The Tucker Carlson Show - DEBATE: Tucker vs Kevin O’Leary on the Dystopian AI Future Devouring American Energy and Jobs

Episode Date: May 14, 2026

Kevin O’Leary says anyone who opposes his dystopian data center is probably working for China. A debate. Paid partnerships with: Preborn: To donate please dial #250 and say keyword "BABY" or visi...t https://preborn.com/TUCKER Ethos: Protect your family with life insurance from Ethos. Get up to $3 million in coverage in as little as 10 minutes at https://ethos.com/TUCKERBattalion Metals: The market moves fast. Invest when the time is right. Get alerted at https://battalionmetals.com/alerts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Just when you think you got it all figured out, you see trends in progress that seem to contradict each other, and you wouldn't have expected that. Here's one example. So whatever you think of the war with Iran, there is really no arguing the fact it has caused a global energy crisis, maybe the most severe global energy crisis, well, since the discovery of fossil fuels. To give it some perspective, so the Strait of Hormuz famously is closed down, that's the choke point through which a fifth of the world's hydrocarbons flow. And that's been for maybe two and a half months. If the straight is opened by next month, which is best case scenario, we have no idea
Starting point is 00:00:40 if that's going to happen. I'll let's just say it did. June, straight opens, business returns to normal energy flows, what they were on February 27th, just world returns to status quo. There will still be a net loss of 1.8 billion barrels of oil, not including natural gas, by the way, or petrochemicals or all kinds of other commodities the world needs, but just oil. 1.8 billion barrels missing from the global energy system.
Starting point is 00:01:11 And that's best case. So that has massive effects on the price of everything. And now everyone's kind of an amateur expert on the need for energy and global supply chains and all the stuff. And what we have been misled about for the last 15 years, because of climate orthodoxy. We're now learning the hard way, which is you need fossil fuels. And you need them for all kinds of things, but you need them primarily for electricity.
Starting point is 00:01:35 It's not oil, really, it's natural gas and coal that produce the world's electricity. But without them, electricity prices spike. And when they do, the price of everything else spikes, including just living in your house or your apartment or anywhere. Because cheap energy is the key to prosperity and, in fact, civilization itself. And this has always been known. always since the time when people burned peat to stay warm. So energy prices not surprisingly have gone up around the world in some places quite severely. Europe, for example, parts of Asia.
Starting point is 00:02:08 But even in the United States, 5% on average energy prices for homeowners have gone up this year. And that is expected to continue to rise. So again, not surprising how this happened. It's easy to explain, very easy to understand, maybe a little bit harder to fix, but at least within the realm of the explicable. Here's what's less expected. At exactly the moment this is happening, energy becoming more expensive,
Starting point is 00:02:35 global supply chains more fragile, you are hearing first a chorus and then just a screaming crowd of demands for more energy production. And these demands are not coming from consumers, homeowners. Hey, my electricity bill's gone up. I think we need more power plants in the county. Maybe we should burn costs.
Starting point is 00:02:54 why not? That would be understandable. No, this chorus is coming from the people in charge, which is to say elected officials, think tank grandees, and most interestingly of all, captains of finance, the richest people in the world, all of a sudden are telling you we need to produce more energy. That's a little weird because this exact group for again, the past at least 15 years since Al Gore was famous, has been telling you exactly the opposite. They've been telling you that energy is not the source of life, not the base of civilization, but it's the cause of humanity's downfall. It's the destruction of the earth.
Starting point is 00:03:31 It's the main reason we have climate change. CO2 is the reason it's getting warmer, which, by the way, it is because climate cycles are part of nature. That's why we had glaciers and now don't. But whatever, they've been telling us for this last generation that burning fossil fuels, was not just bad for the environment, but a sin, and it was the main sin against which we should organize all of our society. Like everyone had to be carbon conscious all the time, because we love the earth.
Starting point is 00:04:04 Now those exact same people up to and including the father of ESG himself, Larry Fink at BlackRock, are all telling us, we're going to take a pause on the concern for global warming. We need more electricity. And the truth about electricity is it does not come from renewables. The overwhelming majority of electricity on planet Earth comes from, well, the same place that always came from, boiling water, which moves turbines.
Starting point is 00:04:33 And to boil water in some small percentage of cases, they use radioactive material, fuel rods, nuclear reactors, but for the overwhelming majority, it's what it always was. Coal, still number one globally, natural gas, and to some extent, oil. So you burn things in order to boil water in order to move turbines in order to create electricity. This is not modern technology. It's industrial age technology. It's the same technology. Refined a little bit, cleaned up a bit, but basically the same. And so those people who spent all this time telling us that that technology was not just inefficient, but morally wrong, are now calling for a massive expansion of it. Kind of crazy if you think, like, what is this? Well, of course, it's one thing. It's
Starting point is 00:05:20 AI, AI, artificial intelligence. A dramatic, a quantum, as they say, increase in processing power, computer processing power, which will allow computers, the machine, to reason, to mimic human thinking and thereby replace a lot of human labor. That's the idea. Computers are now so powerful, they can do many of the things, not just the manual things, that was the promise of the industrial age, but the intellectual things that we do.
Starting point is 00:05:53 And this is great or not, but in any case, it's inevitable, and we've got to do it, and it turns out to be incredibly demanding of power. You need a lot of electricity to run AI, much more than most people understood. And so we're going to need to put on hold, in fact, invert our concerns about global warming
Starting point is 00:06:14 in order to build AI. Okay. And on the one hand, they make a rational argument. They don't always say this out loud, but it's the basis, clearly, a part of their thinking. If you're a planner, if you're in charge of a country, you know that technological advantage pretty much consistently translates into geopolitical advantage.
Starting point is 00:06:36 In other words, the strongest countries are the most technologically advanced countries. They're the ones who are the most advanced economies. They're the ones who can defend those economies, successfully with technology, with tools, in that case, weapons. But technology makes the difference between first and second or 123rd on the global roster of power and wealth. The most technologically advanced countries are the most powerful countries.
Starting point is 00:06:59 That's basically true. Always has been true. The tribe with bows and arrows beats the tribe with spears. Okay. That's not crazy. None of this is crazy on one level. It's the details that maybe need a little fleshing out. But on the basis of this promise, AI, the federal government and state governments, particularly
Starting point is 00:07:20 the government of California, our largest state, have bet everything. So traditional manufacturing in the United States isn't entirely dead, but it's getting there. Of course, it's not the basis of our economy. That would be finance and real estate. But AI is the next iteration in the minds of the people making the big plans of the American economy. And again, you can't overstate the degree to which they're betting on this. again, to take our biggest state, California.
Starting point is 00:07:45 So the basis of the California economy, threefold. It was, of course, agriculture, and that's still huge in California. The Central Valley, it was just farmland in the world, most fertile ground on the planet. It was aerospace, mostly in Southern California. That would be aircraft and anything that goes into space to defend us. And it was entertainment. It was a movie business, movies in television, famously out of Hollywood. Now, two out of three are, if not totally dead, certainly on their way to being totally.
Starting point is 00:08:13 dead. Agriculture, we hope, will always be there, but it's not a big money proposition even in a good year. So what sustains the state of California? What allows the generous welfare promises that its politicians have made to its people to continue? How can the state of California continue paying full health and medical, maybe even dental for illegal aliens without a big source of tax revenue? And of course, the answer in their minds is AI. So they're better. They're everything on AI. The problem is once a politician bets everything on any industry, he has every incentive to, well, have unrealistic expectations for what that industry is going to do. Of course, not so different from rolling the dice. But they're also very likely to suspend
Starting point is 00:09:03 the normal protections that keep the rest of us from being hurt by that industry. because it's too important to get into the details of what this might look like 10 or 15 years from now. So what's happening in California is really happening nationally. It's happening in every state and it's happening in Washington. We are betting everything on AI. And you know that because by far the most ambitious investments into the United States, not simply by American companies and investors, but by states, by the federal government, and by foreign investors, putting foreign direct investment into the United States, is in artificial
Starting point is 00:09:43 intelligence. And all of this has kind of become visible. It's been going on for a while, but it's become very visible to the public in the outcry over a proposed data center in Utah, in a fairly sparsely populated, pretty remote county in Utah, most of which is sparsely populated, in which will be built the what's well what's being built as the largest data center in the world enormous 40,000 acres, 40,000 acres, 62 square miles, multiples the size of Manhattan, huge, impossible to imagine. And that data center, which is basically a series of interconnected, low slung, vinyl clad warehouses in which sit, not people making things, but computers, computers, computers, computing things, that data center once completed will draw about nine gigawatts of power.
Starting point is 00:10:44 How much is a gigawatt? It's a billion watts. It's one step from a terawatt, which is a trillion watts. Nine gigawatts. Now, how much is nine gigawatts? Well, nine gigawatts is more than twice what the entire state of Utah now uses. Every human being in the millions of people who live in Utah, all of them combined. All the manufacturing in Utah, all the ski lifts, all of it.
Starting point is 00:11:06 every air conditioning unit, every electric heater, every Tesla, all of them combined, use less than half that amount of electricity. That's an amazing amount of electricity. But then you think to yourself, well, it's a manufacturing facility, it's a business. Of course, they use a lot of electricity. Well, how much is that? Well, let's compare it to the largest manufacturing facility in the United States. It would be the Boeing Everett plant in Washington State, made famously this 747.
Starting point is 00:11:36 It was built in the late 1960s to build the 747. The cutting-edge, state-of-the-art aircraft that signified American dominance in the skies, and was, by the way, a beautiful aircraft first rolled out in 1969. So this manufacturing plant was built in Everett, Washington, by Boeing, and it's still there, and they make still all the wide-body bowings are made there. And it was always built as, it may still be, the world's largest manufacturing plant. It's about 92 acres. It's under 100 acres.
Starting point is 00:12:06 What does it use for power? Well, it uses about a quarter of a gigawatt every year. So contrast that. So the world's largest manufacturing plant, certainly the largest in the United States, the Boeing Everett plant, 92 acres, a quarter of a gigawatt, 258 million kilowatts, something like that. Compare that to the proposed data center, which is, Well, as we said, 40,000 acres and nine full gigawatts. So one makes wide-body airplanes, which are visible to everyone who goes to an airport or looks up in the sky on a cloudless day. And the other produces what?
Starting point is 00:13:00 And employs who? So that kind of is the question right there. And we're getting into it in just a minute. What exactly are these data centers doing? told they're incredibly important. They are the future. We must have them. Someone's going to have them. If it's not us, it's going to be our arch enemy China. And if they get them before we get them, you know, really bad things could happen. Now, those things are never quite specified. They might wind up with a bigger economy than ours. Oh, wait, they already have that. But for some
Starting point is 00:13:29 never quite spelled out reason, that is the disaster scenario we need to avert by building the world's largest data center in a country that already has thousands of data centers in comparison to China, which has only hundreds of data centers. Hmm. So that tells you right there. There may be something else going on, but we know we have to have it. We know that, yes, it's going to produce more heat and CO2 than really any other human activity in recorded history, but that's not a problem that will not add to global warming or
Starting point is 00:14:02 if it does, very much like the pro-George Floyd protests, it doesn't matter. We're going to suspend the laws of nature for this project because it's that important. So it doesn't matter. Ignore everything we told you about climate because this has to be done. Okay. We'll accept all of that is true. And the third thing they tell us is this will come at no real cost to you. Now, in a country that has been stalling the construction of new energy production because it's bad, it's immoral, it's not carbon neutral. If they're not windmills or solar panels made in China, it's just wrong. That country is going to construct full gigawatt data centers that is in the process
Starting point is 00:14:49 across the country of doing that in a bunch of different states, Texas, Mississippi, you name it, Louisiana. And that will have no effect on you. In other words, we're somehow going to have enough electricity to power everything that you use in your life, including all the new electric things that are going to be great. You're going to love them. The electric stove that's now mandatory, the electric heater that's down mandatory, the electric car that we hope you buy. We're trying to convince you to buy it by paying for it in part with your tax dollars already. All of that's going to be possible. None of that will be affected in any way. Your cost will not rise as we, I don't know, quintuple. American energy production? Is that true? And we're going to do all of this for a reason that we can't quite explain to you because we may not know ourselves, but we have to do it because if we don't the Chinese world, that is the state of play. We can go through each one of those different claims to see if they're true. But in the case of the penultimate claim, this is not going to affect
Starting point is 00:15:51 you. Consider that today, the 55,000 permanent residents of Lake Tahoe, which is one of the biggest and prettiest lakes in the United States, shares borders with both California and Nevada. Residents were told today that actually we're not going to provide you electricity anymore. The Nevada-based power company that is providing electricity to the residents of Lake Tahoe inform them today that, sorry, all the electricity we make, every watt of power that we generate is going to have to go to a nearby data center, and therefore you have until the end of next year to find a new source of electricity,
Starting point is 00:16:28 And after that, we can't help you because the machines have called and they need the power. Sorry. So that's a little dystopian, to be honest. Not attacking the idea of AI and the promise that it may do useful things. But if they're informing you a year and a half out that, hey, at the end of 2027, you're not going to have any more electricity because the machines need it. And in fact, they're demanding it. And they seem a little agitated.
Starting point is 00:16:55 it suggests a future that, I don't know, we should think about before it arrives. Now to the question of what that future will look like. There's been a lot of talk about this on the internet. What is AI exactly? And what's its nature and what kind of society will it produce once it has more power than it does? And is it possible that a machine designed to, quote, think like a human being, could potentially get out of control. Is it possible that it will develop consciousness and self-awareness and a will of its own
Starting point is 00:17:35 that may be not aligned perfectly with our own, might not have, as the AI developers themselves, say, alignment, and they could say turn on us. Is it possible we face a future of enslavement by the machines that we built? Seems a little crackpot. Keep in mind, people and Americans too are prone to overstaying, the risk of things and something their imaginations go a little crazy and imagining monsters under the bed. And if you're old enough to remember Y2K, the much anticipated disaster that was supposed to strike the world at the stroke of midnight on January 1st, 2000, when every computer in the world
Starting point is 00:18:16 is supposed to melt down and planes were going to fall out of the sky, incubators would stop working in maternity wards and we had returned to the Stone Age. And of course, that didn't happen. But people were really worried about it at the time, very worried about it. If you remember that, then you know that we don't always have the ability to accurately predict what the things we make, the systems that we created will produce. We can't see the future. And we tend to overstate the darkness ahead because that's just in us. That's just who we are, always.
Starting point is 00:18:44 But with that in mind, it's still worth listening to some of the people who created AI in the first place to see what they think this might bring for the rest of us. So Jeffrey Hinton is a man in his 70s of British computer science. who is widely described as one of the fathers of AI, one of the people who first thought that this could be possible. And in his final years with us, he is thinking a lot about the fruit of his work and what it could mean for your children. And this is a conclusion he's reached. Listen. I think we're moving into a period when, for the first time ever, we may have things more intelligent than us. You believe they can understand?
Starting point is 00:19:30 Yes. You believe they are intelligence? Yes. You believe these systems have experiences of their own and can make decisions based on those experiences? In the same sense as people do, yes. Are they conscious? I think they probably don't have much self-awareness at present.
Starting point is 00:19:49 So in that sense, I don't think they're conscious. Will they have self-awareness? Oh, yes. Yes? Oh, yes. I think they will in time. And so human beings, will be the second most intelligent beings on the planet.
Starting point is 00:20:02 Yeah, we're entering a period of great uncertainty where we're dealing with things we've never dealt with before. And normally the first time you deal with something totally novel, you get it wrong, and we can't afford to get it wrong with these things. Can't afford to get it wrong, why? Well, because they might take over. Take over from humanity. Yes, that's a possibility.
Starting point is 00:20:22 Why would they not saying it will happen? If we could stop them ever wanting to, that would be good. would be great, but it's not clear we can stop them ever wanting to. Well, that's pretty scary. It's terrifying, actually. He's describing the end of humanity, basically. He's describing the final stage in the drama, Prometheus or Tower Babel or whatever, the much-predicted moment where man is destroyed by the tools he's created, killed by his own cleverness.
Starting point is 00:20:52 Will that happen? I mean, again, hard to know. Impossible to know, really, because it's impossible to see the future. and once again, the West has a pretty spotty track record of predicting the effects of technology. I mean, it was, what, October 2001, right after 9-11, that the U.S. military used drones in the war in Afghanistan, the famous predator drone. Remember that? It was 25 years ago. And yet somehow, there are five, at least five aircraft carriers under production right now that American taxpayers are paying for, billions and billions and billions of dollars.
Starting point is 00:21:28 to build aircraft carriers, World War I technology. And after watching the Russia-Ukraine war for four years and the war with Iran for the last two and a half months, it's pretty obvious that the future is not aircraft carriers. And if it was, then our aircraft carriers are probably opening the Strait of Hormuz right now. But they're not at all. Why?
Starting point is 00:21:50 Because their commanders are worried about being attacked by drones. In other words, with 25 years advanced notice, operational experience with drones and with the past four and a half years of just watching it in real time, the U.S. military was unable to pivot to the future of warfare technology, completely unable. It's not an attack on them. Well, actually it is an attack on them. Why would people like that deserve another, I don't know, $1.5 trillion a year in taxpayer money, unclear? But they're getting it. But the point is only, it's really hard to know where these things go.
Starting point is 00:22:25 and smart well-meaning people very often get it wrong. But just based on what we do know, right now, what is happening right now, we can say there are threats to people from AI. And if you don't believe that, first of all, think about who's developing AI. AI, again, is a machine. It is the sum total of its inputs. It is made by people. And because it is an effect of cognitive exercise,
Starting point is 00:22:54 it reflects the character and the predispositions, the biases of the people who made it. So if this machine, this technology, AI, is being created by people like Sam Altman or the Google guys, you can expect that, well, I don't know, programs built by some of the least trustworthy people in the world probably shouldn't be trusted. So it's likely not a huge surprise that AI is often caught lying.
Starting point is 00:23:22 manipulating results to hide the truth from people who use it, which itself is an indication of consciousness, is it not? Do animals lie? No, they can't. That's why they're wonderful, because they're always honest, like it or not. They don't have the capacity for deception. Only people, and now this machine that we've created AI, have the capacity for deception. There's not to say AI is our equal, much less our superior,
Starting point is 00:23:51 but it is noting the obvious, which is it's moving in that direction. And if it were to stop at the point where it is equal with people and shares their basic nature, their fundamental characteristics, you would be afraid of AI, even there, because you're often afraid of other people, because within the human heart lurks some darkness. Maybe not in Sam Altman's heart, but in the hearts of mere mortals. They have the capacity for good, but they have the capacity for evil as well. and this is known, and so will AI. So right there, there should be some concern,
Starting point is 00:24:26 some public discussion about this. What is this exactly? Will it be good for us? And what even now are its effects? As people become dependent on using AI, what does that mean? Well, they get answers quicker. That's great.
Starting point is 00:24:40 Convenience is awesome. Everyone's for it. That's why we have drive-through dinner. But there are downsides. For example, if you no longer have to write anything, if you don't have to formulate your thoughts in the written word, what happens to the quality of your thinking? Well, is anyone who writes a lot can tell you writing produces thinking?
Starting point is 00:24:59 It is almost impossible to formulate a thought without articulating it first. Articulation is thinking. We think through writing and through speaking. But if we stop having to do those things, what happens to the quality of our thinking? Well, of course, it degrades. How can you teach children to write when they no longer write because they use AI to write for them.
Starting point is 00:25:22 This is often dismissed as cheating. Oh, it's cheating. We have a cheating scandal. Oh, it's more profound than that. Who cares about cheating? Who cares about grades? Your dumb school? What you care about is the quality of the child that school produces.
Starting point is 00:25:35 Can that kid think? And is AI a bet thinking or does it stifle thinking? Seems like it stifles thinking. What about AI in full flower? We've seen its effects already on the margins in education, but what if it enters into the professional world? What if it has the effect they tell us it's going to have in eliminating 50% of all high-paying American jobs, which are mostly intellectual jobs, jobs, jobs in which you use your mind, thinking jobs, reasoning jobs, creative jobs? What happens then?
Starting point is 00:26:13 Well, there are, of course, massive displacements, 50% of your population, 50% of the population, 50% of the population, that can support a family on a wage, if those people are unemployed, well, you're almost certainly going to get revolution, of course, because political volatility is directly related to economic volatility, obviously. Unemployed people become desperate, very often violent.
Starting point is 00:26:36 This has been known since the beginning of civilization. No one seems concerned about it. We should be. But there's, again, a deeper level on which to be concerned, which is, if the machine, creates, what do you do? Well, you consume. And so the people creating it are thinking of new ways to help you consume, well, you're not going to have a job. That's true. But we're going to come up with some way to give you money. And then you can just live and enjoy yourself, enjoy yourself.
Starting point is 00:27:07 Only shallow people who don't have children or hard-earned life experience could say something like that. Because the point of living, of course, is not to eat. Eating is a prerequisite to living, but it's not the point. The point of living is to create. That's the point of being a human being is to create things, whether with your hands or with your mind or with your body and producing children,
Starting point is 00:27:29 but it's the act of creation in which you mimic the creator himself who created you. So creation is central to the human experience. It's necessary for joy. There is no joy without creation, of course. We call it purpose or mission.
Starting point is 00:27:47 There are many names for it, but it's the same thing. It's the reason that you're here on Earth. And without it, you go crazy. Best case you kill yourself, very likely you kill others. You can't live without that. No person, particularly no man, can live without a mission. And the mission is always the same to create. So if the machine creates, right there we've got a huge problem.
Starting point is 00:28:13 This is very obvious. This is not a higher philosophy. philosophical concept. This is just life as we live it. And if you take away the thing that makes it worth living, where are we then? And yet, that's exactly what they're saying this is going to do. And because they're telling us this at a time when there's so much going on, so many looming existential crises, when there's so many things that are changing so quickly, there has not been a moment to pause and say, wait a second. Before we even get to the question of, can we stop this? let's talk about what it is.
Starting point is 00:28:45 What is this? But that hasn't happened at all. And instead, it has been cheer-led, mindlessly, perfectly in character, by the people in charge. They're totally for it. Because it's the future. It's cool. It's change. Change is great.
Starting point is 00:29:03 We love change. It's so exciting. If there's a single attitude that encapsulates the baby boom of a worldview, baby boom of a worldview, it's that. Change is so exciting. Well, it kind of depends what kind of change it is. Some changes are great. Some changes are fatal. So you have to kind of differentiate.
Starting point is 00:29:25 And before you expect me to get excited about the change, why don't you tell me what it's going to consist of? But they don't. And not only do they not, most of them, the foot soldiers in this project, the dumb ones, just repeat it with totally authentic cheerfulness. This is so great. It's the future.
Starting point is 00:29:40 Watch this tape from this weekend. is at Central Florida University. And this is a woman who's some kind of real estate executive who was called in to give the commencement address for some reason. And she's very excited about AI. She's very excited. It's the future. Watch as she tries to sell that program to a room full of young people
Starting point is 00:30:02 who are heading into the future. Watch their response. Now that said, we are living in a time of profound change. That's an understatement, right? Profound change. Change is exciting, very exciting. And let's face it, change can be daunting. The rise of artificial intelligence is the next industrial revolution.
Starting point is 00:30:37 What happened? Okay. I struck a chord. May I finish? Only a few years ago, AI was not a factor in our lives. That's just an amazing clip. You just got to hope that AI will allow us to save that clip for future generations to see.
Starting point is 00:31:17 Of course, it'll be one of the first thing AI races when it takes charge. But for right now, we can just savor that because of what it tells us. So here you have this boomer-adjacent lady from the real estate business up giving this kind of tepid, silly, banal commencement talk. Like all of them, they're all kind of tepid and silly and banal. She's like, it's so exciting. The future is so exciting. The AI is the next industrial illusion. She's no idea with the industrial illusions, but it's the next industrial revolution.
Starting point is 00:31:41 And here's this audience. She's hoping to impress by throwing out this newfangled term, AI. Kids, you want some AI? And they erupt in booing. booing. Now contrast this from like the tapes they used to play on Fox News 10 years ago. You know, of like the woke college kids are mad about some imaginary transgression with language and race. You know, you called it the Orient, not Asia. Boos! These are not those kids. These are their much younger siblings. They don't care about that stuff.
Starting point is 00:32:15 They care about reality. And the reason they care about reality is because suddenly it's very real to them. And they know the threat that they face is not a microaggression. The threat that they face is a barren future with no job and no reason for living. Oh, but you get UBI. Okay. What am I going to do with my life? Why am I here? They're stepping into a world where they can't answer that question.
Starting point is 00:32:39 And there are several reasons for this. But the main one is technological change. It's AI. And they probably don't know everything about AI. No one seems to, including Sam Altman, who's developing it. But they know enough to know it's a threat to them. But the chick on stage has no clue. She can't believe they're booing her.
Starting point is 00:32:57 AI, I threw that out for you. You're young people. Because she never thought to consult the people inheriting the future when she talked about the future. But because they are inheriting that world and they know it, they're 22 years old, stepping into adulthood. They know it's a threat to them. So then she says, well, just a few years ago, AI wasn't a factor.
Starting point is 00:33:19 And they say, yay! they pine for a world they will never know in which the most important things in their lives weren't threatened with extinction by a technology they don't understand. But they know enough to know it's likely not going to profit them. And how do they know this? Because no one's told them differently. For all the talk of AI,
Starting point is 00:33:40 nobody, literally nobody, has taken 20 minutes to explain how this is going to be great for you and me. We're getting higher power costs, of course. there's probably nothing uglier on planet Earth than a data center it's a physical atrocity it's an offense against God in nature prima facie look at it
Starting point is 00:34:01 this is not the Parthenon this is the opposite this degrades the landscape it is a scar upon the earth knows no environmental groups seem upset about it hmm that wasn't an op or anything the environmental movement were they
Starting point is 00:34:16 so they know that but no one has said to them as you would see in any rollout of any new technology. No one has said to them how this can be good for you. And they always tell you that, whether it's true or not, this is a space-saving dishwasher. You can get it in your apartment. You're never going to scrub dishes again. It's going to be amazing. Think of the time you will save. No one has said that. They'll give you like two minutes and how this is better to analyze medical records and like maybe you can get pancreatic cancer at stage two rather than stage four and that's like a couple extra years and that's great, you know,
Starting point is 00:34:56 it's great. But no one has said to the average person under 75 like how exactly is this going to improve your life? They haven't even tried. Not for one second. Even the people selling it. Why? Because they're not selling it to you.
Starting point is 00:35:10 You're not part of the transaction. It's a closed loop. You're not part of this economy. The data centers are the physical, the routers, literally. They're the place where these computations are happening inside machines, big water-cooled buildings. And those are owned by one company or set of companies. And the machines inside are owned by another set. And the data is owned by a bunch of other companies.
Starting point is 00:35:39 And all of it is made possible by the complicity of a bunch of elected officials from county commissioner up to president. but at no point is anybody else consulted or cajoled even or won over it's just they're not relevant they're literally not relevant watch this clip which you may have already seen because it's been everywhere but it tells you so much of residents in rural Utah in a think a county commissioner's meeting when they're trying to tell the three member panel that hey how is a 62 square mile facility that employs almost nobody and is going to use more
Starting point is 00:36:19 electricity than the entire state of Utah. How is that good for us? Watch their response. False. All of this is false. Then why won't they let people talk? Why won't they let people talk? This is not real information.
Starting point is 00:36:35 And we sit here like it's okay. It's a charade. It's a charade. It's false. Those people are upset, really upset. And you can imagine that they're upset because they're worried about what this data center is going to do to their lives. To their home finances, of course, but not just that. What are these things? What are they for?
Starting point is 00:37:06 Why has nobody told us? You're telling us this isn't going to hurt us, but you don't even seem to know what it is. How can we trust you? And shouldn't we have a say in this? Isn't the whole system predicated based on the idea that we own this? this. We are shareholders in this town, this county, this state, this country. We own, we are its owners. And you're the people we hire to manage it. How did that get inverted? Why are you acting like owners and treating me like an employee who has no agency and no right
Starting point is 00:37:36 to pipe up? Who is in charge here? Is this really a democracy? I mean, those are the obvious questions that come to mind when you watch something like this. So how are politicians responding in a functioning democracy or Democratic Republic or whatever you want to call it, but in a country in which the people rule, what so are the owners, not the employees, you would expect elected officials to try and calm fears and say, look, I get it. This is scary. Change always is. But once this happens, your life is going to be so much better. It's unbelievable. At least go through the motions. So here's the governor of that state, Utah. This is Spencer Cox, explaining not why you should like AI, but why you should shut up and bear it and pay for it. Watch this.
Starting point is 00:38:23 Look, we're living through a very interesting time right now. There was an article I read yesterday that said that this is very similar to kind of the nuclear arms race, the nuclear era, you know, 60, 70, 80 years ago, very different than anything that we've experienced in the past several decades. And there is a national security piece to this that has to be acknowledged. The rate at which machine learning and artificial intelligence is changing, the dangers that that poses. And what happens if an adversarial nation gets ahead of us in this space is something that we should all be worried about. And so we have an obligation. I think every state has an obligation when it comes to this space to allow for these types of data centers to be built
Starting point is 00:39:16 in their states. Did that guy go to HBS and work at Bain? Maybe, maybe not. They all talk the same. It's not happening in the world. It's happening in this space. And what's happening? What's happening is the potentially existential threat of a competitor nation getting dominance in
Starting point is 00:39:31 this space. What is that existential threat? what exactly would happen, specifically happen? Why should I be afraid of China getting dominance, whatever that means, please tell me what it means, in AI before the United States, China, which has hundreds of data centers somehow overtaking the United States in this space, which is thousands of data centers, and now is building the world's biggest data center. So a bunch of questions come to mind. Is building data centers the same thing as achieving dominance in this space? Maybe, maybe not. I'd be the most lucrative part of the whole process for developers and for Black Rock,
Starting point is 00:40:09 but is it actually the same as technological progress? Is building giant steel vinyl-clad buildings that use unimagined levels of electricity the same as progress? I don't know. You tell me, Spencer Cox, not that he knows, of course he doesn't. So instead, he goes right to maybe the core question, because it may tell us what this actually is, which is the military. This isn't about improving your life. we'll just be honest because I can't think of any way that it might.
Starting point is 00:40:38 What this is really about is achieving dominance over a strategic rival, China. Now that raises like obvious questions like, okay, what is dominance? Why do we need to achieve it over China in what specific area are you talking about? And actually, if we're being totally honest, like, why is China so bad? And China is bad in a lot of ways. There's no doubt about that. Let's be specific about the ways in which China is bad. China is bad, not because it's slovenly or shallow.
Starting point is 00:41:09 It's not. It's actually highly well-organized, complex ancient societies. There's a lot, it's very impressive about China. But it's not Western. And because it's not Western, it doesn't begin with the universally agreed upon belief that people have inalienable rights with which they were born, granted them by God, not the state, that the state can abridge. In fact, the state exists to protect.
Starting point is 00:41:31 you have always and everywhere as a human being, not just an American, as a human being, the right to say what you think, to speak your conscience. You have the right to talk to whomever you want to. Those are inalible rights. You have the right to worship whichever God you choose. So China's bad, to the extent that it is bad,
Starting point is 00:41:51 again, many ways it's pretty impressive, pretty darn impressive. But it's bad from our point of view, and this is true, because it doesn't respect those rights. And the way we know it doesn't respect those rights, is because China uses technology to eliminate privacy. And no privacy means no freedom. You can't actually have freedom as you're being surveilled. Right?
Starting point is 00:42:15 I mean, the most diabolical thing is a subject to many science fiction stories, that any government can do to you is control your thoughts. Of course, because why? Because your thoughts are private. And because they're private, they cannot be violated. Privacy is essential. It's a prerequisite for freedom. and China is bad because there is no privacy in China.
Starting point is 00:42:34 Everything you say or do is being monitored with technology. Why is it possible to do that in a country of over a billion people? Because they have amazing tech and they have harnessed it against their own people to watch and listen to them, to monitor them. And then to use that information as all governments will inevitably to punish people who don't comply. That's why China is bad, specifically. Just to let Spencer Cox know the core of this right. Their system, totalitarian, our system based in the acknowledgement of inailable rights. Freedom versus tyranny. It's simple. Why is this relevant? Because what Spencer Cox is telling
Starting point is 00:43:13 you is that we are building the system not to become different from China, but to ape China, to be more like China. And this really is the core problem with AI. I mean, there may be lots of problems. It could take off and develop its own desires and personality and enslave us. I mean, Maybe. Hope not. But short term, the real threat, and by the way, it's possible that some people are highlighting the theoretical threat of AI becoming autonomous in order to cloak the more real and present threat of AI being used by the normal middling IQ autocrats who occupy our government. Like letting John Cornyn read your email. That might be the real use of AI.
Starting point is 00:43:58 It's not nothing spooky or crazy. It's just like letting Ted Cruz do it every once to you. That's reason enough to fear AI. I don't need to be fluent in sci-fi to worry about that. So will that happen? Well, I don't know. This data center in Utah was made possible by the military installation development authority of Utah. This is a military installation.
Starting point is 00:44:27 Well, in what sense is it a military installation? installation. What is that? Well, we don't really know. And of course, no one asked Spencer Cox, but we do know that governments might be predisposed to AI because it gives them control. And the first thing it gives them almost complete control over is communication. Communication, not just surveillance, but the ability to craft a message, to convince you of something. The propaganda opportunities inherent in AI are something that the Stasi, couldn't have dreamt about because they're so profound. You can create any illusion with AI. You can convince people very easily of almost anything using AI. And so if you're going to have
Starting point is 00:45:10 technology like that, the very first thing you would do, if you were thinking clearly about it, is prevent anyone with institutional power from having it. Because that would eliminate the freedom of everyone else. You would have no shot against people with AI. Not necessarily that they would target your house for a drone strike, they wouldn't have to. Because they would convince your wife and your kids and your neighbors and maybe even you that their program was right because you would have no other information. You would be living in a vacuum controlled by them. You wouldn't know different.
Starting point is 00:45:42 The past would be gone. The future would be theirs. It would be a complete control of your attitudes. It would be almost impossible to remain independently minded, to think clearly in an ecosystem controlled where information was controlled by AI in the hands of autocrats. So you would think in a country founded to preserve human freedom,
Starting point is 00:46:05 which is why the United States was founded, not to preserve free market capitalism, whatever that is, but to preserve God-given rights, you would think there would be a robust debate on this. No, at the very same moment this technology is being developed and paid for by taxpayers
Starting point is 00:46:18 who really are paying for this. Of course, needless to say, always paying for this. The U.S. Congress just voted to allow the U.S. government to spy on American citizens without even going through the normal pro forma rigmarole of getting a warrant from a secret judge to do it. They just do it. And the president pushed for this and both parties were totally on board with it. Huh. Kind of weird is happening in exactly the same moment. So that is the concern. And that may explain why the people developing this and permitting it and profiting from it, everyone involved in this, not one of them has taken any time to me. make you like it. They don't care what you think about it, possibly because pretty soon they won't have to. That's not like some dark conspiracy theory. It's just obvious. It's just obvious. How else would you explain this? You're rolling, I mean, even during COVID, they at least tried to tell you that you were wearing the mask and taking the poison shot and jumping on one leg and
Starting point is 00:47:20 whatever they were having you do that day because of the science. They tried to convince you that you kind of had to do it because it was good. They're not even trying that now. And so you have to ask why. And again, it may be, just guessing, because they don't have to. We should take this very seriously. Final clip, which may convince you of this, comes from Larry Fink, who runs BlackRock. Now, Larry Fink was, you know, a nemesis of the current president.
Starting point is 00:47:49 Of course. He's not simply one the richest men in the world, one most important business leaders in the world, certainly one of the most powerful, more powerful than almost all global heads of state. He was also, in effect, the leader of the opposition to Trump. And he was the guy who promulgated anyway, the idea of ESG, the idea that you don't just do business, you have to affect political change as you do it. You got to worry about racial equity, too many whites. You got to worry about the climate, CO2.
Starting point is 00:48:20 No, you can't have a chainsaw or a woodstone. that's his contribution to the American economy is not just economic, it's social. And Trump was standing in opposition to all of that, of course. That's why got elected twice. But now all of a sudden, Larry Fink is
Starting point is 00:48:42 a close associate of Trump's and is working in close concert with Trump to bring about this AI. So here's Larry Fink speaking to fellow members of the Epstein class, a about AI and what this means and his concerns about it. Watch what he's worried about.
Starting point is 00:49:00 But even here in the United States, if we're going to be building, let's see these one-gigawatt data centers, how do we make sure we're not protecting those $50 billion, $75 billion investments? We have to re-look at everything because of the role of drone warfare. Right now we're looking at it internationally. But, you know,
Starting point is 00:49:19 one of my concerns is could it be a domestic terrorism using a $3,000 drone. So all of these things are actually opportunities, not problems. There are opportunities, not problems. There are no problems in the Bain Capital HBS world. They're only opportunities in this space. But consider the concern. So if you're rolling out what they're telling you,
Starting point is 00:49:45 and clearly they believe, is the single greatest technological change in the history of human life on this planet, It's the biggest thing that's ever happened, ever. Then you think one of your main concerns would be, well, does this change the relationship of the powerless to the powerful relationship of the citizen to the state, for example? One of your concerns would be, how do we do this and bring about the prosperity that it promises without totally eliminating human rights, making people slaves? Because we're against slavery, right? Aren't we against slavery?
Starting point is 00:50:18 We were. How do we do that? But that doesn't seem to be Larry Fink's main concern. His main concern is how do we protect our investment, this infrastructure, these buildings, these data centers. Someone could drone them. Someone could drone them. Now who?
Starting point is 00:50:36 Foreign actors, Hezbollah, Hamas? No, no, no, just people. Larry Fink is concerned that ordinary American citizens, as he just said, will use $3,000 drones to destroy these billion-dollar investments. Why would you be worried about that? We've had electricity for over 100 years. There are 11,000 power plants in the United States. There are like 50,000 substations, electrical substations.
Starting point is 00:51:05 There are 185 million power poles in the United States. 185 million. How many Americans have drone a power plant or a substation or a power pole recently? How many acts of domestic terror have been committed against energy infrastructure? Well, some in the 70s, it wasn't that uncommon. It wasn't that successful either. But there were, you know, radical splinter groups are doing stuff like that. But not very many.
Starting point is 00:51:31 Most of it's pretty much unprotected because it has no need for protection. Because people understand the utility of electricity. Without electricity, we live a very different life, a reduced life in a lot of ways. We need electricity. People will starve to without it. So people aren't blowing up power plants because they're fundamental. fundamentally, even the climate warriors among us are pretty grateful for energy, for power, for electricity.
Starting point is 00:51:56 So you don't have to protect something that people appreciate and think helps them. There's no need. But Larry Fink knows, in fact, he's admitting that people know this is bad for them, so bad that they might be willing to commit an act of terrorism, a felony for which they could be in prison for a long time. And trust me, if you attack a data center, you're going to get a lot longer sentence than you would if you say, raped someone, or molested a child on an island in the Caribbean, in which case you're fine, you attack a data center, part of a Black Rock investment?
Starting point is 00:52:28 Are you joking? A Spencer Cox property? You're going away, buddy, for real and not to some club-fed farm. Like Supermax in the hole. Do not mess with a data center. But again, why would you want to? Why are the kids at graduation at Central Florida State University booing AI? The very name AI makes them booed.
Starting point is 00:52:48 because people can feel in their gut it's not good for them. This is not a future they want. And they moreover know because it couldn't be more obvious that nobody cares that they don't want it at all. It's being imposed on them as immigrant populations are imposed on them all the time. Hey, meet your new Somali neighbors. Oh, you didn't ask for that? Who cares? Shut up, racist.
Starting point is 00:53:09 People are used to living like this. They've been humiliated. Their standard of living has fallen. Their life expectancy has declined in the United States over the past 12. 20 years. And they've said almost nothing about it. They've been sent to wars, committed to wars, as a nation, not just the men fighting it, but all of us and their consequences again and again and again against their will. No one's booing the Iran war at a college graduation, but the mere mention of AI sends the graduates into booze. Because they feel in their guts it's that bad and
Starting point is 00:53:47 nobody cares that they feel that way. In fact, they only don't only not care. They know it. And their only real concern is protecting the investment from what they consider inevitable drone attacks from arrestive population. Man, the point is not that AI is terrible. Certainly, there's got to be upsides. It's kind of interesting. Probably can do a lot of repetitive tasks that people don't want to do and shouldn't be doing in the first place? Great. It's great. But the downsides also seem profound. And the refusal of the people developing this and profiting from it to even address those is making this a still more volatile place. For a lot of women, Mother's Day is a joyful day, particularly those who are about to become
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Starting point is 00:57:30 Maybe that's why he's out explaining what the data center is because it's pretty hard to dislike him personally. But as you watch this interview with the guy who's in charge of the World's Largest Data Center, watch carefully and listen, are any of the questions being answered? Does he know the answers? Does he care about the answers? Watch. Kevin O'Leary, thank you so much for doing this. How did you, I read, first of I just wanted to check the facts here, but I read that you
Starting point is 00:58:03 are building the world's largest data center in Utah, 40,000 acres. How did you get to the data center business? How did this start? You know, I've always been in real estate and I sort of came up in commercial real estate with climate control storage for pharmaceutical companies. Data center development is very complex, but very similar in some ways. It requires permitting. It requires dark fiber. There's only five tenants in the world. You know, you know them all at Amazon, Google, et cetera, Microsoft. And so the thing that got me motivated, though, was watching in the last two years
Starting point is 00:58:42 this narrative in North America about how negative data centers are. It started in Virginia, actually. The idea that they consume a lot of water, that they are very noisy, and all that's true from stuff that was built 15 years ago, but today that's not the case.
Starting point is 00:58:59 And yet the narrative kept going. And I thought, who's doing this? who would not want us to have compute power? Who would not want us to build our power grid out? Because when you build a data center today, you have to develop your own power and you can sell it back to the grid. That's what we're doing in Utah.
Starting point is 00:59:14 I'm thinking to myself, the Chinese. They don't want us to do that. And I went through that whole thing with TikTok, as you may recall, and I actually saw the evidence of how the Chinese were manipulating the algorithm. Now they're doing it a different way. And that just kind of pisses me off. So I'm happy to add, I'm like I I don't want my kids in 20 years who live in New York being told what's eat for breakfast by the Chinese.
Starting point is 00:59:40 So, you know, I'm kind of on a mission here to compete. Okay, so the point, so you're doing this because, well, because it's a business opportunity, but also because China doesn't want you to do it. Why would China not want data centers built in the United States? Because we're in a competition for AI compute. The nation that has the best AI models will be the winner of future wars. It'll have the most productive economy. We already know now just looking at earnings that are coming out as we speak.
Starting point is 01:00:13 Talk of the earnings this quarter are unprecedented in terms of how good they are. Because somehow, very quickly, and this is probably just serendipitous luck for this administration, AI compute is now being implemented in all 11 sectors of our economy, and it's enhancing both productivity and margin. So these companies are making a lot more money than they were anticipated to because AI is very productive. And people debate about the job shift and everything else, but the fact is the economy is on fire, even at a time when we have conflict. So if I were the Chinese, the last thing I want in America is the five or six tech companies that are competing with me on DeepSeek having more compute capacity. I want to shut down every single proposal for every single data center in every single state.
Starting point is 01:00:59 and I want agitators, I want paid protesters, I want environmentalists, I want to shut it all down so that they can't train their models as fast as I can. Meanwhile, the Chinese just built in terms of new power in the last 18 months, 400 gigawatts of new power, all with coal burning turbines, coal. You know, they're not worried about the environment. The big guy over there says, built one here and then stick a data set it beside it so I can train my deep seek model faster. And you've heard it from the Anthropic CEO this week. He came out the stereo guy and said, hey, they're going to catch up in six months. So everybody wake up and smell
Starting point is 01:01:41 what's going on here. And just, I started to dig in the last week looking at all of these strings that are attacking the Utah proposal and the one I got up in Alberta. I'm going to where I can find power and developing these things. And I want the Chinese to see what we're doing. We're coming at you, Can I ask, I've got a million questions, but let's just start with the competition between the U.S. and China on AI. If data centers are the key to AI, why has China built so few of them? Oh, no. I think there are about 365 data centers in China, almost 4,000 in the United States. So clearly they haven't prevented us from building data centers. What do you think that is? Okay. Let me walk you through the math of the last, you know, this is moving very, very quickly.
Starting point is 01:02:25 but the data centers of even 24 months ago were 100 megawatt facilities. And they were useful for cloud storage, like your Excel files and all the rest of that. They were useful for just basic compute and storage of data. But then when these models started emerging, such as we have going with Anthropic or Gemini, and any of them, GROC, all of it. and all of the tools built on top of them, the amount of compute power geometrically required, geometrically grew, and it was no longer 100 megawatts.
Starting point is 01:03:04 The minimum was 250 megawatts. Then four months later, the minimum was 500 megawatts. Wait, here it comes. And then two months after that, it was one gigawatt. Now, try and get a gigawatt out of the American grid. or the Canadian grid or the Mexican grid, not a chance in hell. We're tapped out. So the Chinese were building these one-gigawatt facilities.
Starting point is 01:03:32 So it doesn't matter about the number of facilities. It matters how many are gigawatt plus for training AI models. Because you need a lot of compute for the modern-day chip. And this technology is advancing very, very quickly. So it's the size of the, the large ones are the ones that they're, beating us on, not the small 100 megawatts. Nobody cares about those anymore. You can't train anything on that.
Starting point is 01:03:59 So we're competing now for campuses, 10,000 acres and more at a time. And that's where the Chinese are kicking our asses. So you said you will go wherever the energy is, but I thought you were bringing your own energy to the project. Can you explain how you're going to power this? Sure, that's a good question. You need, you can't tap in and you can't, you know, you tap, you know, you tap into somebody's
Starting point is 01:04:25 grid, let's take a place like Texas or in Mississippi or Utah for that matter where I am, the electrical bills in that county are going to go up 30%. And that's what pissed off so many people in Virginia. They went out of their minds as the electrical bills kept
Starting point is 01:04:42 going up. So you can't do that. You have to bring your own power. So the way you do that is you find low-cost stranded natural gas. You acquire the new technology turbines that burn very, very clean and require a lot less water, because that's a big debate too. And in some cases, no water. They're air-cooled.
Starting point is 01:05:01 And you build those turbines first. So basically, the data center game is about power. Now, here's another reason the Chinese would not want. Forget about data centers. Let's just say we're building new gas turbines that make electricity. The Chinese don't want you to do that either, because they know that that's how you're going to solve the grid problem. You know, the people in Utah are telling me, look, is there any way when you build these power facilities for the data centers?
Starting point is 01:05:30 You can sell back some of that power to our local grid. And the answer is yes. So now, instead of being the evil data center guys, we can be the guys that are actually powering the Utah grid, which, by the way, taps into the national grid. So we want to build as many of these power generators before we build any data centers. So where does the gas come from in the, in the, this day, the world's largest data center, the one you're planning in Utah. Well, mine won't be the largest for years. That's another piece of misinformation being spewed everywhere. And I'm going to tell you doing it soon. We're going to build 1.5 gigawatts
Starting point is 01:06:07 first, so a fraction of the nine gig proposed and make sure everything works. And the people there in Box Elder County come inspected and see the air quality EPA standards we're going to hold up to the water rights permits that we're going to maintain and be compliant with the noise EPA requirements that we have to be compliant with the air quality we have to be compliant with get the first one up a small fraction of it and show everybody how it work that's the plan and then I didn't I didn't need 40,000 acres but that was the parcel available that's twice the size of Manhattan it's called a mya designation right beside the Hill Air Force base it's not using it all right times bigger than manette yeah but I don't
Starting point is 01:06:50 I don't need all that, but that was what was available. I'm going to lease it back to grazers, do some manufacturing, maybe. There's plenty of land. We don't need it all. But the power for it, where does that come from? So what we do is there's the Ruby pipeline there. It's only 17% utilized. It's one of the most underutilized pipelines in America.
Starting point is 01:07:10 So it's not like we're, so we buy gas from the Ruby pipeline, and we put it into a clean generator, and it generates electricity. And we tie that back to the grid if they wanted, or we power a data center. That's the idea. So we have to build the power first. And the power itself, I think we have a big challenge in every state. Everybody's got to build more power in the American grid right now. And the North American grid, for that matter, Mexico, too, and Canada.
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Starting point is 01:09:54 Join bloke's. Get your edge back. I mean, I think that's absolutely right. But so just to be clear, this project is totally energy independent. It takes electricity from nobody else. It creates 100% of its own power. Yes, that's 100% correct. And that was always the proposal.
Starting point is 01:10:12 And that is in the contract. that we actually developed and got unanimously passed by the three commissioners in Box Elder where this is the benefit. It's to the benefit of the Box Elder, there's 66,000 people there. They're gonna get a lot of tax revenue, a lot of jobs, 10,000 construction jobs,
Starting point is 01:10:28 2,000 maintenance jobs just for the first one and a half gigawatts. So there's a lot of economic upside. But I must tell you, and this is the first time this has happened to me, I have a pretty big team, as I'm sure you do on social media, I'm managing a, network of 12 million plus followers on different platforms, on all of them.
Starting point is 01:10:48 And so about four hours after the vote was unanimously, unanimously passed on, there was a Monday night at around 605 Utah time. I got a phone call from one of the people that watches our network, looks for abnormalities. And he said, there's something going on here, something very unusual on Instagram and on Twitter, which is now X. And I said, what do you mean? He said, the spiking of a bunch of IP addresses that we don't know. And it's spewing out a tremendous amount of information. I said, okay, guys, let's get our team on, because I'm very fortunate. I have a bunch of very good data scientists, investigative data scientists, if you want to call them that,
Starting point is 01:11:51 probably one of the best teams privately outside of the government in the Department of Defense. My team's pretty good. You can make the assumption they once worked in these agencies. All right, let me give you some names here, Tucker. Party for socialism and liberation. Apparently, shares offices with the CPP all over my social media. Okay, wait, let me just stop you. Let me just stop you there. So if you're saying that you're being criticized by agents of a foreign government, let me just add my sympathy, empathy, in fact, having been the subject of that, you know, quite a bit over many. I'm well aware. Right. But this, so, okay. But, but. But. But. But.
Starting point is 01:12:38 that doesn't, yeah, you make the case the Chinese don't like it. If you're that concerned about the Chinese, what percentage of the materials in the data center come from China? Less and less all the time. That's one of the things the administration is trying to do. The turbines are European made or American made. The pipelines are obviously American made. The chips are certainly American made. The actual buildout of the facilities, mostly American made. I don't think there's a whole lot of, we're not mining Bitcoin here. Right. No, I mean, I think I read it's about 40 or 41%.
Starting point is 01:13:18 So it's, I mean, China is benefiting from, you know, most purchases that most of us make because it's the world's largest manufacturer, and that would also include the construction of data centers. But my point is, I'm sure there are lots of people trying to influence this outcome to their own benefit, and that would include foreign countries, maybe even China. But it doesn't change the facts. about the project. So I just want to make sure I have these clear. Are you paying, would you be paying market rate for the gas? Yes, I don't have a choice on that. Right. You have to go sheet a gas
Starting point is 01:13:48 deal. Pretty well-paying market rate for everything. There's a, there's a competition between states for these jobs. I know there's a lot of bad press. I wanted to just finish with the list, because I don't think, Tucker, you get the enormity of what's going on here. Oh, I do. I do get the enormity. No, no, no, I have no doubt that, I mean. Well, I want to, I want to, I want to, I want to mention two that are cells inside of Utah, which really stunned me. This I'd never seen before. Alliance for a Better Utah elevate strategies, taking the content from the CPP, repurposing it, and jamming it down the throats of people in Utah on my social media feed and lots of other feeds.
Starting point is 01:14:33 I have no doubt that's true, but I'm asking questions that I think are relevant to the country. I'm not an agent of the Chinese. I'm not a socialist. So I just want to know, like, where's the water coming from? Because water, as you know, is one of those fantastic resources in the West. Oh, no, that's right. That's right. When you buy land in Utah, there are water rights that were granted that land sometimes over 100 years ago. You have to apply for a permit, a usage permit for that water. So if it was once used for, for one purpose and you want to change the purpose to industrial, let's say, in the case of a data center or power generation, you have to apply for the permit. Usually what happens, if it was grazing
Starting point is 01:15:20 and it was 100% you could use, they may change that and knock it down by 40% to 60%. But there's water already on that property already being used right now. We're just repurposing that water for a different purpose. It's not like we're going to draw water from somewhere else. We couldn't use the land if it had no water. We couldn't even have a toilet in the men's room if we didn't have any water. Would you be using more water than, say, a sugar beet farmer would? No, actually, probably not. It depends. Tucker, the way it works is, let's say your prime tenant is Google. They come along and they say, okay, we want to be the tenant for the Utah site. But we have a whole bunch of requirements because they're under pressure too to be a lot more
Starting point is 01:16:12 efficient, productive and more sustainable. They may say, well, let's not use water to cool our turbines. Our spec is going to be air-cooled turbines. So you're going to build out, you're the owner, you're the master developer, here's our spec. And so I expect whether it ends up being Amazon or Microsoft or Tesla or Google, they're going to build in a whole bunch of things. And we can't deliver them water we don't have. So my guess is it's going to be contained cooling for the chips, which is like a radiator in your car, so you're not using a ton of water there. And then for the turbines themselves, it may be air cooled.
Starting point is 01:16:57 We don't know yet. It depends what the tenant wants. So what's your, as you, as you, you game this out, expected water use over the first 10 years? Well, not knowing what my tenant wants yet, probably less than we originally anticipated in terms of what is given us on the water rights. We've applied for that. I mean, we're anticipating we'll get, you know, whatever we're going to get. I don't think we're going to use it all at all because what people... Do you expect water rates in the state of Utah will go up? Yeah, not because of us. I just think
Starting point is 01:17:31 they go up anyways over time. But if they go up, if they go up at a quicker rate, then they have been going up. If there's a spike in water price, would you compensate the state for the difference? No, I'd be paid. In other words, if your business causes water prices to rise, are you on the hook for any of that? Yeah, I think we would be. I mean, we're negotiating that. But that, I don't think water is the constraint because most of the technology, which advances
Starting point is 01:18:00 every 24 months is reducing the requirement for water. So I mentioned the air-cooled turbines. Those just came on the scene 18 months ago. So they're the first to actually generate five megawatts at a time like Lego Box, put them together and you're using air. But you have EPA regulation about air quality. So you've got to be very careful that when you're using air cooling, you're not breaching the air quality because in Utah,
Starting point is 01:18:28 and I studied this when I was back in college, It's a unique geography. They get inversions there because of the mountains. So you really is an old environmental study guy. That's the one they'd always show us would be Salt Lake City. So I'm well aware of the problem, and I know what the new turbines can do. The amount of hype and hysteria and over all of this stuff, well, I've already pointed out, I think it's being generated by our adversaries, but it's also misinformation.
Starting point is 01:18:58 Everything that's been said about that site is, false. Well, I'm grateful that you're able to present your side of this and thank you for doing it. Things around the world are moving so fast right now. It's impossible to keep up with all of the changes. But we do know that when those changes happen, markets change too. And nothing changes faster than the price of precious metals, gold and silver. It just shifts in an instant because it is a reaction to and against what's happening in the world. So timing is essential. If you're thinking about adding precious metals, and you definitely should, we do. You need to know when prices are going to move and why they're moving. And Battalion Metals makes that all really simple. You can
Starting point is 01:19:39 buy the dip when it happens. So if you want real-time alerts sent directly to your inbox when gold and silver prices move, go to battalionmedals.com slash alerts. Markets move fast, to stay ahead of them. So it's battalion metals.com slash alerts. So let me ask, because I mean, this is just a huge new thing, and I think it's understandable that people would be anxious about it. I don't think they understand it. I don't fully understand it. That's for sure. Let me ask, though, about why taxpayers should have to pay for this if it's a private business and your tenants are some of the richest companies in the world. Why would taxpayers be required as they now are to subsidize this.
Starting point is 01:20:26 They don't. They don't necessarily have to do that. They just won't win any contracts. It's a competition. But why are you getting tax breaks, is my question. Yeah, everybody, you go back and you say, what incentives can you give us to invest $15 billion in the first 1.5 gigs? That's what it takes.
Starting point is 01:20:46 I have to go raise $15 billion. That's just the first point. But anyone who starts a business, why should taxpayers have to pony up for that? they don't but of course they do if you if you're getting a tax break and they're not they're making up the difference there's a state budget that's no problem that's no problem i can build that in texas i can build it in jacksonville mississippi there but why if it's such a good business would you be asking taxpayers to help pay for it without giving them equity in the company are you giving taxpayers
Starting point is 01:21:13 shares no the investors get the shares but here's why they would do it why would the taxpayers have to i mean in other words if you want to start a business but why why am i as a taxpayer for forced to pay for your business. I don't get it. Well, let's forget about data centers. Let's go any manufacturing. Let's say you're going to build an aluminum sheet manufacturing facility. You go to the government there and say, look, this is a huge cap-ex expenditure.
Starting point is 01:21:43 I'm going to hire 2,000 people. I'm going to build a community center. I'm going to pay a lot of tax on the profits in your state when I sell the aluminum. and I'm going to hire all these people who they will also pay tax and we will build a school because our workers need a school and and and and and what can you give me
Starting point is 01:22:02 to incentivize me versus the state right beside you which is willing to give me an incentive package. No, no, I understand that you're gaming a system in place. You didn't come up with this but I'm just trying to understand so the trade typically is jobs, okay?
Starting point is 01:22:18 But these projects don't actually... Well, no, no, it's also jobs and tax. Because you're going to be. And taxes. Yeah. But then you're getting a tax break. So that doesn't really make any sense. Only up front you're getting Tucker, welcome to America, buddy.
Starting point is 01:22:32 This is how it's gone on for 200 years. Okay. Well, I don't know. Lots of bad things go on for a while. I'm just, but I think at some point it's worth assessing, like, why are we doing this? So you are fair to do that? You're doing it because there's a competition. Well, I run a couple of businesses and we're not getting any tax breaks.
Starting point is 01:22:49 I think they're every bit as virtuous as data centers. but I'm not availing myself of that, and no one's offered. And I wouldn't take it anyway, because it's not the job of taxpayers to subsidize a private business. It's a fair comment, but my job is to create a data center, create 2,000 jobs for long term, 10,000 manufacturing at the beginning or in construction. And I'm obviously looking at multiple sites, and this won't be the last one I build. May I ask 2,000 jobs? Okay, so relative to the size, the physical size of the project, which, as you noted, is multiple times the size of Manhattan, and the power draw at peak, this data center, your projections, will consume about as much energy as New York City does.
Starting point is 01:23:38 But New York City provides almost five million jobs, and this project, by your own description, would provide about 2,000 jobs. I don't see the trade here. You definitely got that calculation wrong. By building a data center that trains AI that provides productivity to the entire nation, we create millions of jobs, high-paying jobs. So AI is going to create jobs? Yes. I thought it was going to eliminate jobs.
Starting point is 01:24:06 You know, just think about the new technologies we don't even know yet that are going to be built off AI. Everybody thinks when television came, everybody would lose their job in radio. That was complete BS. And the same thing is going to happen here. Everybody's hysteria about losing jobs, making hamburgers or flipping them, being replaced by a robot. That's probably true. But all kinds of new technology will become available over time, including in medical science and biology and all kinds of things where the models can be used. I'm extremely optimistic what I'm doing is creating a whole new opportunity for my children.
Starting point is 01:24:44 What kinds of jobs? Well, I mean, again, some of this, of course, is unknowable. and I want to be as fair as I can be because I'm grateful that you're willing to talk about it so openly. But you just said this will create, AI will create millions of new jobs. You're part of the basis of AI. You can't have AI without data centers, at least right now.
Starting point is 01:25:04 So what are those millions of jobs? Because we can go through the list that the creators, the people who actually are making AI right now, developing it, we can go through a list of jobs they say it's going to eliminate, which would be like lawyers and financial planners, and the basis of upper middle class America, that's going away. They've said this.
Starting point is 01:25:23 What will it be replaced by? It'll be replaced by new science opportunities, new exploration into space, new manufacturing for robotics, for defense as well. Wars in the future probably aren't going to be fought with people getting shot in the flesh. It'll be one set of robots against another.
Starting point is 01:25:42 I think the drone technology will advance the manufacturing of surveillance, all that stuff against our enemies. which notably is basically China. So if you think about how, you know, you debate the data center, I think it's fair to do that, what you're doing. But I would be very concerned if I were living in Taiwan that one day my electricity just goes out
Starting point is 01:26:02 and I get invaded by basically robotics and high precision ordinance. And that's what China wants and they want to get there first. Now, if we don't get there first, if we don't develop something better than their AI, and our ability to be predictive on where these conflicts are going to happen, I think we'll be in a bad place in 20 years. And so... Okay, but I think it's very revealing that I asked you about jobs in the United States,
Starting point is 01:26:26 and you went immediately to defending Taiwan in the South Carolina. Well, we manufacture the equipment here, Tucker. That's where it's made. Okay. Well, actually, a lot of this has been in China, as I know you know. So... But that's my whole point. I don't want to do that anymore.
Starting point is 01:26:41 I want to start making it here. I want to do advanced robotics. I totally agree. But the promise of AI and robotics is that the, the robots will make the products of the future. So how exactly does that result in American jobs? If you're in the campus, what are those? What are you talking about when you see? Every job is replaced by a machine. I don't buy that. I just don't agree with you because it's never happened. I'm not saying I don't want that to happen. Trust me. I'm really worried about it. Almost panicked. But I'm trying to feel better.
Starting point is 01:27:11 Okay, then please make me feel better. Where are these millions of new jobs? What specifically are you talking about? Well, you know, every time technology advances, it creates new opportunities that we're not foreseen prior because you don't know the direction of new tech. You know, think about if you and I, because we were actually around in the late 80s contemplating what new jobs would be created by the Internet. And look at what's happened. It's created millions of jobs and advanced all kinds of technologies and changed the way we live to the better. And I would say to you, the same angst we had, the same narrative that was going on in 1992 about how the Internet is going to wipe out the economy and it's a bad thing and it's dangerous. Of course people loathe change. That's the nature of how it is.
Starting point is 01:28:04 Do you think that the United States is a happier country than it was in 1992? Define happy. What does that mean? I don't know. How about the suicide rate or the addiction rate or the life? expectancy. Those are all upside down. There's lots of social issues and there always has been. I would remind you, though. But they've gotten worse at exactly the period in history that the Internet was formed and then
Starting point is 01:28:33 seemed to infuse every part of our lives. So if you were worried about the effect of the Internet in 1992 on America, looking back from the vantage of 2026, you could say, yeah, I had good reason to be worried, couldn't you? Or am I imagining that? You could say that it would have some effect on society, but let me remind you something, and I'm probably the right guy to make this comment, because I spend a lot of time all around the world investing all around the world. I don't care where you go, and I feel this way, and I've really learned this over the last 20 years, what is the number one export of America? It's not energy, and it's not technology. It's not technology. it's actually the American dream for all its faults that America has everybody I meet in every country
Starting point is 01:29:23 pretty well every single one would like to figure out how they can get to America, start a business, and be part of the American dream. And I go to some pretty gnarly places where people are willing to risk their lives to go under a river with barbed wire to get in here. So until that changes, which I don't see ever happening, my only concern is China. They're the ones. What's the American, what's the, if you could just be more precise,
Starting point is 01:29:53 I mean, born here, I love this country, I'm not leaving, so I'm vested in the idea of the American dream, but I'd love to just define it more precisely before we discuss it. What is it?
Starting point is 01:30:03 Okay. Let's make it really basic. Let's go to Shark Tank. Those people that trot out in front of me and have done for almost 20 years with an idea to solve someone's problem that they'll get paid for. And 80% fail, but 20% make it. And it creates personal freedom for them because it was just an idea. I mean, I think of some of these things,
Starting point is 01:30:26 wicked good cupcakes set two women free for the rest of their lives. Base paws, cat DNA testing, Anaskaya, a researcher that came up with this idea, walked away with 105 million cash 36 months later. that's the American dream and I'm an ambassador for it. So it's freedom and opportunity, I think you just said. It's not about the greed of money. What I've learned is... No, opportunity. It's opportunity.
Starting point is 01:30:54 And I see it over and over again, and I'm ambassador for it all around the world because of the fact that somehow magically this show, and you understand television better than anybody, this thing is on in 54 countries around the world. I can go anywhere and call up the leadership of any place and have a meeting with them because I'm just an ambassador of the American dream. That's pretty interesting.
Starting point is 01:31:16 Well, it's a great thing. The American Dream, if freedom and opportunity is what the American Dream is, then, you know, those are things worth dying for, I think. That's what people are doing. So the question is, is AI going to bring us freedom and opportunity? Because AI is the big bet that the entire American economy is making right now. and I want it to be a good bet more than anything, but I wonder if it's going to bring us freedom and opportunity.
Starting point is 01:31:44 So let's just start with opportunity. The concern that people have is that their jobs, and not just their jobs, but their purpose for being alive, will be replaced by machines. To which you say, that's not true. Great things will happen. To which I said, okay, what are those great things
Starting point is 01:32:02 to which you talked about Shark Tank? So I just want to be a little more specific about what the upside of AI is because then everyone will calm down and feel happy about your data center. What is the upside? Well, let's start in medicine. Let's use specific cases everybody can understand. I was in Miami two weeks ago and went for a full body scan, the price of which has dropped 80% in the last three years.
Starting point is 01:32:30 So in an hour and a half, this machine went right through my body. two years ago, it would have taken three weeks to get the results, looking for cysts on your liver or whatever it is. With AI, with the agent they had there right at the scan facility, 18 minutes later, it delivered me a report, told me I had an infection in my sinus,
Starting point is 01:32:58 that I had a cyst on my kidney that hasn't grown since the last body scan four years ago. that was stunning and remarkable. Yeah, it's great. It is great. So that's one use case of something very, very important. And that's just medicine. And so if you think about all the things that this can do,
Starting point is 01:33:20 including the arts and in music and film and everything, I think the use cases are going to be created by humans who find ways to use the tool. I view it, and maybe you don't agree, as simply a tool. Another example, because it's great to tell people just examples. I've been a photographer, my whole life, including a period when I was a professional commercial photographer and a cinematographer of the networks.
Starting point is 01:33:46 I've amassed 590,000 images during my career, half of which are on film, not shot with a phone where you get all the data on it and that knows where it was shot, when it was shot, and everything else, which is easy to index and look for. So call it a quarter of a million negatives. How could I possibly catalog that as a human? I couldn't. I don't have enough time left before I'm dead. So I used AI last week with a tool to actually, after scanning all the images, to go look at them for two weeks. And now I'm able to just go to this computer and say, find a picture of my wife the day I met her in the gym. Boom.
Starting point is 01:34:37 There it is. It's amazing. No, you're kind of making my point, though, because the two examples you gave are examples of a machine replacing human labor and doing a better job than any person could do. Oh, Tucker, that's horrible. That's great. Well, that's my point. Well, I know what's your point. I know what's your point.
Starting point is 01:34:53 And I can see the marvel of it. But it raises the question, which won't go away, which is okay. now that machines do what people do better than people did, what do people do? Okay. And what is the answer to that? Let me ask you, let me pose a question against that. Would you prefer? I'm giving you one of two options with the uncertainty of both, okay?
Starting point is 01:35:14 But I want you to pick one. This will tell me a lot about how you think. Would you prefer in the next five years that China have more compute power than we do, even though the use and the outcome and jobs and everything else we're talking about is unknown, or would you prefer the United States of America and their allies in North America had more compute power to develop AI? It depends. Whichever makes the United States happier, freer, and more prosperous, I guess, is the answer to every question.
Starting point is 01:35:48 What do you think it is? I'm not sure that we know. I know that reducing this question to a competition between the United States and China, is a very quick way to derail people from the core questions, which revolve around whether or not it's a good idea. So that's always kind of a red flag for me. China has more economic power now than the United States, probably has more military power.
Starting point is 01:36:09 I didn't want either of those things to happen. I'm a little bitter at the American business community, which allowed them to happen, but they happened. So here we are. There's not much I can do about it. My focus remains, however, on is it good for the United States? Is it good for us? Does it make people happy?
Starting point is 01:36:24 and I don't understand what people are going to do for a living if machines are going to be able to do most things that people currently do better than people do them. Like, what is the answer? And a lot of people are honest stuff to say, nothing. We're just going to, the oligarchs are going to send out checks
Starting point is 01:36:43 to everybody, the bread and the bread and circuses, and everyone's just going to kind of stay home and be obedient. But I don't know that that is a good idea. And I don't know. I think you're raising. a great point. It's a wonderful debate and it's certainly going on, but it's analogous to the narrative that must have been happening back
Starting point is 01:37:00 when the Model T Ford rolled off the assembly line and everybody that had a buggy looked at it and said, oh no, this is going to wipe me out and there'll be no work for me. The American economy is very resilient as it develops new sectors. What happened after the Model T was rolled out? We had two big events
Starting point is 01:37:17 in the, say, 40 years after that. One was the first World War and one was the Second World War. The Industrial Revolution, like all technological change caused dramatic political and social change, which resulted in the biggest bloodletting in human history. So it's worth thinking this stuff through. Like, technological change forces social and political change. Unfortunately, capitalism and the freedom it provides is volatile. And it has lots of periods, including the rate depression, where it taxes the people
Starting point is 01:37:52 that support it. But it's still better than the alternative anywhere on earth, it seems 200 years later. And so, you know, when you start and looking at the American
Starting point is 01:38:02 economy and the vol it's had, it's been unbelievable. But the system, with all its faults, and you're raising some good points, I agree with you. I'm just trying to think what's the alternative.
Starting point is 01:38:12 And regarding AI and the ultimate issue around your job issue, and I think it's fair, I'm looking at it differently. I'm looking at it as insurance. I would prefer, even though the future is uncertain and the outcome, you know,
Starting point is 01:38:30 and the end is always near to quote Jim Morrison, I love that line in his song. Roadhouse Blues. Yeah, the future is uncertain and the end is always near. Live, you know, words I live by. But it's sort of, if you had to give me the two alternatives, let China do this first or us, I'll take us. And I'm part of that now. the controversy of it. We started our conversation. I've never seen a controversy like this.
Starting point is 01:38:58 I've never seen a tax like this. I know you have, but I haven't experienced it. And I'm hiring. Well, I mean, if you take money from taxpayers, you should expect them to weigh in to and take their complaints seriously and not just dismiss them as much as you're right. But this has been going on. Incentives, state by state in every sector happen. Even real estate. incentives. It's a forced transfer of wealth from taxpayers to people who are richer than taxpayers. So, like, of course they have. You get a tax break to create 2000 jobs. The taxpayer wouldn't do it if it wasn't the long-term outcome. The taxpayer has no choice. The taxpayer has no choice. They can say no. That's not what happened. Well, they tried to say no to this data center and they got laughed at. And then the governor, Spencer Cox, of Utah, who really is a kind of living symbol of our ruling class.
Starting point is 01:39:49 said that the state is an obligation to do this. And basically, as you are doing, waved away concerns as like foreign propaganda when I think they're probably non-crazy people live in Utah. Why is this good for me? Why should I pay for this? It's fair. It's fair.
Starting point is 01:40:08 All this is fair. How about we forget the data center and just talk about the power for a second because there aren't going to be any data centers in America unless we build power generation. Do you have the same visceral reaction to power generation as you do? to data centers?
Starting point is 01:40:22 Inversely, I think we need more electricity in the United States. And I think that people who are speaking of agents of China. In fact, if you're looking for agents of China, it's the people who told you that you could live without fossil fuels, that babies wouldn't die without fossil fuels. Babies will die without fossil fuels. Civilization will collapse without fossil fuel. And that right there is the foreign op telling us that, you know, people are causing global climate change.
Starting point is 01:40:47 People are not causing global climate change substantially. We're having global climate change as we always have. But to blame it on natural gas is just a flat out lie and a lot of rich Americans fell for that. So no, I'm strongly for energy. I'm just very concerned about replacing people, their purpose for living, which is to create with machines. That seems like hell to me, literally hell. So I think it's fair to ask like, how is this not hell? And no one has been able to answer it.
Starting point is 01:41:20 Yeah, I think trying to stop advancement of technology with the uncertainty it brings has always been a dilemma in capitalism and in America. And that's a fair comment. How is this capitalism? If taxpayers are paying for some of it, how is that capitalism? That seems... Well, I think that's no different than building an apartment building downtown in Austin. You can get incentives for that, too.
Starting point is 01:41:44 And that's just part of how it works. You can debate that. How is that capitalism? How is that free market? If politicians are handing you other people's money to do it, how is that capitalism? Well, capitalism is built into the constitution, which I think was genius, because it couldn't even thought that far ahead, was the idea of competition between states. Why is there an exodus out of New York City to Miami where I live? Why are people leaving New Jersey and Massachusetts and moving into my building? Nobody in my building is from Florida. They're all from other states. I understand.
Starting point is 01:42:19 And all of these people moving, why? Because they're reaching retirement age, and the environment in these other states is not conducive to their lifestyle when they're being tax. But I think you're making my point for me. You just listed states that use a higher percentage of taxpayer dollars for private industry. And people are leaving those states, Illinois. Wait a second. New York is not. New York is not.
Starting point is 01:42:45 inefficiently run. It may be inefficient, but the principle that you can, politicians can take the public's money and hand it to their friends in business. That's a longstanding practice in New York, California, and Illinois. And relatively uncommon in Florida, so people are moving to the free market state, but you're now saying that actually the beauty of capitalism is that politicians hand other people's money to their friends? That doesn't, that's the opposite of capitalism.
Starting point is 01:43:13 I'm saying that. That is incorrect. I didn't say that. I said what makes capitalism work is competition. And it does work. And it has worked for hundreds of years. And so the concept, you may not like the policy of giving incentives for manufacturers and real estate. You may not like it. And I understand you don't. But you don't have to do it. A state can stop doing it. And then for a while maybe they'll be less competitive in terms of getting new projects. I didn't make those rules up. I'm a football. player on the field of capitalism. I get it. I get it. I get it. No, I get it. I get it. And I'm not attacking you for it. I'm just wondering, again, occasionally it's worth pausing and asking, are we doing the right thing, even if we've been doing it the same way for a long time? Do you, I'll ask just one final question. I'll stop torturing you. But do you see how other people find it unfair that one of the richest people in America, you, in league with the biggest companies in America, Amazon, Microsoft, etc., the ones you listed, that the richest people in our society
Starting point is 01:44:17 would be taking money from people much poorer than them. That seems very unfair. You know, Tucker, I'll speak for myself on this. I'm not motivated by money anymore. That is not why I get up and work 18 hours a day. I want to build something incredible. I want my legacy from my children to be something that they're honored by. I want to compete against the Chinese. I don't like the Chinese government in case anybody has noticed that over the last five years. I don't like how they treat their people. I don't like how they treat me in business.
Starting point is 01:44:58 I simply don't like them. What's motivating me now with all of this barrage, this firestorm, which I understand you've experienced in the past, is I want to beat them in AI. I don't want them controlling the most advanced models, wherever that's taking us, because you bring up great points about the unknown and jobs and everything else.
Starting point is 01:45:22 But I want to be part of the team that makes sure our way of life in North America remains the same for my children. I don't give a shit about money anymore. I don't need any more money. I've already been very successful. I'm very lucky, but I'm not finished. I'm very motivated to win.
Starting point is 01:45:42 And if you, if people want to compete with me, I want that. If they don't think my motivation is to beat the Chinese, they're wrong. I am going to beat them. I am going to show them these data centers. They're going to be this shining example, how you do this sustainably, because I'm the only guy that is graduated out of environmental studies and builds data centers. No one else on earth has done that. Do you think, well, I love the idea.
Starting point is 01:46:07 I'm for America, above all. Do you think that Microsoft and Amazon and Google will do a good job preserving the American way of life? Are they substantially superior morally to the Chinese government? Do you think that? Those are your time? Yes, I do. And in fact, I deal with that. Tell me how is Google.
Starting point is 01:46:28 I was talking with the guy yesterday that does, is doing the buildouts all around the world for Google's data centers. they are on incredible sustainable mission. They are looking at every technology to reduce their need for traditional power sources. And we were talking about the campus in Utah. They have some very advanced thinking on the use of battery, wind, and solar. And so they want to do that. Why? Because their customers want that.
Starting point is 01:47:07 But wait a second. China leads the United States in battery wind and solar in development of those technologies. Yeah. Yeah. That's such a great. It's a great story, but not in data centers. They don't. They're powering. No, but hold on. Jumping around a little bit. I'm just trying to ask, okay, so you say you want to preserve the American way of life. That's why you're building this. My question was, okay, well, your tenants are these big companies that are not really American companies, are publicly traded companies that are owned by the sovereign wealth funds of tons of countries around the world, in what sense are the American companies? In what sense do they have American values? Because they operate under the laws and are headquartered in the United States of America
Starting point is 01:47:49 under the regulations. The only reason that Google can raise as much capital as it does from the sovereign wealth, now you're coming into my space. I'm an indexer for sovereign wealth. The only reason 52 cents of every dollar comes to America is the transparency of our laws and the appellate system and our banking system and the regulated. And so that's why you find the largest tech companies on earth housed in America because the regulatory environment and the actual regulatory environment in the context of the globe is the most advanced on Earth. So you may hate the SEC. You may not like, you know, regulations, but in fact, it gives an infrastructure where most capital comes here. That's what happens. Because the outcomes, why does France have no Microsoft?
Starting point is 01:48:38 Why does Germany not have one? What happened to, you know, the European countries? They, they, and Britain, you know, they don't have any of this tech because they regulated it out of their society. We don't want to change that. We want the innovation here, not the regulation necessarily. I strongly agree, except the extent the regulation protects the public. It's a balance. That's why we trust the government.
Starting point is 01:49:04 A lot of people don't like them. We say, look, at the end of the day, you know, the great example that we could use that you both know, I don't think crypto is going to work until they pass the bill about crypto. They got to finish this infrastructure act so that finally crypto can find its place inside of the 11 sectors of our economy. No one's going to – I'm not investing in crypto until I get that frigging thing through. the house. May I ask, okay, so just to your second point about the American dream, there was opportunity, I think, you know, the ability to be judged on, on your actions, on your behavior, on your character, to be treated equally. And there was also freedom. And so I think many people
Starting point is 01:49:45 have deep concerns about AI's effect on freedom. You said yourself, the purpose of AI is in part surveillance. Yeah. What is the point? Right. So what is that? What does that look like? I asked what jobs does it create?
Starting point is 01:50:01 Couldn't get an answer. Now I'm going to ask you more specific question. Well, you can't get an answer for me because nobody knows what jobs it's going to create yet. But I would say, well, of course, but I've always seen every technology that has been low that has come in always creates new jobs. And I assume the same for this tool.
Starting point is 01:50:18 It's just a tool. So, you know, the surveillance is a great point. We have laws regarding. surveillance. And we have laws that restrict the government and they're built into the Constitution. And we have free speech. All of these things remain the same. They don't change with AI. Well, they did until last week when the president led the charge to change the law and allow warrantless spying on Americans. Yeah. Okay. Well, wait a second. In direct violation of the U.S. Constitution. So obviously the Constitution doesn't matter to the people in charge.
Starting point is 01:50:51 No, it does. Every administration is kept in check by the Supreme Court, including this one. And so that's why the founding fathers created this structure. And I think it works. And I trust it for one. And I'm willing to, you know, have my kids who are Americans grow up here and I want to protect them. Okay. So what kind of surveillance? I mean, it seems like AI will make it possible to know what every American is doing at all times. Correct me if I'm wrong. I would say that's not AI that's going to do that. I would say now with the amount of high-resolution video and surveillance that is built into every street corner, that's how they solve a lot of crimes. Now, if you don't like that. Do they solve a lot of crimes? Has the closure rate for murders in our big cities, like what percentage of murders are in New York City or Chicago or Detroit are solved? I don't, I don't track the murder.
Starting point is 01:51:44 Pretty low, actually. It's lower in this country than that. The point is surveillance is a great issue, but the enhancement of surveillance with AI tools is how you now walk through the Dubai airport. And you also walk through some airports here in the U.S. Facial recognition technology has finally got to the resolution using AI's tools. It's going to run through your data center. There'll be pictures of all of us in your data center.
Starting point is 01:52:08 Every data center. Right. Sue, but how does that make it freer? You don't have to opt into that program, by the way. I do it for convenience. I'm not hiding anything. Well, it's on street corners, as you said. So it's anytime you're in public, your face is being surveilled by the U.S.
Starting point is 01:52:25 It is, but I'm not doing nefarious things. I'm not a criminal and I'm not stealing any money from anybody. The definition of nefarious changes, as you know, I mean, hundreds of thousands of American citizens were sent to concentration camps by Franklin Roosevelt because they were Japanese. Correct. So in 1940, it was not a crime to be Japanese. In 1941, it was. So the definition does change, as you know.
Starting point is 01:52:48 It's true. So you could have those concerns, but I ask you again, Tucker. I do. And I know you do, but I ask you again, and you haven't answered my question. Do you want the insurance policy or not? Would you, with all of the nefarious concerns about AI, which outcome do you prefer as an American for your family? would you prefer all of us that are developing these data centers put down our shovels and stop while the Chinese accelerate theirs?
Starting point is 01:53:23 Would you like that? Well, I see kind of a different question. I see the question. Let me answer your question in the following way. Do I want to become like China in order that we can, quote, beat China? Not at all. The problem with China, from my perspective, is that it surveils its citizens. and it limits their ability to say what they think
Starting point is 01:53:44 and to oppose existing power. That's why China is bad, I thought. Because there are a lot of things about China that are great, but what I don't like about China is the totalitarian approach it has towards its own population. I agree with you. You're making it possible for our government
Starting point is 01:53:59 to have the same approach, and our government already does. They're surveilling us at all times. Most Americans don't even know they're being watched. They're license plate readers, their facial recognition cameras everywhere. And the question is why?
Starting point is 01:54:10 So the crime rate can go down well, it hasn't gone down. So, of course, the real reason is to make you obedient, obviously. No, I have a different vision of the future. Why do we still have crime now? Now, hear me out. Here's what I think is going to happen, because I'm enjoying this conversation. Let me, as we know, we come to a close soon.
Starting point is 01:54:27 But here's where I think we're going to be in 20 years, okay? I believe in 20 years, and this is my vision of what's going to occur. And I think I'm a great guy to actually do this because I have a foot in both economies. I think by the time the 20th year, I mean, I'm, I'm. I'm going to make it in 10 years. It may not be with this administration or the administration in Canada. The two economies are going to emerge for one reason. Which two economies?
Starting point is 01:54:53 Canada has all the raw resources, the largest consumer. Oh, yeah. And it's crazy that we're fighting on this stuff. It's crazy. I agree. It makes no sense. Totally agree. And so we should merge these economies.
Starting point is 01:55:07 You don't have to merge the countries. You can merge the economies. You can merge the economies. get an EU-type situation where you allow freedom of movement across the border and you allow no tariffs on all the stuff we need, the rare earth Canada has, the water, the paper, all that stuff. And the only reason we're going to do that is so we can take 5% of our GDP, which will be the largest on earth, by around 25%. No one will be close to us. We merge those two together and the benefits that accrue. For one reason, to tell the Chinese don't fuck.
Starting point is 01:55:40 with us. That's basically what's going to happen because they want to fuck with us big time. And that's my belief. And I think I'm right. I think that's what's going to happen. And AI and compute and all this stuff, that's a side story. We have to keep all of our tech ahead of theirs, including data centers and everything else. But ultimately, they are our adversary on our way of life. Then can I ask our way of life, right? So you, I would think, think, since you disagree with the Chinese way of life, which is pretty civilized in a lot of ways, but the one way in which it's barbaric is that it grants its citizens no real rights. And so I would think that you would be very worried about aping their system, which we are now doing. Like,
Starting point is 01:56:25 they have total surveillance. It's a panopticon in China. We should create our own. Let's take 40,000 acres in Utah and make it possible for the government to know where you are at all times and what you're thinking, listening to you on your phone. Like, we have that. I would think you'd be upset about You have to choose the less of two evils in your scenario. And I'm telling you what you should do is say, I want Kevin O'Leary to succeed. I want him to beat the Chinese and compute power. And then use the laws of the United States to make sure that you keep that compute power and check whichever way you want.
Starting point is 01:56:56 But to not have it available, to put down my shovel, I don't think people want me to do that. Even the people in Box Elder, the majority of them want me to hold my shovel and start digging. And that's basically the debate we're having. How do you know that the majority of people? Because they voted for unanimously before the Chinese guys. There was a referendum? Like all this crap that's being spewed out. Wait, wait, hold on.
Starting point is 01:57:20 Yeah, and I may have fallen for some of it, so you correct me. There was a referendum among citizens or did some like county board vote? We actually went through the whole process that you have to do by their laws and were granted three to zero. The commissioners of the county said, we want to be part of this. The people voted. The people of the county.
Starting point is 01:57:43 They're elected officials. That's how you do it. How hard is it for Kevin O'Leary and Amazon and Microsoft and Google to subvert three county commissioners in rural Utah? Tucker, they voted. They asked us to come. They asked us to bring $15 billion. They asked and they voted and they, it was a. a three to zero vote.
Starting point is 01:58:07 That's how it had fun. There's not a way to do it. Amazon, Google and Kevin O'Leary got three county commissioners in rural Utah on their side. Good work. But can I just ask you really quick? Like, why don't you have a referendum? Why don't you let all citizens, all taxpayers, the ones who are paying for your project?
Starting point is 01:58:21 Why don't they get to pay or vote? Well, listen, the whole idea of expediting it was so the project didn't go to Jacksonville, Mississippi. That's the competition. And so the government there said, okay, look. Jackson, because we haven't lost our, we have to go through EPA. We have to go through air and quality. We have to go through the water permitting.
Starting point is 01:58:46 We have to go through the land construction permitting. Nothing's been lost. There's no circumventing the process. And that's what we're doing now. So if you want to block the water permit or whatever, go ahead. I mean, if you think that's a good idea, if there's a path to do that, we're going to do it the way we've been told by the law. By the way, I've got to go soon, but I would love to keep going.
Starting point is 01:59:11 Kevin O'Leary, I sure appreciate it, and I hope that when my personal data comes through your data center, you will filter it. Tucker, I think I'm going to tell when people ask me what was the like I'm going to say, he told me to get my shovel out and keep digging. That's it. I very much did not say that. Not digging for a data center. I don't know, build like an antibiotics factory.
Starting point is 01:59:34 that would be, I'd be for that. Thank you very much. Take care of my friend. You know I'm a huge fan. I really am. I appreciate the shit you take and the shit you give. I really do. It doesn't bother me at all.
Starting point is 01:59:47 Thanks for millions. Thank you. Take care. Ciao. Bye-bye.

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