StarTalk Radio - Tough Love and Geopolitics, with Susan Rice
Episode Date: December 13, 2019Neil deGrasse Tyson explores geopolitics with Ambassador Susan Rice, PhD, co-host Chuck Nice, neuroscientist Heather Berlin, PhD, and cybersecurity expert Stephen Garcia. (WARNING: strong language, di...scussions of suicide and mental health, other adult topics.)NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons and All-Access subscribers can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free.Thanks to this week’s Patrons for supporting us: Paul Weist, Alexandra Uribe Coughlan, Annie C Hickman.Photo Credit: StarTalk. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
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From the American Museum of Natural History in New York City,
and beaming out across all of space and time,
this is Star Talk.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist.
And I got with me my co-host, Chuck Nice.
Chuck.
Hey, Neil.
Tweeting at Chuck Nice Comic.
Well, thank you, sir.
Yes.
I follow you.
I follow you, too. To the ends of Nice Comic. Well, thank you, sir. Yes. I follow you. I follow you, too.
To the ends of the earth.
Whereas you only follow me on Twitter.
I'm following you to the gates of hell.
You're following me like, maybe I'll like this, maybe I won't.
Earth has no ends.
It's a continuous surface, in case you hadn't noticed.
See, that's why I follow you.
This program,
this particular episode, we're going to talk about
the roots of mental toughness
as they resided inside
former National Security Advisor
to the President of the United States,
Susan Rice.
And since we're talking about mental toughness,
we need our go-to person.
A mental expert.
A person who's mental.
Right, we need somebody mental. I gotta person. We need a mental expert. A person who's mental.
Right, we need somebody mental.
I got to go.
We got Heather Berlin.
Heather, welcome.
You're our go-to mental person.
I'm happy to be the mental person of this group.
Yes.
Right, and you're one of our featured people on StarTalk All Stars.
It's just great to have you in the StarTalk family.
I'm happy to be here.
As long as we're not a pain
always reaching for you for this, but it's just always good to have here. As long as we're not a pain always reaching for
you for this, but it's just always good to have you. Just a little bit of background on Susan Rice.
She came out with a book called Tough Love. Tough Love. And she was National Security Advisor to
President Obama, 2013, 2017. UN Ambassador. So the United States has an ambassador to the UN
as distinct from ambassadors to other countries of the world, right?
And she was a Rhodes Scholar.
Wow.
And so she went to New College at Oxford,
and she's authored the memoir Tough Love,
My Story of the Things Worth Fighting For.
Interesting.
Yeah.
So she's got the pedigree.
She's got the attitude.
She's got the, you know, she's ready to.
She's ready to rock shake
shake shake that up and so she credits some of what she's accomplished i would say a lot of what
she's accomplished to how she was raised with tough love tough love so let's check out that
first clip tough love this kind of title like we say of our grandparents so you're not a
grandparent yet god no okay so when you up there naming a book like what the grant because grant
it's that's a previous generations are you dogging my title i'm a little bit come on a little bit
you know what everybody i know knows what tough love means they do young people know even the young people hell yeah okay because certainly my young people know
i'm kicking their ass no no no no the young people and all the young people who work with me know
what it means too because i last time i saw their upbringing they get a trophy for participating
there's nothing tough about that life. Not in my household.
That's the point.
So to me, it means loving fiercely, but not uncritically.
And, you know, when you mess up, the people who love you are supposed to tell you straight up, you know, that your stuff is not together.
I think that's the polite term.
And there are many families where they're always bolstering each other's efforts, even if it has failed.
And you're saying if someone is failing, you get on there, you tell them how and why.
With the aim of helping them do better.
Do better.
Not just to beat them down.
Right, right, right, right, right.
But I'm just contrasting it with the fear of being truthful with someone because you might hurt their feelings.
Yeah, that was not a familiar concept in my household.
So my parents raised me and my brother very much in the vein of tough love.
And for better or for worse, my own kids inherited the same.
Well, they seem to be doing okay.
They're doing okay.
How old are they now?
Knock on wood.
So one's a senior in college and one's a junior in high school.
Okay.
And they're doing okay.
So far.
So guys, what do you think of her definition of tough love?
I mean, I think it's a unique definition.
What we normally think of, at least in the field of psychiatry, is tough love.
Is, you know, when somebody is kind of really out of control or they're, let's say, a drug addict.
And it's about...
You mean literally out of control.
Like out of control.
They don't control their own lives.
Yeah.
And it's about then coming in
with harsh enforcements of restrictions.
So, you know...
That's not what she said that she had?
Well, I mean, she has more...
There are different types of parenting.
So there are three different types of parenting.
One is authoritative.
Authoritative. One is authoritarian.
And the other is permissive.
Right?
So she's more just what I think she's describing is authoritative parenting,
which is that you're demanding, you have high expectations, rules.
Lots of structure.
Lots of structure.
But you're also responsive and like connected emotionally.
Whereas authoritarian
is... You do what I say. That's it.
And there's no... Get your ass over here.
Purely punitive.
Who the hell are you talking to like that?
All I said was yes, sir.
So her way, which is not
author... Not authoritarian.
Not dictatorial. Right.
Like totalitarian.
Authoritative.
Yes.
Why should we assume that would work for everyone?
Wouldn't that just fall flat for some people trying to grow up?
Boom.
And see, that's where, when you said, how do you feel about her?
And I said, my response was going to be, it's fraught.
And the reason why I think it's fraught is because children are individuals who respond differently to different stimuli.
That's why I'm asking Heather.
Right, right.
So there's studies that show, yeah.
So basically, it's all about the combination
of the personality type of the child with the parenting.
So there's no one right way to parent.
And every type of parenting, there's articles that say
that it's really good or it's really
bad.
And really, the key factor is how it interrelates with the personality.
And it's the same thing with learning.
Like, for example, some people need really restrictive ways to learn, like being tested
all the time and having structure, and they work really well in that system.
Others don't.
And they need a more sort of permissive environment where they can learn on their own.
So it's the same thing with parenting.
But what's described here is there was one way everybody got raised.
Right.
And it either works for you or it doesn't.
Right.
And so in some cases, depending,
and also there are cultural differences as well.
So, you know, depending on the culture.
One of them is that some people go, mm-hmm.
Right.
Exactly.
That's the culture of it.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
So, for example, for example for example did your culture go
not fly in my house that was not one of your cultures no but like for example authoritarian
or like sort of very very restrictive parenting works better in asian cultures because that's
part of the culture they find that that type of parenting,
whereas in the US, for example,
they get worse results with that kind of parenting
because it conflicts with the culture.
Yeah, exactly.
So you have to be careful when you're imposing
other sort of cultural standards that work in one place.
Here, it might not work.
However, you know, sometimes it's when you look at cultural.
Now, I will just say this,
and people are going to
be maybe... We'll just edit it out.
Yeah.
I was going to say, I'm going to say this and it probably
won't even be heard. But
the more what is perceived to be
permissive in many cultures
are the way Caucasian parents,
white people, actually let
their children do pretty much anything.
But I see that there are some
benefits to that where the child feels emboldened to try things and be more adventurous. So, you
know, there's... So the permissive type of parenting has its own advantages. So it does encourage
independence. The idea is that you sort of create an environment where the child can make their own decisions
and that they'll be more prepared for life.
But on those kinds of parenting, you get more people who tend to be more impulsive.
Yet, at the end of the day, they are better when it comes to sort of making their own decisions.
And so, you know, as I said, every type of parenting has pluses and minuses.
So when kids are born, there should be some readout on what kind of upbringing that genetic...
Eventually.
Eventually, maybe.
Eventually, yeah.
You go, boop.
Okay, this one needs, you know...
Exactly.
We are going to be beating your ass every day.
Here's a really good one.
Let me tell you something, mister.
Your backside's in for a real tanning.
I'm letting you know.
A really good example, though though is there's this film
called Three Identical Strangers
with these triplets
documentary
documentary
and they were separated
at birth
and it was an experiment
that was obviously
this should never be done
but they did this
where they
an experiment
where none of the parents knew
none of the parents
or the children knew
what was happening
so the same exact DNA
but they put them in three different households with different socioeconomic statuses, different types of parenting.
Wait, this is legal?
This was not legal.
No, no, no, no.
This was not.
This is the kind of stuff her people do.
No, it did.
It wasn't me.
Not anymore.
I didn't say you.
I said your people.
He's like, look, the most a physicist will do is give you a nuclear bomb.
That's all.
That's what most people do.
Where her people, they're doing human experiments.
Exactly.
Exactly, Chuck.
But what's interesting and what they kind of.
Low socioeconomic, middle class and an upper class.
Yeah, but they also had different types of parenting.
And I think it was like the lower SES was more permissive
and a socioeconomic status.
Status, okay.
The highest one, I think,
was very distant, cold, and restrictive.
And I believe that, unfortunately,
that child ended up committing suicide.
What?
Yeah, yeah.
And so basically...
I'll tell you why.
Here's why.
Red Fox said it first. Okay. Elizabeth! Elizabeth! Oh, yeah. And so basically... I'll tell you why. Here's why. Red Fox said it first.
Okay.
Elizabeth.
Elizabeth.
Oh, God.
Red Fox said it first.
Red Fox said it first.
When asked,
how come black people
have such a lower
suicide rate
than white people?
He said,
it's hard to kill yourself
jumping out of the basement window.
That's hilarious.
Oh, my God.
That is so funny.
Oh, my God.
That is so funny.
That is terrible.
That is amazing. That was Red Fox, 1969 or something. That is so funny. Oh, my God. That is so funny. That is terrible. I am sorry. That is amazing.
That was Red Fog, 1969 or something.
It's so hard to kill yourself jumping out of a basement window.
I'm coming to join you, honey.
But I'm walking upstairs.
All right, we got to keep going.
So she also credits her ability to tackle difficult situations to playing sports.
Ooh.
So there's a whole social thing that goes on in sports.
It's not just the contest itself,
but the interpersonal dimension of it.
So let's find out what she says about this.
I was very much a tomboy growing up,
and I was really into sports.
And my idea of fun as a scrappy kid
was playing football with the boys
or basketball on the neighborhood
court. But that evolved into playing varsity basketball as well as varsity tennis, a little
bit of softball in high school. And I was a much better tennis player. And I am a much better
tennis player than I ever was a basketball player. There are a lot of myths out there about me. The only good one is that I was a really excellent basketball player.
So people want to believe you were good at basketball.
People have circulated a myth that I was a great basketball player.
But in fact-
Not true.
In fact, it was text.
In fact, I was a mediocre basketball player and a pretty good tennis player.
Cool. Okay.
And still play tennis.
So what did it do for you other than that?
It taught me how to really compete and to lose,
but also to win and to want to win and to lead a team.
And I spent a lot of time describing the role
that I had as national security advisor
as being akin to playing point guard on a basketball team
because, one one that was my
position two when i was playing in high school and later in graduate school um is the captain
usually a point guard not necessarily i think about it okay i'm just wondering all right i mean
but on the court that's in fact often the role that the point guard's playing because they're
seeing the whole court they're calling the plays they're dishing the ball for the most part to the putting the ball into motion
yeah and and uh you know making sure that that the the stars who usually those with the great
outside shots are the ones you know under the basket are putting it in the opportunity now
then you get your you know your your extraordinary point guards who do all of the above.
I was not one of those.
So it was really a huge growth experience playing both tennis and basketball.
Here's what I wonder.
Is the personality type that we see among sort of athletes,
did that develop by them being athletes?
Or was it always there
and now it attaches
to the fact that
they have great athletic performance?
Yeah, I mean, it's like what came first, the chicken or the egg?
I think certain types of people are...
It did it? Okay.
It's been answered.
Thanks, sorry, I got that.
It was just laid by a bird that was not a chicken.
Oh, okay. I got it, okay. You didn't know that. Okay. I'll just check. It was just laid by a bird that was not a chicken.
Oh, okay.
Got it.
Okay.
You didn't know that.
Yeah, and there's a mutation,
and then what comes out of the egg is what you would call a chicken.
Right.
Who laid the egg was not a chicken,
and that's the first chicken.
Got it.
Got it.
So a cow laid an egg.
You know, certain people with personality, you're born with the genetic predisposition
to have certain types of personality traits
and those might be more attracted
to certain types of sports also, you know.
So it could be that you are more into playing
with a group and a team
and, you know, you like that aspect of it.
I must know what personality attracts to golf.
A really boring one.
I don't know.
Sorry.
But the mental discipline though it takes, like, you know, just to play golf even or, you know, any sport.
It's all a mental discipline.
Super mentally tough.
Absolutely.
And so you need that.
So I think you come to it, those at least who excel in sports, come to it with certain genetic predisposition, and then they develop it even further.
So I think it's the discipline.
It's being able to control your emotions under pressure, high stakes.
That's another trait. So it's not just control over your body no it's mostly control over your mind because baseball is 90 percent of baseball is half mental right
it was entirely yogi
um but yeah i mean it's being able to have the discipline to practice but also to control
your emotions
under high stress
to rebound from losses
right you know
so if something happens
you lose a point
you're getting out
you have to be able
to get right back on there
and not be kind of
thrown off
which are good life skills
all good life skills
so I think you know
you're attracted to a sport
for certain reasons
but then you develop
these skills along the way
okay so but without sports
you still want to be
mentally tough
what would be
what's a pathway if you didn't do sports like Susan did?
What's interesting is that you can actually, when we talk about mental toughness, we're talking
about when you're sort of emotionally aroused or have a negative emotion, how you can kind of,
in a way, suppress it and keep going on and not let it kind of defeat you. And so,
studies have shown that actually mindfulness and meditation increases parts of
particularly the left prefrontal cortex, which works to downregulate the amygdala.
And so those people who can sort of overcome trauma-
The amygdala is part of your brain?
Is part of your brain involved in emotion.
Fight or flight?
Fight or flight response. And so resilience or mental toughness is really about how we can
overcome these negative emotions and go on and sort of reframe things in a positive way.
And we find that if you have more activation in the left prefrontal cortex, you can do that.
One way to do that is through meditation.
So what if, just as a question, like for developing mental toughness, what if adversity and failure actually, so of course everybody feels bad and they're angered, right?
But what if that is actually fuels better performance?
So what you're saying is that which doesn't kill you makes you stronger.
Right.
Please comment on that.
Okay, okay.
Suppose that makes you like, you know.
So there's a sort of, we all need a little bit of stress that actually helps us increase our performance.
And there's this sort of inoculation a little bit.
So it's all about the amount.
So a little bit will get you to the sort of we call optimal state of arousal and increase and improve your performance.
Too much, however, will become detrimental.
I mean, yes, like physiologic stimulation.
Exactly.
So you need a little cortisol.
That would be really awkward.
Not be good for now.
Maybe you really like this game, buddy.
But we all know this.
I've got a good example of this, if I may.
A track buddy of my father.
My father ran track.
They were competing against the New York Athletic Club.
All white, all wasp of the day.
No Jews?
No.
Not in that club.
In his club, Pioneer Club,
they picked up everyone who was not admitted
to the New York Athletic Club,
which were blacks and Jews.
So my father ran alongside Jews.
Apparently not anyone from your family.
The Berlin Stone Place sports.
So there's still a racial dimension to this.
As there was so much in society back then,
it was deeper than even today, as much
as anyone complains. It was worse. It only encompassed
everything.
So coming around the backstretch, my guy,
his name is Johnny Johnson, is ahead of
the runner from the New York
Athletic Club. And on the backstretch for
the final straightaway, the guy from the New York
Athletic Club,
Johnny Johnson overhears him
yell to his runner, catch that nigger.
Wow.
Oh, my God.
Which, by the way, is shocking today, but back then.
Back then, it was like, yeah, of course.
That's just.
That's what happened.
And so he said, this is one nigger he ain't going to catch.
And then increased his win.
Yeah.
That gave him.
Motivation.
Yeah, motivation.
Exactly.
So too little is not good.
Just enough is right.
But if he, let's say,
got really angered by that
to the point where he was so enraged
that he kind of...
His performance could have been injured.
Oh, it could subtract.
Yes.
If it's too much.
Too much.
So just enough.
All right.
So you grew up in a Jewish household.
Yes, I did.
So it was sports.
Therefore, I did not play sports.
Therefore.
It's just not part of our culture.
It's really true that scene in the movie Airplane where the flight attendant, then stewardess, had reading material.
And someone seated there says, I just need something light.
And said, well, here's a pamphlet on famous Jewish athletes.
That's exactly.
That's exactly. That's exactly.
But the Sandy Koufax are Jewish.
Yeah, okay.
Very important.
There's exceptions, but, you know, in general, yeah, the stereotype is legit.
I was never very good at any sports.
And Chuck?
Yeah.
No.
Not at all.
Damn, y'all.
You know what?
Had I known this before this episode, I would have let both your asses out in the street.
I didn't even watch it.
I was like, God, this is exhausting.
What the hell are they doing?
What's the whole point of this?
No, I did.
I played several sports.
But I didn't like it because I was forced into playing sports
because my father was a really accomplished athlete.
Another way to say it is you didn't have the mental toughness.
That's right.
That's exactly what I was thinking. That's another way to say it is you didn't have the mental toughness. That's right. You know what?
That's exactly what I was thinking.
That's another way to say that.
I've been talking in the last 20 minutes here with our woman, Heather.
She's telling us what's going on.
Did you play a sport, Neil?
Yeah, I played everything.
Oh, you played everything.
You were a sportsman.
Oh, you were like wrestling.
Yeah, I used to wrestle.
I rode.
I also danced.
And I played basketball,
street ball in the Bronx.
And here's the measure of things, just so you know.
If it's a five on five choosing sides, where in that ranking are you chosen?
See, I was always first.
First?
Wow.
Okay, no, I was never first.
But I was like fifth.
So I was like midway in the Bronx.
But then I spent a year up in Lexington,
Massachusetts. And I went to the
playground there. And we played ball.
And I went to jump to block someone's shot.
And I blocked it with my elbow.
And I realized I jumped much higher than was
necessary to block this person's shot.
Because my elbow blocked the ball.
So they all thought I was
some amazing basketball player when it was average.
And it turns out you were just black.
Funny how that works.
That sounds like we need to go to commercial.
Coming back more with my interview with former National Security Advisor to Barack Obama,
Susan Rice, who's got her new book, Tough Love.
And we're just unpacking the tough love and how all that came about.
And we'll talk more about that when StarTalk returns.
The future of space and the secrets of our planet revealed.
This is StarTalk.
Welcome back to StarTalk.
Chuck Nice.
Yes, sir.
Heather Berlin.
Heather, give me your full title because when you first came on, I didn't. I'm a cognitive neuroscientist and assistant professor of psychiatry at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
See, that's why I could not.
No, yes, yeah.
Bada bing!
Drop the mic.
Drop the mic right there.
We're done here.
I'm out. See that? Right there.
I don't have to play a sport.
So my interview with Susan Rice,
former National Security Advisor
to the President. We're talking about mental toughness,
a running theme
in her book, Tough Love.
But in there is also just how do you deal with stress?
Mental toughness,
one thing to just come back from failure, but how about
just stress? How about, you know,
if you're trying to keep peace in the world, there's no
greater source of stress
than geopolitics.
So, and the Obama administration, like so many,
was not short on crises.
So I just asked her, what were your challenges in that role?
Let's check it out.
So I think the hardest part of the job of National Security Advisor
is the number and the weight of the issues
that you're confronting at any given time.
I mean, it's almost overwhelming. I'd describe it as like a slab of concrete lying on your chest, and then
they just put more and more bricks on it, and you still got to breathe. So, for example, in my first
six months on the job, this is beginning in July 1st of 2013.
The day I got in the office, the Egypt blew up and a coup occurred, which we didn't actually term a coup.
This was the Arab Spring. This was after the Arab Spring, but yeah.
Yeah. Then Edward Snowden was in the middle of doing his nasty, releasing, you know, alleged U.S. government secrets.
We had the war in Syria evolve into the use of chemical weapons and the challenge over the red line that President Obama drew as to whether or not we deal with the chemical weapons through the use of force. We had, you know, a extraordinary
secret negotiation going on that led to the Iran deal. We had secret negotiations going on that
led to the opening to Cuba. We just had all these things.
This was day one?
negotiations going on that led to the opening to Cuba. We just had all these things.
This was day one?
First six months. But day one was Egypt and Snowden.
And that's not even giving you the whole picture of what we were dealing with. But the crush of those issues and the import of each of them and the downside of failure
for our security and our interests on any given one of those was quite daunting.
So Heather, what kind of people handle stress better than others?
Well, there's actually been some studies which find that there are some genetic differences.
So we all have, it's adaptive to have a stress response.
So you have, it's what's called the HPA axis, but that fight or flight response gives you some.
HPA stands for what?
The hypothalamic adrenal, no, no, pituitary adrenal axis.
So basically, it's releasing norepinephrine and epinephrine, and then also you have cortisol.
So that kind of gets you going when you have to run or fight something.
We all have that, and that's adaptive.
But then what comes in next is how do you handle it?
How do you go back?
I got to, before you continue.
So the idea that when you're scared, you pee your pants.
Right.
Okay.
Is that from birds?
What?
No, no.
Because a bird, if you scare a bird, a bird poops and then flies off.
Okay.
Right.
So they don't want to carry extra weight.
But actually, no, it's the reverse.
So when the sympathetic nervous system is aroused, we actually, it restricts. So you become
less likely to basically crap your pants. Why does everyone talk about pooping your pants?
That's interesting. I don't know where that actually came from, but physiologically speaking,
that's not, it tightens up. It stays in. It's not the time to be doing your business when you've got to run. Excuse me while I...
But usually it's right.
I've got to tell you the truth.
It might help if you were.
A little lighter.
Actually, crap your pants because I don't want to do anything with you once you do that.
Oh, that might be a way to get the animal to run away from you.
I see.
I see.
They don't like your stank.
But what happens is...
Sorry, continue.
Okay, so you have this response. Everything see, I see. They don't like your stank. But what happens is, okay, so you have this response.
Everything sort of restricts.
But then the parasympathetic nervous system kind of kicks in,
which kind of relaxes everything and calms it down.
And that's how people respond or deal with stress.
So genetically speaking, some people are more what we call resilient.
They can respond to stress and kind of calm down their nervous system.
Can this be trained?
So with certain techniques, behavioral techniques, we call it, it's a biopsychosocial kind of
phenomena where there's some biological aspects, there's some things in your environment that
can help you.
But really-
So I guess let me tighten that question.
Does more exposure to stress make you better at stress the next time or does it make you
worse?
There's a theory that it's called about inoculation.
So in small doses,
so the whole thing,
there's actually a great book
called The Coddling
of the American Mind
about how, you know,
we're protecting our kids
so much.
Yes, exactly.
Jonathan Haidt.
And it's safe spaces.
Yes, Greg Lukianoff.
Okay.
And basically, you know,
we're creating these safe spaces.
We're protecting our kids.
We're trying to allow them
to have any anxiety.
But actually,
it's good to
have it in small amounts, to have a little bit of adversity. Just a reminder, the safe spaces are,
you were warned in advance that someone might say something that would trigger you. Yeah, exactly.
And then so you avoid it. Exactly. Okay. Which is not really good, psychologically speaking. What we
want to do actually to decrease anxiety is called exposure. The more you expose people, you can
train the brain and the body how to respond.
And so then when something, let's say, really traumatic happens, you'll be more prepared to handle that.
So in small doses, it could help you.
But in large doses, it could really… It could hinder you.
It could really mess you up.
And we also find that, like, especially during youth and childhood, if you're exposed to high cortisol levels,
it actually affects the way the hippocampus, the part of the brain involved in memory, develops.
But we find that people who are traumatized early in life have smaller hippocampus, the part of the brain involved in memory, develops. But we find that people who are traumatized early in life
have smaller hippocampi.
But later in life,
you can actually try to regrow those neurons.
And exercise, aerobic exercise is one thing.
Hippocampi is plural of hippocampus?
Yes.
Okay.
Hippocampi is plural of hippocampus, yes.
I was a big man on the hippocampus, did I tell you that?
Oh, my God.
I feel like I've heard that joke before tell you that? Oh, my God. I feel like I've heard that joke before.
That hurt.
Oh, my God.
That hurt my prefrontal cortex.
So I had to ask Susan, how did she cope with the stress?
I had to ask her.
Let's find out.
The other challenge was, how do you not just deal with all the crises in your inbox,
but how do you also, as I say in the book, put points on the board,
get affirmative things done that we chose to do that we thought would be beneficial to the United States? So, for example, like negotiating the Paris Climate Agreement.
We didn't have to do that, but we chose to do it.
That was an affirmative opportunity.
But you want your job to be more than just solving problems.
You want to actually be proactive.
Right.
And be remembered for doing something progressive or positive.
Exactly.
Right.
So those were the two big challenges.
And then in terms of my background and what prepared me,
I mean, first of all, I was fortunate to have had a series of jobs in the run-up to becoming National Security
Advisor that had given me a real insight into the work and the issues and how to navigate.
But I also had learned as a child something that I found was really invaluable as National Security Advisor, which is to be able to compartmentalize the painful, tough, wrenching issues
that you've got to deal with from when you come home and try to be a mom
or a daughter or a wife or whatever it is,
and not let the weight of those issues literally prevent you from sleeping,
exercising, functioning as Oh, my gosh.
You know, as a normal human being.
It wasn't just a bad day at the office.
It was a bad day on planet Earth.
Exactly.
And you know, you learn some stuff in that job
that you really wish you didn't know.
Bad day in the Western Hemisphere.
Right.
So I actually learned that, as I explained,
through enduring my parents' really ugly and violent divorce,
and yet still trying to perform in school and be a good student,
play on my sports teams and try to maintain my friendships,
that focus on what you have the ability to control
and don't let that which you can't completely control
cripple you emotionally or psychologically.
Compartmentalizing.
Is there a downside to compartmentalizing?
Because I would wonder,
my most creative thoughts come when things kind of,
when the spillage from one thing to another.
So is it possible to over-compartmentalize?
Yeah, I mean, first of all,
it is an adaptive defense mechanism
because if things are stressful and overwhelming,
but you still have to function in society or at home.
Still got to eat, find food.
Right.
You can kind of suppress.
Well, one technique is to suppress or repress things to the unconscious.
But compartmentalizing is you sort of put it in a different brain state.
You only can access it when you're in one state and not the other, which temporarily works.
But we see psychiatric illnesses where, in a sense, they're over-compartmentalizing.
They actually split into these different,
it used to be called multiple personality disorder, now it's called identity, what
is it called, identity disorder.
But they basically, the idea is that you now start forming a whole other identity that's
associated with those traumatic thoughts.
So it's a limiting case of this.
Right.
And then you can't access them, you can only access them when you're in one state and not
the other.
So they become sort of almost so separate that the information flow isn't there
anymore. And you kind of dissociate is what we call it. Dissociative identity disorder.
There you go. So what are ways people learn to cope with difficult situations when they have to
function in the rest of their lives? Is compartmentalizing the only way?
No.
So there are a number of defense mechanisms,
and we all kind of tend toward one or the other.
Like, for example, people who are highly intelligent
use intellectualization as a defense mechanism, right?
I wonder who that sounds like.
I can't imagine who that might be,
but you can kind of over-intellectualize things away.
But that's a more mature defense mechanism.
So there's more mature ones
and there's more primitive ones.
Not tell me about the primitive ones.
Right.
The primitive ones are less sophisticated.
So they'll be just like
where you automatically repress something
or relegate it to the unconscious,
where it can then come up in other ways, right?
It can percolate.
It can percolate.
Psychosomatic.
Uninvited.
Uninvited, exactly.
So then, you know, these classic cases with like Freud described of these psychosomatic symptoms, all of a sudden you have some weird twitch in your arm or, you know, it comes out in other ways.
So I think there are more adaptive types of defense mechanisms, and there are ones that can be more problematic.
But they all, taken to the extreme, can become problematic and create psychiatric illness.
The idea, I mean, the real goal is to integrate the uncomfortable memories and anxiety-provoking thoughts into your consciousness in a sort of neutral way where it doesn't disturb your daily function.
We just raised a point.
Yeah.
If you have a really uncomfortable memory, why not suppress it?
Because it will come out as in other ways.
But suppose I suppress it so effectively, it'll never come out.
Maybe for years and years and years.
And then 10 years later, all of a sudden you have like some major panic attack because you were triggered by something that was like deep in your unconscious.
So the best idea is to reintegrate that memory in a neutral way.
So it doesn't lurk.
So it doesn't lurk in the background doing weird things
and affecting your behavior outside of your awareness.
Okay, so you want leaders to be able to not have something lurk.
That's right.
In the long moment.
That's right.
Sounds like a good thing not to have lurking leaders.
Yes.
God, why does that sound so good?
Like basically a lack of insight. Lurking leaders. Yes. God, why does that sound so good? Like basically, the lack of insight. When are we going to
not get working leaders?
Lack of insight into
your own unconscious
processes is really
not great.
So, you know, just
being sort of ignorant
and blind to them is
not a good policy.
All right, well, we
got to take a break,
but when we come back,
we'll get into the
anatomy of national
security when StarTalk
returns.
Bringing space and science down to Earth.
You're listening to StarTalk. We're back.
StarTalk.
In this segment, we're going to talk about the future of national security,
featuring my interview with Susan Rice,
We're going to talk about the future of national security, featuring my interview with Susan Rice, former national security advisor to Barack Obama.
And since we're talking about security, we're bringing somebody with us, what he does for a living.
Stephen, Stephen Garcia, welcome.
Thank you. Your first time on StarTalk.
It is.
And you're kind of local to us.
Yeah, yeah.
So we're going to pull you back.
Yeah, yeah.
We'll totally pull you back. But I'm definitely a fan of the podcast. Excellent. So we're going to pull you back. Yeah, yeah. We'll totally pull you back.
But I'm definitely a fan of the podcast.
Excellent.
So you're an expert on data and cybersecurity,
chief information security officer at ConsenSys.
Very cool company name.
What is it?
Blockchain.
Blockchain, excuse me.
Yes.
Yeah, blockchain software tech company.
Very nice.
Advisory board member for Rutgers University's
Big Data Program.
So Big Daddy, Big Data. Right. That's what he put on Data programs. So Big Daddy, Big Data.
That's what he put on his business card.
So let's go hit the Susan interview, and then we'll come right back to you.
Do you have a sense of the direction of the future of security, national security?
Is it how many soldiers you have lined up on a battlefield, or is it how many programmers you have
to protect your cyberspace?
Or is it how many scientists and engineers
you have to innovate?
I mean, so the profile of war is evolving.
Yes.
So what do you see the future, if you had a crystal ball, given your life experience?
Well, I hate to traffic in crystal balls.
But I would say several things.
One, the domains in which conflict can occur are evolving. So, you know,
we think of fighting as being on the ground or in the air or on the sea, but it's also increasingly, as we discussed a little bit earlier, in space, under sea, in the cyber domain,
in the cyber domain, and elsewhere that are very hard for the average American to envision. And those domains are already active battle spaces, at least in theory.
Those are the physical domains.
Then there's the means of combat, potentially.
And that's where things like artificial intelligence, machine learning, data,
you know, biotech and CRISPR come in. Because all of these are ways in which
the nature of the tools that we have to engage in combat potentially can change radically. And then the question becomes such moral issues as ones of agency.
Like, do we ever want to have fully autonomous weapons?
What happens when an artificial intelligence outsmarts the people who built these weapons?
Yeah, so Stephen, what kind of security risk do we face today as a country?
Cybersecurity risk.
And what should we do about it?
I mean, to start based on what Susan said, I think we don't want autonomous weapons.
Thank you.
Every major sci-fi movie we've seen has talked about it, right?
2001 A Space Odyssey, Tron, all the Matrix movies, Terminator 1, Terminator 2, Judgment Day.
This is known.
We just kind of can't let that happen.
We just want ordinary
people giving the command to kill
rather than machines giving the command
to kill. Yeah, I think that's
appropriate. I like that. I like that a lot.
Yeah.
If Chuck wants to drop bombs, I think I got a chance to
reason with him versus a machine.
Unless the machine has a higher level of reasoning
than you do. Yeah, in which
case we're all done.
Why are we laughing?
I know, this is completely...
That's the point where the machines
say humans are no longer useful
to the survival of this world.
I mean, we do tend to make irrational
decisions, which can be good and bad,
right? But I mean, we have empathy, so that's...
But sometimes we might choose, in terms of numbers,
to kill more people because of an emotional decision
versus a rational one.
So I think working with the...
But why wouldn't AI also have those same emotional profiles?
In principle, if they're like us,
except better versions of us.
Because they don't actually feel emotion. We can program in algorithm but the actual feeling of say you know sadness or pain
or empathy i don't think that they will ever have that how do we know we didn't that wasn't just
programmed into you um because i have subjective experience i think therefore i am i feel like
so what should we be doing well so to her point right, we have new theaters of war, right?
See, right, your boy Bill Nye, he's on a show called Blindspot where they did a whole episode on some hackers taking over a satellite that was weaponized, right?
And, you know, back in the Reagan time when we talked about Star Wars, it felt like sci-fi and it was out of the realm of possibility where now maybe not so much.
Most of the world's data travels through-
By the way, just to be clear, Star Wars under Reagan, because most people alive today were not yet born when Reagan was president.
Fair enough. You're not referring to the movie series. No, no. You're referring to the government
program. Proper sci-fi. The floor of monies to create a failsafe, foolproof defense system to
then render the Soviets Soviets weaponry obsolete.
But it doesn't need to just remain defensive. It can be offensive.
And so, with
this new age space race, with satellites going up
into space, that's another theater.
The undersea water cables getting tapped
for information, that could be another big
source of national security. So we're going to be moving
away from marching armies
to defense of
cyberspace.
As the future of war.
It makes more sense because
the risk to reward ratio is better.
There's a value
on human life versus
data. So if you can
still take over a country with a few
keystrokes versus a standing army,
it makes a little bit more sense on multiple.
He sounds like he's thought about. Don't he sound like okay what's in your basement dude here's how you would do that
you would just take over it also gives lesser powers the opportunity to enter the theater of
war yeah as opposed to our you know more commonly uh known enemies yeah it democratizes who can
start a war. Right.
That's what I'm saying.
Yeah.
The playing field does change a little, right?
Because you don't need that capital for tanks, planes, whatever.
Okay.
As creepy and as weird as it is that we could be cyber attacked,
that's just another way to be attacked.
Yeah.
So I'd otherwise be spending money on tanks,
spend the money on cyber protection.
And you don't see any problem with that.
Not when he owns a cyber company.
Are you kidding me?
Stupid question.
Sorry.
So Department of Homeland Security,
they do have the
Cyber Security
and Infrastructure
Security Agency.
And they are responsible
for protecting
our federal networks.
And there's a few pillars
of things that they do protect on a national level.
But I think it's important to not just think about this in terms of nation states.
We also have to think about this in terms of private companies.
Because the internet doesn't discriminate whether I come into you as a private individual to make my way to government.
So it has to be a partnership.
Because all governments use third parties anyway, right?
So if you're a XYZ random company
that has government contracts,
you're a potential vector.
Well, I asked Susan what countries needed to do
going forward to change their approach
to national security issues.
Let's check it out.
So should the future of those meetings
that you described with these heads of agency,
should they have an ethicist sitting right at the same table?
Because you're about to make a decision that affects the health and well-being.
Right now we have lawyers.
Maybe we should have lawyers and ethicists.
Did I say lawyers?
We have national security lawyers.
But each of us actually have to be ethicists,
not just have a specialized somebody to police us because we don't think about the consequences.
Everybody should be thinking about it.
Absolutely.
It's not taught in school.
No.
And the other problem is.
Your mama give it to you, but people otherwise don't.
Exactly.
And the ethics that we may apply to these questions of war and peace are not going to be the same ethics that other countries apply.
And how do you therefore have global norms and rules
about how to deal with these new technologies?
They tried that with the Geneva Convention.
And to a large extent, that worked.
But you can observe and police and enforce those kinds of crimes.
It's a lot harder to see how you police and enforce,
you know, what you've taught a machine to do,
particularly once it's out of your control.
Or cyber attack.
Or disinformation.
Or disinformation.
That leaks into a...
Absolutely.
I mean...
So it's getting wild out there.
Information's getting weaponized.
Yes, absolutely.
And this is exactly what we've seen
with respect to how Russia's trying to corrupt our democracy
and pit Americans against each other.
It's working.
They're effective at it.
And it will work unless we get hip to it
and work together to prevent it.
Information is definitely being weaponized
by domestic actors and foreign actors.
And we need to find new ways to, you know, determine the quality of information and not
allow the weapons to be turned against our unity and democracy. This is part of the cost of an open,
free society. We have susceptibilities that closed societies don't have. That's exactly right. And that's an eternal battle.
Let's hope it's an eternal battle because otherwise we lose.
When I look at our susceptibilities, there's banking, there's interpersonal,
just how people are treating each other, there's elections.
All of this has a cyber component to it because we now interact
through our Facebook pages
and
we see ads or videos.
So how do you
balance
the free
movement of people
through society with
security risk that we face walking
into it flat-footed?
Well, delicately.
Thanks for that answer.
No, like every tool, it's double-edged, right?
So we're an open and free society and we want that,
but there are risks to that, right?
And so in particular, attention with our elections,
I point to Michael
Isikoff has a book called Russian Roulette. I forgot who the co-author was, but it's a really
good breakdown of what happened with us in terms of what Russia did. And what you effectively have
here is that in particular with Facebook and the Cambridge Analytica scandal, where you had this
company that essentially started plotting all these data points for everyone.
I don't want to call it the equivalent, but they effectively did a genome mapping of all of our preferences and data points.
And that weaponized the data that you're talking about.
This is what happened.
So now they know, hey, Neil is very disposed to wanting to talk about this and talking about that.
disposed to wanting to talk about this and talking about that. And, you know, we call them troll farms where, where there are these, these kinds of fake accounts that are designed to seem
like real people and start inflaming people and getting them into conversations. And then all of
a sudden you have a polarized nation. So you, you, you effectively, because, you know, the United
States is a Titan, right? And so kind of like the Avengers in that point, right? Like you don't beat
us from the outside, right? You take, um, what um what was that movie uh civil war where the guy was like no no we're
gonna bucky bucky i love you please stop trying to hurt us okay sorry i'm wait so heather yeah
this sounds like something you guys never thought could or would happen this you knew that we would
have hot buttons as human beings,
but to have that weaponized put against us,
to pit us against each other?
I mean, it's psychological warfare.
And it's just basically the brain is an information processing machine.
So you can manipulate people by manipulating the information
that they are accessing.
Right, you knew you could do that one-on-one,
but you know you can do that for an entire society.
Well, now we have the tools to do it.
Well, no, we've always had the tools to do it. Yeah.
Well, no, we've always had the tools to do it.
So let's be clear.
Well, now they're better, though.
Yeah, they're much better and they're more effective.
But the truth of the matter is what happened with what you said, Cambridge Analytica and Facebook and the weaponization of information is something that the military calls psyops.
That's exactly what it is.
So why?
I don't understand why people don't say what things are.
That is called PSYOPs.
It is forbidden because it is that effective.
So, you know.
So what kind of policy changes do we need to put into play
to protect us going forward
without completely constraining our freedoms?
I mean, a lot would work in helping with data
protections. The European Union
is a lot stronger
than we are on that, so it would help
if our data was treated like the
commodity that it is.
What does that entail? I don't know what you mean.
Access to your personal information.
But not only that, also just
restrictions on disinformation.
I was talking to an executive at Facebook who actually left Facebook
because they're not putting restrictions on disinformation and political ads.
That's really dangerous.
So I think there are places where we can in the sort of private sector, you know,
or at least that there be policies in place so that, you know, nonsense isn't getting out there,
at least in the political realm, which influences how we vote.
And the media, they have to be the watchdogs
they're supposed to be, not lapdogs, not saying...
Watchdogs, not lapdogs.
Ooh, I like that.
That's the quote of the day.
Right on.
No!
Because you can't just say,
oh, the administration said this, and that's it.
Like, your job is to question it, right?
And so the public trusts the media
to give that information.
We've seen very recently that has not always been the case.
And Heather, so we're being manipulated without even knowing it.
That's the insidious part of it.
That's the thing.
Most of us think we're making decisions of our own free will,
but we're really doing things because we're being unconsciously manipulated all the time.
It's because we're all in a simulation and someone else is programming our behavior.
Sweet.
I'm sorry.
I'm not knowing.
We got to end it.
We got to do another show around there. We got to do another
show around you,
okay?
We got to do that.
I appreciate that.
So we got to end it there.
Heather,
thanks for coming.
As usual,
Chuck,
my man.
Always good.
All right.
This has been Star Talk
and I've been your host,
Neil deGrasse Tyson.
As always,
keep looking up.