PBD Podcast - Trump's Iran Speech PANICS The Market | PBD #768
Episode Date: April 2, 2026Patrick Bet-David is joined by Richard Werner and Luke Gromen break down Donald Trump’s Iran war address, crude oil prices surging past $100 per barrel, U.S. dollar weakness in global markets, and F...ederal Reserve pressure over inflation, interest rates, and economic outlook.------📺 SUBSCRIBE TO LUKE GROMEN'S FFTT, LLC: https://bit.ly/3OgGy4c💰 LUKE GROMEN'S FFTT, LLC: https://bit.ly/47yPzfCⓂ️ MINNECT WITH RICHARD WERNER: https://bit.ly/3NSJ8NN✍️ SUBSCRIBE TO RICHARD WERNER'S SUBSTACK: https://bit.ly/4s7AVDdⓂ️ CONNECT ON MINNECT: https://bit.ly/4kSVkso Ⓜ️ PBD PODCAST CIRCLES: https://bit.ly/4mAWQAP👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: https://bit.ly/4lzQph2 🥃 BOARDROOM CIGAR LOUNGE: https://bit.ly/4pzLEXj🇰 KALSHI: http://kalshi.com/pbd💬 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time!ABOUT US:Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Did you ever think you would make it?
I feel I'm supposed to take sweetly.
I know this life's meant for me.
Adam, what's your point?
The future looks bright.
My handshake is better than anything I ever signed.
Right here.
You are a one of one?
My son's right there.
I think I've ever said this before.
Okay, so lots going on.
We got to react to last night's speech that the president gave.
We have Richard Werner here.
Godfather of quantitative easing. We got Luke Roman here on macroeconomics and our microeconomics.
We have Vincent O'Shanna here with us as well. A lot happened yesterday, right? To give some numbers here
before we get into it. Rob, why don't you start off with the clip? Why don't you start off with the
clip on what the president said that made the futures go berserk? This is the exact moment.
Everybody was waiting to see what the speech was going to be. Was there going to be a big announcement?
Was there going to be something massive, positive?
You know, the Gulf states are going to pay for the war.
What was it at the end when this comment was made?
I will share with you what happened to the markets.
Go ahead, Rob.
The progress we've made, I can say tonight that we are on track to complete all of America's military objectives shortly, very shortly.
We are going to hit them extremely hard over the next two to three weeks.
We're going to bring them back to the Stone Ages where they belong.
In the meantime, discussions are ongoing.
regime change was not our goal. We never said regime change, but regime change has occurred because of
all of their original leaders' death. They're all dead. The new group is less radical and much more
reasonable. Yet if during this period of time no deal is made, we have our eyes on key targets.
If there is no deal, we are going to. Okay, SMP futures, down 1.448. Dow 1.36. Oil, gas prices right now,
12 and 17, 112.17, it skyrocketed. While this is going on, you know, at the same time,
we're hearing a bunch of other news that took place. And, you know, that statement,
Bitcoin drop. Markets concerned, people are worried. What's going to be happening? He did talk
about the 4 million, you know, kids in America right now have that Trump account that's been
created, which was some of the good news that he shared. But, you know, people, some people are
even speculating that the news was so scary for some people that even the Artemis 2 that went
to space yesterday because of the speech, the toilet stopped working because, now, now, that's
speculation. I don't want you to go fact check me on this and ask, you know, Grok or some of these
other things, but people were expecting something else, Richard, why did the market react so negatively
to yesterday's speech? Well, in many ways, there was no news. There was no sort of real new announcement.
And to the contrary, there was perhaps, well, there was disappointment.
For one, the time scale, the timeline stayed pretty vague.
We're told, well, it's going to soon end, but we've heard that before.
And there wars that are going to end soon, and they go on for a very long time thereafter.
Yeah, he repeated, on this clip, as we saw, is going to bomb Iran to the Stone Age from henceforth, which is a big task.
It's a major country.
And actually, didn't he care about the Iranian people?
Wasn't that in the beginning of the story?
That's the criticism right now.
So all these contradictions, and that's just the, you know,
there's just to be the iceberg, I think.
Luke, what do you think?
First, what do you think about the speech, too?
Why do you think the market reacted so aggressively to back to Stone Ages?
I think exactly what Richard said, were the contradictions.
I mean, I received texts from institutional clients around the country.
said they should have called this speech stuck.
Another one said this could have been an email.
But I think why the markets ultimately I freaked out
and then carried through on that freak out
is what he said about the Strait of Hormuz
and the contradiction therein,
which is he said something along the lines
that it'll open up on its own eventually, naturally,
maybe our allies will help us.
And the contradiction within that is...
Well, not really our allies will help us.
He even said they got to figure out themselves
and we'll help them if they need it,
but I think they have it themselves, like almost leaving it to a NATO and some of the others to figure out for themselves.
Yeah, I think that's right.
And there's a huge contradiction therein.
We're the greatest military in the world.
We are the reserve currency issuer.
Our job is to use our deep water, deep blue water navy to maintain freedom of navigation for the world.
That is why the world, there's a big reason why the world uses the dollar as the reserve currency.
And so if we say, hey, this isn't our problem.
Number one, that starts to raise serious questions about why am I paying the Americans for weapons?
Why am I paying the Americans to hold dollars?
And then also, at a more fundamental level, if we're winning, why can't we open the Strait-Hormuz?
If their Navy has been devastated, if their Air Force is devastated, if their offensive capabilities have been devastated,
why can no ships sail through there?
Why do you think?
Well, forget about what I think.
What I'm being told is that, yes, their Navy is destroyed.
Yes, their Air Force is destroyed.
and this isn't where their power was.
Their power was in missiles and drones,
and I'm hearing we've destroyed less missiles than we thought.
There was a story talking about this on Reuters last week,
where we originally were taking Israeli intelligence,
and they were saying, yeah, we got 70% in the first couple of weeks.
Last week, Reuters said, well, it's closer to a third,
which means it's probably a little less than that.
It's sounding, I'm hearing very credible rumblings,
that more of their missiles were deeper underground than we thought,
And the reality is, is these drones, it's not different for us than it's been for the Russians in Ukraine,
which is to say something very important has happened in this last four or five weeks of war in the same way it happened in Ukraine,
which is the very nature of warfare has fundamentally changed in a way that has arguably not happened since black powder rifles were used to take down heavy cavalry whenever that was four or five hundred years ago.
And that is that Iran is using missiles and drones to stand off the United States.
States Navy in a naval choke point. And so while there's something called Mahan doctrine,
which is you control naval choke points, you control the world. And that has been in force for
four or five hundred years. British Navy, well, three, four hundred years. British Navy under the
British Empire taken over by the American with the United States Navy. Navies have been the ones
to control those naval choke points. And here we have in live living color for the first time in
three, four hundred years, a land-based power. And one, oh, by the United States, and one, oh, by the ones,
by the way, that is probably not even a top five and maybe not even a top 10 military,
standing off the United States Navy in a naval choke point.
The relative power dynamic has shifted.
So now you have this, I think when you layer that onto what we're looking at with oil,
there's this massive markets, I think, are starting to discount.
Okay, there is some sort of major change taking place here.
And it's going to be a lot harder and messier to reopen this via naval force.
I think they're not sailing through because they're,
they don't want to wake up. I think Trump most of all, but none of us want to wake up to a scene
of a U.S. Naval Destroyer on fire or sinking. That's what I think the issue is. Vinny.
Well, yesterday you made a great point. Trump, the president, listens to everything. He reads everything.
He knows the pulse. Remember we talked about this? And I think, you know, he had to come out and
people around them are like, you're going to have to go out there and you're going to say something and show
strength and say that we're on on on on the path and they let them know that it's going to go a
little bit long and everything but we were under as a regular american that just follows what he
sees and and and reads we were told that the first attack was at the summer where we went in we
bombed it was clean we left that was it we took out all their nuclear launching capabilities
come to find out now we were told it was for the people i haven't heard a single thing from
anybody on the ground any iranians the protesters here are like yes we wanted please how
help us. Their internet's down. We don't know what the hell is going on. And I think the miscommunication
is, let's just say, ready for this? We take out all their leaders and we keep knocking out
all these people that are on top. You think their military, whoever becomes a leader now is going
like, okay, we'll follow this guy. These people are very, very stuck on their ideology. They have
America in there with Israel bombing the hell out of them, Pat. I don't know. I have a feeling that
the president was, I'm about he's he's an alpha, he does what he wants, but the people in his ear,
Like Lindsay Graham, when Lindsay Graham did a thing on Wall Street Journal reported,
he was visiting the president saying, hey, Roosevelt, think about your legacy, do this.
A bunch of people was like, yeah, let's go in there.
Is it going to be like Venezuela?
Yeah, let's go in there.
And then now we're there and it's like, uh-oh, longer.
And what was it?
Short-term pain for long-term game.
They kept saying that.
Short-term pain.
I don't see this not going a year, at least a year.
You think it's going to go a year?
Are you there as well?
You think it's going to go a year?
That's the risk that it could be very long, potentially even longer than a year.
and really what, you know, from a European perspective, what we currently see, because, you know, as Luke explained, and this is actually not surprising what has happened so far.
I mean, Iran so far had not used its power to close the Strait of Hormuz, but it was always capable of doing that, but it chose not to.
Of course, being suddenly attacked during negotiations and its leadership being assassinated.
and so on.
You can see from their viewpoint, OK, well, now we
have to do a bit more.
And they close the straight.
So in other words, it's not a surprise.
So from a European perspective, actually,
what's really happened now is, under President Biden,
the number one energy supply line to Europe
was cut the North Stream 2 pipeline from Russia to Germany.
Under President Trump now, the second lifeline of energy,
has been cut, which is through the Strait of Hormuz.
So really what's happening, and none of that
is sort of a surprise.
If you sort of take these actions, this is the result,
revealed preference, we have to assume that's what.
Those behind the scenes who advise the president
want it because it's not surprising.
So really, one of the goals seem to be
to totally de-industrialize and destroy Europe.
I think we're witnessing the implementation
of the Morgantau Plan proposed by former,
well at the time, the Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthal,
which was that after the, you know,
after 1945, the post-war era,
Germany needs to be totally annihilated,
the industry needs to be taken out,
and needs to be de-industrialized, degrowth,
although they didn't use that word, but,
and even the population needs to be replaced.
And that's the program that seems to have,
got into motion with a delay, but from 2015 onwards, and now it's really, you know, on steroids,
and that's really what's happening. Now, you'd expect that there be somebody in Europe who said,
well, hang on, hang on, what's going on. We've got to find solutions. And of course,
President Trump, in his speech yesterday, did say, well, you know, okay, this is what happened,
this is happening, and we continue to do our job. Looking after the Strait of Hormuz and energy
supplied Europe, well, that's Europe's job effectively. You know, he's saying, so they should take care of that.
And if there was sort of proper leadership in Europe, then they could now take the necessary steps.
And yesterday, you know, actually April 1st, there was a great message on social media saying,
oh, German government announcement by the Chancellor, we're going to build 15 more nuclear power plants,
We're going to rebuild the Nord Stream 2 pipeline.
We're going to get energy here.
We're going to change our energy policy to make sure we've got all the energy.
It was an April Fool's Day joke.
You know, listing sensible policies in Europe has become an April Fool's Day joke.
Can you believe it?
Because this is not what Europe is saying.
So what is happening?
Where is European leadership in this?
They're just watching as the European economy gets decimated
in a bigger scheme in which President Trump is playing a role.
And you could argue he's looking after America
because America is going to get a lot of demand now from the world for energy.
And he said you guys can come to us.
We have unlimited supply of oil.
Yeah, exactly.
And this is something that I think in the current debate
still is not really discussed enough.
And too few people are aware of this,
including, I think, the advisors around President Trump,
that essentially what happened is in the whole post-war era,
Germany has never become a sovereign country.
Legally, it's still an occupied territory.
The occupation statutes are de facto still valid
and are being used by the deep state, the US deep state.
And there's no peace treaty in the UN Charter.
Germany is still enemy country.
The constitution is still suspended.
It has what is done for occupied countries
only basic law.
It's not a sovereign country, and the leadership is essentially there
to administer the zone for the occupation powers.
And, of course, you know, it's the biggest occupation force in the world
is stationed in Germany, U.S. troops, 70,000, 80,000 troops.
And, of course, it's a major platform also for the Middle Eastern Warfares.
Or, you know, via Ramstein and other U.S. bases, the CIA bases in Germany.
They love it because what they do there,
unlike when what they do stuff in America
in Germany they can argue it's legal
when they do stuff here it's technically illegal
because they don't actually see
it doesn't have the powers it's it's you know
it's using as Fletcher Prouty showed in his great book
The Secret Team
and he was a critic he was an insider you know
he was the chairman of the Joint Chief of Staff of COVID Operations
for charge of COVID operations
and and so the deep state
has been using this as a power base
also against president
Trump early on because in Germany they can do whatever.
So and as part of this agenda the EU was created.
Now a lot of people think well Europe there's all these great democracies.
Now with Germany you see it's not true it's an occupied territory there's an
occupation administration but also for the EU in total this is not true
because a structure was created this European Union with the European Commission.
Now you do have a European Parliament that gives you
the impression of it must be a democracy.
But you know what this is modeled on?
These documents have been declassified.
It was a CIA plan to create a United States of Europe,
which they then called European Union.
Sometimes they do say United States of Europe.
What year is it?
This was in the post-war years.
So from, you know, 47, 48 onwards,
you've got a lot going on in the 50s and 60s
and all the key guys, the founding fathers of Europe,
actually now revealed,
revealed, as a matter of public record, as CIA agents, Jean Monnet. You know, if you could
buildings named in Brussels and streets named after these people, they're all CIA agents. Their
goal was to create this dominance by the deep state that exists over Germany as an occupied
country, over the whole of Europe, sort of extend that. And this has happened. Now, people
think, well, there's a parliament and there's a proper structure. What are you talking about? This
is a democracy. No, the CIA always had this chip on the shoulder and was always jealous looking at
the KGB and the Soviet Union.
And the central planners love
the Soviet Union system. It's a central plan
system, right? And they
use that as a model, and that is what the EU
is modeled on. You see, the Soviet Union
technically was a democracy.
Of course we all laughed. That's a joke. Well, they had
a parliament. So what's the difference?
Well, the parliament wasn't full of
lawmakers because they couldn't write a
single law. All the laws
were written and proposed
by the Politburo, which was
unelected central planners.
That is the model they chose.
So the European Parliament is, there's no lawmakers there.
They're highly paid.
They call themselves members of Parliament, but they haven't proposed a single law.
They haven't written a single law.
100% of the laws are written and are proposed and then pushed through by the unelected Politburo called the European Commission, these commissars.
It's the Soviet central planning system.
So we have actually a dictatorship in Europe, and it was established by the,
the deep state by the CIA and is run by the CIA.
And that explains this big puzzle.
I mean, what's going on?
Why are Europeans allowing this destruction of Europe?
European civilization was the source of democracy
and the idea of individual freedom actually comes from Europe.
But it's been annihilated.
That's what's currently happening.
Now the energy supply gets cut off.
Now the last, you know, the big source of independent energy supply
via the Middle East is now being threatened,
and it looks like it's the plan to actually do nothing about it
and let this cause a major, major disruption,
not only of energy, but also food supply, fertilizer, all these things.
Is it for Trump to show how much power he has?
I think President Trump's role in this is ambiguous.
I did believe him when he said earlier on
and in the election campaign that he doesn't want these wars.
And we all sensed, you know, that's his opinion.
So what happened?
There are clearly powerful forces around him that have moved him into this position.
And it looks like he has no choice.
And he didn't look entirely happy yesterday, even though, you know, these were bold words.
But I think a lot of people got the sense that, you know, he's not really happy about what's going on.
This is not his ideal scenario.
So it looks like, though, that these planners that are making these plans,
And, you know, we've heard about this for so many years.
We need war against Iran.
We need war against Iran.
This has been said so many times under, it doesn't matter who's president.
That's been around as a major policy force.
And it looks like Charlie Kirk was the first a casualty in this campaign.
You're going there?
Well, you know, he was very much against this war.
You think you're saying Charlie could have been a casualty in this?
It looks like it.
You know, just look at the amazing investigation done by Candice Owens.
Yeah, you know, she's done an amazing.
He's asking questions.
And we should be allowed to ask questions.
That's in fact the phrase from Charlie Kirk himself.
We should always ask questions.
Right, right.
And he was close to President Trump.
He had clearly a lot of voting power, young people,
and he continued particularly in the last year of his life
to argue stronger and stronger, don't do this.
We don't want to get into this Quagmire war against Steve.
But now that he is in here, what I'm trying to find out from you is,
Who has power now? Who needs who now? Is NATO getting so desperate that they're going to go closer to China?
Like, who are they going to go and say, we've got to figure out it would open up this relationship with Russia?
Like, where are you at?
Yeah, natural. Just headline yesterday on Reuters,
European Union natural gas imports from Russia up 22% year over year.
So that's where it's going to push them, I think, in some level, is they are desperate for energy, to Richard's point.
And the hard part is, is energy and food are higher on Maslow's hierarchy of needs than stocks, bonds, et cetera.
And the nature of the economic system we've had over the last 30, 25 years in particular, there's something called the net international investment position.
It's simply a tallying as a balance sheet of how much do foreigners own of U.S. assets versus netted against how much.
we own a foreigner's assets. And in the first Iraq war, this number was probably positive
seven, or excuse me, negative 7% of GDP of U.S. GDP. In other words, foreigners owned roughly
7% more of U.S. GDP of our assets than we owned of theirs. No big deal. Second Gulf War,
the number was probably up to 10, maybe 12%. Great financial crisis, the number was probably
15%. Since the great financial crisis, we have not had so much a recovery that we've, that has been
talk about, well, the U.S. has recovered so much better than the rest of the world. Yes, nominally,
but what really happened can be seen in this net international investment position balance sheet,
which is we went from a negative 15% of GDP net international investment position,
today we're at negative 87%. So we didn't recover. We just hawked our family silver to China,
to Europe, to Japan, to everybody that ran trade surpluses against us.
So the average person that are paying attention to them? Simplified for them. Why is it so important?
Why is it so important is because by cutting off European energy and Southeast Asian energy,
what this means is that they now have no way to get enough energy.
They're going to have to pay a lot more for energy, and they will do anything to get it.
What are they going to do?
They own $70 trillion in U.S. dollar assets gross, $27 trillion in U.S. dollar in assets net.
They are going to sell stocks.
Who's they?
the whole rest of the world.
Europe, China, everyone that is short energy.
Are you going to de-dollarization?
Is that kind of where you're going right now to?
Well, it's not even de-dollarization.
It is simply a desperate reaction.
You have a pile of stocks and bonds.
You lose your job.
You need to feed your kids.
Do you let your kids starve,
or do you sell your stocks and bonds to feed your kids?
That's not even a choice.
That is the position Europe is now in.
That is the position in Southeast Asia, Japan.
And this is why you can see,
in this, people thought when this war started that treasury yields, long-term treasury bond yields would drop, right?
Risk off. What have they done? They've gone straight up at the fastest pace in a long time.
And they're going to keep going up. You were going to have an oil shock where rates go up, stocks go down,
and it's going to devolve into a severe. People are saying, well, we're in the best position.
Nominally, vis-a-vis energy? Absolutely. But this is going, the world is connected in a way it is going to spiral into U.S. asset markets.
bond yields, borrowing costs, they're all going to go much higher.
And it all ties back to Richard's point of now the second energy lifeline is cut.
So now they're in a desperate situation.
The Europeans have been running surpluses against America for what?
50 years, 70 years, 80 years, and a lot of those surpluses have been deployed into U.S. stocks and bonds.
Now they're going to, that's their rainy day fund.
That's their piggy bank.
So you run, what business do you run?
You have clients.
Institutional clients.
So maybe walk us through what business you?
I'm a consultant. I'm a macroeconomic consultant for institutional, high net worth and sophisticated
individual investors. What are they asking you? What questions do they ask you and how do you consult
them? It's not a fee-based model. It's a subscription-based model. So it's, I write two reports a week,
and I basically am focused on current events and the implications for markets in these types of
manners. Where do you stand with what's going to happen with the market next? With everything with gas for,
Okay, if it's at 112 right now, we know gas is probably going to 425 to 450.
We're going to start seeing five some places if it continues like this.
Markets dipping, has a market opened up yet, Rob, or no?
What is the market right now if we look it up?
It's got to be down big.
Okay, the market right now is down, Dow is down 667.
So Dow is down a point four, NASDAQ 2 points, SMP 1.46.
What do you see happening next?
If you look at the drop in oil consumption, right?
This isn't implied because this is a supply side drop in oil consumption.
This isn't because we're in a recession and so demand has dropped.
If you look at oil consumption year over year globally, going back to 1965, global oil consumption
has only been negative three times.
19703 oil shock, it was down 1 to 2% going from memory.
The 1980 double-dip recession that we had here in the U.S. 15% interest rates, etc.,
it was down 4.3% year-over-year.
And in COVID, when we shut down the world, it was down 9.2% year over year.
Right now, the oil supply out of the Gulf, depending on what net adjustments you make
for strategic petroleum reserve rundowns, etc., we have lost roughly
7 to 11% of the world's oil. And it's supply side. What does this mean for markets?
This is going to sound hyperbolic, but it's not. It's literal math. It's guaranteed double
entry bookkeeping math supply chain reality. The world economy cannot survive a 7 to 11% loss
of oil supply. It will not survive. We can debate, is Europe going to go first and collapse?
is Southeast Asia going to go first and collapse.
Will America collapse first?
But the global economy is a certainty.
It will collapse if we keep oil supplies down 70.
What's the likelihood we go there and we stay there?
What's the timeline?
Like if we go to 7-11% for how long?
Well, we've been there for six weeks.
And I think if we get to mid-April,
like you're already seeing flights.
I just woke up this morning,
a discount airline out of London Gatwick.
Can't get fuel.
So now you're going to start having tourism fall.
Do you agree with the fly chains?
That's very true.
It was announced in the UK that the last shipment of kerosene was just made this week
and there's no further known shipment arriving in the UK, which is pretty crazy.
But it also tells you that this is a policy outcome.
Because nobody seems to care.
There's no countermeasures.
There's alternative ways.
There's things you could do if you wanted to.
They don't.
Why? Because this feeds into this other agenda that's ongoing and that we mustn't forget.
We mustn't take our eyes off that.
And that is, you know, I've just explained sort of the background with the European Union.
It's actually central planners wanting to centrally plan more and more.
And it looks like they're going to use this opportunity to impose digital controls
and the types of restrictions of individual freedoms that will be at least as bad as during this COVID-Ciop.
or worse, of course, now under the excuse of, oh, there's no energy, you have to stay at home,
you can't use your car.
You think that kind of stuff as possibility?
It looks like that's what they want, because there were so many policy decisions actually
ahead of this, you know, a closure of the Strait of Homers that already indicated that actually
they want to restrict energy usage.
This is who?
This is the European administrators.
I wouldn't say leaders, because they're not really the decision makers.
Who's debating them?
Who's arguing with them and disagreeing with them?
Nobody's arguing with them because, you know, it's a dictatorship.
When the European, they can do anything.
They can put somebody in prison without legal cause.
They can sanction people without legal due cause,
and that's what's happening already.
That's why they're cracking down on freedom of speech, you know,
this digital services act.
What do you live today?
Switzerland, spending time in Hungary as well.
You feel safe?
So far, yes, but, you know, Switzerland is also under enormous pressure from the US and from the EU to cozy up to them and essentially implement whatever they are doing.
There's, you know, legal framework.
Are you seeing friends and family leaving? Are you seeing friends and family leaving EU?
Well, I think a lot of, what I see is a lot of people thinking, should we stay within the EU?
There's a lot of Germans who want to move away. And also they're sending, first of all, they're sending their money out.
And it's not because it's some kind of hidden money, black people.
money or anything. No, this is post-tax official money. He just don't want the German government
to, and they're talking about it, taking people's money. You know, that's how bad it is. So,
so in other words, yes, what we see is the imposition of controls and restrictions under this
excuse is almost as if it's welcome that the Strait of Hormuz is now being closed because
these administrators in Europe who are running the show for the deep state,
seemed to have been given the task sheet to implement controls anyway.
And it's like, oh, great, we have this fantastic excuse now.
Oh, it's too bad.
We're out of kerosene now.
And yeah, so now there's no choice we have to do this.
And of course they will blame it on President Trump.
They will blame it, you know, on all sorts of other forces.
But they love it and they're doing nothing against it.
Because literally, you could change the situation dramatically.
President Putin has repeatedly told the Europeans
you notice that operation that was done,
the terrorist attack on the Nord Stream 2,
didn't completely destroy all the pipelines.
There's one pipeline that is intact.
We're happy to open it and deliver,
even at the original price that the contract that was made
was signed a long time ago, which is super cheap.
You know, he said that.
What's the reaction?
And essentially, they're not allowed to say, yes, please.
What advice would you give to President Trump today?
If you're in his ear, he asks you a question, what do you tell him?
You're with him, you say, hey, Richard,
So what do you think I should be doing?
Well, I think he should go back to what he promised the American people
and what they loved him for.
You know, the things he said originally,
that he doesn't want these forever wars.
This one has all the makings of another forever war, you know, 20 years Afghanistan.
I mean, pretty crazy.
So go back to what they love you for.
And I believe that's really who you are.
that's what you really want.
Let's all work together and get the real President Trump back.
And there's things he can do.
Of course, there's opposition forces.
The Deep Say is very, very powerful.
We've seen that.
And is empowering and is using the power bases, including the EU,
as quite a serious opponent.
There's his sponsors that have paid a lot of money.
And we know how they feel.
You know, they give a lot of money to Charlie Kirk
and they feel they owned him, and then if you do something they don't like,
they feel it seems they have the right to do all sorts of things.
You know, suddenly threaten him as can his own, as documented, you know, happened.
Are you the same place where he's at?
Broadly speaking, yeah.
Really?
Really.
Okay, so what would you say to the president?
I would say get back to what you promised to do,
which is reinvest in America, re-shore the defense base.
We are, I mean, he said yesterday in a different speech,
We're at war, so we don't have money for all these other things.
I'm paraphrasing, but there's this constant refrain from everyone in America
that we have to outperform China.
China is catching us.
China is at risk of winning in this or China is at risk of winning at that.
Well, how did China do that?
China did not go into and spend $8 trillion or $10 trillion in stupid foreign wars
that really didn't have a point.
They invested in themselves.
And so I would say to President Trump, stick with what you said you were going to do.
Stay here, redirect money into our domestic industrial base, into our domestic infrastructure.
You know, he's done a great job with borders.
He's done, I think, a lot of what they've accomplished under Secretary Kennedy has been very admirable, very supportive of that.
this is just such a out-of-left-field turn.
I don't fully understand it.
And I would just encourage him to get back to why are we investing, you know, $200 billion
there.
They're looking for incremental to support this, right?
Why are we not spending that $200 billion in domestic infrastructure, growth?
There's a whole lot of ways you could spend the money.
See, I thought he was going to come out and say the Gulf states are paying for the $200 billion.
I thought he was going to come out and say, hey, this war is going to be paid by the Gulf
States because, you know, the $18 trillion, you were going to say something.
Well, of course, I mean, entirely agree with Luke.
And I would add that actually there's a lot of things you can do where you don't have to spend
money or essentially almost no money.
And you can really just change world history, namely, you know, deliver what people would love,
and that is prosperity and abundance.
how, well, what delivers prosperity, and we talked about this, and you've talked about this,
is you need to create more banks.
And that's very easy because, you know, it's a leveraged model where you just need a little bit of capital.
You set up a new bank, and the bank will be able to lend 20 times as much.
China did this.
This is the secret of the Chinese success.
Well, why is only China delivering 10% growth every year, GDP?
The US can do it.
there's nothing to stop the U.S.
But we need to increase the number of banks.
Actually, what is happening is the number of banks keeps going down.
You know, it's funny.
Credit to you, the last time you and I spoke,
when you talked about the history with China,
I made a video about that.
And what I noticed is that U.S. went all the way up to 14,000 banks.
I don't know what, we're at 4,500, 4,300 today.
Yes.
And a lot of these guys are being picked up.
You know, a lot of the bigger banks are picking up the smaller banks.
So you're going back to start lending more money
to create more small businesses.
You're going back to basic fundamentals.
Exactly.
Now, when America was in its high growth phase, 15% growth, 20% growth,
you're talking in the second half of the 19th century,
it had tens of thousands of banks.
I think at the peak it was like 40,000 banks.
We were down to 5,000 banks and falling in every state, in Ohio.
You know, the number of banks is going down and down
as they're being forced by the regulators to close,
and they think that's a good thing.
No, it's not.
It's only a good thing for the same.
central planners who want to give us zero growth, degrowth, because they want to restrict
everything.
Scarcity is their model.
That increases the power of the allocators.
But actually, what we need is to implement what America was created for, individual freedom
and the ability to implement, you know, through hard work, to implement things that give us
abundance.
Now, you need the right financial framework.
And America used to have it.
tens of thousands of banks. Germany used to have
almost 30,000 banks just 100 years ago.
Just Germany. Yes, just Germany.
Wow. And then, of course... Who had more, by the way?
Because I don't think China ever got to a number like that.
That's correct.
Who had more than... What country has ever had...
Well, the U.S. had at its peak more.
In the end of the 19th century.
Can you type in what's the most bank?
That's a recent number. That's a recent number. That was very recent.
You know, 40 years ago, America had 14,000 banks.
I'm talking about 120 years ago.
Oh, wow.
That's when America had double-digit growth.
$100 small business loan 100 years ago.
There was even an era, and I think we should really go back to this era,
of free banking where everyone is allowed to set up a bank.
1984, we had $14,000.
Can you do me favor?
Ask the question, how many banks U.S. had 100 years ago, right?
Yeah, 1884.
1884.
Check like 1884.
Please continue.
Yes.
And so the model used to be at some stage in America that you could just set up a bank.
Even in the UK, you could just go to the post office, you pay $5.
pounds, which was of course much more money than nowadays, and you could register a new bank.
You see, and that's what we need to do. We need to make it easier to set up banks.
We need to switch to a registration procedure. If you meet certain criteria, you've done it,
signed off by an auditor that you've got it, you automatically get your license.
At the moment, it's the bureaucrats humming and high and you have to persuade that.
But somebody may push back and say, okay, Richard, you're the godfather of quantitative easing, right?
You came up with quantitative easing.
some may say that created a lot of issues
if we loosen up too much.
Like if you go back and look at,
you're saying hardcore deregulation,
a lot of these banks that did the no income,
no assets, loans, the WAMUs,
went from 330 billion to $1.9 billion,
all these guys.
That was kind of part of the problem, no?
Yes.
It was the wrong type of bank lending.
And my original quantitative easing was
for the central bank to help the banks
that are doing the real job,
which is business lending.
There's three scenarios, three types of lending and three types of outcomes.
When banks lend, they create money out of nothing.
I did the first empirical study in a 5,000 year history of banking proving that,
because that was considered the conspiracy theory by those who didn't want the public to know,
the reality that when a bank gives a loan, even a mortgage,
the money for the mortgage, the money for the loan is newly created
and the bank is allowed to add it to the money supply.
And everyone can figure out, well, if they're adding new money,
that has an impact.
There is our consequence.
What is it back in?
Is it 40 to 1?
Because I know insurance company, for every dollar.
It's really created out of nothing.
It is.
There's no ratio.
But do you know the number?
That's the fraction of reserve model, which is also not the reality.
That's fake.
That's not real.
The reality is 100% of the loan money is newly created by the bank.
That's how it works.
But how much do I need to have in reserves to be able to lend it out?
For every million dollars, what do I need to have in a reserve?
Look, in many countries, the reserve coin is zero.
Can you check that route?
Which proves that.
I remember 40 to one a few years ago.
England, Sweden, Australia, the reserve
is zero. The reserves are not really what's holding things back. We have currently, in many
countries, the capital adequacy model where capital is a limit. And anyway, that's really
beside the point because most banks are far below the maximum they're allowed to lend. So there's
no point even discussing, oh, you know, how can they, you know, what's holding them back? Well, it's
not the capital that's holding banks back. Actually, the regulators have
made life very hard for those banks that do the productive lending.
So let me just explain. There's three types of lending.
When banks give a loan for asset purchases,
which is, well, if you're buying an apartment, land, real estate, property, but also financial assets.
All the lending to hedge funds, you know, they're leveraged.
Private equity is leveraged.
You know, all these loans.
You've got money creation, but you're not adding to value.
to the economy therefore there's no impact on GDP because you're just transferring ownership
and assets
but at the same time because you're creating new money it has an impact what's the impact
if you suddenly create a lot of money and pump it into the real estate market
you don't need to study economics to know what's going to happen with real estate prices
and of course the banks usually
behave like each other because of the various regulatory influences
so then when they start doing that you get a real estate boom property prices go up
if they start lending more for hedge funds you get an asset market you
you know, financial market boom, and it out.
So this is unproductive and unsustainable credit creation,
which creates the asset bubbles that lead to the banking crisis,
and we've had so many, you know, more than 100 in the past 50 years alone.
That's just one of three scenarios.
When banks create credit for consumption,
that means you've got more purchasing power, more demand for consumer goods,
but you don't have more consumer goods, you get inflation,
consumer price inflation.
That's what they did in 2020.
And I want to actually make the link now to what's going to have,
happen next because I think we're going to see another bout of inflation. Just one moment.
Hold that thought. I'm going to let you wrap it up. I just had Rob asked the question.
I asked the question. I sent them the question. In order for a bank to lend a million dollars,
how much money do they need to have in reserve? I know there's a minimum for insurance company,
but what is it for banks? The old rule pre-2020 was 10% deposits. You know what the new rule is?
0%. Are you kidding me? Well, I told you.
What do you think about this? This doesn't make any sense to me, though.
That's how they got out of 2020.
They did.
There was a QE without QE.
But that's been reality in many ways,
even when there were official reserve requirements.
Because when you are the creator of money,
what is it to say, oh, there's a capital requirement,
there's a reserve.
You're creating the whole money supply.
Are you supportive of this?
What I'm supportive.
Okay, let me say the third thing.
And then I can tell you what I'm supportive of.
So the third possibility is when banks give a loan to entrepreneurs,
entrepreneurs like you,
on Brenner's like your audience, you know, business people who are working hard,
are implementing new ideas, are adding value.
Then, this is really what banks should focus on.
What you then get is prosperity, growth, job creation, and no inflation, and no negative consequences.
That's what we get.
We get higher GDP growth.
So we've got these three scenarios.
And what I'm saying is I'm supporting bank lending for business investment.
especially to small firms, because that's almost always a job creator.
It's almost always productive.
Large firms, well, they don't really need bank loans.
They go elsewhere.
They get access to capital markets and so on.
And also often it's all about rationalization and they reduce stuff.
So it's really the small firms.
And the small firms is crucial because there's 70% of employment across the globe.
In every country, in some countries, more than 70% of employment is with small firms.
And so I'm saying, and my original quantitative,
Dave Easing was to kickstart that bank credit for productive business investment that delivers
job creation, prosperity, GDP growth. And that's what we need to do. And that's what we need
to set up banks for. And if it's a bank that will lend only for business investment, why should
there be strict reserve requirements or capital adequacy requirements or regulatory requirements
making it hard to get the license? Do you know that there's never been a banking crisis
due to too much
lending by small banks to small firms.
You know, big banks don't lend to small firms.
Only small banks lend to small banks.
It was where we need many small banks.
There's never been a banking crisis
due to small firm, you know, business lending
because that is productive.
And there's no downside, and that's what we need.
And if you set up a bank that's going to do that,
here's the license.
That's how quick it should be and how easy it should be.
What's the risk, though?
You prefer 0%.
You're talking still about the reserve requirement.
Why are we still talking about the reserve requirement?
Okay, it's not the Jeffrey Epstein list.
But it is a misunderstanding.
The reserve requirement model was taught in textbooks until the sort of 70s,
since it's been replaced by the financial intermediation model
where they say, oh, there's nothing to see here.
Banks don't even create any money.
So in that sense, it was more true than what they're now teaching.
There's no money creation. Banks don't create money is what they're teaching now. All the leading textbooks, finance professors, the finance journals, which is totally wrong and disproven. And before was this fractional reserve model. But it was just a measure to lead the conversation away from credit creation. Because this fractional reserve model still argued that each individual bank receives deposits, does this analysis and lends out money. And then in aggregate, as they interact, there's this fractional reserve.
money multiplier, money creation going on. That's not true. And I disprove that. It's published.
You know, you can look it up. It's open access paper, the most downloaded academic paper of any
L-Severe publications across all disciplines. Can banks individually create money out of nothing?
And of course I do the analysis on my substack, rwerner.substack.com where I analyze current events.
Put the link below, Rob. And by the way, if you're watching this right now, if you're really
enjoying this conversation. Richard Werner's on Meneck. If you want to ask him any questions,
we're going to put his QR code around here and the link as well. And the 51% of you that
enjoys the podcast, you watch it, but you don't subscribe. We would appreciate if you click on that
subscribe button, we are this close to 3 million. We can do it with you. So if you don't mind
take you in a minute, subscribe to the channel. That'd be great. I'm going to come to you.
Everything he just said, how do you process the information on what he's saying? Because for me,
what it's making me think about is the following. Are politicians lying to us about affordability?
because what really needs to be done could potentially crash the market,
or is there a real fix without needing to crash the market?
Because sometimes you're like the next person gets elected,
what's the right thing to do?
If I do that, my poll numbers, my this, my dad, so guess what?
Kick it to the next guy.
Next guy comes in, well, when I get elected, we're going to fix the national debt.
Kick it to the, well, when I get elected,
and then eventually nobody actually does what they're supposed to be doing.
What do you think?
What he's saying is exactly right.
you don't need to crash the markets to do it.
His, to the contrary, his plan would send the markets soaring, GDP soaring on low inflation.
Would that not make the rich, rich or poor poor?
Wouldn't that make me?
No, it would actually do the opposite.
And the reason why no one wants to do it is for that exact reason.
It's actually a much more decentralization of the economy.
It would the so-called K-shaped economy we have.
It would take the legs of the K and narrow them actually in a mutually beneficial way, right?
It would be basically like that.
with the lower leg growing faster than the higher leg,
but it would be the best of all worlds.
But the very reason they don't want to,
it's ultimately about political power.
What he's really saying and why they don't want you,
the policymakers, the central bankers,
don't want this disgust, the credit creation discussed,
is what happens, there's a great quote from Henry Ford,
I believe it was, 100 so years ago,
so that it is all well that the public does not understand how money's created.
For if they did, there would be a revolution by morning.
I think that's in Ron Paul's book, if I'm not mistaken.
I think I'm sure it is.
I'm sure it is.
There it is.
Well, yeah, it is well enough that the people of the nation do not understand our banking and monetary system.
For if they did, I believe there would be a revolution before tomorrow morning, Henry Ford.
And that's ultimately issue, because think about the implications of it, what this does to people's psyches.
I'm a Republican. I'm a Democrat. The left is to blame. The right is to blame. The left can fix it. The right can fix it. No, they can't because if you control the ability to create money, there's another great quote by Meyer Amschel Rothschild. Give me control of a nation's currency and I care not who makes its laws. That's what Richard is ultimately saying. And so it's really about, yes, in our system, the politicians say what they say on the campaign trail because they need to vote. The billionaire and
and the average Joe on the street both get the same vote.
Once he's in office, everything changes.
The guy on the street, they don't care about while the billionaire has extremely much higher political power than the guy on the street.
And so what is the interest of the billionaire is to continue to control and gain power.
And I'm not picking out.
Listen, if you do a great business, I'm not discriminating against billionaires by saying this.
I'm simply just using that as an example.
But those people in power want to continue to be in and grow their power.
And the way you do that is by controlling the money supply,
by constricting control of the growth of the money supply.
And also controlling the narrative,
because this knowledge has been suppressed.
And, you know, I've had to fight against all sorts of suppression of my work in, you know,
in the last two decades.
the policymakers, or let's say they're handlers in the background and the billionaire class,
they don't want people to realize that we, and politicians should really love this.
The truth is, we can have high, sustainable, sustained economic growth,
double-digit growth without inflation, without crises, and fairly equitable.
So everyone gets a share, everyone who's working hard, everyone who's contributing,
the hard work will be rewarded.
Now, that is capitalism, that's freedom,
and you don't need the restrictions and scarcity, the rationing,
where then the allocators have all the power,
and they decide, oh, there's going to be allocated here,
oh, sorry, we're now out of kerosene,
and we're going to allocate,
and of course the private jets, you know,
of the decision makers will still work.
But, you know, so when you have scarcity,
the central planners love it.
And we saw that in the Soviet Union,
which is all about scarcity,
and the central plan is doing their allocation.
But the opposite is the American model
and the American dream implemented,
and it used to work very well and deliver, you know, 15% growth, 20% growth.
When America moved from a developing country,
emerging market to the number one power in the world,
it was on the back of the same model,
which later was then introduced in East Asia
and also China introduced, well, why is America forgetting this?
You know, Germany used this,
and America used this in the 19th century.
So we can have this high growth and prosperity without any downside, and markets will love it.
So why is this not happening?
It's exactly as Luke says.
Well, and think about Germany in the 1800s.
Who didn't like what Germany was doing?
Germany was running very much an Anglo economic model until, I believe, the crisis of 1873,
in which they took a step back, Germany, they Germany, and said, wait a second, this makes no sense.
And they then pursued very aggressively the model that Dr. Werner's talking about.
and they outgrew the UK.
They had massive growth, massive productivity, low inflation,
increased in every massive prosperity,
but it began to threaten the British Navy, the British Empire.
Well, they felt, it didn't actually threaten.
No, it didn't.
To be clear, that's right.
The British began to feel threatened by it,
to state it more accurately.
Including these beautiful cities they were created
and, you know, the cathedrals built
and the prosperity is so visible,
which explains this totally unnecessary carpet bombing
of German cities, you know, which was a war crime, is actually so that the world doesn't see
this prosperity for ordinary people, you know, these fantastic buildings.
The Berlin-Bagdad Railway. They were doing the Silk Road of China, the one-belt run road,
was the hard time with that. I have a hard time with that. I'll tell you why. Because right now,
you saw what happened with AI, right? And you got the reports that came out. And Rob,
I don't know if you have the stories or not where, you know, Oracle is letting go of, I don't know,
20 to 30,000 people, meta, let him go.
And everybody's like, well, you know, Jack Dorsey announced he's firing people,
letting go 4,000 people stock goes up, meta, stock goes up, Oracle.
You know, they react positively.
And so if all these guys, and by the way, Mark Andresen, respect to him,
he came out and said something.
I don't know if you guys saw what Mark Andreessen said yesterday.
Did you see what he said about the whole I think?
Okay, Rob, if you want to play this clip, because this is going to lead to a question for you guys
to see what you'll say.
Go ahead, Rob.
Yeah, so you have friends, I'm sure.
who were great coders before AI and are now using AI for coding?
What's the thing that they all report?
They're far more productive.
They couldn't live without it.
And?
And are they working more or fewer hours than before?
Fewer.
More.
More.
Yeah.
So this entire labor displacement thing is 100% incorrect.
It's completely wrong.
It's classic zero-sum economics.
It's the lump of labor fallacy.
It happens over and over and over again.
It's always been wrong.
It's going to be wrong again.
Do you even believe it for mediocre people?
And I know that sounds very judgmental and horrible,
but most social media managers mark a crap.
Okay, I'm getting in trouble for this, not you.
And crap, if you get a social media tool that is AI driven
and can replace an average social media manager for AT&T,
surely you'd do it.
I don't say this to be insulting,
but it's the classic Marxist analysis, right,
which is there's a certain amount of work to be done.
And either the machines do it or the humans do it.
And so, you know, surely those jobs,
go away. The answer has to be, and this is what technology is always done, and this is what AI's
going to do, and this is why I went through the long description that I did of the hyper democratization
of AI. Every single one of those people who's a social media manager today now has AI. They all have
AI, they all have AI or they're about to have AI, and they're going to have it at their fingertips,
and if they want to, and then anything that they want to do in their life, in their work, in their
career, in their profession, in their job for the rest of time, they're going to be able
able to use AI to do those things. And they're going to be able to use AI to become a better
version of themselves. They're going to be able to use AI to be able to learn new skills. They're
going to be able to use AI to become more productive at work. They're going to use AI to be able to
not do a lot of the grunt work they're doing today so that they can do higher value work. And then now I'm
just talking classical economics, which is just, you know, the kind of the other side from Marxism,
classical economics says that the actual function, the actual economic function of technology,
and this includes AI, the actual function is to raise productivity and specifically to raise marginal
productivity of the individual worker. And again, this has happened many, many times. You take an
individual worker who used to write a pencil and paper and you give them a typewriter,
and then they used to write on a typewriter, and then you give them a word processor.
I'll read the rest on what he says. He says, essentially, every large company is overstaffed.
It's at least overstaffed by 25%. I think most large companies are overstaffed by 50%.
And I think a lot of them are overstaffed by 75%. So what does this mean? You know, we saw what
Jack Dorsey did laying off 40% of them. Rob, what was the average salary? I know Meadow was
379. What does Oracle's average salary payout is? What is the average salary? What is the average
salary at Oracle. Oracle is 139 to 400. Meta was 379. So if these guys are letting go
these jobs, and listen, we don't need them. Profits are going to go up. And, you know, Bloomberg's
story says more than half of U.S. AI will likely harm them. This is a Bloomberg poll. More than
half of them are worried about this. This is a real number. 70% Americans think advancement of
AI are likely to reduce job opportunities. 14% more than they said last year, 7% said they think
advancement in AR are likely to increase job opportunities, but that's only 7%.
Right? Okay. So if you're saying, you know, the models they have right now is the rich
getting richer and the poor getting poor and they wouldn't want to do it the way you're suggesting
and AI is going to do what AI is going to do, what are you going to do if people are unemployed?
What are you going to do if people don't have job? What are you going to do if people are not
growing and becoming success? Then what do you do? Then what kind of chaos are these billionaires
dealing with? Well, yes. Now, do you realize that what we're talking about here with the, you know,
replacing these big company jobs, that's entirely unsurprising, I would say, because we know
there's over-employment in these big companies.
But do you know, what is the percentage of companies that are listed even on any stock exchange?
It's 0.01%.
99.9% of companies are small and medium-sized companies that are not listed and are likely
never to be listed.
And also that's where the majority of employment is.
And that's where we have under-employment
because the small firms are always liquidity rationed.
They usually can't get enough money
because they don't have access to capital markets.
It's mainly banks that lend to them,
and the number of banks going down,
so we have increasingly credit crunch affecting small firms.
And that's much more important.
So you can easily counterbalance.
The big companies always go through these phases of,
okay, we're going to cut, and McKinsey comes in
and they cut 10%.
That's what they always do.
But that's marginal compared to if you increase employment in small firms,
and all you need to do there is create more banks,
not reduce the number of small banks, but create more small banks.
I'm totally with you.
I don't think what I'm saying is not against the solution.
I'm not against, and I know the numbers,
because when I go back, right now, 46%, 45% of Americans work for a small business.
Okay?
Well, you could even say it's more than that,
depending on the definition.
Sure, let's just say the definition this is used by U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
is 45% small business today.
Of all employees work for a small business.
Everybody here works for a small business.
50 years ago was 60%.
70 years ago was 65%.
Okay, so what is it doing?
The bigger companies are employing more.
The smaller ones are being picked up or whatever.
They're going out of business, right?
My argument isn't your solution is a bad solution.
My argument is why would the people empower and the billioners not want?
want that. Why would they not want others to create small businesses?
The answers would Luke earlier said, it's about power and control.
Barrier to entry, to have more control, to not allow somebody else to come into help.
Maximize profits and...
Essentially, these billionaires, they love the central planning because they think they can be
the central planners. It's about power. They want to control things, which is actually
betrayal of the American dream of individual freedom and, you know.
Yeah. I mean, and this AI think, too.
to your point, if you're shrinking the small banks while you're doing this.
Because I agree with you, Patrick, which is there's an order of operations.
I agree with what Andreessen's saying.
And I found that a lot of the sort of tech billionaire class like Andresen, they are brilliant.
And they also, I don't, I think they're a bit disconnected from the reality of how this has gone.
I live in Cleveland.
I live in the U.S. Rust Belt.
I saw, for me, my working mental model of what AI is going to do to these white-collar jobs is what China did to these blue-collar jobs,
which is to say a lot of what Andresen said is exactly what the politicians and the billionaire class were saying about NAFTA and about China going into the WTO.
And from the time China entered the WTO in December of 2001, by 2008,
2009, the number of manufacturing jobs in the United States had dropped by almost 35%.
And they never came back, right? So there's an element of-
Sure, they're not going to come back. Never coming back. You're not going to bring you.
You're never going to bring that back. And so there's this assumption of essentially
teaching old dogs new tricks, right? And number one, it's hard to teach old dogs new tricks.
You get to 50, 55 years old. It's hard to re-skill. They're, they're, and Dresen's view of
unless your name is Tom Ellsward, because Tom Hill's word. Because Tom Hill,
The bill's word is an exception.
Yeah, an exception to the rule.
Of course.
There are always exceptions.
And so...
And he would be even offended.
I called him an old dog.
Tompkins, just joking.
Please.
The challenge is this order of operations, the point you made, Patrick, which is these people
took on mortgage loans.
They took on car loans.
Student loans are less than issue because they're owed to the government.
They can be forgiven in extremists.
They probably wouldn't be, but that's a separate discussion.
But basically, our entire credit bill...
based system is not prepared for a deflationary impulse, a productivity driver, the magnitude of AI.
In 38 of 50 U.S. states, in New York Times reported last year, the single biggest employer in the United
States is health care. 35 years ago it was manufacturing. It's health care now, and these aren't
doctors and nurses. These are health care. Healthcare administrators are one of the biggest
jobs. So AI is uniquely suited to disintermediated, to driving high unemployment among health care
administrators. These are good paying jobs. These are people that have never had to think about what the
blue collar guy has, which is, wow, my job might go to China. Up until two, three years ago,
a health care administrator, Rob, what is that? Give me a high low of a health care administrator.
Salary. I bet you're 80 to 120, let's say. It's not a bad number. You're pretty spot on.
94 to 120. By the way, and the top earner.
earners make 150 to 200. So you couldn't make it up to a, okay. So you're saying AI is going to replace
these guys. These types of jobs, it's very easy to. And again, if you have the, there's no social
safety net big enough. They're going to fall into default on their mortgage loans possibly.
They're certainly, and you can already see that delinquencies and defaults on consumer loans are
at the highest levels already since 2011, 2012, shortly after the course.
great financial crisis. So if you have some sort of institutionalized system like what Richard's talking
about of small banks that are looking to take risks to support entrepreneurs as they go from this
to something new, empowered by what Andreessen highlights, is absolutely the productivity enhancing power
of AI, then this can work. It's going to be tenuous, but it could conceivably work. But as it's structured
now, what's going to happen is you're going to see increasing unemployment amongst high earning
classes that took on loans, never thinking that their job would be threatened in a way a blue-collar
guy's job was threatened by China, and they're going to default on their house and on their car,
and then the banks are going to have to constrict credit because they're taking credit losses
due to the regulatory ratios that Richard talked about. And we're going to have another something
that looks like GFC. And you're starting, in my opinion, to see cracks already when you see
these private credit headlines. Global financial crisis. Global financial crisis.
Oh, wait.
So look, so what do we, what percentage of jobs are those like, you know, the entry clerks,
the customer service, the calls, and what percentage of American jobs are we talking about
that AI could take?
Oh, this, just this health care administrator, I'm glad you asked.
I just looked it up right now.
How many people have that job?
560,000 health care administrates in America.
That's one.
That's one.
For all the jobs.
So what do you think?
What percentage?
Well, Andre Carpathie, who's a AI expert, did a study.
using the 342 Bureau of Labor Statistics job classifications.
And it was a heat map.
You can probably find it online, a heat map of risk to AI.
And he rated them from low risk to very high risk.
And the low risk were exactly where you would think.
It's construction workers, laborers,
in the real meat space.
There it is.
There's the heat map.
Okay.
You can see the very high risk.
Very high risk, there are 25 million jobs at very high risk of disintermediation and another, I believe, 34 million jobs at just high risk.
So you're talking about 60 million jobs, what's the labor force?
120 million, 150 million in the United States, something like that.
You're talking about 30 to 40 jobs, 30 to 40 percent of the jobs at risk.
And look at all these jobs here, right?
that you can scroll over to the right on this thing.
It's what I do for a living, right?
I'm in financial markets.
And think about this,
and I love that you brought that up
because that kind of economic desperation,
once those people, if they're not trying to recreate
or an AI takes over, AI takes over,
you're talking about a serious civil unrest
where they haven't gotten ready.
There's no other jobs.
That's like civil war type, hey, we're hungry.
I can't feed my kids.
Oh, if this goes.
Oh, by the way, here's a thing, though.
Let me tell you.
You know the whole rich gets rich or poor get poor,
get poor. A part of it is on the poor, a part of it is on the rich. Let me explain. My opinion.
I get hateful. Because I used to be the poor guy. Okay. My dad was a cashier at a 99 cents store.
It doesn't get worse. My mother ran out of money, went back to Iran, and I would go and he'd be making
sandwiches and we're broke. He's making $1,500 a month, my dad, okay, working at a cashier out of
99. I joined the military. Why? I have no money. My credit score, 484, 495, 499. Now ask me the way I
lived. Anything I made went straight to the nightclubs. Anything I did, it was all about sports,
party and travel and hanging out, no investments, could care less about mutual funds. I'm not getting
paid. All of a sudden, it's like, boom, I read a book called a millionaire next door. The millionaire
next door drives a Ford F-150. You know what he talks about in that book that the millionaires?
The number one car millionaires drive in this book, it says F-150. It's not the Ferrari, it's not the
Lambo, it's not any of that stuff. This guy uses dollar cost averaging. Pust the money away long-term, it grows
from at 11, 12% stay in the market, SMP,
because that's the way for you to hedge your money against all these other guys.
If you really want to compete against the heads of other guys,
they're in the market.
And half the time, they can't beat the SMP anyways.
So if the last 40 years, SMP's done 11.5%.
Guess what?
If you don't know a lot about it, go buy a nice little mutual fund,
American Funds Investment Company Act,
go to Vanguard, go to somebody guys, get an ETF to plate safe, right?
And then, you know, expenses, you know,
find a way to save 20% if you can.
10% live way below your means.
This is on the individual.
Learn a new skill set.
Go learn clod.
Go learn coding.
Go learn the skill set today.
So if the poor is not doing that, that's on them.
Those who do to get out of it, different story.
Now let's go to the ridge, a part of this being on the ridge.
If you're building a company, Richard, and this is what I thought about.
I was in a company that I went and had a meeting with them at Duluth, Georgia, and I said,
one day I would like to be to CEO of this company.
I want to know what I can do to own a real people.
piece of this company, because I'm going to give 20 years to this company.
They laughed me out of the room.
I was 29 years old, 30 years old.
I was like, who the hell are you?
I said, oh, really?
Yeah, this lady named Susan.
So I walked and I'm like, very interesting how they handle this.
Okay, they'll never leave.
You're not going to start it.
You're just coming here to get a few million dollars because another guy does this every four years.
And you're trying to scare us.
You have a very good life.
You're not going anywhere.
I'm like, wow.
How many other people came and they were faking it?
And then I said, I'll never do that.
So I left.
I started an insurance company.
I gave everybody who were leaders equity.
And what happened when everybody got equity?
We didn't lose people.
They stuck around.
Their lives changed.
Happy marriage.
They had kids.
Players that spend the most time with me, they got on average three to five kids.
Because to me, it's like, I want you to have happy marriage, have a lot of kids, have your dreams become a reality, you know, enjoy your life, wear nice clothes, eat good food, you're good to go.
If you don't think that way, people are leaving you and your company collapses.
So I can't see the logic of not creating an economy where young people want to get married,
want to have kids, want to have their dreams become a reality, want to live in a nice place.
If you don't have that kind of an environment where everyone's having a dual career,
you know, husbands working, wife's working, this is not a good climate for the economy.
And that's kind of what we're going today.
So to me, it's more coming from that standpoint.
I want to come to you and ask you as a question.
This is Jerome Powell yesterday.
I don't know if you saw this or not.
So this is your space.
So Jerome Powell yesterday is talking about the,
39 trillion dollar national debt that nobody wants to talk about.
He just flat-out comes out and says the following.
Go ahead, Rob.
What's clear is that our debt is growing much faster.
The federal government debt is growing substantially faster than our economy,
and that ratio is going up, and, you know, in the long run,
that's kind of the definition of unsustainable.
The level of the debt is not unsustainable, but the path is not sustainable.
And so it's really important that we get back to,
we don't have to pay the debt down,
we just need to have primary balance
and begin to have the economy actually growing
better, growing more quickly than the economy.
It will not end well if we don't do something fairly soon.
This is not the Fed's job, of course,
and I pretty much limit myself to those high-level points
which essentially everyone ignores.
one ignores. Now, he says this. He says, this is not the Fed's job, right? And he continues to say
a few other things. There's a few clips. I'll just play that one. And then a story comes out
talking about Americans carry $1.79 million in lifetime debt as U.S. total hits $18.4 trillion.
How sustainable is that? He says it. He admits it. It's unsustainable. The path is unstable.
You know, he sort of is technically correct by saying the actual number itself, 39 trillion total national debt.
That's not the problem as such, you know, which we can agree because otherwise we'd have a huge stock market collapse today, you know, a real meltdown.
So, but he's, but he's also correct to say that the path is clearly unstable because, you know, it's, it's now, the time it takes for another trillion to be added is constantly shrinking.
It used to be a decade, then it used to be a few years.
Now it's a few months, and it will be a few weeks, and then it will be a few days.
We're not far from that, and that is unsustainable.
And he does say the most elegant solution.
I mean, there's other solutions, and they're far less elegant.
The most elegant solution is to have higher economic growth.
He even says that.
But then he says, and you picked up on that, that's not the Fed's job, and that is so wrong,
because the Fed is also one of the bank regulations.
and economic growth is directly proportional to the number of banks, and it's not rocket science.
If we had another 5,000 small banks, we could easily double economic growth, if not more.
I love that you keep talking about that. I love that you keep going back to the basic fundamental.
There's the Fed chairman saying, well, that's not our job. Actually, they've reduced the number of banks.
You know, monetary policy itself, regulatory policy has reduced the number of banks, and they've done everything to reduce numbers.
Somehow they think that's a great thing to reduce number of banks,
concentrate the banking system,
increase the power of the central planners.
But the result is less economic growth,
apart from many other consequences,
less freedom and small firms, credit crunch, and, and, and,
less job creation, unequal economy.
And yet he claims, oh, that's not my job.
It is, you are actually responsible for this.
I was going to say is it also ties into your point about before
of the three types of lending,
productive business lending and then other other unproductive types of lending.
And what he doesn't say in there, but what he should is the most unproductive way you can spend the lending is on war.
You borrow money, you build a missile, a bomb, whatever.
You drop it once, it goes boom, it's gone.
Totally agree.
And the debt is still there.
And so when you spend $10 trillion, $8 to $10 trillion, and the Iraq and the Forever Wars and the Global War on Terror, number one,
that's a big part of why this is becoming.
unsustainable. Then to your point as well about this isn't a problem now, but it's becoming one,
I want to go back to what I said earlier about the net international investment position.
And this Iran war, the part that nobody's talking about yet second derivative of what we have
just done, which is we have choked off energy to the people who own our bonds. They are going
to sell our bonds to buy energy and food. And so what Powell is saying is nominally true today,
de facto, our debt is sustainable.
The number one factor, as we've seen over the last four or five years, as interest rates rose
at the fastest pace in 40 years, the number one factor of maintaining the sustainability
of our debt that high is the interest rate we pay on it.
And this war just is guarantee, it's going to guarantee our foreign creditors.
It's not, do they want to buy bonds?
Do they not want, do they, they have to buy bonds, they have to sell bonds to buy energy
and buy food. It is a guarantee. And so our interest rates are going to go up. They've gone from
when we started this war, the 10-year treasury yield was 3.94%. Today it's 4.4%. In three times last week. In four
weeks. In four weeks. And three times last week, it hit 4.4%. And Trump tacoed, B.B. Tacoed, Trump
tacoed. They did everything they could to keep below 4.4. Well, you're going to wake up. If this war
continues as it is, and Hormuz stays closed, we're going to wake up. And there's going to be a week or two weeks.
where the 10-year treasury goes from 4.4 to 5.5%.
Well, Luke, I'm glad your specialty is delivering good news to people.
I want to applaud you. Go ahead.
Patrick, and so what's going to happen at that point?
Will the Fed will step up?
They're going to print money into an oil spike.
Oh, yeah.
It's version of QE.
Now, are you joking?
That's what's going to happen here because of this war.
In how long?
Can we have that clip where Jerome Powell talks about QE to harm?
of its students. I think you've got one of those.
The call sheet here in the back, he talks about it here.
Right here. Go for it. Yes, indeed.
The other side of it is, you know, QE is thought by the critics to risk all kinds of other things.
So, for example, you could buy too much of the Treasury market and it would stop functioning well.
We have not seen that here. At the very beginning, there was the thought that it would be inflationary.
We have not seen that, or that it would threaten financial stability or even create an
quality. So we haven't really seen the downside risks. So sadly, what he's saying is wrong.
We didn't do it. Wasn't me. It was right. It was like shaggy. Wasn't me. Now, basically, it's a
slight of hand. I mean, and this has been done by a lot of commentators who missed the difference
between QE 2008 and the QE 2020. It's like night and day. This was very different. And in fact,
these are the two types of QE I recommended originally in Japan in 1990.
for this deflationary crisis, banking system,
bus, credit creation, shrinking, credit crunch.
And then the solution was, my QE1 proposal.
The central bank buys the non-performing assets from the banks at face value.
The banking balance sheets are cleaned up.
No cost of the taxpayer, no national debt increase, no tax money used.
Elegant solution can be done.
Has been done when they want a banking crisis not to affect the economy,
but of course, often they do want.
That's QE1 and that was done in 2008 only by the Fed.
The other central banks did this fake QE that the Bank of Japan did
where they just buy bonds from banks and it doesn't really help.
But the Fed did this QE1 in 2008 and that doesn't lead to inflation
because there's no money creation.
There's no injection of new money into the non-bank sector.
It's just within the banking sector, a cleanup between the Central Bank of the banks.
And so they then extrapolate.
Everyone extrapolate, okay, 2020, yeah, they're doing the same thing.
So no inflation.
And he's like, well, we know, of course, there was inflation.
18 months later, as I warned, there'd be significant inflation.
And sure enough, 18 months later, essentially double-digit inflation.
And not just in the U.S., but also in the European countries.
Now, why is that?
The difference is this.
QE2, I recommend it in Japan.
How soon do you think this is going to happen?
I want you to say to Japan story in a minute, but how soon you think QB is going to have?
If this, you said second week of April, if it goes past April 15th and nothing's really moving,
and Hormuz hasn't opened up,
say it's the same way that it is.
How much longer until they go to quantitative easing?
And also the question is which type?
The non-inflationary one,
it looks like they will have to do,
or they would want to do,
I mean, they don't have to, okay?
So correct myself there.
It looks like they will be tempted to do the QE2 type,
which will lead to inflation 12 to 18 months later.
Sadly, I think this is what's going to happen.
And I always had the feeling
that they're just going to repeat the script
of the 70s, where we had two bouts of inflation with a few years in between. That's where we are.
This is essentially, and for the same reason, because the 70s was about switching from the
gold-link dollar to the petrol dollar, and the inflation was actually not created by the oil
price shock. It couldn't be because... It became fake, though. We became a fake market.
Well, yes, but you see, the inflation was in 73 already, but the oil price only quadrupled in January
74. So how is that going to create the inflation before? It's because the Fed, as soon as Nixon,
you know, had his announcement in 71, the Fed switched on the printing press and told the banks
to massively create money for asset purchases, real estate lending, and so on. And so bank credit
ballooned 20, 30 percent credit growth in 71 and 72. That's created the inflation of 73,
you see. And that's, so when you rearrange the monetary system, now they want to switch from
the petrol dollar to the digital dollar, whether it's through stable coins or in Europe,
more likely central bank, digital control, CBDC.
Well, they say currency, it's a control system. And so really that's the background. So the second
type of QE, which was what they did in 2020, totally unnecessarily. And it was absolutely not called for,
it was not needed. It was predictable
would cause inflation.
I proposed that
in order to kickstart bank credit,
central banks can force banks to
create money by the central banks
doing what they rarely do, deal with
non-banks and buy assets
from non-banks.
I proposed at the time in Japan, 95,
96, that they buy real estate.
Central bank buys real estate and turns into
parks because in Tokyo, there's not enough
parks. There's not a very green city.
But they buy shit companies, but they buy
shit loans from them to help them out. That's what they do. It's fake. Well, so in principle,
it doesn't matter what they buy. It's because when the central bank deals with non-banks and
buy something, this forces the banks to create that money out of... But that money rarely ends up
to the person. Well, of course, of course. And so, but when you have deflation and shrinking
credit creation and the asset markets are collapsing, then that's... You know what my... But that
wasn't the case in 2020. But you know, they totally wrongly did this and it led to this predictable
inflation. It was spent,
consumer spending.
And so that was the problem.
But they knew that. They wanted it because
BlackRock had written
up my proposal, QE2,
as their proposal,
Elgar Barge, who's a fellow German
had seen my work. They presented
it at the Jackson Hall Conference
in August 2019.
The BlackRock plan
going direct, they called it, well, QE2.
And the interesting is
they say, well, when the next crisis
comes, we need to create inflation.
Then I've explained why.
Why do we need to create inflation?
And then in March 2020,
the Fed did it. It adopted the
Black Rock plan. How do we know that?
Look on the website.
Fed hires Black Rock
to do what they said, which is purchase assets
from non-banks. Of course, the Fed didn't
want to deal with all these non-banks. In other words,
these were corporate bonds, as you mentioned,
issued by companies. The Fed
buys them, forcing the banks
that the sellers give as their bank,
you know, please put the money here,
to create these new deposits.
That's how you force an expansion in the money supply.
And the inflation followed.
Because, of course, the economy was ready,
you know, doing pretty well 5%, 6%.
Richard, you don't live in America.
You live in Hungary and Switzerland, right?
I think you said Hungary in Switzerland.
And you're always welcome to move to Miami.
We would do a podcast more often if you're down here
because it would be a drive to you as well instead of Cleveland.
And we tend to have better sports teams than Cleveland,
although our sports teams aren't doing too well.
But I would tell you this, I would tell you this,
is, you know, this is my concern.
If they do quantitative easing, the second type,
inflation is going to be delayed 12 to 18 months.
Affordability doesn't change.
And so there's pro-capitalism.
People are becoming rich billionaires.
Elon becomes a trillionaire, it easily sets up for an AOC type to be president in 2028.
And I know it's the last thing people think about.
It's like, give me a break, AOC.
Nobody thought a socialist Muslim was going to be a mayor of New York City.
But if they go this hard, like when you go on this hard, you get this hard, right?
You get this person of a reaction.
But if we're going this hard, you don't get this hard.
You go, bam.
So if they continue to go this way, and I'm looking at a four,
So, homeownership costs consume nearly 100% of typical wages in some parts of U.S.
What do you mean 100% if you go to page 15?
Affordability pressures are most acute in coastal markets like California, New York,
where in some counties the most homeownership now exceeds or nearly consumes a full year of typical wages.
Kings County, New York, topped the list of the least affordable market where homes cost 109% of typical wages.
Okay?
Vin, you know what that means?
you make 100 grand a year, your home to buy, average home to buy, you need $110,000 just to pay for the home.
$108.9%.
Santa Cruz, 97%. Marine County, 91%.
San Luis Obispo, beautiful place, 89.7.
OC, 88%.
And then the next store, nearly one in three car buyers are underwater right now on trade-ins.
These are not good things to be looking at.
This is affecting middle income.
This is the most important community we have in the country.
How do you react to it?
If we go what he's talking about,
if in the next, after April 15, they do quantitative easing,
oh, we're just going to bail ourselves out,
and here's what we're going to do.
We're going to get the money from ourselves.
Inflation goes at 12 to 18 percent.
Families are sitting there saying, how do hell do I buy a house?
How do I buy a car?
How do I pay off my debt?
How do I do this?
You're going to get the complete opposite reaction
because the AOC is going to come out.
And so we told you to rich this.
We told you the rich that.
All they want to do is bail themselves.
Look at all this Bitcoin.
Look at the money they're making in crypto.
And who takes the hit?
You.
We are going to change.
change it and then people are going to say maybe we have to change the ways. Thoughts. Yeah, I think
it's sadly, I think it's exactly right. It's a big part of why I was, I've been very vocal,
why for me, the Iran war is not about the politics of it per se. That's a separate discussion.
And people have seen my comments on it said, oh, you're anti-Trump or you have TD? No, no, not at all.
What I'm looking at is exactly what you're describing, which is I look at what Powell says about the
sustainability of the debt. I look at the energy cutoff of what is happening to everyone that
owns our debt. I look at a 50 basis point rise in 10-year treasury yields in four weeks, and I know
it's going to go higher. It is a double-entry bookkeeping mathematical certainty. I would bet my
house on it. And I also know it's very simple. You can do the math. $39 trillion once the 10-year
treasury yield gets to 4.6, 4.8%. There isn't going to be a choice about having to do QE. It is going
to have to happen because the alternative is we will go into a death spiral and take the rest of the
world with us. And so for me, this Iran war was, I can't believe they made this big a mistake,
not understanding these. People say, well, there's massive catastrophic existential issues.
No, no, no, you just triggered an existential issue. There might have been existential issues with
Iran, nuclear proliferation, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Maybe there was, maybe there wasn't.
I can guarantee you by what we just did four weeks ago and have continued to do,
particularly if Hormuz stays closed for another few weeks,
you have triggered an existential issue that is going to be met with QE to cap bond yields
so that the debt stays nominally sustainable for the federal government here and elsewhere around the world.
You know, Europe, Japan is another big one.
And then 12 to 18 months after that, you are going to get inflation.
in all likelihood makes what we saw in 2020, 2021, 2022 look tame. I would not be surprised
see 10 to 20 percent inflation in the United States in 12 to 18 months. And then you're going to get
into what you just said, Patrick, which is you're going to get someone who looks like Mamdani,
broadly speaking. And ironically, we will get regime change as a result of the Iran war.
Regime change in the United States. That's exactly right. You know what? I don't know, Luke,
I've been talking, how long have I been talking about AOC 2020?
The last how many months?
Rob, how long would you say,
AOC?
I remember the meeting and you were doing the,
you told us about the whole what they're doing,
why not, can I, can I ask Luke just, Luke, really, really quick.
Because Pat asked earlier, what would you both,
YouTube, what would you advise the president right now to do?
Like, and you guys, I think we've all agreed go back.
We would go back and tell him, is it too late that I think we're at a point right now.
There is no, hey, go back to the basics.
We are way too far in.
What could we do now?
You can't stop.
The military is not going to just go, oh, okay, we're done.
Because it seems like these people aren't stopping.
And I think president said, if they don't listen,
which the odds are, they're not going to listen.
They're very proud people.
He's from there.
My mom is there.
Our family's from there.
We're obviously Christians.
But he's talking about bombing oil if they don't adhere to the demands.
Oil, desalination, grid, and everything,
which is going to destroy that whole place for the people.
Is there any fixing it from this?
this point? Do you think? What do you tell them to do now? We have a very narrow window here.
I've been saying since this started, A, it's going to last longer than people think. Remember,
originally people consensus was like this was going to be weekend. Three to four weeks.
Yeah. It's going to be less longer. But B, I've been saying mid-April's kind of been my bogey,
where if Hormuz is closed through mid-April, then it starts to become irrecoverable in terms
of the downstream supply chain disruptions leading to debt defaults, leading to debt defaults, leading
to financial. And that's like smoking in a nitroglycerin plant, right? It's not like once you,
you know, you drop your cigarette and it starts going boom. It's not like you can say,
ooh, let me stop out my cigarette and I'll go home. We've got probably two to three weeks,
maybe four at the long end of how long Hormuz can stay closed before the nitroglycerin plant
of all of these downstream effects starts to go. And so if it's me, and to your point, the challenge is
will Trump's ego allow him to put his signature on what will come to be known as a U.S. Suez Crisis moment with Britain in 1956, where I don't think it will? And like when you talk to military people, private contractors on the ground, I had a conversation with a friend. And he mentioned that we've evacuated most people from east of Cairo up to Jordan to Adonah Turkey through the Gulf Peninsula.
This was two, three weeks ago.
I said, wait, why are we doing that?
We're winning.
We have air supremacy.
We have dominant.
He goes, are you not being told how badly our bases are getting hit?
No, they're not saying that at all.
Now, it's kind of been leaked out a little bit since.
I mean, I hear Fifth Fleet at Bahrain is, I mean, the New York Times finally reported last week, borderline uninhabitable.
Now, can you put tents there?
Sure.
But you can't get air defense there because they have missile dominance.
And they have missile dominance relative to how many missiles we can make.
and the Chinese make key components for our missiles.
And we're saying we want to choke off China's oil.
So how eager do you think China's going to be to supply us with the components to make more missiles?
So the Iranians can fire more missiles than we can make for longer,
which means we're never going to be able to get back to these bases to rebuild them
until we have the air defense, which we can't build without China, who doesn't want to do.
So you can see very quickly we're in a, it's a quagmire.
It's a quagmire.
We are walking right up to D.S.
Did you vote for Trump in 24?
I did.
You did?
I did.
Okay.
So that's very important because to say you're criticizing, yet you did support him.
I voted for the man.
I voted for the man.
So to me, if he leaves now, Trump's going to find a way to say, hey, we did our part, we're out.
The rest, I think the right way to do it to even say.
I actually think this phrase could help.
We came.
We supported our partner.
Israel needed help.
We did our part. We're leaving it up to Israel.
Israel has the right to defend itself.
Israel has the right to do what they want to do.
And our support is from here.
And we have walked out.
I think that comment can actually get everybody to say,
all right, cool, fair.
And you know, you get out in two or three weeks
and then open up some of the relationships,
broker some oil deals, get it kind of going.
You're still going to take it in the midterm.
Well, what can he do?
Because, you know, the market cycle with New York,
cycle, we move on very quickly, right? What can he do in your eyes for the market to move on
with this Iran war? Well, I think what you mentioned is a good proposal. It is viable. It is
understandable. He could potentially go a step further even to explain how all these things
happened, how, you know, the deep state put pressure on him. I think people would love that and would
back him potentially again because, you know, we're all wondering how did this happen. But it
it'll be necessary.
Story just came out right now
that Trump's about to fire Tulsi.
Just so you know,
the story is going out right now
that Trump could fire Tulsi
and, yeah, they're right there.
A few in Trump secretly plots
firing the top goon for embarrassing him.
I don't know what story you went to, Rob.
You went straight to Daily Beast.
Go back.
The first one right there, the Guardian,
yeah, Trump polled advisors, Top Coon.
Trump polled advisors about replacing Tulsi Gap
Gabbard as intelligence chief. So this could be the part where, look, who's given me the intel?
Where's the intel coming from? I was told this is going to last a week, two weeks.
I was told, so if he kind of, you guys saw even the other day he kind of joked about Caroline Levitt.
Should you hear what he said? Should we fire her? Should we still have a job? You guys didn't
hear this? No. Rob, do you have this where he says, I don't know. Do you guys think she's doing a good job? Do we need a new person?
I think she's doing a good job. I think she's pretty safe. Is this it? She's in a tough spot.
You're doing a terrible job. Is this it, Ra, plate?
93% bad publicity. Some people say 97, but between 93 and 97.
A person that gets 97% of bad stories, maybe Caroline's doing a poor job, I don't know.
She's my representative. You're doing a terrible job. Should we keep her? I think we'll keep her.
But I get 93 to 97% bad press, fake press, all fake.
I won in a landslide. When you get 93% percent, you,
to 97, bad
stories, bad press,
and you went in the landslide, you know what that says?
People don't believe
the press. I got 90...
And by the, she's not to cut you up.
She's not the only one. He said yesterday,
Rob, I just sent it to you right now, too.
Pam Bondi's also, he's disgusting
together. So he's trying to
you know. But you know what, though? That's what you need
to do. Honestly, that's what
you need to do sometimes. Because if you're
restructuring, you have to show, we have
to make some changes. And here's what we did.
The other thing he could do, because of course another theme has been his relationship with Europe, with NATO, you know, dissatisfied this and that.
And I think it's important to change things in that relationship.
That would really change the dynamics also, you know, with a view of how do international investors see there's European, even Japanese investors, how they see America.
He's been treating Europe as if their sovereign nations.
and the reality is they're not, they're run by the CIA
and his opponent.
So essentially he's been fighting with the CIA
when he fought with Europe and, oh, they're not supporting me.
Well, this is because the CIA, or that branch of the CIA, let's say,
you know, based there, has been using Europe
to manipulate and maneuver against Trump
and against his original policies.
So in order to treat Europe as partners,
what he needs to do is set Europe.
Europe free from the deep state.
So we need a bit more of this early plan of fighting the deep state by coming out and saying,
okay, actually, you know, Germany is not sovereign, but it's about time we change that.
Germany should become a sovereign state.
We're going to have a peace treaty.
We're going to ask the Germans to actually free the, you know, we're going to withdraw occupation troops.
We're going to position them somewhere else.
and we're going to allow Germany to have a constitution again, be a sovereign nation,
we're going to change the UN Charter, it's not going to be an enemy country in the UN Charter again,
and Germany will have to do some serious changes,
because the entire period since 1945, you know, the government structure,
the parties have been entirely arranged as occupation administrators.
And that resulted in all sorts of contradictions and problems,
including when somebody comes to power in America
who wants to fight the deep state,
then he's got this CIA power base in Europe
and there's Brussels as well
fighting against him.
And so that needs to be changed.
And of course, Brussels is the other thing
because that was another CIA project.
That needs to be ended,
and Europeans would love him for that.
In fact, the whole world would love him for that.
Why do we have these dictators in Brussels
that have this power of sanctioning people
that means your money doesn't work anymore.
You can't buy food.
There's a Swiss, a former, actually, Secret Service, high-ranking official who's now retired, lives in Belgium,
and did some analysis on Ukraine, Russia, war, just his opinion.
And that was enough to be sanctioned.
He can't travel.
He can't buy anything.
And they're doing it to journalists as well now in Germany.
This is the European Commission.
There's no court proceedings.
It's just sanctioning people.
Of course, giving us an insight in what they're going to do when we have central.
bank digital currencies, you know, so it's quite useful.
But so this Brussels Soviet revival, you know, system, that needs to be addressed.
And Trump is the right guy, you know, if he wants, you know, why is he even talking to
a Soviet Union-style structure?
Well, let me read this to you, and I'm going to come to you, Lou.
China-Russia cooperation hands the U.S. a grievous loss as Iran conflict escalates,
expert warns.
Rob, I think you got a clip on this because this is, this is causing some people to get close
to each other.
This is Gordon Chan. We've had him on the show before. Go ahead, Rob.
Anything else strike you about China's relationship with Iran and how it's undermining the United States and all of us?
I'm going to come to you with this one first.
We just lost an AWACS plane in Saudi Arabia.
And the Russians and the Chinese almost certainly supplied the information to Iran for targeting purposes.
That was a grievous loss for us.
There's got to be some costs on China for continuing.
its support of Iran.
Yeah, and that was an early warning jet,
which gives early warnings to intelligence
to the region's officials
and troops on the ground.
And the Wall Street Journal reported
that a replacement of that jet
will cost $700 million.
That was a real loss. You're right.
And you're saying the reason that they knew
where that jet was is because China provided the information.
Yes.
From even before this war started, you had a private Chinese company, Mazur Vision,
showing the location of U.S. military assets in the region along with specific coordinates.
And then we have that large Chinese intelligence ship just off Iranian waters.
China's support for Iran is almost across the board.
The only thing they don't do is they don't supply combat troops.
But apart from that, China is there, and we need to recognize that because we don't recognize it.
Yeah, so really quick, just to follow up on your point,
and I'll touch on that point,
which is the best explanation I've seen for why Trump did this,
seemingly so out of character,
is from, we'll call him a friend of mine
in sort of the Washington world.
It's a mobster, a friend of mine?
Like, is he connected to the hours?
It's like, just tell us because, yeah.
Well, he said, how do you get,
if you have a dog that won't stop chasing cars,
how do you get them to stop?
And the answer is you let them catch the car.
Who's the dog?
Neocons have wanted this war with Iran.
The deep state have wanted this war with Iran forever.
Let them catch the car and let it go badly.
I'm not saying I like what that means,
but let the American public see it, let them feel it.
And so there's a way where this goes,
where maybe he stands aside and he lets gas go to six bucks.
And he lets basically Iran and Israel beat each other to death.
I would prefer that.
That's not a bad outcome.
You know what it is for me?
It's like, okay, guys, go, go.
Because he can't tell Israel.
Western hemisphere.
Yeah, he can't tell Israel to go, practically speaking, politically.
He can't say, I'm going to let Israel go.
So let them have their fight.
And then just, that might be what we're watching.
But so to Gordon Chang's point, absolutely Russia and China are supporting them.
And what Americans have not been well informed on because, you know, it's just not what politically.
But in the 23 and 24, we have been, since then, been providing very accurate targeting information,
doing everything for the Ukrainians, but pressing the red button to hit Russian targets in Ukraine.
And even in Russia, even in Russia territory proper, more importantly, they were launching missiles into Russia
with our targeting and guidance.
And the Russians didn't take the bait.
They said we will retaliate at a time and place of our choosing.
And what I hear is that the time and place of their choosing was about two, three days after
this war began because the Iranians apparently only have like two satellites. We were not expecting
them to be very accurate. The Russians have a satellite system called Glonass, GLO, N-A-S, that is
apparently extremely accurate. And then the Chinese also have a private, basically GPS, etc. And yeah,
they're absolutely helping. I think we've lost two, at least one, if not two E3AWACs. Those
would be the first ever loss of that aircraft in combat, if I hear right. We have lost, if you
include the 16, as I saw it yesterday, wrapped their drones as fixed-wing aircraft. We have now
lost as many, either just 95% or more of the number of aircraft, fixed-wing aircraft we lost
in 11 years in Iraq. We have lost in four weeks in Iran. And why is that happening? Because
they are getting good targeting from the Russians and the Chinese. And so there's this narrative,
the Iranians are on their own. They're beaten to death. The Russians are weak. The Chinese are weak.
because they're not helping, Chinese by culture,
they aren't going to come like an American
and punch you right back in the face.
They are going to sit back, passively, aggressively,
respond in a way that works for them.
The Russians, a little bit of the same dynamic.
But the point here is this.
The American people are not being told
that they are fighting Russia and China by proxy in this war.
And that is exactly what's happening.
And when we look at the implications of that,
number one, do we want to be at,
war with Russia and China? Probably not. But number two, they have the two biggest industrial bases
in the world. The Secretary General of NATO in January 2025, Secretary Rudy came out, Mark
Rudy, came out in January 2025 and said, in the Ukraine war, Russia has outproduced all of
NATO, America and everybody else, four to one, not on a relative basis, four to one. So the Russians
can out produce our industrial base and have been. They are supporting Iran. The Chinese, our military,
literally cannot go to war without Chinese factory bases. There's a great study by Govini, a government
Washington contractor, consultant, and they have put out a couple of excellent reports
looking at how deeply embedded the Chinese industrial base into our components. The head of Raytheon
in 2023, CEO said, we cannot go to war without China. It was an article in the Financial Times.
And it would take many, many years, his words, not mine, to replace that.
And so think about the logistics of this.
We are going to war with Iran, supported by Russia and China,
both of whom can outproduce us and are,
and one of whom we can't make anything without.
This reality of logistics is superior to dominant to everything else.
So what sense does that make?
No sense.
Because they know this, right?
To your point, the policymakers in the West know this,
which leads you to your conclusion, which is somebody wants this to go on.
And of course, the risks are extremely high because we're talking about,
and this has been the downside that's not really discussed of all this.
There is the risk that this will lead to World War III.
Yes.
A full-blown World War III.
Yes.
We could see some to and fro, perhaps cooling down a bit,
then heating up again in the coming weeks and months.
But there is a risk because forces are clearly at work that want this to happen.
When we don't have weeks or months, right?
Like we are three weeks to three to four weeks where it becomes irrecoverable.
And of course, there's things like there could be false flags.
There could be a nuclear bomb being dropped on Iran.
You know, there could be escalation.
There could be a false flag, nuclear maybe the other way.
All these things are possible, sadly.
you know, when one side feels a bit cornered or triggered by something or a false flag blaming it.
In this situation, we're cornered, is what you're saying.
And everybody's cornered.
This is, people say, well, we're just going to stay here and this is what the administration is telling the public.
This is every bit as existential for Russia and China as it is arguably with Israel.
And Israel and us can't, Israel and we, Israel and us, we can't make the air defense missiles without China's rare earths.
And China's already curtailing them, I hear.
And so, again, it gets into, then it brings you to that,
Israel and the U.S. are already reportedly running low on these interceptors.
You're already seeing the batting average more than a little low,
but the cost of it and the speed of making it.
And they can't make it.
So they are now getting pounded without an ability to defend.
What do they do in that scenario to Richard's point?
Do they invoke the Samshan option, right?
Do they drop a new, that's entirely possible.
And then what?
I don't know.
And also clearly, you know, the U.S., whether it's the military leadership or the Trump administration per se, doesn't seem to have any control over what Israel is doing.
None at all.
None at all.
And therefore, and, you know, it's no, officially there's no nuclear capability, but actually there is.
Everyone knows that.
You know, JFK didn't want this to happen.
He got killed.
And, of course, what is this for?
there have been forces saying for years and years
we want this war against Iran
so there seemed to have been some long-term planning
and what are the nuclear capabilities for
and of course we're talking about Iran
well actually they were engaging with the
international nuclear authority
always and they had
inspectors coming and they had
things to do there was an agreement
which then the US side council
but what about Israel
you know it's not even signed
this international
nuclear anti-proliferation free T and officially doesn't have any.
No. But but so okay but we know it has capabilities there's no US control,
no military outside control over their decisions. So this is an extremely
dangerous situation. And the US policymakers have very unusually if you paid
attention this war, Rubio publicly said Israel let us into this. Multiple US
senators said Israel let us into this which is a very unusual
inorganic shift of
the Overton window on that discussion.
You've seen Reuters report on it.
You've seen Bloomberg report on it. You've seen New York Times report on it,
specifically saying Israel and Netanyahu pulled the U.S. into this.
This is why I think Trump should just get up there and say, hey, we helped you.
We kicked it off.
We leave the rest to you.
Go fight it.
We have your back, but you've got to go do your own thing.
And if you want anybody for us to support, hey, you got to, I think, I think he has to,
every time he goes and kind of puts BB in his place in his own way, you know, the, the popularity
goes kind of back to here. Yeah, that helps him. It helps him. So I just think he needs to take that
position, and I think he needs to make that clear because the audience is a little bit confused.
And MAGA is not just MAGA is not one type of MAGA. There's seven different types of voters
for him. One voter was, you know, the market. One voter was the border. One voter was the border. One
vote was the war, no war. One vote was well. So he's got to find a way to bring them together.
But anyways, it's been a great conversation. It's probably the longest conversation, Richard,
we've had on. Typically, we do hour and 15 minutes. We went to almost two hours. Really enjoyed it.
Gang, if you want to learn more about what Luke does, let's put the link below to Luke and the work he does.
He's got great commentary on X. And also at the same time with Richard Werner, if you have any questions for
Richard Warner, there was a lot covered today. Go Menectum, his link's going to be below, as well as his
substack. I think both of you guys have a substack, if I'm not mistaken. You can get our written work
through the website. So my substack is rwerner.substack.com. We're going to put that below. We'll for
sure put that below for people to go check it out. And again, the offer is still on the table.
If you guys miserably choose to leave Switzerland and Hungary and come down here from Cleveland
to South Florida, there could be a lot more activity for you guys if you guys come down here.
Anyways, Vinny, incredible insight. I feel I think that I don't want to undermine. My, my,
brain hurts, but I learned a lot.
Faith over fear, buddy.
100%.
Faith over fear.
100%.
Hey, 51%ers, press that subscribe button.
Come on.
Fully commit.
Anyways, God bless everybody.
We'll do a home team tomorrow.
Take care.
Bye, bye, bye, bye, bye.
Thank you.
