Open Book with Anthony Scaramucci - March 2026 Q&A: America Going Broke, Working for Trump, Books You Must Read
Episode Date: March 10, 2026In this month’s Q&A episode of Open Book, I answer questions from viewers across YouTube, Instagram, LinkedIn, and X on topics ranging from politics and global markets to career decisions, philosoph...y, and parenting. We cover Citizens United, the national debt, and the future of crypto, while also offering personal insights on finding your calling, managing time, and navigating difficult moments in life. 📚 Books recommended in this video: Meditations by Marcus Aurelius https://amzn.to/4uoAo2k The Iliad by Homer https://amzn.to/4uhpR8S The Odyssey by Homer https://amzn.to/4uflV8V Lincoln at Gettysburg by Gary Wills https://amzn.to/4dd5Iux The British Are Coming by Rick Atkinson https://amzn.to/4ullaLh American Scripture by Pauline Maier https://amzn.to/40hBcZ1 Traitor to His Class by H. W. Brands https://amzn.to/40TB4z3 The Bible (King James Version) https://amzn.to/4rlTUd6 Ryan Holiday’s books https://amzn.to/4s7xDRw Anthony Scaramucci is the founder and managing partner of SkyBridge, a global alternative investment firm, and founder and chairman of SALT, a global thought leadership forum and venture studio. Pre-order my next book, All the Wrong Moves: How Three Catastrophic Decisions Led to the Rise of Trump, out on the 17th of September in the UK and the 22nd of September in the US: https://linktr.ee/anthonyscaramucci Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Open Book.
host, Anthony Scaramucci. Happy March, everybody. In New York, it's still cold, but the spring is on the way.
So good news and good times ahead. So I've gone through almost everybody's comments. I just want to say
thank you to everybody. Those of you that I didn't get to, please send them because we're doing this
once a month. And we're looking at YouTube X, LinkedIn, Instagram. And it's just really great
stuff coming in. And I really do appreciate your support for the show. And if you enjoy open
book or any of the other content that we're putting out on our channel. Could you do me a favor?
There's a subscribe button somewhere because you hit the subscribe button. It just helps us out with
the algorithm and I would be grateful. Okay, so let's get into it. And we will start with
YouTube. This is Edda Sandoval, 4164. Citizens United was pivot in our politics. How could
that be reversed or reform to separate private money and influence in American people?
politics. So no question. I talk about this all the time. That decision in January of 2010
has been a disaster for the United States because literally the rich people, the rich corporations
bought the Congress and ultimately the president. And I'll just go back 15 short years ago.
These guys are now spending five times the amount of money that they were once spending in the
political theater. So this is just a
staggering stump. And I'll just let people know, if you look at the legislative agenda over the last
15 years, it's big food, big business, big pharma, it's corporate tax cuts, it's corporate welfare,
bailouts for banks, bailouts for other industries. And the little guy, now little guy's not in there.
And that's the big problem. And that's why you're seeing the systemic rise of populism and this great
frustration with the system. So what do you do? Well,
You could have the Supreme Court reverse the decision. They did that on a racial discrimination case. They said Plessy versus Ferguson, you could have separate but equal facilities for blacks and whites that caused tremendous amounts of segregation in the South and other areas. It took 80 years. Brown versus Board of Education sort of reversed that decision. So they could reverse it. You could get to the Congress and say, hey, we got to stop it. And you could congressionally.
legislated way. I don't really think you could do it through executive action. Actually, I've
looked at that. So those are the big ways to do it, but it does need to be reversed. We probably
would even, if we had the strength to do this, we would probably prefer a constitutional amendment,
something that really codifies this. Okay, Instagram, Island Construction, will the federal debt
hurt us significantly? It's a big maybe on that. I can't say definitively if the federal
debt is going to hurt us significantly. We have $40 trillion of debt, but we really do have a
tremendous economy and tremendous resources in the country. I remember the United States itself
owns about 28% of the land of the 50 United States. And so there's assets, resources, oil,
natural resources under the land. You know, somebody did a balance sheet analysis of the U.S. and
said probably have over $100 trillion in assets on the balance sheet. And,
with $40 trillion of the debt, it's serviceable and or manageable, where things would get hairy
is if our tax base started to shrink and we couldn't meet the interest payments through the
tax base.
If we ended up having to borrow the money to pay back the interest on the money that we borrowed,
that would cause what my friend Ray Dalio calls a super debt cycle.
And so we got to hope that that doesn't happen.
So could it hurt us, yes?
or there are ways to correct it, sure.
But again, this would require the Congress to slow down the growth of spending.
And if you do that just slightly and just let the economy's growth catch up to the growth in
spending, we probably would be fine.
You can't spend 27% of the GDP from the federal spending.
The right numbers and when Clinton was running a budget surplus is closer to 20%.
Now, maybe you can't get there overnight, but you can get there.
and that's something that we should really be considering.
LinkedIn.
Karee Ivar Gaskrud.
Man, I really hope I pronounced her name right now.
If I didn't, I apologize.
But what is the biggest risk to global markets
over the next five years that most institutional investors
are still ignoring?
So, you know, listen, there's lots of risk.
I don't want to say that there isn't,
but there's also tremendous amount of opportunity.
So some of the risks are dislocation in jobs.
We have to be really careful about that.
We have to manage that process as it relates to AI
and the introduction of robotics,
the introduction of technology that can help people work less.
We just want to make sure they don't get paid less while they're working less
because that could set up a nightmare.
Second risk is always geopolitical.
Everybody knows that we're in a fight right now with Iran.
I, as an institutional investor, of course, would like that to simmer down
because we like more tranquility for markets.
It allows for capital to flow around the world
and decrease prosperity globally.
But yeah, those are the risks, basically.
And I don't really see unknown unknowns,
like Donald Rumsfeld used to say
that people aren't really talking about.
But if I think of things in the next question-and-answer session,
I'll bring them up.
But those are the big ones,
and I think those are the most important ones.
Okay.
Now, this is Benjamin 7978307 in the darkest times.
What philosophy should we adopt?
Well, listen, I'm obviously a practicing Catholic.
I've said that often.
I'm a Roman Catholic, raised Catholic.
And so I have my faith that helps me get through a lot of difficult times.
I have talked about stoicism on this program and the idea that we're only here really for a minute.
and to just take in today, if you can live in the present, you can really de-escalate your anxiety.
And so Lao Zhu, the Chinese philosopher for many thousands of years ago, once said,
if you're thinking too much about your past, well, guess what happens?
You have regrets.
Of course, you do.
You made decisions that you wish you didn't do.
You really can't go back and change them.
And so sometimes we live with some level of depression or regret.
If you think too much about your future, well, guess what?
The future is unknown.
at least it's unknown to us.
And so as it's unfolding, it can create anxiety because we recognize there's just so little about
life that we ourselves actually control.
So what Lao Zhu said, don't think too much about the past.
You'll get depressed.
Don't think too much about the future.
You'll end up getting anxious.
But think about the present.
Focus your mind in the present and let the past go away.
Get that millstone of regret off your neck.
I mean, I got my ass fire from the whiteouts after 11.
days. I don't sit around and kick myself in the pants every morning when I wake up. Take the
millstone of regret. Put it down. Go forward. And don't worry about the future because just only
so much of it that's in your control. Focus on today. That's where lots of the variables are that
you yourself can control. Okay. This is Ort Slamrow 9661. Hi, Anthony. In a recent reel,
you said you decided against working at a law firm after finishing law school.
Why did you make that choice?
So it's a great question.
It's about a calling.
You know, I worked at a law firm for the summer.
Actually, two summers I worked in law firms.
And, you know, listen, a lot of my friends now, 40 years in the law, they've had amazing experiences.
They've made great money.
It's a phenomenal career.
I don't want to underestimate the phenomenal.
nature of the career, but it just wasn't for me. And I knew if I found my way to Wall Street,
and I found my way ultimately into the money management, that was more interesting. I feel like
I love business and the business of understanding other businesses is being a capital analyst
or a capital allocator on Wall Street. So it's about a calling. And remember the word vocation.
it comes from the Latin derivative of the word calling vocare.
And so you have to feel it in yourself what you like.
Do what you like.
And guess why?
You never work a day.
So like the law, but I don't love the law as much as I love business.
So anyway, Instagram Summit, Timis.
How many hours a night do you sleep?
What's your exercise like?
Any alcohol intake?
I mean, it's a great question.
So last night, I did not sleep well.
hence the coffee. I get iced coffee here to get me revved up. But I'm typically trying to sleep
seven to eight hours a night, if possible. When I'm traveling, that is completely impossible.
And so what I would tell you about your sleep, don't stress about it. Get up, do your best.
Who cares? Try to get the seven or eight hours. You will feel better. It will help your immune system,
but don't overly stress about it, particularly you have a high stress job. Exercise. I'm in the gym.
at least four times a week.
Doing a lot of walking at 62.
You know,
you got to protect the joints a little more.
It's doing a lot of running at 32,
doing a lot of walking at 62.
Inclined walking is probably the best way to lose fat.
But yes,
I also lift weights to the extent that I can.
And alcohol intake.
I'm not a teetotaler.
Don't want to say that.
I'm not a pedantic guy.
If you enjoy a glass of wine here or there,
you should do it.
Of course, who cares?
Just don't tip it over into too big of a harmful habit.
But I'm not a drinker.
And so if I have an occasional glass of champagne, you were there to celebrate somebody's
birthday or anniversary, I'll certainly do that.
But I'm actually, you won't, you won't see me drinking a lot.
And Caddy Kay often teases me about that.
My podcast hosts on the rest of politics, U.S.
It's not European enough for some of these people, but that's how I am.
Okay.
Aslan Kat, this is coming out of X, is the ex-Prince-Prinx.
Andrew's arrest going to put pressure on the US DOJ to appear to be doing more about the Epstein
files. I do, I do think that actually. And I had said that on the politics show the rest of
politics, U.S. I said that if I was his defense attorney, I would be getting people like
Galane Maxwell to testify because it would open up a seam of worry for the Department of Justice.
There's a cover up going on at the Department of Justice. I think it's pretty obvious. And so we'll
just have to see how it unfolds, but all of these variables out there are going to put some pressure
on the people that are orchestrating this cover up. Okay. YouTube, David Dement,
4647, I would love to hear more about your kids' journeys in the arts. It's something I wanted
to do, but fell into a job I don't love. What the success looked like to them, and would you ever
encourage a safety net? So, listen, it's a tough question for me because I always try to create space,
for my children. Don't want to be too pedantic here where I'm taking too much credit for my kids or
anything like that. We've just been fortunate where I have done reasonably well to provide that
safety net as you're describing and I'm doing my best to my can to help them. I did not have a
safety net. So you don't need a safety net to do what you really love. I guess the big message here
about the journey is find something that you really love
and see if you can get the gumption and the courage to go do that thing
because what is happening is the universe starts coming your way
in so many different ways. Okay, so that's my best answer for that one.
How do you structure your calendar to allocate time for kids, marriage, and the firm?
This is Richard Lorenzen from Instagram.
So good question. Okay, so when you think about it like this.
Here's a jar.
We got a jar.
You got rocks and you got sand.
Okay?
Just how you got to think about your time.
The rocks are the most important things.
They go in the jar first.
Your family, your kids, the employees and the partners at the firm, their needs.
They go in the jar first, right?
Those are the rocks.
Then the sand goes in.
So that could be things like exercise even.
Okay.
That could be things like, I don't know, reading books, going on vacation, whatever it might be.
But you take that and you pour it in after.
Okay.
And if you think about it from that metaphor, it finds its way through the rocks.
If you take the sand, you put the sand in first, then you try to put the rocks on top of the sand.
You don't have enough room for everything.
So prioritize.
You're not going to do everything every day, meaning it could be all business for 72 hours.
and then I could be all family for 75 hours.
Who the hell knows?
But don't hold yourself.
And again, don't be upset if it's not going perfectly.
I think that's the best way to manage stress
is not to be upset when it's not going perfectly.
Who do you believe will do a better job running the country?
This is Barry S. Barry.
So I guess you're saying is Democrats are Republicans
who would do a better job of running the country.
I actually think independence would do a better job of running the country.
I think people who are of reasonable mind and don't want the tribalism and want to focus on
the kinetic things that put us together as opposed to the cultural things maybe that may pull
us apart or even the economic things.
And so I'm really hoping that we go into some type of postpartisan mode at some point
where people just get fatigued from the nonsense and we get to something that's a little bit more
postpartisan and we get to something that's a little bit more beneficial for the country
than the hard left swinging or the hard right swinging that goes on right now.
Okay, this is Brighton Gien.
6256.
Hey, Anthony, from Australia.
I'm a fan of yours.
Thank you.
Listening to the rest of the policy at Open Books.
I just started my first year studying at law school and I know you studied at Harvard.
Any tips and advice?
Yes.
Go to your upperclassmen.
second and third year law school, try to find some friends in the upper class,
maybe even have an advisor or student advisor, and get copies of last year's tests.
Totally legal to do that.
Test change all the time, but get copies of the test so you can see what the professors
think are important about what you're studying.
If you're in law school and you've got 1,500 pages to read and you start at page 1 and
you read from page one to page 50, it's going to be a very hard time in law school. You have to
reverse engineer what's important and you've got to work off a summary sometimes or maybe use
AI to get the gist of what people think are important and study that. That's my recommendation.
And that's what I tried to do. And there were a lot less services available back in that day,
but you've got a lot of services now, take advantage of them. Okay. Libetine, maybe, Instagram. What are your
top three favorite historical periods to read about in any book recommendations. Well, listen,
I've always got books around me, tons of books. I've been reading a lot about the Revolutionary
War. I would say Atkinson's book about that war are phenomenal. I would say Pauline Meyer on the
Declaration of Independence, she's now passed now, but she was a professor of Harvard,
constitutional scholar at Harvard. Anything that she's written, I have read about that period of time
other great period of time for me is the World War II.
And I've read most of that stuff.
H.W. Brands is coming out with a book on George Washington.
It's coming out this spring.
I would certainly recommend that to you.
He's also written a book called Trader to his class about FDR,
which I also think is a brilliant, brilliant book about the war
and about getting through the Great Depression.
So those periods of time are important for me because they really shaped America
and if America is one of the greatest countries in history,
if not the greatest in terms of its economic prowess,
its military footprint, and general freedoms,
I would say to you that those periods of time really shaped America.
So those are my favorites there.
Let's keep going.
Thank you for that question, by the way.
Instagram, I'm sorry, X.
This is X-I-A-A-W-3.
I'm curious to know what your thoughts are
on the next big shift in finance.
Well, it's crypto and it's tokenization.
That's the next big shift, whether people like it or not.
And apparently there are like left-leaning economists that right screeds against crypto.
Peter Schiff's still out there hating on crypto and I get all that.
But the technology is going to transform the financial services industry.
So it is crypto.
So let's go there with crypto.
I think that's going to be the big shift.
Learn about that.
I think it's very important for you to learn about it.
And you don't have to invest in it, but you have to learn about it.
Okay, Jack, Carlo, what impressed you when you're working with Mark Carney at Goldman early in both of your careers?
Well, I actually didn't work with Mark, so I don't want to talk about that because he was actually on the investment banking side.
I was on the asset management side.
We're in a training class together.
I know Mark a very, very long time.
I really got to know him through the World Economic Forum more closely.
and with his time at the Bank of England when I was on both the Romney and the Trump economic teams in 2012 and 2016.
And so what impresses me about him is he's kind.
And what impresses me about him is that he has a vision for Canada and he's also a tough technocrat.
And so he's not going to back down in a situation if his principles are anchoring him to that position.
So real leadership requires that.
And I would say the best thing I could ever say about Mark Carney, he's very trustworthy.
And so he says he's going to do something.
He's going to do it.
I think that's great for the Canadian people.
And he's the right leader at the right time for Canada.
So I wish him continued success.
I got the bit, you know, it's probably flattering myself by saying this.
So forgive me, but I had the opportunity to speak to him at my wine party in Davos after his speech in Davos, which I think will go down historically.
as one of the best speeches rendered at the World Economic Forum.
And pay close attention to him.
He's a great role model.
Okay, let's go to Wilson 2394.
Two questions.
In today's world, if you had a 14-year-old,
you wanted to give him and her the gift of judgment
with all the fake info, with AI,
becoming increasingly hard to success.
What lasting advice would you give them to navigate?
Who are the three people in the financial and economic world
when they speak?
You listen.
Okay, so let's talk about giving advice to kids. So you're going to be careful. You don't want them to live your life. You want them to live their life. There's Lebanese poet by the name of Gahil Gibran. It's probably from the turn of the 20th century, early a 20th century literature, Lebanese Christian writing about children. He said, you could really only be the bow. They're the arrow. So you've got to just be firm in your guidance.
but when they leave you, they're going to a place that you could never get to.
It's not your place. It's their place. And so I think the philosophies and I think that we have to
teach people is to follow their guts, follow their insights, follow their enthusiasms and their
love of life and don't spend a lot of time judging them. I think that's probably the best advice I can
give on three or four people. Well, for sure, Warren Buffett. Jamie Diamond, I think is probably one of the
smartest people in the industry. I don't agree with everything that he says at all times.
But when he's talking, I'm listening. And by the way, if I don't agree with them, I say,
okay, he's smarter than me. Let me go figure out what he's thinking and why. And maybe that will
influence my point of view. Ray Dalio, I think he's somebody that I always look up to.
Somebody that I think really has a good insight on what's going on. There's so many others,
you know, Stan Drucker-Milly is more quiet. Ken Langone, a founder of Home Depot.
who's now Langone Medical Center, NYU.
Those are people I look up to and I talk to and listen when they're speaking.
Okay.
YouTube, Scott Kunda, 7VW, can you explain the conflicting view of trade deficits and the
overall deficit?
I hear the tariffs have brought the overall deficit down, but the trade deficits are
still big.
Can you explain?
Okay.
I can't explain.
And so I want to think about this from your own life.
I trade deficit would be if you're buying something from China and you get the, you send them your
money, they now have your money in their account.
You have their goods.
Did China buy anything back from you?
Like, let's say they sold you an electronic.
Did you sell them oil or did you sell them a car or something like that?
And so the difference in the account between what you bought from China and what you sold to two
China is the trade deficit.
Okay.
And so that's the best way I can describe in the simplest terms of trade deficit.
The overall deficit is very different.
You have tax revenues that are coming in and a result of which you are then using that
money to spend on the military or resources or social spending or whatever it may be.
And unfortunately, those tax revenues are below what you actually want to spend.
So you go into the capital markets and you borrow money.
from people to spend on top of that. And so as you do that, you start to accumulate a deficit.
So you have an operating deficit, which is our annual deficit per year, and then you have an
overall debt to the American people, which is now closing on $40 trillion. So it sounds
staggering, but it is manageable. And, you know, when you talk about tariffs, I'll just be
very clear with you on tariffs. I think this is an important thing to say. They've marked
marginally helped the deficit. They brought in some revenues and marginally helped the deficit,
but they've also hurt the industries and they've also hurt our manufacturing here in the United
States. And so Wall Street Journal had a great article on this a few weeks ago talking about
how they have actually hurt because if you have an airplane as an example, and Boeing's
making that airplane here in the United States, well, 60% of the component,
of the airplane are coming from overseas. So if you're taxing all of those components,
you're really disrupting the supply chain in the U.S. You're not getting the effect that you would
like. There are better things to do, enterprise zones, tax-free enterprise zones,
things like that, I think would have been more successful. But that's the best explanation I can
give you. Lynn Flurry, what is the most influential book that you've ever read? So most people are
to say the Bible of the Bibles that I have read, the King James version is probably the most
influential. But other than that, I would say Aurelius' book Meditations. I think that if you
read Aurelius' book Meditations or any of the Ryan Holiday books around Stoicism, I think you'd be
very well grounded. You'd also have to read, in my opinion, the Iliad and the Odyssey,
everything's in there, you know. If you really want me to be philosophical, you read the
The Odyssey, Aurelius and Shakespeare, and you've got yourself a liberal arts education,
and you'll be very well grounded in a lot of different things.
Okay.
Let's keep going.
If you could pass change one law, what would it be?
And why?
Pest Spona from Instagram.
So listen, I'm going to be greedy here.
I'm going to give you two laws.
Number one, I would end Citizens United.
Number two, I would end gerrymandering in the United States, and I would force these people to
leave their adversaries in their districts so that they could compete on ideas as opposed to
be in a gerrymandered system where the politicians are picking the voters. I think if you're in a
true democracy, the voters should pick the politicians, not the other way around. So those are the
two. As in all of the, the Civil War is a major gap in my historical. This is from Joel Wendy,
on my historical knowledge.
Can you recommend a couple of good books on the subject?
You know, I'm going to recommend one book to you, sir, okay?
And it's a short book, but I have it here.
And it's Lincoln at Gettysburg,
and it's written by Gary Wills about 35 years ago.
And read that book.
After you're done reading that book, take a deep breath.
And you could read Bruce Katten's books about the Civil War and things like that.
But take the book on Lincoln at Gettysburg.
It's a short book.
You read that.
I think you'll be well ahead of the game.
You see SFI at X.
How did you miss all the negative character judgment of Trump when you supported them?
Very good question.
I didn't.
I didn't miss it.
I didn't miss it.
I mean, you know, when you're in the political world, you got to take the good and the bad.
I didn't miss it.
I didn't think it was going to go ballistic or as crazy as it's gone.
People don't remember this.
and they want to attack me for it, and they have the right to do that, and that's fine.
But he started out as a Democrat.
He always spoke for 20 years that I knew him as a centrist Republican.
The fact that he went this sort of alt-right proto-fascism is something that did surprise me.
Now, a lot of people say, oh, no, I saw that, and I knew he was going to do that and all this other thing.
And so they're obviously smarter than me.
but I guess what I took into play was he was a 70-year-old guy going to the presidency,
had some reasonable success in his career,
and I thought he was going to try to take the country in a postpartisan way.
I got that wrong, but at least I was smart enough and honest enough to admit that and tell people that.
So can't be anything more than upfront with you about it, but I did get it wrong.
Okay, that's a wrap on today's Q&A episode of Open Book.
I'm reading all your comments.
I love hearing from you guys.
Keep sending in the questions.
Make you or you subscribe, please, to see the latest episodes and also to be able to submit the questions.
If I missed something, which, of course, I did, will be back next month with another round of questions.
Until then, let's keep the conversation going.
I'll see you next time.
And by the way, apparently these Q&A sessions are very popular.
So thank you for that.
Let's keep it going.
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