The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Why Working-Class Voters Feel Left Behind, Wealth and Security, and How Scott Gives Money
Episode Date: September 12, 2025Producer’s note: This episode was recorded prior to Charlie Kirk’s death. Scott answers listener questions on why working-class voters feel left behind in politics, how wealth shifts your appr...oach to personal and online security, and how he decides where and when to give his money away. Want to be featured in a future episode? Send a voice recording to officehours@profgmedia.com, or drop your question in the r/ScottGalloway subreddit. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Office Hours with Profti.
This is the part of the show where we answer your questions about business, big tech
entrepreneurship, and whatever else is on your mind.
If you'd like to submit a question for next time, you can send a voice recording to
OfficeHours of ProptuMedia.com.
Again, that's OfficeHours of Profftymedia.com.
Or post your question.
on the Scott Galloway subreddit,
and we just might feature it
on our next episode.
First question.
Our first question comes from
much membership 45-07 on Reddit.
They say,
Hey, Scott, just a simple question.
As a lower middle class man in his 30s,
I resonate a lot with your content.
My question is this.
Why does it feel like no matter
what or who you vote for,
the people making the decisions
are always against the normal everyday working person?
mostly because of citizens united and a little bit gerrymandering.
And that is probably the greatest ROI in corporate America is to give money to a senator or a representative and say, all right, Americans pay four to eight times more for a Zempic or Humira than people in other nations.
Oftentimes we pay exponentially more for pharmaceuticals in the United States.
And I'm just using this an example despite the fact that many of these pharmaceuticals were invented here when we manufacture and distribute them here.
So why do we pay more?
Because pharmaceutical companies, insurance companies, hospital complexes, donate money to a congressperson and say, wouldn't it be great if we had a law that said Medicaid could negotiate directly with pharmaceutical companies and get, use their bulk purchasing power to drive down the prices of pharmaceuticals and pass those on to American consumers?
Well, okay, you want a law that we can't do that?
Sure, Congressman.
And here's $50,000 for your election campaign because we think you're a great.
American. And maybe they don't even have to actively promote that law, but anything that gets
in the way of trying to not let that law pass, Democrats are famous for on policies that are totally
contrary to the views or the principles of the Democratic Party of having real concerns and
basically slow-balling and killing shit. Now, the Democrats are just as guilty of it as Republicans,
and Republicans are just more transparent. We're about money and whatever can create more
money and shareholder value for a company, whether it's pouring mercury into the river or selling
public lands or letting them engage in algorithmically elevated content that creates an incentive
for teen girls to engage in self-harm. We don't mind it's about creating economic growth.
Oh, and by the way, META, please stop by and cut me a check. The biggest donor is not weapons.
It's not social media or tech. It's in fact the health care complex or the healthcare industrial
complex. And what do you know in America? We pay $13,000 per citizen for our health care versus
$6,500 in the other six of the G7 nations. And we have worse outcomes. A more anxious, depressed,
obese, have a lower life expectancy. And that is because, simply put, corporations stand being
between you, the voters, and how these individuals actually vote. Gun control, the majority of
Americans believe in gun registration, family planning, the majority of Americans. The majority of
Americans believe women should have some level of bodily autonomy, and yet we have laws that are
totally contrary to that. So until we get rid of Citizens United, we're quote-unquote, money is free
speech, and these corporations don't have the ability. The thing that I have found so shocking
about giving some money away to politicians, I do it, I'd like to think I do it for the right
reasons. I'm not trying to get them to pass laws to subsidize podcasting. I do it because I'm
passionate about income inequality or trying to address income inequality and programs that would help
struggling young men. But what has struck me is just with a little bit of money, how much
attention you can get from congressmen and senators. I think if you gave $10,000 to every senator
a million dollars, when you go to Washington, you could get a meeting, an in-person meeting with
20 of them on 24 hours notice. Because if you're giving $10,000, you might give 50 or 100 at some point.
And it's not that they're total horrors. And by the way, proximity is important.
If you meet with 20 senators and make your case, if enough people do that, they're inclined to block something or get in the way of that because you're going to be articulate and give them compelling reasons. And also wink, wink, if you vote against this, I might give you $50,000 or $100,000 at some point. But the problem is, run into a Republican Congress person. I'm going to find you someone who's taken between $50,000 and a million in the oil and gas industry. And it was long-winded way of saying money, citizens,
United, unfettered access or unfettered ability to give money. A lot of foreign nations have
much lower limits, or they just have matching funds, and then that's it. You know, may the best
man or woman win. So what do we have? We have a commerce and elected leaders who represent
corporations and the wealthy disproportionately versus the rest of us. Thanks for the question.
Our second question comes from Glenn from Brooklyn. Glenn asks,
Hi, Profji. Returning questioner, Glenn from Brooklyn here. You describe your life and wealth with
surprisingly candid detail, whether that be travels and lodging or even activities with your boys.
I'm curious what your thoughts are, on security, both personal and cyber, and how one security needs
evolve as they cross thresholds such as assets and fame. For example, is there a magic number of
liquid assets that suddenly marks an investor as a target? How do today's successful and very online
people stay safe without paranoia. Thank you for your time. Thanks for the question. So this is a good
problem because the majority of targeting, if you're wealthy, is the kind of targeting you want. It's
offers, it's opportunities to invest in things. It's people who want to know you, be your friend,
people who want to date you. So the targeting, if you will, for wealthy people. In terms of
a threat, I know some people who are much wealthier than me that have pretty serious security,
apparatus, not only in their home, but even I had dinner with someone the other night who's
quite wealthy. And this person has a security person who's anonymous. He told me that this person
was there, but I couldn't pick them out. But basically a person who follows him around and should
anything go wrong, someone with a training and a gun is there to ensure that or reduce the
likelihood that it ends badly. Now, being attacked online, I do think you need to take a
additional precautions around your data. Also, you become very much a target just for criticism.
And some of that is healthy. Power should be checked. But some of it is also, America has kind
of a media industrial complex that engages in trying to build people up and sanctify them
and demonstrate them as heroes. And then once they get to a certain level, try and tear them
down because it's the way up and the way down that creates engagement and clicks and advertising
revenue. So there's money in both those things. I think additional cyber
security or additional investment in personal security. I mean, this sounds weird. My personal security
system is not only I have all that stuff in my home, but I've always had dogs, and I've always
made sure I've had a fairly big, intimidating, and well-trained dog. And a lot of the data
shows that having a dog is much more effective than a security system, a gun, or what have you.
And then I do some other stuff, which I don't want to disclose, but not a ton. I want to live
my life and if it means engaging a certain amount of risk, so be it. I would say it's not about
your wealth. It's more about the messaging you're getting. I think you could be worth very little
money. And if you are constantly ship posting or talking about a specific issue that is very
incendiary, you're probably, I want to say become a target, but become a visible recipient of people
who feel strongly the other way. Don't be stupid, but to run your life,
leaving or focusing too much on downside risk as a flaw in our species.
Well, that was a word salad.
Thanks for the question.
We'll be right back after a quick break.
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Welcome back.
Our final question comes from Reddit.
Straight out of Dorigo.
Derijo.
Derigo asks.
Hi, Scott.
I just listened to past Office Hours episode.
And you mentioned how any money you have at the end of the year
above a certain point, you give it away after spending what you can.
which made me wonder, how do you decide who and what to give your money to? So I never gave
anything away until the age of 40. And if I did accidentally give money away, it was so I could go to
some cool party with other people pretending to be virtuous. I remember going to a party called
Save Venice in New York, and it was because Venice was experiencing flooding. And so we needed
to save the incredibly historically important architecture of Venice, and a bunch of hot young people
would show up in sort of this eyes wide shut apparel and we'd pay 500 or a thousand bucks.
I'm like, this has fucking absolutely nothing to do with Venice.
There's a bunch of people pretending to have virtues so we can all show up and hopefully meet
other interesting people.
And that was the only philanthropy that ever, I ever engaged in.
And then as I got wealthier and as I became more thoughtful about all of my blessings,
I've become, I think, not only philanthropic, but very philanthropic.
And it's not virtue for me, it's consumption.
I really enjoy it.
Makes me feel strong, makes me feel masculine.
So how do I decide?
The two charities, I try and pick specific sectors, one, there's just random stuff.
If I see, you know, Representative James Talarico talking about what Jesus would have done
and Jesus wouldn't have canceled food stamps and that charter schools,
or nothing but a transfer of wealth from public schools to wealthy people.
And the example he used in his speech was that Elon Musk with 14 kids would get about
a million dollars in grants for, you know, they want to move to this voucher system.
I just thought he was so articulate, powerful, unafraid, and I loved how he incorporated
his Christian roots and the hypocrisy of some of these people who cloak themselves in
in Jesus. Whenever someone brings up Jesus on the floor of the rotunda, they're usually about to
cut welfare to single mothers. Anyways, I'll bust off a check for 10 grand of that guy, which I did.
And if I hear about someone, a friend of mine, not a friend of mine, someone who I went to college
with had a massive stroke. I haven't seen this person in 30 years. And I cut a check for 10
grand to that person anonymously through a friend because they're by the grace of God go I. And
I'm doing a lot of virtue signaling right now, but it's true. So I have a kind of a series of random
things. I give a $100 tip wherever I am because I was a service professional. I think people
in the services industry are vastly underpaid. My generation has aggregated, in my opinion,
too much wealth. And so there's little acts of philanthropy that I engage in spontaneously that are just
sort of fun. Now, on a more systemic level, where I give away much bigger funds, is on two
categories. One, the first is broadening access to higher education. I funded a scholarship at Berkeley
for the children of immigrants. And most recently, for kind of vocational programming, to take
non-traditional students and give them a shot at participating in the wonderful education of
UCLA. It's a program called the Extension Accelerator, I believe, that helps no admissions.
Anyone can show up and very low cost. And I like that. I think my industry has engaged in this
incredibly corrupt, immoral cartel behavior that creates an exclusionary culture where we create
artificial scarcity such that good kids like myself or unremarkable kids such like myself can access
amazing education. And then my second big category is teen suicide prevention, which is skyrocketed
and which just sort of rattles me. I find it unacceptable the trends in teen suicide. I don't
think anything else matters if our kids are so upset and anxious that they contemplate ending
it all. And I've given away about 20 million bucks over the last five or seven years. And I plan to
give a lot more away, and it's something I very much enjoyed. But so random acts, I don't
only call them kindness, random acts of consumption. Makes me feel really fucking strong and smart and like
a baller to give a $100 tip. Makes me feel good in an expression of affection to give some money
to someone who needs it at that point. It makes me feel like I'm being a patriot, giving some money
to some good candidates who are fighting the good fight. But on a more organized level, I give money
away to two things I feel very strongly about. And I think that's the way to do it. Do stuff that
makes you feel good, random acts of kindness and generosity. People don't give away enough money.
I mean, if you have money, why wouldn't you give every person every waiter a hundred bucks?
You know that person's working hard. You know that person who's probably really could use the money.
I remember when I was a pool boy at the Mondrian Hotel. In this character actor, this woman,
you've probably seen a movie as never a big star. She was in her 70s or 80s at the time.
Every time I walk by, every time I walk by her table, she would say, hold on, and she'd grab my hand, and she'd sneakily, like, kind of funny, like, put a $10 bill in my shorts pocket.
And by the end of the time, you know, I'd have $20 or $30, and in 1987, that made a difference in my life.
I was a box boy, and I'd carry out people's groceries, and I remember the same guy, used to give me 50 bucks.
He was this guy with a big beard and a Rolls-Royce, and he'd let me carry his groceries.
out to his car, and he'd give me 50 fucking dollars. And this is when I was in high school.
I mean, the easiest way to make someone's day is to give them a little bit of money.
It's a transfer of time and work. So if you give a waiter or a box boy, I give a hundred,
I'm doing a lot of virtue signaling right now, but it's all true. I give a hundred bucks to
the in and out cash year when I got to L.A. a few days ago. And she looked like she was about
to start crying. I mean, this shit is easy. This is not a lot of money if you make good money.
It's not, it's just not a lot of money. So, it's, it's just not a lot of money. So, it's
It's incredibly joyous for me.
So these little moments where it makes my day, I feel good about myself, it's fun, it's an easy way to make a total stranger just really like you.
So two levels, the fun stuff, the fun, daily stuff, little acts that are just so much fun and so rewarding.
And then the bigger stuff, if you're blessed with real money, think about how the topics that really, that really,
motivate you that you are really passionate about. Appreciate the question. That's all for this
episode. If you'd like to submit a question, please email a voice recording to office hours
ofpropertymedia.com. Again, that's office hours ofpropertymedia.com. Or if you prefer to ask
on Reddit, just post your question on the Scott Galloway subreddit, and we just might feature it
in an upcoming episode.