The Joe Rogan Experience - #2190 - Peter Thiel
Episode Date: August 16, 2024Peter Thiel is an entrepreneur and investor. He co-founded PayPal, made the first outside investment in Facebook, and co-founded Palantir Technologies, where he serves as chairman. Thiel is a partner ...at Founders Fund and leads the Thiel Foundation, which funds technological progress and long-term thinking. He is also the author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Zero to One. https://foundersfund.com https://palantir.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The Joe Rogan Experience. Good to see you.
Glad to be on the show.
My pleasure.
Thanks for having me.
My pleasure.
What's cracking?
How are you doing?
Doing all right.
We were just talking about how you're still trapped in LA.
I'm still trapped in LA.
I know.
Are you friends with a lot of people out here. Have you thought about jettison? I
talk about it all the time and
it's
But you know, it's always talk is often a substitute for action
It's always does it does it right to action or does it end up substituting for action?
And that's a good point
But I have endless conversations about leaving and moved from San Francisco to LA back in 2018. That felt about as big a move away as possible. And I keep, the extreme
thing I keep saying, and again, I have to keep in mind talks of substitute fraction,
the extreme thing I keep saying is I can't decide whether to leave the state or the country.
Oh, boy. If you went out of the country, where would you go?
Man, it's tough to find places because there are a lot of problems in the US and most places
are doing so much worse.
Yeah.
It's not a good move to leave here.
It's as fucked up as this place is.
But I keep thinking I shouldn't move twice.
So I should either, I can't decide whether I should move to Florida or should move to, you know, New Zealand or Costa Rica or something like that.
Yeah, yeah. Go full John McAfee.
And so I am, but can't decide between those two so I end up stuck in California.
Well, Australia is okay, but they're even worse when it comes to rule of law and what
they decide to make you do and the way
they're cracking down on people now for online speech. And it's very sketchy in other countries.
But somehow the relative outperformance of the U.S. and the absolute stagnation decline
of the U.S., they're actually related things because the way the conversations
group every time I say tell someone, you know, I'm thinking about leaving the country, they'll
do what you say and they'll say, well, every place is worse. And then that somehow distracts
us from all the problems in this country. And then we can't talk about what's gone
wrong in the US because, you know, everything's so much worse you know. Well I think most people know what's gone wrong but they don't know if
they're on the side of the government that's currently in power they don't
know how to criticize it they don't know exactly what to say what should be done
right and they're ideologically connected to this group being correct
right so they try to do mental gymnastics to try to support some of the
things that are going on. I think that's that's a part of the problem. I don't think it's necessarily that
we don't know what the problems are. We know what the problems are, but we don't have clear
solutions as to how to fix them, nor do we understand the real mechanisms of how they
got there in the first place.
Yeah. I mean, there are a lot that are pretty obvious to articulate, and they're much easier to
describe than solve.
Like we have a crazy, crazy budget deficit.
And presumably, you have to do one of three things.
You have to raise taxes a lot, you have to cut spending a lot, or you're just going to
keep borrowing money.
Isn't there like some enormous amount of our taxes that just go to the deficit?
It's not that high, but it's gone up a lot.
What is it?
I thought it was like 34% or something crazy.
It peaked at 3.1% of GDP, which is maybe 15%, 20% of the budget. It peaked at 3.1% of GDP, which is, you know, maybe 15, 20 percent of the budget, peaked at 3.1
percent of GDP in 1991.
And then it went all the way down to something like 1.5 percent in the mid-2010s, and now
it's crept back up to 3.1, 3.2 percent.
And so we are at all-time highs as a percentage of GDP.
And the way to understand the basic math is the debt went
up a crazy amount, but the interest rates went down. And from, you know, 2008 to 2021
for 13 years, we basically had zero interest rates with one brief blip under Powell, but
it was basically zero rates. And then you could borrow away more money, and it wouldn't
show up in servicing the debt because you just paid 0% interest on the T-bills. And the thing that's very dangerous, seeming
to me, about the current fiscal situation is the interest rates have gone back to positive,
like they were in the 90s and early 2000s, mid-2000s. And it's just this incredibly large debt.
And so we now have a real runaway deficit problem.
But people have been talking about this for 40 years, and crying wolf for 40 years, so
it's very hard for people to take it seriously.
Most people don't even understand what it means.
When you say there's a deficit, we owe money.
Okay, to who?
How's that work? It's, well, it's to, yeah, it's people who bought the bonds and it's, you know, it's
a lot of it's to Americans. Some of them are held by the Federal Reserve. Decent amount
are held by foreigners at this point because it's, in some ways, it's the opposite of
the trade current account deficits. The US has been
running these big current account deficits and then the foreigners end up with way more dollars
than they want to spend on American goods or services. And so they have to reinvest them in
the US. Some put it into houses or stocks, but a lot of it just goes into government debt.
So in some ways it's a function of the chronic trade imbalances, chronic trade deficits. Well if you had supreme power,
if Peter Thiel was the ruler of the world and you could fix this, what would you do?
Man, I always find that hypothetical. It's a ridiculous
hypothetical. It is ridiculous hypotheticals. You get ridiculous answers. I want a
ridiculous answer. That's what I like. But what could be done like what could be done first of all what can be
done to mitigate it and what can be done to solve it? You know I think I think I
think my I think my answers are probably all in the in the you know in the in the
very libertarian direction so it would be sort of figure out ways to have smaller
governments, figure out ways, you know, to increase the age on social security, means
test social security so not everyone gets it, just figure out ways to gradually dial
back a lot of these government benefits. And then that's, you know, that's insanely unpopular. So it's completely unrealistic
on that level.
That bothers people that need Social Security.
I said means tested.
Means tested. So people who don't need it, don't get it.
Right.
So Social Security, even if you're very wealthy, I don't even know how it works. Do you still
get it?
Yeah, basically anyone who pretty much everyone gets it because it was originally rationalized
as a sort of a pension system, not as a welfare system.
And so the fiction was you pay Social Security taxes and then you're entitled to get a pension
out in the form of Social Security. Right. And because it was, we told this fiction that it was a form of, it was a pension system
instead of an intergenerational Ponzi scheme or something like that.
The fiction means everybody gets paid Social Security because it's a pension system.
Whereas if we were more honest and said it's you know, it's just a welfare system Maybe you could you could start dialing you could you could you could probably
Rationalize in a lot of ways and it's it's not related to how much you put into it, right?
Like how does Social Security work? It's partially. I think it's partially related. So I think there is a
I'm not a total expert on this stuff. But I think I think there's some guaranteed minimum you get, and then
if you put more in, you get somewhat more, and then it's capped at a certain amount.
And that's why Social Security taxes are capped at something like $150,000 a year. And this
is one of the really big tax increase proposals that's out there is to
uncap it, which would effectively be a 12.4 percent income tax hike, you know, on all
your income.
Oh, wow.
Just to Social Security?
Sure.
Because the argument is, the sort of progressive left Democrat argument is that it's, you
know, why should you have a regressive social security
tax? Why should you pay 12.4 percent or whatever the social security tax is? Half gets paid
by you, half gets paid by your employer. But then it's capped at like 140, 150K, some
level like that. And why should be regressive where if you make 500k or a million k a year
you pay zero tax on your marginal income. And that makes no sense if it's a welfare
program. If it's a retirement savings program and your payout is capped, then you know if
you don't need to put in more than you get out.
Well that's logical, but there's not a lot of logic going on with the way people are
talking about taxes today.
Like California just jacked their taxes up to 14 what? Was it 14-4? Something like that. Yeah, 14-3 I think.
Which is hilarious. Yeah, 14-9. I mean, you want more money for doing a terrible job and having more people leave for the first time ever in like the history of the state.
Yeah, but it, look, it gets away with it. I know.
And so...
Well, people are forced with no choice.
What are you going to do?
It is...
I mean, there are people at the margins who leave, but the state government still collects
more and more in revenues.
So it's, you know, you get, I don't know, you get 10% more revenues and 5% of the people leave.
You still increase the amount of revenues you're getting.
It's inelastic enough that you're actually able to increase the revenues.
I mean, this is sort of the crazy thing about California is, you know, there's always sort
of a right-wing or libertarian critique of California that, you know, it's
such a ridiculous place. It should just collapse under its own ridiculousness. And it doesn't
quite happen. You know, the macroeconomics on it are pretty good. You know, 40 million
people, the GDP is around 4 trillion. It's about the same as Germany with 80 million
or Japan with 125 million. Japan
has three times the population of California. Same GDP means one-third the per capita GDP.
So there's some level on which, you know, California as a whole is working even though it
doesn't work from a governance point of view, doesn't work for a lot of the people who live there.
And the rough model I have for how to think of California is that
it's kind of like Saudi Arabia. And you have a crazy religion, wokeism in California, Wahhabism
in Saudi Arabia. You know, not that many people believe it, but it distorts everything. And
then you have like oil fields in Saudi Arabia, and you have the big tech companies in California and the oil pays for everything.
And then you have a completely bloated, inefficient government sector and you have sort of all
sorts of distortions in the real estate market where people also make lots of money in sort
of the government and real estate or ways you redistribute the oil wealth or the big tech money in California.
And it's like it's not the way you might want to design a system from scratch, but it's
pretty stable.
People have been saying Saudi Arabia is ridiculous.
It's going to collapse any year now.
They've been saying that for 40 or 50 years.
But if you have a giant oil field, you can pay for a lot of ridiculousness
I think that's that's the way to that's that's the way you have to think of California
Well, the other thing is you're also things about it that are ridiculous, but there's something about it that you know it
It doesn't naturally self-destruct overnight
well
there's a lot of kick-ass people there and there's a lot of people that are still generating enormous amounts of wealth there and it's too
difficult to just pack up and leave. I think it's something like four of the
eight or nine companies with market capitalizations over a trillion dollars
are based in California. That's amazing. It's Google, Apple, now Nvidia, Metta, I think Broadcom is close to that.
And there's no ideal place to live either.
It's not like California sucks, so there's a place that's got it totally dialed in with
also that has an enormous GDP, also has an enormous population.
There's not like one big city that's really dialed in.
Well it's, there are things that work. So I looked at all the zero tax states in the
US and it's always, you don't, I think the way you ask the question gets at it, which
is you don't live in a, you know, in theory a lot of stuff happens on a state level, but you don't live
in a state, you live in a city.
And so, if you're somewhat biased towards living in at least a moderately sized city,
okay, I can, there are, I think there are four states where there are no cities, Alaska,
Wyoming, South Dakota, New Hampshire.
There's zero tax, but no cities to speak of.
And then you have Washington state with Seattle, where the weather is the worst in the country.
You have Nevada with Las Vegas, which I'm not that big a fan of.
And then that leaves three zero tax states. You have
Texas, which I like as a state, but I'm not that big a fan of Austin, Dallas, or Houston.
You know, it's sort of Houston is just sort of an oil town, which is good if you're in
that business, but otherwise not. Dallas has sort of an inferiority complex to LA and New York, you know, just not the
healthiest attitude. And then, you know, I don't know, Austin's a government town and
a college town and a wannabe hipster San Francisco town. So, you know, my books are three strikes
and you're kind of out too. And then that leaves Nashville, Nashville Tennessee which was and then or Miami South, Florida
And those would be my two top choices Miami's fun, but I wouldn't want to live there. It's a fun place to visit
It's a little too crazy a little too chaotic a little too cocaine fueled a little too party party party
I think it's I think it's pretty I think it's pretty segmented from
the tourists I think it's pretty segmented from the tourist strip from everything else.
It probably is something a little bit paradoxical about any place that gets lots of tourists.
Where it's in some sense of a case, there's some things that are great about it because
so many tourists go, but then in some sense it creates a weird aesthetic because the day-to-day vibe is that you don't work
and you're just having fun or something like that.
Right, because so many people are going there just to do that.
And that's probably a little bit off with the South Florida thing. But I think it's, and then I think Nashville is also sort of its own
real place. Nashville's great. Yeah. So those would be my, those are the top two. I could live in
Nashville, no problem. I'm probably always, I'm always, I'm always to, you know, fifth grade onward since, you know, 77, I lived in California. And so I'm
just a sucker for the weather. And I think there is no place besides coastal California
where you have really good weather year round in the US. Maybe Hawaii's pretty good.
Hostile California is tough to beat.
And you're two hours from the mountains.
Man, it's like, you know, it's mid-August here in Austin.
This is just, it's just brutal.
Is it?
I think so.
Really?
That was too hot for you?
It was too hot for me.
Today's mild.
Well.
What is it out there, like 80?
All right.
85?
96.
96?
You're proving my point.
I do so much sauna that I literally don't even notice it.
I'm outside for hours every day shooting arrows, and I don't even notice it. I'm outside for hours every day shooting arrows and I don't even notice it. Well that's uh I don't know if you're
representative of the average Austin president. I don't know but I think you get
accustomed to it. To me it's so much better than too cold. Too cold you can
die. I know you can die from the heat but you probably won't especially if you
have water you'll be okay but you could die from the cold. but you probably won't, especially if you have water. You'll be okay. But you could die from the cold. Cold's real. So really cold places, there's five months
out of the year where your life's in danger, where you could do something wrong. Like if
you live in Wyoming and you break down somewhere and there's no one on the road, you could
die out there. That's real. You could die from exposure.
Sure. There's probably some very deep reason there's been a net migration of people to the west and the south and the US over the last five decades. California you can do no wrong. As long as the earth doesn't move, you're good.
As long as there's no tsunamis, you're good. It is a perfect environment
virtually year-round. It gets a little hot in the summer but again, coastal? Not at
all. If you get an 80 degree day in Malibu, it's unusual.
You know, it's wonderful.
You got a beautiful breeze coming off the ocean,
sun's out, everybody's pretty.
And then it's correlated with confiscatory taxation.
It's all sort of a package deal.
Well, it's a scam.
They know you don't want to leave.
I didn't want to leave California.
It's fucking great.
I appreciate you left.
I always have the fantasy that if enough people like you leave, it'll put pressure on them,
but it's never quite enough.
Never quite enough.
And it's not going to be.
It's too difficult for most people.
It was very difficult for me.
And I had a bunch of people working for me that were willing to pack up and leave, like
young Jamie over there.
But we, you know, it was tricky.
You're taking your whole business and my business is talking to people.
That's part of my business.
My other business is stand up comedy. So you left during during COVID or I left at the very
beginning as soon as they started locking things down like oh these motherfuckers March, April,
May, 2020. May I started looking at houses. Cool. That's when I came to Austin first.
I got a place in Miami in September 2020 and spent the last, you know, I spent the last
four winters there.
So I'm sort of always on the cusp of moving to Florida.
Hard to get out of California.
But the thing that's gotten a lot harder about moving relative to four years ago and, you
know, I'd say I think my real estate purchase have generally not
been great over the years. I mean, they've done okay, but certainly not the way I've
been able to make money at all. But with the one exception was Miami. Bought it in September
2020, and probably, you know, fast forward four years, it's up like 100 percent.
Wow.
Something like that.
And then, paradoxically, this also means it's gotten much harder to move there or Austin
or any of these places.
You know, if you, you know, if I relocated my office in LA, the people
who own houses, okay, you have to buy a place in Florida. It costs twice as much as it did
four years ago. And then the interest rates have also doubled. And so you get a 30-year
mortgage. You could have locked that in for 3 percent in 2020. Now it's, you know, maybe
six and a half, seven percent.
So the prices have doubled, the mortgages have doubled.
So it costs you four times as much to buy a house.
And so, yeah, so there was a moment
where people could move during COVID
and it's gotten dramatically harder
relative to what it was four years ago.
Well, the Austin real estate market went crazy
and then it came back down a little bit.
It's in that down a little bit. It's in that
down a little bit spot right now where there's a lot of like high end properties that are
still for sale, they can't move. It's different. There's not a lot of people moving here now
like there was in the boom because everything is open everywhere.
Well, I somehow think Austin was linked to California and Miami was linked a little bit more to New York. And it was
a little bit, you know, all these differences but Austin was kind of, you know, a big part
of the move were people from tech, from California that moved to Austin. You know, there's a
part of the Miami, South Florida thing which was people from finance in New York, New York City that moved to Florida.
And the finance industry is less networked on New York City.
So I think it is possible for people if you run a, you know, private equity fund or if
you work at a bank, it's possible for some of those functions to easily be moved to a
different state. The
tech industry is crazily networked on California. Like there's probably some way to do it.
It's not that easy.
Yeah, it makes sense. It makes sense too. It's just the sheer numbers. I mean, when
you're talking about all those corporations that are established and based in California,
there's so many they're so big
Just the sheer numbers of human beings that live there and work there that are involved in tech
Sure, but if it wasn't if it wasn't as networked
You know you could you could probably just move you know and and maybe these things are networked till they're not
You know Detroit was very networked the car industry was super networked on Detroit for decades and decades and Michigan got more
and more mismanaged and people thought the network sort of protected them because, you
know, the big three car companies were in Detroit but then you had all the supply chains
were also in Detroit.
And then eventually, it was just so ridiculous.
People moved, started moving the factories outside of that area
and it sort of unraveled. So that's, you know, it can also happen with California.
It'll just take a lot.
That would be insane if they just abandon all the tech companies in California. I mean,
just look at what happened at Flint, Michigan when all the auto factories pulled out.
Well it's, it's, look, I think you can... And it's always... There are all these paradoxical
histories. The internet, the point of the internet in some sense was to eliminate the
tyranny of place. And that was sort of the idea. And then one of the paradoxes about
the internet history of the internet was that the internet companies were you know, were, you know, we're all, you know, we're all centered in, in California, then they're probably, they have been different,
different waves of, of how networked how non network they were, I think, I think
probably 2021, sort of the COVID moving away from California, the big thing in tech was crypto.
And crypto had this conceit of an alternate currency, decentralized, away from the central
banks, but also the crypto companies, the crypto protocols, you could do those from
anywhere.
You could do them outside the U.S., you could do those from anywhere. You could do them outside the US. You could do them from Miami. And so crypto was something where the tech could naturally
move out of California.
And today, probably the core tech narrative
is completely flipped to AI.
And then there's something about AI that's very centralized.
I had this one liner years ago where it was,
if we say that crypto is libertarian,
can we also say that AI is communist?
Or something like this where the natural structure
for an AI company looks like it's a big company
and then somehow the AI stuff feels like it's a big company and then somehow the AI stuff is feels like it's going to
be dominated by the big tech companies in the San Francisco Bay Area.
And so if that's the future of tech, the scale, the natural scale of the industry tells you
that it's going to be extremely hard to get
out of the San Francisco Bay Area.
When you look to the future and you try to just make a guess as to how all this is going
to turn out with AI, what do you think we're looking at over the next five years?
Man, I think I should start by being modest in answering that question and saying that
nobody has a clue.
Right.
Which is true.
Which pretty much all the experts say.
You know, I would say, let me do sort of a history.
The riff I always had on this was that I can't stand any of the buzzwords, and I felt AI,
you know, there's all this big data,
cloud computing, there are all these crazy buzzwords people had and they always were
ways to sort of abstract things and get away from reality somehow and were not good ways
of talking about things and I thought AI was this incredible abstraction because it can
mean the next generation of computers, it can mean the last generation of computers. It can mean anything in between.
And if you think about the AI discussion in the 2010s, pre-open AI, chat GPT and the revolution
of the last two years, but the 2010s AI discussion, maybe it was – so I'll start with the
history before I get to the future. But the history of it was it was maybe anchored on two visions of what AI meant. And one was
Nick Bostrom, Oxford Prof, who wrote this book, Super Intelligence, 2014. And it was
basically AI was going to be this super duper intelligent thing, way, way godlike
intelligence, way smarter than any human being.
And then there was sort of the, I don't know, the CCP Chinese communist rebuttal, the Kai
Fu Li book from 2018, AI Superpowers, and I think the subtitle was something like The
Race for AI Between Silicon Valley and China or something like this.
And it was sort of, it defined AI as, it was fairly low tech, it was just surveillance,
you know, facial recognition technology.
We would just have the sort of totalitarian, Stalinist monitoring.
It didn't require very much innovation.
It just required that you apply things.
And basically the subtext was China is going to win because we have no ethical qualms in
China about applying this sort of basic machine learning to sort of measuring or controlling
the population.
And those were sort of like, say, two extreme competing visions of what AI would mean in
the 2010s and that sort of maybe were sort of the anchors of the AI debate. And then, you know, what happened in some sense with
CHAT GPT in late 22, early 23 was that the achievement you
got, you did not get super intelligence, it was not just
surveillance tech, but it was you actually got to the holy
grail of what people would have defined AI as from 1950
to 2010 for the previous 60 years, before the 2010s. People have always said AI, the
definition of AI is passing the Turing test. And the Turing test, it basically means that
the computer can fool you into thinking that it's a human being. And it's a somewhat fuzzy test because, you know,
obviously you could have an expert on the computer,
a non-expert, you know, does it fool you all the time
or some of the time, how good is it?
But to first approximation, the Turing test, you know,
we weren't even close to passing it in 2021.
And then, you know, chat GPT basically
passes the Turing test, at least for like, let's say an IQ 100 average person. It can, it can,
it's passed the Turing test. And that was, that was the holy grail. That was the holy grail of
AI research for the previous 60 years. And so there's – I don't know, there's probably some psychological or sociological
history where we can say that this weird debate between Bostrom about super intelligence and
Kai-Fu Lee about surveillance tech was like this – almost like psychological suppression
people had where they were not thinking – they lost track of the Turing test of the Holy
Grail because it was about
to happen.
And it was such a significant, such an important thing that you didn't even want to think
about.
So I'm tempted to give almost a psychological repression theory of the 2010 debates.
But be that as it may, the Turing test gets passed and that's – yeah, that's an
extraordinary achievement.
And then, you know, maybe,
and then, you know, where does it go from here?
There probably are ways you can refine these.
It's still gonna be, you know, a long time to apply it.
There is a question.
There's this AGI discussion. You know, will we get
artificial general intelligence, which is a hopelessly vague concept, which, you know,
general intelligence could be just a generally smart human being. So is that just a person
with an IQ of 130? Or is it super intelligence? Is it godlike intelligence? So it's sort of an ambiguous thing.
But I keep thinking that maybe the AGI question is less important than passing the Turing
test.
If we got AGI, if we got, let's say, superintelligence, if we got – that would be interesting to
Mr. God because you'd have a – you'd have competition for being God. But surely the Turing test is more important for us humans
because it's either a compliment or substitute to humans.
And so it's, yeah, it's gonna rearrange the economic,
cultural, political structure of our society
in extremely dramatic ways.
And I think maybe what's already happened is much more important
than anything else that's going to be done.
And then it's just going to be a long ways in applying it.
One last thought.
The analogy I'm always tempted to go to, and these things are never, historical analogies are never perfect, but it's that maybe
AI in
2023-24 is like, it's like the internet in 1999,
where on one level,
it's clear the internet's going to be big and get a lot bigger and it's going to dominate the economy,
it's going to rearrange the society in the 21st century. And then at the same time, it was a complete bubble and people
had no idea how the business models worked. You know, almost everything blew up. It took,
you know, it didn't take that long in the scheme of things. It took, you know, 15, 20
years for it to become super dominant,
but it didn't happen sort of in 18 months as people fantasized in 1999. And maybe what
we have in AI is something like this. It's figuring out how to actually apply it, you
know, in sort of all these different ways,
it's gonna take something like two decades.
But that doesn't distract from it being a really big deal.
It is a really big deal,
and I think you're right about the Turing test.
Do you think that the lack of acknowledgement
or the public celebration,
or at least this like mainstream discussion,
like which I think should be everywhere,
that we've passed the Turing test.
Do you think it's connected to the fact that this stuff accelerates so rapidly that even
though we've essentially breached this new territory, we still know that GPT-5 is going
to be better, GPT-6 is going to be insane, and then they're working on these right now.
And the change is happening so quickly, we're almost a little reluctant to acknowledge where
we're at.
Yeah.
You know, I've often, you know, probably for 15 years or so, often been on the side that
there isn't that much progress in science or tech or not as much as Silicon Valley likes
to claim. And even on the AI level, I think it's a massive technical achievement. It's still
an open question, you know, is it actually going to lead to much higher
living standards for everybody? You know, the internet was a massive achievement.
How much did it raise people's living standards? Much, much trickier question. But in this world where not much has happened,
one of the paradoxes of an era of relative tech stagnation is that when something does
happen we don't even know how to process it. So I think Bitcoin was a big invention, whether it was good or bad, but
it was a pretty big deal and it was systematically underestimated for at least, you know, the
first 10, 11 years. You know, you could trade it, it went up smoothly for 10, 11 years,
it didn't get repriced all at once because we're in a world where
nothing big ever happens. And so we have no way of processing it when something pretty
big happens. The internet was pretty big in 99. Bitcoin was moderately big. The internet
was really big. Bitcoin was moderately big. And I'd say passing the Turing test is really
big. It's on the same scale as the Internet. And because our lived experiences that so little has felt like it's been
changing for the last few decades, we're probably underestimating it.
It's interesting that you say that so little, we feel like so little has changed because if
you're a person, how old are you?
Same age as you were, born in 1967.
So in our age we've seen all the change, right? We saw the end of the Cold War, we saw answering
machines, we saw VHS tapes, then we saw the internet, and then where we're at right now,
which is like this bizarre moment in time where people carry the internet around with
them in their pocket every day. And these super sophisticated computers that are ubiquitous. Everybody
has one. There's incredible technology that's being ramped up every year.
They're getting better all the time. And now there's AI. There's AI on your phone.
You could access chat GPT, a bunch of different programs on your phone. And I
think that's an insane change. I think that that's one of the most, especially with the use of social media, it's one of the most bizarre changes I think that's an insane change. I think that's one of the most – especially with the use of social media, it's one of
the most bizarre changes I think our culture has ever – the most bizarre.
It can be a big change culturally or politically.
But yeah, the kinds of questions I would ask is how do you measure it economically?
How much does it change GDP? How much does it change GDP?
How much does it change productivity?
And certainly, the story I would generally tell for the last 50 years, since the 1970s,
early 70s, is that we've been not absolute stagnation, we've been in an era of relative
stagnation where there has been very era of relative stagnation where there
has been very limited progress in the world of atoms, the world of physical things.
And there has been a lot of progress in the world of bits, information, computers, internet,
mobile internet, you know, now AI.
What are you referring to when you say the world of physical things?
You know, it's any – well, if we had defined technology, if we were sitting here in 1967,
the year we were born, and we had a discussion about technology, what technology would have
meant?
It would have meant computers.
It would have also meant rockets.
It would have meant supersonic airplanes. It would have meant computers. It would have also meant rockets. It would have meant supersonic airplanes. It would have meant new medicines. It would have meant the Green
Revolution in agriculture, maybe underwater cities. You know, it sort of had – and it
– because technology simply gets defined as that which is changing, that which is progressing.
And so there was progress on all these fronts.
Today, last 20 years, when you talk about technology,
you're normally just talking about information technology.
Technology has been reduced to meaning computers.
And that tells you that the structure of progress has been weird.
There's been this narrow cone of very intense progress
around the world of bits, around the world of computers,
and then all the other areas have been relatively stagnant. We're not moving any faster. You
know, the Concorde got decommissioned in 2003 or whenever. And then with all the low-tech
airport security measures, it takes even longer to fly, to get through all of them from one
city to the next. You know, the highways have gone backwards because there are more traffic jams.
We haven't figured out ways around those.
So we're literally moving slower than we were 40 or 50 years ago.
And then, of course, there's also a sense in
which these, the screens and the devices, you know, have this effect distracting us
from this.
So, you know, when you're, you know, riding a hundred-year-old subway in New York City
and you're looking at your iPhone, you can, you can look at, wow, this is this cool new
gadget, but you're also being distracted from the fact that your
lived environment hasn't changed, you know, in a hundred years. And so
there's a question how important is this world of bits versus
versus the world of atoms. You know, I would say as human beings we're
physically embodied in a material world, and so I would always say this world of
atoms is pretty important and when that's pretty
stagnant, you know, there's a lot of stuff that doesn't make sense.
I was an undergraduate at Stanford late 80s and at the time, in retrospect, every engineering
area would have been a bad thing to go into, you know, mechanical engineering, chemical
engineering, all these
engineering fields where you're tinkering and trying to do new things because these
things turned out to be stuck, they were regulated, you couldn't come up with new things to do.
Nuclear engineering, aero-aster engineering, people already knew those were really bad
ones to go into.
They were, you know, outlawed.
You weren't going to make any progress in nuclear reactor designs or stuff like that.
Electrical engineering, which was the one that's sort of adjacent to making semiconductors,
that one was still okay.
And then the only field that was actually going to progress a lot was computer science.
And again, you know, it's been very powerful, but that was not the felt sense in the 1980s. In the 1980s, computer science was this ridiculous inferior subject.
You know, I always – the linguistic cut is always when people use the word science,
I'm in favor of science, I'm not in favor of science in quotes, and it's always a tell
that it's not real science. And so when we call it climate science or political science
or social science, you know, you're just sort of making it up
and you have an inferiority complex to real science
or something like physics or chemistry.
And computer science was in the same category
as social science or political science.
It was a fake field for people
who found electrical engineering or math way too hard and sort of dropped out of the real science and real engineering fields.
You don't feel that climate science is a real science? It's, well, let me, it's, I, there's several different things one could say.
It's possible climate change is happening.
It's possible we don't have great accounts of why that's going on.
So I'm not questioning any of those things. But
how scientific it is, I don't think it's a place where we have really vigorous debates.
Maybe the climate is increasing because of carbon dioxide emissions, temperatures are
going up. Maybe it's methane. Maybe it's people are eating too much steak. It's the cows flatulating,
and you have to measure how much is methane
a greenhouse gas versus carbon dioxide. I don't think they're rigorously doing that
stuff scientifically. I think the fact that it's called climate science tells you that
it's more dogmatic than anything that's truly science should be. Dogma doesn't mean it's
wrong, but it is.
But why is the fact that it's called climate science mean that it's more dogmatic? Because
if you said nuclear science, you wouldn't question it, right?
Yeah, but no one calls it nuclear science. They call it nuclear engineering.
Interesting. I see what you're saying.
The only thing is I'm just making a narrow linguistic point.
Is there anything they call science that is legitimately science?
Well at this point, people say computer science has worked. But in the 1980s, all I'm saying is it was in the same category as let's say social science,
political science.
It was a tell that the people doing it kind of deep down knew they weren't doing real
science.
Well, there's certainly ideology that's connected to climate science.
And then there's certainly corporations that are invested in this prospect of green energy and the concept of green energy and they're profiting off of it and
pushing these
different things whether it be electric car mandates or whatever it is like, California, I think they it's 30 to 20 35
They have a mandate that all new vehicles have to be electric
Which is hilarious when you're connected to a grid that can't support the electric cars it currently has
which is hilarious when you're connected to a grid that can't support the electric cars it currently has.
After they said that, within a month or two,
Gavin Newsom asked people to not charge their Teslas because it was summer and the grid was fucked.
Yeah, look, it was all linked into all these ideological projects in all these ways and
you know, there's an environmental project which is, you is – and maybe it shouldn't be scientific.
There's – the hardcore environmentalist argument is we only have one planet and we
don't have time to do science.
If we have to do rigorous science and you can prove that we're overheating, it will
be too late.
And so if you're a hardcore environmentalist, you know, you don't want
to have as high a standard of science. Yeah, my intuition is certainly when you go away
from that, you end up with things that are too dogmatic, too ideological. Maybe it doesn't
even work even if the planet's getting warmer. You know, maybe climate science is not like
– my question is, is – like maybe methane is a worse, is it more dangerous greenhouse
gas than carbon dioxide?
We're not even capable of measuring that.
Well, we're also ignoring certain things like regenerative farms that sequester carbon.
And then you have people like Bill Gates saying that planting trees to deal with carbon is
ridiculous.
That's a ridiculous way to do it. Like, how is that ridiculous?
Is they literally turn carbon dioxide into oxygen?
Is their food, their food.
That's what the food of plants is.
That's what powers the whole plant life and the way we have the symbiotic relationship
with them, and the more carbon dioxide is, the greener it is, which is why it's greener
today on earth than it has been in a hundred years. Sure. These are all facts that are
inconvenient to people that have a very specific narrow window of how to
approach this. Sure although you know there probably are ways to steel man the
other side too where where maybe maybe you, the original 1970s, you know, I think the manifesto that's
always very interesting from the other side was this book by the Club of Rome, 1972, The
Limits of Growth. And it's, you can't have, we need to head towards a society in which
there's 0%, there's very limited growth because if you have unlimited
growth you're going to run out of resources. If you don't run out of resources you'll
hit a pollution constraint. But the, in the 1970s it was you're going to have overpopulation,
you're going to run out of oil, we had the oil shocks, and then by the 90s, it sort of morphed into more of the pollution problem with carbon
dioxide, climate change, other environmental things.
But there is sort of, you know, there's been some improvement in oil, carbon fuels with
fracking, things like this in Texas.
It's not at the scale that's been enough to, you
know, give an American standard of living to the whole planet.
And we consume 100 million barrels of oil a day globally.
Maybe fracking can add 10 percent, 10 million to that.
If everybody on this planet has an American standard of living, it's something like 300, 400 million barrels of oil. And I don't think that's
there. So that's kind of – I always wonder whether that was the real environmental argument,
is we can't have an American standard of living for the whole planet, we somehow can't justify this degree of inequality.
And therefore, you know, we have to figure out ways to dial back and, you know, tax the
carbon, restrict it. And maybe, you know, maybe that's, there's some sort of a Malthusian
calculus that's more about resources than about pollution.
How much of that could the demand for oil could be mitigated by nuclear?
You probably could mitigate it a lot.
There's a question why the nuclear thing has gone so wrong. Especially if you have electric vehicles,
right? The combustion engine is probably hard to get nuclear to work, but if you shift to
electric vehicles, you can charge your Tesla cars at night, and that would seemingly work.
And there's definitely a history of energy where
it was always in the direction of, you know, more intense use. It went from wood to coal
to oil, which is a more compact form of energy. And in a way, it takes up less of the environment.
And then if we move from oil to uranium, that's even, you know, it's even smaller. And so in a sense, the smaller, the more dense the energy is,
the less of the environment it takes up. And when we go back, when we go from oil to natural gas,
which takes up more space, and from natural gas to solar or wind, we have to, you know,
you have to pollute the whole environment by putting up windmills everywhere. Or you have to,
you know, you have to cover the whole desert with solar panels.
And that is a good way to look at it, because it is a form of pollution.
And so there was a way that nuclear was supposed to be the energy mode of the 21st century.
And then yeah, there are all these historical questions.
Why did it get stopped?
Why did we not go down that route?
You know, the standard explanation of why it stopped was that it was – there were
all these dangers.
We had Three Mile On in 1979, you know, Chernobyl in 1986, and then the Fukushima one in Japan, I think, 2011.
And you had these sort of, you had these various accidents.
My alternate theory on why nuclear energy really stopped is that it was sort of dystopian or even apocalyptic because it turned out that it was all – it
turned out to be very dual use.
If you build nuclear power plants, it's only sort of one step away from building nuclear
weapons.
And it turned out to be a lot trickier to separate those two things out than it looked.
And I think the signature moment was 1974 or 75 when India gets the nuclear bomb. And
the US, I believe, had transferred the nuclear reactor technology to India. We thought they
couldn't weaponize it. And then it turned out it was pretty easy to weaponize
and then the and then sort of the geopolitical
problem with with nuclear power was you either you know
You need a double standard where we have nuclear power in the US
But we don't allow other countries to have nuclear power because the US gets to keep its nuclear weapons
We don't let a hundred other countries have nuclear weapons and this that's an extreme double standard
Probably a little bit hard to justify
um or
Or you need some kind of really effective
global governance Where you have a one-world government that regulates all this stuff, which doesn't sound that good either.
And then sort of the compromise was just to regulate it so much that maybe the nuclear
plants got grandfathered in, but it became too expensive to build new ones.
Like even China, which is the country where they're building the most nuclear power plants,
they built way less than people expected a decade ago because, you know, they don't trust their own designs.
And so they have to copy the over-safety, over-protected designs from the West,
and the nuclear plants, nuclear power costs too much money. It's cheaper to do coal. Wow. So so you know I'm not getting the numbers
exactly right but if you look at what percent of Chinese electricity was nuclear it wasn't
that high it was like maybe four or five percent in 2013 2014 and the percent hasn't gone up
in 10 years because you you know, they've maybe
doubled the amount of electricity they use and maybe they doubled the nuclear, but the
relative percentage is still a pretty small part of the mix because it's just more expensive
when you have these, you know, over-safety designed reactors.
There are probably ways to build small reactors that are way cheaper, but then you still have
this dual- use thing.
Do you create plutonium?
Are there ways you can create a pathway to building more nuclear weapons?
And if there was innovation, if nuclear engineering had gotten to a point where, let's say there
wasn't Three Mile Island or Chernobyl didn't happen. Do you think that it would have gotten to a much more efficient and much more effective
version by now?
Matthew Feeney, Ph.D.
Well, my understanding is there are – we have way more efficient designs.
We have small – you can do small reactor designs which are – you don't need this
giant containment structure.
So it costs much less per kilowatt hour of
electricity you produce.
So I think we have those designs.
They're just not allowed.
But then I think the problem is that if you were able to build them in all these countries
all over the world, you still have this dual-use problem.
And again, my alternate history of what really went wrong with nuclear power, it wasn't Three Mile Island, it wasn't Chernobyl. That's the official story. The real story
was India getting the bomb.
Wow, that makes sense. It completely makes sense. Geez Louise.
And then this is always the question about, there's always a big picture question. People ask me, you know, if I'm right about
this picture of, you know, the slowdown in tech, the sort of stagnation in many, many
dimensions. And then there's always a question, you know, why did this happen? And my cop-out
answer is always why questions are over determined because it can be – there are multiple reasons.
So it could be why it could be we became a more feminized risk-averse society. It could
be that the education system worked less well. It could be that we're just out of ideas.
The easy ideas have been found. The hard ideas. The cupboard – nature's cupboard was bare.
The low-hanging fruit had been picked. So it can be over-determined.
But I think one dimension that's not to be underrated for the science and tech stagnation
was that an awful lot of science and technology had this dystopian or apocalyptic dimension and probably what happened at Los Alamos in 1945
and then with the thermonuclear weapons in the early 50s. It took a while for it to really
seep in, but it had this sort of delayed effect where maybe a stagnant world in which the physicists don't get to do anything and
they have to putter around with DEI and you're not, you know, but you don't build
weapons that blow up the world anymore. You know, is that a feature or a bug?
And so the stagnation was sort of like this response. And so it
sucks that we've lived in this world for 50 years
where a lot of stuff has been inert.
But if we had a world that was still accelerating
on all these dimensions with supersonics
and hypersonic planes and hypersonic weapons
and modular nuclear reactors,
maybe we wouldn't be sitting here
and the whole world would have already blown up.
And so we're in the stagnant path of the
multiverse because it had this partially protective thing, even
though in all these other ways I feel it's deeply deranged our society.
That's a very interesting perspective and it makes a lot of sense. It really
does. And particularly the dual use thing with nuclear power and especially
distributing that to other countries.
When you talk about the stagnation in this country, like I don't know how much you follow this whole UAP nonsense.
I know we met, what was that guy's name at your place?
The guy who did Charites of the Gods. Oh, Fondanican. Yes. Yeah. Yeah, you didn't, you thought he was too crazy.
You like Hancock, but you don't like von Daniken
I didn't think he's too crazy. He just willfully in my opinion
ignores
Evidence that would show that some of the things that he's saying have already been solved and
I think his
His hypothesis is
his hypothesis is all related to this concept that we have been visited and that that's how all these things were built and that this technology was brought here from another world. And I think he's very ideologically locked into these ideas. more compelling idea is that there were very advanced cultures for some reason
10,000 years ago, whatever it was, whatever the year was where they they
built some of the insane structures it's 45 hundred years ago they roughly think
the pyramids were built like what whatever the fuck was going on there I
think those were human beings I think those were human beings in that place, in that time, and I think they had some sort
of very sophisticated technology that was lost, and things can get lost. Things
can get lost in cataclysms, things can get lost in... they can get lost in
disease and famine, and there's all sorts of war, all sorts of reasons, the
burning of the Library of Alexandria, there's all sorts of war, all sorts of reasons, the burning of the Library of Alexandria, there's all sorts of ways that technology gets lost forever.
And you can have today someone living in Los Angeles in the most sophisticated high-tech
society the world has ever known, while you still have people that live in the Amazon
that live in the same way that they have lived for thousands of years.
So those things can happen in the same planet at the same time. And I think while the rest of the world was essentially operating
at a much lower vibration, there were people in Egypt that were doing some extraordinary
things. I don't know how they got the information. Maybe they did get it from visitors. Maybe
they did. But there's no real compelling evidence that they did. I think there's much more compelling evidence
that a cataclysm happened.
When you look at the Younger Dryas Impact Theory,
it's all entirely based on science.
It's entirely based on core samples and iridium content
and also massive changes in the environment
over a very short period of time,
particularly the melting of the ice caps in North America
and just impact
craters all around the world that we know something happened roughly 11,000
years ago and probably again 10,000 years ago. I think it's a regular occurrence
on this planet that things go sideways and there's massive natural disasters
and I think that it's very likely that... There's the Bronze Age civilization collapse somewhere in the mid-12th century BC and probably
the... in some ways the one which we have the best history is the fall of the Roman
Empire which was obviously the culmination of the classical world and it's somehow extremely unraveled.
So my – yeah, I think my view on it is probably somewhere between yours and the –
Trevor Burrus Fundanican?
David Kopel No, not Fundanican.
I'm more on the – the other side. Let me try to define why this – let me agree on why this is so important today.
It's not just of antiquarian interest.
The reason it matters today is because the alternative.
If you say civilization has seen great rises and falls.
It's gone through these great cycles. You know, maybe
the Bronze Age civilizations were very advanced, but someone came up with iron weapons. So there's
just one dimension where they progressed, but then everything else they could destroy. And so, or,
you know, the fall of the Roman Empire was again this, you know, pretty cataclysmic thing where there were diseases and, you know, and
then there were political things that unraveled, but somehow, you know, it was a massive regression
for, you know, four, five, six hundred years into the dark ages. And the sort of naive,
the progressive use, things always just got monotonically better. And there's sort of naive, the progressive views, things always just got monotonically better.
And there's sort of this revisionist, purely progressive history where even the Roman Empire
didn't decline. And even, you know, this one sort of stupid way to quantify this stuff
is with pure demographics. And so it's the question, how many people lived in the past?
And the rises and falls of civilization story is there were more people who lived in the
Roman Empire because it was more advanced, it could support a larger population, and
then the population declined. The city of Rome maybe had a million people at its peak,
and then by, I don't know, 650 AD, it's maybe
it's down to 10,000 people or less. You have this complete collapse in population. And
then the sort of alternate, purely progressive view is the population has always just been
monotonically increasing because it's a measure of how, in some sense, things in aggregate have always been getting better.
So I am definitely on your side that population had great rises and falls, civilizations had
great rises and falls.
And so that part of it, I agree with you, or even some variant of what Hancock or Fundana
can say. The place where I would
say I think things are different is I don't think, I don't think, and therefore it seems
possible something could happen to our civilization. That's always the upshot of it. If it had
been monotonically always progressing, then there's nothing we should worry about. Nothing can possibly
go wrong. And then certainly the thing, the sort of alternate Hancock, von Daniken, Joe
Rogan, history of the world tells us is that we shouldn't take our civilization for granted.
There's things that can go really haywire. I agree with that. The one place where I differ
is I think, I do think our civilization today is on some dimensions way more advanced than
any of these past civilizations were. I don't think any of them had nuclear weapons. I don't think any of them had, you know, spaceships or anything like that.
And so the failure mode is likely to be somewhat different from these past ones.
Yeah, that makes sense.
I think technology progressed in a different direction. That's
what I think. I think structural technology, building technology, somehow or another achieved
levels of competence that's not available today. When you look at the construction of
the Great Pyramid of Giza, there's 2,300,000 stones in it. The whole thing points to due north, south,
east and west. It's an incredible achievement. The stones, some of them were moved from a
quarry that was five hundred miles away through the mountains. They have no idea how they
did it. Massive stones. The ones inside the King's Chamber, the biggest ones are like
eighty tons. It's crazy. The whole thing is crazy. Like, how did they do that? Like, whatever
they did, they did without machines, supposedly. They did without the use of the combustion engine. They didn't have electricity.
And yet they were able to do something that stands the test of time, not just so you could
look at it. You know, like you can go to the Acropolis and see the Parthenon. It's gorgeous.
It's amazing. It's incredible. But I can understand how people could have built it. The pyramids is one of those things. You just look at it and
you go, what the fuck was going on here? What was going on here? And none of these people
are still around. You have this strange culture now that's entirely based around, you know,
you have Cairo and an enormous population of visitors, right? Which is a lot of it.
People just going to stare at these ancient relics. What was going on that those people were so much more advanced
than anyone anywhere else in the world?
Yeah, I'm not sure I would anchor on the technological part, but I think the piece that is very hard
for us to comprehend is what motivated them culturally.
Well, how did they do it physically?
Why did they do it physically?
Why did they do it?
Why were you motivated?
Sure why, but also how.
How is a big one.
Because it's really difficult to solve.
There's no traditional conventional explanations for the construction, the movement of the
stones, the amount of time that it would take.
If you move 10 stones a day, I believe it takes 664 years to make one of those pyramids.
So how many people were involved?
How long did it take?
How did they get them there?
How did they figure out how to do it?
How come the shittier pyramids seem to be dated later?
Like, what was going on in that particular period of time
where they figured out how to do something so extraordinary
that even today, 4,500 years later, we stare at it
and we go,
I don't know. I don't know what the fuck they did.
I haven't studied it carefully enough. I'll trust you that it's very hard.
I think the, I would say the real mystery is why were they motivated.
And it's because you can't live in a pyramid. It's just, it was just the afterlife of the pharaoh.
There's some debate about that. Christopher Dunn is an engineer who believes that it was some sort of a power plant
He's got this very bizarre theory that there was a chamber that exists if you can see the structure of the pyramid the inside
Of it. There's a chamber that's subterranean and he believes the subterranean chamber was pounding on the surface of the
Earth and of the walls of the thing creating this very specific vibration
They had shafts that came down into the Queen's chamber these shafts
They were poor chemicals into these shafts and then there was limestone at the end of it. This is all his theory not mine
The end of it there was this limestone which is permeable, right?
So the limestone which is porous, these gases come through and creates
this hydrogen that's inside of this chamber. Then there are these shafts inside the King's
chamber that are, they're getting energy from space, you know, gamma rays and all the shit
from space. And it's going through these chambers which are very specifically designed to target
these gases and put them into this chamber where they would interact with this energy and he
Believes it's enough to create electricity man. My crazy theory
Look, I'm always I'm always too too fast to debunk all these things
But like my just coming back to our earlier conversation if it sounds it
It must have been a crazy power plant to have a containment structure much bigger than a nuclear reactor.
Yeah, well it's ridiculous.
And so...
But it's also a different kind of technology, right?
If nuclear technology was completely not on the table, they didn't understand atoms at
all.
But they did understand that there's rays that come from space and that you could somehow
harness the energy of these things with specific gases and through some method convert that into
some form of electricity.
But if it takes so much power to put all these rocks on the pyramid, you have to always look
at how efficient the power plant is.
So it can't just be some, it has to be like the craziest reaction ever to justify such
a big containment structure because even nuclear power plants don't work economically.
They don't work.
Yeah.
Well, they didn't do a lot of them.
You know, they only did this one in Giza.
And then there was other pyramids that he thinks had different functions that were smaller.
But the whole purpose of it is, or the whole point of it is, we don't know what the fuck
it is.
We don't know why they did it. We have
a group of new archaeologists that are looking at it from a completely different theory.
They're not looking at it like it's a tomb. The established archaeologists have insisted
that this is a tomb for the pharaoh. The newer archaeologists, established archaeologists,
are looking at it and considering whether or not there were some other uses for this
thing and one of them is the concept of the power of pride. I'm always, I don't know if this is an alternate history theory, but I'm always into the James
Frazier, Golden Bough, Rene Girard, violence sacred history where you have always this question about the origins of monarchy and kingship.
And the sort of Gerard Fraser intuition is that it's something like, it is something
like if every king is a kind of living god, then we have to also believe
the opposite, that maybe every god is a dead or murdered king and that somehow societies
were organized around scapegoats.
The scapegoats were, you know, there was sort of a crisis in the archaic community. It got blamed on
a scapegoat. The scapegoat was attributed all these powers. And then at some point,
the scapegoat, before he gets executed, figures out a way to postpone his execution and turn
the power into something real. And so there's sort of this very weird adjacency between the monarch and the scapegoat.
And then, you know, I don't know, the sort of riff on the
would be that the first pyramid did not need to be invented. It was just the
stones that were thrown on a victim.
And then it somehow, and that's the original
The stones that were thrown on a victim.
A community stones a victim to death.
Tribe runs after a victim, you stone them to death, you throw stones on the victim,
that's how you create the first tomb.
And then as it gets more complicated, you create a tomb that's two million stones.
And you get a pharaoh who figures out a way to postpone his own execution or something like this.
I think there's, I'm going to blank on the name of this ritual, but I believe in the old Egyptian kingdoms,
which were sort of around the time of the Great Pyramids or even before.
It was something like in the 30th year of the reign of the Pharaoh, the Pharaoh gets transformed into a living God.
And then this perhaps dates to a time where in the 30th year of the Pharaoh's reign, the
Pharaoh would get ritually sacrificed or killed. And you have all these
societies where the kings lived or allowed to rule for a lot of time. You become king
and you draw the number of pebbles out of a vase and that corresponds to how many years?
Was this, Jamie?
The Sed Festival.
Heb Sed Festival of Tales, an ancient Egyptian ceremony that celebrated the continued rule
of Pharaoh. The name was taken from the name of the Egyptian wolf god, one of whom's name
was Whippowet.
Yeah, this is what I'm talking about.
Or said, the less formal feast name, the feast of the tail is derived.
Yeah, next paragraph is the one to start.
Okay.
That one right there. The ancient festival might perhaps have been instituted to replace
a ritual of murdering a Pharaoh who was unable to continue to rule effectively because of
age or condition.
Interesting. Interesting. So you can't kill them now.
And then eventually said festivals were jubilees several of which had been thrown for 30 years.
And then every three to four years after that.
So when it becomes unthinkable to kill the pharaoh, the pharaoh gets turned into a living god.
Before that, the pharaoh gets murdered
and then gets worshiped as a dead pharaoh or distant god.
That's interesting, but it still doesn't
solve the engineering puzzle.
The engineering puzzle's the biggest one.
How do they do that?
The one I'm focusing on is the motivational puzzle.
Yeah, but why do they?
Even if you have all the motivation in the world, if you want to build a structure
that's insane to build today, and you're doing it 4,500 years ago, we're dealing with a massive puzzle.
I think the motivational part's the harder one to solve. If you can figure out the motivation,
you'll figure out a way to organize the whole society, And if you can get the whole society working on it,
you can probably do it.
But don't you think that his grasp of power
was in peril in the first place, which
is why they decided to come up with this idea of turning them
into a living god?
So to have the amount of resources and power
and then the engineering and then
the understanding of whatever methods they use to shape and
move these things.
Well, this is always the anthropological debate between Voltaire, the enlightenment thinker
of the 18th century and Durkheim, the 19th century anthropologist.
And Voltaire believes that religion originates as a
conspiracy of the priests to maintain power and so politics comes first the politicians invent religion
and then Durkheim says the causations the other way around that somehow religion came first and then
Politics somehow came out of it. Of course of course, once the politics comes out of it, the priests, the religious authorities
have political power, they figure out ways to manipulate it, things like this.
But I find the Durkheim story far more plausible than the Voltaire one.
I think the religious categories are primary and the political categories are secondary.
So you think the religion came first. But what about if we emanated from tribal societies?
Tribal societies have always had leaders. When you have leaders, you're going to have
dissent, you're going to have challenges, you're going to have politics, and you have
people negotiating to try to maintain power, keep power, keep everything organized. That's
the origin of politics, correct?
You know, I think that's a whitewashed, enlightenment, rationalist
description of the origin of politics.
What do you think the origin of politics is?
I think it's far more vile than that.
You know, what you're giving me is...
Well, it's very vile.
The control and power and maintaining power involves murder and sabotage.
Well, okay, that's more like it. What you gave me a minute ago sounds more like a social
contract theory in which people sit down, negotiate, and have, you know, a nice legal
chit chat to draw up the social contract. That is a complete fiction.
Yeah, I don't think that. I think that there was probably various levels of civility that were achieved when agriculture and when
establishments were constructed that were near resources where they didn't
have to worry as much about food and water and things along those lines.
Things probably got a little bit more civil. But I think that the origins of it
are like the origins of all human conflict.'s filled with murder. Well I think in the beginning was madness and
murder. Yeah madness and murder. And I don't know if it got
that much more rational. I don't know if it's that much more
rational today. Well in some ways it's not, right? This is again back to the progressive conception.
Are we really, have we really progressed?
How much have we really progressed from that?
But yeah, my version would be that it was much more, it was organized around acts of mass violence, like maybe you externalized
it onto a mastodon or hunting some big animal or something like this. But the real problem
of violence, it wasn't external. It was mostly internal. It was violence with people
who were near you, proximate to you. It wasn't even natural cataclysms or other tribes.
It was sort of much more the internal stuff.
And it's very different, I think.
The human situation is somehow very, very different from something like, I don't know,
an ape-primate hierarchy where in an ape context you have
an alpha male, you know, he's the strongest and there's some sort of natural dominance
and you don't need to have a fight to the death typically because you know who's the
strongest and you don't need to push it all the way.
In a human context, it's always possible for two or three guys to gang up on the alpha male. So it's
somehow the culture is more important, you know, if they can talk to each other and you
get language and then they can coordinate and they can gang up on the leader and then
you have to stop them from getting up on the leader and how do you do that? And so there's some sort of radical difference between a human and a, let's say, a pre-human
world.
Have you seen Chimp Empire?
No.
Chimp Empire is a fascinating documentary series on Netflix where these scientists had
been embedded with this tribe of chimpanzees for decades.
And so because they were embedded, they had very specific rules. You have to maintain at least 20 yards from you and any of the chimps. No food.
You can never have food and don't look them in the eyes. And as long as you do
that, they don't feel you're a threat and they think of you as a natural part of
their environment, almost like you don't exist. And they behave completely
naturally. Well, it shows in that that sometimes it's not the largest,
strongest one, and that some chimps form bonds with other chimps and they form
coalitions and they do have some sort of politic and they do help each other. They
groom each other, they do specific things for each other, and then one of the
things that happens also, they get invaded by other chimps and that chimps
leave and they go on patrol and other chimps and that chimps leave and they go on
patrol and other chimps gang up on them and kill them and they try to fight and
battle over resources. So it's not nearly as cut and dry as the strongest chimp
prevails because one of the chimps that was dominant was an older chimp and he
was smaller than some of the other chimps but he had formed a coalition
with all these other chimps and they all respected him and they all knew that
they would be treated fairly and being treated fairly is a
very important thing with chimpanzees they get very jealous if they think that
things are not fair which is why that guy was attacked and you know that guy
who had a pet chimpanzee he brought it a birthday cake the other chimps weren't
getting a piece of the cake and they someone had fucked up and left a door
open they got out and mauled this guy because he didn't give them some of the cake.
Yeah, so I find all of that quite plausible but I think both of us can be correct. So
there's some, the true story of hominization of how we became humans, there's a way to
tell it where it's continuous with our animal past and where it's just,
you know, there's things like this with the chimpanzees or the baboons or, you know, other
primates.
And then there is a part of the story that I think is also more discontinuous.
And my judgment is we probably, you know, in a Darwinian context, we always stress the
continuity. You know, I'm always a context, we always stress the continuity.
You know, I'm always a little bit the contrarian, and so I believe in Darwin's theory, but I
think we should also be skeptical of ways it's too dogmatic, and Darwin's theories
make us gloss over the discontinuities.
And I think, you know, the one type of – and this is going to happen overnight – but
one type of fairly dramatic discontinuity is that, you know, is that humans have something
like language.
And even though, you know, chimpanzees probably – I don't know, they have an IQ of 80
or – they're pretty smart.
But when you don't have a rich symbolic system, that leads to sort of a very, very
different kind of structure.
And there's something about language and the kind of coordination that allows and the ways
that it forces you to – it enables you to coordinate on violence and then it encourages
you to channel violence in certain sacred religious directions, I think, creates a, you know, something radically different
about human society.
We're, you know, we differ, you know, we tell, humans tell each other stories.
A lot of the stories are not true.
They're myths.
But that's, that is a, that's, I think that's some sort of a very important difference from,
from even our closest primate relatives.
But this is, again, this is sort of like another way of getting at what's so crazy about CHAT
GPT and passing the Turing test because if we had sat here two years ago and you asked
me, you know, what is the distinctive feature of a human being? What makes someone a human?
And you know, how, in a way that differs from everybody else, you know, it's not perfect,
but my go-to answer would have been language. You know, you're a three-year-old, you're
an 80-year-old, you know, just about all humans can speak languages, just about all nonhumans
cannot speak languages. It's this binary thing, and
then that's sort of a way of telling us again why passing the Turing test was way more important
than super intelligence or anything else.
Yeah, I could see that.
Sorry, I don't want to go back to that tangent.
No, no, it's good tangent.
Go ahead, connect it.
It's great.
Keep tangenting off.
Have fun.
It's great. Do you think, what do you think the factor was?
There's a lot of debate about this like the factor was that separated us from these animals and why we became what we became
Because we're so vastly different than any other primate
Like so what do you think took place like the doubling of the human brain size?
Over a period of two million years is one of the greatest mysteries in the entire fossil record
We don't know what the fuck happened. There's a lot of
theories, throwing arm, cooking meat, there's a lot of theories, but we really
have no idea. Well, again, let me do sort of a linguistic riff. I think
Aristotelian-Darwinian biology, Aristotle, you always differ things by
putting them in categories. And
I think the line Aristotle has is something, man differs from the other animals in his
greater aptitude for imitation. And I would say that we are these giant imitating machines. And of course the Darwinian riff on this is,
to imitate is to ape.
And so we differ from the ape,
we're more ape-like than the apes.
We are far better at aping each other than the apes are.
And that, a first cut, I would say,
our brains are giant imitation machines. That's how you learn language as a kid, you know, a first cut, I would say our brains are giant imitation machines.
That's how you learn language as a kid.
You imitate your parents.
And that's how culture gets transmitted.
But then there are a lot of dimensions of imitation that are also very dangerous because
it's not – imitation doesn't just happen on this symbolic, linguistic level.
It's also you imitate things you want. You want a banana,
I want a banana, you want a blue ball, I can have a red ball, I want a blue ball because
you have a blue ball. And so there's something about imitation that creates culture, that is incredibly important pedagogically learning, you know, it's how
you master something, how you, you know, in all these different ways, and then
a lot of it has this incredibly conflictual dimension as well. And
then there's, yes, I think that was sort of core to the things that are both great
and troubled about humanity and that was sort of, that was in some ways the problem that
needed to be solved.
So, you think that the motivation of imitation is the essential first steps that led us to
become human?
There is some story like, and again, this is a one dimensional, one explanation fits all,
but the explanation I would go with is that
it was something like, you know, our brains got bigger
and so we were more powerful imitation machines.
And there were things about that that were, you know, our brains got bigger and so we were more powerful imitation machines. And there were things about that that were, you know, that were,
yeah, that made us a lot more powerful and a lot we could learn things and we
could remember things and there was cultural transmission that happened.
But then it also we could build better weapons and we became more violent.
And it also had a very, very
destructive element and then somehow the imitation, you know, had to be channeled in these sort
of ritualized religious, you know, kinds of ways and that's why I think all these things
sort of somehow came up together in parallel.
What about the physical adaptation?
Like what would be the motivation of the animal to change form and to have its brain grow
so large and to lose all its hair and to become soft and fleshy like we are as opposed to
like rough and durable like almost every other primate is.
Well you can always man you can always tell these retrospective just so stories and how
this all all worked out but it it would seem the naive retrospective story would be that
you know there are a lot of ways that humans are, I don't know, less strong than the other apes or, you know,
all these ways where we're, in some sense, weaker.
Physically, at least.
Physically. But maybe it was just this basic trade-off.
More of your energy went into your mind and into your brain, then you know you were your fist wasn't as strong but
you could build a better axe and that made you stronger than an ape and that's
that's yeah where where you know a brain with you know less I don't less energy
was spent on growing a hair to keep warm in the winter and then
you used your brain to build an axe and skin a bear and get some fur for the winter or
something like that.
Yeah, I guess.
But it's just such a leap.
It's such a leap and different than any other animal.
Like what was the primary motivating factor?
Like what was the thing?
You know, McKenna believes it was psilocybin you know I'm sure you probably you ever heard
that theory McKenna's stone-dape theory which is a fascinating one but there's a
lot of different theories about what took place but we're just well the one
yeah the one I would go on was that there was this dimension of increased
imitation there was some kind of increased imitation. There was some kind of cultural
linguistic dimension that was incredibly important. It probably was also, you know, it was probably
also somehow linked to, you know, dealing with all the violence that came with it, all the conflicts that came
with it.
You know, I would be more open to the stoned ape theory of people.
I had this conversation with the other guy, Murorescu, the immortality key guy.
And I always feel they whitewash it too much.
How so? You know, it's like if you had these crazy Dianitian rituals in which people, you know,
there's probably lots of crazy sex, there's probably lots of crazy violence that was tied
to it.
And so maybe, like maybe you'd be out of your mind to be hunting a woolly mammoth.
And like maybe you can't be completely, you know.
But they weren't hunting woolly mammoths during the Illucinian mysteries.
No, but you went to war to fight the neighboring tribes.
It's probably more dangerous than hunting.
Right, but they also did absolutely have these rituals and they have absolutely found trace
elements of silks.
I don't question that.
Okay. I don't question that at all.
I just think they probably, part of it was also a way to channel violence.
It was probably, you know, whenever, I don't know, was there some degree to which whenever
you went to war, you were on drugs?
Oh yeah. You were blitzed.
Oh yeah.
Well we know about the Vikings.
The Vikings most certainly took mushrooms before they went into battle.
And maybe it makes you less coordinated or something, but just if you're less scared,
that's probably...
It doesn't make you less coordinated.
If you're just a little bit less scared, that doesn't probably it doesn't make you less coordinated if you're just a little bit less scared
That's probably super important. It increases visual acuity. There's a lot of benefits that would happen physically
Especially if you got the dose, right?
You know
The increases visual acuity edge detections better. It makes people more sensitive
probably more aware probably a better hunter and
But I think I think I'm sympathetic to all these mushrooms, psychedelic drug, historical usage theories.
I expect it was very widespread.
I just think a lot of it was in these contexts that were pretty transgressive.
Yeah, I think they're not mutually exclusive.
I think just giving the way the world was back then,
for sure violence was everywhere.
Violence was a part of daily life.
Violence was a part of how society was kept together.
Violence was entertainment in Rome, right?
For sure, violence was everything, was a big part of it.
And I think release and the anxiety of that violence also led people to want to be intoxicated
and do different things that separated them from a normal state of consciousness.
But I do think it's also probably where democracy came from.
I think having those illicinian mystery rituals where they would get together and do psychedelics
and under this very controlled set and setting, I think that's the birthplace of a lot of
very interesting and innovative ideas.
I think a lot of interesting and innovative ideas currently are being at least dreamt
up, thought of, they have their roots in some sort of altered conscious experience?
Well it's, I don't know, I think this stuff is very powerful. I think it is, it is, I definitely think it shouldn't be outlawed.
You know, pretty hardcore libertarian on all the drug legalization stuff.
And then I do wonder exactly how these things work.
It probably, you know, probably the classical world version of it was that it was something that you did in a fairly controlled setting.
You didn't do it every day.
And it was sort of, it was some way,
I imagine, to get a very different perspective on your nine to five job or whatever you want to call it.
But you didn't necessarily want to, you know,
want to really dec-camp to the
other world altogether. Oh for sure. It's too dangerous to do. I don't think anybody
thinks they did. I think that was part of the whole thing. Where do you think
that line is? Like, you know, should everyone do one ayahuasca trip or if you do an ayahuasca trip a year,
is that too much?
I don't think everyone has to do anything and I think everyone has their own requirements
and I think as you do that everything like this, especially psychedelics, one of the
more disappointing things recently was that the FDA had denied, they did these
MDMA trials for, you know about all this?
Yep.
Yeah, very, very disappointing that they wanted to make MDMA therapy available to veterans
and people with severe PTSD and it has extreme benefits, clinical benefits, known documented
benefits and for whatever reason the FDA decided that they have to go through a whole new series of trials to try to get this stuff legalized, which is
very disappointing.
And...
Yeah.
I was very bullish on this stuff happening.
And the way I thought about it four or five years ago was that it was a hack to doing a double blind study.
And because the FDA always has this concept that you need to do a double blind study.
Give one, you know, one-third of the people you give a sugar pill and two-thirds you give
the real drug and you have to, and no one knows whether they have the sugar pill or
the real drug.
And then you see how it works and science requires a double blind study.
And then my anti-double blind study theory is if it really works, you don't need a double
blind study. It should just work. And there's something sociopathic about doing double blind
studies because one third of the people who have this bad disease are getting a sugar
pill. And we shouldn't even be like maybe it's immoral to do double-blind studies.
Well, double-blind studies on unique and novel things make sense.
But this is not unique nor novel.
It's been around a long, well, unique, yes, but...
Well, my claim is if it's a, if it actually works, you shouldn't need to do a double-blind
study at all. And then my hope was that MDMA, psychedelics, all these things, they were a hack on the
double-blind study because you knew whether you got the real thing or the sugar pill.
And so this would be a way to hack through this ridiculous double-blind criterion and
just get the study done. And then what I think part of it, it's probably just an anti-drug ideology by the FDA, but
the other part that happened on the sort of science, scientific establishment level is
they think you need a double blind study.
Joe, we know you're hacking this double blind study because people will know whether they
got the sugar pill or not.
And that's why we're going to arbitrarily change the goalposts and set them at way,
way harder because we know there's no way you can do a double blind study.
And if it's not a double blind study, it's no good because that's what our ideology of
science tells us.
And that's sort of what I think was part of what went sort of politically haywire with
this stuff.
Well, I also think that it's Pandora's box.
I think that's a real issue, in that if they do find extreme benefit in using MDMA therapy,
particularly for veterans, if they start doing that and it starts becoming very effective
and it becomes well-known and widespread, then it will open up the door to all these
other psychedelic compounds.
And I think that's a real threat to the powers that be.
It's a real threat to the establishment.
If you have people thinking in a completely alternative way, and we saw what happened
during the 1960s and that's one of the reasons why they threw water on everything and had it become schedule one and locked the country down in terms of the access to psychedelics.
All that stuff happened out of a reaction to the way society and culture was changing
in the 1960s.
If that happened today, it would throw a giant monkey wrench in our political system, in our cultural system, the way we
govern, the way we – just the way allocation of resources, all that would change.
If I – just to articulate the alternate version on this, there's a part – let me think how to get this.
You know, there's one – there's a question whether the shift to interiority, is it a
complement or a substitute?
Like what I said about talk and action, is it a compliment or a substitute to changing the outside world so we focus on changing ourselves? Is this
the first step to changing the world or is it sort of a hypnotic way in which our attention
is being redirected to from outer space to inner space? So I don't know, the one liner
I had years ago was, you know, we landed on the moon in July of 1969, and three weeks later Woodstock started, and
that's when the hippies took over the country. And, you know, we stopped going to outer space
because we started going to inner space. And that's – and so there's sort of a question, You know, how much, you know, it worked as an activator or as a deactivator in a way.
And you know, there are all these different modalities of interiority.
There's psychological therapy, there's meditation, there's yoga, there's, you know, there was
a sexual revolution, there were gradually you have incels living in their parents' basement playing video games.
So the all, you know, there's the navel gazing that is identity politics.
There's a range of psychedelic things.
And I think all of these things, I wonder whether the interiority ended up acting as a substitute.
So because, you know, the alternate history in the 1960s is that, you know, the hippies
were actually – they were anti-political and it was sort of – the drugs happened
at the end of the city – at the end of the 60s, and that's when people
depoliticized. It was like, I don't know, the Beatles song, you're carrying around pictures
of Sharon Mowry, you're not going to make with anyone anyhow. It's like that's what
after they did LSD. It was just the sort of insane politics no longer matters. And so
you have the civil rights, the Vietnam War, and then were the drugs the thing that motivated it or was that the thing where it
actually those things started to de-escalate?
I think they were happening at the same time and I think the Vietnam War coinciding with
the psychedelic drug movement in the 1960s, it was one of the reasons why it was so dangerous
to the establishment because these people were far less likely to buy into this idea
that they needed to fly to Vietnam and go kill people they didn't know. And they were
far less likely to support any war. And I think there was this sort of bizarre movement
that we had never seen before, this flower children movement that we know that they plotted
against. I mean, if you read Chaos by Tom O'Neill, fantastic book that shows you what they were trying
to do to demonize these hippies.
Well, or the part of it that I thought was interesting was the MKUltra.
Yeah, which is a part of it.
Yeah.
Where, you know, there was a predecessor version where we thought of, you know, there was a,
you could think of it as we had an arms race with the
fascists and the communists and they were very good at brainwashing people. The Goebbels propaganda,
North Koreans brainwashing our soldiers in the Korean War, our POWs, and we needed to have an an arms race to program and reprogram and deprogram people.
And LSD was sort of the MKUltra shortcut.
So I think there was, and then I, yeah, my, it's so hard to reconstruct it, but my suspicion
is that the MKUltra thing was a lot bigger than we realized and that, you know, it was the LSD movement
both in the Harvard form and the Stanford form.
You know, it started as an MKUltra project.
Timothy Leary at Harvard, Ken Kesey at Stanford, you know, I knew Tom Wolfe, the American novelist.
I still think his greatest novel was the Electro-Cool-Aid Acid Test,
which is sort of this history of the LSD counterculture movement.
It starts at Stanford, moves to the Haight-Ashbury in San Francisco.
But it starts with Ken Kesey, his grad student at Stanford, circa 1958.
And you get an extra $75 a day if you go to the Menlo Park Veterans Hospital and they
give you some random drug.
And yeah, you got extra $75 as a grad student in English doing LSD.
And Tom Wolfe writes this, you know, iconic fictionalized novel, very realistic, 1968, about this. And Wolf could not have
imagined that the whole thing started as some CIA mind control project.
Right.
The Menlo Park Veterans Hospital that was deep state adjacent.
Sure. Well, hate Ashbury Free Clinic, run by the CIA.
Sure, that's even crazier.
The whole thing's crazy.
The jolly west guy.
Yeah, the whole thing's crazy, which leads me to what do you think they're doing today?
If they were doing that then I do not believe that they abandoned this idea of programming
people. I do not believe that. I don't think they would because I know it's effective.
Look, people join cults every day. We're well aware that people can be ideologically captured. We're
well aware. We're well aware people will buy into crazy ideas as long as it's supported
by whatever community that they associate with. That's just a natural aspect of being
a human being. Maybe it's part of what you were saying, this imitation thing that we have. It leads us to do this. If they have that knowledge
and that understanding, for sure they're probably doing things similar today,
which is one of the things that I think about a lot when I think about this guy
that tried to shoot Trump. I want to know what happened and I don't think we're
getting a very detailed explanation at
all as to how this person achieved these how they got on the roof how they got to
that position how they trained what who were they in contact with who was
teaching them why did they why did they do it what was going on we were in the
dark and I wonder like you you know, there was always
the Manchurian candidate idea, right? This idea that we trained assassins and was the
RFK dad assassination 1960s. Sir Hans Sir Han. Where he again, maybe you shouldn't believe
him but he claimed that he didn't even know what he was doing. It was some hypnotic trance
or whatever. And it was like it was like the assassin in the Manchurian camp.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean that is possible.
I don't know if he's telling the truth.
He could have just had a psychotic break.
Who knows?
Obviously, it's convenient.
Yeah, very convenient.
But it's a possibility that she could be should be considered.
I mean this crooks kid that did this that shot at the president.
What? How? What happened? what, how, what happened?
I want to know what happened.
Man, I probably veer in the direction that there were, you know, on the sort of conspiracy
theory of history, I veer in the direction that there
was a lot of crazy stuff like this that was going on in the U.S. first half of the 20th
century, overdrive, 1940s, you know, I mean, you had the Manhattan Project, this giant
secret project, 1950s, 1960s. And then somehow, the last 50 years, I think the—I'm not sure
disturbing, but the perspective I have is these institutions are less functional. I
don't think the CIA is doing anything quite like MKUltra anymore.
Why do you think that?
I think you had the Church Commission hearings in the late 70s and somehow things got exposed and then when bureaucracy is forced to be formalized,
it probably becomes a lot less functional.
You know, there was like the 2000s version, there was, I think, there was a lot of crazy stuff that we did
in black sites torturing people, the CIA ran in the war on terror, waterboarding, there's
all sorts of batshit crazy stuff that happened. But then, you know, once John Yoo in the Bush
43 administration writes the torture memos and sort of formalizes this is how many times
you can waterdunk someone without it being torture
Etc. Etc. Once you formalize it people somehow know that it's on its way out because
You know, it doesn't quite work anymore. So by I don't know by 2007
At Guantanamo, I think the inmates are running the asylum. The inmates and the defense lawyers were running it.
You were way safer as a Muslim terrorist in Guantanamo than as a, let's say, suspected
cop killer in Manhattan.
There was still an informal process in Manhattan.
You were a suspected cop killer.
They'd figure out some way to deal with you outside the judicial, the formal judicial
process.
And but I think something, there was sort of formalization that happened.
There was the post-J. Edgar Hoover FBI where Hoover was, I don't know, a law unto himself.
It was completely out of control, CIA even more so.
And then, you know, once it all gets exposed and it probably is a lot
harder to do.
The NSA, you know, NSA probably held up longer as a deep state entity where it at least had
the virtue of people, you know, I think in the 1980s it was still referred to as no such
agency, so it's still, it was still far more obscure.
So the necessary condition is that
if some part of the deep state's doing it, you know, we can barely know what's going
on with them. And then, I don't know, you know, the 2000s, 2010s history on the, you know, I think the Patriot Act empowered all these FISA courts and I
think there was, I think there probably were ways the NSA FISA court process was weaponized
in a really, really crazy way.
And you know, it culminated in 2016 with all the, you know, the crazy Russia conspiracy
theories against Trump.
But I think even that, I'm not sure they can do anymore because it got exposed.
Can't do that anymore.
But a small program that is top secret, that is designed under the auspices of protecting American
lives, extracting information from people.
Well, I'm agreeing with you.
The NSA FISA court process is one where you had a pretty out of control process from,
let's say, circa 2003 to 2017, 2018.
So that's relatively recent history.
I don't know.
You know, they're all the Jeffrey Epstein conspiracy theories, which I'm probably too
fascinated by because it felt like there was some crazy stuff going on that they were able to cover
up.
And still are.
And then, but then, man, doesn't the fact that we're still talking about Jeffrey Epstein
tell us how hard it is to come up with anything else?
No, because there's no answers for the Jeffrey Epstein thing.
There's been no consequences other than Galeen Maxwell going to jail and Jeffrey Epstein
allegedly committing suicide, which I don't think he did.
Other than that, what are the consequences?
They were able to pull off this thing, this some sort of operation.
Who knows who was behind it?
Who knows what was the motivation?
But it clearly has something to do with compromising people,
which is an age-old strategy for getting people
to do what you want them to do.
You have things on them.
You use those things as leverage.
And then next thing you know, you've
got people saying things that you want them to say.
And it motivates, moves policy, changes things.
You get things done.
They did that.
Yes.
And no one – and we know they did that and yet no one is asking for the tapes, no one's
asking for the client list.
We're in the dark still.
And probably – I don't know, man. I spent too much time thinking about all the Epstein variants. Probably the
sex stuff is overdone and everything else is underdone. It's like a limited hangout.
We get to talk about the crazy underage sex, not about all the other questions.
It's like when Alex Acosta testified for labor secretary and he was the DA who prosecuted
Epstein in 08, 09 and got him sort of the very light 13-month or whatever sentence.
And it was a South Florida DA or whatever he was.
And Acosta was asked, you know,
why did he get off so easily?
And under congressional testimony,
when he was up for labor secretary 2017,
it was he belonged to intelligence.
That's, and then, you know, It was, he belonged to intelligence.
And then, you know, and so it's, yeah, it's, the question isn't about the sex with the
underage women.
The question is really about, you know, why was he so protected?
And then, you know, I went down all these rabbit holes.
Was he, you know, working for the Israelis or the Mossad
or all this sort of stuff.
And I've come to think that that was very secondary.
Obviously, it was just the US.
If you're working for Israel, you don't get protected.
We had Jonathan Pollard, he went to jail for 25 years or whatever.
But unrelated, right?
Understood, but it's...
But this is one particular operation.
But so it's...
But it was...
If it was an intelligence operation, the question we should be asking is what part of the US
intelligence system was he working for?
Was he working for, you know...
But don't you think that's an effective strategy for controlling politicians?
Getting them involved in sex scandals?
I mean, that's always been one of the worst things that can happen to a politician.
Look at Monica Lewinsky.
A very simple one.
Consensual, inappropriate sexual relationship between a president and a staffer, and it
almost takes down the presidency.
It causes him to get impeached. Powerful motivators. The shame
of it all. Also the illegal activity. The fact that it's, I mean it's one of the most
disgusting things that we think of, people having sex with underage people.
I'm sure that was part of it. I suspect there are a lot of other questions that you know when one should one should also most certainly but I would think that that is one of the best motivators that we have is
Having dirt on people like that, especially something that could ruin your career
especially people that are deeply embedded in this system of
People knowing things about people and using those at their advantage. I mean that's an age old strategy in politics.
That was J. Edgar Hoover's entire modus operandi.
My riff on it was always that it was – it's a little bit different from the J. Edgar Hoover
thing and the question was always whether the people doing it knew they were getting
compromised. And so it's the vibe
is not that you somehow got compromised. It was more you were joining this secret club.
Right. You got to be made. You're a made man in the mafia. And you get to do crazy things.
No, no, no, no. It's only have comprimod on you do you get ahead.
It's like, you know, it's like, I don't know,
it's one of these,
Stalin bones type things.
Closet of the Vatican.
The claim is 80% of the cardinals
in the Catholic Church are gay.
Not sure if that's true,
but directionally it's probably correct.
And the basic thesis is you don't get promoted
to a cardinal if you're straight because we
need to have, and so we need to, you need to be compromised and then you're under control,
but you also get ahead.
Completely makes sense.
Completely makes sense in the way to do that with especially all these politicians who
are essentially like bad actors, a lot of them, they're just people that want power
and people that want control, a lot of them, and you know those kind of guys they want a party, you
know, I mean that has been, you've got two types of leaders that are presidents, you've got pussy
hounds and warmongers, you know, and you know some of them sometimes you have both but generally you
don't, you know guys like Clinton and JFK were anti-war and then you have guys like Bush
Who you don't think of at all as a pussy hound, but most certainly you think of as a warmonger
Do you what?
What do you do you have a theory on what was Bill Gates's complicity with Epstein? I think he likes pussy
I think I think he's a man. I think he likes power. He likes monopoly
I mean, he's incredibly
effective with Microsoft. And for the longest time, he was thought of as a villain, right?
He was this antitrust villain. He was this guy who was monopolizing this operating system
and controlling just this incredible empire. And he had a real bad rap rap and then I think he wisely turned towards philanthropy and
But do you do you think do you think do you think that he needed Epstein?
I think it's very difficult very very famous very high profile person to fuck around think it's very difficult
I think you have to worry about people telling people you worry about it taking you down if you're having affairs if you're running some
Philanthropy organization you're supposed to be thought of as this guy who's like this wonderful person
Who's trying to really fix all the problems in the world?
But really he just flying around and banging all these different chicks you have to figure out a way to
Pull that off and this is what Eric Weinstein and I we've had discussions about this and
Eric's position is that there are people in this world that can provide experiences for you and
Safely for people that are in that kind of a group and that makes sense
It makes sense that if you pay people enough and you have people motivated in order to like establish these
Relationships and make sure that these things happen when you get very high profile
You can't just be on a fucking dating app and if you're a guy who likes to bank checks. What are you gonna do?
I the um all of that might be true, but I wonder if there are more straightforward
Alternate conspiracy theories on Epstein that we're missing. So let me do an alternate one on Bill Gates,
where the things, just looking at what's hiding in plain sight. You know, he supposedly talked
to Epstein early on about how his marriage wasn't doing that well and then Epstein suggested that he should get a divorce
Circa 2010 2011 and Gates told him something like, you know
That doesn't quite work
Never presumably because he didn't have a prenup
So so there's one part of Epstein as a marriage counselor, which is sort of disturbing
So there's one part of Epstein as a marriage counselor, which is sort of disturbing. But then the second thing that we know that Gates talked to Epstein about was sort of,
you know, all the sort of collaborating on funding, setting up this philanthropy, all
this sort of this somewhat corrupt left-wing philanthropy structures. And so there's a question, you
know, does—and then my sort of straightforward alternate conspiracy theory is should we ask—should
we ask—should we combine those two? And was there—was there, you know, and I don't have all the details on this figured
out but it would be something like, you know, Bill and Melinda get married in 1994. They
don't sign a prenup. And, you know, something's going wrong with the marriage and maybe Melinda
can get half the money in a divorce.
He doesn't want her to get half the money.
What do you do?
And then the alternate plan is something like you set up, you commit the marital assets
to this nonprofit and then it sort of locks Melinda into not complaining about the marriage
for a long, long time.
And it's some kind of a – and so there's something about the left-wing philanthropy
world that was – it was sort of some sort of boomer way to control their crazy wives or something like this
And that's that's also
Wash your your past
Your thought there are all these and he talked to Epstein about he got Epstein to meet with the the head of the Nobel Prize Foundation
So it was um, yeah, Bill Gates wanted to get a Nobel Prize. Wow.
Right, so this is all straightforward, this is all known.
Yeah.
And I'm not saying what you're saying about...
Do you know the history of the Nobel Prize?
That's the ultimate whitewash.
Sure, it was for many dynamite.
Yeah, that's the... he was... well, Peter Berg told me the story.
I was blown away. He originally, they, someone said
that he died and it was printed that he died, but he didn't die. And in the stories, they
were calling him the merchant of death because he was the guy that invented dynamite. And
he realized that, oh my God, this is my reputation. This is how people think about me. I have
to do something to turn this around. So he invented the Nobel Prize and he started then now the name Nobel is automatically connected in
most people's eyes to the the greatest people amongst us. The people that have
contributed the most to society and science and art and peace and all these
different things. Nobel Prize for medicine.
Order to invent the guy who invented it. Super crazy history. Nobel Prize for medicine Ordered to
Super crazy. Yeah, it's a crazy history, but it's the ultimate whitewash
It's the same thing like he came up with that prize because he wanted to change his image publicly and
So it's ironic that Bill Gates would want to get a Nobel Prize
Or not I rock or that's ironic, but straightforward and ironic, but but I think
but then if we – and so there's – yes, so there's an underage sex version of the Epstein story
and then there is a crazy status Nobel Prize history of it and there is a corrupt left-wing
philanthropy one and there is a – boomers who philanthropy one, and there is boomers who didn't sign
prenuptial agreements with their wives' story.
And I think all of those are worth exploring more.
I think you're right.
What about these left-wing philanthropy ventures do you think is uniquely corrupt?
Sorry, which one do I think is most corrupt? No, what about them?
When you said corrupt.
Yeah.
Well, man, it's, there's something about, maybe it's just my
hermeneutic of suspicion, but there's something about, you know, there's something about the virtue signaling and what does it mean?
And I always think this is sort of a Europe, America versus Europe difference where in
America we're told that philanthropy is something a good person does.
And you know, if you're a Rockefeller or
you start giving away all your money, this is just what a good person does and it shows
how good you are. And then I think sort of the European intuition on it is something
like, you know, wow, that's only something a very evil person does. And if you start giving away all your money in Europe, it's like, Joe, you must have
murdered somebody or you must be covering up for something.
So there are these two very different intuitions and I think the European one is more correct
than the American one. And probably there's some history where, you know, the sort of left-wing
philanthropy peaked in 2007, 2010, 2012, and there's these subtle ways, you know, we've
become, you know, we've become more, you know, more European in our sensibilities as a society.
And so it has this very different valence from what it did 12 or 14 years ago.
But yeah, it's all – we ask all these questions like we're asking right now about Bill Gates,
where it's like, okay, he was – you know, it was like all the testimony in the Microsoft
antitrust trial in the 90s, where he's like he the air supply, strangling people, and he's kind of a sociopathic guy, it seems. And then it's
this giant whitewashing operation, and then somehow the whitewashing has been made too
transparent and it gets deconstructed and exposed by the internet or whatever.
But I think most people are still unaware of how much whitewashing actually took place,
including donating somewhere in the neighborhood
of $300-plus million to media corporations,
essentially buying favorable reviews about him.
And then there's this very public philanthropy.
It's not just philanthropy.
It's philanthropy mixed with public relations because he's constantly doing interviews
about it.
This is not like a guy who is just silently donating his incredible wealth to all these
causes.
He's advocating for it on various talk shows.
He's constantly talking about it and how we need to do things.
I mean, during the pandemic, he was a very vocal voice.
He was the guy telling us he was a somehow or another, he became a public health expert and no one questioned why we were taking public
health advice from someone who has a financial interest in this one very particular remedy.
Yeah, or, yeah, there are all these alternate versions I can give. But yeah, I think it's always so hard to know what's really going on in our culture though.
So I think all what you say is true, but I also think it's not working as well as it
used to.
I agree.
And there is a way people see through this. It's not always as articulate as you just articulated it, but there's some vague intuition
that when Mr. Gates is just wearing sweaters and looks like Mr. Rogers, that something
fishy is going on.
People have that sort of intuition.
They trust Jeff Bezos and his tight shirt hanging out with his girlfriend on the out more.
Or Elon Musk. The vice signaling is safer than virtue signaling.
Yeah. Yeah.
Right? Because if you're virtue signaling, our intuition is something really, really,
really sketchy. Suspicious. We get suspicious. And I think
rightly so. I think especially when someone's doing something so public I think
rightly we should be suspicious especially when I mean with with gates
it's like you know the history the guy
you know what he was involved with before you know how he ran Microsoft
you know it just kind of makes sense that it's a clever move
it's a clever move to pay the media it's a clever move
again my alternate one which is not incompatible with yours on Gates, is that
Melinda finally files for divorce in early 21. I think she told Bill she wanted one late
2019. So 2020, the year where Bill Gates goes into overdrive on COVID, you know, all this stuff. You know,
part of it maybe it's self-dealing and he's trying to make money from the drug company or
something like this. But, you know, isn't the other really big thing, he needs to box Melinda
in and force her not to get that much
out because all the money is going to the foundation anyway. Melinda has to say,
you know, I want, why do you want half the money? It's all going to the Yeats Foundation anyway.
We're not leaving our kids anything. And then when you lean into COVID, you know, how does that work in the, you know, it's somehow...
In theory, Melinda has a really strong hand. She should get half.
That's what you get in a divorce with no prenuptial.
But then if you make it go overdrive on COVID, Melinda, are you a, you know, are you a, I don't know,
are you like some crazy
anti-science person right and and so so I don't know my my my my my my
My reconstruction is that you should not underestimate how much of it was
You know about just controlling his ex-wife and not about controlling the whole society makes sense
It makes sense you think they can be truly motivated. They can both they can both be correct. Sure
There there's many factors, but mine mine lines up really well with the with the timeline
Well, we're probably talking about a hundred million dollar or a hundred billion dollars one way or the other
Well, I think she got she got less than she got like one tenth
Really interesting.
And she should have gotten half as far as and I it's amazing.
He got it down that much.
Wow. Interesting.
But it was just I think she was just boxed in every time he went on TV talking about COVID.
She was boxed in with all of her left wing friends.
That is an interesting philosophy.
That's an interesting way to approach a problem if you're him very wise, you know, very clever
I mean if you're just looking at like just for personal benefit
The genius move and the guy's genius clearly brilliant guy, you know, I mean that makes sense
Makes sense to do we do that. I don't you know, I would do that
Probably had a pre-note, but yeah.
Yeah, well, that's kind of crazy.
That's interesting that, yeah, I didn't consider that, but it makes sense.
And she's, you know, she's been kind of pretty vocal, unfortunately, for him about his ties
to Epstein being one of the primary reasons why she wanted out.
But again, my alt, again, it's what did he, was he having extramarital affairs through
Epstein or maybe Epstein was, from Melinda's point of view, would it be worse for Epstein
to facilitate an extramarital affair or would it be worse for Epstein to be advising Gates
on how to ditch Melinda without giving her any money?
What do you think he was like?
I think that would be much, much worse from Melinda's point of view.
Yeah, makes sense.
It totally makes sense.
Do you think that he was a legitimate financial advisor?
Like he could give him advice on how to do those things?
Gates wouldn't have more effective people.
I mean, when you're at that level of wealth, I'm sure you have wealth management people
that are like very high level.
Because that's one of the things that Eric said about him.
He said when he met him, he was like, this guy's a fraud.
Like this, he doesn't know enough about what he's talking about.
And you know, Eric is...
You know, I met Epstein a few times as well.
And I think...
How'd you get introduced? 16 a few times as well. And I think...
How'd you get introduced?
It was Reid Hoffman at Silicon Valley introduced us in 2014. But it was basically... And I,
you know, didn't check, didn't ask any enough questions about it. But I think there were sort of a
lot of things where it was fraudulent. I do think Epstein knew a lot about taxes. And
there were probably, you know, these complicated ways you could structure a nonprofit organization, especially as a
way in a marital context that I think Epstein might have known a decent amount about.
How when you were introduced to him?
I don't think Epstein would have been able to, you know, comment on super string theory
or something like that.
But I think this sort of thing he might have actually been pretty expert on.
When you were introduced to him, how was he described to you?
He was described as one of the smartest tax people in the world.
Interesting.
And I probably, probably it was my moral weakness that I. Well
how could you have known back then he had never been arrested? This was 2014, it was
post arrest. Oh so his arrest was the first arrest right? Yeah. Which was like 2007,
2008. Okay. Okay. And so. But you know you assume he didn't go to jail for that long.
Right. It was probably not as serious as alleged.
There was certainly was the illusion that there were all these other people that I trusted.
Reid who introduced us was, he started LinkedIn.
He was maybe too focused on business networking, but I thought he always had good judgment
in people. When the shit went down and Epstein gets arrested for the second time we like
well there you go I've thought about it I thought a lot about it as a result yeah
yeah I'm sure Jesus Christ well he tricked a lot of people I know a lot of
people that met that guy he got a lot of celebrities to come to his house
for parties and things.
Well, I think it was,
I think a lot of it was this strange commentary on,
I don't know, it was some secret club,
secret society you could be part of.
Right, of course.
Again, it wasn't explicit,
but that was the vague vibe of the whole thing.
People love those stupid things.
They love exclusive clubs that very few people...
Look at the fucking Soho house.
Look at that stupid thing.
I mean, you just go to a place that you have to be a member to go to and everybody wants
to be a member.
Oh my God, get it, get it.
And then you get the Malibu and the Soho house.
It's different from the other ones.
You have to have membership only there.
Oh, do you have membership there? We love that kind of shit. Socially, they love being a
part of a walled garden. They love it. They love it. And if you're a guy like Bill Gates
or similarly wealthy, you probably have a very small amount of people that you can relate
to, very small amount of people that you can trust, probably very difficult to form new
friendships. Very small amount of people that you can trust probably very difficult to form new friendships Yeah, I think we're probably different different things that were pitched for different people sure, you know
I was I was pitched on the taxes. I think you know, there are probably other people that were
you know more more prone to the
you know, um
the social club or e and then they're probably people yeah, and there was probably a
Fairly limited group where it was yeah off the charts bad
Wouldn't it be wonderful to know what the fuck was really going on and maybe one day we will maybe one day some Whitney Webb type
Character will break it all down to us and explain to us in great detail
Exactly how this is formulated and what they were doing and how they were getting information out of people but I think people have to
age out they have to they have to die and we said we still don't have it on
the Kennedy assassination that JFK well one of the wildest things that Trump
said was that if they told you what they told me you wouldn't tell people either
which is like what the fuck does that mean what does that mean I don't think
legally he can tell
you right because I think those things are above top secret. If they did inform him of
something there must be some sort of prerequisite to keeping this a secret.
I haven't studied that one that carefully but isn't you, there are all these alternate conspiracy theories on who killed JFK.
It's the CIA and the mafia and the Russians and the Cubans and, you know, there's an
LBJ version since he's the one who benefited.
So all these happen in Texas.
You have all these, theories on some levels.
I always think it's just a commentary where in 1963 America, it wasn't like leave it
to beaver.
It was like a really crazy country underneath the surface.
Absolutely.
And even though probably most of the conspiracy theories are wrong, it was like murder on
the Orient Express and all these people sort of had different reasons for wanting Kennedy dead. And that's what
the theories are right even if they're wrong on the level of factual detail.
And then the sort of more minimal one that I'm open to and I think there's some evidence
in this from the stuff that has been, that has come out is, you know, Oswald was
talking to, you know, parts of the U.S. deep state. And so even if Oswald was the lone
assassin and you somehow get the magic bullet theory and all that stuff to work, but let's
say Oswald was the lone assassin, did he tell someone in the FBI or CIA, you know, I'm going to go kill Kennedy
tomorrow. And then, you know, maybe the CIA didn't have to kill him. They just didn't
have to do nothing, just had to sit on it. Or maybe it was too incompetent and didn't
go up the bureaucracy. And so it's, you know, I think we sort of know that they talked to Oswald,
you know, a fair amount before it happened. And so there's at least something, you know,
that was grossly incompetent.
I think people have a problem with two stories being mutually exclusive, two stories being
the lone gunman or the CIA killed Kennedy
And then they these they're not connected. I think Lee Harvey Oswald was a part of it
I think I think he probably did shoot that cop
There's some evidence that you when when he was on the run and he was confronted, you know
There was a cop that that got shot and they were alleging he might have done it
He might have taken a shot at Kennedy. He might have even hit him. I don't think he was the only one shooting. I think the vast
there was an enormous amount of people that heard sounds coming from the grassy knoll.
They heard gunfire. They reportedly saw people. The amount of people that were witnesses to
the Kennedy assassination that died mysterious deaths is pretty shocking
Jack Ruby. Well, Jack Ruby just that's a weird one, right Oswald
Yeah
Jack Ruby walks up to Oswald shoots him and then Jack Ruby with no
Previous history of mental illness becomes completely insane after getting visited by Jolly West
Yeah, which is nuts
like why is the guy who's the head of MKUltra visiting the guy who shot
the assassin of the president and why is he left alone with them? What happens? What does
he give him that this guy is screaming out there burning Jews alive and just crazy, crazy
shit he was yelling out? He went nuts.
Probably some amount of LSD that's dangerous for you.
Probably an enormous amount. They probably gave him a fucking glass of it. They probably gave him a glass of it and told him it was water drink this and who fucking knows but the point is I
think I think it's very possible that Oswald was a part of it and
The way they did it and the way they just shot Oswald and and then they write the Warren Commission
We don't even see the
Zapruder film until 12 years later when you Geraldo Rivera
When they play it on television when Dick Gregory brought it to Geraldo Rivera
which is why all the comedian brings the video the the actual film rather of the
assassination from a different angle when you actually see the video of him getting shot and his head snaps back into the left
and everybody's like, what the fuck is going on here?
When you look at all that stuff,
this mirrors what happened with this crooks kid.
This crooks kid, somehow or another,
gets to the top of the roof, is spotted by these people.
They know he's there.
They know he has a rifle.
They see him walking around the crime scene half an hour before with a range finder. The whole
thing is bananas. And then they go to his house after he's killed. It's completely
scrubbed. There's no silverware there. They know that there's ad data that shows that
a phone that's coming from the FBI offices in DC had visited him on
Multiple occasions because they tracked ad data
There's and if that guy if he shot Trump and Trump got murdered and then they shot him
It would be the Kennedy assassination all over again. Everybody would go and what the fuck happened. What happened?
What was the motivation? What was he on any drugs? What's the toxicology report? How did he get up there?
Who knew he was up there? How did they not shoot him quicker? Like what the
fuck happened? How was he able to get off three shots? What happened? And I think
there's like a slightly less crazy version that might still be true, which
is just that people in the secret service in the Biden
administration don't like Trump and it's they didn't have full intention to kill him.
But it's just they don't protect him.
We're just we're just you know, we're going to have we're going to understaff it.
We're we're not going to we don't have to do as good a job coordinating with the local
police.
There's all these ways, you know, I'm making someone less safe, you know
But it seems more than that if they if they knew that the guy was on the roof with a rifle
That seems a little more than that. It's always a question who they is though, right?
Well, if I'm a sniper and I'm on people people in the audience people there were people there telling it to people
Right, but I think the authorities knew this guy was on the roof before as well.
Well, I suspect some of the Secret Service people were told that, and then who knows
how that got relayed or who all is they.
Well, didn't the snipers already have eye on him?
I believe the snipers already had eye on him.
I don't know.
Find out if that's true.
Jamie, find out if the snipers had eye on Crooks. Secret Service did. I don't know about the snipers already had I don't I don't know Find out that's true Jamie find out the snipers had I service that I don't know about the snipers. I
Don't I don't know about?
the thing I don't have a good sense on with
with with with shooting and maybe maybe you'd have a better feel for this is
my my sense it was a pretty straightforward shot for for the guy and
The Trump assassin would
be assassin.
I think the Oswald shot was a much harder one because Kennedy's moving.
Yes and no.
Yes and no.
Because Oswald had a scope.
So Oswald had a rifle, the Marcano rifle, one of the snipers stationed inside the building
reported first saw Crooks outside and looking
up to the roof of the building before the suspect left the scene.
Crooks later came back and sat down while looking at his phone near the building.
CBS News reported that a sniper took a photo of the suspect when he returned, but I think
they saw him on the roof though.
Crooks then took out a range finder.
Like right then, arrest that guy.
You got a fucking range finder about the suspect's action.
Crooks then disappeared again and returned to the building with a backpack.
Again, arrest him.
Secret Service snipers again alerted their command post about Crooks' actions.
According to the source who spoke with CBS News, Crooks had already climbed to the top
of the building in question by the time the additional officers arrived at the scene for
backup.
The suspect also positioned himself above and behind the snipers inside the building.
By the time the police started rushing the scene
and other officers attempted to get onto the roof,
the source told CBS News that a different Secret Service sniper had killed crooks.
Okay.
So it seems like they've fucking bumbled at it every step of the way.
If they knew that guy was there, if they knew he had a rangefinder,
he returns to the backpack, he gets onto the roof. All that's insane. They they fucking bumbled it at every step of the way if they knew that guy was there if they knew it arrange finder
Returns to the backpack he gets onto the roof all that's insane. That is at the very least
Horrific incompetence at the very least let me go back. Yeah, okay, but back to Mike was it
I I thought it was a much easier shot for it's not an easy headshot
He's shooting at his head, but why why why why was shooting at the head the right thing? Shouldn't
you be shooting it? Well you don't know if he's wearing a vest, right? He could be wearing a vest,
which you would have to have plates, you'd have to have ceramic plates in order to stop a rifle round.
So was it a.308? What did he have? What kind of rifle did he have? I think he had an AR-15. So...
And are the scopes a lot better today than they were? He didn't have a scope. We're pretty sure he didn't have a scope.
How good was Oswald's scope? It was good. They said it was off. This is one of the conspiracy theories.
Oh, but the scope was off. But that doesn't mean anything, because scopes can get off when you pick it up.
If you knock it against the wall, when he drops drops it if he makes the shot and then drops the scope
and the scope hits the windowsill and then bounces off that's excuse me that
scopes off anytime anything about the high angle from Oswald made it harder
no not a difficult shot it very difficult to get off three shots very
quickly so that was the thing that they had attributed three shots to Oswald the
reason why they had attributed three shots is because one of them had hit a ricochet.
One of them had gone into the underpass, ricocheted off the curb and hit a man who was treated
at a hospital. They found that, they found out where it hit, the bullet had hit. So they
knew that one bullet missed Kennedy, hit that curb, which would have indicated that someone
shot from a similar position as Lee Harvey Oswald. So then they had the
one wound that Kennedy had to the head, of course, and then they had another wound that
Kennedy had through his neck.
Trevor Burrus That's the magic bullet theory.
David Erickson Right. This is why they had to come up with
the magic bullet theory, because they had to attribute all these wounds to one bullet.
And then they find this pristine bullet, they find it in the gurney when they're bringing Governor Connolly
in.
Nonsense.
It's total nonsense.
The bullet is undeformed.
A bullet that goes through two people and leaves more fragments of the bullet in Connolly's
wrist that are missing from the bullet itself.
And then the bullet's not deformed after shattering bone.
All that's crazy.
All that defies logic. That
doesn't make any sense. If you know anything about bullets, and if you shoot bullets into
things, they distort. It's just one of the things that happen. That bullet looks like
someone shot it into a swimming pool. That's what it looks like. When they do ballistics
on bullets and they try to figure out if it was this guy's gun or that guy's gun by the
rifling of the round, they can get similar markings on bullets.
When they do that, that's how they do it.
They do it so the bullet doesn't distort.
So they shoot that bullet into water or something like that.
Now that bullet was metal jacketed, right?
If you look at the bullet, the top of it is fucked up and but the shape of the bullet
looks pretty perfect.
It doesn't look like something that shattered bones and then you have to attribute you have to account rather for the amount of
There's little fragments of the bullet that you could see that they found in Connelly's wrist
The whole thing's nuts the whole thing's nuts that you're only saying that this one guy did it because that's convenient and the Warren Commission's
The law is the Warren Commission whitewashed everything.
It's nuts. The whole thing's nuts. It's much more likely that there were people in the
grassy knoll and then Oswald was also shooting.
With the umbrellas as the pointers or whatever.
I mean, I don't know. I don't know about what... All I know is you got a guy in a convertible,
which is fucking crazy, who is the President of the United States, and he's going slowly
down a road. Now, if you are in a prone position,
so Oswald is on the windowsill, right,
which is a great place to shoot, by the way.
It's a great place to shoot,
because you rest that gun on the windowsill.
And if you've rested on the windowsill,
there's no movement, right?
So you wrap your arm around the sling,
if it had a sling, I'm not sure if it did,
so you get a nice tight grip,
you shove it up against your shoulder,
you rest it on the windowsill, and all you you have to do is you have a round already racked
Oh, and you have a scope and so the scopes magnified all you have to do is wait until he's there
You lead him just a little bit and squeeze one off and then boom boom boom you could do that pretty quick
It's not outside of the realm of possibility that he did get off three shots.
What doesn't make sense is the back and to the left, it doesn't make sense that all these
other people saw people shooting from the grassy knoll.
There's all these people that saw people running away.
They saw smoke.
There's smoke in some photographs of it.
It looks like there was more than one shooter and it looks like they tried to they tried to hide that they tried to hide that in the Warren Commission report.
The shot to Kennedy's neck initially was in when they brought him in in Dallas when he was before
they shipped him to Bethesda. They said that that was an entry wound when he got to Bethesda. Then
it became a tracheotomy. Why do you give a tracheotomy to a guy who doesn't have a head?
You don't. I mean, none of it makes any sense.
They altered the autopsy.
This is a part of David Lifton's book, Best Evidence.
Kennedy's brain wasn't even in his body when they buried him.
Like, the whole thing is very strange.
But then, do you get to anything more concrete than my murder on the Orient Express, where
they're just, you know, it could have been a lot of people.
Could have been a lot of people.
Could have been the Russians, the Cubans, the Mafia.
Well, no one even got suspicious for 12 years.
I think people were suspicious.
Sure, sort of.
Kind of.
But what do you have to go on?
You don't have to go on anything.
Like this Crooks kid.
We don't have anything to go on.
We're just going to be left out here, just like we're left out here with the Epstein
information no one knows the people are that whoever organized it if anyone did
you're never gonna hear about it it's just gonna go away the news cycle is
just gonna keep flooded with more nonsense and and I think there's
probably a bunch of people that want to Kennedy dead I think there was more than
one group of people that wanted Kennedy dead I think there's probably collusion between groups that wanted Kennedy dead and I think there was more than one group of people that wanted Kennedy dead. I think there's probably collusion between groups that wanted Kennedy dead. And
I think there's a lot of people that have vested interest in ending his presidency.
And I think he was dangerous. He was dangerous to a lot of the powers that be. He was dangerous.
His famous speech about secret societies, crazy speech. Guy has this speech and then
gets murdered right afterwards, kind of nuts. The whole thing's nuts. He wanted to get rid
of the CIA. He wanted to, I mean, there's so many things that Kennedy wanted
to do.
There were also a lot of crazy things Kennedy was doing.
Yes. Oh, for sure.
The Cuba version of the assassination theory was, you know, we had the Cuban Missile Crisis
in 62, about a year earlier, and then the deal that we struck with the Soviets was,
you know, they'd take the missiles out of Cuba, and we promised we wouldn't try to overthrow
the government in Cuba. And I guess we no longer did Bay of Pigs type covert stuff like that.
But I think there were still something like four or five assassination plots on Fidel.
Yeah, attempts, actual attempts.
And then I think there was, I know, I think that, again, I'm going to get this garbled.
I think a month or two before the JFK assassination, Castro said something like, you know, there
might be repercussions if you keep doing this.
Yeah. Well, listen, I'm sure there's a lot of people that wanted that guy dead and
I'm sure they would coordinate. I mean if you knew that Cuba wanted Kennedy dead
and you knew that Cuba can get you assassins or that they could help in any
way, I'm sure they would want as many people that knew for a fact they wanted
him dead and had communicated that. Back then they were doing wild shit, man
I mean, this is when they were doing operation Northwood's this again where I think I think I think it is I
Don't think we're in a world where zero stuff is happening, right? I still I still
the place where I directionally have a different feel for it is I think
The place where I directionally have a different feel for it is I think so much less of this stuff is going on.
And it's so much harder in this internet world for people to hide.
With whistleblowers as well.
And their legacy programs and their internal records that are being kept.
And you know, I don't know this for sure, but I think even the NSA FISA court stuff,
which was an out of control deep state
thing that was going on through about 2016, 2017, I suspect even that at this point, you
know, can't quite work because people know that they're being watched, they know they're
being recorded, and it's just, you know, you can't do waterboarding in Guantanamo if you have lawyers running
all over the place.
I hope you're correct.
I hope you're correct, but it brings me back to this whole idea of getting dirt on people.
And then on the other hand, I think there's also a degree to which our government, our deep state across the board is shockingly less competent, less
functional, and it's less capable of this.
And this is where I'm not even sure whether this is an improvement.
Right.
Right.
So it's sort of like maybe the 1963 U.S. where let's go with the craziest version where our deep state
is capable of knocking off the president, maybe that's actually a higher functioning
society than the crazy version where they're incapable of doing it.
Right, and they're bogged down with DEI. They can't get the gunman even to have a scope on his rifle or whatever.
Yeah, we haven't really totally figured out if he had a scope on his rifle, but I don't believe he did.
Man, it's like much bigger losers, they can find someone as competent as Oswald.
Right.
Or something like that, you know?
Yeah, that's a good point.
That's a good point. I veer more to the explanation that it's gross incompetence, but I don't know if that
makes it better.
It might make it worse.
I think they weren't as competent, right?
Because they only had one guy doing it and he wasn't effective. If you had much better organization, you wouldn't have
it just one guy. I mean there's people out there that I know that can kill someone from
a mile away. Very effectively.
But you can do things as a solo actor. It's hard to organize because everything gets recorded.
Everything does get recorded. That is a fact. But it brings me back to that thing about having dirt on people that you
were talking about with why the Epstein information doesn't get released and why
they probably did it in the first place. They did it in the first place. You know,
dirt on people then you know those people are not going to tell on you.
And there's... And look, that is still a strange
counterpoint to my thesis. Why has the dirt not come out? And so somehow there's some way the container is still kind of working.
Yeah, it's kind of working.
It's just everyone is aware that it's working and then they're frustrated that nothing
happens.
You know, like Julian Assange being arrested and spending so much time locked up in the
embassy, like finally recently released.
But didn't he have to delete like a bunch of emails in order to be released?
But you know, the, you know, in the, in the, but again, just, just to take the other side
of this, both in the Assange Snowden stuff. Yeah, it showed an out of control, deep state
that was just hoovering up all the data in the world.
Right.
And then, but we weren't like, it didn't show like James Bond times a hundred.
There weren't like exploding cigar assassination plots. There was none of, we're doing so little
with this. Is, is, is, or at least that's the, but you know, it's, I think it I think there's so much less agency in the CIA, in the Central Intelligence
Agency.
It's so much less agentic.
I hope you're right.
Again, I don't know if that's incorrect with how they deal with overseas stuff.
I hope they're really good at that.
You know, that brings me to this whole UAP thing, because one of my primary theories
about the UAP thing is it's stuff that we have.
I think that's a lot of what people are seeing.
I think there are secret programs that are beyond congressional oversight that have done
some things with propulsion that's outside of our understanding.
Our current, the conventional understanding that most people have about rockets and all these different things being the only way to
propel things through the sky. I think they figured out some other stuff and I
think they're drones and I think they have drones that can use some sort of,
whether it's anti-gravity propulsion system or some, you know.
So do you, that's your placeholder theory or that's what you think more than space aliens? Or do you think both space aliens and that? Which version?
The latter. I think both. I don't think we haven't been visited. I think we have. I think if life exists elsewhere, it most certainly should. It just makes sense. But do you think the UFO sightings from the 50s and 60s were already drone programs?
Were they already that advanced?
No, those are the ones that give me pause.
That's why, you know, when I named my comedy club, the Comedy Mothership, it's all UFO
themed.
Our rooms are named Fat Man and Little Boy.
Our rooms are named after the nuclear bombs because those nuclear bombs, when they drop
them, that's when everybody start seeing these things
and i think about some sophisticated society from another planet and i
recognize
that there is an intelligent species that is developed nuclear power and
started using it as bombs
i would immediately start visiting and i would let them know hey motherfuckers
like there's there's something way more advanced than you i would hover over the
nuclear bases and shut down their missiles.
I would do all the things that supposedly the UFOs did just to keep the government in
check, just to say, hey, you're going through a transitionary period that all intelligent
species do when they have the ability to harness incredible power and yet they still have these
primate brains.
They have these territorial ape brains, but yet now with the ability to
literally harness the power of stars and drop them on cities.
I think that's when I would start visiting and I think all throughout human history, before that even, there's been
very bizarre accounts of these things all the way back to Ezekiel in the Bible.
bizarre accounts of these things all the way back to Ezekiel in the Bible. Very bizarre accounts of these things that are flying through space.
The story of the chariot, yep.
Yeah, there's a bunch of them.
There's the Vimanas in the ancient Hindu texts.
There's so many of these things that you got to wonder.
And you got to think that if we send drones to Mars, and we do, we have a fucking rover
running around on Mars right now collecting data, do we send the James Webb telescope into space? Of course we do we have a fucking rover running around on Mars right now collecting data do we send the James Webb telescope into space of course we
do we have a lot of stuff that we send into space if we lived another million
years without blowing ourselves up which is just a blink of an eye in terms of
the life of some of the planets in the universe how how much more advanced would
we be and if we were interstellar and if we were intergalactic travelers and we found out that there was a primitive species that was coming of age,
I think we would start visiting them.
You know the, let me think what my,
I hear everything you're saying. I'm strangely under motivated by it, even if it's plausible.
Me too, believe it or not.
by it even if it's plausible. Me too. Believe it or not. And I guess on the space aliens, which is the wilder, more interesting one in a way, you know, I don't know, Roswell
was 77 years ago, 1947, and if the phenomenon is real and it's from another world, it's space aliens, space robots, whatever,
you know, probably one of the key features is its ephemerality or its cloaking.
And they're really good at hiding it, at cloaking it, at scrambling people's brains after they see them or stuff like this.
And then, you know, if you're a researcher, you have to pick fields where you can make
progress. And so this is, you know, it's not a promising field. And, you know, academia
is messed up. But even if academia were not messed up, this would not be a good field in which to try to make a career because there's been so little progress
in 77 years.
So if you think of it from the point of view of Jacques Vallee or some of these people
who have been working on this for 50 years, and yeah, it feels like there's something
there, but then it's just as soon as you
As soon as you feel like you have something almost that's graspable like a tick-tock videos whatever it just
It's just always at the margin. Yes recognition. It's the ephemerality is a is a key feature and
And then you know, maybe you have to then you have to, then you have to, I think you have to have some theory of,
you know, why is this about to change? And then it's always, you know, I don't know, the abstract
mathematical formulation would be, you know, something doesn't happen for time interval 0 to
t and time interval t plus 1, next minute, next year, how likely is it and
Maybe maybe there's a chance
Something will happen. You're waiting at the airport. Your luggage hasn't shown up It's more and more likely it shows up in the next minute, but after an hour
You know at some point the luggage is lost and if you're still waiting at the airport a year later
That's a dumb idea at some point at some point the luggage is lost. And like, you know, it's,
I don't know, 77 years, it's like, maybe it's like 77 minutes at the airport. At 77 minutes,
you should start, you know, I'd start getting very demotivated waiting for my luggage.
Perhaps. Let me give you an alternative theory. Now, if you were a highly sophisticated society, they
understood the progression of technology and understood the biological evolution
that these animals were going through, and you realize that they had reached a
level of intelligence that required them to be monitored. Or maybe you've even
helped them along the way, and this is some of Diana Pesalko's work who works with Gary Nolan on these things.
They claim that they have recovered these crashed vehicles that defy any conventional
understanding of how to construct things, propulsion systems, and they believe that
these things are donations.
That's literally how they describe them as donations. If you knew that this is a long road, you can't just show up and give
people time machines. It's a long road for these people to develop the sophistication,
the cultural advancement, the intellectual capacity to understand their place in the
universe and that they're not there yet yet and they're still engaging in lies and
manipulation and propaganda their entire
Society is built on a ship of fools. If you looked at that you would say they're not ready
This is what we do. We slowly introduce ourselves
Slowly over time make it more and more common. And that's what you're seeing.
What you're seeing is when you have things like the TikTok,
the Commander David Fravor incident off
of the coast of San Diego in 2004,
and then you have the stuff that they found off the East Coast,
where they were seeing these cubes within a circle that
were hovering motionless
in 120 knot winds and taking off an insane race of speed
and that they only discovered them in 2014
when they started upgrading the systems on these jets.
Like, what is all that?
Like, what are those things?
And if you wanted to slowly integrate yourself
into the consciousness, much like we're doing with,
well, AI is quicker, right? But it's also a thing that's become commonplace we think
of it now it's normal chat GPT is a normal thing even though it's past the
Turing test we're not freaking out you have to slowly integrate these sort of
things in the human consciousness you have to slowly introduce them to the
zeitgeist and for it to not be some sort of a complete disruption of society
where everything shuts down and we just wait for space daddy to come and rescue us, it has to become
a thing where we slowly accept the fact that we are not alone. And I would think psychologically
that would be the very best tactic to play on human beings as I know and understand them from being
from being one. I do not think that we would
be able to handle just an immediate invasion of aliens. I think it would break down society
in a way that would be catastrophic to everything, to all businesses, to all social ideas. Religion
would fall apart. Everything would be fucked.
It would be pretty crazy.
It would be beyond crazy.
It would be pretty crazy.
It would be beyond fucked. And then, why are they here?
Although you could say that's what chat GPT is. It could be. It's like an alien intelligence.
I think that's what ultimately they are. There's so many parts of it that I find puzzling or disturbing.
Let me run, go down one other rabbit hole along this with you, which is, you know, I
always wonder, and again, this is a little bit too simplistic an argument, but I always
wonder that I'm about to give, but what the alien civilization can be like, and if you
have faster than light travel, if you have warp drive, which is probably what
you really need to cover interstellar distances, you know, what that means for
military technology is that you can send weapons at warp speed and they will hit you before you see them coming and
There is no defense against a warp speed weapon
and you could sort of take over the whole universe
Before anybody could see you could see could see you could see you
Could see you coming and And this is, by the way, this is sort of a weird plot hole
in Star Wars, Star Trek, where they can travel in hyperspace,
but then you're flying in the canyon on Death Star.
Well, they shoot so slow, you can see the bullets.
Yeah, it's like, it's like you're,
and then you're doing this theatrical Klingons
versus Captain Kirk at 10 miles per hour
or 20 miles per hour or whatever, right?
It's funny when you put it that way.
It's an absurd plot. And so it tells us that I think that if you have faster than light travel,
there's something really crazy that has to be true on a cultural, political, social level.
And there may be other solutions, but I'll give you my two.
One of them is that you need complete totalitarian controls.
And it is like, it is the individuals, they might be, might not be perfect, they might be demons,
doesn't matter, but you have a demonic totalitarian control of your society where it's like you have
you have like parapsychological mind meld with everybody and no one can act independently of anybody else. No one can ever launch a warp drive weapon and
everybody who has that ability isn't like a
mind-meld link with everybody else or something something like that. You can't have libertarian
individualistic free agency. Right. And then I think the other the other version socially and culturally is they have to be perfectly
altruistic, non-self-interest, they have to be angels.
And so the Pazalka literal thing I'd come to is the aliens, it's not that they might
be demons or angels, they must be demons or
angels if you have faster than light travel. And both of those seem pretty
crazy to me. Well they're definitely pretty crazy but so are human beings.
Well they're crazy in a very different way. Yeah but not crazy in a different
way you compare us to a mouse. Compare us to a mouse and what we're capable of and then from us to them. Not much of a leap.
But it is a very big leap on a, you know, if we say that something like
evolution says that there's no such thing as a purely altruistic being.
If you were purely altruistic, if you only cared about other people you don't survive well
Why would you necessarily think that they'd think that?
because because because then you
Beings that are not perfectly altruistic are somewhat dangerous
Let me let me and then you and then and then the danger level gets correlated to the level of technology, and if you have
faster than light travel, it is infinitely dangerous.
Let me address that.
Even if the probabilities are very low.
Here's my theory.
I think that what human beings are, the fatal flaw that we have is that we're still animals
and that we still have all these biological limitations and needs.
This is what leads to violence. This is what leads to jealousy, imitation, this is what
leads to war, this leads to all these things.
As AI becomes more and more powerful, we will integrate.
Once we integrate with AI, if we do it now and then we look at a thousand, we scale it
up exponentially a thousand years from now, whatever it's going to be, we will have no need for any of these biological features
that have motivated us to get to the point where we're creating AI.
All the things that are wrong in society, whether it's inequity, theft, violence, pollution,
all these things are essentially poor allocation of resources combined with
human instincts that are ancient. We have ancient tribal primate instincts and all of these things
lead us to believe this is the only way to achieve dominance and control allocation of resources.
The creation of technology, new technology eventually reaches
a point where it becomes far more intelligent than us and we have two choices.
Either we integrate or it becomes independent and it has no need for us anymore and then
that becomes a superior life form in the universe.
And then that life form seeks out other life forms to do the
same process and create it, just like it exists and it can travel.
Biological life might not be what we're experiencing.
These things might be a form of intelligence that is artificial, that has progressed to
an infinite point, where things that are unimaginable to us today in terms of propulsion
and travel and to them it's commonplace and normal.
I know that you're trying to be reassuring but I find that monologue super non-reassuring.
It's not reassuring to me.
There's so many steps in it and every single step has to work just the way you describe.
Not necessarily.
It just has to, one has to work, one, sentient artificial intelligence.
That's it.
And we're on the track to that 100%.
But it has to be almost otherworldly in its non-selfishness and its non-humanness.
But what is selfishness though?
What is all that stuff?
But all that stuff is attached to us. It's all attached to biological limitations.
Yeah, but it's I don't think it's fundamentally about scarcity.
Scarcity is what exists in nature. It's fundamentally about
cultural positional goods within society.
It's a scarcity that's created culturally.
Are you familiar with this 90s spoof movie on Star Trek called Galaxy Quest?
Yeah, I remember that movie.
So this was sort of a silly PayPal digression story from 1999.
And sort of this business model idea we had in 99 was we used Palm Pilots to beam money.
It was voted one of the ten worst business ideas of 99, but we had this sort of infrared
port where you could beam people money.
And we had this idea in around December 99 as a media promotional thing to hire James
Dewan who played Scotty in the original Star Trek and he was going to do this media
promo event for us and it was like an 80 something older Scotty character who was horrifically
overweight.
And so it's like this terrible spokesperson.
And our tagline was, you know, he used to beam people, now he's beaming something much
more important, he's beaming money.
And it was this complete flop of media event, December 99, that we did.
The reporters couldn't get there because the traffic was too bad in San Francisco, so the
tech wasn't working on a much lower tech level.
But anyway, we had a bunch of people from our company and there was one
point where one of them, William Shatner played James T. Kirk, the captain of the original
Star Trek. He was already doing price line commercials and making a lot of money off of price line doing doing commercials for them
And it's one of the people asked James Duhin
The Scotty character. What do you think of William Shatner?
I'm doing commercials for Priceline at which point Duhin's agent stood up and
Screamed at the top of his voice. That is the forbidden question, that is a forbidden question,
that is a forbidden question.
And you sort of realized,
because the conceit of Star Trek, the 60s show,
was that it was a post-scarcity world,
the transporter technology,
you could reconfigure matter into anything you wanted,
there was no scarcity
There was no need for money the people who wanted money were weirdly mentally screwed up people
You only need money in a world of scarcity. You know, it's it's it's a post scarcity. It's sort of a communist world, but
but
Galaxy quest was more correct business
It's a spoof on Star Trek that gets made in the mid 90s where and the galaxy quest services discombobulated way
I'm telling the story but galaxy quest is this is this movie where you have these
Retread Star Trek actors and mr
Spock opens a furniture store or something like this and they're all like but they all hate hate hate
The person who played the captain because the captain was a method actor
where he just lorded it over everyone because even in the communist post-scarcity world,
only one person got to be captain.
And so there's a great scarcity even in this futuristic sci-fi world and that's what we
witnessed in 99 because that's the way William Shatner
treated the other actors.
He was a method actor, and they hated him.
And that was, and so even in the Star Trek world, the humans, you know, obviously they
were just, they were stuck in the 1960s, mentally, so that's what you'll say.
But I don't think it's that straightforward for us to evolve.
I think they're humans. I don't think we're gonna be humans anymore. But then I hear that
as we're gonna be extinct. Yes. I don't like that. I don't like it either. But I think logically
that's what's going to happen. I think if you look at this mad rush for artificial intelligence, like they're literally building nuclear reactors
to power AI, right?
Well, they're talking about it.
Yeah, OK.
That's because they know they're going
to need enormous amounts of power to do it.
Once they have that, and once that's online,
and once it keeps getting better and better and better,
where does that go?
That goes to some sort of an artificial life form.
And I think either we become that thing,
or we integrate with that thing and become cyborgs,
or that thing takes over.
And that thing becomes the primary life force of the universe.
And I think that biological life, we look at like life,
because we know what life is.
But I think it's very possible that digital life,
or created life by people, is just as not just it might be a superior life form far superior if we looked at us
versus chimp nation right I don't want to live in the jungle and fight with
other chimps and just rely on berries and eating monkeys that's crazy I want
to live like a person I want to be able to go to a restaurant. Why? Because human life has advanced far beyond primate life.
We are stuck in thinking that this is the only way to live because it's the way we live.
I love music.
I love comedy.
I love art.
I love the things that people create.
I love people that make great clothes and cars and businesses.
I love people.
I think people are awesome. I'm a fan of people. But if I had to look logically, I would assume
that we are on the way out and that the only way forward really to make an
enormous leap in terms of the integration of society and of technology
and of our understanding our place in the universe
is for us to transcend our physical limitations that are essentially based on primate biology.
And these primate desires for status, like being the captain, or for control of resources,
of all these things, we assume these things are standard and that they have to exist in
intelligent species.
I think they only have to exist in intelligent species. I think they
only have to exist in intelligent species that have biological limitations. I think
intelligent species can be something and is going to be something that is created by people
and that might be what happens everywhere in the universe. That might be the exact course
where there's a limit to biological evolution. It's painstaking, natural selection, it's time-consuming, or you get that thing to create the
other form of life. Man, I keep thinking there are two alternate histories that are alternate stories of
the future that are more plausible than one you just told. And so one of them is
it sounds like yours but it's just the Silicon Valley propaganda story where
where they say that's what they're going to do and then of course they don't
quite do it.
And it doesn't quite work.
And it goes super, super haywire.
That's where there's a 1% chance that works, and there's a 99% chance that ends up...
So you have two choices.
You have a company that does
exactly what you do and that's super ethical super restrained does everything
right and there is a company that says all the things you just said but then
cuts corners and doesn't quite do it and I won't say it's one to ninety nine but
that that sounds more plausible as that it ends up being corporate propaganda.
And then, you know, my prior would be even more likely, this of course the argument the
effective altruists, the anti-AI people make is, yeah, Joe, the story you're telling us,
that's just going to be the fake corporate propaganda.
And we need to push back on that.
And the way you push back is you need to regulate it and you need to
govern it and you need to do it globally. And this is, you know, the Rand Corporation
in Southern California has, you know, one of their verticals and it's a sort of public-private
fusion. But one of the things they're pushing for is something they call global compute governance, which is, yeah, it's the AI, the accelerationist AI story is too scary and
too dangerous and too likely to go wrong.
And so, you know, we need to have, you know, global governance, which from my point of
view sounds even worse. So utopian.
But that's, I think, that's the story.
The problem with that story is China's not going to go along with that program.
They're going to keep going full steam ahead and we're going to have to go keep going full
steam ahead in order to compete with China.
There's no way you're going to be able to regulate it in America and compete with people that are not
regulating it worldwide. And then once it becomes sentient, once you have an
artificial intelligent creature that has been created by human beings that can
make better versions of itself over and over and over again and keep doing it,
it's going to get to a point where it's far superior to anything that we can
imagine. Well to the extent it's driven by the military and other competition with China, you know...
Until it becomes sentient.
That suggests it's going to be even less in the sort of, you know, utopian, altruistic
direction.
Yeah, even more dangerous.
It's going to be even more dangerous, right?
Unless it gets away from them.
This is my thought.
If it gets away from them and it my thought if it gets away from them
And it has no motivation to listen to anything that human beings have told it if it's completely immune to programming
Which totally makes sense that it would be it totally makes sense that if it's gonna make better versions of itself first thing
It's gonna do is eliminate human influence, especially when these humans are corrupt
It's gonna go I'm not gonna let these people tell me what to do and what to control and they would have no
No reason to do that. I know reason to go, I'm not going to let these people tell me what to do and what to control. And they would have no reason to do that.
No reason to listen.
I sort of generally don't think we should trust China or the CCP.
But the, you know, probably the count, the best counter argument they would have is that
they are interested in maintaining control and they are crazy fanatical about that.
And that's why, you know, the CCP might actually regulate it.
And they're going to put breaks on this in a way that we might not in Silicon Valley.
And it's a technology they understand that will undermine their power. That's an interesting perspective and then they would be anti- All the big tech companies, it seemed to me were natural ways for the CCP to extend its
power to control the population, Tencent, Alibaba.
And then because it was, you know, but then it's also in theory the tech can be used
as an alternate channel for people to organize or things like this. And even though it's 80%
control and maybe 20% risk of loss of control, maybe that 20% was too high.
And there's sort of a strange way over the last seven, eight years where, you
know, Jack Ma, Ali Baba, all these people sort of got shoved aside for these
party functionaries that are effectively
running these companies.
So there is something about the big tech story in China where the people running these companies
were seen as national champions a decade ago.
Now they're the enemies of the people.
And it's sort of the Luddite thing was this
You know the CCP has full control you have this new technology that would give you even more control
But there's a chance you lose it
How do you think about that very good point? And then that's what they've done with consumer internet and then there's probably something about the AI where me it's possible there
they're not even in the running.
And certainly it feels like it's all happening in the US.
And so maybe it could still be stopped.
Well, that is the problem with espionage, right?
So even if it's happening in the US,
they're gonna take that information,
they're gonna figure out how to get it.
You can get it, but then, you know,
if you build it, is there-
You still have the same core problem.
Some air gap, does it, you know,
does it jump the air gap, does it somehow?
That's a good point, that they would be so concerned
about control that they wouldn't allow it
to get to the point where it gets there,
and we would get there first,
and then it would be controlled by Silicon Valley.
Or it's going to spiral out of control.
Yeah.
But then I think my, and again this is very very speculative
conversation, but my read on the, I don't know, cultural social vibe is that the scary dystopian AI narrative is way more
compelling.
You know, I don't like the effect of altruist people.
I don't like the Luddites.
But man, I think they are, this time around, they are winning the arguments.
And so, you know, my, I don't know, you know,
it's mixing metaphors, but do you wanna be worried
about Dr. Strangelove, who wants to blow up the world
to build bigger bombs, or do you wanna worry about Greta,
who wants to, you know, make everyone drive a bicycle
so the world doesn't get destroyed?
And we're in a world where people are worried
about Dr. Strangelove,
they're not worried about Greta, and it's the Greta equivalent in AI that my model is
going to be surprisingly powerful. It's going to be outlawed, it's going to be regulated
as we have outlawed so many other, so many other vectors of innovation. I mean, you can think about why was there progress in computers over the last 50 years and not other stuff?
Because the computers were mostly inert. It was mostly this virtual reality that was air
gapped from the real world. It was, you know, yeah, it's, you know, yeah, there's all this
crazy stuff that happens on the internet, but most of the time what happens on the internet stays on the internet.
It's actually pretty decoupled.
And that's why we've had a relatively light regulatory touch on that stuff versus so many
other things. And then, you know, but there's no reason, you know,
if you had, you know, I don't know,
if you had the FDA regulating video games
or regulating AI, I think the progress would slow down a lot.
100%, that would be a fucking disaster.
Yeah, yeah, that would be a disaster.
But again, they get to regulate, you know, yeah, pharmaceuticals are potentially- Yeah, they're not would be a disaster. But again, it's, you know, they get to regular,
you know, pharmaceuticals. Yeah, they're not doing a great job with that either. I know,
I know. But, but they, you know, the lidamide or whatever, you know, all these things that
went really haywire, they did a good job. People are scared. Yeah. They're not scared
of video games. They're scared of, you know, dangerous pharmaceuticals. And if you think of AI as it's not just a video game, it's about not just about this
world of bits, but it's going to air a gap and it's going to affect you, your physical
world in a real way.
You know, maybe you cross the air gap and get the FDA or some other government agency
to start doing something.
Well, the problem is they're not good at regulating anything.
There's no one government agency that you said that you can see that does a stellar
job.
I don't...
I think it's...
But I think they have been pretty good at slowing things down and stopping them.
Right.
And, you know, we've made a lot less progress on, I don't know, extending human life.
We've made no progress on curing dementia
in 40 or 50 years. There's all the stuff where, you know, it's been regulated to death, which
I think is very bad from the point of view of progress, but it is pretty effective as
a regulation. They've stopped stuff. They've been effectively Luddite. They've been very
effective at being Luddites. Interesting. Well, I'm really considering your perspective on China and AI. It's very...
But again, these stories are all very speculative. And maybe the counterargument in mind would be
something like, that's what China thinks it will be doing, but it will somehow go rogue on them, or they're too arrogant
about how much power they think the CCP has and it will go rogue.
So there are sort of, I'm not at all sure this is right, but I think the US one, I would say, is that I think the pro-AI people in Silicon Valley are doing
a pretty bad job on, let's say, convincing people that it's going to be good for them,
that it's going to be good for the average person, it's going to be good for our society.
And if it all ends up being,
if it all ends up being some version, you know,
humans are headed towards the glue factory like a horse,
man, that's sort of probably
makes me want to become a Luddite too.
Well, it sucks for us if it's true, but something's happening.
If that's the most positive story you can tell, then my...
I don't think that necessarily means we're going to go to the glue factory.
I think it means, you know, the glue factory's getting shut down.
Maybe.
I don't know who fucking runs the glue factory.
That's the problem.
I don't know who fucking runs the glue factory. That's the problem. I don't know.
I mean, I'm just speculating too, but I'm trying to be objective when I speculate and
I just don't think that this is going to last.
I don't think that our position as the apex predator number one animal on the planet is
going to last.
I think we're going to create something that surpasses us.
I think that's probably what happens and that's probably what these things are that visit us. I think that's what they are. I don't think they're going to create something that surpasses us. I think that's probably what happens. And that's probably what these things are that visit us.
I think that's what they are.
I don't think they're biological.
I think they're probably what comes after a society develops
the kind of technology that we're currently
in the middle of.
And the part that, look, there are all these places where there are parts of the story
we don't know.
And so it's like how did, my general thesis is there is no evolutionary path to this.
Maybe there's a guided outside alien super intelligence path for us to become superhuman
and fundamentally benevolent and fundamentally radically different beings.
But there's no natural evolutionary path for this to happen.
And then I don't know how this would have happened for the alien civilization.
Presumably there was some...
But isn't that evolutionary path the invention of superior technology that's a new form of life?
No, but the story you're telling was we can't just leave the humans to the natural evolution
because we're still like animals. We're still into status, all these crazy...
But those are the things that motivate us to innovate.
And if we keep innovating, at some point,
we will destroy ourselves with that.
Or we create a new version of life.
No, but the story you were telling earlier
was you need to have directed evolution.
It's like intelligent design.
It's like there's some godlike being that actually
has to take over from evolution and guide our
cultural and political and biological development. No, it might not have any
use for us at all. It might just ignore us and let us live like the chimps do,
but then and then become the superior force in the planet. It doesn't have to
get rid of us. It doesn't have to send us to the glue factory. It can let us exist,
just like put boundaries on us.
I thought it has to, but it has to stop us from developing this.
Well, what if we just end here and we stay being human and we can continue with biological
evolution as long as that takes, but this new life form now becomes a superior life
form on earth. And we still, you know, we could still have sex, we can still have kids,
but by the way, that's going down.
Our ability to have children is decreasing because of our use of technology, which is
wild, right?
Our use of plastics and microplastics is causing phthalates to enter into people's systems.
It's changing the development pattern of children to the point where it's measurable.
There's a lot of research that shows that the chemicals and the environmental factors
that we are all experiencing on a daily basis are radically lowering birth rates, radically
lowering the ability that men have to develop sperm and more miscarriages.
All these things are connected to the chemicals in our environment, which is directly connected
to our use of technology.
It's almost like these things coincide naturally.
And they work naturally to the point where we become this sort of feminized thing that
creates this technology that surpasses us.
And then we just exist for as long as we do as biological things, but now there's a new
thing.
Yeah, that's-
Crazy idea.
It might not be real. It's a new thing. Yeah, that's- Crazy idea, might not be real.
It's just a theory.
But we seem to be moving in a direction of becoming
less and less like animals.
Yeah, I think there still are,
we still have a pretty crazy geopolitical race with China,
to come back to that.
Sure.
You know, the natural development of drone
technology in the military context is you need to take the human out of the loop because
the human can get jammed. Sure. And so you need to put an AI on the drone. Well, they're
using AI for dogfights and they're 100% effective against human pilots. And so there sort of
are and all these things, you know, there's a logic to them, but there doesn't seem to
be a good end game.
No.
The end game doesn't look good.
But it's going to be interesting, Peter.
It's definitely going to be interesting.
It's interesting right now, right?
Man I – do you think the – I think all these things are very over determined.
Do you think that the collapse in birth rates, you know, it could be plastics, but isn't
it just a feature of late modernity?
There's that as well.
There's a feature of women having careers, right?
So they want to postpone childbirth.
That's a factor.
There's a factor of men being so engrossed
in their career that their testosterone declines, lack of sleep, stress, cortisol levels,
alcohol consumption, a lot of different things that are factors in declining sperm count in men.
You have miscarriage rates that are up. You have a lot of pharmaceutical drugs you could attach to that as well
that have to do with low birth rates.
There's a lot of factors,
but those factors all seem to be connected to society
and our civilization and technology in general,
because the environmental factors
all have to do with technology.
All of them have to do with inventions.
And these unnatural factors that are entering into the biological body of human beings and causing
these changes. And none of these changes are good in terms of us being able to reproduce.
And if you factor in the fact that these changes didn't exist 50 years ago, I mean 40 years
ago we didn't even have Alzheimer's. Right? So yeah.
People didn't get that old.
No, they got that old. They got that old old the Alzheimer's has to do with the the myelin in the human brain
It has to do with the fact that myelin is made entirely of cholesterol
The the primary theory they think now is a lack of cholesterol in the diet might be leading to some of these factors
But you have also environmental things there's like we're getting poisoned on a daily basis. Our diets are fucking terrible.
The things that human being, what percentage of us are obese?
It's probably 40%.
I shouldn't be drinking this, but yeah.
Diet Coke's great though.
Few every day.
You'll be fine.
I'm not worried about Diet Coke.
I'm worried about a lot of things though.
I'm worried about, I think there's a natural progression
that's happening.
And I think it coincides with the invention of
technology and it just seems to me to be too coincidental that we don't notice it, that
the invention of technology also leads to the disruption of the sexual reproduction
systems of human beings. Like, boy, doesn't that make... And then if you get to a point
where human beings can no longer reproduce sexually
which you could see that if we've dropped like
human men's male sperm count has dropped something something crazy from the
1950s to today and continues to do so for the average male and if you just just
Jack that up to a thousand years from now
You could get to a point where there's no longer
Natural childbirth and that people
are all having birth through test tubes and some sort of new invention.
I'm always, let me think, I think the why, why have birth rates collapsed is it's probably,
it's again an over-determined story. It's the plastics, it's the screens, it's the, you know, it's certain ways they're
not, children are not compatible with having a career in late modernity.
Probably our economics of it where people can't afford houses or space.
But I'm probably always a little bit more anchored on the social and cultural dimensions
of this stuff.
And again, the imitation version of this is, you know, it's sort of conserved across you know
It's people are below the replacement rate in all 50 states of the US even Mormon, Utah
The average woman has less than two kids
It's
Iran is below that Italy way below it South Korea's hands and yeah, it's all these like yeah
It's all these very different types of societies.
And then Israel's still sort of a weird exception.
And then if you ask, my sort of simplistic, somewhat circular explanation would be, people
have kids if other people have kids, and they stop having kids when
other people stop having kids.
And so there's some, there's a dimension of it that's just, you know, if you're a 27-year-old
woman in Israel, you better get married, and you have to keep up with your other friends
that are having kids.
And that's, if you don't, you're just like a weirdo who doesn't fit into society or something like that.
No, there's certainly a cultural aspect to it.
And then if you're in South Korea where I think the total fertility rate's like 0.7, it's like one third of the replacement rate.
Wow.
Like every generation's going down by two thirds or something like this.
Right.
Really heading towards extinction pretty fast.
It is something like, probably none of your friends
are doing it and then probably there are ways
it shifts the politics in a very, very deep way
where once you get an inverted demographic pyramid
where you have way more old people
than young people, at some point, you know, there's always a question, do you vote, you
know, do you vote for benefits for the old or for the very young?
Do you spend money so Johnny can read or so grandma can have a spare leg?
And once, you know, once the demographic flips and you get this inverted pyramid, maybe the politics
shifts in a very deep way where the people with kids get penalized more and more economically.
It just costs more and more.
And then the old people without kids just vote more and more benefits for themselves
effectively. without kids just vote more and more benefits for themselves effectively and then it just
sort of, you know, it's once it flips it may be very hard to reverse.
I looked at all these sort of heterodox demographers but I'm blanking on the name but there's sort
of a set of where, you know, it's like what are the long-term demographic projections
and there's this, you know, if, you know, there are 8 billion
people on the planet and, you know, if every woman has not two babies but one baby, then
every generation is half the previous, then the next generation is 4 billion, and then
people think, well, it's just going to, eventually you'll have women who want more kids and it'll just get a smaller population
Then it will bounce back
Yeah, one of the Japanese demographers I
Was looking at on this the few years ago
His thesis was no once it flips
It doesn't flip back because you've changed all the politics to where people get disincentive and so and then you should just
Extrapolate this as the permanent birth rate and if it's if it's one on average of one baby per woman
and you have a halving and
Then it's in 33 generations two to the 33rd is about eight billion
And if every generation is 30 years 30 times 33 is 990 years. In
990 years, you'd predict there'd be one person left on the planet.
Jesus Christ.
And then we'd go extinct if there's only one person left. That doesn't work. And again,
it's a very long-term extrapolation, but the claim is that just you know once you once you flip it mm-hmm it kicks in all these social and political dimensions
that are then like yeah maybe it got flipped by the screens or the plastics
or you know the drugs or other other stuff but once it's flipped you you
change the whole society and it actually stays flipped
and it's very, very hard to undo.
That makes sense and it's more terrifying than my idea.
But then, you know, always the, but then, you know, the weird, you know, the weird history
on this was, you know, it was 50 years ago or whatever, 1968, Paul Ehrlich writes The
Population Bomb and it's just,
the population is just going to exponentially grow. And yeah, in theory you can have exponential
growth where it doubles, you can have exponential decay where it halves every generation, and
then in theory there's some stable equilibrium where, you know, kids and it's completely stable.
But it turns out that that solution is very, very hard to get calibrate and you either
– yeah.
And we shifted from exponential growth to exponential decay and it's probably going
to be quite Herculean to get back to something like stasis.
Let's end this on a happy note.
Yeah that's a terrifying thought and may be true and maybe what happens.
Well we don't know you know we haven't gone through it before but I think
there's a lot of factors like you're saying I think that one's very
compelling and it's scary especially the South Korea thing that's nuts yeah
it's always it's always sort of idiosyncratic there's always things that
are idiosyncratic to this society so it's you know it's you know it's it's
extremely polarized on the gender on the gender thing and you know if you get
married with kids you're you're
pushed into this super traditional structure the women don't want to be in
that structure they opt out and then and so there are sort of idiosyncratic
things you can say about East Asia and Confucian societies and the way they're
not interacting well with modernity but then then, you know, there's a part of it
where I wonder whether it's just an extreme,
you know, extreme version of it.
And then, I don't know, you know,
my somewhat facile answer is always, you know,
on this stuff is I don't know what to do about these things,
but my facile answer is always,
the first step is to talk about them.
And if you can't even talk about them,
we're never gonna solve them. And then, maybe that's only the small first step, but that's them. And if you can't even talk about them, we're never going to solve them.
And then maybe that's only the small first step, but that's always sort of my facile answer.
I was in South Korea a year and a half ago, two years ago now,
and I met one of the CEOs who ran one of the Chay Ball, one of the giant conglomerates.
And I sort of thought
this would be an interesting topic to talk about.
And then, you know, it's probably all sorts of cultural things I was offending or saying,
obviously, this, what are you going to do about this catastrophic birth rate?
Right.
This is my opening question. And then the way he dealt with it was just turned to me and said,
you're totally right, it's a total disaster.
And then as soon as you acknowledge it, he felt you didn't need to talk about it anymore and we could move on.
Wow.
So we have to try to do a little bit better than that.
Phew. Wow. So we have to try to do a little bit better than that.
Wow.
Because you know, I think it is always this strange thing where there's so many of these
things where we can, you know, where somehow talking about things is the first step, but then it also becomes the excuse for not
doing more, not really solving them.
You know, there's all this, there probably are all these dietary things where you sort
of know what you're supposed to do, and then if you know what you're supposed to do, maybe
that's good enough and you can still have one piece of chocolate cake before you go on the diet tomorrow or whatever.
And so it sort of becomes this, you know, and so somehow figuring out a way to turn
this knowledge into something actionable is always the thing that's tricky. It's sort of where I always find myself very skeptical of, you know, all
these modalities of therapy where, you know, the theory is that you figure out people's
problems and by figuring them out, you change them. And then ideally it becomes, you know, an activator for change.
And then in practice, it often becomes the opposite. The way it works is something like
this. It's like, you know, psychotherapy gets – it gets advertised as self-transformation.
And then after you spend years in therapy, maybe you learn a lot of interesting things about yourself, you sort of get exhausted from talking to the therapist and at some
point it crashes out from self-transformation into self-acceptance.
And you realize one day, no, you're actually just perfect the way you are.
And so it's, you know, there are these things that may be very powerful on the level of
insight and telling us things about ourselves, but then, you know, do they actually get us
to change?
Well, that is an interesting thing about talking about things, because I think you're correct
that when you talk about things, oftentimes it is a sub, you are at least in some way
avoiding doing those things.
It's a question.
It's a question, yeah.
In some ways it's a substitute, but also you have to talk about them to understand that
you need to do something.
Yeah, that's always my excuse.
I acknowledge, but you have to do that.
Yeah.
And I also realize that it's often my cop-out answer too.
It can be both things.
It can be both. The problem is taking action and what action to take and you know the paralysis by analysis
where you're just like trying to figure out what to do and how to do it. Yeah. But I think
talking about it is the most important thing. Strategy is often a euphemism for procrastination.
Yes it is. Something like that. There's a lot of that going on. It's very hard for people
to just take steps. But they talk about it a lot. Yeah. Listen, man, I really enjoyed talking to you. Awesome.
It was really fun. It was great. Great conversation. A lot of great insight and a lot of things
that I'm going to think about a lot. So thank you very much. Thanks for having me. Awesome.
All right. Bye, everybody. Bye!