The Bulwark Podcast - David Wallace-Wells: The U.S. Is Handing the Baton to China
Episode Date: July 17, 2025While the Trump administration is doubling down on fossil fuels, China is annihilating us in the clean energy space. Right now, 75% of all renewable projects anywhere in the world are being built by a... Chinese company. China is dominating the green energy supply chain with solar panels and batteries, and its electric car can charge in five minutes. The U.S. may be betting on AI, but that build-out needs cheap, fast energy—like wind or solar. We may have thought modernity was a Western story, but that may not be the case. Meanwhile, inland flooding could be the new face of the climate crisis, Silicon Valley overlords want to live in a sci-fi novel, and the Epstein story has legs because it's about elite impunity. David Wallace-Wells joins Tim Miller. show notes David on the increasing occurrence of inland flooding, and how we respond (gift) David's newsletter on the mystery of rich, powerful people hanging out w/ Epstein David's book, “The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming"
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Hello and welcome to the Bullard podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller. I'm glad to have
with me a science writer and essayist for the New York Times Opinion, a columnist for
the New York Times Magazine. He also has a newsletter on climate and he's the author
of The Uninhabitable Earth, published in 2019, a very uplifting piece of literature. It's
David Wallace-Wells. What's up, man?
Really good to be here. Good to see you.
Good to see you too. I guess I just want to start in the micro about the Texas floods,
which is one of the reasons I reached out to you recently and then kind of get a little more macro
on climate stuff after that. But as of last night, we have 132 dead from those floods,
according to the Dallas Morning News and another 100 missing, which is I think as you noted in your column about this, more dead than in the Maui fires.
Maybe it's because we were both on holiday recently and I just kind of missed it.
It feels like the scale of the reaction to this has been like kind of mild compared to
the scale of the devastation.
But I just kind of want to just put a quarter in and give any thoughts you
have on what we saw in Texas. Well, just to start with what you mentioned, the scale of reaction,
I think that that's basically the standard now. I mean, I think a lot about the fires that swept
through LA. That was just six months ago. It's like a huge, incredibly wealthy neighborhood in
one of the most kind of globally culturally relevant
places in the entire world, full of lots of famous, well connected, powerful people.
The entire neighborhood was incinerated. And six months later, it's not like a major
story about our climate, about our politics, about our society. Even when I talk to my friends in LA,
it's like a third or fourth order concern for them. And you see the same thing as
you know, the the Naui fires that you mentioned from a couple
years ago, which, you know, okay, it's a wildfire. It's a
tragedy. It was the deadliest North American wildfire in more
than a century. It destroyed the indigenous capital of the
island. You know, last year, there were these shocking
national shocking homelessness numbers.
Homelessness went up more last year than it had in recent
history, and there was some part of that coming out of the
migrant surge and people basically the way that that
filtered through the cities.
But a big part of it was actually people displaced in
Hawaii by the Lahaina fires.
And so that's the scale of climate disaster that that was.
And again, it's just not getting traction.
With the Texas floods, we had a pretty intense, you know,
three or four day news cycle.
We're still seeing a fair amount of, you know,
soft focus human interest coverage.
And the stuff is just absolutely devastating.
I mean, to think about these camp counselors leading these little
girls through the floodwaters and, you know, people getting notes home from their camper kids who are now dead, getting their notes
in the mail.
I mean, it's just absolutely crippling, devastating.
But we don't have the kind of attention economy media ecosystem that makes these things really
long stories anymore.
And I think there's a really natural comparison to make between the Texas floods and Hurricane Katrina.
And when I think about that example, I just think,
you know, it wasn't the only thing
that killed George W. Bush's presidency.
It wasn't the only thing that like put the Republican Party's
reputation in the toilet, but it was a meaningful contribution
to what felt like a generational setback.
And I don't think there's gonna be anything like that
kind of response to these floods
as there wasn't to Hurricane Halean,
as there haven't been to so many of these disasters
that we've seen, even though, you know,
you can make a case that the FEMA response
and the federal response in Texas
and the way that the local authorities failed
to prepare for such an event was, you know,
as terrible and ill-prepared as we saw in New Orleans around Katrina.
So I thought you were going to make the comparison to gun violence in Uvalde, right?
That it's like this horrific tragedy that also happens in Texas.
Obviously, a big story for a little while, but like no repercussion.
I know it's a total failure of local officials, you know, in addition to being this broad
cultural failure, no repercussions for anybody.
In the Texas whole country, it's like, you know, all of these stories we've seen over
the last week or 10 days, you know, this is was known to be a meaningful risk.
Climate change is intensifying that risk, making these kinds of extreme floods more
likely.
We'll talk about that in a second.
But, you know, it was known that there was real danger here and yet very little was done to prepare. And in fact, the camp itself lobbied
to be excluded from these FEMA requirements when they did repairs in recent years of multimillion
dollar. They didn't do anything to address the flood risk. And I think that tells you
something complicated about the thing we're dealing with here when we talk about the risk
from climate change, which is that it's not neatly that we're gonna be facing
these unprecedented, unimaginable storms, natural disasters.
So those will occasionally happen.
Much more often, we're gonna be dealing with more,
more intense climate events that resemble events
that we encountered in the past,
and which we have just utterly failed to prepare for.
And climate skeptics will often talk about that and say, or, you know, people who are
climate complacent and say, well, we can manage these risks.
In theory, we could have done more to prepare for these floods in Texas.
And that is to some extent true.
But we didn't even with the knowledge that we had.
And climate change is making the gap
between the adaptation levels that we'd want climate change is making the gap between the adaptation levels
that we'd want to be at and the adaptation levels that we are at larger rather than smaller.
That's a story that's playing out all around the world when it comes to climate risk, not
just in Texas, but I think because of the culture of Texas, Texas has especially a lot
to answer for here.
Yeah.
Living in New Orleans, I think about this a lot.
I mean, we literally went through Katrina and there've been some huge changes to prepare for the future, but also
simultaneously like we have pumps that don't work for regular rainfalls. And I'm like,
how is this not an urgent priority for the city of New Orleans, making sure the pumps
work? And this is just a micro example where I live, but you know, that plays out.
Totally. I mean, the major infrastructural response
that we took in the aftermath of Katrina
didn't even prepare the city for a category five hurricane.
And Katrina wasn't when it hit.
But obviously, it should have told us that that kind of thing
was possible.
And in planning, we should say, well,
what is the worst case scenario?
Let's prepare for that.
And as you well know, also, it's not just
the direct climate risks.
New Orleans is a different city, full of different people with a different set of, you know, it's a different
economy. It's a different school system. It's a different culture than it was before that storm.
This can have really profound, you know, what used to be called the kind of civilizational scale
effects. And we're not doing, we're not doing nearly enough to prepare, adapt, to respond to
the things even after
they hit.
Your column on this last week, I guess, was about how we can adapt and prepare for floods.
You wrote about how we're not all that adapted to the climate we have now.
Forget the climate that's coming.
What are some examples of that?
Are there places where people are doing it well?
Yeah.
I mean, in general, I think one lesson is that we've actually gotten up quite a bit
better when it comes to hurricanes. We can track them really well. Our hurricane forecasting
is much better, which means when people are told to evacuate, actually, it's a much more
targeted ask than it was even 15 or 20 years ago, because many, you know, we have a much
better sense of where the hurricane is going to land. People in hurricane zones do know
to leave. You know, not everybody does. There are some people left behind.
A lot of that has to do with socioeconomic disparities.
But in general, we have acculturated the idea
of when a huge storm is coming, that is a real risk
and you should get out of the way.
And we saw that even in Hurricane Helene
when it hit the coast
and it was actually not that devastating on the coast.
But then it continued inland where we have not done nearly as much of that devastating on the coast. But then it continued inland
where we have not done nearly as much
of that kind of cultural preparation.
And it just absolutely walloped,
you know, Georgia, South Carolina,
and especially Western North Carolina,
which are not places that are used
to dealing with these risks.
And I think globally,
we're seeing that phenomenon quite dramatically
with all of these crazy flooding events,
particularly in cities. I see videos from South America, from Europe all the time,
which is like streets in old cities,
just absolutely flooded,
cars being pulled down by the floodwater,
people being pulled away by the floodwater.
And we're seeing that kind of episode more and more,
not the hurricanes.
And in the last couple of years, actually,
we haven't even had, there've just been fewer of those,
some of those classic coastal disasters.
But the inland flooding is something
that few people were even worrying about a few years ago.
Now it seems almost like it's like
the protagonist of the climate crisis is disasters inland.
I mentioned in that piece, the NOIA,
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
compiles this database of what they call billion-dollar disasters.
There are a lot of issues with this database because as land gets more valuable,
the same disaster will register a much bigger hit, etc.
Nevertheless, they're just calculating how many disasters
have caused more than a billion dollars in damage,
and the number is going up very dramatically. but even more striking than that, it's dominated
by these like normal storms.
It's not dominated by hurricanes.
It's not even dominated by wildfires.
It's dominated by just what they call extreme storm events.
So all over the country in the US, you just have, oh, here's a big rainstorm hitting Iowa.
Here's a big rainstorm hitting New Mexico.
There was a huge flash flood in New Mexico last
week too. Or in North Carolina, there was another one last week as well. And I just think off the
coast, we've done far, far, far too little to prepare for these kinds of floods. And I don't
even think we really understand exactly why they're getting so intense. The science says
they have this line that's like for every degree of warming, you get 7% more water.
And they also say that extremes get worse,
much faster than the median.
But when I look at these storms, these 500 year storms,
thousand year storms, so-called,
they just seem to be happening so much more often
and doing so much more damage.
And I think there may be some remaining mystery
about exactly why they're getting so intense.
Certainly we're not prepared for the intensity
that they're bringing today.
Yeah, and maybe I'm missing it just because I'm consuming
so much insane national politics news.
But at the local level in these places,
it doesn't feel like this is a massive,
it feels like it's less of a conversation
than it was 10 years ago.
And how do cities adapt as far as in the political kind of cultural,
you know, conversation is here's a big challenge
we need to solve and it's not like it's not happening,
but it feels like it's been deprioritized.
Is that, is that your,
and you're following this stuff closer to me.
Is that a misimpression?
I think it's kind of complicated,
but I would say that you have had
a very representative experience,
which is to say that like our politics
has become much more nationalized,
even over the course of the last 10 years.
And that's true at the level of discourse,
like what's who's saying what, who's focusing on what.
It's also true at the level of funding.
It's just not the case that if Houston wants to build the Ike Dyke,
they can't do that without federal money.
Even New York, one of the richest places in the country,
we can't build a hundred billion dollar storm barrier,
which is like what FEMA is proposing we do
without federal money.
And so, states in particular have these budget constraints,
they can't do disaster response,
they can't do large scale adaptation
without federal funding.
And yet we have a system in which systematically
local authorities have much less money to play with
in spending, in spending on this stuff.
And as a result, I think people just don't focus on it as much. I do think there is some local
adaptation going on. You know, you do hear especially in places like Phoenix, a lot of
stuff about heat adaptation. And, you know, we'll see what happens with the insurance market coming
out of the California wildfire is still a huge, huge question. And how that all shakes out really
will shape the future
course of development in California.
And maybe even around the country since the consequences
for the insurance market are so large.
But I would also just emphasize like,
adaptation is not just a public policy measure.
It's also an individual response.
People learn what to do and how to respond.
Like in California, you get it alert,
you get out of the house when the fires come in.
And that is not just even true at the level of behavior. It's also true at the
level of biology. If you look at the way that heat death affects
people in really poor hot countries, it actually takes a
lot more to kill people there than it does in Europe, which
actually has the highest level of heat vulnerability, because
the people that are not used to high temperatures, they don't
have air conditioning. They're a lot older than people in like, you know,
India and Bangladesh and Pakistan, Saudi Arabia.
And so, you know, we've told ourselves in the climate world,
a lot of scary stories about the intensity of heat effects,
especially on the global South,
but it may be the case that like, you know,
that the sort of bullseye there is actually Europe.
And that's in part because people's bodies, as they grow,
learn how to deal with different climates
and different effects.
And we just haven't seen those kinds of extreme temperatures,
certainly in Europe and in parts of the US too.
All right, so let's zoom out a little bit.
Last time we talked, I basically asked you,
I said, I want an uninhabitable Earth update.
I think we talked in 2023 or 24.
I'm going to TLDR you a little bit.
It was basically, we aren't alarmed enough
at a global level, but also warming projections have gotten better since you'd written the
book. So now, around a year and a half since then, update me.
Well, the big story that I would tell is that the momentum for global climate action that
was building all through the 2010s kind of gave us the Paris Accord in 2015. And then to some extent, this like rising tide of climate concern and alarm in 2019 and 2020 with things like Extinction Rebellion and Greta, and the Green New Deal and the Green Deal in Europe. possibly distant era and not just narrowly on climate action, although that's a big part of it.
It's also just like,
if you think about what the Paris Accords told us about the future,
it was that we were heading towards an era of more global cooperation defined
by increasing solidarity among the world's nations and a growing sense of
mutual obligation and aid.
And those are just not principles that are like present in the global stage anymore.
So we don't care about each other anymore.
So that's a big change in the last year, you know?
Yeah, no, I mean, I think it's a huge story, especially coming out of the pandemic.
I think many, many people who had a sense of real deep humanitarian solidarity in say
2018, 2019, 2020, by 2022, like having been pushed through the wringer
of whatever was all the burdens and trauma of the pandemic,
so many more people came out feeling
like just much more mercenary in their view of the world.
And that has filtered up through our politics
in really profound ways.
I don't know that it's all that dramatic
in the end for climate in part, because one thing that's happened is that the US has just completely retreated.
And that's given a huge opening to China, who is doing an awful lot to accelerate the green transition.
So 75% of all renewable projects being built anywhere in the world right now are being built in China, or by Chinese companies elsewhere in the world. And, you know, they're maybe have reached a peak
of carbon. We'll see how it shakes out. But like, in any event, they are building a massive,
clean energy electrostate. And the US is over here doubling down on fossil fuels,
kneecapping renewables wherever they can. But the third part of the story
is that because China's made so much of this stuff so cheap,
it can now be provided, be sold
to countries who people like you and me used to talk about
as like they can't afford the transition on their own.
And like just a couple years ago,
there was this miraculous thing that happened in Pakistan
where the issues with global coal systems
because of the invasion of Ukraine,
Europe bit up the price of coal,
all this coal that was like literally on boats
going to South Asia got redirected back up to Europe
so they could use it.
And there was in the global South,
a huge problem with like these rolling blackouts
because electricity prices,
fossil fuel prices were so high. And some of the
supply that even though they counted on wasn't there. And
the response to that was not even at the policy level in
Pakistan, it was at the individual level, just like tons
of people just started buying these solar panels from China
and putting them on their roofs. So much so that like, you know,
they've now something like 40 or 50% of their energy mix, it
comes from from rooftop solar. And like, that's because a solar panel now costs less
on a free global market,
not in the United States where you can't buy it this way,
but on a free global market,
a solar panel costs less than the same amount of wood
to build a fence.
So like if you're putting up a fence in your yard,
people are like, why not?
Yeah, why not just build it on a solar panel?
I'm like leasing a solar panel in my house right now.
I'm on like a, you know, 80 year lease and I'm betting some guy.
In the US the story is really different, but yeah, I mean, you know, in Germany they're like hanging them off their balconies.
There's been this huge boom in balcony solar power and it's like you're not even they're not even angling the solar panel towards the sun in the optimal way.
But it's like who cares?
It's like if the material is actually cheaper than what I'd be doing, otherwise, any power
that I can get from it is a bonus. And there are now,
according to think tanks and stuff, they say like, you know,
this, this Pakistan boom that took everybody by surprise,
because it wasn't even directed by public policy, just by
individuals who are desperate for energy. It there now maybe
dozens of other countries that are poised to make the same jump
that they did in the global south because
of just how cheap things are. So we have this like, you know, the era of global climate geopolitics
has kind of ended, but the actual green transition is moving ahead, maybe as fast, maybe even faster
than we would have hoped it would have in the presence of politics. And, you know, that's
kind of mind bending in certain ways. It's also depressing
about the future place of America on that world stage, but it may, for the sake of climate,
be ultimately at least a mixed bag and maybe even good news.
Yeah, I want to do more on the China thing, but just really quickly, like the actual,
so when we last started, I think you said like in 2019, you know, the projection, like
the median projection was something like 4% warming
and it had gone down to like 2.5%.
That's basically where we are.
Yeah, we're still somewhere in the zone
of between two and three degrees.
Not much has changed over the last couple of years,
in part because there hasn't been much policy change
and a lot of those model it,
a lot of that modeling is based on policy.
But you know, just to keep that in mind,
like that's really good, right?
Like we went from four to five to two to three, huge progress. But like
if you remember, getting freaked out about climate change in 2019,
as a lot of people were, that was because there was a huge
scientific report about how bad two degrees was going to be. And
we are going to get north of that. Like what freaked you out,
then we're not avoiding it.
We're going there.
In fact, there have been some days that have already been above two degrees, although that's
not what people mean when they say that we're at two degrees.
They mean a 30 year average.
So we are, we are a progress.
Our models have like somewhat stalled out.
We're still in a relatively better place than we were a few years ago, while still being
north of what we define not that long ago as catastrophe.
There is this other little thing to mention, which is a little scarier, which is that there's
a growing concern that a lot of these models are just missing some basic fundamental aspects
of the climate system.
And there's been a sort of contrarian minority of climate scientists
who think that we're heading already for considerably faster warming.
And in fact, warming has accelerated.
It has now inarguably accelerated over the last couple of decades rather than slowing down.
And there are a lot of possible reasons for that.
But one basic thing is that we have cleaner air now.
We've stopped polluting the oceans with these sulfur belching ocean liners and tankers.
And all that pollution that goes up into the atmosphere actually reflects sunlight and makes the planet cooler.
It also affects the formation of clouds, which also have an effect here.
And the net of all of that is that the impact of the carbon that we put into the atmosphere is
actually more intense than it was five or 10 years ago. And, you know, there's some pretty
prominent people, again, I wouldn't say it's like exactly the conventional wisdom or the
establishment view, but there's some quite prominent, quite bad degree people who think
that even if the sort of conventional
wisdom model says, you know, let's say two and a half degrees is where we're heading.
They think we're actually still on track for four or five, even though we've cut our emissions
below what we thought was necessary to get us to four or five, because it turns out they
think
Can we pollute without putting out emissions? Are there other kinds of pollutants we can
put into the air?
You've heard of geoengineering, right? That's what that
is. That's like, instead of having that illegal in Florida.
Yeah, the basic idea is like, you know, we breathe in all this shit, we get
sick, we suffer as a result, you know, something like 10 million people a year
are dying from air pollution. And it has this climate benefit, which is it cools
the planet somewhat.
And the geoengineering pitch is, let's just put that stuff higher in the atmosphere so
we don't have to breathe it into our lungs.
It doesn't affect our health, and we can cool the planet that way.
And there are huge questions about whether that's safe or too risky, but it does feel
like we're moving in a direction where more and more people are kind of taking that possibility
seriously.
You know, maybe it'll end up being the cure all that the optimists think it is.
I'm suspicious, you know, I'm skeptical, but I just like a lot of people.
I read the deluge, which is a fiction, but that's kind of a section after the
fires. It's like the contrarian scientists telling everybody that it's going to get
worse is heading a little closer to reality there with that.
You know, I mean, the L.A.
fires, I just I don't know if you,
have you looked at like Zillow
for the Pacific Palisades recently?
It is like, it's like every lot is for sale.
Every lot is priced north of $5 million
and the vast majority of them are just rubble.
Wild.
And you know, it's like,
I think the city has approved something
like eight licenses
to rebuild.
So that whole neighborhood is still just completely destroyed.
And you know, a lot of those homeowners, even quite rich ones are going to just like, I
mean, putting aside the fact that they saw their homes burn, then they breathed in air
that was like full of bicycles and HVAC systems and cars that had been incinerated by the fires.
You know, they have like a $10 million home
and they're gonna get, you know,
a much smaller amount of payout from that.
So we'll see where it goes.
And I have a friend that lived in Pacific's house
that said, I'm guilty, I haven't like checked in with them
in a couple of months.
So now you're making me feel bad.
I'm gonna have to text.
And there's this whole debate about it,
which is related to the Texas flood stuff,
which is, you know, and I said,
I wrote some of this too right after the fires,
which is like, we gotta do a lot more.
Forget, you know, climate change is real.
It's making these things worse,
but we have to do a lot more to protect ourselves
from threats like these.
But the longer I've gone on,
and the deeper I've looked into the exact nature
of the particular fire in LA,
I just, I wonder just how much could be done
because Palisades already had building
codes that required people to like keep flammable plants away from their homes. They already had
building codes about what you were allowed to build with and not most people weren't respecting
them, but those codes were still there. That comes back to the individual adaptation though.
Totally. Yeah. And then at the social level, people talk about, you know, we got to take care
of the forests. We have to manage the, you know you know in the forest to prescriptive fire and all that stuff and that's good at the
Level of the American West even at the level of the state of California
But in California in LA proper like the those hills where the fire started those are not forests
That's brush that stuff comes back as soon as there's rain
There's new brush and then as soon as there's a hot day
It's dry tinder and there's just not all that much you can do.
You can do a little bit, but there's not all that much
to protect yourself there.
And then when you have 60, 80, 100 mile an hour winds,
it's like, so you have a building code that says
you can have a flammable plant within 10 feet of your house.
Is that going to stop you from fire traveling at you
at 100 miles an hour?
Just seems, I mean, just to be clear,
experts do say it would make a difference.
Sure.
But I sort of wonder like whether we're learning Just seems, I mean, just to be clear, experts do say it would make a difference. Sure.
But I sort of wonder like whether we're learning something fundamental about what can be built
and defended in an environment like that, you know, like that environment.
And we may be learning that a lot less could be done and protected than we helped.
If you're like me, you wish that you had secured a few NVIDIA shares before they boomed.
It does seem nice.
I was at a school function where one of the grandpas was talking to me about how much
money he made on NVIDIA.
Good for you, sir.
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This is kind of vaguely related to what I wanted to get back into on the China side. Your 75%
status is just remarkable and the domination of China. I want to talk about BYD and how
they're dominating and now in the electric
car space too.
And that, but like first like that relationship between that and politics and influence, like
it was just insane to me that like the most influential advisor to the president for the
first six months was the owner of an electric car company. And we, as you mentioned, like
the people that have been victims of like the
recent climate events are ostensibly influential. You know, we are talking about money and politics,
rich people in California, rich people in Texas. Yeah. And yet there's no attempt to
try to compete, right? Like that is like narrative is barely even out there. Like, oh, we need
to compete with the Chinese, you know, like we need to be we need to be better about this, like the like the impact is coming for us. Like that is the part that is the craziest.
If you had told if I would have flown 10 years ago and said, David, Elon Musk is the most
influential advisor to the president, you're like, oh, okay, well, we're finally getting serious
about the green tech revolution in the White House. And like instead, you know, he was worried about
trans boxers. The most perverse part of this is I think that basically, if you
look at the geopolitical game that's been played, or the
geoeconomic game that's been played over the last half
decade, it's that China has really profoundly bet on green
tech, clean tech, clean energy, and the US has really bet its
economy on AI. And maybe on some level, that's like a better bet.
I'm kind of agnostic about it on the side of skeptic,
but like maybe that's a better bet.
But not only is our lead on AI not growing, it's shrinking,
but we need energy for the AI that we are building.
And we are, rather than pursuing an aggressive build out of the cheapest and
fastest energy that we have, which is solar and to some extent wind, which,
you know, people talk about nuclear.
It's like, it takes 30 years to build a nuclear plant.
You can roll out huge, large scale solar much more quickly.
We have permitting issues, but nevertheless, like much faster than for
nuclear or for geothermal, which, you know, again, I'm pro nuclear, I'm pro geothermal, but it's like, if you want to like rapidly build out our electricity,
What about the Permian Basin? We got more natural, can we can we get more natural gas out of the Permian Basin?
My understanding is that, you know, the basic dynamic there is that it's kind of diminishing returns. There's there's more that we can pull out of it, but it's not going to get cheaper. It's going to get more expensive and more complicated.
And that really like the simplest solution to our growing energy needs,
which is to say the economically vital input that we need to make a bet on
AI work out is to deploy
basically solar power at much more rapid scale.
And when you look at what China has done there, they are just annihilating us.
I mean, absolutely annihilating us.
And we are not only, under Trump,
we are not only emphasizing fossil build out,
which that's basically the energy policy.
We're also kneecapping the renewable progress
that is possible.
So they want to sell it as energy abundance
or energy dominance, but it's not. It's, you know, they want to sell it as energy abundance or energy dominance,
but it's not, it's just fossil dominance that they're going for.
And that means that, you know, the main thing that we,
that could really make our sort of our energy demands for AI workable over the
next five years, we're just like not even touching.
And so it's just another sign that like, like with tariffs,
we are reducing everything,
even what seems like economically vital considerations
to culture war dynamics. And that's just totally catastrophic.
I have a million follow up questions. So just on the AI part first, like the thing that's been hard
for me to, you know, translate is like, it's almost been memeified now on the left, like, oh,
you shouldn't, you know, create an AI image, because you just, you know, kill the tree, they're like, oh, you shouldn't create an AI image because you just killed
a tree or hurt the climate or whatever.
How much climate energy expense risk is there with AI versus the other side?
If we're listening to the All In podcast right now, we'll steal man their side.
David Sachs would be saying, well, AI will maybe solve the climate problem because it
will create such smart supercomputers that they'll figure out how to geoengineer things in the air and it's worth it. Like where do the smart people
that you talk to fall in like that conversation? Well there are a lot of different things in that
question right so just on the energy use it's like I think I would say that the carbon footprint of
use of like chow chow gbt has been overst. Like when I put in a query, I'm not doing meaningful damage compared to everything else
that I do as a modern American living in the 2025.
It's not a dramatic, it's not like getting on a plane.
Flying to Europe, flying to Europe was worse.
Totally, totally, totally, way worse.
You know, the training runs are more significant.
They take up much more energy.
And I think the story I would tell there is like,
if you look at- Training the models,
you mean the companies themselves. Yeah, yeah., if you look at- Training the models, you mean?
Yeah.
The companies themselves train the models.
Yeah, yeah.
And when you look at the big tech companies,
like five years ago, they were like at the vanguard
of being clean tech, cause they were like,
all we need is electricity
and we could just use green energy.
It's like, we're going to be net zero by 2030.
They made all these promises about how they were going
to cut their emissions very dramatically.
It was quite encouraging.
A lot of them have like actually tried to do some amount of carbon removal stuff, but even just putting that aside,
they were doing much better than the rest
of the American economy at getting carbon
out of their electricity systems.
And that just stopped three years ago,
and they've all gone into reverse,
and none of them are anywhere near the targets
that they set for themselves in 2025
because of the energy demands of AI
and trying to meet those energy demands
given the mix of the system that we have in the US today, which has a fair amount of clean
energy in it, but it's also a lot of fossil.
Then there's like, what can AI do for us?
Let me take one step back and just if you project that out a decade or two down the
line, you could plausibly tell yourself, well, if we get to a clean net zero
electricity system, we don't need to worry all that much about how much we're using because
none of it is affecting the future climate of the planet. And that's true of everything. It's like,
if we have carbon-free jet fuel, we don't have to worry about flying to Europe. That's like the
optimistic case for all of this is like, we can get to some point where we don't have to worry
about our guilt on any of these points. And that was technically like Joe Biden's clean electricity
plan was to get us there. And we're now not on that path. And that means that for the foreseeable
future, especially in the US, we're going to be dealing with some amount of guilt and about
feeling of guilt and responsibility for what we do with AI. Now, what can this tech do for us in
the future? I mean, AI has already done an enormous amount
for climate science, for clean energy.
I think we often get a little confused
because we talk about AI as though it came out
with CHAT GPT in 2022 or whatever.
And it's like, scientists have been doing
machine learning stuff for decades,
and that's a big part of the whole scientific
research apparatus. It's a big part of climate science. that's a big part of the whole scientific research
apparatus. It's a big part of climate science. It's a big part of energy innovation. When we
talk about managing the grid better, a lot of that has to do with something you could call AI,
even though it's not being done by a chatbot. And I do think that there's enormous potential there
in the same way that there's enormous potential for AI with medicine and drug discovery and
development. I think it's undeniable. The more
firepower we have to throw at a problem, the easier it'll be to solve. I'm somewhat more
skeptical on the LLMs are going to do all this stuff for us. And honestly, I'm a little bit
out of my depth talking about it in detail. But I think that when I, in my personal use, like the amount of
bullshit and, you know, false stuff that chat GPT and even deep research and
whatever throws at me, I'm just like, I'm not going to hand my, the future of the
planet over to these machines anytime soon.
Like that would be completely irresponsible.
And yet here we have like, here's the Pentagon signing a huge 200, what was
it, $200 billion deal with Grok.
And it's like, I know last week, Grok was calling it.
So I thought it was Hitler last week.
And then it's like the department's defense is like, all right, sign me up.
Machine Hitler getting a military is no problem.
Nothing to worry about there.
Yeah, no, it's like, uh, like that old Norm MacDonald routine about, you know,
how Germany taking over the world again.
Um, so, you know, I think a lot of this is TBD.
If I think it's possible in 50 years
that we think that AI has really helped us address a lot of aspects of climate planning,
climate resilience. I think that's certainly possible. But I don't think it's going to be
coming out of a chatbot. I think it's going to be coming out of more constrained, more focused models.
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Back to China.
Just the degree to which China is dominating us in this is something that really has come
into my vision in the past six months.
Obviously, this has been a little bit of a long time coming, but we're also compounding
it right now.
Just a couple of stories that just, so BYD, the electric car company has a five-minute
charge car that's coming, which could totally change the game in that space, completely dominate Tesla.
There are Chinese electric car dealerships in downtown Amsterdam, I'm walking around
last week.
So we're losing there in the consumer space.
And then the cancellations of the investments we were making over the past six months.
So when you combine those two things, like the Chinese advancements with the fact
that I think we've closed like eight billion worth of projects, you know, that the government
was going to be subsidizing here in the country, thanks to Elon and Doge and rescission.
So just talking about kind of like that, like the trajectory that the Chinese are on versus
where we are.
Well, I mean, I would say, you know, I, there's an awful lot of blame and
responsibility to lay at the feet of Donald Trump and the Republican party
and, and, and Doge and all that.
Um, but it's actually a bigger story than that because even despite Joe
Biden making a huge push on climate, making the IRA his signature piece of
domestic legislation, the U S was still falling dramatically behind in those years.
And one way that I like to tell that story is like,
you know, we basically had these subsidies in the IRA. And that
those subsidies were calculated to allow American producers to
match the Chinese market, it was basically like, this is how much
subsidy we have to give in order to make our domestic, clean,
green economy competitive.
And then like nine months after the bill passed,
Joe Biden's putting significant tariffs on top of that
against Chinese green tech.
And the reason he's doing that is because,
oh, our calculation was also, was actually way off.
We have to like, the gap is like twice as big
as we thought, and we need to make,
we need to fill that gap with something else.
And then, it's like a few months after that,
I see an essay by Brian Dease,
who's one of Biden's central economic advisors,
but has a clean energy background
and is really focused on these things.
And he's like, we actually need America
to subsidize the rest of the world buying our stuff
from our clean stuff from us,
like a green Marshall Plan in order to compete with China and that's like that's
basically it's an acknowledgement that even with the tariffs we're still not
catching up people in South America and Africa are still gonna be buying
directly from the Chinese we need to be you know subsidizing it on top of that
so every few months we take a new assessment and we're even further
behind that even is before Donald Trump comes into office and basically cancels the IRA.
And their optimistic assessments about like how much it's going to cost to build and support
the stuff like all of that and you know everything ends up becoming more expensive and less efficient
than they thought, right, for a variety of reasons.
And we think about it in terms of cars and I mean you know a lot of very smart people
think that basically the Chinese car industry is going to destroy the European car industry
in a very short order.
The US may hang on a little bit longer
just because we have such a much larger domestic market.
But we also think about it a little bit in solar panels.
But it's also batteries in general.
It's like all of these inputs to all these things.
It's the refining of rare earths.
It's the pieces of solar panels.
So even if you're a manufacturer in South Asia or Southeast
Asia, you're still buying the raw stuff from China.
They're just dominating every aspect of the green supply
chain globally.
Something like every single input
is like 60%, 70%, 80% controlled by the Chinese.
And when you get up to finished solar panels,
it's even larger than that.
So the US is just hopelessly behind.
And I think there's a way of thinking about this as just,
this is the great story of our time. It's
bigger than climate, but it's expressed in climate, it is a
giant industrial superpower waking up, you know, we thought
that like the story of modernity was a Western story, but we may
be learning that in fact, we're handing the baton to China.
That's not to say that like, they're going to become, you
know, in geopolitical terms or military terms, the dominant power in short order, who knows exactly how that'll all play out. But just when you
think about what the global market is, what people trading in goods, where they are focused,
where they're drawing from, it's like China is just building stuff out at such a different
scale than anywhere else in the world. And it's just humbling because even 10 years ago,
12 years ago, we really thought we were
in a dominant position here.
When Obama was trying to pivot to Asia and do the TPP,
he was like, I can keep China in this little box
if I get people to sign onto this deal.
And now we're just in a world where like,
much of the world is just like, forget the US,
just forget them.
Yeah, the thing I think about listening to you just as sort of like the domestic
political challenge and dealing with all this is it's kind of interesting that
there isn't, if I said, who is the person, who is the politician or political
figure or leader outside of politics who best represents like almost like a
jingoistic or patriotic flag waving.
The US needs to compete and win around the world.
We need to kick the Chinese ass.
It's important that we do this for economically and geopolitically.
Hulk Hogan, we've got to go dominate in this space.
That person doesn't exist really.
I do wonder if the failure of the IRA is, kind of the failure of the IRA, like,
is maybe related to that at all. I don't know. Do you have any thoughts on either of those
points?
Well, I think there is like a rising, there is like that in like the, you know, Ezra and
Derek abundance spirit. Like that is sort of like their vision.
It's hard to think of Ezra as like a Hulk Hogan type figure though, you know?
Totally. Well, but they have, you know, they have a lot of friends sort of in various places on the political spectrum, some of whom are a little bit more jingoistic. Mark
Andreessen would certainly like, you know, you know, I think of him as in many ways a villain,
but yeah. Now we're tipping over from jingoism into kind of like, like I'm interested in white,
white identity politics and fascism, right? So I'm trying to, we're trying to find someone else on
that spectrum. It is interesting because, you know, a big pitch by or for the tech, right? So I'm trying to, we're trying to find someone else on that spectrum. But it is interesting because, you know,
a big pitch by or for the tech right
in the run up to the November election was like,
we need unencumbered, you know,
development of these key industries,
centrally AI, but also everything that serves AI.
We need to get the-
Crypto.
All that, get all this,
all the regulation that Biden piled on us,
which I think has been hugely overstated by
these people, but I'm just ventriloquizing their point of view.
We need to get all of that red tape cut.
We need to get some more money flowing in from the government, but basically we need
a hands-off approach to let Silicon Valley take over the future on behalf of the United
States.
And you hear that not just people talking narrowly about AI, but all of the Palantir,
Anderil folks, they are like, we need to do this for military tech. We need to design, you know, what's the name of the Alex
Cart book, you know, the, the, um, technological Republic or whatever. Although he's, he's not
really imagining a Republic at all. He's imagining something much more authoritarian than that. But,
um, in any event, you know, there was this huge energy coming out of Silicon Valley that actually
was doing exactly what you were saying, but it was aligned to the Republican Party. Now, why was that? It was because those people felt insulted
by cultural signals coming out of the Democratic Party under the Biden administration. I mean,
there was Lena Kahn doing some antitrust stuff, but these people, they just seem so insane to me.
They talk about their experience. Because they weren't invited to the White House or whatever.
It's like, you guys all made hundreds of billions of dollars. You were the richest, These people, they just seem so insane to me. They talk about their experience. Because they weren't invited to the White House or whatever.
It's like, you guys all made hundreds of billions of dollars.
You are the richest, most powerful people in the world.
What are you complaining about?
What treatment did you expect?
And this is not new among business people, but it seems so grotesque.
Yeah, no.
I asked Cuban about this, and Cuban was like, it's rational to me.
It's like they didn't get their phone calls returned.
And I'm like, okay. So I was like, I didn't have a prom date either, you know? I
haven't turned to fascism, but I hear you. But again, though, maybe that is maybe a narrative.
I guess if we're going to give a more generous, not generous, you know, a critique of the
Democrats that's like more rational, right? Is it because they didn't offer, you know,
something that felt like a narrative framework
that felt like it was about, you know, whatever,
like economic growth and prosperity for people
and that you could like, you know,
we can solve these big problems
and we can do it with privacy, right?
Like, I don't know.
I mean, my view, I'm more on the left than you,
but my view is like, that is the Green
New Deal.
That pitch was like, we're going to-
Yeah, there are a lot of dumb rules in the Green New Deal.
Well, I mean, we never got to a real policy proposal for it, right?
So like-
There are a lot of dumb rules and things that random people put on white websites.
Yeah, and there are pieces of the climate coalition and the Liberal Left Coalition that were...
That are degrowth.
Yeah, that have that impulse in them.
But at its basic level, what it is like, do you remember the New Deal?
We're going to do that for clean tech.
We're going to spend a lot of money to build out a new infrastructure that will allow us
to live cleaner, safer, more prosperous lives.
We're going to invest through public means in the public wellbeing
of the country and the planet. That's the basic conceit there, that a new industrialization could
be brought about by climate concerns. And that is what we're seeing in China. And we turned away
from it. Now, as both of us are saying, the Green New Deal was for many reasons a hard sell. It was
not presented always in that way. But even when I think about what Joe Biden actually did accomplish
with chips and the infrastructure bill and the IRA, I mean, these are basically large-scale
public spending programs to try to bring about a new era of economic prosperity. And it had
all of them had clean aspects to them. But it's like, you know, he's just basically saying,
here's a tax credit to buy an EV. Here's a tax credit to buy solar panels. I, you know,
it's like, it wasn't oppressive. It was all carrot, no stick, and I think that
helps explain why there was no broad public backlash to it. It was hardly
mentioned on the campaign trail. It certainly wasn't mentioned in the
midterms. There's no backlash, but there's also no rallying around it, right?
Like, nobody, nobody, there's no backlash, there's also no rallying around it, right? Like nobody,
nobody, there's no backlash but also nobody seems too mad. I'm mad, like people are mad, but like
there's no mass movement of anger about the fact that it's being taken away either, right? I guess
would be my point. I think, you know, a lot of folks, including folks who were involved in the
writing of the RIR are saying like this is not just a catastrophic setback for climate or for the American economy. It's a it undermines
our whole theory of politics. Like we thought we were going to
send money to purple districts in purple states, and that like
that was going to win people over to the cause of climate. And,
you know, at the local level, it has done some of that if you
look at what happened what's happened in Texas, where they've
had, you know, their electricity bills have been lowered by 50% by green energy build out, and they've had their risk
of blackouts cut from like 16% to 1% over just based on the new clean energy that they brought
online in the last couple of years. Every year now, there are Texas legislators who try to undermine
that program in the Texas State House, and every year they get defeated. But at the national level,
we've just got so much goes back to what we were talking about
at the beginning of the conversation,
there's just so much other stuff that we're talking about
that crowds up our mind,
that even if people in Georgia or Texas
are a little bit more supportive of green energy
than they were five years ago,
it doesn't ultimately matter for their presidential vote.
And it's not the main way that they think about
what's happening in Washington.
The other thing, I don't think this is the Democrats' fault
or the last one really, but like,
getting coded left, you know, also is just part of this.
Like it gets lumped into, climate ends up getting
lumped into the omni-cause of all the other things
that people think that they don't like about the left, right?
And so you got into this situation where
these fucking tech assholes, you know,
who are pushing for this, you know,
as you mentioned this like revolution and this, you know,
investment and, you investment and getting rid of
any government shackles on the expansion of AI and crypto. They didn't include green tech in part
of it because it felt like, oh, that's libshit. And that is maybe associated with polarization
or maybe the disinformation. This might be tied into disinformation story where they've like decided that they don't think
climate change is real anymore.
You can't be a real conservative if you care about this.
I don't know.
It sort of depends who you're talking about
and how you slice the coalition.
I mean, I've noticed certainly since Elon and Trump
had a falling out that Elon has like routinely been posting
about how much China's kicking our ass
on green electricity and solar and that kind of thing.
And you do hear that from
a lot of people who are like in and around the tech, right? They do talk about the need to build
an electrostate, the need to build a type one civilization. They call it like they do, they do
use that language and what that means is, yeah, well, it's just like they want to live in a sci-fi
novel. I remember, you know, I, a bunch of years ago, I did a long interview. I did a Paris Review
interview with William Gibson and he was talking about how he first imagined the,
he first came up with the idea of cyberspace,
which is like, and he said,
I walked past a bus stop and I saw an ad for a personal computer,
and I was like, wow, that's really cool.
Then I walked past an arcade and I
saw all the kids leaning into the machine and he was like,
they want to live in the machine.
They want to live inside the machine. All these
people designing the future of the world in Silicon Valley,
they all want to live in sci fi and fantasy novels, and their
understanding of the future is so defined in those terms.
Nevertheless, they will often talk about the need for clean
energy. They'll also talk about nuclear, they'll also talk about
geothermal, but like, they're not opposed to solar. But like
the main thing they need is just volume of electricity.
I do think that we're seeing in this period of the Trump, you know, it's so hard to
talk about the way this coalition is breaking up and, you know, the Epstein thing is
like one other chapter in that.
But in this particular period where you have some, you know, led by Elon, some
frustration with with Trump in the way that the BBB went through, I think you are
starting to see some concern from the tech titans about how underserved or poorly served
their needs were and are by a fossil only approach.
But it hasn't yet shattered
the coalition at a national level by any stretch of the imagination.
Maybe that's why I feel so disconnected from this debate sometimes,
because you're right, the tech guys do want to live in a machine.
You listen to Peter Thiel interview and you can tell he wants the human race to end and that he wants us to
become cyborgs. And then, you know, you've got the deal and he sees his enemy, he thinks
Greta is the Antichrist. I don't think Greta is the Antichrist. But I think if anybody in the
conversations is the Antichrist, it's probably Peter. But I don't think, I don't believe there
is an Antichrist. But I don't think Greta is the Antichrist, but I also, like, there's like a kind of a dehumanizing element sometimes to the conversation coming
from the climate left too, right? That it's like, we need fewer humans, we need less,
you know, less of that, right? And so I'm like, these two people are fighting at each
other. I'm like, I don't think any of them actually really care that deeply about like
human prosperity in the future at a deep level.
Yeah, I mean, I have more sympathy for the folks on that climate far left, I think, than you do.
Obviously. I wasn't trying to create an even parallel. I just mean like this idea of not centralizing individual human flourishing,
like versus caring more about others.
When I started writing about climate,
this is one of the things that I really leaned into
and leaned on was I would say like, I'm a New Yorker.
I'm in a lot of ways like a neoliberal.
I do not come to this because I care about polar bears
or forest or trees.
I care about this because I started to realize
how significant the impacts would be on humans
and indeed on humans like me.
But you know, the interesting thing to me about the questions that you're raising is like everybody in talking about
the failure, the American failure here, points to China and says like, look how much they're doing.
And whether it's like, you know, Mark Andreessen lamenting how quickly they're building out their drone industry,
or whether it's, you know, Adam Too Tu's talking about the rapid build out of solar.
Everybody's like, this is the country that's really building the future.
There are huge problems with China politically in terms of concern for individuals,
human rights, all that stuff.
Individual human flourishing is not actually a huge priority for Chairman Xi either.
But this is an illustration of how climate concerns can fuel radical transformation,
at least in the context of a still growing relatively young industrial economy.
And I think that should make us all think a little bit harder about the, you know, whatever
simplistic stories we might tell about what works and what doesn't because, you know, you're just like, you know, it's just any claim that you make that is based on America
or Europe doing it right or wrong is just obliterated by the example of China. Like
nothing that we are doing in any direction almost has any bearing on, you know, debates
about what the correct approach about climate is
because China's just doing so, so, so, so, so much more of it.
And exactly what we can learn from them, I don't know, it may be limited,
but I don't think, like, I don't know, I don't think we should just go around name calling
about the people who are undermining it domestically.
We just have to think much bigger if we really hope to like move into another safer, more habitable phase.
David Wallace was trying to turn me red.
And I think this is going to be the first blog podcast to go viral on TikTok.
The Chinese are like, okay, now they're finally making some sense over there at
the bulwark, you know, put their finger on the algorithm there.
You mentioned F C you'd have an F C.
You know, I want to just talk about that briefly.
We're going to obviously talk about Jeffrey Epstein on every episode for the foreseeable future until we figure out who killed him.
And your headline is the Epstein story is both conspiracy theory and genuine scandal. What parts the scandal for you?
That so many of the world's most powerful people were associating some in pretty
ongoing, you know, regular ways with a notorious sex offender.
ongoing, you know, regular ways with a notorious sex offender, even in a period of time when the culture was really hostile to the idea of, you know, male sexual predation. So you have,
especially after 2015, when a lot of extra stuff came out, but even going back to his first arrest,
when people knew that he had been soliciting dozens of underage prostitutes and, you know,
you still have a huge cast
of incredibly influential power brokers
who were really, really close steps in.
And I don't think we have any good explanation for that.
You know, the sort of most naive answer
is that he was at least seen to be
an extremely wealthy, powerful person,
in part because he had all of these connections, and he was able to convene other wealthy and powerful people in part because they were happy to be in his company in a kind of a private space and
you know talk with each other so they were real people that is to some extent defensible but it's like if i'm imagining myself.
Larry summers i'm cathy rumler on bill burns i'm nathan merrivold on bill gates on read hoffman i'm peter teal I'm Kathy Rumler. I'm Bill Burns. I'm Nathan Mirvold. I'm Bill Gates. I'm Reid Hoffman. I'm Peter Thiel. I'm any of these people.
Houd Barak, you know, Prince Andrew, Mohammed bin Salman, any of these people who we have at least pretty good reason to believe had some ongoing relationships with him. 2016, 2017, like, am I really going to say it's okay to go to
his house for dinner? Like, why? Why is that somebody who I'm
going to be associating with? And they've known for 10 years
at that point? Yeah. And, you know, and so what are they
getting out of it? What is the nature of that relationship? I
actually don't have a specially paranoid view of it. I don't
think I mean, we'll see, or maybe we won't see it. Probably actually we won't see. But like, I'm sort of like disinclined to believe that he was like,
essentially running a pedophilia sex ring blackmail operation. I think that's quite extreme.
My understanding of at least what his life in New York was like, was that there wasn't much
like sort of sex in it involved. A lot of that was really focused in Florida, where he was in some ways living separate lives. Nevertheless, just like, why are all these people here?
Risking public condemnation for what? And there are these more fundamental questions, like,
how did he get the money that he seemed to have? How did he become into possession of
the largest house in all of Manhattan? It's like, how did he become into possession of the largest house in all of
Manhattan? You know, how you know, it's like, how did he become apparently a billionaire? All
these things? What is the nature of his relationship, if any, with various intelligence
services, etc. But I think the big scandal is we just have, and still have an American elite, a
global elite that counted him as a confidant and associate and just
doesn't seem to add up to me. And I don't think well, like a
lot of the conspiracy stuff feels really extreme. This isn't
QAnon. It's not, you know, pizza gate. I'm still like, yeah,
like, why? Why is Steve Bannon spending 15 hours talking to
Jeffrey Epstein on camera? What, what the
fuck is that about? And then to see him last weekend on stage being like, we need a special
investigator, special, special counsel investigating this. It's like, you were like a good friend
of his.
Shouldn't you have been in on the investigation?
Or like, or at least, at least release the videotapes.
At least release the videotapes, Steve Bannon. You release the tapes. Here's the thing that
people in that world, you know, whatever you want to call it, you know, the kind of contrarian,
more conspiratorial, right, world, the Rogan world. I just would go a step further from what
you're saying about what the scandal is, which is we know all of these people were involved with
them at some level. We know at least some of them were involved with him with regards to the sexual predation of young girls. And
there's been no social penalty or no legal repercussions for anyone associated with Jeffrey
Epstein besides Julian Maxwell, not a single person. Like one of them became elected president
and is the current president since then, had a long time relationship with him. As you
mentioned in your article, one of them was a past president, still is speaking at the
Democratic National Convention last year. I'm not saying that there should be a specific social
penalty for any of these people, but the fact that there is none, that there's been none,
and there's been no legal penalty, and that the first time Jeffrey Epstein got caught,
he got a sweetheart deal, it is not illegitimate for regular people
around the world to be like, this is rich fucking elite people protecting each other. Like this is,
maybe Jeffrey Epstein wasn't running a blackmail racket, but there's a protection racket of some
kind happening around all these folks. And that is a real scandal. And that's a legitimate thing
for people to be upset about. And clearly Donald Trump was involved in that, and he's the current president of the United States.
It's elite impunity showcased in a very direct way in an era when that has been one of the
things that the public has been most outraged about. I don't want to speak too much in defense
of Donald Trump, but it does seem like their falling out was in 2004, 2005.
That is true. His falling out was before he was first arrested. That is true.
According to Michael Wolff, that falling out happened in part because
according to Michael Wolff, Jeffrey Epstein thinks that Donald Trump turned him in to
prevent Epstein from dropping a dime on Trump for doing money laundering in Florida. So
there is like it all it does all like tangled up. I don't know exactly how seriously to
take that story. But yeah, I mean, I would say more broadly, you know, that plea agreement that
Epstein signed in Florida in 2008, I think, explicitly, you know, barred the federal
government from prosecuting anyone related to the case in the future. And that is the, that even
more than that sort of short prison sentence, which he was mostly able to serve in his mansion,
that part of the plea deals just seems a little curious curious and I think hasn't ever really been adequately explained.
And even beyond that, I think, you know,
putting aside the legal repercussions,
I think actually I may be a little bit more skeptical
than you are that there are many other people
who are involved in the sex crimes here.
There may be some, but I'm-
I mean, obviously there were people committing
the sex crimes, it wasn't just Jeffrey Epstein
that was fucking the girls.
I don't think we can say that for sure.
I mean, the main accuser who has been...
Several accusers have accused other people, including Prince Andrew and others.
I don't want to get into a position where I'm defending any of these people.
I don't want to make you defend. I'm just trying to understand.
Well, you know, a lot of these people have questions about their credibility
that are meant that they have not been called in any of the proceedings going forward.
I think one of them actually made a public apology
to Alan Dershowitz for accusing him.
I have no sympathy for Alan Dershowitz,
but just to say, you know, a lot of this I would say
is in the realm of ambiguity rather than known fact.
I sat with Alan Dershowitz at a dinner,
one of these dumb dinners where he talked about this
for like 40 minutes and defending himself,
which I can, on the one hand,
makes you feel like, man, a hit dog barks loudest. On the other
hand, it's like, I don't know, if I was falsely accused of
pedophilia in the news, like, maybe I would not be able to
talk about anything else either. I don't know which way you fall
on that, but it was noteworthy.
But to get back to my point, which is more about this sort of
the culture of elite impunity in general, and it's more about the
social approbation that you're talking about than the legal consequences, which is like,
this was a public fact that Jeffrey Epstein was a sex
trafficker and sex offender. That was known, it was known to
me, you know, as a reader of Gawker, like, it was known to
me. It was like, as a reader, readers of the New York Post,
it was known to readers of the New York Post, it was a public
fact. And that anybody would say
just a little Peckadillo. I can just go over to dinner at his house. It's all fine. Maybe he's
being scapegoated. Maybe he's being... Let him sponsor our charity, our charity ball.
Yeah. I mean, you know... Let him sponsor our university.
You know, I mean, the Harvard and MIT connections are really quite
astounding. And I think, you know, it's just like, how could
anybody putting aside those who are directly associating with
him? How could anyone like how could deans and provosts be like
looking at like where this money is coming from and think, Oh,
that's fine. It's coming from a acknowledged sex trafficker and
sex offender who's-
With a murky job.
Yeah, and like where's the money even coming from?
Yeah, totally.
Unclear source of money.
And that to me is like the real issue is that
even if there's no fire there,
it tells you that in these circles,
at least among these particular people who we know about,
there was nothing like the kind of reflexive scrutiny
that you or I might apply to a figure like Jeffrey Epstein
if confronted with him.
And instead, it seems like they basically thought
he's one of us.
And whether that means we commit crimes like this too,
which I think is unlikely,
or whether it just means someone who does these kinds
of things is okay, is cool,
is worth spending time with, that's an indictment itself.
And I think very few of those people have adequately answered for that lack of oversight.
We're way over, but I want to ask you one more question and then I'll just let you cook on it,
and then we can take it out.
It's kind of a dark topic, which is in your oof.
You've been writing a lot about the kind of COVID, post-COVID trauma too.
And I was thinking about, I was interested in asking you how you think about it in the
context of your work about climate.
Because I think about the COVID stuff and a million people died in the country over
it.
And yet when we look back at it, it seems like the cultural
remembrances that like we did too much to guard against it, right? And I just
want to even admit like I have to fight against that because like in my brain,
the brain part of me knows that we probably didn't do enough, right?
There's a million people died, but there's like a visceral part of me that's
like, why was my kid still wearing a mask in fall of 2021
when she probably shouldn't have been?
And so I understand why that is.
And so I think about that, what we learned from that.
And then you compare it to the climate situation
where it's like, you know, there's part of you that's like,
okay, well, maybe we'd get really more serious about it
if New Orleans went underwater or something.
But I look at the COVID thing now and I think,
I don't know if there's a scale of devastation that would
change people's view towards it.
Anyway, I wanted to get your take on
that thought and we'll leave it there.
Yeah. In the really big picture,
I have much the same view that you do.
I actually think in a lot of ways we did overreact on particulars,
and there's probably a lot to learn about the things
that were unnecessary that we went through.
But I think in a really big picture,
you have to say that on that,
you can't just toss out the whole project
of limiting the spread of this disease as wasteless,
as useless and wasteful.
And the way that I know that for sure
is that when I go back to 2020,
and I see Anthony Fauci saying 100,000 Americans could die,
and everybody's like, what an alarmist. That was the public response. It's like that you have
Neil Ferguson in England saying maybe a couple million Americans could die. And people are like,
that is completely crazy. But if that were true, of course, we would want to take maximal
precautions to protect one another.
Then we end up in a world that is actually like the one that the alarmists projected.
And we are telling ourselves in that post-pandemic emergency period that it was all unnecessary,
and that the threat was trivial, and that we have been much better off just letting it letting it burn through the population at great speed. And
yeah, I think when I compare it to the climate crisis, I think
there's something really amazing and inspiring about the first
period of the pandemic response when for a few months, all of us
in America, and really all of us around the world did an enormous
amount to protect one another and ourselves. It was a really,
it was produced by fear, but it was an incredible global gesture of solidarity
that I think is basically unparalleled in modern history.
And yet we responded to that performance of solidarity
by then resenting the fact that we had to do it at all.
And resenting it so much,
and this is the thing that really frustrates me,
resenting it so much that we just don't see clearly what we actually did and the burdens that
were actually imposed on us.
We talk about lockdowns, first of all, lockdowns were not policed.
It was all recommendations.
When people talk about Sweden and their voluntary lockdowns, that's what the US did.
You can maybe point to a few people
who got tickets, like maybe a few dozen people in a country of 330 million people. This was
not an authoritarian response. It was a, we were given a set of advisories and in part
because we were so scared, we basically respected them for a period of time. How long? A couple
of months, a couple of months.
Unless you lived in Oakland.
In California and a couple of other places, things lasted a little bit longer. Certainly,
the school closures went on much longer than in retrospect we would have liked.
All of that is absolutely true. But the idea that in the early months of 2020, you had all of these
people on the conspiratorial right saying like, this is the beginning of a new world government,
they're taking away all of our freedoms. And it was like, you know, I was eating out with friends in
the summer of 2020. And I was like, I was someone who's scared of the virus, you know,
in a place that was run by a pretty aggressive governor, Andrew Cuomo. I can't believe he's
back in the news. And you know, people were socializing in parks and exercising by the summer of 2020.
There were restrictions, you were advised to wear masks,
schools were closed way too long.
But when you think about on the grand scheme of things,
like, do we wanna go back in time
and do absolutely nothing in 2020?
Would that have been better?
Would it have been better to have,
instead of one and a half million Americans die, three or four or five million Americans die? Like that is a much,
much, much more catastrophic footprint that it would have left. And, you know, I just think
if you had put that precise dilemma to the country as a whole in early 2020, they would have said,
to the country as a whole in early 2020, they would have said, let's bunker down.
They would not have said, let's let it burn.
And the fact that we came out of the process thinking
that was a mistake, collectively thinking that was a mistake,
I think is really sad, problematic.
I think it's also a sign of the basic trauma
of the whole experience, which is that above all, this thing taught us that however rich we are, however advanced our technology is,
however far from the times of the Black Death we really thought we were, we are still biological
creatures.
We are still vulnerable to forces larger than us, which we cannot perfectly control.
And I think, by the way, this is like one reason why Maha really springs up is because
it tells you, you can control your own health.
When that scary message of the pandemic is, you can't really control your own health,
certainly on your own.
But unfortunately, the social response that we've taken from it was that we're not going
to try to do it collectively either.
And that really scares me about climate and so much else.
All right.
Alan Dershowitz, Defender, David Wallace.
I was just joking.
Just joking.
David Wallace, New York Times.
So subscribe to his newsletter if you want climate stuff.
I'm doing my best to keep informed of our bleak future across a separate vertical from
the one I cover every day. Appreciate you very much. Come back.
Unfortunately, I think we'll probably have a reason for you to come back soon, alright?
Cool, man. Talk to you soon.
Alright, hope that was uplifting for you.
It's David Wallace-Wells. Appreciate him very much.
We'll be back tomorrow with one of your favorites.
So we'll see you all then. Peace. Well, I dreamed I saw the knights in armor come and saying something about a queen.
There were peasants singing and drummers drumming and the archers split the tree.
There was a fanfare blowing to the sun that was floating on the breeze
Look at Mother Nature on the run in the 1970s
I was lying in a burned out basement With the full moon in my eyes
I was hoping for replacement
When the sun burst through the sky
There was a band playing in my head
And I felt like getting high
I was thinking about what a friend had said
I was hoping it was a lie
Thinking about what a friend had said
I was hoping it was a lie.
The Bullork Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason
Brown.