What piece, what fraction of the intelligence of future models
Starting point is 00:01:50 will be based on training on synthetic data? At the top AI labs, I'm hearing a lot of optimism. As far as I can tell that optimism is not currently, at least in the general case, based on any real evidence. So I do think synthetic data will play a part. But how big a part? There's still going to be some curation from humans. There's still going to need to be a human in the loop. I think the real question is how do you effectively integrate the human in the loop so that the synthetic data sort of 99 synthetic 1% human that
Starting point is 00:02:30 combination can be most effective that's a real question and companies like Encore are trying to solve that very problem first of all I want to provide the tooling for the annotation for for the actual human-AI collaboration, but also asking and answering the research question of like how do you pull it all off and make the resulting model more intelligent for very specific applications and for the general applications.
Starting point is 00:02:57 Yeah, so Encore does a really good job on the tooling side. Go try them out to curate, annotate, and manage your AI data at Encore.com slash Lex. That's Encore.com slash Lex. This episode is brought to you by GitHub and GitHub Copilot. If you don't know what that is, my friends, you're in for a joyous, beautiful surprise. I think a lot of people that program regularly know and love GitHub and know and love Copilot. It's the OG AI programming assistant,
Starting point is 00:03:36 and it's the one that's really trying to win this very competitive space. It is not easy. If you're somebody that uses VS code, obviously, well, maybe not obviously, but you can use GitHub Copilot in VS code, but you can use it also in other IDEs. I'm gonna be honest with you.
Starting point is 00:03:56 It's a very competitive space. I'm trying all the different tools in the space, and I really love how much GitHub and GitHub Co-Pilot want to win in this competitive space so I'm excitedly sort of sitting back and just eating popcorn like that Michael Jackson meme and just enjoying the hell out of it and like I said I'm going to be doing a bunch of programming episodes including with Primogen. And he I think has a love-hate relationship with AI and with AI agents and with the role
Starting point is 00:04:34 of AI in the programming experience. And he's really at the forefront of people that are playing with all these languages, with all these different applications, with all the different use cases of code. And he is a new of M user so he's going to be skeptical in general of new technology. He's a curmudgeon sitting on a porch on rocking chairs, screaming at the kids throwing stuff at them. But at the same time he's able to play with the kids as well. So I am more on the kid side with a childlike joy enjoy the new technology. For me basically everything I do
Starting point is 00:05:13 programming wise has the possibility of AI either reviewing it or assisting it. It's constantly in the loop. Even if I'm writing stuff from scratch, I'm always just kind of one second away from asking a question about the code or asking it to generate or rewrite a certain line or to add a few more lines, all that kind of stuff. So I'm constantly constantly using it. If you're learning to code or if you're an advanced programmer, it is really important that you get better and better at using AI as an assistant programmer. Get started with GitHub Copilot for free today at gh.io slash copilot. This episode is also
Starting point is 00:05:56 brought to you by Notion, a note taking and team collaboration tool that Mark Andreessen on this very episode sings a lot of praises to. I believe he sings, was it on mic or off mic? I don't remember, but anyway he loves it. It's one of the tools, one of the companies, one of the ecosystems that integrate AI really effectively for team applications. When you have, let's see like docs and wikis and projects and all that kind of stuff. You can have the AI load all of that in and answer questions based on that. You can connect a bunch of apps like you could connect slack.
Starting point is 00:06:33 You can connect Google Drive. I think in the context we were talking about something like notion for email for like Gmail. I don't know if Notion integrates email yet. They're just like this machine that's constantly increasing the productivity of every aspect of your life. So I'm sure they're going to start integrating more and more apps.
Starting point is 00:06:57 I use it for Slack and Google Drive, but I use it primarily at the individual level for note taking and even at the individual level, just incredible what Not notion AI can do Try it out for free when you go to notion comm slash Lex That's all lowercase notion comm slash Lex to try the power of notion AI today This episode is also brought to you by Shopify a platform designed for anyone to sell anywhere with a great looking online store. There are a few people embody the the joy and the power of capitalism than Mark Andreessen. I believe Mark and Toby
Starting point is 00:07:37 are friends. I was at a thing where Mark and Toby were both there and they were chatting and they were very friendly, so I think they're friends, and I got to hang out with Toby, and he's, again, an incredible person. I say it again and again, and it's almost becoming funny that eventually we'll do a podcast. I don't know why we haven't done a podcast.
Starting point is 00:07:59 There's a few people in my life where, it's like, like, Jeffrey Hinton is one of those people it's like we've agreed to do a podcast for so long and we've just been kind of lazy about it and Toby's the same anyway he's the CEO of Shopify I don't even know if he knows that Shopify sponsors this podcast it doesn't matter it goes without saying it should be obvious to everybody that one doesn't affect the other I am very fortunate to have way more sponsors than we could possibly fit so I could pick whoever the hell I want and whatever guest I choose will never have anything to do with this
Starting point is 00:08:39 companies that sponsor the podcast there's no there's not even like a tinge of influence. In fact, if there's anything, it'll be the opposite direction. But I also try to avoid that, you know, it's possible I talk to the CEO of GitHub, for example, on this podcast and GitHub sponsors podcasts, it's possible I talk to the CEO of Shopify, Toby, and Shopify sponsors this podcast. One doesn't affect the other. And obviously again, goes without saying, but let me say it, make it explicit that nobody can buy their way onto the podcast, whether through sponsorships or buying me dinner or whatever. I don't know. This is just, this it's impossible.
Starting point is 00:09:22 And most likely if that's attempted, it's impossible. And most likely, if that's attempted, it's going to backfire. So I think people intuitively know not to attempt because it would really piss me off. Anyway, this is a detour. We're supposed to talk about Shopify. I have a Shopify store, lexwime.com slash store that sells t-shirts, but you can sell
Starting point is 00:09:44 more sophisticated stuff, make a lot of money, and participate in this beautiful machinery of capitalism. Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at Shopify.com slash Lex. That's all over the case. Go to Shopify.com slash Lex to take your business to the next level today. This episode is also brought to you by element, my daily zero sugar delicious electrolyte mix of which I consume very ridiculously large amounts. You know salt used to be currency in the ancient world. How silly are humans or not silly? How sort of surprising the things we converge on as being the store of value. Just value in general,
Starting point is 00:10:29 the kind of things we assign value to together. We just kind of all agree that this item, this material, this idea, this building is extremely valuable. And then we compete over that resource or that idea or that building and we fight and sometimes there is wars and sometimes there is complete destruction and the rise and fall of empires all over some resource. What a funny strange little world Mostly harmless as Hitchhikers guide to the galaxy summarizes humans For some reason instead of that book. I was gonna say catcher in the rye in my exhausted brain the books kind of all morphed together
Starting point is 00:11:20 Catcher in the rise a really damn good book All of the classics I returned to, often the simple books, even like the first book I read in English, trivial book, trivial book called The Giver. It's like I returned to it in its simplicity. Maybe it has sent a mountain of value, maybe that's what it is. But just the simplicity of words. Animal Farm I've read, I don't know how many times, probably over 50 times. I've returned to it over and over and over. The simplicity, the poetry of that simplicity.
Starting point is 00:11:54 It's something that just resonates with my brain. Maybe it's a peculiar kind of brain. It is a peculiar kind of brain. And I have to thank you for being patient with this peculiar kind of brain. And I have to thank you for being patient with this peculiar kind of brain. Get a sample pack for free with any purchase of whatever the thing I was talking about which I think is element. Try it at drinkelement.com slash Lex. This is the Lex Friedman podcast. To support it please check out our sponsors in the description.
Starting point is 00:12:26 And now, dear friends, here's Mark Andreessen. I'm gonna go ahead and start with optimism. All right, let's start with optimism. If you were to imagine the best possible one to two years, 2025, 26, for tech, for big tech and small tech, what would it be? What would it look like? Lay out your vision for the best possible scenario, trajectory for America.
Starting point is 00:13:05 The roaring twenties. The roaring twenties. The roaring twenties. I mean, look, a couple of things. It is remarkable over the last several years with all of the issues, including, you know, everything, not just everything in politics, but also COVID and every other thing that's happened. It's really amazing.
Starting point is 00:13:18 The United States just kept growing. If you just look at economic growth charts, the U.S. just kept growing and very significantly many other countries stopped growing. So Canada stopped growing. The UK has stopped growing. So Canada stopped growing. The UK has stopped growing. Germany has stopped growing. And some of those countries may be actually going backwards at this point.
Starting point is 00:13:30 And there's a very long discussion to be had about what's wrong with those countries. And there's, of course, plenty of things that are wrong with our country. But the US is just flat out primed for growth. And I think that's a consequence of many factors, some of which are lucky and some of which through hard work. And so the lucky part is just, number one,
Starting point is 00:13:50 we just have incredible physical security by being our own continent. We have incredible natural resources. There's this running joke now that whenever it looks like the US is going to run out of some rare earth material, some farmer in North Dakota kicks over a hay bale and finds a $2 trillion deposit. We're just blessed with geography
Starting point is 00:14:09 and with natural resources. Energy, we can be energy independent anytime we want. This last administration decided they didn't wanna be. They wanted to turn off American energy. This new administration has declared that they have a goal of turning it on in a dramatic way. There's no question we can be energy dependent. We can be a giant net energy exporter. It's purely a question of choice. And I think the new administration is
Starting point is 00:14:29 going to do that. And so, oh, and then I would say two other things. One is, we are the beneficiaries, and you're an example of this. We're a beneficiary. We're the beneficiary of 50, 100, 200 years of like the basically most aggressive driven, smartest in the world most capable people you know moving to the US and raising their kids here and so we just have you know by far the most dynamic you know we're by far the most dynamic population most aggressive you know we're the most aggressive set of characters in a certainly in any western country and have been for a long time and certainly are today and then finally I would just say look we are overwhelmingly the advanced technology leader you know we have our issues and we have a I would just say, look, we are overwhelmingly the advanced technology leader. We have our issues and we have a particular issue with manufacturing, which we could talk
Starting point is 00:15:08 about, but for anything in software, anything in AI, anything in all these advanced biotech, all these advanced areas of technology, we're by far the leader. Again, in part, because many of the best scientists and engineers in those fields come to the US. We have all of the preconditions for just a monster boom. I could see economic growth going way up. I could see productivity growth going way up,
Starting point is 00:15:32 rate of technology adoption going way up. And then we can do a global tour if you like. But basically, all of our competitors have profound issues. And we could go through them one by one. But the competitive landscape just is, it's like it's, it's remarkable how, um, how, how much better position we are for growth. What about the humans themselves? Almost a philosophical questions. You know,
Starting point is 00:15:53 I travel across the world and there's something about the American spirit, the entrepreneurial spirit that's uniquely intense in America. I don't know what that is. Uh, I've talked to Sagar who claims it might be the Scott's Irish blood that runs through the history of America. What is it? You, at the heart of Silicon Valley, is there something in the water?
Starting point is 00:16:17 Why is there this entrepreneurial spirit? Yeah, so is this a family show or am I allowed to swear? You can say whatever the fuck you want. Okay, so the great TV show succession. The show, of course, that would, which you were intended to root for exactly zero of the characters. The best line for succession was in the final episode of the first season when the whole family is over in Logan Roy's ancestral homeland of Scotland and they're at this castle, you know, for some wedding.
Starting point is 00:16:40 And Logan is just like completely miserable after having to, you know, because he's been in New York for 50 years. He's totally miserable being back in Scotland and he gets in some argument with somebody and he's like, he says, finally just says, my God, I cannot wait to get out of here and go back to America where we could fuck without condoms. Was that a metaphor or okay?
Starting point is 00:17:00 Exactly, right? And so, no, but it's exactly the thing. And then everybody instantly knows what, like everybody watching that instantly starts laughing because you know what it means, which is, it's exactly the thing. And then everybody instantly knows what to, like, everybody watching that instantly starts laughing because you know what it means, which is, it's exactly this. I think there's like an ethnographic, you know, way of it. There's a bunch of books on like all,
Starting point is 00:17:11 like you said, the Scots-Irish, like all the different derivations of all the different ethnic groups that have come to the US over the course of the last 400 years, right? But it's, and what we have is this sort of amalgamation of like, you know, the Northeast, you know, Yankees who were like super tough and hardcore. Yeah, the Scots-Irish are super aggressive. We've got the Southerners and the Texans
Starting point is 00:17:29 and the sort of whole kind of blended kind of Anglo-Hispanic thing, super incredibly tough, strong, driven, capable characters. You know, the Texas Rangers. We've got the California. We've got the Wild. We've got the incredibly inventive hippies, but we also have the hardcore engineers. We've got the California, we've got the wild, we've got the incredibly inventive hippies, but we also have the hardcore engineers. We've got the best rocket scientists in the world.
Starting point is 00:17:49 We've got the best artists in the world, creative professionals, the best movies. And so yeah, there is, all of our problems I think are basically, in my view, to some extent, attempts to basically sand all that off and make everything basically boring and mediocre. But there is something in the national spirit that basically keeps bouncing back. And basically what we discover over time is we basically just need people to stand up at a certain point and say, it's time to build, it's time to grow, it's time to do things. And there's something in the American spirit that just like, it's right back to life. And I've seen it before. I actually saw, you know, I saw it as a kid here in the, in the early eighties.
Starting point is 00:18:27 Um, you know, cause the, the, the, the seventies were like horribly depressing, right? In the, in the U S like it was, they were a nightmare on many fronts. And in a lot of ways, the last decade to me has felt a lot like the seventies, just being mired in misery. Um, and just this self-defeating negative attitude and everybody's upset about everything. And then by the way, energy crisis and hostage crisis and foreign wars and just demoralization, right? The low point in the 70s was Jimmy Carter who just passed away,
Starting point is 00:18:57 he went on TV and he gave this speech known as the Malay speech. And it was the weakest possible trying to rouse people back to a sense of like passion. Completely failed and we had the hostages in Iran for I think 440 days and every night on the nightly news, it was lines around the block, energy crisis, depression, inflation. And then Reagan came in and Reagan was a very controversial character at the time and he came in
Starting point is 00:19:20 and he's like, yep, nope, it's morning in America. And we're the shining city on the hill and we're gonna do it. and he did it and we did it and the national spirit came roaring back and you know, we're really hard for a full decade and I think that's exactly what I think, you know, we'll see, but I think that's what could happen here. And I just did a super long podcast on Milton Friedman with Jennifer Burns, who's this incredible professor at Stanford and he was part of the Reagan.
Starting point is 00:19:42 So there's a bunch of components to that. One of which is economic yes, and one of which maybe you can put a word on it of Not to be romantic or anything, but freedom individual freedom economic freedom Political freedom and just in general individualism. Yeah, that's right Yeah, and as you know, America has this incredible streak of individualism, you know Individualism in America
Starting point is 00:20:05 probably peaked, I think, between roughly, call it the end of the Civil War, 1865 through to probably call it 1931 or something. And there was this incredible, I mean, that period, we now know that period is the second Industrial Revolution. And it's when the United States basically assumed global leadership and basically took over technological and economic leadership from England. And then that led to ultimately then therefore being able to not only industrialize the world but also win World War II and then win the Cold War. And yeah, there's a massive industrial, massive individualistic streak. By the way, Milton Friedman's old videos are all on YouTube.
Starting point is 00:20:39 They are every bit as compelling and inspiring as they were then. He's a singular figure and many of us have, I never knew him, but he was at Stanford for many years at the Hoover Institution, but I never met him. But I know a lot of people who worked with him and he was a singular figure, but all of his lessons live on or are fully available. But I would also say it's not just individualism. And this is one of the big things that's playing out in a lot of our culture and political fights right now, which is basically this feeling, certainly, that I have
Starting point is 00:21:12 and I share with a lot of people, which is it's not enough for America to just be an economic zone. And it's not enough for us to just be individuals. And it's not enough to just have line go up. And it's not enough to just have economic success. There are deeper questions at play. And also, there's more to a country than just that. And quite frankly, a lot of it is intangible. A lot of it involves spirit and passion. And like I said, we have more of it than anybody else, but we have to choose to want it. The way
Starting point is 00:21:41 I look at it is like all of our problems are self-inflicted. Like they're, you know, decline is a choice. You know, all of our problems are basically demoralization campaigns. You know, basically people telling us, people in positions of authority telling us that we should, you know, we shouldn't, you know, stand out. We shouldn't be adventurous. We shouldn't be exciting.
Starting point is 00:21:57 We shouldn't be exploratory. You know, we shouldn't, you know, this, that, and the other thing, and we should feel bad about everything that we do. And I think we've lived through a decade where that's been the prevailing theme. And I, I think quite honestly, as of November, I think people are done with it. If we could go on a tangent of a tangent, since we're talking about individualism
Starting point is 00:22:14 and that's not all that it takes, you've mentioned in the past, the book, the ancient city by, if I could only pronounce the name French historian, and Numa Dini Foustel de Cologne. I don't know. That was amazing. Okay. All right. From the name French historian. Numa de Nid, Foustel de Coulomb, I don't know. That was amazing. Okay, all right. From the 19th century, anyway, you said this is an important book to understand
Starting point is 00:22:30 who we are and where we come from. So what that book does, it's actually quite a striking book. So that book is written by this guy as a profuse, he was a, well, let's do the pronunciations, the foreign language pronunciations for the day. He was a professor of classics at the Sorbonne in Paris, the top university actually in the 1860s, so actually right around after the US Civil War. And he was a savant of a particular kind, which is he, and you can see this in the book,
Starting point is 00:22:58 is he had apparently read and sort of absorbed and memorized every possible scrap of Greek and Roman literature. And so it's like a walking like index scrap of Greek and Roman literature. And so it's like a walking like index on basically Greek and Roman, everything we know about Greek and Roman culture. And that's significant. The reason this matters is because basically none of that has changed, right?
Starting point is 00:23:13 And so he had access to the exact same materials that we have access to. And so we've learned nothing. And then specifically what he did is he talked about the Greeks and the Romans, but specifically what he did is he went back further. He reconstructed the people who came before the Greeks and the Romans and what their life in society was like and these were the people who were now known as the as the Indo-Europeans and
Starting point is 00:23:29 these were you may have heard of these these are the people who came down from the steps and so they came out of what's now like Eastern Europe like around sort of outskirts of what's now Russia and then they sort of swept through Europe they ultimately took over all of Europe by the way you know almost many of the ethnicities in the Americas in hundreds of years to follow are Indo-European. So they were basically this warrior basically class that came down and swept through and essentially populated much of the world. And there's a whole interesting saga there, but what he does, and then they basically, from there came basically what we know as the Greeks and the Romans were evolutions off of that. And so what he reconstructs is sort of what life was like, what life was like, at least
Starting point is 00:24:08 in the West for people in their kind of original social state. And the significance of that is, is the original social state is living in the state of the absolute imperative for survival with absolutely no technology, right? Like no modern systems, no nothing, right? You've got the clothes on your back, you've got your, you know, you've got whatever you can build with your bare hands, right? This is, you know, predates basically all concepts of technologies, we understand that today.
Starting point is 00:24:31 And so these are people under like maximum levels of physical survival pressure. And so what social patterns do they evolve to be able to do that? And the social pattern basically was as follows, is a three-part social structure, family, tribe, and city, and zero concept of individual rights, and essentially no concept of individualism. And so you were not an individual, you were a member of your family, and then a set of families
Starting point is 00:24:55 would aggregate into a tribe, and then a set of tribes would aggregate into a into a city. And then the morality was completely, it was actually what Nietzsche talks about, the morality was completely, it was actually what Nietzsche talks about, the morality was entirely master morality, not slave morality. And so in their morality, anything that was strong was good. And anything that was weak was bad. And it's very clear why that is, right? It's because strong equals good equals survive, weak equals bad equals die. And that led to what became known later as the master slave dialectic, which is, is it more important for you to live on your feet as a master, even at the risk of dying? Or are you willing to live as a slave on your knees in order to not die?
Starting point is 00:25:28 This is the derivation of that moral framework. Christianity later inverted that moral framework, but the original framework lasted for many, many thousands of years. No concept of individualism. The head of the family had total life and death control over the family. The head of the tribe, same thing. head of the city, same thing. And then you were morally obligated to kill members of the other cities on contact. You were morally required to. If you didn't do it, you were a bad person. And then the form of the society was basically maximum fascism combined with maximum communism. And so it was maximum fascism in the form of this absolute top-down control where the
Starting point is 00:26:04 head of the family, tribe, or city could kill other members of the community at any time with no repercussions at all. So maximum hierarchy, but combined with maximum communism, which is no market economy, and so everything gets shared. And the point of being in one of these collectives is that it's a collective and people are sharing. And of course, that limited how big they could get because the problem with communism is it doesn't scale. It works at the level of a family. It's much harder to make it work
Starting point is 00:26:28 at the level of a country, impossible. Maximum fascism, maximum communism. And then it was all intricately tied into their religion. And their religion was in two parts. It was veneration of ancestors and it was veneration of nature. And the veneration of ancestors is extremely important because it was basically like,
Starting point is 00:26:47 basically the ancestors were the people who got you to where you were. The ancestors were the people who had everything to teach you, right? And then it was veneration of nature because of course nature is the thing that's trying to kill you. And then you had your ancestor,
Starting point is 00:26:57 every family, tribe or city had their ancestor gods and then they had their nature gods. Okay, so fast forward to today, like we live in a world that is like radically, and the book takes you through what happened from that through the Greeks and Romans through to Christianity. But it's very helpful to think in these terms because the conventional view of the progress through time is that we are, the cliche is the arc of the moral universe, Ben's Tourist Justice, or so-called Whig History, which is that the arc of progress is positive, right?
Starting point is 00:27:25 And so we, you know, what you hear all the time, what you're taught in school and everything is, you know, every year that goes by, we get better and better and more and more moral and more and more pure and a better version of ourselves. Our Indo-European ancestors would say, oh no, like you people have like fallen to shit. Like you people took all of the principles
Starting point is 00:27:41 of basically your civilization and you have diluted them down to the point where they barely even matter. And you're having children on a wedlock and you regularly encounter people of other cities and you don't try to kill them and how crazy is that? And they would basically consider us to be living like an incredibly diluted version of this sort of highly religious, highly cult-like, highly organized, highly fascist communist society. I can't resist noting that as a consequence of basically going through all the transitions we've been through,
Starting point is 00:28:11 going all the way through Christianity, coming out the other end of Christianity, Nietzsche declares God is dead. We're in a secular society that still has tinges of Christianity, but largely prides itself on no longer being religious in that way. We being the most fully evolved, modern, secular, expert scientists and so forth, have basically re-evolved or fallen back on the exact same religious structure that the Indo-Europeans had, specifically ancestor worship, which is identity politics,
Starting point is 00:28:38 and nature worship, which is environmentalism. We have actually worked our way all the way back to their cult religions without realizing it. It just goes to show that in some so we have actually like worked our way all the way back to their cult religions without realizing it. And it just goes to show that like, you know, in some ways we have fallen far from the far from the family tree, but in some cases, we're exactly the same. You kind of described this progressive idea of wokeism and so on as a worshiping ancestors. Identity politics is worshiping ancestors, right? It's tagging newborn infants with either benefits or responsibilities or levels of condemnation based on who their ancestors were.
Starting point is 00:29:10 The Indo-Europeans would have recognized it on site. We somehow think it's super socially progressive. Yeah, and it is not. I mean, I would say obviously not. Get new auspices where I think you're headed, which is, look, is the idea that you can completely reinvent society every generation and have no regard whatsoever for what came before you,
Starting point is 00:29:28 that seems like a really bad idea, right? That's like the Cambodians with year zero under Pol Pot and death follows, it's obviously the Soviets tried that. The utopian fantasists who think that they can just rip up everything that came before and create something new in the human condition and human society have a very bad history of causing enormous destruction.
Starting point is 00:29:47 So on the one hand, it's like, OK, there is a deeply important role for tradition. And the way I think about that is the process of evolutionary learning, which is what tradition ought to be is the distilled wisdom of all. And this is how the Europeans thought about it. It should be the distilled wisdom of everybody who came before him, all those important and powerful lessons learned.
Starting point is 00:30:07 And that's why I think it's fascinating to go back and study how these people lived, is because that's part of the history and part of the learning that got us to where we are today. Having said that, there are many cultures around the world that are mired in tradition to the point of not being able to progress. And in fact, you might even say globally,
Starting point is 00:30:21 that's the default human condition, which is a lot of people are in societies in which there's absolute seniority by age. Kids are completely, like in the US, for some reason, we decided kids are in charge of everything. And they're the trendsetters, and they're allowed to set all the agendas, and set all the politics, and set all the culture.
Starting point is 00:30:37 And maybe that's a little bit crazy. But in a lot of other cultures, kids have no voice at all, no role at all, because it's the old people who are in charge of everything. They're gerontocracies. And it's all a bunch of 80-year-olds running everything, which by the way, we have a little bit of that too. Right? And so what I would say is there's a real downside. Full traditionalism is communitarianism. It's ethnic particularism. It's ethnic chauvinism. It's this incredible level of resistance to change.
Starting point is 00:31:07 It just doesn't get you anywhere. It may be good and fine at the level of individual tribe, but as a society living in the modern world, you can't evolve. You can't advance. You can't participate in all the good things that have happened. I think probably this is one of those things where extremists on either side is probably a bad idea. This needs to be approached in a sophisticated and nuanced way. So the beautiful picture you painted of the roaring 20s,
Starting point is 00:31:33 how can the Trump administration play a part in making that future happen? Yeah. So look, a big part of this is getting the government boot off the neck of the American economy, the American technology industry, the American people. And again, this is a replay of what happened in the 60s and 70s, which is for what started out looking like, I'm sure good and virtuous purposes, we ended up both then and now with this, what I described as sort of a form of soft authoritarianism. The good news is it's not like a military dictatorship. It's not like you get thrown into Lou Bianca for the most part. That's not coming at four in the morning. You're not getting dragged off to a cell. So it's not like a military dictatorship. It's not like you get thrown into Lubeyanka, for the most part. It's not coming at four in the morning. You're not getting dragged off to a cell. So,
Starting point is 00:32:07 it's not hard authoritarianism, but it is soft authoritarianism. And so, it's this incredible suppressive blanket of regulation, rules, this concept of a vitocracy. What's required to get anything done? You need to get 40 people to sign off on anything. Any one of them can veto it. There's a lot of how our now political system works. And then just this general idea of progress is bad, and technology is bad, and capitalism is bad, and building businesses is bad, and success is bad. Tall poppy syndrome, basically anybody who sticks their head up deserves to get it chopped off.
Starting point is 00:32:41 Anybody who's wrong about anything deserves to get condemned forever. Just this very kind of grinding repression and then coupled with specific government actions such as censorship regimes and debanking and draconian, deliberately kneecapping critical American industries, and then congratulating yourselves in the back for doing it or having these horrible social policies like let's let all the criminals out of jail and see what happens. And so we've just been and then congratulating yourselves in the back for doing it or having these horrible social policies, like let's let all the criminals out of jail and see what happens. Right? And so we've just been through this period. I call it a demoralization campaign.
Starting point is 00:33:12 We've just been through this period where whether it started that way or not, it ended up basically being this comprehensive message that says you're terrible, and if you try to do anything, you're terrible, and fuck you. And the Biden administration reached kind of the full pinnacle of that in our time. They got really bad on many fronts at the same time. And so just relieving that and getting kind of back to a reasonably optimistic, constructive pro-growth frame of mind, there's so much pent up energy and potentially the American system that that alone is going to, I think, cause growth and spirit to take off.
Starting point is 00:33:46 And then there's a lot of things proactively that, yeah, and then there's a lot of things proactively that could be done. So how do you relieve that? To what degree has the thing you describe ideologically permeated government and permeated big companies? Disclaimer at first, which is I don't want to predict anything on any of this stuff because I've learned the hard way that I can't predict politics or Washington at all. But I would just say that the plans and intentions are clear and the staffing supports it. And all the
Starting point is 00:34:12 conversations are consistent with the new administration and that they plan to take very rapid action on a lot of these fronts very quickly. They're going to do as much as they can through executive orders and then they're going to do legislation and regulatory changes for the rest. And so they're going to move, I think, quickly on a whole bunch of stuff. You can already feel, I think, a shift in the national spirit, or at least let's put it this way, I feel it for sure in Silicon Valley. We just saw a great example of this with what Mark Zuckerberg is doing. Obviously, I'm involved with his company, but we just saw it in public, the scope and
Starting point is 00:34:41 speed of the changes are reflective of a lot of these shifts. But I would say that same conversation, those same kinds of things are happening throughout the industry. Right? And so the tech industry itself, whether people were pro-Trump or anti-Trump, there's just like a giant vibe shift, mood shift that's kicked in already. And then I was with a group of Hollywood people about two weeks ago, and they were still people who at least vocally were still very anti-Trump.
Starting point is 00:35:04 But I said, has anything changed since November 6? And they immediately said, oh, it's completely different. It feels like the ISIS thawed, woke us over. They said that all kinds of projects are going to be able to get made now that couldn't before, that Pollywood's going to start making comedies again. They were just like, it's just like an incredible immediate environmental change. As I talk to people kind of throughout, certainly throughout the economy, people who run businesses, I hear that all the time, which is just this last 10 years of misery is just over. The one that I'm watching that's really funny, I mean, Facebook's getting a lot, Metta's
Starting point is 00:35:38 getting a lot of attention, but the other funny one is BlackRock, which I'm not, and I don't know him, but I've watched for a long time. And so Larry Fink, who's the CEO of BlackRock, was first in as a major investment CEO on every dumb social trend and rule set, like every retarded thing you can imagine, every ESG, and every possible satellite companies with every aspect of just these crazed ideological positions and he was coming in, he literally was like,
Starting point is 00:36:11 had aggregated together trillions of dollars of shareholdings that were his customers' rights and he seized their voting control of their shares and was using it to force all these companies to do all of this crazy ideological stuff. And he was like the typhoid Mary of all this stuff in corporate America. And he in the last year has been like backpedaling from that stuff like as fast as he possibly can. And I saw just an example last week, he pulled out of that, whatever the corporate net zero Alliance, you know, he pulled out of the crazy energy stuff. And so like, you know,
Starting point is 00:36:40 he's backing away as fast as he can. He's doing remember that Richard Pryor backwards walk. Richard Pryor backwards walk? Richard Pryor had this way where he could back out of a room while looking like he was walking forward. And so, you know, even they're doing that. And just the whole thing, I mean, I hope you saw the court recently ruled that NASDAQ had these crazy board of directors composition rules.
Starting point is 00:37:01 One of the funniest moments of my life is when my friend Peter Thiel and I were on the Meta board and these NASDAQ rules came down, mandated diversity on corporate boards. And so we sat around the table and had to figure out, which of us counted as diverse. And the very professional attorneys at Meta explained with a 100% complete straight face
Starting point is 00:37:19 that Peter Thiel counts as diverse by virtue of being LGBT. And this is a guy who literally wrote a book called The Diversity Myth. And he literally looked like he swallowed a live goldfish. And this was imposed, I mean, this was like so incredibly offensive to him that like it just like, it was just absolutely appalling.
Starting point is 00:37:37 And I felt terrible for him, but the look on his face was very funny. It was imposed by NASDAQ, you know, your stock exchange imposing this stuff on you. And then the court, whatever the court of appeals just nuked that. These things basically are being ripped down one by one and what's on the other side of it is basically finally being able to get back to everything that everybody always wanted to do, which is run their companies, have great products, have happy customers, succeed,
Starting point is 00:38:02 achieve, outperform, and work you know, work with the best and the brightest and not be made to feel bad about it. And I think that's happening in many areas of American society. It's great to hear that Peter Thiel is fundamentally a diversity hire. Well, so it was very, you know, there was a moment. So, so Peter, you know, Peter, of course, you know, is, you know, is publicly gay, has been for a long time, you know, but, you know, there are other men on the board, right? And we're sitting there and we're all looking at it and we're like, all right, like, okay, LGBT.
Starting point is 00:38:29 And we just, we keep coming back to the B, right? And it's like, you know, it's like, you know, I'm willing to do a lot for this company, but. It's all about sacrifice for diversity. Well, yeah. And then it's like, okay, like, is there a test? Right.
Starting point is 00:38:47 You know? Oh, yeah, exactly. How do you prove it? The questions that got asked, you know. What are you willing to do? Yeah. And I've become very good at asking lawyers completely absurd questions with a totally straight face.
Starting point is 00:39:03 And do they answer with a straight face? Sometimes, okay. I think in fairness they have trouble telling when I'm joking. So you mentioned the Hollywood folks, maybe people in Silicon Valley, and the vibe shift. Maybe you can speak to preference falsification. What do they actually believe?
Starting point is 00:39:21 How many of them actually hate Trump? What percent of them are feeling this vibe shift and are interested in creating the roaring 20s in the way David described? So first we should maybe talk population. So there's like all of Silicon Valley. And the way to just measure that is just look at voting records, right? And what that shows consistently is Silicon Valley is just a, you a, at least historically, my entire time there has been overwhelmingly majority, just straight up Democrat.
Starting point is 00:39:48 The other way to look at that is political donation records. And again, the political donations in the valley range from 90% to 99% to one side. And so I just bring it up because we'll see what happens with the voting and with donations going forward. We maybe talk about the fire later, but I can tell you there is a very big question of what's happening in Los Angeles right now.
Starting point is 00:40:08 I don't want to get into the fire, but it's catastrophic. And there was already a rightward shift in the big cities in California. And I think a lot of people in LA are really thinking about things right now as they're trying to literally save their houses and save their families.
Starting point is 00:40:21 But even in San Francisco, there was a big shift to the right in the voting in 2004. So we'll see where that goes. But you observe that by just looking at the numbers over time. The part that I'm more focused on is, and I don't know how to exactly describe this, but it's like the top 1,000 or the top 10,000 people.
Starting point is 00:40:39 And I don't have a list, but it's all the top founders, top CEOs, top executives, top engineers, top VCs, and then kind of into the ranks, the people who kind of build and run the companies. And I don't have numbers, but I have a much more tactile feel for what's happening. So the big thing I have now come to believe is that the idea that people have beliefs is mostly wrong. I think that most people just go along. And I think even most high status people just go along.
Starting point is 00:41:13 And I think maybe the most high status people are the most prone to just go along because they're the most focused on status. And the way I would describe that is, you know, one of the great forbidden philosophers of our time is the Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski. And amidst his madness, he had this extremely interesting articulation. He was an insane lunatic murderer, but he was also a Harvard super genius.
Starting point is 00:41:37 Not that those are in conflict. But he was a very bright guy. And he did this whole thing where he talked about, basically he was very right-wing and talked about leftism a lot. And he had this great concept that's just stuck in my mind ever since I wrote it, which is he had this concept he just called oversocialization.
Starting point is 00:41:57 And so most people are socialized. Most people are, we live in a society. Most people learn how to be part of a society. They give some deference to the society. There's something about modern Western elites where they're over socialized. And they're just like overly oriented towards what other people like themselves, you know, think and believe. And you can get a real sense of that if you have a little bit of an outside perspective, which I just do, I think as a consequence of where I grew up. Like even before I had the views that
Starting point is 00:42:25 I have today, there was always just this weird thing where it's like, why does every dinner party have the exact same conversation? Why does everybody agree on every single issue? Why is that agreement precisely what was in the New York Times today? Why are these positions not the same as they were five years ago? Right. But why does does everybody snap into agreement every step of the way? And that was true when I came to Silicon Valley and it's just as true today, 30 years later. And so I think most people are just literally, I think they're taking their cues from some combination of the press, the universities, the big foundations. So basically,
Starting point is 00:42:59 it's like the New York Times, Harvard, the Ford Foundation, and I don't know, a few CEOs and a few public figures and maybe the president of your parties in power. And whatever that is, everybody who's good and proper and elite and good standing and in charge of things and a correct member of, let's call it Coastal American Society, everybody just believes those things. And then the two interesting things about that is, number one, there's no divergence among the organs of power, right? So Harvard and Yale believe the exact same thing. The New York Times and the Washington Post believe the exact same thing. The Ford Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation believe the exact same thing. Google and,
Starting point is 00:43:36 you know, whatever, you know, Microsoft believe the exact same thing. But those things change over time. But there's never conflict in the moment. Right? And so, you know, the New York Times and the Washington Post agreed on exactly everything in 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000, 2010, and 2020. Despite the fact that the specifics changed radically, the lockstep was what mattered. And so I think basically we in the Valley, we're on the tail end of that in the same way. Hollywood's on the tail end of that in the same way New York's on the tail end of that in the same way New York's on the tail end of that, the same way the media's on the tail end of that. It's like some sort of collective pie mine thing.
Starting point is 00:44:10 And I just go through that to say, I don't think most people in my orbit, or let's say the top 10,000 people in the Valley, or the top 10,000 people in LA, I don't think they're sitting there thinking, basically I have rocks, I mean, they probably think they have rocks out of beliefs, but they don't actually have
Starting point is 00:44:24 some inner core of rocks out of beliefs, and they don't actually have like some inner core of rocks A lot of beliefs and then they kind of watch reality change around them and try to figure out how to keep their beliefs Like correct. I don't think that's what happens I think what happens is they conform to the belief system around them and I think most of the time they're not even aware That they're basically part of a herd. Is it possible that the surface chatter of dinner parties Underneath that there is a turmoil of ideas and thoughts and beliefs that's going on, but you're just talking to people really close to you
Starting point is 00:44:50 or in your own mind, and the socialization happens at the dinner parties. Like when you go outside the inner circle of one, two, three, four people who you really trust, then you start to conform, but inside there, inside the mind, there is an actual belief or a struggle, a tension within your times or with the listener.
Starting point is 00:45:13 For the listener, there's a slow smile that overtook Mark Andreessen's face. So look, I'll just tell you what I think, which is at the dinner parties and at the conferences, no, there's none of that. What there is is that all of the heretical conversations have anything that challenges the status quo, any heretical ideas, and any new idea is a heretical idea. Any deviation, it's either discussed one-on-one, face-to-face, it's like a whisper network,
Starting point is 00:45:38 or it's like a real life social network. Here's a secret handshake, which is like, okay, you meet somebody and you know each other a little bit, but like not well. And like, you're both trying to figure out if you can like talk to the other person openly or whether you have to like be fully conformist. It's a joke. Well, yeah, humor.
Starting point is 00:45:53 Somebody cracks a joke, right? Somebody cracks a joke. If the other person laughs, the conversation is on. Yeah, yeah. If the other person doesn't laugh, back slowly away from the scene. Yeah, I didn't mean anything by it. Right. And by the way, it doesn't have to be like a super offensive joke. It just has to be
Starting point is 00:46:09 a joke that's just up against the edge of one of the use the same bankman freed term, one of the chivalrous, you know, it has to be up against one of the things of, you know, one of the things that you're absolutely required to believe to be the dinner parties. And then, and then at that point, what happens is you have a peer to peer network, right? You have it, you have a one to one connection with somebody. And then at that point, what happens is you have a peer-to-peer network, right? You have a one-to-one connection with somebody, and then you have your little conspiracy of thought criminality. And then you have your network, you've probably been through this,
Starting point is 00:46:34 you have your network of thought criminals, and then they have their network of thought criminals, and then you have this delicate mating dance as to whether you should bring the thought criminals together, right? And the dance, the fundamental mechanism of the dance is humor. Yeah, it's humor. Like, of course. Memes. Yeah. Well, for two reasons. Number one, humor is a way to have deniability. Right. Humor is a way to discuss serious things without
Starting point is 00:46:55 having deniability. Oh, I'm sorry, it was just a joke. Right. So that's part of it, which is one of the reasons why comedians can get away with saying things the rest of us can't is they can always fall back on, oh yeah, I was just going for the laugh. But the other key thing about humor, right, is that laughter is involuntary, right? You either laugh or you don't. And it's not like a conscious decision whether you're going to laugh. And everybody can tell when somebody's fake laughing, right? And every professional comedian knows this, right?
Starting point is 00:47:15 The laughter is the clue that you're onto something truthful. People don't laugh at made up bullshit stories. They laugh because you're revealing something that they either have not been allowed to think about or have not been allowed to talk about, right, or is off limits and all of a sudden it's like the ice breaks and it's like, oh yeah, that's the thing and it's funny and I laugh. And then this is why, of course, live comedy is so powerful is because you're all doing that at the same time so you start to have the safety of numbers. And so the comedians have like the... It's no surprise to me that, for
Starting point is 00:47:43 example, Joe has been as successful as he has, because they have this hack that the rest of us who are not professional comedians don't have. But you have your in-person version of it. Yeah, and then you got the question of whether you can sort of join the networks together. And then you've probably been to this, is then at some point there's like a different, there's like the alt dinner party,
Starting point is 00:47:59 the Tharker middle dinner party, and you get six or eight people together and you join the networks. And those are like the happiest, at least in the last decade, those are like the happiest, at least in the last decade, those are like the happiest moments of everybody's lives. Cause they're just like, everybody's just ecstatic cause they're like,
Starting point is 00:48:09 I don't have to worry about getting yelled at and shamed. Like for every third sentence that comes out of my mouth and we can actually talk about real things. So that's the live version of it. And then of course the other side of it is the, you know, the group chat phenomenon, right? And then basically the same thing played out, you know, until Elon bought X and until Substack took off,
Starting point is 00:48:27 which were really the two big breakthroughs in free speech online. The same dynamic played out online, which is you had absolute conformity on the social networks, literally enforced by the social networks themselves through censorship, and then also through cancellation campaigns, and mobbing, and shaming.
Starting point is 00:48:41 But then group chats grew up to be the equivalent of Samizdat, right? Anybody who grew up in the Soviet Union under communism, no, they had the hard version of this, right? It's like, how do you know who you could talk to and then how do you distribute information? And like, again, that was the hard authoritarian version of this and then we've been living through this weird, mutant, soft authoritarian version,
Starting point is 00:49:01 but with some of the same patterns. And WhatsApp allows you to scale and make it more efficient to build on these groups of heretical ideas bonded by humor. Yeah, exactly. Well, and this is the thing, and then, well, this is kind of the running joke about group chats, right?
Starting point is 00:49:16 The running kind of thing about group chats, it's not even a joke, it's true. It's like, every group chat, if you've noticed this, like every, this principle of group chats, every group chat ends up being about memes and humor. And the goal of the game, the game of the group chat, if you've noticed this, like every principle of group chats, every group chat ends up being about memes and humor and the goal of the game, the game of the group chat is to get as close to the line of being actually objectionable as you can get without actually tripping it, right? And I look literally every group chat that I have been in for the last decade, even if it starts some other
Starting point is 00:49:39 direction, what ends up happening is it becomes that absolute comedy fest where but it's walking, they walk right off the line and they're constantly testing. And every once in a while, somebody will trip the line and people will freak out and it's like, oh, too soon. Okay, you know, we gotta wait till next year to talk about that. You know, they walk it back.
Starting point is 00:49:54 And so it's that same thing. And yeah, and then group chats is a technological phenomenon. It was amazing to see, cause basically it was number one, it was, you know, obviously the rise of smartphones. Then it was the rise of the new messaging services. Then it was the rise specifically of I would say a combination of WhatsApp and Signal. And the reason for that is those were the two big systems that
Starting point is 00:50:11 did the full encryption. So you actually felt safe. And then the real breakthrough, I think, was disappearing messages, which hit Signal probably four or five years ago and hit WhatsApp three or four years ago. And then the combination of encryption and disappearing messages, I think, really unleashed it. Well, then there's the fight.
Starting point is 00:50:32 Then there's the fight over the length of the disappearing messages, right? And so it's like, you know, I often get behind my things. So I set to seven day, you know, disappearing messages and my friends who, you know, are like, no, that's way too much risk. It's gotta be much risk. Yeah. It's got to be a day.
Starting point is 00:50:46 And then every once in a while somebody will set it to five minutes before they send something like particularly inflammatory. Yeah. 100%. Well, what, I mean, one of the things that bothers me about WhatsApp, the choices between 24 hours and, you know, seven days, one day or seven days. And I have to have an existential crisis about deciding whether I can last for seven days with what I'm about to say.
Starting point is 00:51:06 Exactly. Now, of course, what's happening right now is the big thought. And so the vibe shifts. So what's happening on the other side of the election is, you know, Elon on Twitter two years ago, and now Mark with Facebook and Instagram, and by the way, with the continued growth of Substack and with other new platforms that are emerging,
Starting point is 00:51:21 you know, like I think it may be, I don't know that everything just shifts back into public, but a tremendous amount of the verboten conversations can now shift back into public view. And I mean, quite frankly, this is one of those things, quite frankly, even if I was opposed to what those people are saying, and I'm sure I am in some cases, I would argue still like net better for society that those things happen in public instead of private You know, do you really want like yeah, like don't you want to know? And and so and then it's just look It's just I think clearly much healthier to live in a society in which people are not literally scared of what they're saying
Starting point is 00:51:55 I mean to push back and come back to this idea that we're talking about I do believe that people have beliefs and thoughts that are heretical like a lot of people I wonder what fraction that people have beliefs and thoughts that are heretical, like a lot of people. I wonder what fraction of people have that. To me, the preference falsification is really interesting. What is the landscape of ideas that human civilization has in private as compared to what's out in public?
Starting point is 00:52:20 Because like that, the dynamical system that is the difference between those two is fascinating. Throughout history, the fall of communism in multiple regimes throughout Europe is really interesting because everybody was following the line until not. But you better, for sure, privately, there was a huge number of boiling conversations happening where like this is the bureaucracy of communism, the corruption of communism, all of that was really bothering people more and more and more and more
Starting point is 00:52:54 and all of a sudden, there's a trigger that allows the vibe shift to happen. To me, the interesting question here is, what is the landscape of private thoughts and ideas and conversations that are happening under the surface of Americans? Especially, my question is, how much dormant energy is there for this roaring 20s?
Starting point is 00:53:16 Where people are like, no more bullshit, let's get shit done. Yeah, so let's go through the theory of preference falsification. Yes, by the way, amazing. The books, it's fascinating. Yeah, yeah, so this is one of the theory of preference falsification. Yes, by the way, amazing. The books on this is fascinating. Yeah, yeah. So this is one of the all-time great books.
Starting point is 00:53:29 Incredibly, it's about 20, 30-year-old book, but it's completely modern and current in what it talks about, as well as very deeply historically informed. So it's called Private Truths, Public Lies. And it's written by a social science professor named Timur Kuran at, I think, Duke. And it's definitive work on this. And so he has this concept he calls preference falsification.
Starting point is 00:53:50 And so preference falsification is two things. Preference falsification, and you get it from the title of the book, Private Truths, Public Lives. So preference falsification is when you believe something and you can't say it. Or, and this is very important, you don't believe something and you must say it. And the commonality there is in both cases you're lying. You believe something internally and then you're lying about
Starting point is 00:54:11 it in public. And so the thing, and there's sort of two classic forms of it. For example, there's the I believe communism is rotten, but I can't say it version of it. But then there's also the famous parable of the real life example, but the thing that Václav Havel talks about in the other good book on this topic, which is The Power of the Powerless, who is an anti-communist resistance fighter who ultimately became the president of Czechoslovakia after the fall of the wall. But he wrote this book and he describes the other side of this, which is workers of the world unite. And so he describes what he calls the parable of the greengrocer, which is your greengrocer in Prague in 1985. And for the last
Starting point is 00:54:51 70 years, it has been, or 50 years, it's been absolutely mandatory to have a sign in the window of your store that says workers of the world unite. And it's 1985, it is crystal clear that the workers of the world are not going to unite. Like, of all the things that could happen in the world, that is not going to happen. The commies have been at that for 70 years. It is not happening. But that slogan had better be in your window every morning because if it's not in your window every morning, you are not a good communist. The secret police are going to come by and they're going to get you. And so the first thing you do when you get to the store is you put that slogan in the window and you make sure that it stays in the window all day long. But he says the thing is every single person, the greengrocer knows the
Starting point is 00:55:26 slogan is fake. He knows it's a lie. Every single person walking past the slogan knows that it's a lie. Every single person walking past the store knows that the greengrocer is only putting it up there because he has to lie in public. And the greengrocer has to go through the humiliation of knowing that everybody knows that he's caving into the system and lying in public. And so it turns into the moralization campaign. It's not just ideological enforcement. In fact, it's not ideological enforcement anymore because everybody knows it's fake. The authorities know it's fake.
Starting point is 00:55:54 Everybody knows it's fake. It's not that they're enforcing the actual ideology of the workers of the world uniting. It's that they are enforcing compliance, right? And compliance with the regime and fuck you, you will comply, right? And so anyway, that's the other side of that. And of course, we have lived in the last decade through a lot of both of those.
Starting point is 00:56:13 I think anybody listening to this could name a series of slogans that we've all been forced to chant for the last decade that everybody knows at this point are just like simply not true. I'll let the audience speculate on their own group chats. Um. are just simply not true. I'll let the audience speculate on their own group chats. Send Mark your memes online as well, please. Yes, yes, exactly. Okay, so anyway, it's the two sides of that. It's private truth, it's public lies. Then what preference falsification does is it talks about extending
Starting point is 00:56:38 that from the idea of the individual experiencing that to the idea of the entire society experiencing that. This gets to your percentages question, which is like, okay, what happens in a society in which people are forced to lie in public about what they truly believe? What happens, number one, is that individually they're lying in public and that's bad. But the other thing that happens is they no longer have an accurate gauge at all or any way to estimate how many people agree with them. Again, this literally is like how you get something like the communist system, which is like, okay, you end up in a situation in which 80 or 90 or 99% of society can actually all be thinking individually, I really don't buy this anymore.
Starting point is 00:57:11 And if anybody would just stand up and say it, I would be willing to go along with it, but I'm not going to be the first one to put my head on the chopping block. But because of the suppression, censorship, you have no way of knowing how many other people agree with you. And if the people who agree with you are 10% of the population and you become part of a movement, you're going to get killed. If 90% of the people agree with you, you're going to win the revolution. The question of what the percentage actually is, is a really critical question. Then basically in any authoritarian system, you can't run a survey to get an accurate result. You actually can't know until you
Starting point is 00:57:44 put it to the test. And then what he describes in the book is it's always put to the test in the same way. And this is exactly what's happened for the last two years, like 100% of exactly what's happened. It's straight out of this book, which is somebody, Elon, sticks his hand up and says, the workers of the world are not going to unite.
Starting point is 00:58:01 Or the emperor is actually wearing no clothes. That famous parable. So one person stands up and does it. And literally that person is standing there by themselves and everybody else in the audience is like, Ooh, I wonder what's going to happen to that guy. Right. But again, nobody knows. Elon doesn't know. The first guy doesn't know. Other people don't know, like, which way is this going to go? And it may be that that's a minority position and that's a way to get yourself killed. Or it may be that that's the majority position in that. And you are now the leader of a revolution. And then basically, of course, what happens is, okay, the first guy does that, doesn't
Starting point is 00:58:29 get killed. The second guy does, well, a lot of the time that guy does get killed. But when the guy doesn't get killed, then a second guy pops his head up and says the same thing. All right. Now you've got two. Two leads to four, four leads to eight, eight leads to 16. And then as we saw with the fall of the Berlin Wall, this is what happened in Russia and
Starting point is 00:58:44 Eastern Europe in 89. When it goes, it can go, right? And then as we saw with the fall of the Berlin wall, this is what happened in Russia and Eastern Europe in 89. You, when it goes, it can go, right? And then it rips. And then what happens is very, very quickly, if it turns out that you had a large percentage of the population that actually believe the different thing, it turns out all of a sudden, everybody has this giant epiphany that says,
Starting point is 00:58:58 oh, I'm actually part of the majority. And at that point, like you were on the freight train to revolution, right? Like it is rolling, right? Now the other part of this is the distinction between the role of the elites and the masses. And here the best book is called The True Believer, which is the Eric Hoffer book. And so the nuance you have to put on this is the elites play a giant role in this because the elites do idea formation and communication, but the elites by definition are a small minority. And so there's also this giant role played by the masses and the masses are not necessarily thinking these things through in the same intellectualized formal way that the elites
Starting point is 00:59:32 are, but they are for sure experiencing these things in their daily lives and they for sure have at least very strong emotional views on them. And so when you really get the revolution, it's when you get the elites lined up with, or either the current elites change or the new set of elites, a new set of elites, a new set of counter elites basically come along and say, no, there's actually a different and better way to live. And then the piece that people basically decide to follow the, you know, to follow the counter elite.
Starting point is 00:59:53 So that's the other dimension to it. And of course that part is also happening right now. And again, case study number one of that would be Elon and his, you know, he turns out, you know, truly massive following. And he has done that over and over in different industries, not just saying crazy shit online, but saying crazy shit in the realm of space, in the realm of autonomous driving, in the realm of AI,
Starting point is 01:00:14 just over and over and over again. Turns out saying crazy shit is one of the ways to do a revolution and to actually make progress. Yeah, and it's like, well, but then there's the test, is it crazy shit or is it the truth? Yeah. Right, and you know, and this is where you know Many there are many specific things about Elon's genius
Starting point is 01:00:28 But one of the one of the really core ones is an absolute dedication to the truth And so when Elon says something it sounds like crazy shit, but in his mind, it's true now. Is he always right? No Sometimes the Rockets crash like you know, sometimes he's wrong. He's human. He's like anybody else He's not right all the time But at least my my through line with him, both in what he says in public and what he says in private, which by the way are the exact same things, he does not do this.
Starting point is 01:00:50 He doesn't lie in public about what he believes in private, or at least he doesn't do that anymore. Like he's 100% consistent in my experience. By the way, there's two guys who are 100% consistent like that that I know, Yulon and Trump. Whatever you think of them, what they say in private is 100% identical to what they say in public. Like they are completely transparent,
Starting point is 01:01:08 they're completely honest in that way, right? Which is like, and again, it's not like they're perfect people, but they're honest in that way. And it makes them potentially both, as they have been very powerful leaders of these movements, because they're both willing to stand up and say the thing, that if it's true, it turns out to be the thing
Starting point is 01:01:22 in many cases that, you know, many or most or almost everyone else actually believes, but nobody was actually willing to say out loud. And so they can actually catalyze these shifts. And I think this framework is exactly why Trump took over the Republican Party, as I think Trump stood up there on stage with all these other kind of conventional Republicans and he started saying things out loud that it turned out the base really was. They were either already believing or they were prone to believe.
Starting point is 01:01:42 And he was the only one who was saying them. And so again, elite masses, he was the elite, the voters of the masses and the voters decided, no, no more Bushes. We're going this other direction. That's the mechanism of social change. What we just described is the actual mechanism of social change. It is fascinating to me that we have been living through exactly this. We've been living through everything exactly what Timer-Gran describes, everything that Vaslav Havel described, black squares and Instagram, the whole thing, all of it. We've been living through the true believer, elites, masses thing with a set of basically incredibly corrupt elites wondering why they don't have the little masses anymore and a
Starting point is 01:02:18 set of new elites that are running away with things. We're living through this incredible applied case study of these ideas and you know if there's a moral of the story it is you know I think fairly obvious which is it is a really bad idea for a society to wedge itself into a position in which most people don't believe the fundamental precepts of what they're told they have to do you know to be to be good people like that that is just not a good state to be in. So one of the ways to avoid that in the future maybe is to keep the Delta between what's set in private and what's said in private
Starting point is 01:02:45 and what's said in public small. Yeah, it's like, well, this is sort of the siren song of censorship is we can keep people from saying things, which means we can keep people from thinking things. And you know, by the way, that may work for a while, right? Like, you know, I mean, again, the hard form of the Soviet Union, owning a mimeograph, pre-photocopiers, there were mimeograph machines that were used to make
Starting point is 01:03:05 samistat in underground newspapers, which is the mechanism and written communication of radical ideas, radical ideas. Ownership of a mimeograph machine was punishable by death. Right, so that's the hard version, right? The soft version is somebody clicks a button in Washington and you are erased from the internet, right? Which, good news, you're still alive.
Starting point is 01:03:25 Bad news is, you know, shame about not being able to get a job. You know, too bad your family now, you know, hates you and won't talk to you, you know, whatever the version of cancellation has been. And so, like, does that work? Maybe it works for a while. It could work for the Soviet Union for a while, you know, in its way, especially when it was coupled with official state power. But when it unwindss it can unwind with like
Starting point is 01:03:46 Incredible speed and ferocity because to your point there's all this bottled up energy now your question was like what are the percentages like what's the breakdown and so my My rough guess just based on what I've seen in my world is it's something like 20 60 20 It's like you've got 20% like true believers in whatever is, you know, the current thing. You know, you get 20% of people who are just like true believers of whatever they are, you know, whatever is the New York Times, Harvard professors and the Ford Foundation, like just they're just believe about it. Maybe it's 10, maybe it's five, but let's say generously, it's 20.
Starting point is 01:04:18 So it's a, you know, 20% kind of full on revolutionaries. And then you've got, let's call it 20% on the other side that are like, no, I'm not on board with this. This is crazy. I'm not signing up for this. But their view of themselves is they're in a small minority. And in fact, they start out in a small minority because what happens is the 60% go with the first 20%, not the second 20%. So you've got this large middle of people. And it's not that there's anything like, it's not that people in the middle are not smart or anything like that. It's that they just have like normal lives. And they're just trying to get by and they're just trying to go to work each day and do a good job and be a good person and raise their kids and you know, have a little bit of time to watch the game.
Starting point is 01:04:54 And they're just not engaged in the cut and thrust of you know, political activism or any of this stuff. It's just not their thing. But then, but that's where the over socialization comes in. It's just like, okay, by default, the 60% will go along with the 20% of the radical revolutionaries at least for a while. And then the counter elite is in this other 20%. And over time, they build up a theory and network and ability to resist and a new set of representatives and a new set of ideas. And then at some point, there's a contest. And then the question is what happens in the middle? What happens in the 60%? And it's kind of my point. It's not even really does the 60% change their beliefs as much as it's like, okay, what is the
Starting point is 01:05:34 thing that that 60% now decides to basically fall into step with? And I think in the valley, that 60% for the last decade decided to be woke and extremely, I would say, on edge on a lot of things. And that 60% is pivoting in real time. They're just done. They've just had it. And I would love to see where that pivot goes because there's internal battles happening right now. So this is the other thing.
Starting point is 01:06:01 Okay, so there's two forms of internal, there's two forms of things that, and Timur Kranis actually talked about this. Professor Kranis talked about this. So one is the other thing. Okay, so there's two forms of internal, there's two forms of things, and Timur Kronos, Timur has actually talked about this, Professor Kronos talked about this. So one is he said, he said this is the kind of unwind where what you're gonna have is you're now gonna have people in the other direction,
Starting point is 01:06:12 you're gonna have people who claim that they supported Trump all along who actually didn't. Right? Right. So it's gonna swing the other way. And by the way, Trump's not the only part of this, but he's just a convenient shorthand for a lot of this. But whatever it is, you'll have people who will say,
Starting point is 01:06:25 well, I never supported the EI, or I never supported ESG, or I never thought we should have canceled that person, where, of course, they were full on a part of the mob at that moment. And so anyway, so you'll have preference falsification happening in the other direction. And his prediction, I think, basically, is you'll end up with the same quote
Starting point is 01:06:41 problem on the other side. Now, will that happen here? I don't know. How far is American society willing to Now, will that happen here? I don't know. How far is American society willing to go in any of these things? I don't know. But there is some question there. And then the other part of it is,
Starting point is 01:06:53 okay, now you have this elite that is used to being in power for the last decade. And by the way, many of those people are still in power and they're in very important positions. And the New York Times is still the New York Times and Harvard is still Harvard. And those people haven't changed at all. They've been bureaucrats in the government and senior Democratic politicians and so forth, and they're sitting there right now
Starting point is 01:07:13 feeling like reality has just smacked them hard in the face because they lost the election so badly. But they're now going into a, and specifically the Democratic Party is going into a civil war. And that form of the civil war is completely predictable, and it the Democratic Party is going into a civil war, right? And that form of the civil war is completely predictable and that's exactly what's happening, which is half of them are saying, we need to go back to the center. We need to deradicalize because we've lost the people. We've lost the people in the middle. And so we need to go back to the middle in order to be able to get 50% plus one in an election, right? And then the other half of them are saying, no, we weren't true to our principles. We were too weak. We were too soft. We must become more revolutionary.
Starting point is 01:07:45 We must double down and we must celebrate murders in the street of health insurance executives. And that right now is like a real fight. If I could tell you a little personal story that breaks my heart a little bit. There's a professor, historian, I won't say who, who I admire deeply, love his work. He's kind of a heretical thinker.
Starting point is 01:08:05 And we were talking about having a podcast, we're doing a podcast. And he eventually said that, you know what, at this time, given your guest list, I just don't want the headache of being in the faculty meetings in my particular institution. And I asked who are the particular figures in this guest list, he said Trump.
Starting point is 01:08:31 And the second one, he said that you announced your interest to talk to Vladimir Putin. So I just don't want the headache. Now I fully believe he, it would surprise a lot of people if I said who it is, but you know, this is a person who's not bothered by the guest list. And I should also say that 80 plus percent of the guest list is left wing, okay.
Starting point is 01:08:57 Nevertheless, he just doesn't want the headache. And that speaks to the thing that you've kind of mentioned, that you just don't want the headache. You just wanna just have a pleasant morning with some coffee and talk to your fellow professors. And I think a lot of people are feeling that in universities and in other contexts in tech companies. And I wonder if that shifts, how quickly that shifts.
Starting point is 01:09:20 And there, the percentages you mentioned, 20, 60, 20, matters, and the contents of the private groups matters, and the dynamics of how that shifts matters. Because it's very possible nothing really changes in universities and in major tech companies. Or just there's a kind of excitement right now for potential revolution and these new ideas, these new vibes to reverberate through these companies
Starting point is 01:09:46 and universities, but it's possible the wall will hold. Yeah, so he's a friend of yours. I respect that you don't want to name him. I also respect you don't want to beat on him. So I would like to beat on him on your behalf. Does he have tenure? Yes. He should use it.
Starting point is 01:10:04 So this is the thing, right? This is the ultimate indictment of the corruption and the rot at the heart of our education system, at the heart of these universities. And it's by the way, it's like across the board. It's like all the top universities. It's like because the siren song for what it's been for 70 years, whatever the tenure system peer review system, tenure system, which is like, yeah, you work your butt off as an academic to get a professorship and then to get tenure because then you can say what you actually think, right?
Starting point is 01:10:32 Then you can do your work and your research and your speaking and your teaching without fear of being fired, right? Without fear of being canceled. Like academic freedom, I mean, think of the term academic freedom and then think of what these people have done to it. Like it's gone. Like that entire thing was fake and is completely rotten.
Starting point is 01:10:57 And these people are completely, completely giving up the entire moral foundation of the system that's been built for them, which by the way is paid for virtually 100% by taxpayer money. What's the inkling of hope in this? Like what this particular person and others who hear this, what can give them strength, inspiration and courage?
Starting point is 01:11:21 That the population at large is gonna realize the corruption in their industry and it's going to withdraw all the funding. It's OK. It's a desperation. No, no, no, no. Think about what happens next. OK, so let's go through it.
Starting point is 01:11:31 So the universities are funded by four primary sources of federal funding. The big one is the federal student loan program, which is in the many trillions of dollars at this point and only spiraling way faster than inflation. That's number one. Number two is federal research funding, which is also very large. And you probably know that when a scientist at university gets a
Starting point is 01:11:51 research grant, the university rakes as much as 70% of the money for central uses. Number three is tax exemption at the operating level, which is based on the idea that these are nonprofit institutions as opposed to let's's say, political institutions. And then number four is tax exemptions at the endowment level, which is the financial buffer that these places have. Anybody who's been close to a university budget will basically see that what would happen if you withdrew those sources of federal taxpayer money, and then for the state schools, the state money, they all instantly go bankrupt.
Starting point is 01:12:24 And then you could rebuild. Then you could rebuild because the problem right now, you know, like the folks at University of Boston are like mounting a very valiant effort and I hope that they succeed and I'm cheering for them. But the problem is you're now inserting, suppose you and I want to start a new university and we want to hire all the free thinking professors and we want to have the place that fixes all this. Practically speaking, we can't do it because we can't get access to that money. I we can't do it, because we can't get access to that money.
Starting point is 01:12:46 I'll give you the most direct reason we can't get access to that money. We can't get access to federal student funding. Do you know how universities are accredited for the purpose of getting access to federal student funding, federal student loans? They're accredited by the government, but not directly, indirectly.
Starting point is 01:13:00 They're not accredited by the Department of Education. Instead, what happens is the Department of Education accredits accreditation bureaus that are nonprofits that do the accreditation. Guess what the composition of the accreditation bureaus is? The existing universities. They are in complete control. The incumbents are in complete control as to who gets access to federal student loan money. Guess how enthusiastic they are about accrediting a new university. Right. And so we have a government funded and supported cartel that has gone, I mean, it's just obvious
Starting point is 01:13:32 now it's just gone like sideways and basically any possible way it could go sideways, including, I mean, literally, as you know, students getting beaten up on campus for being the wrong religion. They're just wrong in every possible way at this point. And it's all in the federal taxpayer back. There is no way. I mean, in my opinion, there is no way to fix these things without replacing them. There's no way to replace them without letting them fail. By the way, it's like everything else in life.
Starting point is 01:13:56 In a sense, this is like the most obvious conclusion of all time, which is what happens in the business world when a company does a bad job is they go bankrupt and another company takes its place, right? And that's how you get progress. And of course, below that is what happens is this is the process of evolution, right? Why does anything ever get better? It's because things are tested and tried and then the things that are good survive. And so these places have cut themselves off.
Starting point is 01:14:18 They've been allowed to cut themselves off both from evolution at the institutional level and evolution at the individual level, as shown by the just widespread abuse of tenure. And so we've just stalled out. We built an ossified system, an ossified centralized corrupt system. We're surprised by the results. They are not fixable in their current form. I disagree with you on that.
Starting point is 01:14:39 Maybe it's grounded in hope that I believe you can revolutionize the system from within because I do believe Stanford and MIT are important. Oh, but that logic doesn't follow at all. That's underpants gnome logic. Underpants gnome logic. Can you explain what that means? Underpants gnome logic.
Starting point is 01:14:56 So I just started watching a key touchstone of American culture with my nine-year-old, which of course is South Park. Yes. Wow. And there is a, which by the way is a little aggressive for a nine-year-old. Very aggressive. But he likes it. So he's learning all kinds of new words. And all kinds of new ideas. But yeah. I told him, I said, you're going to hear words on here that you are not allowed to use. Right. Education. And I said, do you know how we have an agreement that we never lied to mommy?
Starting point is 01:15:18 I said, not using a word that you learn in here does not count as lying. And keep that in mind. Orwellian redefinition of lying, but yes, go ahead. Of course, in the very opening episode, in the first 30 seconds, one of the kids calls the other kid a dildo. We're off to the races.
Starting point is 01:15:38 Yep, let's go. Daddy, what's a dildo? Yep. So, you know, sorry, son, I don't know. Um, so, um, uh, the underpants. So famous episode of South park, the underpants gnomes. And so the, the underpants gnomes. So there's, there's, there's this rat, all the kids basically realized that their underpants are quite missing from their dresser drawers. Somebody stealing the underpants and it's just like,
Starting point is 01:16:01 well, who on earth would steal the underpants? The underpants and it turns out it's the underpants gnomes. And it turns out the underpants gnomes would come to town and they've got this little underground warren of tunnels and storage places for all the underpants. And so they go out at night, they steal the underpants and the kids discover that, you know, the underpants gnomes and they're, you know, what, what are you doing? Like what's, what's the point of this? And so the underpants gnomes present their, their master plan, which is a three-part plan,
Starting point is 01:16:21 which is step one, collect underpants. Step three, profit. Step two, question mark. Yeah. So you just proposed the underpants gnome, which is very common in politics. So the form of this in politics is we must do something. This is something, therefore we must do this.
Starting point is 01:16:41 But there's no causal logic chain in there at all to expect that that's actually going to succeed because there's no reason to believe that it is. It's the same thing, but this is what I hear all the time. I will let you talk as the host of the show in a moment, but I hear this all the time. I have friends who are on these boards, right? Very involved with these places. And I hear this all the time, which is like, oh, these are very important. We must fix them. And so therefore they are fixable. There's no logic chain there at all. If there's that pressure that you described
Starting point is 01:17:11 in terms of cutting funding, then you have the leverage to fire a lot of the administration and have new leadership that steps up that aligns with this vision that things really need to change at the heads of the universities. And they put students and faculty at the primary, fire a lot of the administration, and realign and reinvigorate this idea of freedom of thought and intellectual freedom.
Starting point is 01:17:38 I mean, I don't... Because there is already a framework of great institutions that's there, and the way they talk about what it means to be a great institution is aligned with this very idea that you're talking about. It's this meaning like intellectual freedom, the idea of tenure, right? On the surface, it's aligned. Underneath, it's become corrupted. If we say free speech and academic freedom often enough, sooner or later, these tenured
Starting point is 01:18:03 professors will get brave. Wait, do you think the universities are fundamentally broken? Okay, so how do you fix it? How do you have institutions for educating 20 year olds and institutions that host researchers that have the freedom to do epic shit, like research type shit that's outside the scopes of R&D departments
Starting point is 01:18:26 and inside companies. So how do you create an institution like that? How do you create a good restaurant when the one down the street sucks? All right. You invent something new. You open a new restaurant. Yeah. Like how often in your life have you experienced a restaurant that's just absolutely horrible
Starting point is 01:18:41 and it's poisoning all of its customers and the food tastes terrible and then three years later you go back and it's fantastic. Charlie Munger actually had the best comment on his great investor Charlie Munger, the great comment he was once asked. He's like, you know, he was, General Electric was going through all these challenges and he was asked at a Q and A,
Starting point is 01:18:55 he said, how would you fix the culture of General Electric? And he said, fix the culture of General Electric. He said, I couldn't even fix the culture at a restaurant. Like it's insane. Like obviously you can't do it. Nobody in business thinks you can do that. Like it's insane. Like obviously you can't do it. Nobody in business thinks you can do that. Like it's impossible. Like it's not. Now look, having said all that, I should also express this because I have a lot of friends to work at these places and are involved in various attempts to fix these. I hope that I'm wrong. I would love to be wrong. I would love for the underpants gnome step two to be something clear and straightforward that they can figure out how to do. I would love to fix it. I'd love to see them come back to their
Starting point is 01:19:28 spoken principles. I think that'd be great. I'd love to see the professors with tenure get bravery. I would love to see it. I mean, it would be fantastic. My partner and I have done a lot of public speaking on this topic. It's been intended to not just be harsh, but also be like, okay, these challenges have to be confronted directly. By the way, let me also say something positive, you know, especially post October 7th, there are a bunch of very smart people who are major donors and board members of these institutions like Mark Rowan, you know, who are really coming in trying to, you know, I think legitimately trying to fix these places. I have a friend on the executive committee at one of the top technical universities.
Starting point is 01:20:00 He's working overtime to try to do this. Man, I hope they can figure it out. But the counter question would just be like, do you see it actually happening at a single one of these places? I'm a person that believes in leadership. If you have the right leadership, the whole system can be changed. So here's a question for your friend
Starting point is 01:20:19 who have tenure at one of these places, which is who runs his university? I think, you know how I think runs it? Yeah. Whoever the fuck says they run it, that's what great leadership is. Like a president has that power. But how does a university has the leverage
Starting point is 01:20:33 because they can mouth off like Elon can. Can they fire the professors? They can fire them through being vocal publicly, yes. They fire the professors. What are you talking about, legally? Can they fire? No, they cannot fire the professors. Then we know who runs the university. The professors? Yeah, professors. The are you talking about, legally? No, they cannot fire the professors. Then we know who runs the university.
Starting point is 01:20:45 The professors? Yeah, professors. The professors and the students, the professors and the Ferrell students. Then they're of course in a radicalization feedback cycle driving each other crazy. The Ferrell students. Yeah, the Ferrell students.
Starting point is 01:20:54 Yeah, the Ferrell students. What happens when you're put in charge of your bureaucracy where the thing that the bureaucracy knows is that they can outlast you? The thing that the tenured professors at all these places know is it doesn't matter who the president is because they can outlast you. The thing that the tenured professors at all these places know is it doesn't matter who the president is because they can outlast them because they cannot get fired. By the way, it's the same thing that bureaucrats in the government know.
Starting point is 01:21:12 It's the same thing that the bureaucrats in the Department of Education know. They know the exact same thing. They cannot last you. I mean, it's the whole thing that it's the resistance. They can be the resistance. They can just sit there and resist, which is what they do. They're not fireable. That's definitely a crisis that needs to be solved.
Starting point is 01:21:26 That's a huge problem. And I also don't like that I'm defending academia here. I agree with you that the situation is dire, but I just think that institutions are important. And I should also add context, since you've been grilling me a little bit. You were using restaurants as an analogy, and earlier offline in this conversation, you said that Dairy Queen is a great restaurant.
Starting point is 01:21:46 So let's let the listener take that. I said Dairy Queen is the best restaurant. The best restaurant, there you go. So everything Mark Adresa is saying today. I don't want to, you should go order a Blizzard. One day you should walk down there and order a Blizzard. Yeah. They can get like 4,000 calories in a cup.
Starting point is 01:22:02 They can and they're delicious. Amazing. They are truly delicious. They'll put anything in there you want. All right. But anyway, let me just close by saying, look, my friends at the university system, I would just say, look, this is the challenge.
Starting point is 01:22:14 Like I would just pose this as the challenge. To me, having had a lot of these conversations, this is the bar, in my view, this is the conversation that actually has to happen. This is the bar that actually has to be hit. These problems need to be confronted directly. Because I think there's been way too much. I mean, I'm actually worried kind of on the other side. There's too much happy talk in these conversations. I think the taxpayers do not understand this level of crisis. And I think
Starting point is 01:22:35 if the taxpayers come to understand it, I think the funding evaporates. And so I think the fuse is going through, no fault of any of ours, but the fuse is going and there's some window of time here to fix this and address it and justify the money. Because normal taxpayers sitting in normal towns, in normal jobs, are not gonna tolerate this for that much longer. You've mentioned censorship a few times. Let us, if we can, go deep into the darkness of the past
Starting point is 01:23:01 and how censorship mechanism was used. So you are a good person to speak about the history of the past and how censorship mechanism was used. So you are a good person to speak about the history of this because you were there on the ground floor in 2013-ish, Facebook. I heard that you were there when they invented or maybe developed the term hate speech in the context of censorship on social media. So take me through that history, if you can, the use of censorship.
Starting point is 01:23:33 So I was there on the ground floor in 1993. There's multiple floors to this building, apparently. There are. Yeah. So I got the first ask to implement censorship on the internet, which was in the web browser. That is fascinating. Yeah, yeah. Actually, in 1982, I was asked to implement a nudity filter.
Starting point is 01:23:51 Did you have the courage to speak up back then? I didn't have any problems speaking up back then. I was making $6.25 an hour. I did not have a lot to lose. No, I was asked at the time. And look, I was legitimate, in some sense, a legitimate request, which is working on a research project actually funded by the federal government
Starting point is 01:24:08 at a public university. So I don't think my boss was like in any way out of line. But it was like, yeah, this web browser thing is great. But could it just make sure to not have any photos of naked people that show up? But if you think about this for a second as a technologist, I had an issue, which is this was like pre-Imagenet. And so I had a brief period where
Starting point is 01:24:24 I tried to imagine an algorithm that I referred to as the breast detection algorithm that I was going to have to design. And then apparently a variety of other apparently body parts people are also sensitive about. And then I politely declined to do this. For just the technical difficulties of it. Well, number one, I actually didn't know how to do it. But number two is just like, no, I'm not.
Starting point is 01:24:43 I'm just not building a censorship engine. Like, I'm just not doing it. And in those days, the internet generally was a free fire zone for everything. It was actually interesting. It's sort of pre-93, the internet was such a specific niche community. Like, it was like the million kind of highest IQ nerds
Starting point is 01:25:01 in the world. And so it actually didn't really have a lot of issues that people were super interested in talking about, like astrophysics and not very interested in even politics at that time. So there really was not an issue there. But yeah, I didn't want to start the process. So I think the way to think about this, so first of all, yeah, so I was involved in this at Facebook every step, by the way, I've been involved with this at Facebook every step of the way. I joined the board there in 2007. So I saw, I've seen everything in the last, you know, almost 20 years,
Starting point is 01:25:27 every step of the way. But also I've been involved in most of the other companies over time. So I was an angel investor in Twitter and knew them really well. We were the founding investor in Substack. I'm part of the Elon takeover of Twitter with X. I was an angel at LinkedIn. So I've been in these, we were the funder of Pinterest. We were one of the main investors there. Reddit as well. And I was having these conversations with all these guys all the way through. So as much talk specifically about Facebook,
Starting point is 01:25:50 but I can just tell you like the general pattern. And for quite a while, it was kind of all the same across these companies. Yeah, so basically the way to think about this, the true kind of nuanced view of this is that there is practically speaking, no internet service that can have zero censorship. And by the way, that also mirrors there is no country that actually has limited free speech either. The US First Amendment actually has 12 or 13 formal carveouts
Starting point is 01:26:14 from the Supreme Court over time. So incitement to violence and terrorist recruitment and child abuse and child pornography and so forth, they're not covered by the First Amendment. And just practically speaking, if you and I are going to start an internet company and have a child abuse and child pornography and so forth, they're not covered by the First Amendment. Just practically speaking, if you and I are going to start an internet company and have a service, we can't have that stuff either, right? Because it's illegal or it will just clearly destroy the whole thing. So you're always going to have a censorship engine. I mean, hopefully it's not actually in the browser, but you're going to have it for sure at the level of an internet service. But then what happens is now you have a machine, right? Now you have a system where you can put in rules saying,
Starting point is 01:26:48 we allow this, we don't allow that. You have enforcement, you have consequences, right? And once that system is in place, it becomes the ring of power, right? Which is like, okay, now anybody in that company or anybody associated with that company or anybody who wants to pressure that company will just start to say, okay, you should use that machine for more than just terrorist
Starting point is 01:27:07 recruitment and child pornography. You should use it for XYZ. And basically that transition happened, I call it 2012, 2013 is when there was this like very, very kind of rapid pivot. I think the kickoff to it for some reason was this, it was the beginning of the second Obama term. I think it also coincided with the arrival of the first super woke kids into these schools. It's the kids that were in school for the Iraq war and then the global financial crisis and they came out super radicalized. They came into these companies and they immediately started mounting these social crusades to ban and censor lots of things. And then quite frankly, the Democratic Party figured this out and they figured out that these companies were very subject to being controlled and the executive teams and boards
Starting point is 01:27:52 of directors are almost all Democrats and there's tremendous circulation. A lot of Obama people from the first term actually came and worked in these companies and a lot of FBI people and other law enforcement intelligence people came in and worked and they were all Democrats for that set. And so they just, the ring of power was lying on the table. It had been built and they picked it up and put it on and then they just ran. And the original discussions were basically always on two topics. It was hate speech and misinformation. Hate speech was the original one. And the hate speech conversation started exactly like you'd expect, which is we can't have the N word. And which the answer is fair enough. Let's not have the N word. Okay. Now we've set a precedent. Right. And then, and then Jordan Peterson has
Starting point is 01:28:35 talked a lot about this. The definition of hate speech ended up being things that make people uncomfortable. Right? So we can't have things that make people uncomfortable. I, of course, you know, people like me that are disagreeable raise our hands and say, well, that idea right there makes me uncomfortable. But of course that doesn't count as hate speech. So the ring of power is on one hand and not on the other hand.
Starting point is 01:28:56 And then basically that began this slide where it ended up being that completely anodyne. This is a point that Mark has been making recently, like completely anodyne comments that are completely point that Mark has been making recently, completely anodyne comments that are completely legitimate on television or on the Senate floor, all of a sudden our hate speech can't be said online. So that the ring of power was wielded in grossly irresponsible ways. We can talk about all the stuff that happened there. And then the other one was misinformation. And that wasn't as, there was a little bit of that early on, but of course that really kicked
Starting point is 01:29:21 in with Trump. So the hate speech speech stuff the hate speech stuff redated Trump by like three or four years The misinformation stuff was basically a it was a little bit later and it was the consequence of the Russiagate hoax And then that was you know, a ring of power that was even more powerful, right? Because you know hate speech is like okay at some point if something offensive or not Like at least you can have a question as to whether that's the case But the problem with misinformation is like is it the truth or not, at least you can have a question as to whether that's the case. But the problem with misinformation is like, is it the truth or not? What do we know for 800 years or whatever Western civilization? It's that there's only a few entities that can
Starting point is 01:29:54 determine the truth on every topic. There's God, there's the king, we don't have those anymore, and the rest of us are all imperfect and flawed. And so the idea that any group of experts is going to sit around the table and decide on the truth is deeply anti-Western and deeply authoritarian. And somehow the misinformation kind of crusade went from the Russiagate hoax into just full blown, we're gonna use that weapon for whatever we want. And then of course, then the culminating moment on that
Starting point is 01:30:19 that really was the straw that broke the camel's back was we're gonna censor all theories that the COVID virus might've been manufactured in a lab as misinformation. And inside these companies, that was the point where people for the first time, this is like what, three years ago, for the first time they were like,
Starting point is 01:30:35 and that was when it sunk in where it's just like, okay, this has spun completely out of control. But anyway, that's how we got to where we are. And then basically that spell lasted, that complex existed we got to where we are. And then basically that spell lasted, that complex existed and got expanded basically from, call it 2013 to 2023. I think basically two things broke it. One is Substack. And so, and I'm super proud of those guys because they started from scratch and declared right up front that they were going to be a free speech platform. And they came under intense pressure, including from the press, and they tried to beat them
Starting point is 01:31:09 to the ground and kill them. And intense pressure, by the way, from, let's say, certain of the platform companies, basically threatening them. And they stood up to it. And sitting here today, they have the widest spectrum of speech and conversation anywhere on planet Earth. And they've done a great job. And it's worked, by the way, it's great.
Starting point is 01:31:25 And then obviously Elon, with X was the hammer blow. And then I did the third one now was what Mark is doing at Facebook. And there's also like singular moments. I think you've spoken about this, which like John Stewart going on, Steven Colbert and talking about the lab leak theory. Yes.
Starting point is 01:31:46 I just, there's certain moments to just kind of shake everybody up. The right person, the right time, just, it's a wake up call. So that there, and I will tell you like, and I should say, John Stewart attacked me recently, so I'm not that thrilled about him. But I would say I was a long run fan of John Stewart. I watched probably every episode of The Daily Show
Starting point is 01:32:04 when he was on it for probably 20 years, but he did a very important public service and it was that appearance on The Colbert Show. And I don't know how broadly this is, you know, at the time it was in the news briefly, but I don't know how, if people remember this, but I will tell you in the rooms where people discuss what is misinformation and these policies, that was a very big moment. That was probably actually the key catalyzing moment. And I think he exhibited, I would say, conspicuous bravery and had a big impact with that. And yeah, for people who don't recall what he did,
Starting point is 01:32:30 and this was in the full blown, like you absolutely must lock down for two years. You absolutely must keep all the schools closed. You absolutely must have everybody work from home. You absolutely must wear a mask, like the whole thing. And one of those was you absolutely must believe that COVID was completely natural. You must believe that.
Starting point is 01:32:48 And not believing that means you're a fascist, Nazi, Trump supporter, mega evil, QAnon person, right? And that was like uniform. And that was enforced by the social media companies. And like I said, that was the peak. And John Stewart went on the Colbert show. And I don't know if they planned it or not, cause Colbert looked shocked.
Starting point is 01:33:03 I don't know how much it was a bit, but he went on there and he just had one of these like the emperor's wearing no clothes things where he said, it's just not plausible that you had the COVID super virus appear 300 yards down the street from the Wuhan Institute of lethal coronaviruses. Like it's just not plausible that that, certainly that you could just rule that out.
Starting point is 01:33:23 And then there was another key moment. Actually, the more serious version was I think the author Nicholson Baker wrote a big piece for New York magazine. And Nicholson Baker is like one of our great novelist writers of our time. And he wrote the piece and he did the complete addressing of it. And that was the first I think that was the first legit there had been like alt, you know, renegade there had been, you know, people running around saying this, but getting censored all over the place.
Starting point is 01:33:43 That was the first one that was like in the mainstream press where he, and he talked to all the heretics and he just like laid the whole thing out. And, and that was a moment. And I remember, let's say a board meeting at one of these companies after that where basically, you know, everybody looked around the table and it was like, all right, like, I guess we're not, we don't need a sensor that anymore. And, you know, and then of course, what immediately follows from that is, well, wait a minute, why were we censoring that in the first place? And okay, like, and then,
Starting point is 01:34:07 you know, the downstream, not that day, but the downstream conversations were like, okay, if, if we made such a giant in retrospect, if we all made such a giant collective mistake, censoring that, then what does that say about the rest of our regime? And I think that was the thread in the sweater that started to unravel it. I should say it again, I do think that the John Stuart appearance and the statement he made was a courageous act. Yeah, I agree. I think we need to have more of that in the world. And like you said, Elon, everything he did with X is a series of courageous acts.
Starting point is 01:34:37 And I think what Mark Zuckerberg did on Rogan a few days ago is a courageous act. Can you just speak to that? He has become, I think, an outstanding communicator, right? And he's somebody who came in for a lot of criticism earlier in his career on that front. And I think he's one of these guys who can sit down and talk for three hours and make complete sense. And as you do with all of your episodes, when somebody sits and talks for three hours, you really get a sense of somebody
Starting point is 01:35:07 because it's really hard to be artificial for that long. And he's not done that repeatedly. He's really good at it. And then look, again, I would maybe put him in the third category now with, certainly after that appearance, I would say I would put him up there now with kind of Elan and Trump in the sense of the public
Starting point is 01:35:21 and the private are now synchronized. I guess I'd say that. He said on that show what he really believes. He said all the same things that he says in private. I don't think there's really any discrepancy anymore. I would say he has always taken upon himself a level of obligation responsibility to running a company the size of Metta and to running services that are that large. I think his conception of what he's doing, which I think is correct, is he's running services that are that large. And I think his conception of what he's doing, which I think is correct, is he's
Starting point is 01:35:46 running services that are bigger than any country. He's running over 3 billion people use of services. And then the company has many tens of thousands of employees and many investors, and it's a public company. And he thinks very deeply and seriously about his responsibilities. And so he has not felt like he has had, let's just say, the complete flexibility that Elon has had.
Starting point is 01:36:06 And, you know, people could argue that one way or the other, but, you know, he's, you know, yeah, he's, he's, you know, he talked about a lot. He's, he's evolved a lot. A lot of it was he learned a lot. And by the way, I'm going to put myself right back up there. Like I'm not claiming any huge foresight or heroism on any of this. Like I've also learned, learned a lot. Like, like I, my views on things are very different than they were 10 years ago on lots of topics.
Starting point is 01:36:26 And so, you know, I've been on a learning journey. He's been on a learning journey. He is a really, really good learner. He assimilates information, you know, as good as or better than anybody else I know. The other thing I guess I would just say is he talked on that show about something very important, which is when you're in a role
Starting point is 01:36:44 where you're running a company like that, there are a set of decisions that you get to make and you deserve to be criticized for those decisions and so forth and it's valid. But you are under tremendous external pressure as well. And by the way, you're under tremendous internal pressure. You've got your employees coming at you. You've got your executives in some cases coming at you. You've got your board in some cases coming at you. You've got your shareholders coming at you, you've got your executives in some cases coming at you, you've got your board in some cases coming at you, you've got your shareholders coming at you. So you've got your internal pressures, but you also have the press coming at you, you've
Starting point is 01:37:11 got academia coming at you, you've got the entire nonprofit complex coming, activist complex coming at you. And then really critically, he talked about a Rogan and these companies all went through this in this last especially five years, you had the government coming at you. And that's the really stinky end of the pool where the government was, in my view, illegally exerting just in flagrant violation of the First Amendment and federal laws on speech and coercion and conspiracy, forcing these companies to engage in activities. Again, in some cases they may have wanted to do,
Starting point is 01:37:45 but in other cases they clearly didn't wanna do and felt like they had to do. And the level of pressure, like I was gonna say, like I've known every CEO at Twitter, they've all had the exact same experience, which when they were in the job, it was just daily beatings. Like it's just getting punched in the face every single day, constantly.
Starting point is 01:38:01 And Mark is very good at getting physically punched in the face. Getting better and better, yeah. And he is, and he, you know, and he's very good at, you know, taking a punch and he has taken many, many punches. So I would encourage people to have a level of sympathy for these are not kings. These are people who operate with like, I would say, extraordinary levels of external pressure. I think if I had been in his job for the last decade, I would be a little puddle on the floor. pressure. I think if I had been in his job for the last decade, I would be a little puddle on the floor. And so it says, I think a lot about him that he has risen to this occasion the way that he has. And by the way, I should also say, the cynicism of course is immediately out and it's
Starting point is 01:38:34 a legitimate thing for people to say, but it's like, oh, you're only doing this because of Trump or whatever. And it's just like, no, he has been thinking about and working on these things and trying to figure them out for a very long time. And so I think what you saw are legitimate, deeply held beliefs, not some, sort of just in the moment thing that could change at any time. So what do you think it's like to be him
Starting point is 01:38:53 and other leaders of companies to be you and withstand internal pressure and external pressure? What's that life like? Is it deeply lonely? That's a great question. So leaders are lonely to start with. And this is one of those things where almost nobody has sympathy, right?
Starting point is 01:39:10 Nobody feels sorry for a CEO, right? Like it's not a thing, right? And again, legitimately so, like CEOs get paid a lot, like the whole thing. There's a lot of great things about it. So it's not like they should be out there asking for a lot of sympathy, but it is the case that they are human beings.
Starting point is 01:39:23 And it is the case that it is a lonely job. And the reason it's a lonely job is because your words carry tremendous weight. And you are dealing with extremely complicated issues and you're under a tremendous amount of emotional, personal emotional stress. And you often end up not being able to sleep well and you end up not being able to keep up an exercise routine and all those things. And you come under family stress because you're working all the time. My partner Ben, he was CEO of our last company before we started the venture firm. He said the problem he had with his family life was even when he was home at night, he
Starting point is 01:39:53 wasn't home because he was in his head trying to solve all the business problems. And so he was supposed to be having dinner with his kids and he was physically there, but he wasn't mentally there. So you get that a lot. But the key thing is you can't talk to people. So you can't, I mean, you can talk to your spouse and your kids, but he wasn't mentally there. So, you know, you kind of get, you get that a lot. But the key thing is like, you can't talk to people, right? So you can't, I mean, you can talk to your spouse and your kids, but like, they don't understand that they're not working in your company.
Starting point is 01:40:10 They don't understand, have the context to really help you. You, if you talk to your executives, they all have agendas, right? And so they're all, they're all, and they can't resist. Like it's just human nature. And so you can't necessarily rely on what they say. It's very hard in most companies to talk to your board because they can fire you.
Starting point is 01:40:28 Now, Mark has the situation because he has control. It actually turns out he can talk to his board. And Mark talks to us about many things that most CEOs won't talk to their boards about, literally because we can't fire him. But including all the CEOs of Twitter, none of them had control. And so they could all get fired.
Starting point is 01:40:44 So you can't talk to the board members. They're going to fire you. You can't talk to shareholders because they'll just dump your stock. So every once in a while, what you find is basically, the best case scenario they have is they can talk to other CEOs. And there's these little organizations where they pair up and do that. And so they maybe get a little bit out of that. But even that's fraught with peril because can you really talk about confidential information with another CEO, insider trading risk? And so it's just a very lonely and isolating thing to start with. And then on top of that, you apply pressure, right? And that's where it gets painful. And then maybe I'll just spend a moment on this internal external pressure thing.
Starting point is 01:41:22 My general experience with companies is that they can withstand most forms of external pressure thing. My general experience with companies is that they can withstand most forms of external pressure as long as they retain internal coherence. Right? So as long as the internal team is really bonded together and supporting each other, most forms of external pressure you can withstand. And by that, I mean investors dump your stock, you lose your biggest customers, whatever negative article, negative headline. You can withstand all that. And basically, in fact, many of those forms of pressure can be bonding experiences for the team
Starting point is 01:41:55 where they come out stronger. What you 100% cannot withstand is the internal crack. And what I always look for in high pressure corporate situations now is the moment when the internal team cracks because I know the minute that happens, we're in a different regime. It's like the solid has turned into a liquid. We're in a different regime and the whole thing can unravel in the next week because then people turn it. I mean, this is what's happening in Los Angeles right now. The mayor and the fire chief turned on each other and that's it.
Starting point is 01:42:26 That government is dysfunctional. It is never going to get put back together again. It is over. It is not going to work ever again. And that's what happens to the side companies. And so somebody like Mark is under profound internal pressure and external pressure at the same time. Now he's been very good at maintaining the coherence of his executive team, but he has had over the years a lot of activist employees as a lot of these companies have had. And so that's been continuous pressure. And then the final thing I'd say is I said that companies can withstand most forms of external pressure, but not all. And the special, though not all one is government pressure. Is it when your government comes for you? Like, yeah, any CEO who thinks that they're bigger than
Starting point is 01:43:06 the government has that notion beaten out of them in short order. Can you just linger on that? Because it is maybe educating and deeply disturbing. You've spoken about it before, but we're speaking about again, this government pressure. So you think they've crossed the line into essentially this government pressure. So you think they've crossed the line into essentially criminal levels of pressure? Flagrant criminality, felonies, like obvious felonies. And I can actually cite the laws, but yes, absolute criminality.
Starting point is 01:43:36 Can you explain how those possible to happen and maybe on a hopeful note, how we can avoid that happening again? So to start with is a lot of this now is in the public record, which is good because it needs to be in the public record. And so there's three forms of things that are in the public record that people can look at. So one is the Twitter files, right, which Elon put out with the set of journalists when he took over. And I will just tell you, the Twitter files are 100% representative of what I've seen at every other one of these companies. And so you can just see what happened
Starting point is 01:44:04 in Twitter and you can just assume that that happened in these other companies for the most part, certainly in terms of the kind of pressure that they got. So that's number one. That stuff, you can just read it and you should if you haven't. The second is, Mark referenced this in the Rogan podcast, there's a Congressman, Jim Jordan, who has a congressional committee called the Weaponization Committee. And they in the last, whatever, three years have done a full-scale investigation
Starting point is 01:44:27 of this. And Facebook produced a lot of documents into that investigation. And many of those have now been made public. And you can download those reports. And there's like 2,000 pages worth of material on that. And that's essentially the Facebook version of the Twitter files just arrived at with a different mechanism. And then third is Mark himself talking about this on Rogan. So I'll just defer to his comments there. But yeah, basically what those three forms of
Starting point is 01:44:50 information show you is basically the government over time and then culminating in 2020, 2021, you know, in the last four years just decided that the first amendment didn't apply to them. And they just decided that federal laws around free speech and around conspiracies to take away the rights of citizens just don't apply. And they just decided that they can just arbitrarily pressure, just like literally arbitrarily call up companies and threaten and bully and yell and scream and threaten repercussions and force people to force them to censor. And there's this whole thing of like, well, the First Amendment only applies to the government. It doesn't apply to companies. It's like, well, there's actually
Starting point is 01:45:28 a little bit of nuance to that. First of all, it definitely applies to the government. 100% the First Amendment applies to the government. By the way, so does the Fourth Amendment and the Fifth Amendment, including the right to due process, also applies to the government. There was no due process at all to any of the censorship regime that was put in place. There was no due process put in place, by the way, for debanking either.
Starting point is 01:45:47 Those are just as serious violations as the free speech violations. So this is just flagrant on constitutional behavior. And then there are specific federal statutes. There's 18241 and 18242. And one of them applies to federal employees, government employees. And the other one applies to private actors around what's called deprivation of rights and conspiracy to deprive rights. And it is not legal, according to the United States Criminal Code, for government employees or in a conspiracy, private entities to take away constitutional rights. And interestingly, some of those constitutional rights are enumerated, for example, in the First Amendment, freedom of speech. And then some of those rights actually do not need to be enumerated. If the government
Starting point is 01:46:29 takes away rights that you have, they don't need to be specifically enumerated rights in the Constitution in order to still be a felony. The Constitution very specifically does not say you only have the rights that it gives you. It says you have all the rights that have not been previously defined as being taken away from you. So debanking qualifies as a right to access the financial system is every bit something that's subject to these laws as free speech. So yeah, this has happened. And then I'll just add one final thing, which is we've talked about two parties so far.
Starting point is 01:46:57 We've talked about the government employees, and then we've talked about the companies. The government employees for sure have misbehaved. The companies, there's a very interesting question there as to whether they are victims or perpetrators or both. They will defend and they will argue and I believe they have a good case that they are victims, not perpetrators, right? They are the downstream subjects of pressure,
Starting point is 01:47:17 not the cause of pressure. But there's a big swath of people who are in the middle and specifically the ones that are funded by the government that I think are in possibly pretty big trouble. And that's all of these third party censorship bureaus. I mean, the one that sort of is most obvious is the so-called Stanford Internet Observatory that got booted up there over the last several years. And they basically were funded by the federal government to be third party censorship operations.
Starting point is 01:47:43 And they're private sector actors, but acting with federal funding. And so it puts them in this very interesting spot where there could be very obvious theory under which they're basically acting as agents of the government. And so I think they're also very exposed on this and have behaved in just flagrantly illegal ways. So fundamentally, government should not do any kind of pressure, even soft pressure on companies to censor. Can't. Not allowed.
Starting point is 01:48:09 It really is disturbing. I mean, it probably started soft, lightly, slowly, and then it escalates as the old will to power will instruct them to do. Because you get, I mean, yeah, that's why, that's why there's protection. Because you can't put a check on power for government, right? There are so many ways that they can get you,
Starting point is 01:48:33 like there are so many ways they can come at you and get you, and the other thing here to think about is, a lot of times when people think about government action, they think about legislation, right? Because you, so, when I was a kid, we got trained, how does government work? There was this famous animated short, the? So when I was a kid, we got trained at how does government work? There was this famous animated short, the thing we got shown was just a cartoon
Starting point is 01:48:49 of how a bill becomes a law. And it's like this, you know, fancy little bill snicked along and gets this. I'm just a bill. Exactly. Like, it's like, all right, number one, that's not how it works at all. Like that doesn't actually happen.
Starting point is 01:48:58 We could talk about that. But even beyond that, mostly what we're dealing with is not legislation. When we talk about government power these days, mostly it's not legislation. Mostly it's either regulation, which is basically the equivalent of legislation, but having not gone through the legislative process, which is a very big open legal issue and one of the things that the Doge is very focused on.
Starting point is 01:49:16 Most government rules are not legislated, they're regulated. And there's tons and tons of regulations that these companies are... This is another cliche you'll hear a lot, which is, oh, private companies can do whatever they want. It's like, oh, no, they can't. They're subject to tens of thousands of regulations that they have to comply with. The hammer that comes down when you don't comply with regulations is profound. They can completely wreck your company with no ability for you to do anything about it.
Starting point is 01:49:39 Regulation is a big part of the way the power gets exercised. And then there's what's called just flat out administrative power, is the term that you'll hear. And administrative power is just literally the government telling you, calling you and telling you what to do. Here's an example of how this works. So Facebook had this whole program a few years back to do a global cryptocurrency for payments called Libra. And they built the entire system and it was this high scale,
Starting point is 01:49:58 you know, sort of new cryptocurrency and they were going to build in every product and they were going to be three billion people who could transact with Libra and they went to the government and they went to all these different, try to figure out how to make it so it's fully compliant with anti-money laundering and all these controls and everything. And they had the whole thing ready to go. Two senators wrote letters to the big banks saying, we're not telling you that you can't work with Facebook on this, but if you do, you should know that every aspect of your
Starting point is 01:50:21 business is going to come under greatly increased level of regulatory scrutiny, which is of course the exact equivalent of, it sure is a nice corner restaurant you have here. It would be a shame if somebody tossed a Molotov cocktail through the window and burned it down tonight, right? And so that letter, like what is that letter? Like it's not a law, it's not even a regulation. It's just like straight direct state power.
Starting point is 01:50:42 And then it culminates in literally calls from the White House where they're just like flat out telling you what to do, which is of course what a king gets to do, but not what a president gets to do. And so anyway, so what these companies experienced was they experienced the full panoply of this, but the level of intensity was in that order. It was actually legislation was the least important part. Regulation was more important, administrative power was more important. And then just like flat out demands and flat out threats were ultimately the most important. How do you fix it? Well, first of all, like you have
Starting point is 01:51:12 to elect people who don't do it. So like, as with all these things, ultimately the fault lies with the voters. And so, you know, you have to decide you don't want to live in that regime. I have no idea what part of this recent election mapped to the censorship regime. I do know a lot of people on the right got very angry about the censorship, but I think it probably at least helped with enthusiasm on that side. Maybe some people on the left will now not want their Democratic nominees to be so pro-censorship.
Starting point is 01:51:37 So the voters definitely get a vote. Number one, number two, I think you need transparency. You need to know what happened. We know some of what happened. Peter Thiel has written in the FT just now saying we just need like broad, after what we've been through in the last decade, we need broad-based truth and reconciliation efforts to really get to the root of things. So maybe that's part of it.
Starting point is 01:51:59 We need investigations for sure. Ultimately we need prosecutions. Like we need ultimately, we need people to go to jail because we need to set object lessons that say that you don't get to do this. And on those last two I would say that those are both up to the new administration and I don't want to speak for them and I don't want to predict what they're going to do but they have, they for sure have the ability to do both of those things
Starting point is 01:52:18 and we'll see where they take it. Yeah, it's really disturbing. I don't think anybody wants this kind of overreach of power for government including perhaps people that were participating in it. Yeah, it's truly disturbing. I don't think anybody wants this kind of overreach of power for government Including perhaps people that were participating it. It's like this dark momentum of power They just get caught up in it and that's the reason there's that kind of protection. Nobody wants that So I use the metaphor of the ring of power and for people who don't catch the reference as Lord of the Rings and the thing With the ring of power and Lord of the Rings It's the ring the golem has in the beginning and it turns the Rings, it's the ring that Gollum has in the beginning,
Starting point is 01:52:46 and it turns you invisible, and it turns out it unlocks all this fearsome power. It's the most powerful thing in the world. It's the key to everything. And basically, the moral lesson of Lord of the Rings, which was written by a guy who thought very deeply about these things, is yeah, the Ring of Power is inherently corrupting.
Starting point is 01:53:00 The characters at one point, they're like, Endolf, just put on the ring and fix this. Right? And he will not put the ring on even to like end of the war because he knows that it will corrupt him. And then, as it starts, the character of Gollum is the result of, it's like a normal character
Starting point is 01:53:17 who ultimately becomes this incredibly corrupt and deranged version of himself. And so, I mean, I think you said something actually quite profound there, which is the ring of power is infinitely tempting. You know, the censorship machine is infinitely tempting. If you, if you have it, like you are going to use it, it's overwhelmingly tempting because it's so powerful and that it will corrupt
Starting point is 01:53:36 you. And yeah, I, I don't know whether any of these people feel any of this today. They should. I don't know if they do. Um. But yeah, you go out five or 10 years later, you would hope that you would realize that your soul has been corroded, and you probably started out thinking that you were a patriot, and you were trying to defend democracy, and you ended up being extremely authoritarian
Starting point is 01:53:55 and anti-democratic and anti-Western. Can I ask you a tough question here? Staying on the ring of power, Elon is quickly becoming the most powerful human on Earth. I'm not sure about that. You don't think he is? Well, he doesn't have the nukes, so. Nukes.
Starting point is 01:54:19 Yeah, there's different definitions and perspectives on power, right? How can he and or Donald Trump avoid the corrupting aspects of this power? I mean, I think the danger is there with power. It's just, it's flat out there. I would say with Elon, I mean, we'll see. I would say with Elon, and I would say, by the way,
Starting point is 01:54:37 overwhelmingly, I would say so far so good. I'm extremely, extremely thrilled by what he's done on almost every front for like the last 30 years. But including all this stuff recently, like I think he's been a real hero on a lot of topics where we needed to see heroism. But look, I would say, I guess, the sort of case that he has this level of power is some combination of the money and the proximity
Starting point is 01:54:56 to the president. And obviously, both of those are instruments of power. The counter argument to that is I do think a lot of how Elon is causing change in the world right now. I mean, there's the companies he's running directly where I think he's doing very well and we're investors in multiple of them and doing very well. But I think a lot of the stuff that gets people mad at him is like it's the social and political
Starting point is 01:55:17 stuff and it's his statements and then it's the downstream effects of his statements. So for example, for the last couple of weeks it's been him weighing in on this rape gang scandal, this organized child rape thing in the UK. And it's actually a preface cascade. It's one of these things where people knew there was a problem. They weren't willing to talk about it. It got suppressed. And then Elon brought it up. And then all of a sudden, there's now in the UK this massive explosion of basically open conversation about it for the first time. And it's like this catalyzing. All of a sudden, everybody's kind of woken up and being like, oh my God, this is really bad.
Starting point is 01:55:52 And there will be now pretty sure, pretty clearly big changes as a result. And Elon was, he played the role of the boy who said the emperor has no clothes, right? But here's the thing, here's my point. He said it about something that was true, right? And so Like he said it about something that was true, right? And so had he said it about something that was false, you know, he would get no credit for it. He wouldn't deserve any credit for it. But he said something that was true.
Starting point is 01:56:13 And by the way, everybody over there instantly, they were like, oh yeah, he's right. Like nobody seriously said, they're just arguing the details now. So number one, it's like, okay, he says true things. And so it's like, okay, how far, a little bit of this way, like how worried are we about somebody becoming corrupt
Starting point is 01:56:28 by virtue of their power being that they get to speak the truth? And I guess I would say, especially in the last decade of what we've been through where everybody's been lying all the time about everything, I'd say, I think we should run this experiment as hard as we can to get people to tell the truth. And so I don't feel that bad about that.
Starting point is 01:56:42 And then the money side, you know, this rapidly gets into the money and politics question. The money and politics question is this very interesting question because it seems like there's a clear cut case that the more money and politics, the worse things are and the more corrupted the system is. That was a very popular topic of public conversation up until 2016 when Hillary outspent Trump three to one and lost. You'll notice that money in politics has all most vanished as a topic in the last eight years. And once again, Trump spent,
Starting point is 01:57:11 Kamala Raisedman spent 1.5 billion on top of what Biden spent. So they were at, I don't know, something like three billion total and Trump, I think, spent again, like a third or a fourth of that. And so the money in politics kind of topic has kind of vanished from the popular conversation the last eight years. It has come back a little bit now that Elon is spending. You know, but again, like it's like, okay, he's spending, but the data would seem to indicate in the last, at least in the last eight years,
Starting point is 01:57:38 that money doesn't win the political battles. It's actually like the voters actually have a voice and they actually exercise it and they don't just listen to ads. And so again, there, I would say like, yeah, clearly there's some power there, but I don't know if it's some weapon that he can just like turn on and use in a definitive way.
Starting point is 01:57:54 And I don't know if there's parallels there, but I could also say just on a human level, he has a good heart. And I interact with a lot of powerful people and that's not always the case. So that's a good thing there. If we can draw parallels to The Hobbit or whatever, who gets to put on the ring?
Starting point is 01:58:12 Frodo? Frodo, yeah. Yeah, maybe one of the lessons of Lord of the Rings writers, even Frodo would have been corrupted, right? But nevertheless, you had somebody who could do what it took at the time. The thing that I find just so amazing about the Elon phenomenon and all the critiques is, you know, the one thing that everybody in our societies universally agrees on because of our
Starting point is 01:58:32 post-Christian egalitarian. So, you know, we live in sort of this post-secularized Christian context in the West now, and it's, you know, we consider Christianity kind of, you know, backwards, but we still believe essentially all the same things. We just dress them up in sort of fake science. So the one thing that we're all told, we're all taught from early is that the best people in the world are the people who care about all of humanity, right? And we venerate all of our figures are people who care about all of, you know, Jesus cared about all of humanity, Gandhi cared about all of humanity, Martin Luther King cared
Starting point is 01:59:02 about all of humanity. Like the person who cares the most about everybody. And with Elon, you have a guy who literally like, he talks about this constantly and he talks about exactly the same in private. He's literally, he is operating on behalf of all of humanity to try to get us to, you know, he goes through to get us through multi-planetary civilization so that we can survive a strike on any one planet so that we can extend the light of human consciousness into the world and into the universe and have it persist
Starting point is 01:59:26 and the good of the whole thing. And literally the critique is, yeah, we want you to care about all of humanity, but not like that. Yeah, all the critics, all the surface turmoil, all the critics will be forgotten. I think that's clear. You said that we always end up being ruled by the elites of some kind.
Starting point is 01:59:47 Can you explain this law, this idea? So this comes from a Italian political philosopher from about 100 years ago named Robert. I'm going to let you pronounce the Italian, Michels or Michaels. And then it was, I learned about it through a famous book on politics, probably the best book on politics written in the 20th century called The Machiavellians by this guy, James Burnham, who has had a big impact on me. But in The Machiavellians, he resurrects what he calls
Starting point is 02:00:15 is this sort of Italian realist school of political philosophy from the 10s and 20s. And these were people, to be clear, this was not like a Mussolini thing. These were people who were trying to understand the actual mechanics of how politics actually works. So to get to the actual sort of mechanical substance of like how the political machine operates. And this guy, Michelle said this concept he ended up with called the iron law of oligarchy. And so what the iron law of oligarchy,
Starting point is 02:00:40 and I mean, take a step back to say what he meant by oligarchy, because it has multiple meanings. So basically in classic political theory, there's basically three forms of government at core. There's democracy, which is rule of many. There's oligarchy, which is rule of the few and there's monarchy, which is rule of the one. And you can just use that as a general framework of any government you're gonna be under is gonna be one of those. Just a mechanical observation without even saying which one's good or bad just a structural observation. And so the question that Michelle's asked was like, is there such a thing as democracy? Like, is there actually such a thing as democracy? Is there ever actually like direct government? And what he did was he mounted this sort of incredible historical exploration of whether
Starting point is 02:01:17 democracies had ever existed in the world. And the answer basically is almost never, and we could talk about that. But the other thing he did was he sought out the most democratic private organization in the world that he could find at that point, which he concluded was some basically communist German autoworkers union that was wholly devoted to the workers of the world uniting, back when that was the hot thing. And he went in there, and he's like, OK, this is the organization out of all organizations
Starting point is 02:01:40 on planet Earth that must be operating as a direct democracy. And he went in there, and he's like, oh, nope, there's a leadership class. There's like six guys at the top and they control everything. And they lead the rest of the membership along by the nose, which is, of course, the story of every union. The story of every union is always the story of there's a Jimmy Hoffa in there
Starting point is 02:01:58 kind of running the thing. We just saw that with the dock workers union, right? There's a guy. And he's in charge. And by the way, the number two is workers union, right? Like, you know, there's a guy and he's in charge. And by the way, the number two is his son, right? Like that's not like, you know, an accident, right? So the iron law of oligarchy basically says democracy is fake.
Starting point is 02:02:14 There's always a ruling class. There's always a ruling elite structurally. And he said the reason for that is because the masses can't organize, right? What's the fundamental problem? Whether the mass is 25,000 people in a union or 250 million people in a country, the masses can't organize. The majority cannot organize. Only a minority can organize.
Starting point is 02:02:30 And to be effective in politics, you must organize. And therefore, every political structure in human history has been some form of a small organized elite ruling a large and dispersed majority. Every single one. The Greeks and the Florentines had brief experiments in direct democracy, and they were total disasters. In Florence, I forget the name of it. It was called the Workers' Revolt or something like that. There was a two-year period where they basically experimented with direct democracy during the Renaissance,
Starting point is 02:03:00 and it was a complete disaster. And they never tried it again. In the state of California, we have our own experiment on this, which is the proposition system, which is an overlay on top of the legislature and anybody who looks at it for two seconds concludes it's been a complete disaster. It's just a catastrophe and it's caused enormous damage to the state. So basically, the presumption that we are in a democracy is just sort of by definition fake.
Starting point is 02:03:24 Now, good news for the US, it turns out the founders understood this. And so of course, they didn't give us a direct democracy, they gave us a representative democracy. And so they built the oligarchy into the system in the form of Congress and the executive branch and the judicial branch. But so anyway, so as a consequence, democracy is always and everywhere fake. There is always a ruling elite. And basically, the lesson of the Machiavellians is you can deny that if you want,
Starting point is 02:03:47 but you're fooling yourself. The way to actually think about how to make a system work and maintain any sort of shred of freedom is to actually understand that that is actually what's happening. And lucky for us, Devendra saw this and figured out a way to, given that there's going to be a ruling elite,
Starting point is 02:04:04 how to create a balance of power Among that elite. Yes, so it doesn't get out of hand It was very clever right and you know, some of this was based on earlier experiments some of this by the way You know, they these these were very very smart people right and so they they knew tremendous amounts of like Greek and Roman history They knew the Renaissance history, you know, they the federalist papers they argued this a great length You can read it all you know They they ran like a one of the best seminars in world history trying to figure this out. And they went through all this.
Starting point is 02:04:30 And yeah, and so they thought through it very carefully. But just I'll give you an example, which continues to be a hot topic. So you know, one way they did it is through the three branches of government, right? Executive, legislative, and judicial. Sort of balance of powers. But the other way they did it was they sort of echoing what had been done earlier, I think in the UK parliament, they created the two different bodies of the legislature, right? And so the House and the Senate, and as you know, the House is a portion on the basis
Starting point is 02:04:54 of population and the Senate is not, right? The small states have just as many senators as the big states. And then they made the deliberate decision to have the House get reelected every two years to make it very responsive to the will of the people. And they made the decision to have the Senate get reelected every two years to make it very responsive to the will of the people. And they made the decision to have the Senate get reelected every six years so that it had more buffer from the passions of the moment. But what's interesting is they didn't choose one or the other, right? They did them both. And then to get legislation passed, you have to get through both of them. And so they built in a second layer of checks and balances. And then there's a thousand observations we could make
Starting point is 02:05:24 about how well the system is working today and how much does it live up to the ideal and how much second layer of checks and balances. And then there's a thousand observations we could make about like how well the system is working today and like how much does it live up to the ideal and how much are we actually complying with the constitution and there's lots of open questions there. But this system has survived for coming on 250 years with a country that has been spectacularly successful that I don't think at least,
Starting point is 02:05:42 I don't think any of us would trade the system for any other one. And so it's, yeah, one of the great all-time achievements. Yeah, it's incredible. And we should say they were all pretty young relative to our current set of leaders. Many in their twenties at the time. And like super geniuses, this is one of those things where it's just like, all right, something happened, where there was a group of people where, you know, nobody ever tested their IQs, but like these are Einstein's of politics. Yeah, an amazing thing.
Starting point is 02:06:03 But anyway, I just, I go through all that, which is they were very keen students of the actual mechanical practice of democracy, not fixated on what was desirable. They were incredibly focused on what would actually work, which is, you know, I think the way to think about these things. There were engineers of sort,
Starting point is 02:06:19 not the fuzzy humanity students. They were shape rotators, not word cells. I remember that. Wow that meme came and went. I think you were centered to them. You're centered to a lot of memes. I was. You're the meme dealer and the meme popularizer. That meme I get some credit for and then the current thing is the other one I get some credit for. I don't know that I either one, but I popularized them. Take credit and run with it. If we can just linger on the Machiavellians. It's a study of power and power dynamics. Like you mentioned, looking at the actual reality
Starting point is 02:06:56 of the machinery of power. From everything you've seen now in government, but also in companies, what are some interesting things you can sort of continue to say about the dynamics of power, the jostling for power that happens inside these institutions? Yeah. So a lot of it, you know, we already talked about this a bit with the universities, which is you can apply a Machiavellian style lens to the, it's why I posed the question to you that I did, which is, okay, who runs the university, the trustees, the administration, the students
Starting point is 02:07:24 or the faculty. And, you know, the administration, the students or the faculty. And the answer, the true answer is some combination of the three or of the four, plus the donors, by the way, plus the government, plus the press, et cetera. And so there's a mechanical interpretation of that. I mean, companies operate under the exact same set of questions, who runs a company?
Starting point is 02:07:41 The CEO, but like the CEO runs the company basically up to the day that either the shareholders or the management team revolt. If the shareholders revolt, it's very hard for the CEO to stay in the seat. If the management team revolts, it's very hard for the CEO to stay in the seat. By the way, if the employees revolt, it's also hard to stay in the seat. By the way, if the New York Times comes at you, it's also very hard to stay in the seat. If the Senate comes at you, it's very hard to stay in the seat. So, you know, like a reductionist version of this that is a good shorthand is who can get who fired. So who has more power?
Starting point is 02:08:11 The newspaper columnist who makes $200,000 a year, or the CEO who makes $200 million a year. And it's like, well, I know for sure that the columnist can get the CEO fired. I've seen that happen before. I have yet to see a CEO get a columnist fired. Did anyone ever get fired from the Bill Ackman I've seen that happen before. I have yet to see a CEO get a columnist fired. Did anyone ever get fired from the Bill Ackman
Starting point is 02:08:29 assault on journalism? So Bill really showed the bullshit that happens in journalism. No, because what happens is they wear it with a badge, I mean, and I would say to their credit, they wear it as a badge of honor, and then to their shame, they wear it as a badge of honor, right?
Starting point is 02:08:43 Which is, if they're doing the right thing, then they are justifiably priding themselves for standing up under pressure. But it also means that they can't respond to legitimate criticism. And they're obviously terrible at that now. As I recall, he went straight to the CEO of I think, Astel Springer that owns Insider. And I happen to know the CEO and I think he's quite a good CEO. But like, well, there's a good example is the CEO of Axel Springer run his own company, right? Like, well, there's a fascinating, okay. So there's a fascinating thing playing out right now
Starting point is 02:09:13 not to dwell on these fires, but it's a case you see the pressure reveals things, right? And so if you've been watching what's happening with the LA Times recently, so this guy biotech entrepreneur buys the LA Times like whatever eight years ago. It is just the most radical social revolutionary thing you can possibly imagine.
Starting point is 02:09:30 It endorses every crazy left-wing radical you can imagine. It endorses Karen Bass. It endorses Gavin Newsom. It's just like a litany of all the people who are currently burning the city to the ground. It's just endorsed every single bad person every step of the way. He's owned it the entire time.
Starting point is 02:09:44 He put his foot down right before, for the it the entire time. He put his foot down right before, for the first time I think, put his foot down right before the November election and said, we're not, he said, we're going to get out of this thing where we just always endorse the Democrat. And we said, we're not endorsing, I think he said, we're not endorsing for the presidency. And the paper flipped out. It's like our billionaire backer who's, and I don't know what he spends, but he must be burning 50 or a hundred million million a year out of his pocket to keep this thing running. He paid $500 million for it, which is amazing, back when people still thought these things were businesses.
Starting point is 02:10:13 And then he's probably burned another $500 million over the last decade, keeping it running. And he burns probably another $50 or $100 million a year to do this. And the journalists at the LA Times hate him with the fury of a thousand sons. They just absolutely freaking despise him. And they have been attacking him and the ones that can get jobs elsewhere quit and do it. And the rest just stay and say the most horrible things about him. And they want to constantly run these stories attacking him. And so he has had this reaction that a lot of people in LA are having right now to this fire and to this just incredibly vivid collapse of leadership and all these people that he had his paperhead endorsed are just disasters.
Starting point is 02:10:48 And he's on this tour. He's basically just, he's decided to be the boy who says the emperor has no clothes, but he's doing it to his own newspaper. Very smart guy. He's on a press tour and he's basically saying, yeah, we, yes, we did all that and we endorsed these people and it was a huge mistake and we're going to completely change. And his paper Is you know in a complete internal revolt? I but I go through it which is okay now we have a very interesting question
Starting point is 02:11:10 Which is who runs the LA Times? Because for the last eight years it hasn't been him It's been the reporters Now for the first time the owner is showing up saying oh no, I I'm actually in charge. And the reporters are saying, no, you're not. And like, it is freaking on. And so again, the Machiavellian's mindset on this is like, okay, how is power actually exercised here? Can a guy who's like even super rich and super powerful, who even owns his own newspaper, can he stand up to a full scale assault? Not only by his own reporters, but by every other journalism outlet who also now thinks he's the Antichrist.
Starting point is 02:11:45 And he is trying to exercise power by speaking out publicly. And so that's the game of power there. And firing people. And he has removed people and he has set new rules. I mean, he is now, I think at long, I think he's saying that he's now at long last actually exercising prerogatives of an owner of a business, which is decide on the policies and staffing of the business. There are certain other owners of these publications that are doing similar things right now.
Starting point is 02:12:07 He's the one I don't know, so he's the one I can talk about. But there are others that are going through this same thing right now. And I think it's a really interesting open question, like in a fight between the employees and the employer, like it's not crystal clear that the employer wins that one. And just to stay on journalism for a second, we mentioned Bill Ackman.
Starting point is 02:12:23 I just wanna say, put him in the think, and he was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy.
Starting point is 02:12:31 He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy.
Starting point is 02:12:38 He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy.
Starting point is 02:12:44 He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. He was a very brave guy. That's courage. Several things he's done publicly has been really inspiring, just being courageous. What do you think is the most impressive example? Where he wanted to have journalists whose whole incentive is to like, I mean, it's like sticking your, kicking the beehive or whatever. You know what's gonna follow. And to do that, I mean, that's why it's difficult
Starting point is 02:13:05 to challenge journalistic organizations because they're going to, you know, there's just so many mechanisms they use, including like writing articles and get cited by Wikipedia, then drive the narrative and then they can get you fired, all this kind of stuff. Bill Ackman, like a bad MFer,
Starting point is 02:13:21 just tweets these essays and just goes after them. Legally and also in the public eye and just, I don't know. That was truly inspiring. There's not many people like that in public. And hopefully that inspires not just me, but many others to be courageous themselves. Did you know of him before he started doing this in public? I knew of Neri, his wife,
Starting point is 02:13:47 she's just brilliant researcher and scientist, and so I admire her, look up to her, I think she's amazing. Well, the reason I ask if you knew about Bill is because a lot of people had not heard of him before, especially like before October 7th and before some of the campaigns he's been running since in public, and with Harvard and so forth.
Starting point is 02:14:01 But he was very well known in the investment world before that, so he was a famous, he was very well known in the investment world before that. So he was a famous, he was a so-called activist investor for, very, very successful and very widely respected for probably 30 years before now. And I bring that up because it turns out they weren't for the most part battles
Starting point is 02:14:18 that happened in kind of full public view. They weren't national stories, but in the business and investing world, the activist investor is a very, it's like in the movie Taken, it's a very specific set of skills on how to really take control of situations and how to wreck the people who you're going up against. And there's been controversy over the years on this topic and there's too much detail to go into, but the defense of activist investing, which I think is valid is,
Starting point is 02:14:46 these are the guys who basically go in and take stakes in companies that are being poorly managed or under-optimized. And then generally what that means is, at least the theory is that means the existing management has become entrenched and lazy, mediocre, whatever, not responding to the needs of the shareholders, often not responding to the customers.
Starting point is 02:15:04 And the activists basically go in with a minority position and then they rally support among other investors who are not activists and then they basically show up and they force change. But they are the aggressive version of this and I've been involved in companies that have been on the receiving end of these, where it is amazing how much somebody like that can exert pressure on situations even when they don't have formal control. So it would be another chess piece on the mechanical board of kind of how power gets exercised.
Starting point is 02:15:31 And basically what happens is the effective analysts a large amount of the time, they end up taking over control of companies even though they never own more than like 5% of the stock. And so anyway, so it turns out with Bill, it's such a fascinating case because he has that like complete skillset and he has now decided to bring it to bear
Starting point is 02:15:48 in areas that are not just companies. And two interesting things for that. One is, you know, some of these places, you know, and some of these battles are still ongoing, but number one, like a lot of people who run universities or newspapers are not used to being up against somebody like this. And by the way, also now with infinitely deep pockets
Starting point is 02:16:03 and lots of experience in courtrooms and all the things that kind of go with that. Um, but the other is through example, he is teaching a lot of the rest of us, the activist playbook, like in real time. And so the Liam Neeson skillset is getting more broadly diffused, um, just by being able to watch and learn from him. So I think he, I think he's having a, you know, I would put him up there with the Ilana in terms of somebody who's really affecting how all this is playing out.
Starting point is 02:16:25 But even skill set aside, just courage and- Yes. Including, by the way, courage to go outside of his own zone. Yeah. Right? You know, because like he hasn't, I'll give you an example. Like my firm, venture capital firm, we have LPs. There are things that I feel like I can't do or say, because I feel like I would be
Starting point is 02:16:39 bringing, you know, I would be bringing embarrassment or other consequences to our LPs. He has investors also where he worries about that. So a couple of things. One is his willingness to go out a bit and risk his relationship with his own investors. But I will tell you the other thing, which is his investors, I know this for a fact, his investors have been remarkably supportive of him doing that. Because as it turns out, a lot of them actually agree with him. And so it's the same thing he does in his activism campaigns. He is able to be the tip of the spear on something that actually A lot of them actually agree with him. And so he's, it's the same thing he does in his activism campaigns. He is able to be the tip of the spear
Starting point is 02:17:07 on something that actually a lot more people agree with. Yeah, it turns out if you have truth behind you, it helps. And just again, you know, how I started is a lot of people are just fed up. You've been spending a bunch of time in Mar-a-Lago and Palm Beach, helping the new administration in many ways, including interviewing people
Starting point is 02:17:25 who might join. So what's your general sense about the talent, about the people who are coming in into the new administration? So I should start by saying I'm not a member of the new administration. I'm not in the room when a lot of these people are being selected.
Starting point is 02:17:40 I believe you said unpaid intern. I am an unpaid intern. So I'm a volunteer and I went helpful, but I'm not making the decisions, nor am I in a position to speak for the administration. So I don't wanna say anything that would cause people to think I'm doing that. This is a very unusual situation, right?
Starting point is 02:17:54 Where you had an incumbent president and then you had a four year gap where he's out of office and then you have him coming back, right? And as you'll recall, there was a fair amount of controversy over the end of the first term. Oh yeah. The fear, the over the end of the first term. The fear, the specific concern was the first Trump administration, they will all say this, they didn't come in with a team.
Starting point is 02:18:12 So they didn't come into the team and most of the sort of institutional base of the Republican Party were Bush Republicans and they were, and many of them had become never Trumpers. And so they had a hard time putting the team together. And then by the way, they had a hard time getting people confirmed. And so if you talk to the people who were there in the first term, it took them two to three years to kind of even get the government in place. And then they basically only had the government in place
Starting point is 02:18:32 for basically like 18 months and then COVID hit. And then sort of the aftermath and everything and all the drama and headlines and everything. And so the concern, including from some very smart people in the last two years has been, boy, if Trump gets a second term, is he gonna be able to get a team that is as good as the team he had last time or a team that is actually not as good? Because maybe people got burned out, maybe they're more cynical now, maybe they're not willing to go through the drama. By the way,
Starting point is 02:18:55 a lot of people in the first term came under like, you know, with their own withering, legal assaults, and you know, some of them went to prison and like, you know, a lot of stuff happened. Lots of investigations, lots of legal fees, um, lots of bad press, um, lots of debanking, by the way, a lot of the officials in the first Trump term got debanked, um, including the president's wife and son. Yeah. I heard you tell that story. That's insane.
Starting point is 02:19:17 That's just insane. In the wake of the first term. Yes. We, we now take out spouses and children with our ring of power. Um, and so there so there's like this legitimate question as to like, okay, what will the team for the second term look like? And at least what I've seen and what you're seeing this appointments is it looks much, much better. First of all, it just looks better than the first term and not because the people in the first term were not
Starting point is 02:19:37 necessarily good, but just you just have this like influx of like incredibly capable people that have shown up that want to be part of this. And you just didn't have that the first time. And so they're just drawing on a much deeper, richer talent pool than they had the first time. And they're drawing on people who know what the game is. Like they're drawing on people now who know what is going to happen and they're still willing to do it. And so they're going to get, I think, you know, some of the best people from the first term, but they're bringing in a lot of people who they couldn't get the first time around. And then second is there's a bunch of people, including people in the first term, but they're bringing in a lot of people who they couldn't get the first time around. And then second is there's a bunch of people, including people in the first term, where they're just 10 years older. And so they went through the first term and they just learned how everything works. Or they're young people who just had a different point of view and now they're 10
Starting point is 02:20:16 years older and they're ready to go serve in government. And so there's a generational shift happening. And actually one of the interesting things about the team that's forming up is it's remarkably young. Some of the cabinet members and then one of the interesting things about the team that's forming up is it's remarkably young. Some of the cabinet members and then many of the second and third level people are like in their 30s and 40s, which is a big change from the gerontocracy that we've been under for the last 30 years. And so I think the caliber has been outstanding.
Starting point is 02:20:38 We could sit here and list tons and tons of people, but like the people who are running, it's everything from the people who are running all the different departments at HHS, it's the people running, you know, the number two at the Pentagon is Steve Feinberg, who's just like an incredible legend of private equity, incredible capable guy.
Starting point is 02:20:53 We've got two, actually two of my partners are going in, who I both think are amazing. Yeah, like many, many parts of the government, the people are like really impressive. Well, I think one of the concerns is actually that given the human being of Donald Trump, that there would be more tendency towards, let's say favoritism versus meritocracy.
Starting point is 02:21:17 That there's kind of circles of sycophantcy that form. And if you're be able to be loyal and never oppose and just be basically suck up to the president, that you'll get a position. So that's one of the concerns. And I think you're in a good position to speak to the degree that's happening versus hiring based on merit and just getting great teams.
Starting point is 02:21:43 Yeah, so look, I just start by saying any leader at that level, by the way, any CEO, there's always some risk of that, right? So there's always some, you know, it's just, it's like a natural reality warps around powerful leaders. And so there's always some risk to that. Of course, the good and powerful leaders are, you know, very aware of that. And Trump at this point in his life, I think is highly aware of that. At least my interactions with him, like he definitely seems very aware of that.
Starting point is 02:22:03 So that's one thing. I would just say that I think the way to look at that, at least my interactions with him, he definitely seems very aware of that. So that's one thing. I would just say that I think the way to look at that, I mean, and look, like I said, I don't want to predict what's going to happen once this whole thing starts unfolding, but I would just say that, again, the caliber of the people who are showing up and getting the jobs and then the fact that these are some of the most accomplished people in the business world and in the medical field. I just, you know, Jay Bhatoria coming in to run NIH.
Starting point is 02:22:25 So I was actually in the, I was actually, I was part of the interview team for a lot of the HHS folks. Nice. Jay's amazing. Oh, I was so happy to see that. So I literally got, this is the story, I got to the transition office for one of the days of the HHS interviews.
Starting point is 02:22:37 And I was on one of the interviewing teams and they gave us, I didn't know who the candidates were. And they gave us the sheet in the beginning. And I go down the sheet and I saw Jay's name. And I like, I almost physically fell out of my chair. Yeah. And I was just like, you know, and I happen to know Jay, I have to know Jay.
Starting point is 02:22:50 And I like respect him enormously. And then he proved himself under this, like, talk about a guy who proved himself under extraordinary pressure over the last five years. And then go radical under the pressure. He maintained balance and thoughtfulness and depth. I mean, incredibly. Very serious, very analytical, very applied. And yes, 100% tested under pressure came out, like the more people look back at what he said and did. And you know, he's not, you know,
Starting point is 02:23:15 none of us are perfect, but like overwhelmingly, like overwhelmingly insightful throughout that whole period. And you know, we, you know, we would all be much better off today had he been in charge of the response. And so just like an incredibly capable guy. And we would all be much better off today had he been in charge of the response. And so just like an incredibly capable guy. And look, and then he learned from all that. He learned a lot in the last five years. And so the idea that somebody like that could be head of NIH as compared to the people we've had
Starting point is 02:23:35 is just breathtakingly, it's just a gigantic upgrade. And then Marty Macary coming in to run FDA, exact same thing. The guy coming to run a CDC, exact same thing. I mean, I've been spending time with Dr. Oz. So, you know, I'm not like, again, I'm not like, I'm not on these teams, I'm not in the room, but like I've been spending enough time trying to help that like his level of insight into the healthcare system is like astounding. And it comes from being a guy who's been like in the middle of the whole thing and been talking to people about this stuff and working on it and serving as a doctor himself and in medical systems
Starting point is 02:24:06 for his entire life. And it's just like, he's like a walking encyclopedia on these things. And so, and very dynamic, very charismatic, very smart, organized, effective. So to have somebody like that in there. And so anyway, I have like 30 of these stories now across all these different positions. And then I just, I'd be quite honest, I do the 30 of these stories now across all these different positions. And then I just, I'd be quite honest, I do the compare and contrast to the last four years. And not even these people are not in the same ballpark. They're just like wildly better.
Starting point is 02:24:36 And so, pound for pound is maybe the best team in the White House since, I don't even know, maybe the 90s, maybe the nineties, maybe the, maybe the thirties, maybe the fifties, you know, maybe Eisenhower had a team like this or something, but, um, it's, it's, it's, there's a lot of really good people in there now. Yeah. The potential for change is certainly extremely high. Well, can you speak to Doge?
Starting point is 02:24:58 What's the most wildly successful next two years for Doge? Can you imagine maybe also, can you think about the trajectory that's the most likely and what kind of challenges would it be facing? Yeah, so, and start by saying again, I'm not, disclaimer, I have to just claim, I'm not on Doge. I'm not a member of Doge.
Starting point is 02:25:20 We should say there's about 10 lawyers in the room. They're staring now, I'm just kidding. Both the angels and the devils on my shoulder are lawyers. Okay, all right, cool. Yeah, so I'm not speaking for Doge. I'm not in charge of Doge. Yeah. Those guys are doing it, I'm not doing it.
Starting point is 02:25:33 But I am, you know, again, I'm volunteering to help as much as I can, and I'm 100% supportive. Yeah, so look, I think the way to think of, I mean, the basic outlines are in public, right? Which is it's a time-limited, you know, basically commission. It's not a formal government agency. It's a, you know, time-limited 18-month.
Starting point is 02:25:52 In terms of implementation, it will advise the executive branch, right? And so the implementation will happen through the White House. The president has total attitude on what he wants to implement. And then basically what I think about it is three streams, kind of target sets, and they're related but different. So money, people, and regulations. And so the headline number, they put the $2 trillion number and there's already disputes over that and whatever, and there's all question there. But then there's the people thing. And the people thing is interesting because you get into these very kind of fascinating questions. And I've been doing this. I won't do this for you as a pop quiz,
Starting point is 02:26:29 but I do this for people in government as a pop quiz. And I can stump them every time, which is, A, how many federal agencies are there? And the answer is somewhere between 450 and 520. And nobody's quite sure. And then the other is how many people work for the federal government? And the answer is, you know, something on the order, I forget, but like 4 million full-time employees and maybe up to 20 million contractors and nobody is quite sure. And so there's a large people component to this. And then by the way, there's a related component to that, which is how many of them are actually in the office? And the answer is not many. Most of the federal buildings are still empty, right?
Starting point is 02:27:03 And so, and then there's questions of like, are people working from home or are we actually working from home? So there's the people dimension. And of course, the money and the people are connected. And then there's the third, which is the regulation thing. I described earlier how basically our system of government is much more now based on regulations than legislation. Most of the rules that we all live under are not from a bill that went through Congress.
Starting point is 02:27:24 They're from an agency that created a regulation. That turns out to be very, very important. One is, a lot of already described, the DOJ wants to do broad-based regulatory relief. Trump has talked about this and basically get the government off of its backs and liberate the American people to be able to do things again. That's part of it. But there's also something else that's happened, which is very interesting, which was there were a set of Supreme Court decisions about two years ago that went directly
Starting point is 02:27:47 after the idea that the executive branch can create regulatory agencies and issue regulations and enforce those regulations without corresponding congressional legislation. And most of the federal government that exists today, including most of the departments and most of the rules and most of the money and most of the rules and most of the money and most of the people. Most of it is not enforcing laws that Congress passed. Most of it is regulation. And the Supreme Court basically said large parts, large to maybe all of that regulation that did not directly result from a bill that went through Congress the way that the cartoon said that it should, that may not actually be legal. Now, the previous White House, of course, was super in favor of big government. They had no
Starting point is 02:28:30 desire to act. They did nothing based on this. They didn't pull anything back in. But the new regime, if they choose to, could say, look, the thing that we're doing here is not challenging the laws. We're actually complying with the Supreme Court decision that basically says we have to unwind a lot of this. And we have to unwind the regulations, which are no longer legal, constitutional. We have to unwind the spend and we have to unwind the people. That's how you get from basically you connect the thread from the regulation part back to the money part, back to the people part. They have work going on all three of these threads. They have, I would say, incredibly creative ideas on how to deal with this.
Starting point is 02:29:05 I know lots of former government people who 100% of them are super cynical on this topic and they're like, this is impossible, this can never possibly work. And I'm like, well, I can't tell you what the secret plans are, but like, blow my mind. And all three of those, they have ideas that are really quite amazing, as you'd expect from the people involved. And so over the course of the next few months you know that'll start to become visible. And then the final thing I would say is this is going to be very different than the attempts like that. There have been other programs like this in the past. The Clinton-Gore administration had one and then
Starting point is 02:29:39 there were others before that Reagan had one. The difference is this time they're social media. And so there has never been, it's interesting. One of the reasons people in Washington are so cynical is because they know all the bullshit. Like they know all the bad spending and all the bad rules and all the like, you know, I mean, look, we're adding a trillion dollars to the national debt every 100 days right now.
Starting point is 02:30:04 And that's compounding and it's now passing the size of the Defense Department budget and it's compounding and it's pretty soon it's going to be adding a trillion dollars every 90 days and then it's going to be adding a trillion dollars every 80 days and then it's going to be a trillion dollars every 70 days. And then if this doesn't get fixed at some point, we enter a hyperinflationary spiral and we become Argentina or Brazil and Kiblui, right? And so like everybody in DC knows that something has to be done. And then everybody in DC knows for a fact that it's impossible to do anything. Right.
Starting point is 02:30:31 They know all the problems and they also know the sheer impossibility of fixing it. But I think what they're not taking into account, what the critics are not taking into account is these guys can do this in the full light of day and they can do it on social media. They can completely bypass the press. They can completely bypass the cynicism. They can expose any element of unconstitutional or silly government spending. They can run victory laps every single day on what they're doing. They can bring the people into the process. And again, if you think about it, this goes back to our Machiavellian structure, which is if you think about, again, you've got democracy, oligarchy, monarchy, rule of the many, rule of the few, rule of the one. You could think about, again, you've got democracy, oligarchy, monarchy, rule of the many,
Starting point is 02:31:05 rule of the few, rule of the one. You could think about what's happening here as a little bit of a sandwich, right? Which is you have, we don't have a monarch, but we have a president, rule of the one with some power. And then we have the people who can't organize, but they can be informed and they can be aware and they can express themselves through voting and polling.
Starting point is 02:31:22 Right, and so there's a sandwich happening right now is a way to think about it, which is you've got basically monarch, you've got rule of one combining with rule of many. Right, and rule of many is that you get to vote, right? The people do get to vote, basically. And then essentially Congress as, and this sort of permanent bureaucratic class in Washington
Starting point is 02:31:38 as the oligarchy in the middle. And so the White House plus the people, I think have the power to do all kinds of things here. And I think that would be the way I would watch it. The transparency. I mean, Elon just by who he is, is incentivized to be transparent and show the bullshit in the system
Starting point is 02:31:58 and to celebrate the victories. So it's gonna be so exciting. I mean, honestly just makes government more exciting, which is a win for everybody. These people are spending our money. Yeah. These people have enormous contempt for the taxpayer. Okay, here's the thing you hear in Washington.
Starting point is 02:32:16 Here's one of the things. So the first thing you hear is this is impossible. They'll be able to do nothing. And then, yeah, I walked them through this and they're like, they start to get, it starts to dawn on them that this is a new kind of thing. And then they're like, well, it doesn't matter because all the money is in entitlements and the debt and the military. And so like, yeah, you've got like this silly fake, whatever, you know,
Starting point is 02:32:32 NPR funding or whatever. And like, it just, it's a round here and it doesn't matter. And you look it up in the budget and it's like, whatever, $500 million or $5 billion or it's the, or it's the, it's the charging stations that don't exist. It's the $40 billion of charging stations and they build eight charging stations or it's the broadband internet plan that delivered broadband to nobody and cost you $30 billion. So these boondoggles and what everybody in Washington says is a $30 billion is a rounding error on the federal budget. It doesn't matter. Who cares if they make it go away? And of course, any taxpayer is like, what the? What do you mean?
Starting point is 02:33:05 It's $30 billion. Yeah. Right, and then the experts are like, and the press is in on this too. Then the experts are like, well, it doesn't matter because it's around here. No, it's $30 billion. And if you're this cavalier about $30 billion,
Starting point is 02:33:18 imagine how cavalier you are about the three trillion. Yeah. Okay, then there's the, okay, $30 billion. Is $30 billion a lot of the federal budget and percentage? No, it's not, But $30 billion divided by, do the math, $30 billion divided by, let's say 300 million taxpayers, right? Like, what's that? Math expert? $100. $100 per taxpayer per year. Okay. So $100 to an ordinary person working hard every day to make money and provide for their kids. $100 is a meal out. It's a trip to the amusement park. It's the ability to buy additional educational materials. It's the ability to have a babysitter,
Starting point is 02:33:53 to be able to have a romantic relationship with your wife. There's like 100 things that that person can do with $100. That they're not doing because it's going to some bullshit program that is basically where the money is being looted out in the form of just like ridiculous, ridiculousness and graft. And so the idea that that $30 billion program is not something that is like a very important thing to go after is just like the level of contempt for the taxpayer is just off the charts. And then that's just one of those programs.
Starting point is 02:34:18 And there's like a hundred of those programs. And they're all just like that. It's not like any of this stuff is running well. The one thing we know is that none of this stuff is running well. We know that for sure. And we know these people aren't showing up to work. And we know that all this crazy stuff is happening.
Starting point is 02:34:34 Do you remember Elon's story of what got the Amish to turn out to vote in Pennsylvania? Oh, OK. So Pennsylvania is a wonderful state, great history. It has these cities like Philadelphia that have descended like other cities into just like complete chaos, violence, madness, and death, right? And the federal government has just like let it happen. It's incredibly violent places.
Starting point is 02:34:53 And so the Biden administration decided that the big pressing law enforcement thing that they needed to do in Pennsylvania was that they needed to start raiding Amish farms to prevent them from selling raw milk with armed raids. Right. And it turns out it really pissed off the Amish. to prevent them from selling raw milk with armed raids. Right. And it turns out it really pissed off the Amish. It turns out they weren't willing to drive to the polling places because they don't have cars. But if you came and got them, they would go and they would vote.
Starting point is 02:35:16 And that's one of the reasons why Trump won. Anyway, so like the law enforcement agencies are off working on like crazy things. Like the system's not working. And so you add up, pick $130 billion programs. All right, now you're, okay, math major, 100 times 100. $10,000. $10,000, okay, $10,000 per taxpayer per year. And but it's also not just about money.
Starting point is 02:35:36 That's really, obviously money is a hugely important thing, but it's the cavalier attitude that then in sort of, in the ripple effect of that, it makes it so nobody wants to work in government and be productive. It makes it so the corruption can, it breeds corruption. It breeds laziness. It breeds secrecy,
Starting point is 02:35:56 because you don't want to be transparent about having done nothing all year, all this kind of stuff. And you don't want to reverse that. So it will be exciting for the future to work in government because the amazing thing, if you're a steelman government, is you can do shit at scale. You have money and you can directly impact people's lives in a positive sense at scale.
Starting point is 02:36:19 That's super exciting. As long as there's no bureaucracy that slows you down, or not huge amounts of bureaucracy that slows you down significantly. So here's the turn, this blew my mind. Once you open the hell mouth of looking into the federal budget, you learn all kinds of things. So there is a term of art in government called impoundment. And so if you're like me,
Starting point is 02:36:45 you've learned this the hard way when your car has been impounded. The government meaning of impoundment, the federal budget meaning is a different meaning. Impoundment is as follows. The constitution requires Congress to authorize money to be spent by the executive branch. So the executive branch goes to Congress, says we need money X, Congress does their thing, they come back and they say you you can have money, why? The money's appropriated from Congress, the executive branch spends it on the military or whatever they spend it on, or on roads to nowhere or charging stations to nowhere or whatever.
Starting point is 02:37:14 And what's in the constitution is the Congress appropriates the money. Over the last 60 years, there has been an additional interpretation of appropriations applied by the courts and by the system, which is the executive branch not only needs Congress to appropriate X amount of money, the executive branch is not allowed to underspend. Yeah. I'm aware of this. I'm aware of this.
Starting point is 02:37:37 And so there's this thing that happens in Washington at the end of every fiscal year, which is September 30th, and it's the great budget flush. And any remaining money that's in the system that they don't know how to productively spend, they deliberately spend it unproductively. Yeah. To the tune of hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars. A president that doesn't wanna spend the money
Starting point is 02:37:55 can't not spend it. Yeah. Like, okay, A, that's not what's in the constitution. And there's actually quite a good Wikipedia page that goes through the great debate on this, has played out in the legal world over the last 60 years. And basically, if you look at this with anything resembling, I think, in open mind, you're like, all right,
Starting point is 02:38:10 this is not what the founders meant. And then number two, again, we go back to this thing of contempt. Can you imagine showing up and running the government like that and thinking that you're doing the right thing and not going home at night and thinking that you've sold your soul? It's just right? I actually think you sort of had a really good point, which is it's even unfair to the people who have to execute this, right? Because it makes them
Starting point is 02:38:32 bad people and they didn't start out wanting to be bad people. And so there is stuff like this, like- Yeah, everywhere. Everywhere. And so we'll see how far these guys get. I am extremely encouraged what I've seen so far. It seems like a lot of people will try to slow them down. But yeah, we're up to get far Yeah, another difficult topic immigration. What's your take on the let's say heated h1b visa debate? That's going on online and Legal immigration in general. Yeah, so start by saying I am NOT involved in any aspect of government policy on this I'm not planning to be this is not an issue that I'm working on or that I'm going to work on. This is not
Starting point is 02:39:08 part of the agenda of what the firm is doing. So my firm is doing. So I'm not in this in the new administration of the government. I'm not planning to be. So purely just personal opinion. So I would describe SAVE as a complex or nuanced, hopefully nuanced view on this issue that's maybe a little bit different than what a lot of my peers have. And I think, and I kind of thought about this, you know, I didn't say anything about it
Starting point is 02:39:32 all the way through the big kind of debate over Christmas, but I thought about it a lot and read everything. I think what I realized is that I just have a very different perspective on some of these things. And the reason is because of the combination of where I came from and then where I ended up. And so, let's start with this. Where I ended up, Silicon Valley. And I have made the pro skilled, high skilled immigration argument many, many times, the H1B argument many times.
Starting point is 02:39:55 In past lives, I've been in DC many times arguing with prior administrations about this, always on the side of trying to get more H1Bs and trying to get more high skilled immigration. And I think that argument is very strong and very solid and has paid off for the US in many, many ways. And we can go through it, but I think it's the argument everybody already knows. It's like the stock. You take any Silicon Valley person, you press the button and they tell you why we need to brain drain the world to get more H-1Bs. So everybody kind of gets that argument. So it's basically just to summarize, it's a mechanism by which you can get super smart people from the rest of the world, import them in,
Starting point is 02:40:30 keep them here to increase the productivity of the US companies. Yeah, and then it's not just good for them and it's not just good for Silicon Valley or the tech industry, it's good for the country because they then create new companies and create new technologies and create new industries that then create many more jobs for Native-born Americans than would have previously existed. And so it's a positive, some flywheel thing,
Starting point is 02:40:53 where everybody wins. Everybody wins, there are no trade-offs. It's absolutely glorious in all directions. There cannot possibly be a moral argument against it under any circumstances. Anybody who argues against it is obviously doing so from a position of racism, is probably a fascist and a Nazi, right? Right. I mean, that's the thing. And like I said, I've made that argument many times. I'm very comfortable with that argument.
Starting point is 02:41:14 And then I'd also say, look, I would say, number one, I believe a lot of it. I'll talk about the parts I don't believe, but I believe a lot of it. And then the other part is, look, I benefit every day. I always describe it as I work in the United nations. Like I, my own firm and our founders and our companies and the industry, um, and my friends, um, you know, are just this like amazing, you know, panoply cornucopia of people from all over the world. Um, and you know, I just, I've worked, I don't know at this point where people from, it's gotta be, I don't know, 80 countries or something. Um, and hopefully over time it'll be, you know, the rest as well. And you know, I've worked, I don't know, at this point where people from, it's got to be, I don't know, 80 countries or something.
Starting point is 02:41:45 And hopefully over time, it'll be the rest as well. And it's just, it's been amazing and they've done many of the most important things in my industry and it's been really remarkable. So that's all good. And then there's just the practical version of the argument, which is we are the main place these people get educated anyway. The best and the brightest tend to come here to get educated. And so this is the old kind of Mitt Romney staple of green card to every, at least, maybe not every university degree, but every technical degree. Maybe the sociologists we could quibble about, but the roboticists, for sure. For sure. For sure, we can all agree that- At least I won you over on something today.
Starting point is 02:42:19 Well, no, I'm exaggerating for effect. So- And I lost you. I had you for half a second. I haven't gotten to the other side of the argument yet. Oh, and I lost you. I had you for half a second. I haven't gotten to the other side of the argument yet. Okay, thank you. So surely we can all agree that we need to staple a green card. The rollercoaster's going up.
Starting point is 02:42:32 The rollercoaster's ratcheting slowly up. So yeah, so surely we can all agree that the roboticists should all get green cards. And again, there's a lot of merit to that. Obviously, look, we want the US to be the world leader in robotics. What's step one to being the world leader in robotics is have all the great robotics people, right?
Starting point is 02:42:46 Like, you know, very, unlike the underpass, no, it's like a very straightforward formula, right? All right, that's all well and good. All right, but it gets a little bit more complicated because there is a kind of argument that's sort of right underneath that, that you also hear from, you know, these same people. And I have made this argument myself many times,
Starting point is 02:43:02 which is we need to do this because we don't have enough people in the US who can do it otherwise. We have all these unfilled jobs. We've got all these companies that wouldn't exist. We don't have enough good founders. We don't have enough engineers. We don't have enough scientists. Or then the next version of the argument below that is our education system is not good enough to generate those people. Which is a weird argument, by the way, because our education system is good enough for foreigners to be able to come here preferentially in like a very large number of cases,
Starting point is 02:43:28 but somehow not good enough to educate our own native born people. So there's like a weird, these little cracks in the matrix that you can kind of stick your fingernail into and kind of wonder about. Now we'll come back to that one, but like at least yes, our education system has its flaws. And then underneath that is the argument that Vivek made,
Starting point is 02:43:44 which is, we have a cultural rot in the country and native born people in the country don't work hard enough and spend too much time watching TV and TikTok and don't spend enough time studying differential equations. And again, it's like, all right, there's a fair amount to that. There's a lot of American culture that is, there's a lot of frivolity. There's a lot of, you know, look, I mean, we have well-documented social issues on many fronts, many things that cut against having a culture of just like straightforward high achievement
Starting point is 02:44:11 and effort and striving. Anyway, like, you know, those are the basic arguments. But then I have this kind of other side of my, you know, kind of personality and thought process, which is, well, I grew up in a small farming town in rural Wisconsin, the rural Midwest. And, you know, it's interesting. There's not a lot of people who make it
Starting point is 02:44:26 from rural Wisconsin to, you know, high tech. And so it's like, all right, why is that exactly? Right? And then I know I'm an aberration. Like I was the only one from anybody I ever knew who ever did this, right? That I know what an aberration I am. And I know exactly how that aberration happened. And it's a very unusual set of steps,
Starting point is 02:44:43 including, you know, many that were just luck. But there is in no sense a talent flow from rural Wisconsin into high tech, like not at all. There is also in no sense a talent flow from the rest of the Midwest into high tech. There is no talent flow from the South into high tech. There is no flow from the Sunbelt into high tech. There's no flow from the deep South into high tech. Literally it's like the high tech, there is no flow from the sunbelt in the high tech, there's no flow from the deep south in the high tech. Literally, it's like the blanks, there's this whole section of the country where the people just for some reason don't end up in tech. Now, that's a little bit strange because these are the people who put a man on the moon. These are the people who built the World War II war machine. These are the people,
Starting point is 02:45:24 at least their ancestors are the people who built the World War II war machine. These are the people, at least their ancestors are the people who built the second industrial revolution and built the railroads and built the telephone network and built logistics and transportation in the auto industry. I mean, the auto industry was built in Cleveland and Detroit. And so at least these people's parents and grandparents and great grandparents somehow had the wherewithal to build all of this amazing things, invent all these things. And then there's many, many, many, many stories in the history of American invention and innovation and capitalism where you had people who grew up in the middle of nowhere,
Starting point is 02:45:51 Philo Farnsworth who invented the television and just tons and tons of others, endless stories like this. Now you have a puzzle, right? And the conundrum, which is like, okay, what is happening on the blank spot of the map? And then of course, you also can't help noticing that the blank spot on the map, the Midwest, the South, you've also just defined Trump country, the Trump voter base, right? It's like, oh, well, that's interesting. How did that happen? Right? And so either you really, really, really have to believe the very, very strong version of the Vivec thesis or something where you have to believe that that basically culture, the whole civilization in the middle of the country and the south of the country is so like deeply flawed,
Starting point is 02:46:28 either inherently flawed or culturally flawed such that for whatever reason they are not able to do the things that their parents and grandparents were able to do and that their peers are able to do or something else is happening. Would you care to guess on what else is happening? I mean, what affirmative action? Affirmative action. Okay. This is very, think about this is very entertaining, right? What are the three things that we know about affirmative action? It is absolutely 100% necessary. However, it cannot explain the success of any one individual. Right. Nor does it have any victims at all. I think it explains maybe
Starting point is 02:47:03 disproportionate, but it surely doesn't explain why you're probably the only person in Silicon Valley from Wisconsin. What educational institution in the last 60 years has wanted farm boys from Wisconsin? But what institution rejected farm boys from Wisconsin? All of them. All of them. Of course.
Starting point is 02:47:21 Okay, so we know this, we know this. The reason we know this is because of the Harvard and UNC Supreme Court cases. So this was like three years ago. These were big court cases. Because the idea of affirmative action has been litigated for many, many, many years and through many court cases. And the Supreme Court repeatedly in the past had upheld
Starting point is 02:47:36 that it was a completely legitimate thing to do. And a lot of these, and there's basically two categories of affirmative action that like really matter, right? The one is the admissions into educational institutions. and then the other is jobs, getting hired. Those are the two biggest areas. The education one has been a super potent political issue for a very long time. For all people who have written and talked about this for many decades, I don't need
Starting point is 02:47:56 to go through it. There's many arguments for why it's important. There's many arguments as to how it could backfire. It's been this thing. But the Supreme Court upheld it for a very long time. The most recent ruling, I'm not a lawyer, I don't have the exact reference in my head, but there was a case in 2003 that said that Senator De O'Connor famously wrote that, although it had been 30 years of affirmative action and although it was not working remotely as it had been intended, she said that, well, basically we need to try it for another
Starting point is 02:48:24 25 years. But she said basically as a message to future Supreme Court said that, well, basically we need to try it for another 25 years. But she said basically as a message to future Supreme Court justices, if it hasn't resolved the issues it's intended to resolve within 25 years, then we should probably call it off. By the way, we're coming up on the 25 years. It's a couple of years away. The Supreme Court just had these cases. It's a Harvard case and I think a University of North Carolina case. And what's interesting about those cases is the lawyers in those cases put a tremendous amount of evidence into the record of how the admissions decisions actually happen at Harvard and happen at UNC. It is like every bit as cartoonishly garish and racist as you could possibly imagine
Starting point is 02:49:01 because it's a ring of power. If you're an admissions officer at a private university or an administrator, you have unlimited power to do what you want. And you can justify any of it under any of these rules or systems. And up until these cases, it had been a black box where you didn't have to explain yourself and show your work. And what the Harvard and USC cases did is they basically
Starting point is 02:49:21 required showing the work. And so then there was like all kinds of like phenomenal detail, I mean, number one is there were text messages in there that will just curl your hair of people, the students being spoken of and just like crude racial stereotypes that would just make you want to jump out the window, it's horrible stuff. But also there was statistical information.
Starting point is 02:49:38 And of course the big statistical kicker to the whole thing is that at top institutions, it's common for different different ethnic groups to have different cutoffs for SAT that are as wide as 400 points. Right? So, different groups. So, specifically, Asians need to perform at 400 SAT points higher than other ethnicities in order to actually get admitted into these. I mean, white people are a part of this, but Asians are a very big part of this. And actually, the Harvard case was actually brought by an activist on behalf of actually the Asian students who were being turned away. It's the cliche now in the Valley and in the medical community, which is if you want a
Starting point is 02:50:13 super genius, you hire an Asian from Harvard because they are guaranteed to be freaking Einstein because if they weren't, they were never getting admitted. Almost all the qualified Asians get turned away. So they've been running this. It's a very, very explicit, very, very clear program. This of course has been a third rail of things that people are not supposed to discuss or under any circumstances. The thing that has really changed the tenor on this is I think two things. Number one, those Supreme Court cases, the Supreme Court ruled that they can no longer do that. I will tell you, I don't believe there's a single education
Starting point is 02:50:44 institution in America that is conforming with the Supreme Court ruling. I think they are all flagrantly ignoring it. And we could talk about that. Mostly because of momentum probably or what? They are trying to make the world a better place. They are trying to solve all these social problems. They are trying to have diverse student populations.
Starting point is 02:50:59 They are trying to live up to the expectations of their donors. They are trying to make their faculty happy. They are trying to have their friends and family think that they're good people. They're trying to have the press write nice things about them. It's nearly impossible for them. To be clear, nobody has been fired from an admissions office for 25 years or prior. What we now, the Supreme Court now is ruled to be illegality.
Starting point is 02:51:24 They're all the same people under the exact same pressures. And so the numbers are moving a little bit, but I don't know anybody in the system who thinks that they're complying with the Supreme Court. Who's in charge in the rank ordering of who rules who? The universities rule the Supreme Court way more than the Supreme Court rules the universities. Right. Well, another example of that is I think it's that every sitting member of the Supreme Court right now went to either Harvard or Yale. Right, another example of that is I think it's that every sitting member of the Supreme Court right now went to either Harvard or Yale. Like the level of incestuousness here is like...
Starting point is 02:51:50 Anyway, so there's that. And so this has been running for a very long time. So one is the Harvard and USC cases kind of gave up the game, number one, or at least showed what the mechanism was. And then number two, the other thing is obviously the aftermath of October 7th, right? And what we discovered was happening with Jewish applicants.
Starting point is 02:52:07 And what was happening at all the top institutions for Jewish applicants was they were being actively managed down as a percentage of the base. And let's say I've heard reports of like extremely explicit basically plans to manage the Jewish admissions down to their representative percentage of the US population, which is 2%. And there's a whole backstory here, which is 100 years ago, Jews were not admitted into a lot of these institutions.
Starting point is 02:52:32 And then there was a big campaign to get them in. Once they could get in, they immediately became 30% of these institutions because there's so many smart, talented Jews. So it went from 0% to 30%. And then the most recent generation of leadership has been trying to get it down to 2%. And a lot of Jewish people, at least a lot of Jewish people I know, from 0% to 30%, and then the most recent generation of leadership has been trying to get it down to 2%.
Starting point is 02:52:50 A lot of Jewish people, at least a lot of Jewish people I know, they kind of knew this was happening, but they discovered it the hard way after October 7th. Basically, the Supreme Court case meant that you could address this in terms of the Asian victims. October 7th meant that you could address it in terms of the Jewish victims. For sure, both of those groups are being systematically excluded, right? And then of course, there's the thing that you basically can't talk about, which is all the white people are being excluded. And then it turns out it's also happening to black people. And this is the thing that like blew my freaking mind when I found out about it. So I just assumed that like this great news for American blacks because obviously,
Starting point is 02:53:27 if whites, Asians, and Jews are being excluded, then the whole point of this in the beginning was to get the black population up, and so this must be great for American blacks. So then I discovered this New York Times article from 2004 called, blacks are being admitted into top schools at greater numbers, but which ones? Uh-oh. And again, and by the way, this is in the New York Times.
Starting point is 02:53:48 This is not in like, you know, whatever National Review, this is New York Times. 2004, and the two authorities that were quoted in the story are Henry Louis Gates, who's the Dean of the African American Studies, you know, community in the United States. Super brilliant guy. And then Lani Guinier, who was a, who was a potential Supreme Court appointee under, I think, a close friend of Hillary Clinton. And there was for a long time, she was on the short list for Supreme Court. So one of the top jurists, lawyers in the country, both black, was sort of legendarily successful in the academic and legal worlds and black. And they are quoted as
Starting point is 02:54:23 the authorities in this story. And the story that they tell is actually very, it's amazing. And by the way, it's happening today in education institutions and it's happening in companies. And you can see it all over the place and the government, which is at least at that time, the number was half of the black admits into a place like Harvard were not American born blacks.. They were foreign-born blacks. Specifically, northern African, generally Nigerian or West Indian. Right. And by the way, many Nigerians and northern Africans have come to the US and have been very successful. Nigerian-Americans is a group way outperform. They're just a super smart cohort of people. And then West Indian blacks in the US are incredibly successful.
Starting point is 02:55:07 Most recently, by the way, Kamala Harris, as well as Colin Powell, just two examples of that. And so basically what Henry Louis Gates and Lenny Grenier said in the story is Harvard is basically struggling to either whatever it was, identify, recruit, make successful, whatever it was, American born native blacks. Therefore, they were using high-skill immigration as an escape hatch to go get blacks from other countries. Then this was 2004 when you could discuss such things. Obviously, that is a topic that nobody has discussed since. It has sailed on. All of the DEI programs of the last 20 years have had this exact characteristic. There's large
Starting point is 02:55:45 numbers of black people in America who are fully aware of this and are like, it's obviously not us that are getting these slots. We're literally competing with people who are being imported. And if you believe in the basis of affirmative action, you are trying to make up for historical injustice of American black slavery. And so the idea that you import somebody from Nigeria that never experienced that is tremendously insulting to black Americans. Anyway, so you can see where I'm heading with this. We have been in a 60 year social engineering experiment to exclude native born people from the educational slots and jobs that high skilled immigration has been funneling foreigners into. And so it turns out
Starting point is 02:56:23 it's not a victim free thing. There's like 100% there's victims because why? For sure, there's only so many education slots. And then for sure, there's only so many of these jobs. Google only hires so many whatever level seven engineers. And so that's the other side of it. And so you're a farm boy in Wisconsin or a black American whose ancestors arrived here on a slave ship 300 years ago in Louisiana, or a Cambodian immigrant in the Bronx, and your kid or a Jewish immigrant
Starting point is 02:56:55 or from a very successful Jewish family, and for three generations, you and your parents and grandparents went to Harvard. And what all of those groups know is the system that has been created is not for them. It's designed specifically to exclude them. And then what happens is all of these tech people show up in public and say, yeah, let's bring in more foreigners. Right? And so anyway, so the short version of it is you can't anymore, I don't think, just have the, quote, high-skill immigration conversation for either education
Starting point is 02:57:25 or for employment without also having the DEI conversation. And then DEI is just another word for affirmative action. So it's the affirmative action conversation. And you need to actually deal with this at substance and to see what's actually happening to people you needed to join these topics. And I think it is much harder to make the moral claim for high school immigration given the extent to which DEI took over both the education hiring,
Starting point is 02:57:50 education process and the hiring process. Okay, so first of all, that was brilliantly laid out, the nuance of it. So just to understand, it's not so much a criticism of H1B, high school immigration, it's that there needs to be more people saying, yay, we need more American born hires.
Starting point is 02:58:08 So I spent the entire Christmas holiday reading every message on this and not saying anything. And what I was, which you know me well enough to know that's a serious level of work. Yeah, that's very Zen. Yes, thank you. No, it wasn't, there was tremendous rage on the other side of it, but I suppressed it.
Starting point is 02:58:25 So I was waiting for the dog that didn't bark, right? And the dog that didn't bark was, I did not, and tell me if you saw one, I did not see a single example of somebody pounding the table for more high school immigration who was also pounding the table to go get more smart kids who are already here into these educational institutions and into these jobs.
Starting point is 02:58:42 I didn't see a single one. That's true. I think I agree with that. There really was a divide. But it was like, literally, it was like the proponents of high skilled immigrants. And again, this was me for a very long time. I mean, I kind of took myself by surprise on this
Starting point is 02:58:55 because I was on, you know, I had the much, say simpler version of this story for a very long, like I said, I've been in Washington many times under past presidents lobbying for this, by the way, never made any progress, which we could talk about. Like it never actually worked.
Starting point is 02:59:08 But I've been on the other side of this one, but I was literally sitting there being like, all right, which of these super geniuses who, many of whom by the way are very successful high-skilled immigrants or children of high-skilled immigrants, which of these super geniuses are going to say, actually we have this incredible talent source here in the country, which again, to be clear, I'm not talking about white people, I'm talking about native born Americans, whites, Asians, Jews, blacks, for sure. For sure, for sure, those four groups.
Starting point is 02:59:32 But also white people. Yeah, and also white people. People that are making the case for American born hires are usually not also supporting H1B. This is an extreme divide, and those people that are making that case are often not making it in a way that's like, making it in quite a radical way, let's put it this way.
Starting point is 02:59:57 But you have this interesting thing, you have a split between the sides that I've noticed, which is one side has all of the experts. Right. Right, and I'm using scare for people listening to audio. I'm making quotes in the air with my fingers as vigorously as I can. One side has all the certified experts.
Starting point is 03:00:11 The other side just has a bunch of people who are like, they know that something is wrong and they don't quite know how to explain it. And what was so unusual about the Harvard UNC cases, by the way, in front of the Supreme Court is they actually had sophisticated lawyers for the first time in a long time actually put all this evidence together
Starting point is 03:00:23 and actually put it in the public record. They actually had experts, which is just really rare. Generally what you get is you get, because if you don't have experts, what do you have? You know something is wrong, but you have primarily an emotional response. You feel it. But can you put it in the words and tables and charts
Starting point is 03:00:41 that a certified expert can? And no, you can't, that's not who you are. That doesn't mean that you're wrong. And it also doesn't mean that you have less of a moral stance. Yeah, and so it's just like, all right. Now, by the way, look, I think there are ways to square the circle.
Starting point is 03:00:54 I think there's a way to have our cake and eat it too. I think there'd be many ways to resolve this. I think, again, I think the way to do it is to look at these issues combined, look at DEI combined with high school immigration. It so happens that DEI is under much more scrutiny today than it has been for probably 20 years, affirmative action is. The Supreme Court did just rule that it is not legal for universities to do that.
Starting point is 03:01:18 They are still doing it, but they should stop. And then there are more and more, you've seen more companies now also dishing their DEI programs. In part, that's happening for a bunch of reasons, but it's happening in part because a lot of corporate lawyers will tell you that the Supreme Court rulings in education either already apply to businesses or just as a clear foreshadowing, the Supreme Court will rule on new cases that will ban any businesses. And so there is a moment here to be able to look at this on both sides.
Starting point is 03:01:51 Let me add one more nuance to it though, makes it even more complicated. Yeah. So the cliche is we're gonna brain drain the world, right? You've heard that? We're gonna take all the smart people from all over the world. We're gonna bring them here, we're gonna educate them
Starting point is 03:02:01 and then we're gonna keep them and then they're gonna raise their families here, create businesses here, create jobs here, right? In the cliche, that's a super positive thing. Yeah. Okay. So what happens to the rest of the world? They lose.
Starting point is 03:02:13 Well, how fungible are people? How many highly ambitious, highly conscientious, highly energetic, high achieving, high IQ super geniuses are there in the world. And if there's a lot, that's great. But if there just aren't that many, and they all come here, and they all aren't where they would be otherwise, what happens to all those other places? So it's almost impossible for us here to have that conversation in part because we become
Starting point is 03:02:43 incredibly uncomfortable as a society talking about the fact that people aren't just simply all the same, which is a whole thing we could talk about. But also, we are purely the beneficiary of this effect. We are brain draining the world, not the other way around. There's only four. So if you look at the flow of high-skilled immigration over time, there's only four permanent sinks of high-skilled immigration in places people go. It's the US, Canada, the UK, and Australia. It's the- Ooh, Australia.
Starting point is 03:03:08 It's four of the five Is. It's the major Anglosphere countries. And so for those countries, this seems like a no-lose proposition. It's all the other countries that basically what we four countries have been doing is draining all these other people out. It's actually much easier for people in Europe to talk about this, I've discovered, because the Eurozone is whatever, 28 countries. And within the Eurozone, the high skilled people over time have been migrating to originally the UK, but also specifically, I think it's the Netherlands, Germany and France. But specifically, they've been migrating out of the peripheral Eurozone countries. And the one where this really hit the fan was in Greece. So Greece falls into chaos, disaster,
Starting point is 03:03:46 and then you're running the government in Greece and you're trying to figure out how to put an economic development plan together. All of your smart young kids have left. Like, what are you gonna do? By the way, this is a potential, I know you care a lot about Ukraine, this is a potential crisis for Ukraine.
Starting point is 03:04:02 Not because, in part because of this, because we enthusiastically recruit Ukrainians, of course. And so we've been brain draining Ukraine for a long time. But also, of course, war does tend to cause people to migrate out. And so when it comes time for Ukraine to rebuild as a peaceful country, is it going to have the talent base even that it had five years ago is a very big and important question. By the way, Russia, we have brain drain a lot of really smart people out of Russia, a lot of them are here, right?
Starting point is 03:04:26 Over the last 30 years. And so there's this thing, it's actually really funny if you think about it, like the one thing that we know to be the height of absolute evil that the West ever did was colonization and resource extraction, right? So we know the height of absolute evil was when the Portuguese and the English
Starting point is 03:04:43 and everybody else went and had these colonies and then went in and we took all the oil and we took all the diamonds or we took all the whatever, lithium or whatever it is. Well, for some reason, we realized that that's a deeply evil thing to do when it's a physical resource, when it's a non-conscious physical matter. For some reason, we think it's completely morally acceptable to do it with human capital. In fact, we think it's glorious and beautiful and wonderful and the great flowering of peace and harmony and moral justice of our time to do it. And we don't think for one second what we're doing to the countries that we're pulling all these people out of. And this is one of these things like, I don't know, like maybe we're just going to live in this delusional state forever and we'll just keep
Starting point is 03:05:21 doing it and it'll keep benefiting us and we just won't care what happens. But like, I think there may come, this is like one of these submarines under 10 feet under the water line. Like, I think it's just a matter of time until people suddenly realize, oh my God, what are we doing? Because like, we need the rest of the world to succeed too, right? Like, we need these other countries to like flourish. Like, we don't want to be the only successful country in the middle of just like complete chaos and disaster. And we just extract and we extract and we extract and we don't think twice about it. Well, this is so deeply profound actually.
Starting point is 03:05:51 So what is the cost of winning, quote unquote, if these countries are drained in terms of human capital on the level of geopolitics, what does that lead to? Even if we talk about wars and conflict and all of this, we actually want them to be strong in the way we understand strong, not just in every way. So that cooperation and competition can build a better world for all of humanity.
Starting point is 03:06:19 It's interesting. I've been, this is one of those truths where you just speak and it resonates and I didn't even think about it. Yeah, exactly. So this is, you were sitting during the holiday season, just boiling over. So all that said, there's still,
Starting point is 03:06:37 do you use some good to the H1B? Okay, so then you get this other, okay, so then there's this other. Go and come all the way around. There's another nuance, So there's another nuance. There's another nuance, which is mostly in the Valley, we don't use H1Bs anymore. Mostly we use O1s. So there's a separate class of visa and O1 is like this, it turns out the O1 is the super
Starting point is 03:06:56 genius visa. So the O1 is basically our founder. Like when we have somebody from anywhere in the world and they've like invented a breakthrough in new technology and they want to come to the US to start a company, they come in through an O1 visa. And that actually is a fairly high bar. It's a high acceptance rate, but it's a pretty high bar. And they do a lot of work.
Starting point is 03:07:14 And you have to put real work into it and really prove your case. Mostly what's happened with the H1B visa program is that it has gone to basically two categories of employers. One is basically a small set of big tech companies that hire in volume, which is exactly the companies that you would think. And then the other is it goes to these, they call kind of the mills, the consulting mills, right?
Starting point is 03:07:35 And so there's a set of companies with names, I don't want to pick on companies, but names like Cognizant that hire basically have their business model is primarily Indian, being in primarily Indians in large numbers. And they often have offices next to company owned housing. And they'll have organizations that are literally thousands of Indians living and working in the US. And they do basically call it mid-tier like IT consulting. So these folks, they're making good wages,
Starting point is 03:08:04 but they're making $600,000 a're making 60 or 80 or $100,000 a year, not the 300,000 that you'd make in the Valley. And so in practice, the startups, basic like little tech, as we call it, or the startup world, mainly doesn't use H1Bs at this point and mainly can't because the system is rigged in a way that we really can't. And then again, you get to the underlying morality here, which is it's like, well, Amazon, like Amazon's an inlet, I love Amazon, but like they're a big powerful company. They've got more money than God, they've got resources, they've got long-term planning horizon, they do big profound things over decades at a time.
Starting point is 03:08:40 They could, or any of these other companies could launch massively effective programs to go recruit the best and brightest from all throughout the country. You'll notice they don't do that. They bring in 10,000, 20,000 H1Bs a year. You've got a question there. Then these mills, there's lots of questions around them and whether that's even an ethical way to... I don't want to say they're unethical, but there's questions around exactly what the trade-offs are there.
Starting point is 03:09:08 And so, yeah, and this is like a Pandora's box that nobody really wanted to be opened. To play devil's advocate on all this, in terms of national immigration issues, none of this is a top-end issue, just because the numbers are small. And so I don't think the administration has said, this is not a priority of theirs for right now. But I guess what I would say is there is actually a lot of complexity and nuance here. Like I said, I have a lot of friends and colleagues who came over on H-1B,
Starting point is 03:09:36 01s, green cards, many are now citizens. And every single one of them was... Not every single one. A lot of them were enthusiastic to defend the honor of immigrants throughout this whole period. And they said to me, it's like, well, Mark, how can we more clearly express the importance of high school immigration to the US? And I was like, I think you can do it by advocating for also developing our native-born talent. Do you want to inflame the issue,
Starting point is 03:09:59 or do you want to diffuse the issue? And I think the answer is to diffuse the issue. Let me give you one more positive scenario, and then I'll also beat up on the university some more. Do you know about the National Merit Scholarship System? Have you heard about this? Not really, can you explain? There's a system that was created during the Cold War called the National Merit Scholars. It was created, I forget, in the 1950s or 60s when, it was when people in government actually wanted
Starting point is 03:10:28 to identify the best and the brightest, as heretical an idea as that sounds today. And so it's basically a national talent search for basically IQ. Its goal is to identify basically the top 0.5% of the IQ in the country, by the way, completely regardless of other characteristics. So there's no race, gender, any other aspect to it. It's just going for straight intelligence.
Starting point is 03:10:50 It uses the first the PSAT, which is the preparatory SAT that you take, and then the SAT. So it uses those scores. That is the scoring. It's a straight PSAT scoring system. So they use the SAT as a proxy for IQ, which it is. They run this every year. They identify. It's like they get down to like 1% of the population of the kids, 18-year-olds any given year who score highest on the PSAT. And then they get down to, further qualified down to the 0.5% that also replicate on the
Starting point is 03:11:20 SAT. And then it's like the scholarship amount is like $2,500. Right? So it's like, there's a lot of money 50 years ago, not as much today, but it's a national system being run literally to find the best and the brightest. How many of our great and powerful universities use this as a scouting system? Like our universities all have sports teams. They all have national scouting. They have full-time scouts who go out and they go to every high school and they try to find all the great basketball players and bring them into the NCAA, into all these leagues. How many of our great and powerful and enlightened universities use the national merit system
Starting point is 03:11:53 to go do a talent search for the smartest kids and just bring them in? Let me guess, very few. Zero. As you say it, that's brilliant. There should be that same level of scouting for talent internally. Go get the smartest ones. I'll give you one more kicker on this topic. If you're not, if I haven't beaten it to death, um, you know, the SAT has changed.
Starting point is 03:12:15 Um, so the SAT used to be a highly accurate proxy for IQ. Um, that caused a bunch of problems. People really don't like the whole idea of IQ. Um, and so the SAT has been actively managed over the last 50 years by the That caused a bunch of problems. People really don't like the whole idea of IQ. And so the SAT has been actively managed over the last 50 years by the college board that runs it. And it has been essentially like everything else, it's been dumbed down.
Starting point is 03:12:33 And so in two ways, number one, it's been dumbed down where an 800 from 40 years ago does not mean what an 800 means today. And 40 years ago, it was almost impossible to get an 800. Today there's so many 800s that you could stock the entire Ivy League with 800s, right? And so it's been deliberately dumbed down. And then two is they have tried to pull out a lot of what's called the G loading. And so they've tried to detach it from being an IQ proxy because IQ is such an inflammatory
Starting point is 03:13:03 concept. And the consequence of that is, and this is sort of perverse, they've made it more coachable. Right. So the IT, the SAT 40 years ago, coaching didn't really work. And more recently it has really started to work. And one of the things you see is that the Asian spike, you see this like giant leap upward in Asian performance over the last decade.
Starting point is 03:13:19 And I think looking at the data, I think a lot of that is because it's more coachable now and the Asians do the most coaching. Um, so there's a bunch of issues with this. And so the coaching thing is really difficult because the coaching thing is a subsidy then to the kids whose parents can afford coaching. Right? And I don't know about you, but where I grew up, there was no SAT coaching. So there's like an issue there.
Starting point is 03:13:38 I didn't even know what the SAT was until the day I took it, much less that there was coaching, much less that it could work. So much less we could afford it. So number one, there's issues there. But the other issue there is think about what's happened by the dumbing down. 800 no longer captures all the smart. 800 is too crude of a test. It's like the AI benchmarking problem.
Starting point is 03:13:57 It's the same problem they have in AI benchmarking right now. 800 is too low of a threshold. There are too many kids scoring 800. Because what you want is you want whatever, if it's gonna be a hundred thousand kids, I don't know what it is, if it's gonna be 50,000 kids a year scoring 800, you also then want kids to be able to score 900
Starting point is 03:14:12 and a thousand and 1100 and 1200. And you want to ultimately get to, you know, you'd like to identify ultimately identify the top hundred kids and make sure that you get them in MIT. And the resolution of the test has been reduced so that it actually is not useful for doing that. And again, I would say this is like part of the generalized corruption that's taken place throughout this entire system where we have been heading in the reverse direction from wanting
Starting point is 03:14:34 to actually go get the best and brightest and actually put them in the places where they should be. And then just the final comment would be the great thing about standardized testing and the national merit system is it's completely, like I said, it's completely race blind, it's gender blind, it's blind on every other characteristic, it's completely race blind, it's gender blind, it's blind on every other characteristic, it's only done on test scores. And you can make an argument about whether that's good or bad, but it is for sure, it's the closest thing
Starting point is 03:14:54 that we had to get to merit. It was the thing that they did when they thought they needed merit to win the Cold War. And of course, we could choose to do that anytime we want. And I just say, I find it like incredibly striking and an enormous moral indictment of the current system that there are no universities that do this today. So back to the immigration thing, just real quick, it's like, okay, we aren't even trying to go get the smart kids out of the center and south. And even if they think that they can get into these places, they get turned down.
Starting point is 03:15:19 And the same thing for the smart Asians and the same thing for the smart Jews and the same thing for the smart black people. And it's just like, I don't know how, like I don't know how that's moral. Like I don't get it at all. As you said about the 800, so I took the SAT and ACT many times and I've always gotten perfect on math 800. It's just, and I'm not that, I'm not special. Like it doesn't identify genius. And I'm not that, I'm not special.
Starting point is 03:15:47 It doesn't identify genius. I think you wanna search for genius and you wanna create measures that find genius of all different kinds, speaking of diversity. And I guess we should reiterate and say over and over and over, defend immigrants, yes, but say we should hire more and more native born.
Starting point is 03:16:09 Well, you asked me in the beginning, like what's the most optimistic forecast, right? That we could have the most optimistic forecast would be my God, what if we did both? So that's the reasonable, the rational, the smart thing to say here. In fact, we don't have to have a war. Well, it would defuse the entire issue. If everybody in the center in the south of the country and every Jewish family, Asian family, black family knew they were getting a fair shake, it would defuse the issue. How about defusing the issue?
Starting point is 03:16:38 What a crazy radical. Sorry, I don't mean to really get out of my skis here, but. I think your profile on X states it's time to build. It feels like 2025 is a good year to build. So I wanted to ask your advice and maybe for a device for anybody who's trying to build, so who's trying to build something useful in the world, maybe launch a startup, or maybe just launch apps,
Starting point is 03:17:09 services, whatever, ship software products. So maybe by way of advice, how do you actually get to shipping? So, I mean, a big part of the answer, I think, is we're in the middle of a legit revolution. And I know you've been talking about this on your show, but like AI coding, I mean, this is the biggest earthquake to hit software in certainly my life, maybe since the investment software. And I'm sure, you know, we're involved in various of these companies,
Starting point is 03:17:37 but you know, these, these tools, you know, from a variety of companies are like absolutely revolutionary and they're getting better at leaps and bounds right every day. And you know all this, but the thing with coding, there's open questions of whether AI can get better at understanding philosophy or creative writing or whatever, but for sure we can make it much better at coding, because you can validate the results of coding. And so there's all these methods of synthetic data and self-training and reinforcement learning that for sure you can do with coding. And so everybody I know who works in the field
Starting point is 03:18:09 says AI coding is going to get to be phenomenally good. And it's already great. And anybody who wants to see this, just go on YouTube and look at AI coding demos, little kids making apps in 10 minutes working with an AI coding system. And so I think it's the golden age. I think this is an area where it's clear that the golden age, the tool set is extraordinary. You know, in a day as a coder, for sure,
Starting point is 03:18:29 in a day you can retrain yourself, you know, start using these things, get a huge boost in productivity. As a non-coder, you can learn much more quickly than you could before. That's actually a tricky one in terms of learning as a non-coder to build stuff. It's still, I feel like you still need to learn how to code.
Starting point is 03:18:44 It becomes a superpower. It helps you be much more productive. as a non-coder to build stuff, I feel like you still need to learn how to code. It becomes a superpower. It helps you be much more productive. Like you could legitimately be a one person company and get quite far. I agree with that. Up to a point. So I think for sure, for quite a long time,
Starting point is 03:19:01 the people who are good at coding are gonna be the best at actually having AIs code things. Because they're going to understand what's happening. And they're going to be able to evaluate the work. And they're going to be able to literally manage AIs better. Even if they're not literally handwriting the code, they're just going to have a much better sense of what's going on.
Starting point is 03:19:17 So I definitely think 100%, my 9-year-old is doing all kinds of coding classes. And he'll keep doing that for certainly through 18. We'll see after that. And so for sure that's the case. But look, having said that, one of the things you can do with an AI is say, teach me how to code. Right? And so, and you know, there's a whole bunch of, you know, I'll name names, you know, Khan Academy, like there's a whole bunch of work that they're doing at Khan Academy for free. And then, you And then we have this company, Replet, which was originally specifically built for kids for coding that has AI built in.
Starting point is 03:19:50 That's just absolutely extraordinary now. And then there's a variety of other systems like this. And yeah, the AI is going to be able to teach you to code. AI, by the way, is, as you know, spectacularly good at explaining code. And so the tools have these features now where you can talk to the code base. And so you can literally ask the code base questions about itself.
Starting point is 03:20:12 And you can also just do the simple form, which is you can copy and paste code into a chat GPT and just ask it to explain it, what's going on, rewrite it, improve it, make recommendations. And so there's dozens of ways to do this. By the way, you can also, I mean even more broadly than code like, you know, okay, you want to make a video game. Okay, now you can do AI art generation, sound generation, dialogue generation, voice generation, right? And so all of a sudden like you don't need designers, you know, you don't need, you know, voice actors.
Starting point is 03:20:39 You know, so yeah, so there's just like unlimited and then you know, because you know, a big part of coding is so-called glue, you know, it's interfacing into other systems. So it's interfacing into, you know, Stripe to take payments or something like that. And, you know, AI is fantastic at writing glue code. So, you know, really, really good at making sure that you can plug everything together. Really good at helping you figure out how to deploy.
Starting point is 03:21:00 You know, it'll even write a business plan for you. So it's just this, it's like everything happening with AI right now. It's like this latent superpower and there's this incredible spectrum of people who have really figured out massive performance increases, productivity increases with it already. There's other people who aren't even aware it's happening. And there's some gearing to whether you're a coder or not, but I think there are lots of non-coders that are off to the races and I think there are lots of non coders that are off the races and I think there are lots of professional coders who are still like You know the blacksmiths were not necessarily in favor of you know
Starting point is 03:21:30 car business so There's the old William Gibson quote. The future is here It's just not evenly distributed yet. And this is maybe the most potent version of that that I've ever seen Yeah, there's a you know the old meme with the I've ever seen. Yeah, there's the old meme with the bell curve, the people on both extremes say AI coding is the future.
Starting point is 03:21:54 It's very common to programmers to say, you know, if you're any good of a programmer, you're not going to be using it. That's just not true. I consider myself a reasonably good programmer and my productivity has been just skyrocketed and the joy of programming skyrocketed. Every aspect of programming is more efficient, more productive, more fun, all that kind of
Starting point is 03:22:14 stuff. I would also say code has, of anything in industrial society, code has the highest elasticity, which is to say the easier it is to make it, the more of it gets made. I think effectively there's unlimited demand for code. In other words, there's always some other idea for a thing that you can do, a feature that you can add or a thing that you can optimize. So overwhelmingly, the amount of code that exists in the world is a fraction of even the ideas we have today, and then we come up with new ideas all the time. And so I think that like, you know, I was, I was late eighties, early nineties,
Starting point is 03:22:49 when sort of automated coding systems started to come out, expert systems, big deal in those days. And there were all these, there was a famous book called the decline and fall of the American programmer, you know, that predicted that these new coding systems were going to mean we wouldn't have programmers in the future. And of course, the number of programming jobs exploded by like a factor of a hundred. Like my guess will be we'll have more, my guess is we'll have more coding jobs probably by like an order of magnitude 10 years from now. That will be different, there'll be different jobs.
Starting point is 03:23:12 They'll involve orchestrating AI. But we will be creating so much more software that the whole industry will just explode in size. Are you seeing the size of companies decrease in terms of startups? What's the landscapes of little tech? All we're seeing right now is the AI hiring boom of all time.
Starting point is 03:23:32 Oh, for the big tech. And little tech. Everybody's trying to hire as many engineers as they can to build AI systems. It's just, it's 100%. I mean, there's a handful of company, there's a little bit, there's customer service. We have some companies and others, I think it's Klarna that's publicizing a lot of this in Europe.
Starting point is 03:23:50 Where, you know, there are jobs that can be optimized, and jobs that can be automated. But like for engineering jobs, like it's just an explosion of hiring. At least so far, there's no trace of any sort of diminishing effect. Now, having said that, I am looking forward to the day. I am waiting for the first company to walk in saying, yes, like the more radical form of it. So basically the companies that we see are basically one of two kinds. We see the companies that are basically sometimes use weak form, strong form. So the weak form companies sometimes use the term, it's called the sixth bullet point. AI is the sixth bullet point on whatever they're doing.
Starting point is 03:24:29 Sure. Right, and it's on the slide, right? So they've got the, you know, whatever, dot, dot, dot, dot, and then AI is the sixth thing. And the reason AI is the sixth thing is because they had already previously written the slide before the AI revolution started. And so they just added the sixth bullet point on the slide,
Starting point is 03:24:40 which is how you're getting all these products that have like the AI button up in the corner, right? The little sparkly button, right? And all of a sudden Gmail is offering to summarize your email which I'm like, I don't need that. Like I need you to answer my email, not summarize it. Like what the hell? Okay, so we see those and that's fine.
Starting point is 03:24:55 That's like, I don't know, putting sugar on the cake or something. But then we see the strong form, which is the companies that are building from scratch for AI, right? And they're building it. And I actually just met with a company that is building literally an AI email system as an example. So just- Oh, nice. I can't wait.
Starting point is 03:25:11 Yeah, they're going to completely... So the very obvious idea, very smart team. It's going to be great. And then Notion just, not one of our companies, but just came out with a product. And so now companies are going to basically come through, sweep through, and they're going to do basically AI first versions of basically everything. And those are like companies built, AI is the first bullet point. It's the strong form of the argument.
Starting point is 03:25:32 Cursors is an example that they basically said, OK, we're going to rebuild the thing with AI as the first citizen. What if we knew from scratch that we could build on this? And again, this is part of the full employment act for startups and VCs is, if a technology transformation is sufficiently powerful, then you actually need to start the product development process over from scratch because you need to reconceptualize the product. And then usually what that means is you need a new company because most incumbents
Starting point is 03:25:58 just won't do that. And so yeah, so that's underway across many categories. What I'm waiting for is the company where it's like, no, our org chart is redesigned as a result of AI, right? So I'm looking, I'm waiting for the company where it's like, no, we're gonna have like, you know, and the cliche, here's a thought experiment, right? The cliche would be, we're gonna have like the human executive team, and then we're gonna have
Starting point is 03:26:18 the AIs be the workers, right? So we'll have a VP of engineering supervising a hundred instances of coding agents, right? Okay, maybe, right? By the way, or maybe, maybe a VP of engineering supervising 100 instances of coding agents, right? Okay, maybe, right? By the way, or maybe, maybe the VP of engineering should be the AI. Maybe supervising human coders who are supervising AIs, right?
Starting point is 03:26:35 Because one of the things that AI should be pretty good at is managing. Because it's like not, you know, it's like a process driven. It's the kind of thing that AI is actually pretty good at, right? Performance evaluation coaching. And so should it be an AI executive team? And then, you know, and then of course the ultimate question
Starting point is 03:26:50 which is AI CEO, right? And then, you know, and then there's, and then maybe the most futuristic version of it would be an actual AI agent that actually goes fully autonomous. Yeah, what if you really set one of these things loose and let it basically build itself a business? And so I will say, we're not yet seeing those.
Starting point is 03:27:08 And I think there's a little bit of the systems aren't quite ready for that yet. And then I think it's a little bit of you really do need at that point a founder who's really willing to break all the rules and really willing to take the swing. And those people exist. And so I'm sure we'll see that. And some of it is, as know with all the startups this is the execution the the idea that you have a AI first email client this seems like an obvious idea but actually creating one executing and then taking on Gmail is
Starting point is 03:27:36 really is really difficult I mean Gmail it's fascinating to see Google can't do it because because why because of momentum because it's hard to see Google can't do it. Because why? Because of momentum, because it's hard to re-engineer the entirety of the system. Feels like Google's perfectly positioned to do it. Same with your perplexity, which I love. Google could technically take on perplexity and do it much better, but they haven't, not yet.
Starting point is 03:28:02 So it's fascinating why that is for large companies. I mean, that is an advantage for little tech. They can be agile. Yeah, that's right. They can move fast. Yeah, little companies can break glass in a way big companies can't. Right.
Starting point is 03:28:15 This is sort of the big breakthrough that Clay Christians had in the innovator's dilemma, which is sometimes when big companies don't do things, it's because they're screwing up, and that certainly happens. But a lot of times they don't do things because it would break too much glass. Specifically, it's because they're screwing up. And that certainly happens. But a lot of times they don't do things because it would break too much glass. Specifically, it would interfere
Starting point is 03:28:28 with their existing customers and their existing businesses. And they just simply won't do that. And by the way, responsibly, they shouldn't do that. Right? And so they just get, Clay Christians' big thing is they often don't adapt because they're well-run, not because they're poorly run.
Starting point is 03:28:44 But they're optimizing machines. They're optimizing against existing business. And as you kind of just said, this is like a permanent state of affairs for large organizations. Like every once in a while, one breaks the pattern and actually does it. But for the most part, like this is a very predictable
Starting point is 03:28:58 form of human behavior. And this fundamentally is why startups exist. It feels like 2025 is when the race for dominance in AI will see some winners. Like it's a big year. So who do you think wins the race? Open AI, Meta, Google, XAI, who do you think wins the AI race?
Starting point is 03:29:16 I would say, I'm not gonna predict. I'm gonna say there's questions all over the place. And then we have this category question we call the trillion dollar question, which is like literally depending on how it's answered, people make or lose a trillion dollars. And I think there's like, I don't know, five or $6 trillion questions right now that are hanging out there, which is an unusually large number. And I just, you know, I'll just hit a few of them and we can talk about them.
Starting point is 03:29:35 So one is big models versus small models. Another is open models versus closed models. Another is whether you can use synthetic data or not. Another is chain of thought, how far can you push that in reinforcement learning? And then another one is political trillion dollar questions, policy questions, which the US and the EU have both been flunking dramatically and the US hopefully is about to really succeed at. Yeah, and then there's probably another half dozen big important questions after that. And so these are all just like, say this is an industry that's in flux in a way that I,
Starting point is 03:30:09 even more dramatic, I think than the ones I've seen before. And look, the most obvious example, the flux is sitting here in the summer, sitting here less than three years ago, sitting here in December of 22, we would have said that OpenAI is just running away with everything. And sitting here today, it's like, there's at least six world-class God model companies and teams that are, by the way, generating remarkably similar results. That's actually been one of the most shocking things to me is like, it turns out that once you know that it's possible to build one incredibly smart Turing test passing large language model, which was a complete shock and surprise to the world,
Starting point is 03:30:44 it turns out within a year you can have five more. There's also a money component thing to it, which is to get the money to scale one of these things into the billions of dollars. There's basically right now only two sources of money that will do that for you. One is the hyperscalers giving you the money, which you turn around and round trip back to them, or foreign sovereigns, other countries sovereign wealth funds, which can be difficult in some cases for companies to access. So there's maybe another trillion dollar question is the financing question.
Starting point is 03:31:15 Here's one. So Sam Altman has been public about the fact that he wants to transition OpenAI from being a nonprofit to being a for-profit. The way that that is legally done is that there is a way to do it. There is a way in US law to do it. The IRS and other legal entities, government entities scrutinizes very carefully because the US takes foundation nonprofit law very seriously because of the tax
Starting point is 03:31:35 exemption. And so historically the way that you do it is you start a for-profit and then you raise money with the for-profit to buy the assets of the nonprofit at fair market value. And the last financing round at OpenAI was $150-some billion. And so logically, if the flip is going to happen, the for-profit has to go raise $150 billion out of the chute to buy the assets. Raising 150 billion is a challenge.
Starting point is 03:32:04 So is that even possible? If that is possible, then open AI maybe is off to the races as a for profit company, if not, you know, uh, you know, I don't know. And then, you know, obviously the Elon lawsuit. So, so just because they're the market leader today, you know, there's big important questions there. You know, Microsoft has this kind of love hate relationship with them. Where does that go?
Starting point is 03:32:21 Apple's, you know, lagging badly behind, but you know, they're very good at catching up Amazon, you know, is primarily hypers, but you know, they're very good at catching up. Amazon, you know, is primarily hyperscaler, but they now have their own models. And then there's the other questions like you laid out brilliantly, briefly and brilliantly, open versus closed, big versus little models, synthetic data, that's a huge, huge question.
Starting point is 03:32:39 And then test on compute with a chain of thought, the role of that, and these are, I think it's fair to say, trillion dollar questions. Yeah, these are big. Like, look, you know, it's like, okay, here's a trillion dollar question, which is kind of embedded in that, which is just hallucinations, right?
Starting point is 03:32:54 So if you are trying to use these tools creatively, you're thrilled because they can draw new images and they can make new music and they can do all this incredible stuff, right? They're creative. The flip side of that is if you need them to be correct, they can't be creative, and that's the term hallucination. And these things do hallucinate.
Starting point is 03:33:11 And there have been court cases already where lawyers have submitted legal briefs that contain made up court citations, case citations. The judge is like, wait a minute, this doesn't exist. And the very next question is, did you write this yourself? And the lawyer goes, uh. I mean, that's why, with Ilan O'Grock, looking for truth, I mean, that's an open technical question.
Starting point is 03:33:33 How close can you get to truth with LLMs? Yeah, that's right. And my sense, this is a very contentious topic at the industry, my sense is, if to the extent that there is a domain in which there is a definitive and checkable and provable answer, and you might say math satisfies that, coding satisfies that, and maybe some other fields, then you should be able to generate synthetic data. You should be
Starting point is 03:33:54 able to do chain of thought reasoning. You should be able to do reinforcement learning, and you should be able to ultimately eliminate hallucinations. By the way, that's a trillion dollar question right there as to whether that's true. But then there's questions like, okay, is that going to work in the more general domain? So for example, one possibility is these things are going to be truly superhuman at like math encoding, but at like discussing philosophy, they're basically as smart as they're ever going to be. And they're going to be kind of, say, mid-wit grad student level.
Starting point is 03:34:23 And the theory there would just be they're already out of training data. They literally, you talk to these people, like literally the big models are like within a factor of two acts of consuming all of the human generated training data to the point that some of these big companies are literally hiring people like doctors and lawyers to sit and write new training data by hand. And so does this mean that like you have to,
Starting point is 03:34:41 if you want your model to get better at philosophy, you have to go hire like a thousand philosophers and have them write new content? And is anybody going to do that? And so, you know, maybe, maybe these things are topping out in certain ways and they're going to leap way ahead in other ways. And so anyway, so we just don't, you know, I, I, this, this is, I'll tell you, maybe my main conclusion is I don't, any of these, anybody telling you, you know, anybody
Starting point is 03:35:00 telling you these big sweeping conclusions, you know, this whole super, you know, all of these abstract generalized super intelligence, AGI stuff, like it, you know, maybe it's the engineer in me, but like, no, it's like, that's not, that's not the core. That's too abstract. Like it's got to actually work. Um, and then by the way, it has to actually pay for it. Um, I mean, this is a problem right now with, you know, the big models, the big models that are like really good at coding a math, they're like actually very expensive to run. They're quite slow. Another trillion dollar question, future chips, which I know you've talked a lot about. Another trillion dollar question. Yeah, I mean, all the global issues. Oh, another trillion dollar question, censorship, and all the human
Starting point is 03:35:44 feedback training process. Exactly what are you training these things to do? What are they allowed to talk about? How long do they give you these? How often do they give these incredibly preaching moral lectures? Here's a trillion dollar question. How many other countries want their country to run its education system, healthcare system, new system, political system on the basis of an AI that's been trained according to the most extreme left-wing California politics. Right, because that's kind of what they have on offer right now.
Starting point is 03:36:14 And I think the answer to that is not very many. So there's like massive open questions there about like what, you know, and by the way, like what morality of these things can I get trained on as a? And now Owen, we're cracking wide open with what's been happening over the past few months. Censorship on every level of these companies and just the very idea what truth means
Starting point is 03:36:38 and what it means to expand the Overton window of LLMs or the Overton window of human discourse. So what I experienced, you know, going back to how we started, what I experienced was, all right, social media censorship regime from hell, debanking, right, at like a large scale, and then the war on the crypto industry, trying to kill it. And then basically declared intent to do the same thing to AI and to put AI under the same kind of censorship and control regime as social media in the banks. And I think this election tipped in America. I think this election tipped us from a timeline in which things
Starting point is 03:37:12 were going to get really bad on that front to a timeline in which I think things are going to be quite good. But look, those same questions also apply outside the US. And the EU is doing their thing. They're being extremely draconian. And they're trying to lock in a political censorship regime on AI right now. That's so harsh that even American AI companies are not even willing to
Starting point is 03:37:29 launch new products in the EU right now. Like that's not going to last, but like what, what happens there, right? And what, what are the trade-offs, you know, what levels of censorship are American companies going to have to sign up for if they want to operate in the EU or is the EU still capable of generating its own companies or have we brain drain them so that they can't? So big questions. Uh, quick questions. So you're very active on X, a very unique character.
Starting point is 03:37:57 Um, flamboyant, exciting, bold. Uh, you post a lot. I think there's a meme, I don't remember it exactly, but that Elon posted something like, inside Elon there are two wolves. One is, please be kind or more positive. And the other one is, I think, you know, doing the, take a big step back
Starting point is 03:38:21 and fuck yourself in the face guy. How many wolves are inside your mind when you're tweeting? To be clear, a reference from the comedy classic, Tropic Thunder. Tropic Thunder, yeah, legendary movie. Yes. Any Zoomers listening to this who haven't seen that movie, go watch it immediately.
Starting point is 03:38:39 Yeah, there's nothing offensive about it. Nothing offensive about it at all. Tom Cruise's greatest performance. Okay. So, yeah, no, look, I should start by saying, like, I'm not supposed to be tweeting at all. So, yes, yes, yes, but you know. So how do you approach that?
Starting point is 03:39:00 Like, how do you approach what to tweet? I mean, I don't. I look, so it's a, it's a, I don't, I don't well enough. It's mostly an exercise in frustration. Look, there's a glory to it and there's an issue with it and the glory of it is like, you know, instantaneous global communication. You know, X in particular is like the, you know, the town square on all these, you know, social issues, political issues, everything else, current events. But I mean, look, there's no question the format, the format of at least the original tweet is, you know, social issues, political issues, everything else, current events. But I mean, look, there's no question the format, the format of at least the original tweet is, you know,
Starting point is 03:39:27 prone to be inflammatory. You know, I'm the guy who at one point, the entire nation of India hated me. So I once tweeted something, it turned out that is still politically sensitive. And the entire continent. I stayed up all night that night as I became front page headline and leading television news in each time zone in India for a single tweet. So like the single tweet out of context is a very dangerous thing. Obviously X now has the middle ground where they now have the longer form essays.
Starting point is 03:39:57 And so probably the most productive thing I can do is longer form things. You're not gonna do it though, are you? I do, I do from time to time. Sometimes. I should do more of them. And then yeah, I mean, look, and yeah, obviously X is doing great. And then like I said, like Substack, you know, has become the center for a lot, you know,
Starting point is 03:40:14 a lot of them, I think the best kind of, you know, deeply thought through, you know, certainly intellectual content, you know, tons of current events stuff there as well. And then, yeah, so, and then there's a bunch of other, you know, a bunch of new systems that are very exciting. So I think one of the things we can look forward to in the next four years is number one, just like a massive reinvigoration of social media as a consequence of the changes that are happening right now.
Starting point is 03:40:35 I'm very excited to see what's gonna happen with that. And then, I mean, it's happened on X, but it's now gonna happen on other platforms. And then the other is crypto is going to come. Crypto is going to come right back to life. And actually, that's very exciting. Actually, that's worth noting is that's another trillion dollar question on AI, which is in a world of pervasive AI,
Starting point is 03:40:55 and especially in a world of AI agents, and imagine a world of billions or trillions of AI agents running around, they need an economy. And crypto, in our view, happens to be the ideal economic system for that, right? Because it's a programmable money, it's a very easy way to plug in and do that. And there's this transaction processing system
Starting point is 03:41:12 that can do that. And so I think the crypto AI intersection, it's potentially a very, very big deal. And so that was going to be impossible under the prior regime. And I think under the new regime, hopefully it'll be something we can do. Almost for fun, let me ask a friend of yours,
Starting point is 03:41:28 Jan LeCun, what are your top 10 favorite things about Jan LeCun? He's a, I think he's a, he's a brilliant guy. I think he's important to the world. I think you guys disagree on a lot of things, but I personally like vigorous disagreement. I, as a person in the stands, like to watch the gladiators go at it. No, he's a super genius. I mean, look, I wouldn't say we're super close, but you know, casual
Starting point is 03:41:53 friends. I worked with him at Metta. You know, he's the chief scientist at Metta for a long time and still, you know, works with us. And, you know, and obviously he's a legendary figure in the field and one of the main people responsible for what's happening. My serious observation would be that it's the thing I keep, I've talked to him about for a long time and I keep trying to read and follow everything he does is he's probably, he is the, I think, see if you agree with this, he is the smartest and most credible critic of LLMs is the path for AI. And he's not, you know, there's certain, I would say, troll-like characters who are just cropping everything.
Starting point is 03:42:28 But Iyan has very deeply thought through, basically, theories as to why LLMs are an evolutionary dead end. And I actually, I try to do this thing where I try to model, I try to have a mental model of the two different sides of a serious argument. So I've tried to internalize that argument as much as I can, which is difficult, because we're investing it behind LLMs
Starting point is 03:42:48 as aggressively as we can. And so if he's right, that could be a big problem. But we should also know that. And then I use his ideas to challenge all the bullish people to really test their level of knowledge. So I like to grill people. I got my CS degree 35 years ago. So I'm not like deep in the technology, but like if, if to the extent I can understand Jan's points, I can use them to, you know,
Starting point is 03:43:15 to really surface a lot of the questions for the people who are more bullish. And that's been, I think, very, very productive. Yeah. So yeah, just, it's very striking that you have somebody who is like that central in the space, who is like a full on, a full on skeptic. And you know, and again, as you could, this could go different ways. He could end up being very wrong. He can end up being totally right, or it could be that he will provoke the evolution of these systems to be much better than they would have been. Yeah, he could be both right and wrong.
Starting point is 03:43:41 First of all, I do, I do agree with that. He's one of the most legit and rigorous and deep critics of the LLM path to AGI. His basic notion is that AI needs to have some physical, understanding of the physical world, and that's very difficult to achieve with LLMs. And that is a really good way to challenge the limitations of LLMs and so on. He's also been a vocal and a huge proponent of open source,
Starting point is 03:44:10 which is a whole nother, which you have been as well. Which is very useful, yeah. And that's been just fascinating to watch. And anti-doomer. Anti-doomer. Yeah, he's very anti-doomer. He embodies, he also has many wolves. Yes, he does, yes, he does. So it's been really, really fun to watch.
Starting point is 03:44:27 The other two, okay, here's my other wolf coming out. The other two of the three godfathers of AI are like radicals, like full on left, far left. I would say like either Marxists or borderline Marxists. And they're like, I think quite extreme in their social and political views. And I think that feeds into their demerism. And I think, you know, they are lobbying for like draconian government.
Starting point is 03:44:49 I think what would be ruinously destructive government legislation and regulation. And so it's actually super helpful, super, super helpful to have Jan as a counterpoint to those two. Another fun question. Our mutual friend, Andrew Huberman. First, maybe what do you love most about Andrew? And second, what score on a scale, a scale of one to 10, do you think he would give you on your approach to health? Oh, three is a good three. You think you score that high, huh? Okay. That's good. Exactly. Well, so he can, he did,
Starting point is 03:45:20 he convinced me to stop drinking alcohol, um, which was a big success. Well, it was like my, other than my family, which was a big success. Successfully. Well, it was like my favorite, other than my family, it was my favorite thing in the world. And so it was a major, major reduction. Like having like a glass of scotch at night was like a major, like it was like the thing I would do to relax. And so he has profoundly negatively impacted
Starting point is 03:45:35 my emotional health. I blame him for making me much less happy as a person, but much, much, much healthier, physically healthier. So that I credit him with that. I'm glad I did that. But then his sleep stuff, like, yeah, I'm not doing any of that. I have no interest in his sleep shit.
Starting point is 03:45:53 Like, no. This whole light, natural light, no. We're not doing it. I don't see any natural light in here. It's all covered. It's all horrible. And I'm very happy. I would be very happy living and working here because I'm totally happy any natural light in here. It's all covered. It's all horrible. And I'm very happy. I would be very happy living and working here
Starting point is 03:46:07 because I'm totally happy without natural light. In darkness. Yes. It must be a metaphor for something. Yes, it's a test. Look, it's a test of manhood as to whether you could have a blue screen in your face for three hours and then go right to sleep.
Starting point is 03:46:17 Like, I don't understand why you should want to take shortcuts. I now understand what they mean by toxic masculinity. All right. So let's see. You're exceptionally successful by most measures, but what to use the definition of success? I would probably say it is a combination of two things. I think it is contribution.
Starting point is 03:46:48 So have you done something that mattered ultimately? And specifically, it mattered to people. And then the other thing is I think happiness is either overrated or almost a complete myth. And in fact, interesting, Thomas Jefferson did not mean happiness the way that we understand it when he said pursuit of happiness in the Declaration of Independence. He meant it more of the Greek meaning, which is closer to satisfaction or fulfillment.
Starting point is 03:47:16 So I think happiness is... So I think about happiness as the first ice cream cone makes you super happy, the first mile of the walk in the park during sunset makes you super happy, the first kiss makes you super happy. The first mile of the walk in the park during sunset makes you super happy. The first kiss makes you super happy. The thousandth ice cream cone, not so much. The thousandth mile of the walk through the park. The thousandth kiss can still be good,
Starting point is 03:47:38 but maybe just not right in a row. Right, and so happiness is this very fleeting concept. And the people who anchor on happiness seem to go off the rails pretty often. Right? And so happiness is this very fleeting concept. And the people who anchor on happiness seem to go off the rails pretty often. So did the deep sense of having been, I don't know how to put it, useful. So that's a good place to arrive at in life.
Starting point is 03:48:00 Yeah, I think so. Yeah. I mean, can you sit, can you, yeah. Who was it who said that all the source of all the ills in the world with man's inability to sit in a room by himself doing nothing. Um, but like if you're sitting in a room by yourself and you're like, all right, there are, you know, four in the morning. It's like, all right. Have I like, you know, have I lived up to my expectation of myself? Like if you have, you know, the people I know who feel that way are pretty centered. Um, and, um, you know, generally seem very, um, I don't know how to put it, pleased with, you know, the people I know who feel that way are pretty centered. Um, and, um, you know, generally seem very, um, I don't know how to put it, pleased with, you know, proud, um, calm at peace. Um,
Starting point is 03:48:32 the people who are, um, you know, sensation seekers, um, you know, some of the sensations that by the way, some sense, you know, there's there's certain entrepreneurs for example, who are like into every form of extreme extreme sport and they get, you know, huge satisfaction out of that. Um, or, you know, there's sensation seeking and form of extreme sport and they get huge satisfaction out of that. Or there's sensation seeking in sort of useful and productive ways. Larry Ellison was always like that. Zuckerberg was like that.
Starting point is 03:48:52 And then there's a lot of entrepreneurs who end up no drugs, like sexual escapades that seem like they'll be fun at first and then backfire. Yeah, but at the end of the day, if you're able to be at peace by yourself in a room at 4 a.m. Yeah. And I would even say happy, but I know, I understand. Thomas Jefferson didn't mean it the way that way. Maybe I mean it, but I can be happy by myself at 4 a.m. with a blue screen. That's good. Exactly. Staring at cursor. Exactly. That's good. Exactly staring at cursor
Starting point is 03:49:32 As a small tangent a quick shout out to an amazing interview you do with Barry Weiss and just to her in general Barry Weiss of the free press. She has a podcast called honestly with Barry Weiss. She's great people should go listen You were asked If you believe in God One of the joys see we talked about happiness one of the things that makes me happy is making you uncomfortable You were asked if you believe in God. One of the joys, see we talked about happiness, one of the things that makes me happy is making you uncomfortable. Thank you. So this question is designed for,
Starting point is 03:49:53 many of the questions today are designed for that. You were asked if you believe in God and you said after a pause, you're not sure. So it felt like the pause, the uncertainty there was some kind of ongoing search for wisdom and meaning. Are you in fact searching for wisdom and meaning? I guess I put it this way. There's a lot to just understand about people that I feel like I'm only starting to understand. And that's certainly a simpler concept than God. So that's what I spent a lot of the last, you know, 15 years trying to figure out.
Starting point is 03:50:33 I feel like I spent my first, like whatever, 30 years figuring out machines. And then now I'm spending 30 years figuring out people, which turns out to be quite a bit more complicated. And then I don't know, maybe God's the last 30 years or something. And then, you know, look, I mean, just like Elon, it's just like, okay, the known universe is like very complicated and mystifying. I mean, every time I pull up an astronomy, I get super in astronomy and it's like,
Starting point is 03:50:58 daddy, how many galaxies are there in the universe? How many galaxies are there in the universe? 100 billion? Okay, like how? Yeah. Like how is that freaking possible? Like what, like it's just, it's such a staggering concept that I- I actually wanted to show you a tweet that blew my mind from Elon, from a while back. He said, Elon said, as a friend called it,
Starting point is 03:51:23 this is the ultimate skill tree. This is a wall of galaxies, a billion light years across. So these are all galaxies. Yeah, like what the, like how, how is it that big? Like how the hell, and like, you know, I can read the textbook into this and that and the whatever, eight billion years and the big bang and the whole thing.
Starting point is 03:51:42 And then it's just like, all right, wow. And then it's like, all right, the Big Bang, all right, like what was before the Big Bang? You think we humans will ever colonize like a galaxy and maybe even go beyond? Sure, I mean, yeah, I mean, in the fullness of time, yeah. So you have that kind of optimism, you have that kind of hope that extends
Starting point is 03:52:01 across thousands of views. In the fullness of time, I mean, yeah, I mean, yeah, you know, all the problems, all the challenges with it that I do, but like, yeah, why not? I thousands of years. In the fullness of time, I mean, yeah, I mean, yeah, you know, all the problems, all the challenges with it that I do, but like, yeah, why not? I mean, again, in the fullness of time, it'll take a long time. You don't think we'll destroy ourselves? No, I doubt it. I doubt it.
Starting point is 03:52:13 And, you know, fortunately we have Elon giving us the backup plan. So I don't know, like I grew up, you know, rural Midwest, sort of just like conventionally kind of Protestant Christian. It never made that much sense to me. Got trained as an engineer and a scientist. I'm like, Oh, that definitely doesn't make sense. I'm like, I know I'll spend my life as an empirical, you know, rationalist. And I'll figure everything out. And then, you know, and then again, you walk up against these things, you know,
Starting point is 03:52:36 you, you bump up against these things and you're just like, all right, I like, okay, I guess there's a scientific explanation for this, but like, wow. Um, and then there's like, all right, where did that come from? Right, and then how far back can you go on the causality chain? Yeah, and then, yeah, I mean, then even just, you know, experiences that we all have on earth, it's hard to rationally explain it all.
Starting point is 03:52:56 And then, you know, so yeah, I guess I just say, I'm kind of radically open-minded at peace with the fact that I'll probably never know. The other thing that has happened and maybe the more practical answer to the question is, I think I have a much better understanding now of the role that religion plays in society that I didn't have when I was younger.
Starting point is 03:53:14 And my partner Ben has a great, I think he quotes his father on this. He's like, if a man does not have a real religion, he makes up a fake one. And the fake ones go very, very badly. And so there's this class, it's actually really funny, there's this class of intellectual, there's this class of intellectual that has what appears to be a very patronizing point of view, which is, yes, I'm an atheist, but it's very important that the people believe in something. Right. And Marx had like the
Starting point is 03:53:41 negative view on that, which is religion is the opiate of the masses. But there's a lot of like right-wing intellectuals who are themselves, I think, pretty atheist or agnostic that are like, it's deeply important that the people be Christian or something like that. And on the one hand, it's like, wow, that's arrogant and presumptive. But on the other hand, you know, maybe it's right because, you know, what have we learned in the last hundred years is in the absence of a real religion, people will make up fake ones.
Starting point is 03:54:03 There's this writer, there's this political philosopher who's super interesting on this name, Eric Vogel. And, and he wrote this, he wrote in that sort of mid, mid part of the century, mid late part of the 20th century. He was like born and I think like 1900 and like died in like 85. So he saw the complete run of communism and, and, uh, and Nazism. Oh, and himself, you know, fled the, I think he fled Europe and, and you know, the whole thing.
Starting point is 03:54:24 Um, and, um, you know the whole thing. And his big conclusion was basically that both communism and Nazism and fascism were basically religions, but in the deep way of religions. He called them political religions, but they were like actual religions. And they were what Nietzsche forecasted when he said, God is dead, we've killed him and we won't wash the blood off our hands for a thousand years, right? Is we will come up with new religions that will just cause just mass murder and death. And you read his stuff now and you're like, yep, that happened, right? And then of course, as fully elite moderants, of course, we couldn't possibly
Starting point is 03:55:00 be doing that for ourselves right now, but of course we are. And I would argue that Eric Vogel and for sure would argue that the last 10 years, we have been in a religious frenzy. The woke has been a full-scale religious frenzy and has had all of the characteristics of a religion, including everything from patron saints to holy texts to sin. It's that every aspect of a And it said, yeah, wokeness has said every aspect of a, wokeness has said every, I think it's that every single aspect of an actual religion other than redemption, right? Which is maybe like the most dangerous religion
Starting point is 03:55:33 you could ever come up with is the one where there's no forgiveness, right? And so I think if Vogel and we're alive, I think he would have zeroed right in on that, would have said that. And, you know, we just like sailed right off. I mentioned earlier, like we somehow ever rediscovered the religions of the Indo Europeans. We're all into identity politics and environmentalism.
Starting point is 03:55:50 Like I don't think that's an accident. So it's, it's anyway, like there, there was something very deep going on in the human psyche, um, on religion that is not dismissible and needs to be taken seriously, even if one struggles with the specifics of it. I think I speak for a lot of people. That has been a real joy and for me an honor to get to watch you, uh, seek to understand the human psyche, as you described you're in that 30 year part of your life.
Starting point is 03:56:18 Um, and it's been an honor to talk with you today. Thank you, Mark. Thank you, Alex. Is that it? That's the only, the only thing that's left is the, the, the, the, the described during that 30 year part of your life. And it's been an honor to talk with you today. Thank you, Mark. Thank you, Alex. Is that it?
Starting point is 03:56:28 That's only, only, how long is that? Four hours with Mark Andreessen. It's like 40 hours of actual content. So I'll accept being one of the short ones. Oh, for the listener, Mark looks like he's ready to go for 20 more hours and I need a nap. Thank you, Mark. Thank you, Lex. Thanks for listening to this conversation with Mark Andreessen. To support this podcast,
Starting point is 03:56:54 please check out our sponsors in the description. And now let me leave you with some words from Thomas Sowell. It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance. Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.