The Joe Rogan Experience - #2206 - Chamath Palihapitiya
Episode Date: September 25, 2024Chamath Palihapitiya is a venture capitalist, engineer, and CEO of Social Capital. https://chamath.substack.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
Transcript
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The Joe Rogan Experience.
Trained by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
I thought that was gonna do it live.
That will live in infamy.
It is the best clip because he's like a totally different person.
Well, it's what he really is.
But he really is.
Yeah, it's like the Ellen thing.
You know, it's like. I thing, you know, it's like...
I mean, he really did lose his shit there. Oh, it looks like weirdly, you know, was it like...
I got the Christian Bale one because like he's in character,
his intense scene, some guys fucking around in the background like,
God damn it, stop fucking around. I get that.
Yeah, yeah. Like he's in this he's in this frenzy of this intense scene.
But what is fucking?
Republican talking points on Fox News
It's when he's doing like gossip and stuff. Oh, that's right. He was a gossip guy
He was like an entertainment tonight type guy inside edition one of those deals inside. What it was. That's what it's called
Yeah, and fucking those things they never go away. It's um
It's so such a weird environment the the left and right there's no like centrist news source on television
There's no like this is probably what's going on news source
It's always one or the other and
it's like you're living in a bipolar person's brain. I think like part
of what's happened is we used to have news and you could make a good living in
news and you know journalists were really sort of the top of the social
hierarchy in some way shape or form because they were this check and balance. And then somewhere along the way
this business model focused people on clicks and nobody told the rest of the
world that the underlying incentives were going to change. And so that's where
you find yourself where there's very little news I think. There's a lot of
opinion. And then the problem with opinion is that feeds the outrage machine and that's the you know, the clickometer
The clickometer doesn't go high when you're like, hey guys, I studied this equation
There's a 50% chance of this
Nobody cares about that. It's either like it's totally, totally bad, or it's totally, totally good, because it just, it amps people up.
And that's a real bummer,
because I think like you don't know what to think anymore.
Well, it's also a completely novel new thing
that we weren't prepared for.
So before there was social media and online news,
no one was prepared for the world of the algorithm.
No one was prepared for being like literally everything that freaks you out
is what you'll be shown because that shows that you're engaging and that's
how it's set up for it which is just so contrary to the rest of history. I mean
it was always it bleeds it leads in the news because they wanted people, they wanted to win ratings news, but they only had
so much control and it was only on for an hour.
Exactly. And now it's just this 24-7 anxiety fest. It's omnipresent and it's
basically made to want, you know, to convince you that you need more of that
thing. Yeah. And the, it's like a bad diet.
You know, like the first few shots of it,
the first few bites of it tastes amazing.
But you know, if you eat the full toffee cake every day
for the next 365 days and then for the next year,
I mean, you're going to get diabetes.
You're going to get heart disease.
So the version of that is like your brain just
gets totally fried. And then the bigger problem is
and when you're presented with maybe it's not even the truth but an opinion that you should consider,
you get totally shut out of it. And that's like the real problem. You build these antibodies in
your body where this other version that says take a step back and reconsider, it's not allowed. Right. And
you know then if you said to yourself well how do you even start? Where do you
go? You know like if you're a friend of mine works at Facebook and he showed me
threads, we were playing poker last week and he showed me threads, and what's
incredible is like threads and X are like the exact polar opposites in some ways.
And he was showing me in the context of like how the outrage machine on threads works.
And the way it works is like, and this woman wrote this article about it.
But what they'll do is they'll post something that says, two plus two equals five.
Just that.
And you'll get like a million views and then it'll first start
with like you know folks that are like trying to gently nudge this person actually you know
I want you to reconsider to must actually equals four you know and then it builds and
it builds and it builds. And this that so there's this like this weird version of how
people react to like information and it tends to be kid gloves and then
people just lose their mind at some point. So it's kind of like and then over
here I think on X what you find is there's a lot more structural data but
then it can easily get lost in the noise because there's just a few things that
just constantly consume you know what the algorithms want to amplify and what
is important in the moment. And I think that finding a
way to like probably blend the two is probably what is the best in the sense
that there's probably some stuff over here that doesn't make it over here and
there's probably a lot of stuff over here that doesn't make it over here. A
little bit of that diet for everybody probably goes a long way. Is there heavy
content moderation on threads? I don't know. I don't use it.
I don't either. I don't have it. I just saw it in that moment. But when he described how
the the engagement farming works, it just sounded kind of like ludicrously, you know.
So to explain to people, two plus two equals five. If you just post that. Is a bizarre
thing that was going
around where they were talking about how math is racist. Exactly. Basically, that's where
it gets to, math is racist. Which is, oh no. If math is racist, we have a real problem.
Because that means everything's racist. Because everything's math. You know, we had this thing
in, I don't know if you saw this, in the Bay Area
in COVID, the city of San Francisco, you know, brought together their board of
education or whatever, and they eliminated a bunch of AP
classes, including like a bunch of AP math classes,
and part of it was because of this reason, because they felt it was
exclusionary. And I think what it misses is that
there's all this other stuff you could do
to kind of like even the starting line for folks.
But if you rip out things like AP math,
like take a step back,
like in 8 billion people in the world,
what are the odds that there's only literally one Steve Jobs,
or literally only one Elon Musk, meaning capable of that kind of execution? I suspect that there's
maybe two. And so like part of the human experience, like part of our social responsibility as adults is how do you make it so that
that second Steve Jobs can find a path to do stuff. Right. And I'm not saying AP
math is the answer, but I'm saying there are people that I remember when I was
growing up I wasn't particularly good at anything in school, but there were a few
subjects which I was just like, wow, like the
little time I spent in school I was like, I felt a little safe, you know, I could
connect. It built up a little bit of my self-confidence and I didn't feel so
marginal. I'm sure there's a lot of kids like that. For some very small subset
maybe that's what that kind of class is. It pushes them to a boundary that they
didn't know was possible. You're teaching them stuff, that's really cool.
So I understand what the intent is, but then the byproduct is there's a small group of
folks that get shut out and then that person that could be that Steve Jobs-like person,
that Elon Musk-like person is held a little bit back.
And I think that that hurts all of us.
So you got to find a way where we're doing just a little bit back. And I think that that hurts all of us. So you gotta find a way where
we're doing just a little bit better.
Well, isn't that the part of the problem with eliminating gifted classes? Right? There's talk,
I think they're doing that in New York. Is that where they're doing that? Find out if that's the case.
There's some where there's this hot controversy about
eliminating the concept of gifted classes. But the reality
is there's some people that are going to find regular classes, particularly mathematics
and some other things, they're going to find them a little too easy. They're more advanced.
They're more advanced students. And those students should have some sort of an option
to excel. And it should be inspiring, maybe intimidating, but also inspiring to everybody else.
I mean, that's part of the reason why kids go to school together.
Look how hard she works.
She works so much harder than me.
Look how much she's getting ahead.
Fuck, I gotta work harder.
And it really does work that way.
That's how human beings in cooperation, that's how they grow together.
And I think that it used to be the case that if you went to in high school.
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You would be really cool with people that were going to like specific high
schools to get really good at something. Remember like that show on TV fame? Yes.
Right? And so well that was more about the performing arts, right? Right. But that
was amazing. It's like you know if you knew a kid that was going to one of
those schools what you'd say is, wow you are incredibly talented in this one
specific thing. Go push the boundary of that and see what happens.
I think we owe it to ourselves to say that.
Yes.
Right?
There's 330 million Americans in the United States.
Don't you think that if we created
a bunch of different ways for people
to figure out what they're super good at, things are better, not worse?. Like what is the answer? Do you think things take a huge step back?
You know, you have more Joe Rogan's, you have more Kevin Hart's, you know, you have you
have more great actors, you have more great directors, but you also have more
engineers. You have more scientists, you have more doctors, and you created a way
for them to just go deep in something
where their curiosity took them.
That's okay.
What's wrong with that idea?
Just nothing wrong.
It sounds optimal.
It sounds pretty reasonable.
It sounds great.
It's just a matter of resources
and then also like completely revamping how you teach kids.
This is my gripe with this whole ADHD thing. You know, I've talked to many
people who have varying opinions on whether or not that's an actual condition or whether
or not there's a lot of people that have a lot of energy and you're sitting in a class
that's very boring and they don't want to pay attention to it. So instead, you drug
them and you give them medication that is essentially speed and lets them hyper focus
on things and now all of a sudden, little Timmy's locked on.
It was really just the medication that he needed.
I think for a lot of those kids, if they found something that was really interesting to them,
maybe they're really bored with this, but they're really excited by biology.
Maybe there's something that resonates with their particular personality and what excites them and
you know, they could find a pathway and
instead we have this very rigid system that wants to get children accustomed to the idea of sitting still
for an hour at a time over and over and over again throughout the day being subjected to people who you know aren't
necessarily that motivated or getting paid that well.
Well, we're gonna probably talk about AI today,
but let's just touch on this just in this one second.
We are going to create computers
that are able to do a lot of the rote thinking for us.
What that means is, I think,
the way that humans differentiate ourselves
is that we're gonna have to have judgment and taste.
Right, those are very defining psychological characteristics,
in my opinion.
But what that means is if you go back
to like how school is taught,
what you said is very
limiting for what the world is going to look like in 30 years.
You know, in 30 years where you have a PhD assistant that's in your pocket that can
literally do all of the memorization, spell checking, grammar, all of the fact recall
for you, teaching that today is probably not going to be as important as
interpreting it. Like how do you teach kids to learn to think, not to memorize
and regurgitate? So we have to flip, I think, this education system. We have to
try to figure out a different way to solve this problem because like you
can't set children, this generation up, our kids,
to go and have to compete with the computer. That's crazy. It's crazy.
That thing can make a Drake song in three minutes. The computer is going to win.
Yeah. So what can't the computer do is I think maybe a reasonable question and I
think the computer in a lot of cases, can't
express judgment. It'll learn. But today, it's not going to be able to the same
way that humans can. It's gonna have different taste, right? So the way that we
interpret things, the same way that you motivate people, like all the psychology,
all these things that are sort of like these softer skills that allow humans to
cooperate and like work together, that stuff becomes more important when you have a fleet of robots. And so if you
go all the way back to school, today the school system is unfortunately in a kind of a pretty
tough loop. Like look, teachers I think are like going to become the most,
you know, the top three or four important people in society. And the reason is because they are
going to be tasked with teaching your kids and my kids how to think, not to memorize. Don't tell me
what happened in the war of 1812. I don't like you can just you know use a
search engine or use a chat GPT and find out the answer. But why did it happen?
What were the motivations? If it happens again, what would you do differently or
the same? And those kinds of reasoning and judgment things I think we're still
far ahead of those computers. So the teachers have to teach that, which means
you have to pay them more, you have to put them in a position to do that job better. And
then back to what you said, you know, in my, I've lived this example of ADHD in my
family. I have five kids, one of the kids was diagnosed with it. And unfortunately,
what happens is the system a little bit closes in on you. So on the one side, they
give you a lot of benefits, I guess. I put it in quotes because you get these emails that say if
they want extra time, if they want this, if they want, you know, they'll give you
a computer, for example, to take notes so that you don't handwrite. So those feel
like aids to help you, right? But then on the other side, you know, one person was very adamant like, hey, you
want to medicate? And my ex-wife and I were just like, under no circumstances are
we medicating our child. That was a personal decision that we made with the
information that we had knowing that specific kid. All kids are different, so I
don't want to generalize. And then the crazy thing, Joe, what we did was we took the iPad out of the kids hand, and we said, you know, in
we had these very strict device rules, and then COVID turned everything upside
down, and you're just surviving. You're sheltering in place, five kids running
around, they're not really being, you know, taught by the schools. The schools
won't convene the kids. And so what do you do? You just hand them the device.
Everything was through the device. The little class they got, through the device.
The way that they would talk to their friends, through the device. So it
reintroduced itself in a way that we couldn't control. And then we saw this
slippage. And then what we did was we
just drew a bright red line and we said we're taking it out of your hands. No
more video games, no more iPad, we're gonna dose it in very small doses and he
had an entire turnaround. But then here's what happened. I took my eye off the ball
a little bit this summer because it was like he had a great year
He reset his self-confidence was coming back. I was like man
This is amazing and then I do the thing that you know, a lot of people would do I hear you can have an hour
I yeah, it's fine, you know talk to your friends, you know, and then it started again and then again now
We just had to reset so at least in our example what we have found
And I'm not it may not apply to everybody, but for us, him not being bathed in this
thing had a huge effect. Playing basketball outside, you know, rough
housing with his brothers, you know, having to talk to his friends, having to
talk to us, watching movies, you know, or we would just sit around because, by the way, what
I noticed was like my kids had a hard time watching movies or listening to
songs on Spotify for the full duration. They'd get to the hook and they'd be
like, Ford, next, and they'd be like, you know, they'd watch like eight minutes next.
And I was like, what are you guys doing?
Like, this is like, enjoy the fullness.
They couldn't even sit there for 3 and 1.5 minutes.
So what at least, you know, my son was learning
was to just chill a little bit.
Be there, be able to watch the show.
And these shows move at a glacial pace relative to what they're used to if they're playing a video bit. Be there, be able to watch the show. And these shows move at a glacial pace relative
to what they're used to if they're playing a video game. Or TikTok. Or TikTok. Yeah, because
TikTok, they're like this, boom, boom, boom, boom. And it's helped. It's not a cure. But it just goes
back to what you're saying, is like if you give parents options
and I heard this crazy stat I don't know if this is true if you take your devices
away from a kid the kid will feel isolated from their other students the
critical mass I don't know if this is true or not but it's what I was told so
I'll deal with it was that if you get a third
of the parents, so like in a class of 20,
if you get a third of the parents to agree as well,
no devices, the kid feels zero social isolation
because it becomes normative.
It's like, it's normal.
Yeah, you got a flip phone.
Yeah.
And you're texting like this to your parents
or you're calling, you know?
And I don't know, it may be worth trying. There was a crazy thing, I don't know if you can find this,
but there was a crazy thing, Eaton College, which is like the most elite, if you will,
private school in the UK. It's kind of where like all the prime ministers of the United
Kingdom have matriculated through Eaton College.
So it's like high school, fancy high school.
They sent a memo to the parents for the incoming class.
And the headmaster said,
when you get on campus with your child,
we're going to give you like what is basically
a Nokia flip phone.
You are going to take the SIM card
out of this kid's iPhone or
Android, you're gonna stick it in this thing, and this is how they're gonna
communicate with you, and communicate amongst each other while they're on
campus at E. Wow. Mandatory. Mandatory. I was, I thought this was incredible. I
don't know what the impact is, but that's but that takes a lot of courage, and I thought that's amazing.
Well, it's great because then if they're communicating, they're only communicating.
They're not sharing things or Snapchatting each other back and forth, and the addictive
qualities of these phones, which is if you think about the course of human evolution and you think of how we adapted to
agriculture and civilization and we essentially became softer and less muscular and less aggressive like
That took a long time a long time. That was a long time. This thing is hitting us so quickly and
one of the bizarre things is it creates a
And one of the bizarre things is it creates a disconnection. Even though you're being connected to people consistently and constantly through social
media, there's a disconnection between human beings and normal behavior and learning through
interaction with each other, social cues, all the different things that we rely on to
learn how to be a friend and to learn how to be better at talking to each other, social cues, all the different things that we rely on to learn how to
be a friend and to learn how to be better at talking to each other. I have a rule with my
with my oldest who's 15. He'll call me, he'll call me or even when I call him.
him. It's like this like it's like a grunt greeting. Right. They don't know how to talk anymore.
And I'm like hello. And so I went through this thing where like I would just hang up
and I'm like you know beep hang up and then he would just hang up. And I'm like, you know, beep, hang up. And then he would call me back, huh? And then finally I said, I just want you to have these
building blocks, they may sound really stupid
to you right now, but looking people in the eye,
being able to have a normal conversation and be patient in that conversation is going to be really valuable for you.
People will really be connected to you.
You may not feel that and you may think this is like lame and stupid what I'm telling you, but I was like, just try to just try to do it.
try to just try to do it. And then what's so funny is like, I would tell this story about like, you know, our kids go to like, you know, very well-meaning private
school, right? And I almost think like sometimes like, again, we're not teaching
necessarily kids to think for themselves. We're asking them to memorize a bunch of
things. And one of the things that I worry
that we've taught our kids to memorize are like the fake greetings and salutations. So on the one
end you have what's really visceral, which is, oh. And then on the other hand, you know, sometimes
you'll see these kids and they'll get introduced somebody, hello, how are you? It's great to meet
you. And I'm like, man, this is the most,
this is the fakest thing I've ever seen.
So you're at these two ends of the spectrum.
And I would make fun of my kids sometimes
because like, you know, they would say thank you,
but they would say like, thank you like the queen.
They'd be like, thank you.
And I'm like, what are you doing?
Who taught you that?
And I thought, you were taught at school
to say thank you like that? You could just say thank you. Thanks Who taught you that? And I thought you were taught at school to say thank you like that?
You could just say thank you.
Right.
Thanks, I appreciate that.
Just look somebody in the eye, thank you.
But what concerns me is as this tech gets more
and more invasive in terms of how human beings,
particularly children, interface with it,
and as it gets, I mean, really we would just be guessing
as to what comes out of AI and to what kind
of world we're even looking at in 20 years.
It seems like it's having a profound effect on the behavior of human beings, particularly
young human beings and their developmental.
How old are you?
I'm 48.
I'm 57.
So when I grew up, there was zero of this, and I got this slow trickle through adulthood
from when I was a child, VHS tapes, and answering machines through the big tech.
Yeah, you had the rotary phone.
Yes.
Yeah, exactly.
So we went through the whole cycle of it, which is really interesting.
So you get to see this profound change in people and what it's doing to kids.
And you've got to wonder, like, what is that
doing to the species? And is that going to be normal? Is it going to be normal to be
emotionally disconnected and, like, very bizarre in our person-to-person interface?
I think that when technologies get going, you have this little burst,
it's like these Cambrian moments,
you get these little bursts
which are overwhelmingly positive.
Like I don't know what your reaction was,
but my reaction when I first saw the iPhone,
I was blown away.
And I think the first four or five years
was entirely positive,
because it was just
so novel.
Like you took this big computer and we effectively shrunk it to this little computer, made it
half to a third of the cost, and lo and behold, supply-demand, just the number of computers
tripled and quadrupled and quintupled and so many more people were able to be a part
of that economic cycle, all positive.
Then you get a little dip, and the little dip is when I think we lose a little bit of
the ambition of that first moment, and we get caught up in the economics of the current
moment.
And what I mean by that is, you know, the last five or 10 years, I think why you feel this viscerally is
we haven't had a big leap forward
from the iPhone of really 2014, 15.
And I'm not picking on the iPhone,
I'm just like a mobile device.
So what have you had over the last 10 years?
You've had an enormous amount of money get created
by an enormous number of apps.
And the problem is that they are in a cul-de-sac.
And so they'll just iterate in this one way that they understand
because the money is really good, quite honestly.
And the incentives of the capital markets will tell you to just keep doing that.
But then I think what happens is something shocks us out of it,
and then we get the second wave. So if you go all
the way back to look at like the PC, the first moment of the PC in the 70s and
the early 80s was incredible. You had these people that you know were able to
take it and do all kinds of really interesting things. It was it was pure.
Then you had sort of like the 90s and the early 2000s and what was it? It was
duopolistic at best, Microsoft and Intel. And what they were able to do was
extract a huge tax by putting all of these things on folks' desks. And it was
still mostly positive, but it was somewhat limited because most of the
spoils went to these two companies and all the other companies
basically got a little bit run over.
And then it took the DOJ to step in in 2000
and try to course correct that
on behalf of everybody basically.
And then what happened was the internet just exploded.
And the internet blew the doors wide open.
And all of a sudden, if you had a PC,
you didn't have these gatekeepers.
It actually didn't even matter whether you were running on Intel anymore. You just needed
a browser. So you didn't need Microsoft Windows, right? And you didn't need Intel. And then
just the internet just explodes. So we have a positive moment followed by you know call it 10 or 15 years of basically
economic extraction and then we have value. I think today it's like we've
invented something really powerful. We've had 10 or 15 years that were largely
economic and again I think you know this is like the problem I'm going to sound
like every other you other nerd from Central
Casting from Silicon Valley telling you this.
But I do think that there is a version of this AI thing which
blows the doors wide open again.
And I think we owe it to ourselves
to figure out how to make that more likely than not likely.
Well, it seems it's inevitable, right?
AI's emergence and where it goes from here on is inevitable, it's gonna happen.
And we should probably try to steer it at least
in a way that benefits everybody.
And I agree with you, there is a world I could see
where AI changes everything.
And one of the things that makes me most hopeful
is a much better form of translation
so that we'll be able to understand each other better.
Totally.
It's a giant part of the problem in the world.
It's the Tower of Babel.
So we really can't communicate with each other very well.
So we really don't know what the problems are
in these particular areas, or how people feel about us,
how we feel about them.
Can't empathize?
Yeah, we can't.
And it's very easy to not empathize with someone where you can't even you don't even know what have you
Letters have you been in a like a situation where you have a translator with the thing in your ear?
No empathy zero because the problem is you you you the person there is giving it to you in a certain tone
Because it's first person. Oh, I've have that yeah, and then I'm gonna interview fighters. I've got translators
Yeah, but like when you're here, it's very hard to feel empathy for this person,
because it's this person that you're focused on, because you're trying to catch it.
So you hear the words, I think somewhat of the meaning is a little bit lost.
Then you go back to this person and you say something and they're in the same problem that you are.
So I agree that the translation thing is cool.
I think that there are, there's so, like there's just so, there's going to be some negative areas. And I think that there's
going to be a lot of pressure on certain jobs and we got to figure that out. So it's not
all roses. But some areas, if you imagine them, I'll give you a couple if you want,
are just bananas. I think.
Okay.
Okay. So I'll go from the most just bananas. I think. Okay. Okay, so I'll go
from the most likely to like the craziest. Okay. Okay, so most likely today,
do you know if if you know somebody that's had breast cancer, if they go into
a doctor, a hospital, a random hospital in America, and the doctor says we need to
do a lumpectomy, meaning we need to take some mass out of your breast to take the cancer out. What do you think the error
rate today is across all hospitals in America? It's about 30%. Wow. And in
regional hospitals, so places that are poor, right, or places that are in far
flung parts of the United States, it can be upwards of 40%. This is not the doctor's fault, okay? The problem is that you're forcing him or her to look with
their eyes into tissue and try to figure out, well, where is the border where the cancer stops? So,
for every 10 surgeries, what that means are a
week later, so imagine this, you get a breast cancer surgery, they take it out,
they send it to the pathologist, the pathologist takes between 7 and 11
days. So you're kind of waiting. Seven of the calls come back, your clean margins,
you're great. Now go to the next step. Three of the calls, I'm
sorry there's still cancer inside your body. Three. So these women now go back
for the next surgery. But the problem is one of those women will get another
call that says, I'm sorry there's still cancer. And so what is that? That's a
computer vision problem, right? That's not a, that's not necessarily a problem that can't not be solved literally today.
We have models, we have tissue samples of women of all ages, of all races, right?
So you have all of the different boundary conditions you'd need to basically get
to a 0% error rate. And what's amazing is that is now working its way through the FDA. So call it
within the next two years, there'll be an AI assistant that sits inside of an operating room.
The surgeon will take out what they think is appropriate. They'll put it into this machine,
and it'll literally, I'm going to simplify, but it'll flash red or green.
You got all the cancer out.
You need to take out a little bit more,
just right over here.
And now you get it out and now all of a sudden,
instead of a 30% error rate, you have a 0% error rate.
That's amazing.
That's today because you have this computer
that's able to help you and
All we need is the will and the data that says
Okay, we want to do this just show me that it works and
Show me what the alternative would be if we didn't do it and the alternative turns out to be pretty brutal
14 surgeries for every 10 surgery like I mean that's like that's not what the most advanced nation in the world should be doing.
Right. Okay, so if you do it for breast cancer,
the reason why breast cancer is where folks are focusing is because it gets so much attention
and it's like prime time. But it's not just breast cancer, lung cancer, pancreatic cancer, stomach cancer, colon cancer. If you look at any
kind of tumor, so if you're at the stage where you're like we need to get this
thing, this foreign growing thing out of our body, we should all have the ability
to just do that with zero percent error and it will be possible in the next
couple of years because of AI. Okay, so that's kind of like a, that's cool and
it's coming. I think between years two and years five, you're gonna see this
crazy explosion in materials, and this is gonna sound maybe dumb, but it's, I think
it's one of the coolest things.
If you look at the periodic table of elements, what's amazing is like we keep adding.
So there's like 118 elements.
We actually just theoretically forecasted there's going to be 119, so we created a little
box.
It's going to be, it's like, it's theoretical, but it's going to show up.
And they forecasted that there's going to be 142. Okay? So the periodic table of elements
quote-unquote grows. But when you look at the lived world today, we live in this
very narrow expression of all of those things. We use the same few materials
over and over and over again. But if you had to solve a really complicated problem, don't you think the answer could
theoretically be in this? Meaning if you took, I'm gonna make it up, selenium and
then doped it with titanium 1%, but if you doped it with boron 14%, all of these
things are possible. It's like stronger than this strongest thing in the world and wow and it's lighter than anything
So now you can make rockets with it and send it all the way up with less energy. It's all possible
So why haven't we figured it out?
Because the amount of energy and the amount of computers we need to solve those problems which are super complicated
Haven't been available to us. I think that is
this next phase of AI. So what you said, which is we're going to have these PhD level robots and
agents in the next two to five years, we're going to come up with all kinds of materials.
You know, you'll have a frying pan that's like nonstick, but doesn't have to heat up like,
oh, you know, whatever you want from like the most benign to the most incredible stuff we'll just re-engineer
what's on earth that's gonna be crazy it's gonna be incredible we all benefit
from that the kinds of jobs that that creates we don't even know what job
class that is to work with selenium and boron. I'm just, again, I'm making up these elements, so please don't. So the point is that there's, so that's like in the, in the middle phase. So our
physical lived world is going to totally transform. Imagine a building that's made of a material that
bends. It can just go like this and nothing changes to it. Why would that be important? Well, if you want to protect yourself from, you know, the crazy unpredictability of climate,
in the areas where it's susceptible to that, maybe you need, you can construct these things
much cheaper. Well, earthquakes. Earthquakes. You could construct more of them. Imagine in San
Francisco, you could build buildings that solve the housing crisis, but do it in a way that was
cheaper because the materials are totally different and you could just buildings that solve the housing crisis but do it in a way that was cheaper because the materials are totally different and you could just
prove that these things are bulletproof. So instead of spending a billion dollars
to build a building because you got to go you know hundreds of feet into the
earth you know the earth you just go 50 feet and it just figures it out. So
that's like so that's possible and I think there will be people that use these AI models to go and solve those things.
And then after that, I think you get into the world of it's not just robots that are in a computer, but it's like a physical robot.
And those physical robots are going to do things that today will make so much sense in hindsight.
So an example, I was thinking about this this weekend. Imagine if you had a bunch of optimists like
Tesla's robot and they were the beat cops. They were the highway patrol. Okay.
Now what happens there? Well first you don't put humans in the way. I suspect then the
reaction of those robots could be markedly different. Now those robots
would be controlled remotely, right? So the people that are remote now can be a
very different archetype, right? Instead of the physical requirements of policing,
you now add this other layer, which is the psychological elements and the
judgment.
And so my point is that if you had robots that were able to do the dangerous work for humans,
I think it allows humans to do again, judgment, you know, those areas of judgment, which are very
gray and fuzzy, it'll take a long time for computers to be able to replace us to do that. I really do think so
I think the biggest thing that we
Have done as a disservice to what is coming is
some folks have tried to say that AI is the end-all and be-all and I think the better way to think about this is that
You know how like you used to have to
Get your spelling right in an
email and now you just don't think about it because like Gmail just fixes it.
It up levels us, right? You used to have to remember the details of like some
crazy theory, random detail fact, now you can just Google it. So you can leave
your mind to focus on other things, right? The creativity to write
your next, you know, to write your next set, to think about the next interview, to
think about your business, because you're occupying less time with the perfunctory
stuff. I think these models are doing that and they're gonna get
complemented with physical models, meaning physical robots, and they're going to get complemented with physical models, meaning physical robots.
And they're going to do a lot of work for us that we have not done, or today that we do very precariously.
You know, like, should a robot go in and save you from a fire? I think it can probably do a pretty good job.
They'll have multiple sensors, they'll have vision, they'll be able to understand exactly what's going on.
If something is falling, they'll just be able to put their hands up
and just like, you know what I mean? Like if they encounter any person of any
body weight, it's no problem. Pick that person up, transport them. Again, it allows
humans to focus on the things that we're really, really differentiated at. I do think it creates
complications but you know we have to figure those out. So that's like a kind
of like a short medium long term. Well I see what you're saying in the final
example as the rosy scenario. That's the best-case option right? That it gives
people the freedom to be more creative and to pursue different things. And
I think there's always going to be a market for handmade things. People like things that like,
they like, they like an acoustic performance. They like stuff where it's like very human and
very real. But there's a lot of people that just want a job, and these people maybe just aren't
inclined towards creativity.
And maybe they're very simple people who just want a job,
and they just want to work.
Those are the people that I worry about.
I worry about them as well.
And I think that, like, I didn't live in the agrarian economy
nor in the Industrial Revolution.
So I don't know how we solved this problem. But we have seen that problem two times. And each time we found a way. And this
goes back to sort of like news and politics and like just working together. But in each of those
moments we found a way to make things substantively better for all people.
Like I saw this crazy stat in 1800, do you know how many people lived in extreme
poverty? How many? 80%. Whoa. You know where we are today? Sub 10%. Single
digits. And it's a straight line that goes like this and that was through an
agrarian revolution, it was through the industrial revolution. So it is
possible for humans to cooperate to solve these problems. I don't know what the answer is but I
do think you are right that it will put a lot of pressure on a lot of people. But that's why we
got to just figure this out. What are your thoughts on universal basic income as a band-aid to sort of mitigate that transition. I'm
pretty sympathetic to that idea. I grew up on welfare. So what I can tell you is
that there are a lot of people who are trying their best and for whatever set
of boundary conditions can't figure it out. I agree. I grew up on welfare as well.
Yeah. Yeah.
And so if I didn't have that safety net, you know, my, my parents' struggles,
I think would have gotten even worse than what they were.
Right.
So I'm a believer in that social safety net.
I think it's really important.
Best case scenario, right? Because your parents worked their way out of it, my parents
worked their way out of it, but some people are just content to just get a check. And
this is the issue I think that a lot of people have, is that people will become entitled
and just want to collect a check. And if it's a substantial portion of our country, like if universal basic income,
if AI eliminates, let's just say a crazy number, like 70% of the manual labor jobs, truck drivers,
construction workers, all that stuff gets eliminated. That's a lot of people without a purpose.
And one of the things that a good day's work and earning your pay, it makes people feel
self-sufficient. It makes people feel valuable.
It gives them a sense of purpose. You know, they could look at the thing that they did,
maybe build a building or something like that, and drive their kids by, hey, we built that building right there.
Oh, wow. It's a part of their identity.
And if they just get a check, and then what do they do? Just play video games all day?
That's the worst-case scenario, is that people just get locked into this world of computers and online and
Just receive checks and have the bare necessities to survive and are content with that and then don't contribute at all the
The jobs that like let's let's put it this way, if we were sitting here in 1924,
whatever, a hundred years ago, you know, right in the midst of the turn of the
Industrial Revolution, we would have seen a lot of folks that worked on farms and
we would have wondered, well where are those jobs going to come from?
And I think that now when you look back, it was like not obvious, but you could see where the new job classes came from.
It's like all of these industries that were possible because we built a factory and a factory turned out to be a substrate. And then you built all
these different kinds of businesses which created different kinds of jobs on top of
it. I would hope that if we do this right, this next leap is like that, where we are
in a period where it's hard to know with certainty what this job class goes to over here. But I think you have a responsibility to go and figure
it out and talk it out and play it out. Because the past would tell you that we have a really good
humans when they're unimpeded have a really good ability to invent these things. So I don't know, maybe what it is, is by 2035,
there's a billion people that have traveled to Mars. And you're building an entire planet
from the ground up. There'll be all sorts of work to do there.
Boy, what kind of people are going to go first there?
I think that there'll be a lot of people that are frustrated with what's happening here.
Yeah, sure.
Just like the people that got on the Pinta, the Santa Maria, and made their way across
the ocean.
It all starts with a group of people that are just like, I'm fed up with this.
Yeah.
But to want to go to a place that doesn't even have an atmosphere that's capable of sustaining
human life and to try to figure, and you can only go back every couple of years, like,
those people are going to be psychos. You're going to have a completely psychotic, it's
Australia on meth, you know, it's like the worst case scenario of the cast outs of society. Just like what you say is, it's so true, but like if you think about what that decision
looked like 400 years ago when that first group of prisoners were put on a boat and
sent to Australia, that's probably what it felt like.
Most people on the mainland when they were like, cha-chao, were, were probably thinking, man, this is insane. Right. So it'll always look like
that. It'll be easier to rationalize it in hindsight, but I do think that there
will be a lot of people that want to go when it's possible to go. And like, look,
you know, we're in the studio. We could be anywhere. We could be in Salt Lake City, right? We could be in Rome,
right? We could be in Perth. You don't know. It's all the same. Especially today. So you could be on
Mars. Yeah, you could. You wouldn't know. Yeah, you know. That could be the future, you know,
instantaneous communication with people on other planets, just like you could talk to people in New Zealand today. So that's an amazing example of an innovation in material science that we have been experimenting
with for years. So basically at the core of what you just said is a semiconductor problem. It's a
doping problem. Is it silicon germanium? Is it silicon germanium with something
else? And the problem, Joe, is to answer what you just said is a tractable problem that
has been bounded by energy and computers. And we're at a point where we're almost at
infinite energy and at a point we're almost at
like what I say is very specific which is we're at the point where right in the
distance is the marginal cost of energy is basically zero. The marginal cost
meaning to generate the next kilowatt is gonna cost like sub a penny. Even with
today's stuff you don't need nuclear you don't need any of that stuff. We're just on this trend line right now. And because of
AI, we're at the point where to get an answer to a question, super complicated,
is going to be basically zero. The cost of that. When you put those two things
together, what you just said, we will be in a position to answer. The world will
be able to say,
oh Joe, you want instantaneous communication between here and Mars? We need to harden these
communication chips. We're going to build it with this stuff, which we simulated on a computer.
We made it. It works. It's shipping. We're done. Now that will still take five and ten years to do,
but my point is all these things that sound crazy are not. They're actually not that crazy.
These things are like achievable technical milestones. Everything will
boil down to a technical question that I think we can answer. You want a hoverboard?
We could probably figure it out. Well then also with quantum computing and one
of the things about AI that's been talked about is
this massive need for energy.
And so they're going, at least it's been proposed, to develop nuclear sites specifically to power
AI, which is wild.
Yeah, I have to be...
You got to dance around this?
No, I'll tell you what I think. You got to dance around this?
No I'll tell you what I think.
Okay, well, maybe before I give you my opinion, can we, I'll tell you the facts.
Today it costs about four cents a kilowatt hour.
Just don't forget the units, just remember the four cents concept.
Twenty years ago, it cost like six or seven cents.
If you go and get solar panels on your roof, basically cost nothing.
In fact, you can probably make money.
So it cost you like negative one cent because you can sell the energy in many parts of America
back to the grid.
But if you look inside the energy market, the cost has been compounding.
And you would say, well, how does this make sense?
If the generation cost keeps falling, why is my end user cost keep going up?
This is like, this doesn't make any sense. And when you look inside, we have a regulatory
burden in America that says to the utilities of which there are like less than 2,000 in
America, we're giving you a monopoly effectively. In this area of Austin, you can provide all the energy. Now Texas
is different, but I'm just using it as an example. But in return, I'm going to allow
you to increase prices, but I'm going to demand that you improve the infrastructure. Every
few years, you've got to upgrade the grid. You've got to put money into this, money into
that. Over the next 10 years, we've got to put a trillion dollars, America collectively, into improving the current grid, which I think will not be enough,
because it is aging, and most importantly, it's insecure. Meaning folks can penetrate that, folks
can hack it, folks can do all kinds of stuff. So and then it fails in critical moments. I think that you know in Austin you had like a whole
bunch of like really crazy outages in the last couple of years. People died
like this is in 2024 that's like totally unacceptable. So I think as like people
decide that they want resilience,
you're going to see 110 million power plants,
which is every homeowner in the United States.
Everybody's going to generate their own energy.
Everybody's going to store their energy in a power wall.
This stuff is going to become, I mean, absolutely dirt cheap.
And it'll just be the way that energy is generated.
So you have this, but this is not the whole solution,
because you still need the big guys to show up.
When you look inside of the big guys,
so now you're talking about these 2,000 utilities that
need to spend trillions of dollars,
they can do a lot of stuff right
now to make enough energy to make things work. But when you look at nuclear, I would just
say that there are two different kinds of nuclear. There's the old and the new. The
old stuff, I agree with you, it's just money and you can get it turned back on. It's a specific isotope of uranium, you can deal with it.
Everybody knows in that world how to manage that safely.
But then what you have are like these next generation things.
And this is where I get a little stuck.
And I'm not smart enough to know all of it, but I'm close enough to be slightly ticked
off by it.
Which is, there's a materials and a technical problem with these
things and what I mean back to materials. Some of these next-gen reactors need a material that
will take you like 50 years in the United, in America, in the world to like harvest an ounce.
The only place where you can really get it is the moon in sufficient quantity. Are you really gonna, what I mean, that's how it's gonna
work? Like you're gonna go to the moon, you're gonna go to the moon, you're gonna
harness this material, then you know schlep it all the way back to some
place in Illinois to make some. I find that hard to believe. What is the
material? I can find it, it's in an email that one of my folks sent me.
But it's like, it's a certain
form of reactor that uses a very rare
material to create the plasmonic energy that can generate all of this stuff, and it's just very hard to find on Earth.
So I kind of scratch my head. What's the benefit of this particular type of new reactor enormous energy?
So like you know a solar cell gets this much energy
You know a nuclear reactor does this and like this other thing does that and it's super clean and mmm
So my point is like these next-gen reactors. I think have some pretty profound technical problems that haven't been figured out
I applaud the people
That are going after it, but
I think it's important to not oversell that because it's super hard and there's
still some profound technical challenges that haven't been solved yet. You know, we
just got past what's called like, you know, positive net energy, meaning, you know, let's just like,
you put, I'm making up a number, you know, 100 units of energy in, and at least you try to get out like 100.01. And we're kind of there. So that's where we are on these next gen reactors,
the old generation of reactors, I'm a total total believer in and we should be building these things as fast as possible so
that we have an infinite amount of energy. By the way if you have infinite
energy you know the most important thing I think that happens is you have a
massive peace dividend. There's like the odds of the United States going to war
when we have infinite energy approaches zero.
But isn't the problem with introducing this to other countries, and I believe it was India
where they introduced nuclear power plants, then they realized very quickly they could
figure out how to make nuclear weapons from that.
Yes.
When the uranium degrades, it can be used in weapons-grade uranium.
And the real problem would be if that is not a small handful of countries that have nuclear weapons
but the entire world it could get very sketchy.
I think you're you're touching what I think objectively to me
is the single biggest threat facing all of us today.
I escaped a civil war.
So I've had a lived experience of how destructive war can be.
The collateral damage of war is terrible.
Where were you? In Sri Lanka. And you know, it was a, I was part of the ethnic
majority, Sinhalese Buddhist. But you know, we were, they were fighting Hindu Tamil
minority. And it was a 20-year civil war. It flipped the whole country upside down from an incredible place with 99% literacy to just a, you know, a struggling developing third world country.
And so we moved to Canada. We stay in Canada. You know, my parents do whatever they could. They really, and they got run over by that war they went from a solidly middle-class life to my father you know it had a ton
of you know just alcoholism and didn't really work and my mother went from
being a nurse to being a housekeeper and it was dysfunctional it really crippled
I think their dreams for themselves and you know, they breed that into their kids. Fine.
But that can't be the solution where hundreds of millions or billions of people have to deal with that risk.
And I am objectively afraid that we have lost the script a little bit.
I think that folks don't really understand how destructive war can be, but also that
there are not enough people objectively afraid of this. And that's what sends my
Spidey senses up and says, hold on a second, when everybody is telling you
that this is off the table and not possible, shouldn't you just look at like
the world around and ask are we sure
that that's true? And I come and I think to myself, wow we are at you know the
biggest risk of my lifetime. And I think the only thing that that is probably
near this is maybe at some point in the Cold War, I don't know because I was so
young, definitely you know Bay of Pigs. but it required JFK to draw a hard line in the sand and say
absolutely not. So will we be that fortunate this time around? Are we going
to find a way to eliminate that existential risk? This is why, like, my my
current sort of like vein of political
philosophy is mostly that which is like you know the Democrats and the
Republicans there's just so much fighting over so many small-stakes issues
in the sense that some of these issues matter more or less in different points
but there is one issue above all which
where if you get it wrong nothing matters and that is nuclear war and you
have two and a half nuclear powers now that are out and about extending and
projecting their power into the world Russia Russia, China, and Iran. That wasn't what
it was like 10 years ago. That wasn't what it was like 25 years ago. It wasn't
even what it was like four years ago. I just don't think enough people take a
step back and say, hold on a second, if this thing escalates, all this stuff that
you and I just talked about won't matter. Whether, you know,
our kids are on Adderall or not or the iPad, don't give them so much Fortnite or, you know,
material science or, you know, optimists and go, it's all off the table because we will
be destroying ourselves. And I just think that that's tragic. We have an enormous responsibility right now
for the village elders of the world to tell people, guys, we are sleepwalking into something
that you can't walk back from.
One of the strangest things about us is the kind of wisdom that's necessary to sort of
see the future and prognosticate and see where this could
go especially based on the history of human beings and how many times things have, like
you were talking about Sri Lanka, but there's many examples all over the world of civilizations
that were thriving, that were pounded into dust.
And because every day is similar for us, we have this inability to look forward and to
make that leap and see the potential for disaster that all these things have.
And this is what freaks me out about when people talk openly about, you know, we have
to win with Russia versus Ukraine.
What are you talking about?
What is winning? Yeah. What are you talking about? What is winning?
Yeah.
What does that mean?
This sounds insane.
And then applauding the long range attacks into Russia now, and this escalation.
Oh, they're attacking Russia now.
They'll show them.
Are you in a movie?
Do you think that this always ends up with the good guys winning?
Because that's not the case in human history
At all and not only that there is no good guys people start launching nukes. Everybody's a bad guy and everybody's fucked
Yeah, and that's on the table. It's not when you see long-range
Israel bombing campaigns in the Lebanon and you see what's going on with Ukraine and Russia like who knows?
Who knows how this escalates?
Who knows what the retaliatory response is? Who knows what the response to the response
is?
Well, I think, I think, like, let me add to this by saying, we know what the response
will be not. It will not be measured. It will not be calm. It will not be, hey, let's get
on the phone and talk about it.
Right. It will not be calm. It will not be hey, let's get on the phone and talk about it, right? like the thing is there was a long period of time where
You know America was the leading moral actor in the world, right?
And I think that we spoke from a place of wisdom, but also like earned respect
But we forget that at the end of the Cold War
It's not that we vanquished the USSR as much as they imploded from within.
Right? It was just an economic calamity. They just couldn't afford to keep up with us.
And the reason was we had these two edges. Right? We had a technological edge and we had an economic edge.
And when you put those two things together,
it created a lot of abundance.
Now, we can talk about how some of that is not equal,
which I also agree with,
but it allowed America to be sort of effectively
for a long period of time the top dog.
The honest reality is that's not where we are today. We are one of two or three.
And the problem with that is that you can't look back in history and try to live your life like
what it was like in the good old days. You know, we're not the high school football star anymore.
So we need to live in a more modest way, in a more reliable and consistent way,
with neighbors that have also for themselves done well, and just realize
that they have their own incentives. And when you tell them to do something,
they're not always going to listen. So if we don't understand that and find a way
to de-escalate these things,
what you said is going to happen. Something is going to be one step too far,
a reaction, a reaction, a reaction, and then eventually somebody will overreact.
And that is all just so totally avoidable.
And it just frustrates me that we objectively don't understand
that we sweep it under the carpet, and we talk about all the other things. And I understand that
some of those things, all of those things, let's say, matter. But at some point in time,
nothing matters. Because if you don't get this right, nothing matters.
And I think we have to find a way of finding people that draw a bright red line and say,
this is the line I will never cross under any circumstance.
And I think America needs to do that first, because it's what gives everybody else the
ability to exit stage left and be okay with it? The other problem that America clearly has is that there are, there's an enormous portion
of what controls the government, whether you want to call it the military industrial complex
or military contractors, there's so much money to be made in pushing that line, pushing it
to the brink of destruction but not past,
maintaining a constant state of war but not an apocalypse.
And that as long as there's financial incentives to keep escalating and you're still getting
money and they're still signing off on hundreds of billions of dollars to funnel this and
it's all going through these military contractors and
bringing over weapons and gear and the the windfall is huge the amount of money is huge and they do not want to shut that
Off for the sake of humanity, especially if someone can rationalize
You get this diffusion of responsibility when there's a whole bunch of people together and they're all talking about it
Everyone's kind of on the same page and you have
Shareholders that you have to, like the whole thing is bananas.
So I think you just said the key thing, this may be super naive, but I think part of the
most salvageable feature of the military industrial complex is that these are for-profit, largely public companies that have shareholders.
And I think that if you nudge them to making things that are equally economically valuable,
or more, ideally more, they probably would do that.
What would be an example of that other than weapons manufacturing?
What would be equally economically viable?
So part of when you look at the primes, the five big folks that get all of the economic
activity from the Department of Defense. What they act is as an
organizing principle for a bunch of subs underneath, effectively. They're like a
general contractor and then you know they have a bunch of subcontractors.
There's a bunch of stuff that's happening in these things that you can
reorient if you had an economy that could support it. So for example, when you build a drone, okay, what you
also are building a subcomponent, a critical and very valued subcomponent, all the navigation,
all the communications, all of it has to be encrypted, you can't hack it, you can't do any
of that stuff. There is a broad set of commercial applications for that that are equal to
and greater than just the profit margin of selling the drone, but they
don't really explore those markets. If, for example, we are multi-planetary, I'll
just go back to that example, I will bet you those same organizations will make
two or three times as much money by
being able to redirect that same technology into those systems that you
just described. Hey, I need an entire communications infrastructure that goes
from Earth to the moon to Mars. We need to be able to triangulate. We need
internet access across all these endpoints. We need to be real-time from
the get-go. There's just
an enormous amount of economic value to do that. So again, we have these very
siloed parts of the economy that are limited by what we know. And what we know
is part of what you just said, which is we built these things and then some
people convince others to use the things that we built. And I think instead of saying like there's like some crazy nefarious plot to always go to war,
instead if we say if you make the thing and you could sell it to a different
market and make more money, would these people do it or are they hell-bent on
war? I think it's more that they would just do it. As long as there's not still
a business for war. So then it reduces war to a very different
kind of business. I think it's smaller. I think it's more kind of drone oriented. I'm not saying
that war will not will go away. I'm not there's no utopia where war goes away. But I goes away. Which is a crazy thing to say, really.
Unfortunately, I think that we're always going to be fighting for some resource. So the last
30 or 40 years, all these forever wars, we were fighting over energy, effectively.
This is my one bright spot that I think about with AI as well. It's like everyone's terrified
of the open border situation
and criminals coming across the border and wouldn't the solution be not have a
place like a desperate third world country where people are trying to
escape on foot with their families? If we were living next door to another United
States and you could just travel freely back and forth between the two
of them because it really didn't matter. Both of them are equally safe, both of them have equal
economic prosperity, both of them are you know equally democratically governed, no problem.
Yeah. Go over there, go over here. I mean it kind of used to be like that with Canada.
You know with Canada you used to go over there with a driver's license. You used to be able to
go back and forth between the United States.
I think the first time I went to Canada, I did not have a passport.
I had a driver's license.
It was kind of the same sort of deal.
It was just accepted.
Oh, that place is cool.
We're cool.
We're next to each other.
If the whole world was like that.
It would be incredible.
Right.
It would be incredible.
I think AI makes that possible.
I think so too.
I think it makes that possible.
We're going to have to deal with a few very uncomfortable factors, one of them being
the illegal drug trade and another one being the consequences of prohibition
and forcing people into... Prohibition of drugs? Of drugs, yes, which is I'm not
comfortable with that but I feel like the only way to disempower
illegal drug manufacturing is to have legal drug manufacturing that's regulated. The only
way to stop fentanyl overdoses is to have cocaine become legal. But the problem with
that is you get a bunch of people that are addicted to cocaine.
Well, so can I ask you a question? I don't do drugs, so I don't understand, but what's the
step before it? Like what causes you to want to do fentanyl?
They don't do fentanyl on purpose.
Okay. They start it because of a prescription?
No. Most fentanyl overdoses is fentanyl that's cut into other drugs, particularly party drugs
like molly and ecstasy, cocaine, even heroin, things along those lines where
people think that they're getting a pure thing, but they're getting it from the cartel and
you know.
It's laced with this.
Yes.
It's cheap and it's very small amounts of fentanyl do incredible damage.
Like the amount of fentanyl that can kill you is like the head of a nail.
It's very small.
Have you seen it in relationship to a penny?
I saw, I've seen a picture of it, yeah. It's like the head of a nail. It's very small. Have you seen it in relationship to a penny? I saw, I've seen a picture of it, yeah.
It's crazy.
So the problem is if you have a drug and you've cut it with a bunch of other things because
you want to sell as much of it as possible, you add a bunch of things into it and it increase
the potency, they add fentanyl.
And because that, it's all done illegally, it's unregulated, so a lot of people die.
And the numbers in the United States, I think they're upwards of 100,000 people.
Is there something to do to motivate folks to not do the party drugs?
Well, I think you're going to have to have a massive education campaign and people are
going to have to understand it the same way they understand cigarettes. Cigarettes, smoking,
and young people is down quite a bit from the 80s, right?
And I think that's because of people understanding the consequences of it, but you're always
going to have people that want to smoke cigarettes.
And my belief is that they should be able to smoke cigarettes.
I don't think you should do Adderall all day, but if you get a prescription, you can do
it.
But at least in my mind, you're getting Adderall from a pharmacy and that pharmacy is going to give you actual Adderall and not some
fentanyl-laced thing that's gonna kill you and
You have no idea you think you're taking the same thing you've always taken and then one day you're dead
And that's the case with a lot of people today, especially with party drugs. I don't think you should do heroin
I don't think you should do cocaine
I don't think you should fuck your life up and't think you should do cocaine I don't think you should fuck your life up
And I know too many people who have fucked their life up
But I also don't think that I should be able to tell you what you can do
Especially when there's all these drugs that are readily available
Particularly alcohol which is one of the most destructive drugs to your health to relationships and families to society's how many alcoholics?
How many drunk driving accidents how many drunk people murdered other people.
There's just horrible consequences of alcohol, but I completely support alcohol being legal.
Yeah, same.
But we have learned how to consume alcohol as a culture.
What about what happened in Oregon?
You know, like Oregon, they passed, they legalized it, and now they un-legalized it?
Well, first of all, they passed legalize it and now they well first of all
They were already off the rails. Okay. This is not like
legalizing drugs in
Very it's not like legalizing drug in San Francisco in the year 2000. It's it's a completely different scenario
so you have these people that are really, they're accustomed to tents and subsidizing
drug addicts, and they're accustomed to this very bizarre breakdown of civil society, where you're
seeing open air drug markets and everyone's fine with it, and it's somehow or another kind and
compassionate to allow this to take place everywhere. and that's what you have in Portland, right?
Portland is probably one of the most liberal cities that we have the most leftist cities that we have
so for the Oregon to do it that way, I think it's a
Like an awesome libertarian notion to say, you know what we shouldn't
Make any of these things a crime
These are personal choices and you can make
good personal choices or bad ones and we'll have everything. But the problem is
the fabric of society, the encouragement of discipline and of hard work and of
accomplishment had been eroded to the point where accomplishment meant that
there was something wrong with you. Like if you were a person that was eat the
rich, tax the rich. If you're a person that had accomplished something wrong with you. Like if you were a person that was eat the rich, tax the rich, if you were a person
that had accomplished something great,
it wasn't because of some extraordinary effort you put in,
even if it was, it was you did something
to fuck over other people,
and that's the only way you get rich in this world.
And it's just bizarre.
It's bizarre.
And it permeated Portland.
So when you introduce free heroin to that, you're going to get more problems.
And you're subsidizing people for living on the streets, which they do.
I watched this interview where they were talking to these people in the Pacific Northwest where
they moved there specifically so they could be homeless because they knew that they get
money and there's no incentive to get out of those tents.
There's no incentive.
There's free food and free drugs and they give you money and they're like, okay, right
So that didn't fail because of the actual drug policy, right but more of the other social policies
I think have you ever heard of dr. Carl Hart? No, he's a professor at is he had
Columbia I believe he's at Columbia
Carlhart was a straight chemist, like a guy studying
chemistry and studying these substances in Columbia. And he was a clinical researcher.
And along the way, he started realizing that our understanding of these drugs and the pros and cons of them had been flavored by propaganda
heavily, particularly the sweeping act of 1970 that made almost everything illegal,
which was really to target civil rights groups and anti-war people.
And so this was during the Nixon administration.
They made a bunch of things that were psychedelics.
MKUltra, is that when that happened?
Well, MKUltra was actually before that, it was when they were
experimenting with people, particularly with LSD. So when they started doing this, they made
everything illegal, and now the only way you can get any of these things is through illegal sources.
So you're getting them through the cartels. So if we don't have the ability to
legalize things and the problem with legalization, there's a lot, there's no good answer here. So to keep things illegal,
you're gonna have fentanyl overdoses. I know people have lost their children. I know people have lost their brothers and sisters to this.
It's a horrible thing that happens.
You're also
going to get heroin overdoses if it's legal. So Jesus Christ, like, and you're going to
get more people that try it because it's legal. But it's just like prohibition during the
1920s or the 1930s rather. When they had that, what they did was they enabled the mob, and
they enabled organized crime, and that was the rise of they enabled organized crime and that was the rise of Al Capone and that was the rise of the moonshiners.
You essentially, you always had a demand and the people that were willing to supply that
demand were criminals.
They were criminals in this country.
We're empowering criminals that are essentially running Mexico, which is bizarre.
I know during the latest election, how many assassinations were there?
Was it 37 or 35?
During their latest elections-
In Mexico.
In Mexico.
There was at least 35 assassinations.
Wow.
Are there European countries that do this well?
Portugal.
Portugal has decriminalized everything.
And they saw a massive decrease in HIV, a massive decrease in
drug addiction and all sorts of other things. I don't know what the long-term
study is on that. 37. 37. 37 assassinated candidates. I mean you have to play ball
with the cartel over there, you know, just like you had to play ball with the mob
in the 1930s. You have to play ball They have the guns and they're really mean and they'll do whatever the fuck they want to you
The 2021 midterms when 36 candidates were killed. Oh my god. She's oh my god
Yeah, it's wild down there that is a direct
result of
Having trillions of dollars being made by selling illegal drugs and made
Most of them to sell to America. I'm sure they sell them to other places
It's all fentanyl or is it all is it all kinds of things? No
I don't think there's a lot of money in that the real money is in like meth meth cocaine
They have a problem with illegal marijuana that's grown in the United States on national forest land
Because what happened is especially in California my friend John Norris
He wrote a book called the hidden war and he was a fish and game officer and you know
basically wanted to be the guy that like checks your fishing license like great job you're out in the outdoors and
What? It's like great job. You're out in the outdoors and What is it one day?
One day getting a movie. It is a beginning of a movie
I'm sure they're probably doing a movie on it
But in one day they find this creek that has dried up and they think that perhaps
Oh, they diverted the one someone's diverted the water
They thought it was a farmer that had done something inappropriate or whatever
So they follow the creek up and they find this illegal grow up
That's run by the cartel and this is the B and then then then they become a creek up and they find this illegal grow up that's run by the cartel.
And then they become a tactical unit and they have Belgian malinois and bulletproof vests
and machine guns.
The whole thing's crazy and they get in shootouts with the cartel in national forest land because
it's a misdemeanor to grow pot illegally in a state where pot is legal.
So California has legal marijuana.
You can go to any store, anywhere, use credit cards.
It's open free market.
If you follow the rules, you can open up a store.
But if you don't follow the rules,
you can sell it illegally and it's just a misdemeanor.
I wanted to learn about marijuana, the market,
but you can't process the money, I think, right?
In some states. I know in in Colorado it was a real problem and in Colorado they had
to do everything in cash.
Yeah, it's like breaking bad like bricks of cash and all of these places.
Well they were using mercenaries.
They're essentially using you know military contractors to run the money back and forth
to the bank because you had to bring the bank money in bulk.
Right?
So you'd have a million dollars in an armored car and a bunch of guys like tailing the car
and in front of the car and they're driving it to the bank and everyone knows there's
a million dollars in that car.
So who you have to like really be fortified.
And so it was very sketchy for a lot of people.
I don't know what the current condition in Colorado is now. I't know if you're still, if they still have to do it that
way. A couple of companies I just remember, the reason I know this is like
a guy came and pitched me on some business and he was like the the software
for all that. And you know I think the company went public and I just realized
it just went sideways because like nobody wanted to touch it because they didn't want to build rails for that economy.
Yeah. Which didn't make much sense seeing as, to me at least, just because if the laws say it's
legal then it should all be treated equally. But then the problem I think I remember them telling
me was that federally it's still gray. Yeah, it's gray and they're trying to diminish that.
The latest steps during the Biden administration
is to change it to a schedule three.
And that's a proposal.
That would help.
But really, it should be just like alcohol.
It should be something that you have to be 21 years old to buy.
You should have to have an ID.
And we should educate people how to use it responsibly.
And we should also pay attention to whoever the fuck is growing it and make sure you're not going wacky.
You know, like there's people that are botanists,
that are out of their mind potheads,
that are just 24 seven hitting bongs.
And they're making stuff that'll put you on Mars,
like without Elon Musk.
I remember the problem that somebody raised,
I read this in an article was
You need to make it
More than what it like more legal than it is today so that you can get folks to put like some version of a
Nutritional label on the thing and show intensity right because the intensity is not regulated right well They do regulate it in California if you go to good places in California
Let's say this is 39 percent THC, which is very high, this
is 37, this is, you know.
But then there's also the problem with one thing that marijuana seems to do to some people,
that alcohol doesn't necessarily, some people have a propensity for alcoholism and it seems
to be genetic, but there's a thing that happens with marijuana where people who have a tendency
towards schizophrenia,
marijuana can push them over the edge.
Alex Berenson wrote a great book about this called Tell Your Kids.
And I've personally witnessed people who've lost their marbles.
And I think it's people that have this propensity.
Because one of the things that I think is beneficial about marijuana in particular and this is some of one of things that
Freaks people out is the paranoia, right?
Well paranoia is I feel I feel like what it is is a hyper awareness
And I think it it pushes down all these boundaries that you've set up all these walls and all these blinders
So that you you see the world for what it really is.
And a lot of people, it freaks out.
But what I think it does is it ultimately makes you more compassionate and kinder and
nicer and you realize like-
In the moment or afterwards?
Afterwards.
Afterwards.
I think it's a tool for recognizing things that you are conveniently ignoring.
And you know, my friend Eddie told me about this once.
He was saying, if you're having a bad time
and you smoke marijuana, you're gonna have a worse time.
Because you're already freaking out.
You're already freaking out about something.
You know, if you're going through a horrible breakup
and you get high, oh, no one loves me.
But if you're having a great time with your friends,
you'll probably just laugh and be silly, right?
Because you're not freaking out about something. You probably, you'll probably just laugh and be silly, right? Because
you're not freaking out about something. You probably, you're in a good place mentally,
which we should all strive to be in a good place.
I have this weird psychosomatic guard that developed. My father was an alcoholic and
I didn't drink at all in my teens, in my 20s, and mostly in my 30s. And then in my mid 30s I started
drinking wine and I love wine and I think I can handle it and I really enjoy
it. I love it. I do too. But I cannot drink hard alcohol. The minute that it
touches my lips I get severe hiccups. I mean like debilitatingly bad hiccups.
Really? Any kind of alcohol.
So you think it's psychosomatic?
I think it's completely psychosomatic because it makes no logical sense.
Right.
If the tequila touches my lip, I just start hiccuping like crazy and it's like this weird
protective thing that I think my brain has developed because my dad used to drink some
stuff that would like, you know, make you blind.
Right.
Like moonshine.
It was like 150% proof the guy would just chug it. I mean it was...
Well I think there's there are whiskey connoisseurs and there are I mean there
are there is like Scotch like old Scotch does have a fantastic taste it's got an
interesting sort of an acquired taste but there's real wine connoisseurs.
Wine is incredible. Wine is a different animal.
Wine is incredible.
The flavor of wine is spectacular.
It's the most delicious of all alcohols without being sweet.
I completely agree with you.
Yeah, it's a different thing.
The people that say they're tequila connoisseurs, like, shut up.
It all tastes like shit.
Some of it just tastes less like shit.
The great tequila tastes less shitty.
It's alcohol, and it's like then there's some flavor around the alcohol.
Yeah. I drink a glass of wine with a steak and it's like, ah, this wine's fucking great.
I totally agree with you.
And it puts you in a, like a calm. It relaxes me. You don't like want to go drive fucking
wild and get crazy and get in a fight when you're drinking wine.
Exactly. And the amazing thing about wine is you can go on these journeys where, like, when I first
started to buy wine, I did what every knucklehead does,
which is like, oh, if it's expensive, it must be good.
And you start down that road, and it's just so dumb.
Because the amount of money that I
spent on stuff that was marginal, but it had a good label
and it had a good pedigree.
And then when you discover and you learn, like I remember like my wife's Italian so we spent a
lot of time in Italy in the summer with our kids. And when we were there, you find these incredible
Italian white Chardonnays, okay? In the summer, I'm just going to be honest with you, there is
nothing better to drink in the world.
It's better than water.
If you were like, it's cold, it's refreshing,
it's got a great bouquet, but these bottles are 40, 50,
60, 80, maybe maximum 100 euros, max.
And then you'll spend $1,000 on some stupid white burgundy
from France, and it tastes like half of it.
The other great example of this is Chateau Petrus. white burgundy from France, and it tastes like half of it. You know, the other
great example of this is like Chateau Petrus. And you know, I don't want to get
in trouble with the Chateau Petrus guys, but I'll just be honest. Those bottles
cost, you know, two, three, four, five, six thousand. You see some in restaurants,
nineteen thousand. I've never bought one. I've tasted it once, because in Vegas I
had a host, and once he gave me a thing, he, Jemoth you can use this for you know like your dinner and I'm like well is
there a cap? You know and he's like this time no cap and first I was like God I
must have lost a lot of money. So then I said, fuck it, I'm just going to try this.
So I went to Caesars and it was like four or $5,000.
I mean, I would never buy this in a norm, but I got it because it was free.
Joe's okay.
All this buildup in my mind, this is, oh my God, this is going to be ethereal.
It's going to be ambrosia.
It was not ambrosia.
Yeah.
Whereas you can find these other
ones that are made by folks that just put their entire lives into it. You taste the
whole story. I just think it's incredible.
But it's a weird status thing, the expensive wine. It's just like Cuban cigars.
It's really dumb.
Yeah, it's a weird thing.
The real skill is being able to know price value.
And when you know it, it's so satisfying because it's like, oh, this is just delicious.
And then when your friends enjoy it, they're like, oh my God, this is delicious.
And I'm like, yeah, that's 80 bucks.
Yeah.
How?
And I'm like, well, it's very hard to find.
So then the skill is like, it's funny, I'll tell you, this is how bad wine has gotten for me.
Meaning like, I love the story, I love the people, I want to support the industry, so I went and I
registered for an alcohol license at the ABC in California. Really? Because I was tired and
frustrated of trying to buy retail, because you have to go through folks that have their
own point of view. And I was like, well, if we just become, you know, we as in like me
and a friend of mine. And so we set up a thing. We set up a little, I filed the paperwork
and it's called like, you know, C J Wine LLC, you know, my friend, me and Joshua, and we're able to
negotiate directly with the wineries. And we're able to get it from wholesalers in Europe
or in South Africa or in Australia. And it just allows us to buy a bottle, try it if
we really like it. Thursday nights at my house is always poker. We serve it to our friends. They like it. Then we can buy a couple cases I can
share with my friends and you know you get it at wholesale. It's a great little
hack. Is there a limitation? Like is there a certain specific amount that you
have to buy? I look like a retail store. You know. And so retail store could just
buy a few bottles? They could buy a case. They could buy a few bottles they could buy a case they could buy a few bottles front
That's a little bit harder you so you have to have a more personal relationship
but then the really good stuff you can buy a few cases and then you know pass them on to your friends and
It's it's I think wines incredible and with it is incredible
But when I hear people that are gonna open up their own wine label, I'm like, oh good lord
Look, how much do you know about wine?
Like, oh, I'm going to start a wine business. Like, what?
Aaron Ross Powell I went to a couple of these wineries,
and I just asked them just out of like, just explain to me how you got there. And all I could
think of was, man, this is way too complicated. But these folks, it's like animal husbandry.
They're breeding this
vine with this vine, but then they're gonna take, you know, cleave off this
little bit. So it's like, it's a breeding program over 10 and 20 and 30
years, and it's like, this is really complicated. Oh yeah, they do weird stuff.
Like they'll splice avocado trees with, what is that nut?
Pistachios. So they'll take avocado trees and they splice
them with pistachios to make the tree more sturdy. You can take two different species
of tree and if you cut them sideways and splice them together, they'll grow.
A friend of mine started a company that's making like potatoes and he makes like these
ginormous potatoes like this. It's an incredible thing
because like you the yield is through the roof and like you know his his I think vision is I'll
be able to feed the world in a cheaper and more abundant way but it's all this engineering. He
hacked the chromosome of the potato. Oh my god. That's incredible and and like it generates a
huge potato and it generates a seed.
I didn't know this, but potatoes don't have seeds.
In order to plant more potatoes, you chop up the potato into like quarters or eights
and you stick the potato into the soil.
Oh, he's playing God.
And so he's like, no, this is dumb.
I'm going to make a huge potato and I'm going to have the potato have a seed, then I'll
just take the seed and I'll plant it in the ground.
So when you usually do it, do you have to have that potato and they have to soak it
so the sprout comes out of it and then plant it?
Is that what they do?
I don't know, but I mean...
Because I've seen that before.
I've always wondered how they're doing that.
I don't know, but he's going after potatoes and then he wants to go after fruit. Like I'm a, I love fruit, but fruit is like tilts me because like every time I go to a
store sometimes like you'll get like their seasons were like, you know, like white nectarines
and white peaches, maybe like one of the most incredible fruits ever created.
But if you get it in a bad season, it's just like unedible.
Yeah, they're dull.
They're dull.
They're terrible.
Mangos are the same. I love mangoes. And when you see like these mangoes in the
summertime, like I don't know where Europe gets their mangoes, but this is
probably one of the best features of Europe. Like they have these mangoes
that are just like this. Well they're organic too. They're just
incredible. Well they still have real tomatoes. Like you have to search for
real tomatoes here. Like if you want an heirloom tomato, that's an actual tomato.
The tomatoes that we have are just these freaks.
Have you ever worn-
Glucose monitor?
Glucose monitor?
No, I haven't.
I wore one for 90 days.
My wife, when she was younger, well, she runs a pharma company, so she has a proclivity for science, obviously, and she's, she thinks about a lot of this stuff scientifically, but she also broke her back when she was 11.
So she's very sensitive to inflammation. So she's hacked a lot of food so that she can minimize inflammation. I wore this thing and I was totally blown away. The
things that I thought were healthy for me, my body was like, this is radioactive.
Like what stuff?
So like the way that I ate rice or quinoa, I would have like a small amount of rice or I'd
have brown rice or I'd have black rice or I'd have quinoa because I was like, oh, it's more protein.
It didn't really matter.
It had the same, my body reacted with this massive sugar spike.
The minute I cooked it off, put it in the fridge, waited 24 hours and ate it the next
day, no glycemic load whatsoever.
Same with potatoes.
Yeah.
Potatoes.
I found that pasta, if I made it more al dente than what I was used to, no glycemic load.
And like the problem that's frustrating-
More al dente, meaning less cooked?
Less cooked.
Has a totally different reaction in my body than if I make it soft and smushy.
So I've trained my body to have like really, you know, al dente pasta, and I see that the
glycemic load is much lower. I think the point is like the food supply in the United States,
I think it's the most precarious it's ever been. It's brutally hard to figure this out. I mean,
is everybody supposed to get a glucose monitor and then figure out what little things you know trigger insulin spikes well that's not possible and then even
if you do find out are you how do you get it in a cheap affordable way and I
mean no wonder like everybody's you know really struggling with this have you
ever won a glucose monitor when you were in Italy no I wore it here I'd like to
know because there's a
difference that the way my body... I can tell you how my body feels. If I take a
picture like, I mean I try to work out and I take pretty detailed like what's
my BMI, what's my muscle mass, what's my fat percentage, and I always take those
readings right before I go. And when I look afterwards, and I don't
do anything when I'm there, you know, I swim in the in the sea when I can, like
when I'm on vacation or whatever, I walk a lot, but nothing else. No weights, no
nothing. My muscle mass stays the same. My fat percentage goes down.
I look healthier and I feel really great.
And all I do is I just eat what's in front of me. I don't think about quantities, whatever.
But when I'm back in the United States, so I get to be there, call it six weeks a year, right?
But when I'm back in the United States, so I get to be there call it six weeks a year, right? But when I'm back in the United States, I have to go back on lockdown because like a lot of people
You know, I had this thing like if you look at a picture of me in Sri Lanka
Look like old Dave Chappelle. I
Was like this I was just a total stick figure
I was like this. I was just a total stick figure. Within one year of being in North America, in this case in Canada, when you look at the school pictures, I was fat. Couldn't
explain it to you.
And it's just the difference in the food system.
And my parents were making the same things because they wanted to have that comfort of
what they were used to. So I don't know if it was the food supply or not,
but you know, it has to be. It has to be. It has to be. And everybody says the same
thing. And then my whole family has struggled with it, you know. So I think
that there's something, and then when I go now to Italy as a different reference
example, it's like it's the best shape of my life. Yeah, it's completely different.
Even when you eat things like pizza over there
You don't feel like you ate a brick if I have eaten pizza here, and I love it, but when I'm over
I'm like oh, what did you do? What did you do like you ate a brick but over there?
It's just food if it tastes great the pasta doesn't bother you nothing bothers you
It's just whatever they're doing and it's there's many things just one of them
They're not using enriched flour and another thing is they have heirloom flour so it hasn't been maximized for the the most amount of gluten
I'm curious to see what Bobby does if Trump wins in this will make America healthy again
I don't exactly know what his plans are
Yeah
What's possible like how much can you really affect with regulation?
How much can you really bring to light and and what are we gonna learn about our food
system. I mean even Canada, if you could, one of the things about the hearings
that they just had was they were comparing Lucky Charms that they sell in
the United States that are very brightly colored versus Lucky Charms they sell in
Canada, completely different looking product because Canada, in Canada it's
illegal to use those dyes that we use ubiquitously. And those dyes are terrible for you. We
know they're terrible for you and Canada knows they're terrible for you, which is
why they're illegal up there. The food tastes the same. It still sucks. It's
still bad for you. It's still covered in sugar, but at least doesn't have that
fucking poison that just makes it blue or red. And it's impossible to teach my kids healthy eating habits
as a result of this.
The food in the United States, it's everywhere,
and it's beating into you that this
is a cheap way of getting caloric intake.
And it is full of just all these stuff you can't pronounce.
It's garbage.
Yeah, it's all garbage.
And it's so common.
And then if you're in what they would call a food desert, if you're in a place that only
has fast food, like my god, like your odds of being metabolically healthy if you're poor
and you're living in a place that's a food desert.
It's impossible.
It's fucked.
It's impossible.
It's too hard.
And it's also very expensive, which is even crazier.
It's so expensive to eat well and to eat eat clean and make sure that you don't have any additives
and garbage in your food.
Do you remember in the 90s and 2000s where what we were told was fat was bad?
Yeah.
And you would see sugar-free and I would just buy it.
Oh yeah.
Sugar-free is great. I was like, sugar-free, I'm doing the healthy thing here.
This is great.
Margarine.
Margarine, or then I would see fat-free and I'd be like, oh, I'll do that.
And it turned out all this stuff was just nasty.
Well, it's not even, it's such a small amount of people that affected that.
That's what's so terrifying.
There's a small amount of people who bribed these scientists to falsify data so that they
could blame all these coronary artery diseases and heart diseases on saturated fat when it
was really sugar that was causing all these problems.
And we had a very dysfunctional understanding of health for the longest time.
The food pyramid was all fucked up. The bottom of the food pyramid was all bread and carbs. It's so nuts. And
it just made a bunch of really sloppy humans. And you could see it in the beaches, the photos
from the 1960s versus looking at people in the 2000s.
Have you had Casey and Callie Means on?
They're coming on.
They're coming on.
Yeah.
They have an incredible story.
Should I say it or we can just?
Sure, yeah.
They have this incredible story that they tell
about what happened and what they say is,
in the 80s, when you had these mergers,
one of the mega-mergers that happened was
Tobacco Company with Food Company.
There was two of them.
And a lot of the scientists
started to focus some of their energy on taking that skill, I'll just put that in quotes,
of making something very addictive and transposing it to food. Right? It's like, okay, if I'm
at RJR and I'm used to making cigarettes, how do I think about structurally building
up something that wants you to eat more, but now instead
of smoking, instead of a cigarette, it's a Twinkie or whatever.
And a lot of the food science that we have in America is built on the back of a bunch
of these mega-mergers where you have these scientists go and build super quote unquote
addictive food.
Yeah.
You know, and that was a failure of the, I mean, obviously it was a failure of the capital
markets, but it was a failure of the... I mean, obviously it was a failure of the capital markets,
but it was a failure of public health.
Well, it's a failure of our regulatory process.
It's a failure of our exposing the public to this and making sure that whatever this
is is labeled the same way cigarettes are.
Because if you want to buy cigarettes, you can buy them today, but it's going to have
a big warning that tells you this can kill you.
And arguably sugar is probably as difficult to kick as nicotine is.
And there's a lot of other problems.
I smoked when I was younger.
I found it much easier to stop smoking than it was for me to cut out sugar.
Wow.
Cutting out sugar is basically impossible.
It's very hard.
You encounter it everywhere.
I have a friend who has diabetes and he got type 2 diabetes and he's thin, my friend Duncan.
And one of the things he found out is when he stopped eating, it was all just eating
too much sugar.
When he stopped eating sugar, he's like, oh my God, I have so much energy. Like this is what I'm supposed to feel like. He had thought that it was just life.
Like he's in his forties now. Yeah, I need a nap. And he didn't realize he was poisoning himself.
Yeah. And that's what most people are doing. Most people out there that are drinking regular soda and they're eating candy and you're eating
burgers with sugar in the bun and bullshit and bread and french fries cooked in seed
oils.
You're just poisoning yourself.
You should fact check this because I make it the number wrong, but there was something
that came out very recently about the percentage of the US food stamp system that goes to soda.
And it was like 10% of the total budget or something nutty like that. It's like some
ginormous amount of money is just basically giving folks sugar water. Yeah. And you wonder
why now the solution is just to give everybody on the back end of it was Mpick It's also like let's be real. That's not food. Okay, you should it's something you put in your mouth
But you can't buy cigarettes with food stamps. All right, so if you buy you can't buy cigarettes and food stamps
Why should you be able to buy something that's really bad for you?
I mean what would change if we said food stamps?
We're gonna actually increase the amount that you get but but we're going to regulate what you can buy.
And you have to buy all the things from the outside of the store.
I don't even think you have to regulate it.
Think of what has happened because of companies like Uber Eats and DoorDash as an example.
What have they done?
And I'll tell you why I think this is important.
Those guys have gone out and Cloud Kitchens, there's three companies, they have bought up
every single kind of warehouse in every part
of every city and suburb in America.
And what they put in there are these things
that they call ghost kitchens.
So that when you launch the app,
and a lot of the times when you get a drink from Starbucks,
it's not coming from the actual Starbucks down the street.
It's coming from a ghost kitchen.
Why?
Because they centralize all the orders and it creates an economy of scale.
Why am I telling you this?
I think that there is a way for food stamps to sit on top of that infrastructure and just
deliver food.
But the problem is people, especially people that don't know or care, want that sugar water.
Well.
You know, like the choices are.
I understand.
Yeah, you're going to have people that choose that Big Mac,
because it is delicious.
Yeah, and I think that they are delicious.
And once a year, I have a Big Mac.
But I think if you're gonna tie it to something
like a government subsidy, at least the government should have a conversation
with themselves that says, well, we can ship them all of this healthy food and,
you know, change a bunch of boundary conditions in these folks' lives. Like, I've
seen it. I know what it's like to be overweight. It sucks. Your self-confidence
is negative one. The way I dressed, the way I felt, it just took an enormous amount of
work to overcome it and you're still left with it. Then there's the physical pains.
Then there's the internal issues that you create for yourself. This is not a win. And
so I get it that the hamburger tastes good, but this is where the government I think has
a responsibility to say, look, we're gonna spend hundreds of billions of
dollars a year, so let's spend it in a smart way. We're not gonna give you pop
and soda anymore, and we're gonna start introducing some fruit, some vegetables,
some fiber. Like, why can't you do that?
That's like a very reasonable thing to do, especially if on the same hand, the other
hand of the government is going to go and negotiate insulin prices and metformin prices
and GLP-1s.
Right.
That is the issue.
See what Bobby Kennedy was talking about with these GLP-1s, he was comparing the amount of money
spent on GLP-1s and what you could give every obese American, that you could give them free
healthy food and a gym membership.
For 10%, I think.
I think what Bobby said is the cost of GLP-1s current course and speed would be $3 trillion
a year.
Isn't that amazing?
Just something that controls your appetite.
And for 300 billion, you can give everybody food. By the way, you can use
this ghost kitchen infrastructure to give the food in a prepped way, right? So you
can even make life super simple for them. The idea that you would spend three,
we don't have three trillion to spend, but we have a responsibility to make
sure that people don't kill themselves with food.
But now there's an industry that's making $3 trillion by giving people these GLP ones.
And the problem is, just like every other industry, once it starts making money, it
does not want to stop.
And by the way, I think that they should be allowed to make money. But what I'm saying is in a free market, every actor is allowed to act rationally.
And actually what you want is everybody to have their own incentives and to act naturally.
That's when you get the best outcome.
Because if you're acting with some shadow agenda, you're not going to necessarily do
the right thing. So my point is in this example, the government's job in this narrow example is to get the best
health care outcome. Because if they're doing any form of long-term planning,
it's pretty obvious. Like we are hurtling to a brick wall on this health care
issue with respect to people's health. You don't have a solution. The only solution cannot be to medicate and then triple and
quadruple the budget deficit that we already don't have a path to pay down.
Right. Well the only other thing that I could think is if there was some sort of
a way that would be effective at establishing discipline other than just promoting it.
I could conceive of, especially when you're dealing with something like Neuralink, some
sort of a new way of programming the mind where it just changes whatever the behavior pattern is that accepts these foods as choices like
lobotomize your your appetite. That would be a very dystopian place.
Sketchy to be an early adopter. If you want the subsidy you need to get this
brain implant. That would not be a good place. That would be bad. That's worst case
scenario. Best case scenario is you just have like a national scale promotion of health and wellness
and abandonment of this body positivity nonsense and fat doctors and people that are telling
you that every weight is a healthy weight and all food is food and to think otherwise
is discriminatory, which you're hearing from people.
And by the way, that stuff is funded, and that's what people need to know.
That nonsense is actually funded.
They pay people to be influencers, and they're getting paid by these food companies to say
these nonsense things that are scientifically, factually incorrect.
They're not true.
It is not healthy in any way, shape, or form to be obese. And
when they tell you that you can be metabolically healthy and still have fat, it's okay. It's
not okay. It's not okay. That's just not true. And is that fat shaming? You can call it whatever
the fuck you want, but it doesn't change what it does to the human body. And it doesn't
make someone better if you don't make them feel bad about
being robustly unhealthy. Well it's a it's it's an enormous disservice to
folks if we don't expose an alternative path. Okay we're spending this much money
we spent so much money in all kinds of random stuff. Like just a simple example that we saw this past week. Fifty billion dollars spent between rural broadband and chargers.
We have no rural broadband and we have three chargers. No, that's the, this is
the data. That's 50 billion. So okay, that's not the 300 billion that-
Explain that, what you mean by that. So there was a, so in Congress when they come together to pass these bills, sometimes what
happens is there's a lot of horse trading, right?
And you get what's called the Christmas tree bill, which is like everybody gets to hang
something off the Christmas tree.
And the crazy part of the United States is these little baubles now
are 10 billion here, 50 billion there, whatever. So we passed a few years ago
something that was meant to get rural broadband into thousands of people's
homes. And initially it was given to SpaceX and Starlink specifically.
And then I think it was pulled back and they said you know what there's a better
quote-unquote better way to do it. And there's other folks that decided that
the better option would just be to like lay fiber. Now I'm just gonna, this is not a judgment, I'm just gonna show
you something. The thing is like if you are like in Kansas from here, okay,
between here and Kansas is like a big distance, right? It's like this. When
you're in orbit, it's just here. Right. It's just infinitely shorter distance. So
just at a practical level, solving that problem technically is way better through satellites. Fine. They make, I think, what was the right decision, they unmake it. And so they say, we're going to go and figure out a way to lay fiber, whatever they've laid zero fiber. So there's these 1000s of people that were promised broadband that you
can get for basically a thousand or a hundred bucks a month or less now and instead they're
spending upwards of thousands and thousands per home and haven't delivered any.
Isn't it like 42 billion dollars?
That's 42.
Yeah.
And then the other example was a seven billion billion program to install EV chargers, $7 billion,
and they've managed to install three.
So all I'm saying is, if you add the two together,
that $50 billion, that's one sixth
of what Bobby Kennedy was talking about
in terms of giving people organic food.
So maybe we can't give everybody organic food,
but you can get tens of millions of people, right?
Start with the 40 million people that's on Snap, you can get tens of millions of people, right? Start with the 40 million people that's on
Snap, you can get maybe 10 million of those people, get them organic food right away. So there's all
of this waste. All we got to do is just like focus a little bit, take some of these dollars that are
just like falling into the seat cushions, it seems like, and just reallocate it somewhat
intelligently into the things that really matter. It seems worse than falling into the seat cushions, it seems like, and just reallocate it somewhat intelligently
into the things that really matter.
It seems worse than falling into the seat cushions if it's 42 billion people and none
of them have received internet access.
That's really insane.
Forty-two billion dollars, nobody's gotten.
I should say I used the Starlink Mini this past week in Utah in the mountains.
It's amazing.
It's amazing.
It's the size of this book. It's amazing. It's amazing. It's the size of this book.
It's amazing. It's crazy. It literally fits in a small laptop case. My friend couldn't believe that
was it. I was like, this is it. I got a very, just plug it in. I got a very early one and I used to
carry it around in a laundry basket. It was incredible. And then when you see what they've
done in a couple of years
from this thing that was a little bit bulky,
it is so beautiful and simple.
And you know, you've seen it, you just plug it in
and it auto starts to rotate, figures out where it is.
The app comes up, it shows you this speed
and then you're just going.
And I've used it in all kinds of situations,
like where I'm traveling, I bring it with me, it's never failed. And then I think
man this is like it's a hundred bucks, it's less than a hundred bucks. It's
crazy. And then you know in a year or two you'll be able to run your cell phone
over this thing. Yeah. This is crazy. Yeah in the year or two it'll probably be
straight to your cell phone and you won't need that dish anymore. But right now, the dish is a small iPad, and you just sit it down in a field, and we plugged
a cord to it.
And you don't even have to have a cord.
It is a battery that comes with it.
So how much do you think it really takes to give every American just a Starlink dish?
Pretty fucking cheap.
It's very cheap.
Well, it wouldn't be $42 billion.
I can guarantee you that.
And by the way, the cost of that would basically fall through the floor if you put it in an
order for $50 million of these units.
Right.
You know?
SpaceX would make them for like $8 bucks.
Right.
You know what I mean?
And it's fast internet too, which is even crazier.
There's all of this stuff that we should do. We just need a few folks, I don't know, that can either course correct or just can shine a light on it.
I mean, it's like this thing where I'm like so optimistic, married to enormous fear and like, you know, just like a little... I kind of go back and forth between these. Well, let me paint the ultimate dystopian solution.
The ultimate dystopian, part of our problem is we have, we have corruption, we have what
you were talking about with deals, sort of like, you know, the border wall deal had money
in it for Ukraine.
Like, there's all these weird deals,'s bills that don't make any sense.
Like how did you add all this stuff?
And why is this 2,000 pages?
How many people signed it actually read it?
AI government.
AI government solves all those problems.
AI government is not corrupt.
AI government just works literally for the people.
And instead of having all these state representatives
and all these bullshit artists that
pretend to be working on their truck
and they don't know what the fuck they're doing, they're
just doing it for an ad, you don't have any of that anymore.
Now everything's governed with AI.
The problem is who's controlling the AI?
And is there some sort of an ultimate regulatory body that makes sure that the AI is biased
or tainted?
I think there's a step before that which is a lot more palatable. I think the thing with I thought about your version and
The problem that you state is the key problem, which is how is this model trained? Right who got their hands on?
That core stuff the weights and the values of that
Who decides right and at some point there's going to be there or not
They're going there is already today in AI models, a level of human override. It's just a natural facet of how these things are. There's a way to
reinforce the learning based on what you say and what I say. It's a key part of how
an AI model becomes smart. It starts off as primordial, and then Joe and Chamath and all
these other people are clicking and saying, yes, that's a good answer bad answer
Ask this question all this stuff
Who are those people so right and it could be gamed as well, right?
I think I think at scale we haven't figured out we haven't seen it yet
But it will be when the incentives are that high and we've seen distortions
Right like the the Gemini AI that was they were asked to make Nazi soldiers
They made these multi-racial Nazi soldiers and that kind of stuff where it's just like who are the founding fathers?
It's all here's a black guy. It's like here's a Chinese lady. Okay
We get it. You're not racist, but this is your you're being crazy. You're distorting the past exactly when you talk specifically history
I mean one of them was like a Native American woman was a Nazi
soldier. It's like this is so nuts. So that is a problem in that AI is not
clean, right? It's got the greasy fingerprints of modern civilization on
it and all of our bizarre ideologies. But there's a step before it that I think
can create a much better government. So
it's possible today, for example, to understand, have you ever done a renovation on your house?
Yes. Okay, so you make plans, you go and, you know, your architect probably pays an expediter
to stand in line in City Hall. There's a person that goes and reviews that plan.
They give you a bunch of handwritten markups
based on their understanding of the building code.
You can't use this lead pipe, you need to use aluminum,
this window's too small, all this stuff.
You come back, you revise, you go do this
two or three times on average to do a renovation.
And then they issue your permits.
Now, an AI can actually just ingest all the rules,
knows exactly what's allowed and what's not allowed, and they can take your picture and
instantly tell you, Joe, fix these 19 things. You fix those things, you go to the city,
you can show that it maps to all the rules, so you can streamline government. You can also point out
where they're making decisions that don't map to what the rules say. That, I think, is going to be a really
important first step because it allows us to see where maybe this administrative state
has grown unwieldy, where you got to knock some of this stuff back and clean up some
of the cruft because there's rules on top of rules and one conflicts with the other.
I bet you there are things on the books today that are like
that. 100%. We have no way of knowing. Right. You know? But I do think an AI can
tell you these things and say just pick which one. It's A or it's B. And I think
that that starts to cut back a lot of the difficulty in just making progress. Right. You know, one
of the things that I thought was extraordinary that Elon was getting
pushed back on was his idea of making the government more efficient and that
auditing the the various programs and finding out how to make them more
efficient. And a lot of people really freaked out about that.
And their main freak out, the main argument from intelligent people that I saw was, what
are you going to do?
Are you going to fire all these people that are in charge of government?
I don't think that's the answer for ineffective government is to let the same people do the
same thing because otherwise you have to fire them.
That sounds insane. And to say that the government as as efficient as is
humanly possible or even close to it, no one believes that. No rational
person believes that. Everyone believes in bureaucracy. Everyone believes there's
a lot of nonsense going on. Everyone believes that. Like look at the
difference between what Elon has been able to accomplish with SpaceX versus what NASA has been doing recently.
Look at the difference between what they're able to accomplish with Starlink versus this $42 billion program that yielded zero results.
Look at the difference between all these different things that are done in the private sector when there's competitive marketplace strategies. You have to figure out a way to get better and more efficient, and you can't afford to
have a bunch of people in your company that are doing nothing and that are creating red
tape and creating bureau, making things harder to progress.
That's bad for the business.
That's the argument for letting private companies take over things. By the way, I think that what, and just to build on what you're saying,
people jump to this conclusion that like government shouldn't exist.
It's not some anarchic thing where like, government's actually very important.
They create incentives, and then those of us in private industry go out and try to meet those incentives or take advantage of them. That's very normal, okay? And a well-functioning
government creates very good incentives. An incredible example of this is in the
1950s, do you know what the GDP of Singapore was? No. It was the same as the
GDP of Jamaica
And then you fast-forward 70 years and you understand what good governance looks like we actually were talking about Singapore yesterday how
extraordinarily efficient their
Recycling program is it's unbelievable. Yeah, I mean it's really amazing what what they do
They really recycle they recycle how we think we're recycling right They really do. They really separate the plastic. They break it up. They use it to make power.
They use it to make road materials. They make building materials out of it. They reuse everything.
They were thrust into a spit of land with no natural resources. They had to become incredibly well-educated and industrious.
And so, you know, Lee Kuan Yew was able to create the right incentives for government
to do a good job.
They pay their civil servants incredibly well, but then also for private industry to show
up and do the rest.
And it works incredibly.
You can do that in the United States.
The thing that we would
benefit a lot from is if we could just point out all the ways in which like
there's either too many laws or laws are conflicting, you can at least have a
conversation about batting those back. And the second is if you if you look
inside of private equity, there is one thing that they do,
which I think the government would hugely benefit from,
and it's called zero-based budgeting.
And this is an incredibly powerful but boring idea.
What private equity does when they buy a company,
some of them, the best ones,
they'll look at next year's budget,
and if they say, what should the budget be? Well, guess what's
going to happen, Joe, in your company? Everybody runs and says, I need X for this, Y for that,
Z for this. And you have this budget that's just ginormous. Instead, what some of the best private
equity folks do is say, we're starting with zero. Next year's budget is zero. We're spending nothing. Now, let's build it back up meticulously block
by block. So somebody comes in, okay, what is it exactly that you want to do? I want to build
an interface that allows it. Okay, what do you want to do? I want to upgrade the factory so that we can make a more high yield.
Okay, done. You're in. How much do you need? Okay. One by one by one. And if you go and you do that
inside the government, what you probably would find is that same group of people would probably
enjoy their job a lot more. They'd actually be, their hands would be on the controls in a much more
directed way. We'd spend a lot less
because a lot of this stuff probably just goes by the wayside and we don't
even know, you know. And people would just be more able to go and work. You could
do what you wanted to do. I could do what I wanted to do.
Elon could do what he wants to do. There was a thing, I tweeted it out today. He cannot get the FAA to give him a
flight permit for Starship five and six. So they're waiting on dry docks, right?
They're slow rolling the approval, right? He's, it takes it it it takes him less time to build these
starships now than it does to get government approval. That's what he said.
Meanwhile the FCC, which is a sister organization to the FAA, fast-tracked
the sale of 220 radio stations in part to some folks that were foreign entities,
right before an election that touched
like 160 million Americans. When you look at that you would say how can some
folks cut through all the red tape and get an answer quickly? How can other
folks be waiting around for something that just seems so obvious and so exceptional for America and there's no
good answer I don't I don't know what the answer is I don't think any of us
know no and then there's just folks that are stuck in space meanwhile there's
these two people stuck in space yeah and and Jamie said they were supposed to be
there for how long eight hours they were supposed to be there for how long eight hours
They were supposed to be there for eight hours
This was be quick and they've been there for months. They're gonna be there till February. That's so insane
They're gonna be there how terrifying must that be I mean I for maybe you and me
Eight days those was there for eight days. I
Think I think I would freak out.
100%.
I think they would too.
How do you not?
Well, I read this article where they interviewed them.
Now this could be the party line, I don't know, but they're like, this is great.
It's my natural place.
I'm happy here.
Oh, good Lord.
I can't believe that's real.
I had a friend of mine who loved it.
That's what they say to themselves, keep from going crazy.
Well, yeah, a friend of mine went to space. The founder of Cirque du Soleil, Guy LaLiberte. And he brought a super high...
Google talks about like it's already over. What? But it's still going on. No, it's still going on. It says it until February 21st. Yeah, February 20th, 25th. Yeah, February 2025. Yeah, we're stuck in space. It's like it ended up spending months.
That's great. That's just AI. Wow. Yeah, it could be way more. It could be way, way more. That's
weird that AI, that's another flaw with AI, right? It would read it like that. Wonder what the incentive
is for AI to lie to you about that. How does AI not know it's not 2025 yet? We're stuck in space
until February of 2025? We are. That's just a straight up error. That's a weird error though.
It is a weird error. But these poor people, you know. So my friend that was up there said,
it was incredible. He has this funny story where he was a smoker still is a smoker, but
This was like 20 years ago. So he was going up on like a Soyuz rocket and he shows up
I guess in Siberia is where they do the launches and
He was really stressed out because he had to stop smoking
because he had to stop smoking and he had to stop drinking. And he shows up and the cosmonauts are smoking.
Oh, no.
They're like, oh, it's totally fine.
Don't worry.
Do they smoke in space?
No, no, no.
I'm saying on the ground while they were trading.
Oh, boy.
So they go up.
He does eight days.
He comes back down.
He took these incredible high res pictures
of all the parts of the Earth.
He said it was the most incredible thing.
But when you get back, he's like, I was ready to get back.
Did you see this latest report? there's like real controversy about some finding that the
James Webb telescope has discovered?
And there's some talk of some large object moving towards us that's course correcting.
This is the weird part about it.
And there's all these meetings and so all the kooky UAP people are all over it saying,
disclosure is imminent.
There's a mothership headed towards us.
So it gets fun.
I don't know what they mean by course correcting.
What does that mean?
And how do they know it wasn't impacted with something
else that diverted it?
It could have been that.
It could have just been the gravitational fields, it could have been an orbital path.
But they're not telling anybody. There's something going on. Do you think they would tell people, like imagine if there was a giant chunk of steel, of iron rather, that's headed towards us?
That's a great question. I think the question is, what would we do if we knew do we have the capability of moving that thing would the FCC wait five months to give Elon
I think you'd probably spend send as many but see the I mean it's all a
physics problem at that right it's also a problem of breaking it up if it breaks
up then you have smaller pieces that are hitting everywhere. By the way, isn't this like the perfect reason why being
multi-planetary just makes a lot of sense? Sure. Like in any, like for example,
would you get on an airplane if they said, hey Joe, this is the best airplane
in the world, it's the most incredible, it's the most luxurious, it has the best
weather, you can surf, you can, but there's only one navigation system, and if it goes out, boop, you'd never do that. Right. Would you ever get on that airplane? No. No. So, you know,
I think we owe it to ourselves to have some redundancy. Yeah, but ultimately, I always wonder,
you know, like the universe sort of has these patterns that force innovation and constantly move towards further
and further complexity.
And if you were going to have intelligent life that existed on a planet, what better
incentive to get this intelligent life to spread to other parts of the planet than to
make that planet volatile?
Make super volcanoes, earthquakes, solar flares, all sorts of different possibilities,
asteroid impacts, all sorts of different possibilities that motivate this thing to spread.
But to say like, this is fragile, and it's not forever, so create some redundancy.
I mean, I was raised Buddhist, I'm not that religious in that way,
but I'm kind of weirdly spiritual in this other way, which is,
I do think the universe is basically, it's littered with answers.
You just got to go and find out what the right questions are.
So to your point, like, are all these natural phenomena on Earth, you know, the question is, okay, if that's the
answer, well the question is like, do we want to be a single planet species or do
we want to be, do we want to have some built-in redundancy? And, you know, maybe a
hundred years from now that builds on top of what happens in the next five,
we'll have discovered all kinds of different planets. That's an
amazing thing. Unquestionably.
Unquestionably.
And we also know that there's planets
in our immediate vicinity that used to be able to harbor
life like Mars.
We know that Mars was covered in water,
and Mars had a sustainable atmosphere.
So we know that this is not just a dream.
This is possible that what we're experiencing here on Earth
is temporary. And if we get hit by something big, well we know Earth was hit by a
planet in its formation. There was Earth 1 and Earth 2. The formation of the moon,
the primary theory is that we were hit by another planet and that's why we have
such a large moon. That's a quarter the size of Earth. It's like keeping our
atmosphere stable and keeping our...
It's a wild shooting gallery out there.
I mean, it really is.
And especially our particular solar system has a massive asteroid belt.
There's like 900,000 near-Earth objects.
But isn't that so inspiring, this idea like discovering all these other questions
that we don't know yet even ask right that is a life well-lived yes you know
that's the the most promising aspect to a hyper intelligent AI in my in my
opinion that it'll be able to solve problems that are inescapable to us and also offer us like real hard data about
how big of a problem this is and when this needs to be solved by and then come up with actionable solutions.
Yeah. And that seems to be something that
might escape us as biological entities with limited minds, especially when we're not working together,
and you could get AI to have the accumulated power, mind power of everyone, you know, 10x.
The mental model is, if an alien showed up today, would humans by and large drop all
of their internal issues and cooperate together?
Perhaps.
Perhaps.
Perhaps.
I would hope that the answer would be yes.
It would have to be something that showed such overwhelming superiority that it shut
down all of our military systems and did so openly to the point where we're like, we're
really helpless against this thing. Well, so I think that one way to think about AI is that it is a supernatural system in some ways.
So if we can just find a way to cooperate and harness this and see the bigger picture,
I think we'll all be better off. Like, again, like killing each other is just so
barbarically unnecessary. It doesn't solve anything. All it does is just makes
more anger. It creates more hatred because the what's leftover is not
positive. And I think that we need to be reminded of that somehow without actually
living the experience.
Yes. My hope is that one of the things that comes out of AI and the advancement of society
through this is the allocation of resources much more evenly and that we use AI, as I
was saying before, the best way to keep people from
entering into this country is to make all the other places as good as this
country. That's then you solve all the problems for everybody and you don't
have this one place where you can go to get a job or you go over there and you
get murdered. Well so that I think that you know why are a lot of people coming to America? A lot of the reasons, some are clearly political persecution, but a lot
of the other reasons are economic to your point. And so if you can create
economic abundance generally in the world, that's I think what people want.
Most people want, as you said before, a good job. They want to come in and feel like they can point to something and say, I made that. I want to feel proud of that.
They want to hopefully get married, have some kids, have fun with them, teach them what they were all about.
And you know, then our swan song and we all kind of, I don't know, get reborn or not.
Isn't it interesting that the idea of people not getting together in groups and killing
people they don't know, that's utopia.
That is some sort of ridiculous pie in the sky vision of the possibility of the future
of humanity where that's common in small groups, like even in cities. I mean, there's individual murders and there's crimes in cities, but cities aren't attacking
other cities and killing everybody.
So there's something bizarre about nations and there's something bizarre about the uneven
application of resources and possibilities and, you know, your economic hopes, your dreams, your aspirations
being achievable pretty much everywhere. If we did that, I think that might be the way that we
solve most violence or the most horrific nonsensical violence. So, and you have this data point, I said this before, but the most important thing that
has happened is that in the last four or five years is we have severely curtailed the likelihood
of war in the nominal sense.
I think Trump was able to basically draw a hard red line in the sand on that stuff.
And the underlying reason was because we had enough economic abundance where the incentives
to go to war fell.
We had just a complete rebirth of domestic hydrocarbons in America.
Whether you agree with it or not, my point is it is quite clearly correlated in the data.
As we were able to produce more stuff, so economic abundance,
we had less need to go and fight with external parties.
So I do think you're right.
This reduces it down to we need to find ways of allocating
this abundance more broadly to more countries.
Meanwhile, that one crazy thing that you can't unwind and go back
from, you can just never go there. And you just have to make sure nobody believes that that is
justified. Because in a nuclear event, I think that that's not what happens. Clearly. I saw this brilliant discussion that you had where you were
explaining that Trump is the wrong messenger but many of the things that he
did actually were very positive. Right. And I think that is a, that's a very
difficult thing to describe. It's a very difficult thing to express to people because any, we're so polarized
and particularly with a character like Trump that's so polarizing, it's very difficult
to attribute anything to him that is positive, especially if you're a progressive or if you're
on the left or if you've been a lifelong Democrat or if you're involved in tech or if you
I mean
It's this bizarre
Denial of basic reality the reality of what what can you see based on what?
What was put in place what actions were taken? What were the net benefits?
when
I've always been a liberal, and I
think I should define what liberalism used to mean.
It used to mean absolutely no war,
and it used to mean free speech, and it
used to mean a government that was
supportive of private industry.
Try your best.
Go out there.
We'll look out for you. Come back to us if things go haywire. That's an incredible view of the world. And
I think what happened was when I was given a choice, I would vote Democrat or I would
support Democrats because I thought that that's what they stood for. And I didn't really understand Trump. And so what happened was I got too
caught up in the messenger and I didn't focus enough on the message. And I didn't
even realize that, I didn't realize it in 2016, but I don't think many people did. And then in 2020, I got lost in it.
But probably by 21 or 22, I started to see all this data, and I said, hold on, I am not being
a responsible adult the way that I define responsibility. I am not looking at this data from first principles and I
need to do it. And when I did, what I saw was a bunch of decisions that turned out
to be pretty smart. The problem is that because he's the vessel, he turns off so
many people with his delivery. And I think this is a moment where the stakes are so high,
you have to try to figure out what the message is versus what
the messenger is saying.
Or look to somebody else that can tell you
the message in a way that maybe will allow you to actually
listen to it.
That could be JD Vance.
It could be Elon Musk.
It could be RFK.
There's all kinds, Tulsi Gabbard,
there's all kinds of surrogates now,
because I think that they have realized
that there's a lot of value in these messages.
We need to have multiple messengers.
Yes.
So that folks don't get tilted and go upside down.
So that the minute the one person walks in the room.
And I had to
challenge myself to go through that process and at the end of it I'm like
wow he's the only mainline candidate here that will not go to war and just
on that point it's like very unique times creates strange bedfellows it's
sort of like one thing that kind of like always like pops out of me like why are they working together? Why are they cooperating? I
always think like what's going on here? And when I saw him and Bobby align, you
know Bobby is a very balanced view of Donald Trump. Here's the good, here's the
bad, even now. Even with everything that's on the line for Bobby and Bobby's agenda, he's quite honest about Donald Trump's
positives and negatives.
But they both get along.
And one of the things and probably the most important thing where they were sounding the drum from day one is under no circumstance will the United States go to
war. I just think we should observe that. People should have an opinion on that.
He's so polarizing that there's been two attempted assassinations on him and no one cares.
He's like Neo in The Matrix. He's like dodging these bullets.
For now.
You know?
Yeah. But listen, no one can dodge forever. But the thing is, it's like no one seems to care
that the rhetoric is ramped up so hard
and has been so distorted.
The other thing that people need to, I think, think about
is the domestic policy agenda of both the Democrats
and the Republicans are within error bars.
And what I mean by that is when push comes to shove,
they both, whether it's Kamala Harris or Donald Trump, they have to work through a very sclerotic
Congress, which means that very little will ultimately get done. If you just look at the
track record of all these past presidents, You typically get one piece of landmark legislation
passed in your first two years,
and it all just gets unwound.
It's happened from Clinton onwards.
Bush had one bite at the apple,
Obama had one bite at the apple,
Trump had one bite at the apple,
Biden had one bite at the apple.
So the American political system has a really incredible way of insulating itself.
So if people would just take a step back and look at that, a lot of the policy agendas
that both of them espouse are going to be very hard to get done.
There'll be one thing, maybe know, maybe they both do something
on domestic taxation.
Maybe they both do something on the border.
But the likelihood, based on the past,
is that they'll get one of these things done
and then not much will be done.
This is why I think folks then need to think about, OK,
what are the super presidential powers then where
they can act alone? One area where they can act alone is they can issue executive orders.
And that can direct the behavior of governmental agencies. Okay, so people should decide what
they think about that. Do you want a muscular American
bureaucracy? Do you want a more slimmed down one? Do you want one that has, you know, bigger
ambitions, more teeth? Do you want one that is zero base budgeted? They're pretty stark
on those things. And then foreign policy, I think, you know, one camp is much more in
the view that, you know, we are the world's policeman and there's a responsibility that
comes with that. And one says, we got a lot of problems at home, we're not getting pulled
into something abroad. And I think people need to decide about that. But other than those two threshold
issues, my honest opinion is that there's, you know, we're in error bars between the
two of them. One will cut taxes by this much, one will increase taxes by that much.
But there is real decisions that have been made during the Biden administration about
the border that are
affecting people. Or lack thereof. Well, I think it's a decision. I don't think it's a lack thereof, especially the flying people in and the utilization of an app to fly people in.
That seems insane. Like the whole thing seems insane. I don't know what the motivation is.
I've talked to people that know a lot about the construction business and they believe the motivation is cheap labor. I think that's a part
of it and that a lot of the problem is in many industries, the lack of cheap labor and people
that are willing to do jobs. It's one of the things that I've heard, you know, there's a lot
of criticism about all the Haitians that have moved to Springfield, Ohio, but one of the positive
things that I've heard from people that live there is that these people are hard workers and they're willing to do jobs that the other people weren't willing
to take on.
So you have pros and cons, but you have this incentivized effort to move people into this
country illegally, which will undoubtedly bring in people that you don't want here.
Gang members, cartel members, terrorists.
Terrorists. That's real. And we've documented that. And there's people that have been arrested that here, gang members, cartel members, terrorists.
That's real.
And we've documented that and there's people that have been arrested that were trying to
come in that were terrorists and there's people that have gotten through for sure.
I think that if I give both of them the benefit of the doubt, I think both of them will have
to act on the border.
I think that Donald Trump has had a clearer view of this issue for much far longer. I think that Kamala has
had to shift her position to make herself more palatable to centrists. But I do think
that both of them will probably have to act because I don't think what's happening today
is sustainable.
I don't think it is either, but the fear, and Elon's talked about this, the real fear
is that they're bringing these people in to give them a clear path to citizenship which will allow them to vote
and then you've essentially bought their vote.
So if the Democrats bring them in, incentivize them to become Democrats and vote and give
them money, which they clearly are doing, they're giving them EBD cards and they're
giving them housing and they're giving things that they're not getting giving to veterans and poor people in this country. That seems to be an incentive
to get these people to want to be here and also to appreciate the people that gave them
that opportunity, which is you would essentially in swing states, which is Ohio, what's one
of them, you if you can get a lot of people in there and you've given them a better life
because of your policies, those people if you give them the opportunity to vote, they're going, especially
if they're like limited, low in information voters, they're going to vote for the party
that got them to America.
Mm hmm. I mean, I, yeah, I have, I don't know whether it's a conspiracy per se, meaning, but I do agree with the outcome,
meaning I remember very vividly we, my parents took up the whole family, three
of us, myself and my two sisters, to Niagara Falls and then we crossed the
border to Buffalo and we applied for refugee status in
America as well. We didn't get it. We were rejected. And when we went back, we got a
tribunal hearing in Ottawa where I grew up. And I remember that it was in front of this magistrate
judge. So the person comes in with the robes and the hair and everything, and you sit there and they hear...
They have the wigs up there?
All of it, yeah.
The wigs.
And then they sit there and they hear your case out, and my father had to defend our whole family.
Here's what our life was like, here's what we did.
And I remember just crying. From the minute it started, that's all I did the whole time. It seared in my mind. Because
like, you know, your life is right there. It's like a crucible moment for your whole
family. If they're like, I don't buy it, off you go. We go back and I don't know what would
have happened. Fortunately, obviously, it worked out.
And then, you know, you go through the process. I became a Canadian citizen.
Then I moved to the United States to get on a visa. Then I became an American citizen.
I have an enormous loyalty to this country.
And so when I think about, like, Americans not getting
what they deserve before other folks,
it really does touch me in a place, like I get very agitated about that idea.
It's not that those folks shouldn't be taken care of in some way, shape or form,
because I was one of those people that needed a little bit of a safety net, right?
We needed welfare, we needed the, you know, the places to go and to get the free clothes and all that stuff. But you have to sort of take care of all of the
people that are putting in the effort and the time to be here and followed the
rules and stood in line. Like when I came to the United States, man, I came on a TN
visa. Every year you had to get it
renewed, you had to show up, and if the person that was looking at you said,
Jamath, out, you're gone, Joe. Then I had to transfer to an H-1B visa. My company
had to show that there wasn't an American that could do this job. And we,
then we were able to show that. So I've lived
this experience of an immigrant following the rules and just methodically
and patiently waiting and hoping and the anxiety that comes with that. Because it
comes with tremendous anxiety. If you ask people that were on H1Bs in America,
there was a website, I don't even know if it exists anymore, but we would check what, you know, because when you apply for
a green card, you get an application date. And man, I would sweat that website every
other week. Hey, did they update that? And it would be like four years in the past,
and I'm like, I'm never gonna get my my green card, my visa is going to expire,
I'm going to have to move back to Canada. But I still play by the rules. So I just think it's
important to recognize that there are a lot of folks that play by the rules that are immigrants
to this country. There are a lot of people that were born here that have been playing by the rules.
And I think we owe it to them to do the right thing for them as well. And then try to do the right thing for some folks that are coming across the border because
they probably are, some of them legitimately, are escaping some really bad stuff.
Quite a lot of them.
Quite a lot of them.
And I'm sure most of those people are people that just want a better opportunity.
And that's a great thing.
And that's a great thing.
But you have to take care of all the people here, especially the veterans, and especially
these people that have been struggling in these inner cities that have dealt with the
redlining and all the Jim Crow laws that have set them back for decades and decades and
has never been corrected.
There's never been any effort to take these places that have been economically fucked
since the beginning of the 20th century and
correct it and instead you're dumping all this money into people that have
illegally come here that to me is where it starts looking like a conspiracy.
I think that as long as people can explain what they're doing for these
other folks that you just mentioned I think for a lot of people, for 50% of the population that leans red
on this topic, you could at least explain to them. The problem is that
there is no explanation. There is a hundred and fifty thousand dollar, you
know, home credit that Gavin Newsom was about to give. I think he vetoed it. I
could be wrong. It was wildly unpopular. But that bill somehow gets to
his desk. And is there a bill that says we should have better food for the food deserts? Did that
bill get passed? So there's clearly a way for, you know, state legislatures to do what's right on
behalf of the folks in their state. So if we just had a little bit
more balance, and then if we were able to shine a light on those things, a lot of the
people that live here that contribute would feel better about where things were going
and wouldn't feel like the whole thing is just rigged.
Right. Well, that's one of the things that people are so excited about with this Trump Union
with Tulsi Gabbard and Robert Kennedy is that you're having these movements that seem to
be almost impossible to achieve outside of an outsider, like the Make America Healthy
Again concept.
What are you talking about?
You're going to go up against these companies that have been donating to these political
parties forever and have allowed them to have these regulations that are allowing them to
have these dyes in food that's illegal in our neighboring Canada?
What?
No one's done that before, right?
That's very exciting.
But again, messenger message.
Messenger message. So but again messenger message messenger message just take a step back though and
If you were just the average Joe citizen, I
Think an important thing to just notice is
Why are all these totally different people?
Acting as a team I
acting as a team. I just think it's an interesting thought question for, I'm not, I don't have an answer and I'm not going to plant an answer, but just ask yourself like why are all of these people
cooperating? And I think the 2024 election is a lot about the traditional approach to governance and a very radical
reimagining of government. And I think that's what effectively will get decided. The traditional
approach says we're going to create robust policies, we're going to work sort of top
down, you know, this muscular foreign policy, muscular domestic policy, the government's going to play a large part of the economy. And we're going to try to right some wrongs.
The radical reimagining says,
this country. We're going to have a very light governmental infrastructure. We are going to
cut back a bunch of the rules. And we're going to take a little bit of a step back on foreign policies so that we don't end up in a situation we can't pull back from. In that lens, it's very
different. In the lens of actual policy, I honestly think that it's pretty much
six of one, half a dozen to the other. But in that first lens, they're really markedly different choices. And you know, we'll see.
But the lens that you're describing, the thing that distorts everyone's vision is Donald Trump as a human being.
That's the thing. And it's also the media's depiction of him,
which is being grossly distorted.
And I think that, you know,
I've met him and spent time with him.
I've also had lunch with Kamala.
She was very kind, very nice person.
Donald Trump, very funny, very kind,
very polite, like he talks to you. And I just was like, wow,
this is like totally, and exactly what you said, I was like, I was expecting
something totally different. And I think though that the part, at the core, part of
what, where the media goes crazy, I think, I'm guessing, is part at the core part of what where the media goes crazy, I think
I'm guessing
Is that there's a part of him as well. That's like an entertainer. I mean, he's better than he's as good as any comedian
Yeah, he's on point he's got sink like he's got rhythm he knows how to land he so
There's a thing that he's doing when he's on stage, which for the audience,
I think, is no different than going to a show or a revival or something. You're seeing a star.
Right.
But then if you're looking at him as Donald Trump the person,
I think the media really gets out of, they get tilted.
Well, not only that, they've distorted who he is.
Whatever flaws Donald Trump has are nothing in comparison
to the media's depictions of him.
Everybody's got flaws.
His, I think, are, his exists and are well described.
But I do think that they, I think
there's like a couple of good examples.
One example that bothered me was
the Charlottesville press conference.
When I first heard the media depiction of it, I was really upset because of what I thought
he said.
Right.
It turned out he didn't say it.
Exactly.
In fact, not only did he not say it, he said the exact opposite. Right.
And then I was really frustrated and a little bit angry because I thought he was never lying to me.
The filter was lying to me. Right. And I'm not paying for those people to lie to me. I'm paying
for them to actually give me the transcript of it so that I can decide for myself.
I think that's part of a responsibility
of being a cogent adult.
And the only repercussions of them lying
is a lack of trust that people have for them now.
And so then they make their own bed.
They dig their own grave a little bit,
because I think the trust in the mainstream media
is the lowest it's ever been.
I think way more people trust you, you know,
way more people trust us to tell a version of what we think is happening because you're not going to
lie and you're like interested in just showing the clips and then just debating. What did he mean?
What did he say? Why did he say this? Why did he say that? By the way, the same goes for Kamala because now,
you know, the domestic political machinery is going to try to characterize her as well.
Cherry pick comments, she says. So my point is, I think we have to suspend this.
Right, but it's not balanced. Like particularly, look at the debate where they fact-check Trump
multiple times, but they didn't fact-check her. By the way, I read this. Is this true or not? But the co-host was her sorority sister?
Yes.
That is true?
Yes.
I mean-
Well, not just that, but there's the affidavit by the person from ABC that said she was aware
of the questions and that she was told that there were certain things are going to be off topic or off limits like her record as a DA and also some other person that
she's attached to that's involved in something shady. And then on top of it there was things
that she said that were absolutely untrue. One of them, one of the grossest ones was she's saying
that we don't have any troops deployed in combat zones. Have you ever seen that one of the grossest ones was she's saying that we don't have any troops deployed in combat zones.
Have you ever seen that one where the troops in the combat zones are going, what the fuck
are we doing here?
And then Dan Crenshaw, see if you can find Dan Crenshaw's post on Instagram.
He laid out-
He's a Navy SEAL with one eye.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, that's a guy who understands the consequences of war, right?
Clearly, paid the price personally for serving. But on his Instagram, he laid out how many
troops are in active combat zones. It's tens of thousands in multiple combat
zones of American citizens. I mean look, I was trying to be charitable when I
said that. Like, I think that there's, like, I'm going to assume that both people are smart.
They believe what they believe.
They're both trying to do what they think is right.
They both want to win.
Okay, let's take that off the table for a second.
The filters that then try to give them that message will try to pervert that truth for
their own best interests.
And I think what they have decided, the mainstream media,
is their best interests are better served
through one, i.e. Kamala, and less well-served
through another, i.e. Donald Trump.
Yes.
So if there's ever been a moment where it's time for all of us
to show up and be a grown-up, try to get the source material,
try to think about things from first principles.
I'm telling you it is the most consequential election of our lifetime.
And the simplest reason why is that the president decides to hit the button on the nuclear football. So just imagine for one second, irrespective of what your politics is,
who do you want to hold that thing? What do you want them to do under even the most
excruciating pressure in the world? And I think what we want to find is someone, at least in that very narrow moment, will
be a JFK-like decision.
I will block everybody else out.
It is entirely about my desire and wish for how I want America to be known, and I'm going
to protect my children and my grandchildren.
You cannot touch the button.
You can't get close to the button.
I think we're a lot closer than people think.
I think we are too.
Thank you very much for being here, man.
That was really fun.
I really enjoyed it.
Thanks.
I know you're very busy, so I really appreciate your time.
It was a real honor.
It was an honor for me as well.
Thank you.
Thank you.
All right. Bye everybody.