The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - No Mercy / No Malice: House of Cards
Episode Date: September 24, 2022As ready by George Hahn. Follow George on Twitter, @georgehahn. https://www.profgalloway.com/house-of-cards/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Join Capital Group CEO Mike Gitlin on the Capital Ideas Podcast.
In unscripted conversations with investment professionals, you'll hear real stories about
successes and lessons learned, informed by decades of experience.
It's your look inside one of the world's most experienced active investment managers.
Invest 30 minutes in an episode today.
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
Published by Capital Client Group, Inc.
Support for PropG comes from NerdWallet.
Starting your credit card search with NerdWallet?
Smart.
Using their tools to finally find the card that works for you?
Even smarter.
You can filter for the features you care about.
Access the latest deals and add your top cards to a
comparison table to make smarter decisions. And it's all powered by the Nerd's expert reviews of
over 400 credit cards. Head over to nerdwallet.com forward slash learn more to find smarter credit
cards, savings accounts, mortgage rates, and more. NerdWallet, finance smarter. NerdWallet Compare Incorporated. NMLS 1617539.
I'm Scott Galloway, and this is No Mercy, No Malice. Our new book, Adrift, America in 100
Charts, will be released on Tuesday. Today, we're sharing an excerpt from Chapter 6.
Internal divisions have characterized the U.S. since its founding,
and progress has come not from exploiting these fissures,
but finding common ground so we can craft better solutions.
House of Cards, as read by George Hahn.
My new book, Adrift, America in 100 Charts, comes out Tuesday.
It's the story of America told through charts.
The previous excerpt I shared was cautiously optimistic.
In a world where bad news sells, it feels easy to feel nihilistic,
apocalyptic even, about the fate of our nation.
Taking a step back to recognize our myriad accomplishments over the long term
helps restore perspective and hope for America.
I stand by the virtues of optimism and try to practice it regularly.
Emphasis on try.
However, optimism, like alcohol, should be consumed in moderation.
We shouldn't abuse it to distract ourselves from our responsibilities
and the commitments of daily life.
And we certainly shouldn't use it to sedate ourselves in the face of clear and present dangers.
This excerpt highlights some of the dangers I believe are most pressing.
The news cycle has convinced us that the greatest threat to America is other Americans.
MAGA Trumpers, social justice warriors, deep state
bureaucrats. Pick your poison. These narratives are compelling, profitable, and wrong. The greatest
threat to Americans is our fear of other Americans. For the past several decades, that fear has grown
and the rifts between us broadened. We are reaching a tipping point.
Mark Twain once remarked how easy it is to make people believe a lie and how hard it is to undo
that work again. Mark Twain was right. More than a year since Trump left...
The following excerpt is from Adrift, America in 100 Charts.
Chapter 6, House of Cards. In 2018, residents of a 12-story condominium tower along a beautiful stretch of the Florida coast
reported evidence of deterioration in the tower's concrete support slabs.
Engineers attempted to repair surface damage in 2020,
but the project was abandoned because of concerns that it would destabilize the entire structure.
In April 2021, there were more reports of concrete deterioration, which was noted to
be, quote-unquote, much worse.
Remedial work was discussed and planned, but never begun.
Two months later, the Surfside, Florida condo collapsed, killing 98 people.
We have a building here that is tottering.
It is structurally unsound.
And so the building is taken down because we don't know when it could fall over.
In the aftermath of the Surfside tragedy,
images and reports of pooling water, cracked concrete, and rusting rebar were made public.
The problems have been plain for all to see.
It's a familiar pattern. Warning signs are
always obvious in the rearview mirror. What are our warning signs? What are the weaknesses in
our foundation? We are divided against ourselves, seeing enemies rather than adversaries in our
politics. The moniker United States of America is a paradox today.
A poll by the University of Virginia found that two out of five Biden voters believe
it's time to split the country by party lines.
Trump voters agree, with more than one in two favoring a breakup.
Secession is the new succession, and Texit the new Brexit.
This feeds a vicious cycle. As enemies, we cannot negotiate in good faith and our government
accomplishes nothing, which further undermines our faith in government and fuels our hatred for
our opponents. We might say we support bipartisan politics, but we're increasingly
partisan in every aspect of our lives. In 1960, one in 25 parents had concerns about their child
marrying someone from the opposite political party. By 2018, almost half of Democratic parents
and a third of Republican parents had such concerns.
In a democracy that's been pushed to its limits by competing narratives
and unfounded online theories about politicians and political agendas,
it's no wonder that Americans seem to have lost faith in the people running the nation.
The National Election Study began surveying the public about its trust in the government back in 1958,
a time when about 75% of Americans trusted the federal government to do the right thing almost
always or most of the time. That percentage hasn't surpassed 30% since 2007.
In 2021, 42% of Americans believed our political system needed to be completely overhauled,
and another 43% said it required major changes. In contrast, only 12% to 15% of people in most
Western European countries said their political systems should get a complete revamp. In 1966, the U.S. committed
2.5% of its potential GDP to infrastructure investment—roads, bridges, schools, hospitals,
water treatment, sewers, and more. Over the next 20 years, mainly during the Nixon and Reagan administrations, infrastructure investment fell dramatically, hitting a record low of 1.3% of GDP in 1983, and it's held at a relatively steady state ever since.
And that understates the underinvestment, as construction material prices have outpaced inflation in recent years.
In practical terms, what does this mean?
Simple.
Worse conditions for working Americans.
About one in every five U.S. roads is in poor condition.
Forty-five percent of Americans do not have access to public transit.
A water main break occurs every two minutes. Numerous faults in our core
infrastructure have led to crises that once seemed unimaginable. In Flint, Michigan, 12,000 children
drank lead-contaminated water, causing irreparable brain damage that affects academic performance and
IQ and increases the likelihood of Alzheimer's and Legionnaire's disease. In Miami, a 12-story beachfront condominium collapsed, killing 98 people.
Meanwhile, as a share of GDP, China spends 10 times more on infrastructure than the U.S., which may explain why it takes 4.5 hours to take
a train from Shanghai to Beijing, 752 miles, but 7 hours to get from Boston to D.C., 438
miles.
As in an 80s horror flick, America's political divide started benign, campy even, and has
become gruesome quickly.
However, it's not a demon in a hockey mask that terrorizes us.
The threat is not an outside malevolent force.
In fact, the call is coming from inside the house.
We need programs and investments that reinforce a basic truth.
Americans' strongest allies will always be other Americans.
Life is so rich.
Hey, it's Scott Galloway, and on our podcast, Pivot, Thank you. What software do you use at work? The answer to that question is probably more complicated than you want it to be.
The average U.S. company deploys more than 100 apps,
and ideas about the work we do can be radically changed by the tools we use to do it.
So what is enterprise software anyway?
What is productivity software?
How will AI affect both?
And how are these tools changing the way we use our computers to make stuff,
communicate, and plan for the future?
In this three-part special series,
Decoder is surveying the IT landscape presented by AWS.
Check it out wherever you get your podcasts.