Shawn Ryan Show - #169 Vivek Ramaswamy - Making Ohio Tax Free, DeepSeek, DOGE and the Education Crisis
Episode Date: February 10, 2025Vivek Ramaswamy is a biotech entrepreneur, author, and political figure from Cincinnati, Ohio. He founded Roivant Sciences in 2014, focusing on innovative pharmaceutical development, and later co-foun...ded Strive Asset Management. He is a prominent political figure, campaigning for the 2024 US Presidency before endorsing Donald Trump. In 2025, Ramaswamy stepped down from his co-leadership role in President Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Ramaswamy’s expected run for Ohio governor has reshaped the state’s political landscape, with endorsements from prominent Republicans and a platform centered on tax reforms and reducing government inefficiency. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://lumen.me/srs https://ShawnLikesGold.com | 855-936-GOLD #goldcopartner https://ROKA.com | Use Code SRS https://www.armra.com/srs http://helixsleep.com/srs https://americanfinancing.net/srs NMLS 182334, nmlsconsumeraccess.org This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at http://betterhelp.com/srs and get on your way to being your best self. Vivek Ramaswamy Links: TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@vivekramaswamy Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/vivekgramaswamy/ X - https://x.com/VivekGRamaswamy LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/vivekgramaswamy/ Please leave us a review on Apple & Spotify Podcasts. Vigilance Elite/Shawn Ryan Links: Website | Patreon | TikTok | Instagram | Download Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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It's good to see you, man.
Good to see you.
A lot's happened since the last time.
I like this studio because I do a lot of these meetings or podcasts or whatever and it's
super hot and you're sweaty
Not with Sean Ryan
You have a similar belief in conviction in air conditioning as I do. Yeah. Yeah, so thank you for that
I like a nice chill. Yeah, like a nice chill, but same thing. Yeah, but uh, yeah, so you at the inauguration
Yep. Yeah, we saw you there Army Navy game. We've you a couple times. Yep. Yep. Thanks for getting me in there
Yeah, that was fun. And uh, but yeah, so a lot's happened, you know since since I saw you last
Especially since we interviewed and so, you know a lot of good a lot of good stuff to cover today, but I gotta ask
Yeah
Come on. Are you running for a governor in Ohio or what's going on here?
I mean, I got to wait to formally announce it, but that is the direction I'm headed.
So late February, man, we'll have a big announcement coming.
I love it.
I love it.
Yeah.
I love it.
What moved you from, you know, I mean, you ran for president.
You're going to run for governor, likely.
And so what was the shift?
Why did you decide to concentrate more on state?
Well, look, there's a couple reasons.
I mean, one is if we get the job done,
I say we as a movement,
but Donald Trump gets the job done
over the next couple of years at the federal level,
the action shifts to the states.
In two to three years, take the Department of Education,
dismantle the Department of Education,
dismantle a lot of these regulatory agencies.
When in doubt, my advice has always been kick it to the states, to our founding fathers
envisioned.
We live in a system of federalism.
So I'm just looking at where I can have the biggest possible impact.
And a lot of the issues that I've been most focused on in substance, not just tearing
down the administrative state, but education, for example, that can't be led by the federal government. It has to be led by the states. And I had a good time,
you know, over the last year helping President Trump in whatever way I could, bringing young
people along in the coalition, help him get elected, started off with Doge, help get that
off the ground. But when I look to where the puck is going, if we get that job done at
the federal level, tear down the bureaucracy, done at the federal level tear down the bureaucracy
Downside of the federal government. It's gonna require real leaders at the state level to catch the pieces
And I realized when I'm looking at that that's a couple years down the road
I wanted to skate to where I thought the puck was going. Why do you say?
Why do you say it's all moving to the state?
I mean I had a very interesting conversation with Eric Prince quite a while ago on here.
This is a smart guy, yeah, interesting dude.
Love talking to Eric.
But he kind of changed my mindset.
A lot of people were worried
how this election was going to go.
And Eric kind of put it in my head,
the states might be even more important
than the federal government, and we should be focusing maybe more on local municipalities
and state government rather than federal government, because that's what affects your immediate
area that you live in.
And you know, it just, it really resonated with me.
And so how are the, it's, I mean,
you're saying it starts with the federal government
by basically got the-
Yeah, I mean, what happened right now
is the federal government is doing all the things
that it shouldn't be doing,
while failing to do the few things that it should be doing.
What are the few things
the federal government should be doing?
One key responsibility is protecting the homeland
of its nation.
The United States of America, the sovereignty of the US starts even with the physical sovereignty
of the US.
Basic borders.
We have not done basic border control in this country.
We've had more illegal entry at the southern border than we've ever had in our national
history.
That is a failure of the federal government.
We could go on the other failures too.
We are lacking defense systems.
We're lacking in cyber defense systems super EMP defense systems
So the national defense function of actually defending our own homeland forget and meddling around in other countries our own homeland
We've already failed to do that
But that's because the federal government is in part focused on doing a bunch of things that it shouldn't have been doing in the first place
Regulating industries you got a Department of Education that's meddling in the way that we educate our kids, thinking about impediments to nuclear energy in the United States.
It starts with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission at the federal level.
It's doing a bunch of things that fall outside of what our founding fathers envisioned in
the Constitution.
The Constitution says Article 1, here's what's actually the powers of Congress to legislate.
And if it's not an Article I,
Congress doesn't have the power to do it.
The 10th Amendment says that which is not reserved
to the federal government is reserved respectively
to the states and to the people.
So if you can't find the reservation of authority
in the Constitution,
there's very specific categories
of what Congress is able to do.
If it's not one of those categories,
that means by definition the rest is left to the states. A big frontier that's on a
lot of people's minds, for example, is education. The federal government should basically have
no role in shaping K through 12 or frankly even higher education. That is left to the
states. And part of our model was we want states competing with one another. The same
principle in capitalism that causes us to create value or businesses compete with
one another.
Competition breeds innovation.
That's what our founding fathers envisioned if you read the Federalist Papers with respect
to our model of federalism anyway.
And so when I looked at and obviously I ran for president, I think that's the highest
impact position you could possibly have.
And I think Donald Trump is the man for our hour and the man for this moment.
But when you look at the other way, the next most impactful way, at least for me, where
I could say, here are things I could do through public service as a leader where you see tangibly
the impact of actually the decisions you make.
It wasn't even close where you would have that large impact.
It was as governor and among elected office,
that was the place I was drawn to look next.
And that's the way our country is supposed to actually work,
where you got people leaving California and New York
and droves, where are they headed?
Right now they're going to Florida and Texas,
Tennessee since it's gone to effectively zero tax
has been more successful.
You got states, other states that are largely blue states that they're leaving, but Ohio
is kind of interesting in this regard.
It's a red state, it's a conservative state.
But at least as of last year, it was still number 38 in terms of people leaving versus
netting coming to the country.
Coming into the state.
Yeah.
And I think that leaves a lot of room for improvement.
It's a state that in a lot of ways have been headed in the right direction, but I think
right now we need a governor, not only in that state, but across the country, governors
who are willing to step on the gas and actually govern conservative populations with conservative
principles to do it unapologetically and to take on the problems that the federal government
can't actually solve in its own right. You know I want to dig more into that
but when it comes to these droves of people that are leaving the blue states
and coming to red states yeah and you know I think a lot of people are really
upset with policies in the in the blue states especially California. Sure. You
know I'm sure there's getting ready to be another big influx as soon as these
insurance companies start paying out for all these
fires because of the mishaps that went on there. But you know, it's something that
I hear Tennessee is getting overrun with people fleeing their
states. And you know, while it's great to have all these new people coming in,
it's pricing all of the locals that made this state what it is
today.
It's driving them out with the home prices, with inflation.
It's just driving everything up, especially in this county.
And so, I mean, is there any way to, what are your thoughts on that?
Do you want Ohio to become that?
So I don't want Ohio to become Silicon Valley.
And frankly, I don't even want Ohio to become Texas
or Florida, even though those were well-run states.
I want Ohio to be the best version of itself, actually.
What Silicon Valley was to the American economy
for the last 20 years, I think the Ohio River Valley
can be for the next 20.
It's not going to be through bits,
that Silicon Valley's model, but what I call through atoms, through production of stuff,
of actual tangible things that we require in the defense industry. And you look at building
up our defense industrial base, aerospace innovation. Ohio is actually a great state
for that. Wide open planes. You have no spaceports in the state right now. A great history with
John Glenn, first American to orbit the earth.
You got Neil Armstrong, first person in the world
to walk the moon.
Those were Ohioans, right?
So you have a great tradition there of production,
even in biotech and medical production.
Whole opportunities.
I think it'd be a crypto state that leads the way
in crypto and Bitcoin innovation.
You go the distance.
I want Ohio to be at the leading edge of also using AI,
not just to take jobs, which is what people worry about,
but actually to make jobs.
If you train workforces to use AI,
you increase productivity.
So Silicon Valley is focused on training algorithms.
I think if you're focused on training people to use AI,
you can actually increase their productivity,
probably 10 fold in a way that doesn't take those jobs.
So I don't want Ohio to imitate Silicon Valley
or try to be something that it's not,
or try to be Texas or Florida.
We got Four Seasons up there.
It's a real state, there's a reality to it.
If you go 100 mile radius of Columbus,
draw a little circle around that,
that's a cross section of the country.
I grew up in Cincinnati,
built my first business in New York.
Before we had kids, I wanted to go back to Ohio
because we don't want to raise our kids in Manhattan.
And so I don't want to pretend to be something else.
I want it to be the best version of ourselves.
But yeah, I want to open arms to people from patriots
from across the country to say that if you want to live
in a state where you're able to pursue economic excellence,
turn a state into a kind of special regulatory economic zone
for many of these industries to say that you don't want
regulatory overreach to get in your way, great, come to our,
if you want to come to a state where your kids are able
to actually get a good education on reading and writing
and math, which is a major problem in our country.
I want those people coming in, but without creating some of the issues you've seen
in housing markets and other, in places like, you know,
Tennessee, even look at what's happened
in markets like Austin.
How do you do that?
Well, first go back to the philosophy of what causes
a lot of those inflationary spikes are supply constraints.
So part of the reason housing costs have gone up so much
is that we don't actually permit new house construction
or new home construction at the rate that we should,
because there are barriers,
especially even in single family home type communities
to say that if there's a family home of a certain size
and the lot size is less than a certain amount,
a half acre or whatever, you can't build a new home,
that actually prices especially young families out of the market because you have a constraint on supply.
So my general philosophy is we want to increase the supply of everything. That includes the
supply of housing, it includes the supply of energy, it also includes the supply of
people, because that is actually something that allows a business to grow, is if you
have talented people in your state, American patriots to hire, that's great. But if you increase the supply of both energy and
housing and everything else required for those people to live affordable lives,
that's how you match the demand going up. You got to also match the supply going up of those
things too. And I don't think those things have been done as well in some of these states that,
you know, were attractive places to live. But you had the influx, you got to be prepared to really increase, for example, the supply
of housing, really increase the supply of energy in a way that keeps those costs down.
What about stuff like the more traditional generational occupations like farming?
Mm-hmm.
Like, I mean, I don't know how, I mean, like farmer here,
you know, here in this county, I mean, they,
you sell a thousand acres here.
I mean, you're looking at probably a couple of hundred
million, you know, and so you have these farms,
these cattle farms and all these people that are,
I mean, I know it's probably for the greater good.
I mean, I don't know.
I know it definitely boosts the economy,
but I mean, farmers are just getting run out of here.
I mean, it's-
Totally.
They can't sustain a thousand acre cattle ranch
when they can sell it for a couple hundred million.
And then the other thing, well, I'll let you go,
I'll let you riff off that.
No, no, no, go ahead.
Yeah.
But then the other thing is, you know,
and this isn't just my opinion,
I mean, you can look at any Facebook group,
you can hear the local gossip around town.
And you know, the big worry is,
is this influx of people from California,
New York, New Jersey, Michigan, Minnesota,
Wisconsin, I mean, are they gonna flip the state?
Everybody's worried, are we gonna start seeing the things
in the schools here that you saw, where you came from?
And it's a huge worry.
And so, I don't know, it seems like here,
it might, I don't, I would like to see the growth
slow a little bit.
And so, is there a way to do that?
Yeah, I mean, I think all else, it depends on where you are
in the state's journey as well, right?
If you look at where Nashville was 15 years ago,
it's not exactly where Nashville is today.
So if you're not prepared for that influx,
it could have a detrimental impact.
All else equal, do you want to be a state
that people want to move into
versus one that people want to move out of?
You probably want to be in the state
that people want to move into
because they want to move into there for good reasons.
Same thing as the country.
Do we want to be in a country where,
you open the border under Biden, what did you see?
People wanted to go one way and not the other.
Well, you'd rather live in the country
that people want to come to,
but you got to protect yourself.
At the level of a nation, that means the hard border.
At the level of a state,
what it means is actually anchoring who you are
and staying true to that North Star
in a way that says, great,
we're happy if more people want to flock here,
but it's part of the mission of who we actually are
rather than changing who we actually are, rather
than changing who we are, because eventually, you're then going to be a state that people
eventually want to get out of anyway.
So in the long run, I think it's a pretty good metric if people want to move in rather
than out.
The way I want to, I would love to lead Ohio is as a state of excellence, economic excellence
and educational excellence.
All right, if people,
you have nine states that are zero tax states.
If you want to be a state
that people are actually flocking to,
it's table stakes at this point.
I think that people should be able to keep what they make.
Property taxes, I mean, this is actually true
in probably multiple of our states,
are getting increasingly insane
where if you have a high enough property tax,
what it does is it effectively says you don't own your property
Your property becomes a permanent lease from the government and you have a bunch of shackles that stop people from actually starting new businesses
What most of them over to Texas is because it's probably most favorable environment for an entrepreneur right now
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So you think about economic excellence, that's great.
I think where we haven't really had a model
in the country yet, what I would like to create as a model
is what does educational excellence actually look like?
And I think this is the one where where as a parent, you have kids?
I do.
You do, yeah.
How old are yours?
One and three.
All right.
Pretty similar zip code to us.
It's a fun age.
I've got a soon to be five-year-old and a two-year-old who's going to turn three in
July.
This is the problem that at the level of our nation, nobody is actually seriously talking about,
both on the left or on the right.
I think Republicans have been better than Democrats.
We have a massive achievement crisis
in the United States of America.
You got 75% of eighth graders.
They are not proficient in math
compared to international standards.
70% of them aren't proficient in reading.
And the worst part is now you're starting to see
there's other countries where English
isn't even their first language,
where kids in those countries are more proficient in English,
better performing in English,
than our own kids right here at home
where English is our only language.
That's insane, it's unacceptable.
And the thing about this, I mean, it goes to the first conversation we had about
where the action is in terms of government and our impact is at the federal level or the state level.
Right now, this year, definitely federal level because Biden in the past had done so much damage
that Trump has to undo a lot of that at a fast and furious pace.
But if he's successful, as I expect he's going to be, you roll the tape a few years forward,
fixing education is not something that's done
by the federal government.
So who's going to fix that educational crisis?
Yes, we have a lot of woke DEI issues.
I mean, I was the chief DEI crusader,
anti-DEI crusader, what, four or five years ago
when I wrote Woke, Inc.
and criticized the spread of wokeism
through corporate America and other parts of our culture.
But now that we're about to enter,
we're not quite there,
but we're about to enter the post-DEI era,
the post-woke era,
we gotta still admit to ourselves
that that was part of the problem,
but it wasn't the entire problem
accounting for this achievement crisis as well.
And so how do we prepare ourselves to say,
okay, well, there's more people moving in
and we have tough times.
Let's talk about the next 20 years.
I think what we want is a generation of Americans
who's actually equipped to compete.
Because at the end of the day,
China isn't looking the other way
and giving us some sort of participation trophy
at the end of it for complaining.
We can't be victims.
We got to be victorious. We gotta be victorious.
And I do think that lighting a fire
under the feet of our educational system
to prioritize achievement in math, reading, writing,
critical thinking, physical fitness, by the way,
I think that we've gone soft on this,
bring back early physical education, bring back the presidential fitness test
We used to do that, you know
I don't know
I mean most kids are not probably able to do the level of pull-ups that kids were able to do
What 30 40 years ago? I think it goes to implications for mental health
I think it goes to implications for military preparedness
I think we have to have an education system that demands more of ourselves, and that has to be driven by the states.
Actually, even think about knowing about the United States,
I love how many American flags you have in this room,
you know, and use a good sense of patriotism
that we sometimes leave behind for our kids.
Most kids today who graduate from high school
can't even pass the same civics exam that we require of a legal
immigrant before they become a citizen. I think every high school senior who graduates from high
school as a requirement should have to pass that test. I mean, it's a basic condition of citizenship
and nation is that you know something about your nation in order to be a fully informed citizen
of that nation.
So I think we gotta get tough a little bit
when it comes to some of these issues
relating to the revitalization of our young generation.
Well, I think a lot of people are ready for that.
I mean, homeschool is on a massive rise right now.
Do you homeschool?
So we started that way, yeah.
I mean, I think that this year we were on that track
and then we, you know, for our son felt, our older guy,
we felt that he might have been a bit of a benefit
with the socialization,
but we're big fans of homeschooling.
I think that school choice in most states,
so Tennessee is in this category, has school choice,
Ohio has school choice,
it doesn't cover homeschooling, that needs to change.
I mean, educational choice means full models of choice. And you got a lot of people coming through homeschooling, that needs to change. I mean, educational choice means full models of choice.
And you got a lot of people coming through homeschooling
backgrounds where those kids are doing better,
even than kids who are educated,
even in expensive private schools
or public charter schools.
But I'm not like a one size fits all guy,
saying homeschooling is for everybody.
And we get into this debate as well in higher education,
sometimes both sides will fall into this trap
that it's all about four-year college degrees only,
and that's the only path to the American dream.
Or you got the reactionary backlash that'll say,
oh no, colleges, colleges, not for,
you know, colleges are a scam, nobody should go there.
It's only for two-year and vocational degrees
and apprenticeships, that's the way to go.
Whether it's higher education or K through 12 education,
I don't want a one size fits all approach.
I want everybody to be able to choose
what the actual best path is for them.
That's not a system we have right now.
And I do think that universal school choice
should actually, if you're going to call it that,
should be universal in including homeschooling
as the right option.
I think some parents would tell you this too.
I mean, we've got kids got young kids, each ourselves.
Yours are a little younger,
but you'll probably notice this even more over time.
They're different even in the same household.
How you're raising them in the same household
under the same circumstances.
One of them is a younger sibling and one is older.
So it's different for each of them that way.
But private school or public school might be the right option for one of them, and homeschooling
might be the right option for the other one.
It might change over different parts of their upbringing, and the people to know what's
best for their kid, all they'll see is the parent.
And I think that right now, people in wealthy families at least have the opportunity to
hire home help or nannies or tutors or private school tuition or whatever it is.
That's not where I'm worried.
It's the civil rights issue of our time
that actually the very people that,
so-called bleeding heart liberals have been
bleeding their hearts over,
people in inner cities,
people struggling with making ends meet,
single parent households,
they're the ones who actually left a hole in the bag
where their kids don't have that level of choice.
And so I do think this is, I think,
I don't think it's an exaggeration to call this
the civil rights issue of our time, I would call it that.
And I hope that that's gonna bring along not just,
you know, traditional Republican support,
but you can think about anybody who's a parent
wants to be able to choose to be able to send their kid
to the best school they can.
And even in the public schools,
one of the things we don't have in this country right now
is merit-based pay for teachers.
I mean, you run a business of sorts, right?
I run businesses.
Generally, the way it works is the people
who do the best job in creating value for the business
are compensated more than those who don't do as good
of a job in creating value for that business or that fund or that investment firm or whatever.
Why should it work any differently in public schools?
I mean, we got metrics. You've got clear metrics.
And so there isn't a state in the country right now that does this.
There is no merit-based pay for teachers and principals and administrators.
So I want Ohio to be the first state that implements not just universal school choice, universal including homeschooling,
but also for the public schools to compete.
Implements merit-based pay for teachers, administrators, principals, where your pay,
you should be paid a lot more than you are now.
I think the best teachers are vastly underpaid, should be paid far more when tied to the actual outcomes they deliver.
And conversely, those who aren't delivering outcomes shouldn't be paid at that same level
and in some cases should actually not be on that job at all.
And I do think that that's got to be done with leaders who have a spine to that's, I mean,
that's a big fight to pick. I'm not looking to pick fights for the sake of picking fights,
but that's one, there's a reason why that doesn't exist in any of the 50 states.
I think that is our path out of this educational achievement crisis.
How in the weeds have you gotten into that subject?
I mean, how would it be done?
Yeah, I mean, it's not overly complicated, right?
It could be done with one model is to collaborate with the unions.
I'm not going to, I don't believe in just picking fights
for the sake of picking fights. Being conservative without being combative is a fine approach
if that works. So you could talk to the people who are members of a public teachers union
and say that, you know what, here's how we're going to do this. But if there are union objections,
it is my view that if a public sector union, particularly, I'm going to put fire and police
in different category where this doesn't apply to them,
but if public teachers unions are unionizing,
you gotta ask yourself,
who are they actually unionizing against?
In many cases, it ends up being the best interests
of the kids they're actually serving.
And I say this as somebody who believes
that the best teachers in the country right now
are vastly underpaid and under-respected
for the work they do.
I want to see the best ones actually paid more.
So either you do it in collaboration
with the teachers unions,
or you have to be willing to say
that that's not a sacred cow anymore
that somehow we can't touch.
To the contrary, if teachers unions
and the existence of public teachers unions
are in the way of getting that job done,
then we need to fix that system.
Okay, I guess what comes to my mind is,
where I think you might run into problems,
and maybe you've thought through this,
is just looking back, what were EZAs?
Physical education, art, home economics, you know, stuff like that.
That was pretty much a wash. And so, how do you put them on the same pay scale as somebody that's teaching calculus at a junior and high school level?
You know, more challenging course that people are going to struggle with more or do you see what I'm saying?
No, absolutely. I think I think you got a it's a great point
I think I have market-based approaches for pricing each one
So I don't think they're gonna be paid at the same level
But my point is more
Not who's paid more between somebody who's got you got very few of those calculus teachers available where you might have a greater supply
Of other teachers in early education, that's one question. The question I'm stating is all of the people
who are teaching calculus and all of the people
who are teaching PE and all of the people
who are teaching social studies are in public schools
paid flat at the same level.
And I'm saying within each of those categories,
whatever the market rate is for each of those,
that's a separate question.
And that should be a little bit of supply and demand, right?
If you got very few people in an essential category
where we need to educate our kids,
those people are going to have to be paid more
than somebody who's in a category
where you could find 10 other people to do the job.
But within each category,
the way the public teachers work right now,
public school teachers work is that
no matter whether they're really good,
no matter whether they're really bad, no matter whether they're really bad,
they are paid flat the same way,
with exceptions only for seniority,
which is how long you've been there,
or whether or not you have a degree, an advanced degree.
The evidence actually shows that there is no correlation
between having the advanced degree
and being a better teacher in most subject areas.
And there's definitely no argument
that seniority makes that difference either.
So my point is within each of those categories,
tie it to actual outcomes and merit.
And the biggest objection you get is,
well, who picks the outcome, right?
And if you have just a testing-based outcome,
are they just going to teach to the test?
My first response to that is you can't let the,
you know, whatever the old expression is,
you can't let the perfect be the enemy of the good.
And I agree with that.
The perfect should not be the enemy of the good.
The status quo of the bad is the enemy of the good,
which is the fact that you've got a massive
underachievement crisis in the United States.
The facts I mentioned earlier where,
I'll tell you what bad is,
is 75% of eighth graders not knowing
how to be proficient in math.
But the other thing is it doesn't have to just be the test.
I think it should be a composite
of a number of different factors.
On the table could be parents' assessments of the teachers,
which I don't think is a bad starting point either.
Ultimately, not to say that parents
are catering to the parent is the only model
or the right answer for the teacher,
but that's probably a good first best place to start.
You could have independent peer reviewed analysis.
You could also then tie that to tests and objective metrics
being an important part of that outcome.
Is that going to be a perfect system?
Maybe there's no such thing as a perfect system.
But I'll tell you what's far worse is having a system
where compensation and promotions are totally agnostic
to the actual performance of kids coming out of that system.
And the reason why is in some ways,
the people who make the decisions aren't the ones
who are actually have skin in the game.
It's not their kids or it's not really their outcome
that matters, their pay isn't tied to it.
Half of public school pay,
half of public school dollars right now,
I think it's over half, it's like 52% of public school dollars right now, I think it's over half, it's like 52%
of public school dollars right now aren't even spent on instruction.
It's not a bunch of other stuff, administration, bureaucracy, you have building construction
or building amenities, you need some level of infrastructure for sure, but I think it
is insane that a majority of dollars flowing into public schools nationally don't even go towards instruction
or towards those teachers.
And so my view is those teachers do need to be,
the best of the teachers absolutely need to be paid
a lot more than they are right now.
And the union, the equalizing effect,
that's actually the obstacle that gets in the way
and do it by category, right?
Another example would be the inner cities.
Well, how are you going to penalize people in like a poor neighborhood versus a better
neighborhood?
To the contrary, it might actually be the opposite because you're looking at the rate
of improvement.
So if you're starting from a low baseline and you have a force of nature of a teacher
who comes in and is able to demonstrate a scale of improvement that school hasn't seen,
that's what you're indexing the actual merit-based pay to is the actual rate of improvement. There's all kinds of questions on implementation and it
could get pretty technical pretty quickly. But the base principle is, do we actually
believe in a meritocracy in education in America? Do we actually believe in meritocracy amongst
educators in America? And I think if we do, that will be the most important thing
we can take up, the most important tool in our toolkit
to solve the problem in our educational achievement crisis
that frankly too few people are talking about right now.
Makes a hell of a lot of sense to me.
And what I meant by the homeschool thing is I think
that people realize that the education system is failing
in a multitude of ways. that people realize that the education system is failing
in a multitude of ways and they're just taking matters into their own hands because what else can you do?
And so, yeah, I think that makes a hell of a lot of sense.
Back to Ohio and you had mentioned AI
and training people how to use AI.
There's a lot of fear that AI is gonna take over
Editors, they're gonna take over attorneys. They're gonna take over doctors. They're gonna all these all these occupations
Have a lot of fear, you know that AI is gonna take over and so how is AI actually going to create jobs?
I mean the first thing to say is that you had to believe
You got to believe that you're gonna stop something from happening before you turn that into a decision.
And at a certain point in time, you got other countries
that are going to leverage AI to beat out the United States
regardless that I think the better question to ask
is how are we going to best use AI,
not only to make the United States competitive
and at the leading edge of all other countries,
but also in a way that actually makes people's lives better, including those of workers.
I think part of what you're seeing is that can actually enhance the productivity of a
lot of workers.
What I see right now though is a massive imbalance, Sean, between the quantity of investment,
and we're talking trillions of dollars of investment going into training new AI models, algorithms, code
versus the amount actually going into training human beings on how to use AI in each of those
fields. I think fast forward 10 years from now, you're not going to eliminate the existence of
lawyers or doctors or nurses, nor should we want that. I mean, there are certain areas we're going
to need human-to-human contact. It's irreplace are certain areas where we're going to need human to human contact.
It's irreplaceable.
But it's not just even the human to human contact
at a emotional touchy feely level.
It's at the level of people who are operating
and using and asking the right questions
of an AI that's actually giving you the right answers.
And we're not trying, right now,
nobody has really given thought
to what that training modality looks like, right?
And I hate using the term the trades versus other professions because it sort of looks
down on the trades.
I think it was probably, I think it was Mike Rowe might have been somebody who came up
with the artisanal professions.
I love that term.
That's great.
I think we need more people trained in artisanal professions and that's a separate conversation
for carpenters and welders and mechanics and plumbers and builders.
But I think we need to think about a separate category, which is not just the
so-called, you know, genius model of the person who's creating a new AI model. We need that too.
But what we're missing out on right now is training a generation to leverage that, to change the way they already practice their profession, from engineering to medicine to law to even day-to-day management of,
I think it's probably a massive business opportunity for somebody to take up a serious enterprise,
business-to-business training enterprise that actually makes sure those workforces aren't replaced by AI,
but are actually enhanced in their productivity by AI.
And I think that that's a opportunity that we would miss
if we just sort of stayed in the clouds
and worried about it and tried to all play ourselves
the victim card, other countries aren't going to be doing
that anyway, we might as well all pull up our pants
and actually figure out how we're going to train ourselves
to make the most of it.
And I think we'll actually be better off.
And we talked earlier about inflation, bringing down cost.. Well if the cost of providing a good or service
It's pretty expensive to get medical care
It's pretty expensive to get a lawyer to defend yourself or to pursue some sort of legal claim
You need to pursue it's out of reach for many people to be able to even make ends meet on
Getting a basic physical exam or a medical test that follows from it without adequate insurance
on getting a basic physical exam or a medical test that follows from it without adequate insurance,
if the cost of providing those things come down
to say that you don't necessarily need somebody
who has been through four years of college,
then four years of medical school,
and then seven years of a surgical training or residency
before they can have the license
to then still have to be a human being,
to have to search the encyclopedia of their brain
to give you an answer
but instead have somebody who was trained as a
physician's assistant or a nurse practitioner who with the aid and experience of day-to-day human contact can have AI who's
Encyclopedia and ability to access it as far in excess of that trained physician who you still need to do a lot of things
But in the meantime you're serving a lot more people at a lower cost. That opens up more jobs for those nurses.
That opens more jobs for those physician's assistants,
even though it might mean fewer physicians who have gone through
the full rigor of what it currently meant to be a physician 10 years ago.
And that doesn't mean we don't need those people either, we need those people too.
It's just going to change the composition of a workforce that I think the worst of all worlds is one where AIs here, whether we like it or not, we sit here with an armchair concern
about, oh no, what are we going to do about it when it takes our jobs?
That's actually going to be a situation where it's more likely to erode and take jobs and
disrupt communities than one in which we say, here's what we actually value.
What are our actual values as a state or as a country?
We want good people who work hard
to be able to live the American dream
that includes the ability to not only amass great wealth
for themselves, but to live affordable lives
as you're pursuing your passion, whatever that may be.
Then you ask the question of,
okay, got this new toolkit coming along.
How do we best leverage that to achieve that American dream?
And I do think one of the areas where we're under-invested today is in workforce training
to use AI, which I think is an opportunity.
Interesting.
Interesting.
Many aspirations to take Ohio tax-free?
Yes.
Really?
I mean, I do think it's table stakes, right?
You've got seven, eight, nine states that are doing it.
I'm not saying that can happen with the flip of the switch, but it's it's table stakes, right? You got seven, eight, nine states that are doing it. Not saying that can happen with the flip of the switch,
but is an aspirational goal, right?
Is it a goal, a destination to be table stakes
that you're competing to be?
If you want to be a state that people are flocking into
rather than out of, I do think that eventually
it's going to be table stakes to be zero income tax states,
to have states with a low property tax burden
and states that like Texas today
are closer to being regulatory sandboxes
for many industries,
but by which I mean, you know,
it's kind of low burden regulation
to be able to draw industry into that state.
I think that's almost table stake stuff
for economic excellence.
I think the harder stuff to deliver in the long run,
equally important is the educational excellence.
But when you think about, you know, Tennessee,
why is it doing well?
Why are people moving into North Carolina?
It's not quite down to zero,
but it's on its way, on its way, stair stepping down to it.
I just think people have a basic hunger, justified demand
to keep what they actually earn.
And if they could pack their bags and move somewhere else,
unfortunately, that's what you see them doing.
And many people in Ohio will go sit in Florida
for six months in a day and pretend like
it's about the weather.
When it wasn't about the weather,
it was about six months in a day for a reason.
Many of them, I mean, I've got people,
friends I know in the Ohio and greater Columbus community who do this all the time.
They would rather be in Columbus the whole time.
And so I don't think that it's a great service to a state,
but the beauty is, that's why people are leaving California
and New York, despite one of the most naturally beautiful
regions and states on the planet.
It's California, people still packing their bags
and moving.
I think if you have a confiscatory environment, as I think they do in California, eventually people are going to pack their bags and moving. I think if you have a confiscatory environment
as I think they do in California,
eventually people are going to pack their bags and go,
especially if they're not even getting the value
out of the taxes they're paying.
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Totally agree with you. The the the caveat to that is, you know,
through COVID, we saw this big, you know, uprising in remote work.
And so how do you, how would a state, so basically what I'm getting at is, how do you keep people from these states coming in, in remote working from, let's say Ohio,
Ohio's a tax, it turns into a tax-free state. How do you keep these influx of people
from astronomical taxes, like California?
How do you keep them, they moved to Ohio,
they're still working in California, technically,
because they're remote workers.
I want their companies moving to Ohio.
I mean, I think that's a big part of even what you're seeing
with other companies reincorporating from places
like California to Texas. I want Ohio to be the place seeing with other companies reincorporating from places like California to Texas.
I want Ohio to be the place where they're actually
reincorporated and moving.
So if you have enough of the workers moving,
I want the company itself come in wholesale
or the divisions of the company to the place
where the next economic boom's actually happening.
And a lot of the ways in which I think we're going to lead
is in Silicon Valley on one hand, you have bits, right?
Leadership in bits, computer programming,
maybe that's remote work stuff.
A lot of the areas of the future,
I think are going to have to be in the form of production
once again in the second industrial revolution
of our country.
Ohio was at the leading edge
for the first industrial revolution.
Even all the way through the 50s,
a lot of people don't know this.
In the 1950s, Toledo was the glass capital of the world.
Many people may not even know Toledo.
It's this city with a rich history in Northwest Ohio,
glass capital of the world, Akron, the rubber capital.
You have Youngstown and Cleveland
that were steel capitals of the United States.
Dayton was a computing power capital
for the Industrial Revolution.
So the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base is today, but it was a computing power capital for the Industrial Revolution. So the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base is today,
but it was a computing power capital back then.
Cincinnati is my hometown was the Queen City.
It was known as the Queen City.
It was a consumer products capital.
They called it Porkopolis.
It was a meat leading meat producer.
These are some of the wealthiest states in the union
dialed back about a century.
I think even in the 50s, by 1950 1950 it was six of the top 15 wealthiest cities
in America, like the equivalent of San Francisco
and Miami and Los Angeles and New York.
That was actually, that was actually Ohio,
six of the top 15.
So I think if you skate to where the puck is going,
not trying to imitate what Silicon Valley was,
and also by the way, they've got great competitive talent there that I don't think it's realistic
to say that we're going to recreate Silicon Valley in Ohio.
Neither is it realistic nor is it desirable.
But looking at areas where you're going to have to actually produce in order to lead.
Think about aerospace production and innovation.
Think about defense industrial based production.
And Earl Huckshan has recently built out a major facility in Ohio announced the
building of a major one, you know, very recently. Oh really? Yeah. Semiconductor
production. So we're beginning to see the demand for natural attributes of people
to leave to parts of the country where they're able to find different kinds of
workforces than just in the, you know, in the insular nature of Silicon Valley
or wherever they may live.
That's a real opportunity,
but there need to be policy changes to make that possible.
And I do think that being zero tax,
being effectively a regulatory economic safe zone
to be able to say that if you want to grow a business here
without really worrying about the red tape
associated with doing so.
This is the state to do it.
That's the part that policy, it's up to policymakers to deliver.
But if we do, yeah, I do think that Ohio was a frontier state before there was a frontier.
And I think it can be a frontier state again.
It just requires actually acting like one.
Interesting, interesting.
Love it.
I love Doc, you always know your stuff.
It's great, especially the history of Ohio
and all those cities.
It's actually really, I mean, the history, I mean,
some of this is, you know, it's got the, you know,
and the next time it won't be the glass
and the rubber capital, that's not what I'm promising.
It's not going to be glass and rubber next time around.
It'll be chips, AI, crypto, aerospace, biotech innovation,
drug discovery, you go straight down the sectors,
AI training for workforces, you can't look and drive
with your eye in the rear of your mirror,
but take the spirit of that to go to the future itself.
I told you about aerospace, the legacy of John Glenn
and Neil Armstrong, half of this
is reviving self-confidence, man.
I think that, you may be aware of this as like an internet memeconfidence, man. I think that,
I mean, you may be aware of this as like an internet meme, and it obviously grates on me when I see it,
but when somebody says on TikTok, oh, that's so Ohio,
what they mean is it's like denigrating that it's old,
it's out of fashion, it's boring.
I'd love to lead Ohio to a place where, what,
20 years from now, 10 years from now, five
years from now, when we're sending new rockets to outer space, when we're actually having
exploration in parts of the moon or even Mars that we haven't previously touched, when we're
curing a form of a disease, a rare disease that was previously incurable.
I want people to say that's so Ohio at that point in time.
That I think is the self-confidence, right right when Neil Armstrong and John Glenn grew up in
Ohio it was at a time when six of the 15 wealthiest cities were in, Ohio
It was at a time where Toledo was the glass capital and Akron was the rubber capital
To say that I'm proud as a citizen of the United States of America
and I'm proud of the place where I live without having to apologize for it or feeling like I'm a
Second tier kind of citizen or second tier kind of economic region in my own nation.
That's what builds the self-confidence
to say I'm going to go to outer space.
And it's not an accident that a bunch of those happen
in the same state at the same time.
I mean, Amelia Earhart had Ohio roots,
the Wright brothers were right there in Dayton.
It's about creating a virtuous cycle of self-confidence.
And you see this in sports sometimes,
it's sort of a weird analogy,
but I think there's something there where,
I'm a tennis fanatic, right?
You see Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic,
all at the exact same time.
It's mathematically, arithmetically,
you wouldn't predict this.
But the three
guys who won the most Grand Slams in history, so in a sport that's been
around for a really long time, the ultimate metric is there's four Grand
Slams a year. Who won the most Grand Slams? Number one, two, and three were
playing at the same time as each other. And like that doesn't make any sense
because there's only four a year.
So if one of the three wins, that means the other two aren't.
And yet the three greatest of all time,
we're playing at the exact same time.
It's because it creates a culture
that has a feedback loop on itself.
And so every one of these successes
isn't just an isolated success.
It's about part of creating a culture
of success.
And I do think that right now, you know, it happens at the level of America as a nation.
And I think in a microcosm, I think it's happened at the level of Ohio as a state, where people
have lost their conviction in their citizenship in their country and in this case in their state too. So Donald Trump is reviving our conviction in their citizenship, in their country, and in this case, in their state
too.
So Donald Trump is reviving our conviction in America.
I think he's got that covered.
We're only a few weeks into the presidency, and I just think the number one thing he is
going to have delivered a year in isn't even the important stuff of sealing the border.
He's going to do all these things, seal the border, grow the economy, stop the foreign wars, negotiate settlements where needed to keep us out of funding foreign
interests that don't advance our own objectives at home, ending government waste,
ending backdoor censorship, all of it. He's on top of it. He's on the case. He's going to do it.
But I think the number one thing he's actually going to have tangibly delivered come a year from now is a revival
of conviction in America. And I think that's great. He's got that covered. I'm interested
in reviving our conviction in Ohio. And I do think that there is, there's a deficit
there. I do think the revival of that self-confidence is half the job of a good leader, and economic excellence and educational excellence
automatically follow from there.
Excellent, excellent.
I can't wait till you're in the thick of it.
Excellence is in the end.
You're gonna have like, what, a 31%?
It's, we're doing, well, I think I was 57%
in the most recent poll,
and that came out at the start of this week.
And then the guy who was number three in that poll,
great guy, yesterday dropped out and endorsed me.
We're, winning is not the ultimate goal.
Winning is a means to the end of actually turning
this state into the leading edge of innovation
around the world.
And what Javier Malay has done in Argentina
in a short amount of time, in the United States,
compared to Argentina, we have more of a system
of federalism than they do in Argentina.
Argentina is a small country in the United States as well.
But what he has done in Argentina,
I think we have an opportunity at the state level
to demonstrate what's possible
in the United States of America.
So I think, you know, bringing a Malay style outlook
of economic stimulus to a state like Ohio,
to the Ohio River Valley, to what people will call,
I don't like this term,
but what people have historically called the Rust Belt
will instead be, I think, the new platinum belt,
the new excellence belt of America.
And I do think that that works, if you're willing to actually do the things required to get
there.
That works in the short run.
I mean, get to zero tax, slash and burn the regulatory state.
President Trump talked about freedom cities.
Remember this?
I think it's a great idea, the idea of creating cities that are fountainheads of innovation
where you just have special economic zones in those cities
to spawn innovation in the areas of the future, right?
Future cities, that's great.
I would love to not only revive that concept
for federal cities, federal freedom cities,
but to have Ohio be the state where many of them
are actually housed and show what's possible.
That's great, and that revives the self-confidence.
You fix an education system that serves our kids
with merit-based pay, school choice, civic education,
physical education at that young age.
I do think physical fitness is a virtue that we've lost,
at least amongst cultivating in our kids.
I think you've got a whole lab for what's again possible
in the United States of America.
So if Donald Trump's doing it at the federal level, he's got that covered.
The only thing we need left is leaders with that kind of spine at the state level to do
the same thing.
And I do think that that's where the puck is going over the next couple of years.
Speaking of Trump, it's only been a couple of weeks.
Things really seem to be turning around,
I think, way faster than anybody ever imagined.
How do you think it's going?
I think it's going well.
I do think that he is far more seasoned
for this second term than the first, right?
I do think the first term was the most successful
that we've had of any 21st century president.
In some sense, that's too low of a bar, right?
Who do you have?
You have Bush, Biden, Obama, Trump, wasn't even close.
But I do think this second term is in a different category.
He's coming in with a level of preparedness.
He is no deer in the headlights with the deep state.
I think that the deer in the headlights
is the other way around, right?
When he's come in, they are completely paralyzed
by a US president who, radical as this idea might be,
is actually running the executive branch
of the United States of America.
By the way, it has historically worked,
is that the president and other elected leaders
are these cute little puppets that come and go.
I mean, obviously nobody thinks Biden
was running the country, right?
But he was a cog in a system,
but the system would still do fine
once the next cog came along.
Trump's not a cog, he's bringing a jackhammer to that system.
I think that the administrative state is stunned.
And I think that is what's going to be required
to save the country.
He's also just moving fast
on the things he said he was going to do.
I think that one of the things
that people are really used to is,
wait, he said he was going to do all these things,
sealing the border, using all resources,
including from the Defense Department required
to be able to do it,
ending the ability for men to compete in women's sports.
Like that was pretty early that came out in recent days.
He's actually doing the things that he said he was gonna do,
but he's doing them too fast.
Is that like the only objection,
best objection that people have?
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He definitely is moving at a faster pace than probably any president has in modern history
or in our lifetimes.
But I think generally if somebody was elected
with a mandate and told you they were going to do
certain things and then he goes in there and does them
and he does them quickly,
I don't think that the fact of doing them quickly
is a bad thing, I think it's a good thing.
And the fact that I think the best allegation
they're coming up with is that the pace is just too crazy.
Well, when you had open borders
and the largest influx of illegals in American history
and a flailing economy and inflation
we haven't seen in 50 years
and foreign conflicts that didn't exist
when Donald Trump left office that do now exist
that need to be extinguished.
Yeah, I do think that fast and furious
is exactly what we need.
And I am so far as impressed as I possibly could be.
And I'm also somebody who, as you know,
in my experience of running for president,
of course of our own conversations, even predating that,
I'm not gonna just read from the chapter and verse
of Republican talking points, but I think we're just speaking a hard chapter and verse of Republican Talking Points,
but I think we're just speaking a hard truth right now.
He's come out with a bang
and I wanna see that continue for the next four years.
Do you have any fear that it's just gonna get unraveled?
Of course.
I mean, that's-
Is he doing it in a way that it can't be unraveled?
Well, I mean, I think again,
let's just say that that's step one, right?
Step one is you gotta do it. I mean, the idea of the fear of it being unraveled? Well, I mean, I think, again, let's just say that that's step one, right? Step one is you
got to do it. I mean, that the idea of the fear of it being unraveled, being a basis for saying,
therefore, we're going to take some other slower approach is a wrong alternative. But the idea of
just saying we did it, and therefore, we're going to be complacent, that's not an answer either.
So the way I look at it is you do everything you possibly can legally through executive action,
go far, reset the cultural baseline in government
and the cultural baseline to some sense in the country
to expect more of our government and the consequence.
After that, you shut the door
and really shut the door through legislation.
That legislation takes a long time.
Some of it will happen, some of it won't happen. Just the nature of how Congress works. But I don't think that
that concern should stop you from doing something through executive action that you otherwise
could have done. Just an example from the week, right? If you have the opportunity to
pass a new law that says that men can't compete in women's sports and receive federal funding
at the same time.
You could say that that is arguably more solid without a legal challenge in courts than an executive action,
but that would take forever to do.
And you don't need to actually wait for that law to be passed,
because the existing laws already say that federal funds should not allow for local institutions
who are receiving those federal funds to discriminate in that way.
Now let's go to the next level. Many of these local institutions should not be receiving those federal funds to discriminate in that way. Now let's go to the next level.
Many of these local institutions should not be receiving those federal funds because that money is just making a round trip
from those localities to the federal government.
There's a bureaucratic rake and then less of it comes back to the people.
That doesn't make any sense.
So the right answer, the next step will be
shut down the Department of Education and return that money to the states.
And so the way I see President Trump moving is fiercely rational.
Just go quickly using the levers of executive power to do what needs to be done quickly
and within the bounds of law.
Next is then dismantle the bureaucracy that sort of messed up those actions in the first
place.
Actually just you can't reform that bureaucracy but tear down the parts of the bureaucracy
that just need to be torn down and never rebuilt
Then the next step is when in doubt about the rest
Kick it to the states except for the essentials of what we actually need to preserve in the federal government
And I think that that's going to be that you know, three-step sequence is going to look like the first 18 months
Which brings us back to earlier discussion, which is then it goes to the center of gravity for what's left
You know shifts and kicks to the states and if we get each of those each of the steps of that cascade done
That's what the stuff of staving a country in a lasting way
Actually looks like and so do we have to be vigilant to make sure this doesn't just all get sort of reversed
either through the myriad legal challenges that are coming or, you know, by a future president that through a stroke of a pen can
reverse everything to the prior status quo.
Yeah, we've got to be vigilant for that.
But I don't think that should stop us, should not stop President Trump from moving swiftly
in a fast and furious kind of way.
And I say that in the best of ways.
Did you see, was it yesterday,
maybe it was the day before,
first foreign dignitary to be in the White House, Netanyahu?
Yes, I think there's more coming as well.
I'm sure there are, I'm sure there's a lot more coming.
But, I mean, what did you make of when he said,
he really threw him there.
He said we would basically control Gaza and occupy it.
It caught some folks by surprise there.
I would say that, first of all,
just on the paws of foreign dignitaries coming
in the way that they are,
I think that he's commanding respect again.
I mean, I do not think the rest of these world leaders
had an iota of respect for Biden as the president.
They had a respect for the office of the president,
but I don't think they fundamentally respected
the man who occupied it,
largely because people have been in rooms with him,
even business leaders who have gone to the White House
in late Biden's tenure have told me the same thing.
He's just not there, right?
You and I are having a conversation as two,
thinking human beings, examining one another's thoughts.
That wasn't something that happened
for people who met with Biden in the White House. And I don't mean to rag on the guy, being human beings, examining one another's thoughts. That wasn't something that happened
for people who met with Biden in the White House.
And I don't mean to rag on the guy,
in some ways feel bad for any person of older age
who's passed their peak of mental acuity
and is suffering from it,
but that was the state of affairs.
Now you got a guy who is with it, who brings the energy,
who has the spine and the resolve and the force of muscle
to be able to actually
engage with independent ideas and negotiate in the backdrop of those ideas.
So Donald Trump is a master conversation starter.
He is a master negotiator, and he's a master at using a start of a conversation to enter
a negotiation.
Look at what happened even in the discussions in recent days with Mexico, Canada, and China.
Well, he brought Mexico and Canada to the table
and now the real focus shifts to what the heck
we're going to do in our relationship with China,
which is in a different category from Mexico and Canada.
China's in a different category
because we can't depend on China for our modern way of life.
You got most of the semiconductors
in the US Department of Defense being supplied by China.
Our defense industrial base depends on China.
Our pharmaceutical supply chain depends on China.
So it's not just a trade question.
It's a question of actual national security,
actually in a true sense.
You can't depend on an adversary
for things that are essential to your existence.
But look at the masterful way he backed into that, right?
He started with, I want to talk about Canada,
talk about Mexico, get him to the table,
conversation starters that were,
you could call them aggressive openers of conversation.
But he's a guy who is able to start a conversation
that otherwise would not be had.
I love that he met in person with Gavin Newsom, great.
He'd trade barbs with the guy,
but push comes to shove on issues that relate to America.
Gavin's going to be talking to him in good faith about it.
Donald Trump will have that conversation.
And then Bibi comes here.
He has a conversation and he,
akin to a lot of his other conversation openers,
had a, started a conversation by lighting a fire
that otherwise sparks a conversation.
Okay, what does the future actually look like?
Like let's talk about amongst serious ideas of how we're going to make sure the United
States' interests are protected in ways that don't drag us into protracted conflicts in
the Middle East. I mean, Donald Trump was the OG in the Republican Party for that. He
was an opponent to the Iraq War before that was a cool thing to say for a Republican politician. I think he's a guy who knows what he's doing. I think he's a pragmatist who understands America's interests deeply
and I think that you got to let him work it in his method in order to get there even if every one of the
you know initial
Conversation starters isn't necessarily the literal way that he's actually going to ultimately do it.
Do you think we should control Gaza?
Well, look, I think that let's just take a broader question
about U.S. Middle East policy.
I don't think our track record,
I don't think anything I'm going to say is super controversial
here, I think it's kind of obvious.
I don't think our track record of
Being a nation-building
Operator in the Middle East
Has been very good or we wouldn't be where we are in Iraq and Afghanistan right now I mean for God's sake the Taliban is still in charge eighty billion dollars and two decades later
It wasn't a nation-building project that worked. I don't think that Iraq
was compared to the amount of money and even more importantly than money, the lives that
were sacrificed, I don't think achieved our objectives there. And by the way, I fully
being in the room with one of them, fully respect the patriots who served our country
when our country called for their service. And I think there were valuable objectives to have been achieved in a narrow way,
certainly in Afghanistan.
And you could talk about other missions elsewhere, but I think by and large,
our track record of engaging in, you know,
straight up nation building has historically in the Middle East,
not been all that successful. What I'm going to say here is,
I'm going to give president Trump the space to know that he's a man who has a strategy.
When he says something, in the long run,
he has an idea of where he's going.
And he is somebody who has proven time and again
that he's able to use the contours of conversation
and negotiation to achieve what others
would have previously deemed impossible.
I mean, I think what he did even in the Middle East
last time around with the Abraham Accords was unthinkable.
It was unthinkable at the time he took office.
And you're not just gonna get there by some linear path
with, you know, bushy tail showing up and saying,
okay, well, here's what I wanna do.
And I'm gonna tell you exactly what that is.
And somehow everyone's gonna magically agree with me.
No, it doesn't work that way.
You gotta have some level of cojones to say the things that others aren't willing to say,
to bring people to the table in complex ways. And so I'm going to let him do his job as the
commander in chief to lead us effectively. He's demonstrated time and again that he knows what
he's doing. Obviously, he knows as well as anybody what our historical track record in you know occupation and nation-building in the
Middle East has been in the past because he was the guy who called that to the
forefront of the Republican Party and I think he knows what he's doing when it
comes to mapping out how we're gonna secure America in the future which is
his top objective. Let's talk about Doge.
Sure.
Department of Government Efficiency.
Yes, love it.
You're a big part of that.
And then what happened?
Yeah, I mean, look, I've been talking about this for years.
I mean, tackling the administrative state
has been my longtime passion.
And Elon and I actually met first when I ran for president
at a dinner where this is exactly the topic
we spent hours into 1 a.m
Talking about was the basis of our friendship ever since first objective is get Donald Trump elected after he got elected
Yeah, the question is how are we gonna have how for me personally?
How am I gonna have my impact on the country?
That was the issue that I had been so focused on wrote a book even recently laying out the roadmap of one way
I thought a lot of this could get done, taking a legal and constitutional
law first approach and legislation to be able to cut budgets in a lasting way, to be able
to do it in a way that used the law and the lawmaking process and recent Supreme Court
precedents.
And so that was a vision I've been articulating for a long time, you know, even spoke about
that shortly after Doge was announced in the op-ed
in the Wall Street Journal that Elon and I co-published there,
you know, lay that out.
Now, something like Doge has never happened before,
and it's like a new startup.
It takes different directions,
and I think that as the plan evolved
to take more of a technology-centric approach, right?
Doge was supposed to be an outside body to the government that was taking a look at a
lot of these other constitutional and legal dimensions.
I think it became clear that to drive rapid change in some of the ways that we could score
quick wins, Doge came to reside in the government, taking a technology-first approach, taking
over what was formerly known as the U.S. digital services.
At that point, Elon and President Trump and I,
we all came to the same conclusion
that for me to drive the vision I had in mind,
the best way to do that,
the best perch from which to do it is elected office.
And so we all landed at the same place.
And I think it was what this past Monday
that Elon and I did our first Dogecast Twitter spaces,
ex spaces, X spaces.
I think we started at midnight, it went to 1.30 a.m.,
laying out a lot of what this vision was.
And if you look at how much he's been able to do
in just the first two weeks, it's massive.
And when you think about a technology driven approach,
nobody better to do it than Elon.
And I think he is doing it not in a small way,
but in a big way.
And I'm gonna be as helpful on my front
of leading at the state level
as is going to be required to pick up the pieces
from tearing up the federal bureaucracy.
How many people are involved with that?
Oh, I think that it's not,
success ought not be measured in terms of numbers of people.
In some ways you want fewer people doing a lot. So I'm going to stick to what's, I mean, I'm not on the inside, I want to be numbers of people. In some ways you want fewer people doing a lot.
So I'm going to stick to what's,
I mean, I'm not on the inside,
I want to be respectful of it.
But you're not talking about five people,
but you're not talking about an army of thousands of people
that are randomly just looking for work to do either.
That's the rest of the federal bureaucracy.
But a lean, mean team, I think,
has accomplished a lot in a short amount of time.
I mean, any surprises for you yet?
I mean, a lot of people.
Not really.
There's a lot of chatter about USAID right now
and all the funding of different things.
Looks like they're involved in the Romania stuff that we kind of.
It's insane.
I mean, even domestic political press.
It's insane.
Yeah.
And so that caught a lot of people's eye.
We're doing an interview here in a couple days about it.
But I was surprised at the USAID stuff.
I mean, that really-
I think it's great that Elon and the team are focused there.
I give really good credit here on to President Trump
for USAID.
I mean, he understands that even in some of the conversations
I had with President Trump,
even at the Army-Navy game where you and I were,
I mean, he mentioned that to me then.
He mentioned it several times over
that this was one of the areas where he knows
there's massive amount of waste of US taxpayer dollars.
And also kind of a cultural issue.
People who've been worked in the State Department
or good people even who've worked in or around the USAID
will tell you it almost developed a culture
of just believing that it wasn't accountable to anybody,
not even the department in which it sat,
let alone the American people.
And at a certain point,
you cannot incrementally reform that type of beast.
If you wanna tame that beast,
you gotta look at it wholesale.
And so look, I love the expansive vision
with which, you know, Elon is moving quickly,
but it starts with a president who is really has the spine to do what,
usually you might have a president that talks
on the campaign trail and then when it comes to,
you know, making the leap when they're in office,
gets a little gun shy when they look off the cliff.
Now you got a guy who's been in there before,
he's had four years to think about it.
It's a rare situation in American history.
He looks at this as how do I actually,
from a legacy of the United States of America,
make the changes that need to be made?
And you take a look at an organization like USAID,
which is supposedly historically a sacred cow
that couldn't be touched,
lift the hood and see just the level of,
I guess I could call it lowercase C corruption
in the way a lot of those dollars are spent
Yeah, I think the American people are on the side of saying give me back that money
Instead of using it to achieve influence operations domestically or abroad. So how does it work? How does it work? I mean, we've seen all these just in the two weeks. We've seen all these things identified. Yeah, you know, just
cash just going out the door for
various reasons.
And so is it, when they unveil it, and they unveil, hey, USAID funded whatever, insert
any of the last ten things that they have unveiled, is that when the funding stops?
Is it an exposure game? Doge exposes it to
the US government?
So I'll share with you my opinion. Right. I'll share with you my opinion. And I think,
again, we're going to give President Trump the latitude he needs to lead in the way that
he knows the country needs to go without from the peanut gallery,
it's micro-guessing what each of these decisions are.
He knows what he's doing.
But at a high level, give you the general principle,
the US president runs the executive branch of government.
Just because something has budgeted
does not mean that he has an obligation to spend it
on a wasteful, fraudulent,
or abusive application of that budget.
So this gets into, I mean, I don't know,
if this is too technical or whatnot,
but the Impoundment Control Act, okay?
That's an act passed in the 70s that said,
the US president has to spend certain money
if it's been appropriated
by Congress, otherwise it's called impoundment
where he's not spending the money.
And so the impoundment control act stops him
from doing that.
If you read the statute carefully,
like read the actually existing law carefully,
it's pretty clear that waste, fraud, or abuse
is not in that category.
Like the idea that just because you've allocated the budget
doesn't mean that that agency has to spend that money
if it's going to a wasteful or fraudulent or
An abusive expenditure. No, that's already a carve-out
So that's already is a great place to start waste fraud abuse
The president has the authority to do it and the president has the authority to delegate the exercise of that authority
Which is what he's done here through the creation of Doge
And I think it's a brilliant move within the bounds of law and that's not even touching the separate view that
I think a lot of thoughtful legal minds have that the empowerment control act itself might be unconstitutional
Without even going there right which I think there are strong arguments for that
Waste fraud abuse is something that no president is already authorized to to spend now
let's go to a separate point a lot of people don't know this is that a
Good portion of the money that's spent every year,
I think it's to the tune of about $500 billion,
was never actually authorized by Congress in the first place,
which is actually insane.
So if Congress never authorized it,
the idea that you have to continue to spend it
is also insane.
So I think those two things, waste fraud abuse,
far more massive, far more pervasive
than most Americans envision,
but I'm glad the flashlights brought to
where the sun don't shine in the bureaucracy
and that's how you actually get accountability and change.
But combine that with executive action
to say that we don't have to spend that money
if there's an argument for waste fraud and abuse.
By the way, the statute saying all this stuff
might be itself be unconstitutional anyway,
but more importantly, that you have a US president that's actually running the show and calling those shots the elected leader by the people of this country
Rather than some unelected bureaucrat mad managing his fiefdom without accountability. That's not a democracy
Right. I mean the basic premise of a democracy and you know
You always have the people and you know, who are technical about this,
we're a constitutional republic, yes, okay.
I love that, but I'm just talking in a colloquial sense,
lowercase d, democracy.
The basic premise of a democracy
is that when somebody in a government
makes a decision that binds you,
okay, that stops you from doing something, or when somebody in a government makes a decision that binds you, okay, that stops you from doing something.
Or when somebody in a government makes a decision
that spends your money, that they,
effectively with the force of government,
extracted from you.
That if they don't do a good job or you disagree with that,
you get to vote them out of that position.
That's just table stakes for democracy.
When somebody makes laws that bind you
or spends your money by taxing you,
you get to vote them out.
If that doesn't exist, then we don't live in a democracy.
We live in something else altogether.
So the United States was founded on this idea
that the people we elect to run the government
should be the ones actually running the government.
That's not the case today.
That's bluntly not the case today.
The people who make most of the laws,
they call them rules,
but they function with the effect of law.
People could have their lives ruined over them.
The people who make those rules were never elected
to their position in the first place.
They're unelected bureaucrats.
And so the idea that those decisions made
by those bureaucrats are somehow untouchable,
I think is something that says
we don't actually live in a democracy.
We live in some sort of technocratic, bureaucratic monarchy.
And I think we fought an American Revolution to reject that.
And I do think we live in a 1776 kind of moment right now
where we're rejecting that monarchy all over again.
I guess what I'm asking is, thank you for explaining all that, but is the, what I'm
asking is how does it work?
Does Doge shine the light on the wasteful spending?
Get that information to the president?
To the president.
And then the president makes the decision whether to stop it or not to stop it.
Eminently sensible.
That's exactly the way, I mean, you see the way things have worked even in the last two
weeks.
Spotlight, President Trump makes the decisions, President Trump makes the decisions with executive
authority going as far as he can.
Waste fraud abuse, that's the categories.
And then any spending cuts beyond that have to come from Congress.
Okay.
And then what is the strategy?
Are they, I mean, you can't go, because I don't think you can, you can't oversee all
of the wasteful spending all at once.
So they're starting in categories, are they going to go through USAID, FBI, CIA, is that how it's going to work?
I'll let President Trump, you know, lead the way.
I think some of this is being done through a positive kind of shock and all, right?
I mean, I think that that's, I think it's a positive term.
I mean that in the best of ways, but you come in, in some ways you have to let the actions
speak louder than the words.
And so what I can say is in the several months that I spent helping lay the groundwork for
this, thinking about there's a lot of different dimensions.
There's the technology elements, there's the spending elements, there's the legal, constitutional,
regulatory elements, each had our areas of focus.
For my areas of focus, as we said, I think elected office is the right
best next way to realize it. But for a lot of these other, you know, turning off agencies,
deleting their actions, I think a lot of that is well thought out. But I think it's best
done through actions rather than words. And so I predict that there will be continued additional successes, bold moves, moves that will not always be applauded
by the legacy press that covers Washington, D.C.,
but I think will be applauded
by the majority of people in this country.
Yeah, I think that too.
How long do you anticipate the initial sweep?
How long do you anticipate the initial sweep to go for? I mean, let's just take the initial sweep, how long do you anticipate the initial sweep to go for?
I mean, let's just take the category of,
what do you think of the initial phase of the presidency
is undoing damage of the last administration?
Because there's a category of just,
what did Biden do that needs to be undone?
And I always say Biden, it's not really Biden,
but the machine that manages Biden.
What did the Biden administration do that needs to be undone? I mean, that's the really Biden, but the machine that manages Biden. What did the Biden administration do
that needs to be undone?
I mean, that's the first three to six months of work
of this presidency, right?
I mean, this is the electorate gave President Trump a mandate,
and it was a mandate,
to reverse the damage of the last four years.
I'm not saying that's gonna be easy,
but that in some ways is the easiest part.
Right, so I think there's two phases
to this national revival.
The first phase is undo the damage of the last four years.
That is the phase of running from something
as fast as we can.
I think it'll be the second phase of this
that then becomes harder,
which is we're not just running from
something, but we're running to something.
What does the alternative vision of what the country actually looks like, what comes after?
A lot of the successful executive orders in, I think, the first couple of weeks, there
was a lot, but one of the areas that was particularly notable was effectively the ending of DEI
and affirmative action and race-based quota systems in the
government, which is having a trickle-down effect to the private sector, because then
it applies to government contractors who are no longer bound by the same thing.
That's not some small segment of the economy.
20% of the US workforce works for a company that's covered by those government contracting
regulations, now free of these DEI regime stuff.
So a lot of this is like, for example, undoing what happened under Biden
and just fast and furious, undo that as quickly as possible.
A lot of what Biden did was regulation by fiat,
spending through the executive branch.
You know, even you're asking about Doge,
one of the areas to look at is even all the money
that Biden pushed out at the 11th hour after the election.
It's an insane amount of money that was pushed out
because they knew Donald Trump's coming in on January 20th.
They pushed that money out to Rivian. I mean you got a bunch of other people who just received
billions of dollars they shouldn't have otherwise received. So phase one of this,
we're talking at the, I would have said six months at the pace President Trump's moving, maybe it'll be three months.
Okay, we're looking at just fast and furious of reversing the damage, damage control from Biden has done.
We have set the nation back to resetting it to year three of the Trump presidency, 2019.
I think of that as actually a really worthy goal of just baselining the country back to 2019 on
so many metrics, right? As the final year of the Trump presidency pre-pandemic.
Think about the number of border crossings,
hit an all time low in 2019.
Think about even our federal budget, by the way.
People don't stop to ask this sometimes.
And even if you go to Washington, DC,
they use a lot of willy-nilly wonky language
of non-discretionary budget, this or that.
Just a basic question, like just forget the verbiage.
How much money?
Like how much taxpayer cash?
Did the government spend last year answer about seven trillion dollars just a hair less
Next question how much money just like cash forget nondiscretionary and discretionary this and mandatory spending this, no just forget, just like overall dollars.
How much money did the federal government spend in the year 2019?
The answer was less than four and a half trillion.
So to those who say, right, to the project of cutting two trillion dollars in federal
expenditures, oh, it's just not possible.
2019 was not some ancient period of history.
Like it wasn't that long ago.
We all remember it.
It was the third year of Trump's term,
the final year of his first presidency before the pandemic.
If we just view the first three months,
the first six months of this,
but I think President Trump's going even faster,
of baselining the country back to 2019
for border crossings, for how we felt,
for what people felt like affordability was,
what inflation was in the country.
Think about even at least as a mental model
of what federal spending looked like
without all of the level of waste that Biden introduced.
That wasn't that long ago.
So I think that phase one of this is just undo the damage
of the last four years.
I'm not saying it's easy, of course it's not.
Trump's the man for the job, he's going to do it.
But then the question is, okay,
what does the second phase look like
when we actually are post DEI?
Let's just start, I mean, let's use that as an example.
What does the post DEI America look like?
And that's just one of like 50 changes
that President Trump is making, but just as an example.
I think that causes us to have to level up
to answer that question, right?
We got a man up to say that for the last four years
we've had, it's almost an easy talking point, right?
We're against DEI.
I mean, I was the crusader against this before.
It was cool, but now we're post DEI.
Now we've got nothing left to blame, right?
So for 70% of our kids aren't doing well in math,
but we've actually eliminated the subsidization
of DEI in our schools.
Okay, now what are we gonna do actually?
Solve the remaining problem that's actually left.
What does equal opportunity actually look like?
We're against the equal results BS,
but what does actual restoration of equal opportunity
for all actually look like?
Okay, we've cut a lot of the executive order based spending of waste fraud, abuse and all that.
But if we're serious about really permanently ending the precipice that we're all otherwise
on our way to with the national debt, what does that mean for work requirements attached to welfare or other
forms of federal payments, right?
Those are different conversations.
So I think that there's two phases to this.
I think there's phase one shock and awe moving so quickly that they won't even know what
hit them.
You can see it from the other side's response.
Like they have no idea what hit them is just restoring the country back
to 2019 greatness, okay?
In a manner of, I use the word company,
Donald Trump is the CEO of the executive branch,
he's running it, running the executive branch
with the principles that a great CEO of a company would.
And I don't think that's a bad thing.
But we're so much more than a company as a country.
We're a nation.
And so having done that,
what does rebuilding this nation look like?
For that, we have to say not what we're running from, but what are we actually running to as a
nation? What were those civic ideals that we want to revive in the country? And I think that's a
longer term project. I think it's a longer term project, not just at the presidential or federal level, but to our earlier conversation,
I think it will be governors and even local leaders
that have to lead the way on that project.
And I think that that's where the next chapter
of work actually begins.
Do you think that,
so you think the Doge will actually expand into states?
It has to.
It has to. I think it's a necessity. Interesting. I think It has to. It has to.
I think it's a necessity.
Interesting.
I think it has to and must expand to each of the 50 states.
And that doesn't mean the methods in each of the 50 states
are the same as the methods of the federal government
because it's a different problem to solve.
But I do think that each of the 50 states
taking a long hard look at waste, fraud, abuse
of how those state dollars are spent.
In some ways the capture of state governments is even worse than the capture of the federal
government.
I do think about cronyism in the state government administration, in some cases even worse than
you'd imagine at the federal level.
And so I do think that bringing the essence of restoring three branches of government
rather than four, the mission of reducing waste fraud abuse, the essence of restoring three branches of government rather than four.
The mission of reducing waste fraud abuse,
the mission of cutting red tape and over regulation.
That project is not done when it's done at the federal level.
That's just the beginning.
That's the end of the beginning.
And I think you ought to get to the beginning of the end.
That's when you actually start doing it at the state level.
If you just pull most people in this country,
you could just ask most people you know,
do you think there's too much red tape in America
or too little red tape in America?
I think you will find a lot of people
who would tell you there's too much red tape.
Small business owner or a hairdresser
who has to get a license to be able to practice
or profession, the ability to be able to start a new business
in nuclear energy production in the United States
hasn't happened in 30 years?
Is there too much red tape or too little red tape?
I think you'll have a lot of people will tell you that there's too much red tape.
In America, try bringing a new medicine to market the 10 years and billion plus dollars
that that takes.
That was the industry that I was in and I've overseen the development of five medicines
that went on to become FDA approved.
I can tell you from experience, every one of those could and should have been developed
at a fraction of the cost if the regulatory regime worked the way it actually should.
I don't think you'll find anybody who would tell you that there's,
I think there's too little red tape in America.
I think we need more red tape in America.
I think we actually need a little bit more regulatory obstacles before we're able to do
certain things.
I don't think you're going to find many people in that category.
What do you think about this deep seek stuff?
I mean, China basically, they did that for what?
Six, was it $6 million?
We'll see what the actual facts are.
So I'm not sure if I believe the exact numbers,
but broadly speaking, did they create
what appears to be a competitive,
in some ways potentially even superior level of AI
to that which it took tens of billions of dollars,
maybe even hundreds of billions of dollars
of investment from US companies with computing power
that was a fraction of what the US companies had access to.
It appears to be that way.
Yes, now some of the details,
maybe they had access to a little more computing power,
maybe there's a little bit more money spent,
but don't let that deflect from the main point.
This goes to the earlier question
about US education and preparedness for the next generation.
It's an example of it.
I'm not saying the deep sea cologne is the wake-up call.
We should have the wake-up call.
We could have the wake-up call every day,
just from the fact that 70% of our eighth graders
are on proficient in math.
But they're deeply related.
So just on the facts of what happened, right?
Cause people hear this and we're like in a modern
social media culture where people read something
for two seconds on their social media feed
and then that's what they remember of it.
Like, let's just sort of ground ourselves on what happened.
There were export controls of chips from the US to China
and you have apparently, if the facts are to be believed,
they had access to something like 10,000 to 50,000 or so,
and maybe it was a little more than that
based on new reporting,
but call it 50,000 plus A100 GPU computing power chips
from Nvidia, where US companies, like Meta I think it's like something
like had 350,000 plus H100 GPU computing power chips
from Nvidia.
So it's like 60 plus, 63X plus computing power
for US companies might have access to
versus this relatively modestly funded startup in China.
And what they did was with that capital constraint
and with that computing power constraint,
even if you're skeptical of the exact numbers,
they were able to use that to, in a scrappy way,
get to a similar place by doing some clever things, right?
Examples of what it seems like they did.
Instead of using 32 decimal places afterwards for a number, for numerically
training AI, they used eight decimal places instead. Well, they're not, maybe not quite
as precise as using 32, but for any near term human use, maybe they felt like eight decimal
places after was good enough. Or they used different areas of specialization where they
didn't require everyone to be an expert in everything at the same time, but use these so-called centers of excellence, or there
are different ways you could phrase what that is, where you'd have the relevant experts
train on their relevant area of subject matter expertise.
But if you had something in the field of building a bridge, you don't need the advent of the
best medical expert necessarily stepping up to answer that question question because that's otherwise a waste in computing power.
So you had different scrappy things that they did along the way, training it on phrases
at a time rather than just individual letters or words to be able to use capital constraint
and resource constraint to still get to the same place.
I mean, that's a...
I think about that kind of scrapiness
as an American quality, actually.
We're the pioneers and the explorers
and the scrappy and the unafraid.
And yet what we see is that this is a wake-up call for us.
And I saw the Telegram founder, Pavel Durov,
had an interesting comment about this,
which I think was, I don't agree with everything
he wrote in there, but he had an interesting comment about this, which I think was, I don't agree with everything he wrote in there, but he had an interesting comment tying this success,
this apparent success for this Chinese startup
to even deeper differences in the Chinese educational system
versus the current US educational system.
And I think that if we don't use that at a wake up call
for us to at least light a fire under the feet of our STEM education in this country,
then we would be making a grave mistake.
Well, Vivek, I know you got a dinner you got to get to.
Is there anything else you want to discuss?
No, it's gone right by, man.
You know, I think overcoming this victimhood culture
in the United States is something that I think I'm pretty keen on right now.
I think that that's for everything we've talked about from education to AI to economic leadership
to success, right?
Even in overcoming the federal bureaucracy and downsizing the federal government, it's
easy to point the finger at the government,
and I do it because I think we should expect more
of our bureaucrats and our politicians
and expect a lesser size of our bureaucracy.
But part of the reason that exists
is that you have a culture that demands it.
Right, you have an electorate that demands
greater dependence on the government now
rather than independence from it,
and then a victimhood narrative to justify that dependence.
And it's mostly come from the left, right?
But I'm gonna talk about it in terms that aren't partisan
at this point, we won, right?
So what's the point of just
repeatedly pointed the other party.
This is mostly a left-wing problem.
I'm also worried that it's 10% likely to be a problem
on the right as well.
But I don't care whether it's left-wing victimhood
or victimhood culture that goes beyond the left.
We are not victims.
We're not a nation of victims.
I wrote a book a couple of years ago
called Nation of Victims.
We should not at our best be a nation of victims.
We are a nation of victors.
And I do think that one of the things President Trump's doing
an outstanding job of his restoring respect for us
on the global stage.
I love the conversations he's opened up
from Greenland to the Panama Canal.
Great conversations for us to have.
But to puff our chests abroad,
we got to all pull up our pants at home.
I believe that.
You know, that's an expression
that has historically been used to preach
to certain wings of the American left
or whatever.
I think I'm talking to all of us here.
We all got to pull up our pants at home.
Enough whining, start winning.
The pursuit of excellence is what I want to see
in America.
And especially since we've now defeated the left
at the ballot box, I'm keen to make sure
that we restore that pursuit of excellence in America. And wherever it comes
from, victimhood culture, I think we got to get over it and
see ourselves as actually victorious. We're the unafraid.
We're the people who nobody could stop. We're a country
built on the idea of merit and meritocracy. That's America.
That's what Donald Trump is standing for right now. And we
can't forget that.
And I hope that somebody doesn't have to pick up this
exchange three or four years from now and say,
oh gee, I wish we had heeded that earlier.
I hope that's not where we're headed.
And the left-wing victimhood narratives
have ruined this country.
I don't want to see those
Re-emerge where did it come from?
Where did the victim of stem from government handouts?
We're you know, I think it stemmed in part from the Great Society in the 1960s
Which was built on the idea of a victimhood narrative and to think about victimhood narratives that make them alluring
Is that there's always some truth at the kernel of it to justify it, right?
And in the case of the great society,
it's patently true that black Americans did not have
not only the same opportunities that white Americans did,
black Americans were a century before then,
slaves in the United States of America, right?
So there's a justification for it,
but at a certain point in time,
it actually becomes counterproductive
to drive with your eyes in the rear of your mirror,
as I said earlier, to wallow in that victimhood
versus saying, how are we going to actually
lift everybody up?
So what the Great Society did,
the so-called Great Society under Lyndon Johnson,
it's the biggest misnomer of policy agenda
in American history,
was it created a new culture of dependence on the government
that was justified by this victimhood narrative.
But it didn't just start with, it started with black America,
but eventually pervaded basically all swaths of America
to expand the permanent existence of the state
that created a new culture of an expectation
of what the citizens relationship
with the state really was.
And you go back to, this is Lyndon B. Johnson
who pushed this, his predecessor of course was JFK
who famously said,
you know, ask not what your country can do for you,
but what you can do for your country.
Beautiful sentiment.
I think what the great society created was the need
for a new kind of declaration of independence
in the country for us to be able to say,
ask not what your country can do for you,
but what you can do for you, but what
you can do for yourself and for your family.
That in many cases would be the best way an American could serve their country is by not
having to be dependent on that government, especially relevant today when you've got
a $36 trillion national debt and growing where the interest payments on that national debt
are about to be the largest line item in our federal budget. I do think that
the independence from the government is an important part of that victimhood
culture. Part of it just became popular. I mean I do think that victimhood became
a currency, right? Became more popular for a young person or whatever to claim
to be a victim in the totem hole of victimhood, you get more stuff.
Right, I had a friend who was an interviewer
for Harvard's application essays,
and she just comes back and says,
oh my God, all I hear is the first thing
they introduce themselves is what type of adversity
or struggle they have faced in some sort of discrimination
or some type of family sob story.
Not to say that some of them aren't real,
but that's what became rewarded more so
than the actual achievement itself,
apparently in Harvard admissions interviews.
So if you reward victimhood, you get more of it.
And the more you describe yourself as a victim,
the more likely you are to see yourself as one.
So it became a self-reinforcing culture
where that was what was rewarded instead of excellence.
And I think the way we turn this around is just as a country,
yes, from the government, but also just as a culture.
We revive a culture that once again rewards excellence
over victimhood in all domains, academics,
math, reading, science, sports, physical excellence,
excellence in music, the arts, all of it.
That's America.
That's who we are at our best.
And I do think our participation trophy culture
over our championship trophy culture
that has emerged in the last 20 years or so,
I think we need to shift back to that culture of excellence.
And wherever it comes from, left or right,
that's what I want to, competition.
Competition to meritocracy. Let's revive that
excellent excellent well vague I appreciate you coming and
No, see you again. Good to you my man. All right, you back. Thank you
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