The Tucker Carlson Show - Jeffrey Sachs: Trump’s Plan to Stop WWIII, CIA Coups, and Warning of the Next Financial Crisis
Episode Date: August 30, 2024Professor Jeffrey Sachs’s provides a full and updated analysis of the war in Europe, including a forecast of how the 2024 election could change everything. (01:21) An Update on Ukraine (10:14) The ...Potential for Nuclear War (30:07) Will We Go To War With Iran? (53:06) Who’s Running Our Foreign Policy? (58:25) The First Thing Donald Trump Should Do as President (1:35:10) The Trump Assassination Attempt (1:48:41) Alternative Media (1:54:11) Credit Card Debt Eight Sleep Promo code "Tucker" to get $350 off the Pod 4 Ultra https://EightSleep.com/Tucker Unplugged Get $25 off a new phone with code "Tucker" https://Unplugged.com/Tucker Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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So what, okay, what is happening in ukraine right now the coverage of the war has sort of fallen
off the front page in the united states partly because the election i assume but partly because
they're probably developments that our media don't want to talk about but what is the state
of it right now would you say well ukraine's losing the war on the battlefield. That's the basic point. There's been a bit of a diversion with an incursion of some brigades of Ukraine and NATO mercenaries, so-called, into a fairly rural northern part of Russia. That got a lot of attention, but it's militarily meaningless. On the real battlefront, Ukraine has been attrited.
In other words, they just don't have the people.
They don't have the weapon systems.
They don't have the air defenses.
And so Russia is continuing.
Russia has said all along, we can negotiate, we can stop, but we have issues.
And the West and the US and especially Britain, no, no, we're going to win. We're going to win.
So Ukraine loses 1,000 to 2,000 soldiers a day, dead and wounded.
A day? Yeah, a day.
This is a terrible, terrible onslaught.
But nobody counts the dead in the Kiev leadership or in Washington or in London or in Warsaw.
And so this continues because no one wants to take any responsibility in the West for bringing it to a close. So, but there is kind of a forcing action with this election because if there is a change in administration,
then presumably there'll be a change, of course, in U.S. policy toward Ukraine.
I mean, I hope anyway, if Trump wins.
So does that, that provides an incentive to the current administration to, I don't know, what kind of scenario does that set up?
Well, there's nothing really that this administration going out is going to do.
I don't think the president probably is in any mental state to lead anything at this point. So I think we're kind of on autopilot, which is a very bad place to be
in general in a dangerous world. There are no active discussions that we know of between the
United States and Russia, which is the essence of the sine qua non of ending this war and ending it
on a responsible basis. This is a war between the
United States and Russia. It's not a war between Ukraine and Russia. This is the most basic point.
This is a war provoked by the U.S. with U.S. intentions, with U.S. aims for NATO enlargement. And it would take a president that understands the basics of this
and why this was so wrongheaded and such an absurd and tragic idea that dates back 30 years now
inside the U.S. security state to bring it to a close.
But Biden was not that person, clearly.
Biden bought into this whole reckless approach 30 years ago already and has been part of
this tragic adventure that was somehow going to bring down Russia.
But in the end, it's destroying Ukraine.
So yes, we need a new president
and we need a president that honestly understands
what this has all been about.
And the one thing that we've discussed
and the one thing that's absolutely true
is the American people have never been told
what this is all about. They've been told and the one thing that's absolutely true is the American people have never been told what this is all about.
They've been told exactly the opposite.
And I don't think even now there's an appreciation that NATO forces, clearly U.S. forces in some form, federal employees or federal contractors, are fighting in Russia, fighting Russia.
Oh, this is absolutely clear.
We have a hot war with Russia
right now. We are in a hot war because it's not only our financing, our equipment, our aims,
our objectives, our strategy, our advice, but it's our personnel on the ground. They are not
necessarily in U.S. uniform. Sometimes they're called mercenaries. Sometimes they're just not
identified, but they are calling the shots and Russia knows it. And that by itself is a big
reason for alarm. Well, especially because Russia doesn't need to lob a nuke into Poland or Europe or the United States to fight back.
Russia could disable critical American infrastructure without, you know, being obvious about it.
Like, we're very vulnerable if Russia decides to strike at us.
Well, the horrible thing about this war from the start was that it could never conceivably have made sense for the United States to cross
Russia's red lines because either Russia would win on the battlefield as it's doing,
or Russia would lose on the battlefield and then escalate. And the escalation could be in many forms. Like you say, it could be attacks on U.S. interests around the world through proxies, or it could be, as the Russians made clear, if they're losing tactical nuclear weapons to start and with the escalation always in sight if Russia was really profoundly threatened.
So in the end, there was to push NATO to Ukraine,
despite the clearest possible, brightest, biggest red line that Russia could convey in peacetime, which is don't do that. And Russia's attitude towards NATO
and Ukraine was exactly analogous to what our attitude would be to a Russian military base on
the Rio Grande in Mexico. It would be don't try that. And this is obvious. It's not subtle. It has been expressed for more than 30 years.
But now we know, and more and more comes out and will come out, but Clinton approved this plan
in 1994 that NATO would go east, including to Ukraine.
Zbigniew Brzezinski laid it out in 1997 in an article,
which I always asserted was not Brzezinski's idea,
but his way of telling his colleagues in the civilian sector, let's say,
what was already decided. And that is that, yes, of course, we will go all the way to Ukraine.
It became public in 2008 when George W. Bush Jr.
pushed at the Bucharest NATO Summit the commitment to enlarge NATO to Ukraine, it became a cause of war in February 2014 when the U.S. conspired to overthrow a Ukrainian president that was against NATO enlargement, who wanted Ukraine to be neutral because that president understood if you are Ukraine between East and West,
try to keep your head down and stay neutral. And he understood that. So we had to overthrow him
and the U.S. did. And that's when the war started. So this was predictably a failure
on every scenario. The particular scenario that is unfolding right now for the moment is,
ironically, perhaps the safer one, which is that Russia's winning on the battlefield.
Yes.
Because if Russia were losing on the battlefield, we would be seeing escalation to nuclear war. And everyone in punditry that says, oh, don't worry about that.
That's a bluff. I profoundly resent the ignorance of those people. Generally, when people are
ignorant, I don't resent it. I try to help, but I resent the ignorance when it endangers my grandchildren.
That's it.
And they endanger my grandchildren by saying, don't worry about nuclear war.
Ah, that's a bluff.
And that I don't want to hear from anybody because anyone that says that understands nothing about the reality of our
world today. The people who say that, I feel exactly the same way, and I'm outraged by it,
but also distressed by it because of what it says about our leadership class. But I notice that a
lot of people who say that are former U.S. military officers working in some think tank,
you know, Hudson or EI or CSIS or whatever, you know, all these.
They're paid to say it.
They are paid to say it.
But you also wonder where in the officer class are the wise people, you know, who in the
Pentagon has a realistic assessment of risk and a deep concern for the future of the United
States?
Where are those people?
There, no doubt, are some, but it's always a close call because we've known throughout the nuclear era,
there have been hotheads, irrational people, vulgar people who have called for nuclear war.
We have come extraordinarily close to nuclear war, and we've had people in the U.S. military all along who called for first strikes on various occasions against the Soviet Union, which in any plausible scenario could well have ended the world. And those people were in positions of authority.
The case that I've studied most closely in my life
is the Cuban Missile Crisis.
I wrote a book about the aftermath
of the Cuban Missile Crisis
and Kennedy's diplomacy in 1963
to pull back from the brink.
But in the Cuban Missile Crisis,
almost every one of President Kennedy's advisors said,
strike.
And there's very good reason to believe
that that would have led to a full-scale nuclear war
that would have ended civilization.
Kennedy was, in that case, almost the sole restraint within the senior US leadership.
So we came extraordinarily close and there have been other occasions where we have come
extraordinarily close. I don't know if we discussed it before, but it's one of my go-to emblems for trying to help people understand the situation. dead worried about this from the beginning of the atomic age in 1945 uh established this emblematic
doomsday clock in 1947 in the bulletin of atomic scientists and what this is is a an expert view
of how close or how far we are from nuclear war we are the closest ever to nuclear Armageddon today during the entire period
since 1947, according to this doomsday clock. The doomsday clock started a few minutes from
midnight, midnight meaning doomsday, meaning Armageddon. and it went farther away from midnight or closer to midnight,
depending on how the Cold War was unfolding, whether we were at the height of tensions or
during a period of some pullback from the tensions. Well, suffice it to say that at the end of the Cold War I, and maybe it never really ended Clinton administration, the atomic scientists put the clock at 17 minutes from midnight.
That's the farthest that it has ever been since the beginning of the nuclear arms age.
Every president since then has brought us closer to Armageddon. Clinton, Bush, Obama,
Trump, Biden, everyone inherited a clock that they then pushed, I think, through U.S. provocations and policies, all these wars of choice,
all these invasions of the Middle East, all this NATO enlargement, all of the disdain
for anything Russia or China says. How dare they even express an opinion? We're the only ones that can have an opinion. The disdain for Iran, evil.
This view has led to an aggressiveness and a hubris that has pushed us closer and closer to the brink.
Because the whole attitude of the U.S. since 1992 was, we don't have to listen to anybody. We don't have to listen to
Russia. Russia's a gas station with nuclear weapons was, of course, the very unclever
phrase. But the idea was, yeah, humiliate them. Humiliate them. They only have 6,000 nuclear
warheads. What could possibly go wrong uh of course the way we treat china
the casual talk in washington these days about yeah the likely war with china you have people
in service generals talking about yeah there could be a war with china in the next two or three years
are are these people mad out of are they out of their? Do they have any idea what they're doing? But typically,
and the theory of our system is we have a president, civilian, who is responsible for
keeping our country safe, not pushing us to the brink. But of course, we don't have such a
president right now. Even when he was functioning, he wasn't keeping us from the brink. But of course, we don't have such a president right now. Even when he was functioning,
he wasn't keeping us from the brink. He was making declarations that, for God's sake, that man must go, speaking of the president of Russia, as if that's the American choice.
Well, that's not something one should say about even an adversary, but a counterpart that happens to be the second nuclear superpower.
But that's how we have acted.
And Biden walking off soon after his meeting with the Chinese president, Xi Jinping,
and then muttering, I think it was as usual, some kind of donor gathering, oh, he's a dictator.
The idea of the arrogance and the disdain and the silliness, but the attempt to humiliate the counterparts. That's why in this doomsday clock, we are now 90 seconds
to midnight. And from all that I see and know, I just got back from an extended trip through Asia
and Europe and talked to many leaders along the way. There's worry everywhere. There is absolute worry everywhere. Every leader I spoke to, and it was a number of them, what is happening with your country? Are we being pushed to war? Why do we have to choose between having trade with China or having trade with the United States or having trade with Russia? Why are sanctions on Russia applying to
us and breaking our economy? I spoke to leaders all over Asia about these issues. And the answer
is there is no good answer to this. And there is no way to say to them, don't worry, everything's
under control because it's not.
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or go to volvocars.ca for full details and there's no i i don't think widespread understanding of this in the united states
how quickly things around the world are changing the the extent to which the U.S. government is driving these changes, and the overwhelming sense from
outside America that America is in decline because of these decisions. Like, we're hurting ourselves
in addition to a lot of other people. But here it seems like everybody in charge wants a war with
Iran. And I just know from experience watching the Iraq invasion,
which I never thought was going to happen, watching the current war with Russia, which I
never thought was going to happen, that when everyone in DC starts saying, hey, let's have
a war with somebody, you're probably going to have a war with that person. Are we going to
have a war with Iran? Israel just wants that war so much. And israel lobby is very powerful uh so we could uh but i've never seen
such recklessness as the this israeli government uh reckless extremist provocative uh assassinating
counterparts left and right and of course in the most provocative ways, assassinating the Hamas political negotiator in Tehran on the occasion of the inauguration of the new Iranian president.
You know, this is aiming for pulling the U.S. into a broader war. Can I just ask you something? So I said,
are we going to have a war with Iran? And you immediately said we're being pushed by another
country to have a war with Iran. Is there any reason for the United States acting solely in
its own interest to have a war with Iran? Of course not. And it would be devastating because
Iran has allies, including Russia. So a war with Iran could easily become
World War III. World War III, for everyone to understand, could easily become a nuclear war.
A nuclear war, you know, whatever you're going to say or do with your children or your grandchildren,
say it now because the world will end in a very quick moment if we fall into that.
I should just pause and say you wrecked my morning over breakfast today by describing at length the
new Annie Jacobson book on nuclear war, which I hope you will not describe.
I won't do it for everybody except that it's a remarkable book. It's chilling. I listen to it because I go for long walks, so I listen to it
as an audio book with the author, Annie Jacobson, narrating it in a very clipped, precise way,
but it describes in meticulous, rigorous, technical language based on voluminous research, how the world could come to an end in a few minutes.
And it's a very serious book and it's completely chilling.
And it's called Nuclear War.
Nuclear War, A Scenario.
By Annie Jacobson.
I just ordered it after our conversation, though I don't want to read it, but I'm going to make
myself, I'm sorry to interrupt.
I just want to throw that out there because it sounded important.
But you don't think if the United States were acting in its own interest an argument with Iran right now. our potholes and our broken elevators and escalators and our decrepit passenger rail
travel in this country.
I keep having to get off of trains that are broken down because Amtrak breaks down all
the time, it seems, or maybe only when I'm riding it.
But in any event, yeah, we could actually do something for our country if we were less obsessed about or less drawn into these conflicts, which are all solvable on a political level without war.
But we don't want to do politics.
We are the United States or we are the Israel lobby or we have a plan that goes back to 1994 to expand NATO completely contrary to what we promised the Soviet Union and Russia back in 1990 to 92.
We cheated.
We lied, but we're going to do it.
So we're in a very funny way in this country. Obviously, major, major challenges at home of just basic living conditions and infrastructure and keeping up with things.
Yeah, of course, we've got some dazzling technology and some very rich people, but we've got a lot of people in this country that are not living that way.
No.
And we're not attending to any of it because the most important thing for us is picking fights or being drawn into other people's fights. trying to draw us into a broader war in the Middle East that is completely, totally,
100% against American interests. Now, I would say that I give very little credit to this
administration for anything, but I would say they give signs that they don't want to be pulled into a war with Iran, and they at the core being unwilling to talk about any
political settlement that gives the Palestinian people a state and some rights as the way to end
all of this conflict and instead what Israel wants is that the U.S. protects their most extremist positions.
And this is, of course, not in the U.S. interest.
It's not in the U.S. interest to be in a war with Russia.
Why should we be in a war with Russia?
Russia told us absolutely, and by Russia I mean President Putin
and before him President Yeltsin, and I was
an advisor to President Yeltsin.
The Russian presidents told
us absolutely
clearly
we can cooperate, we can
have normal relations, but
don't crowd us with your
military bases on our border.
Something the United States leaders should understand the exact meaning of because we set that position 201 years ago in the Monroe Doctrine.
Yes.
And we have repeated it basically every year since, which is don't crowd us with your military in our neighborhood.
That's all.
That's all the Russians said.
We absolutely refused to listen to this.
What did the Chinese say?
Something very, very simple. The Chinese say, we are one China. You, the Western countries,
led by Britain in the 19th century, and then with all of the imperial powers, including Japan
at the end of the 19th century and into the 20th century tried to dismember us, China.
You tried to pull us to pieces.
You conquered territory.
You invaded us many times.
In fact, to my mind, the most cynical war of modern history was Britain's invasion of
China in 1839 called the First Opium War, which was to force China to accept British opium
in trade. And the Chinese knew, no, we don't want to become opium addicts. And Britain said,
hell, this is free trade. It's our opium. As if the Colombian cartel would invade us
on free trade principles. So in any event, the Chinese are saying one thing, don't dismantle us,
okay? We went through that. We went through 150 years of that. So Taiwan, that's part of China.
You said it, United States. That's the basis of our diplomatic relations. Stop provoking. That's all. We can have perfectly
normal relations, but don't play the game of trying to break us apart. But we have forces
in the U.S. that seem compelled to make trouble, literally, that we must provoke, we must overthrow Russia,
we must divide Russia,
we must dismember China,
we must not allow other countries
just to get on with things.
That's all the other countries are saying.
When I say these things,
it sounds so weird, by the way,
to Americans who are reading
the New York Times or reading the Washington Post
or reading the Wall Street Journal because, Mr. Sachs, China's our enemy. They're doing all these
terrible things. Russia, they're the imperial blah, blah, blah, because we're fed a bunch of
lines that are complete nonsense. But if you say it again and say it again and say it again,
and the U S you know,
better than anybody,
USG trying to control the narrative,
trying to control what we hear,
trying to control what social media can say.
Well,
the simplest truths become completely clouded. So the point is, you asked me, does the U.S. have an interest in war with Iran? Of course not. Does the U.S. have an interest in war with Russia? Of course not. Does the U.S. have an interest in war with China? God forbid is my only answer. It would be probably the end of the world.
I think there's a widespread recognition of that,
that we can't win a war against China, obviously.
And I think most people know that,
that we're not winning our current war against Russia.
Most people understand that.
But I think in the public mind, I'm just guessing,
but that Iran seems very far away and primitive.
And maybe it is a country we can kind of push around and maybe we could have some sort of limited engagement with
Iran and kill the leadership and then the freedom fighters take over and it becomes a democracy
again. I think people may believe that. What would you say to them or to our policymakers who are making that case? Let me start by saying that Iran or Persia, to use its classical name, is one of the greatest
and ancient civilizations on the planet. And it is an amazing civilization and an amazing place and a highly sophisticated country of about 100 million
people and a highly technologically sophisticated place including a militarily sophisticated place
and we have known that and one of the concerns concerns about Iran is that with all of that technical sophistication, they felt threatened by the United States and threatened by other neighbors as well.
And have had a program to develop nuclear weapons of their own.
And that seems no doubt to be true.
And what the Iranians said is, if we had the right geopolitical context where you're not
threatening us, where you're not trying to crush us, where you're not trying to overthrow our regime, we will end that nuclear program.
But if you're trying to overthrow us and threatening us and damning us in every possible
way, how can we deal with you? And that led to a number of years of negotiation and the
negotiations culminated during the Obama last years of his government in a treaty that was called the JCPOA, the Joint Comprehensive Agreement in which Iran would stop its nuclear arms development.
And we would end the sanctions on Iran and normalize relations. Well, our neocon world and especially the Israel lobby could not accept that because Iran is the pure enemy from Israel's point of view. to my mind, in a kind of mad, self-defeating, devastatingly wrongheaded approach, convinced
the Trump administration, and Bolton was there, of course, doing his usual job of messing
things up, which he's done all his career, to break this agreement. And the U.S. kept sanctions, pulled out of the agreement with Iran.
And where are we today? Well, where we are today is that it's commonly said and reported that Iran is now either already with the nuclear weapons
or with the nuclear weapons within reach in days or weeks
because it has been enhancing its uranium,
and it could make a nuclear weapon if it chooses to do so.
In other words, pulling out of diplomacy
solved nothing. It didn on this collision course.
Now, Israel is trying to provoke an outright war on this basis.
The idea that diplomacy, that normal relations, that an agreement that actually was reached and backed by the UN and
backed by all the major powers, including the United States and Europe and Russia and China
and the United Nations, that maybe diplomacy could solve something. That, of course, is utterly rejected by Israel and by the Israel lobby.
And what Bibi is trying to do, what Netanyahu is trying to do, is to pull the U.S. into a full-fledged war to destroy Iran.
But if he wants a war with Iran, just go have your war with Iran.
Why do we have to be involved?
What do we have to do with this? I don't understand. If Israel were to have a war with Iran,
Iran could and would cause grievous damage to Israel. And Israel might in the end, by the way, use its nuclear weapons.
And why not?
I mean, look, people face problems like this, not just geopolitically or on the global stage, but in their daily lives.
Like I would like this, but there are restraints on what I can do because of things I can't control.
Maybe I hate my neighbors, but you have to.
These are the things you deal with in life.
Like you figure it out.
If you don't like your neighbor, you think your neighbor is a little bit dangerous you provoke
them every day and try to humiliate them and uh and do whatever you can to damage their interests
maybe invade their lawn maybe destroy their shed i i don't think so yeah and it's like i don't if
i don't think so that's not good for you or for anyone else. I
guess what I'm saying is I certainly don't want Israel or any other country to be destroyed or
have a war, but I'm still baffled by why we have to be involved. Like, what in the world do we have
to do with this? We're the United States of America. We're on the other side of the planet.
We don't have any connection to Iran. Why would we even consider fighting Iran? This is just nuts. that, of course, went back to the hostage-taking crisis of 1979 and the revolution in Iran.
And like so many things in our world, you can tell a narrative as you like as long as you hide every bit of real history. So, Iran was not an enemy of the United States in some
natural and implacable way. But in 1953, when a democratically elected and popular and very decent and clever leader of Iran,
thought that maybe Iran should get some more benefit from oil that Britain was willfully extracting in imperial terms.
It's oil, Iranian oil.
Sorry, yes.
Well, as the old joke said, how did our oil get under their sand?
You know, this was this, of course, is their oil.
But the vision of imperial powers was we can go where we want, when we want.
And it's really our oil.
We need your oil.
Thank you very much.
That was the British view.
The British Empire was not a nice little uh
fair enterprise the british empire was a completely extractive empire well suffice it to say and the
point i was going to make without diverting us so much is that in 1953 uh britain and the u.s teamed up to overthrow most of this democratic government we love democracy
so let's put in a police state which is exactly what we did so we overthrew the democracy we put
in a monarch which became a police state and the iranians under that, and they didn't like it.
And in 1979, as the Shah of Iran that we installed through a coup, a CIA MI6 coup, was dying of cancer,
the Iranians said, okay, we want our country back. And that, of course, was the occasion at the time
for the hostage-taking of our diplomats because, it's a long story, but Carter had taken the Shah
in, who was the mortal enemy of so many people in iran after decades of his police state well
all of these issues have history and ways to resolve them and by the 1990s or by the
early 2000s had we behaved like normal adult people, well, maybe not normal, but peace-seeking
people, this could all have been long ago past history.
But what did the United States do?
The United States, after the release of the hostagesages armed Iraq to attack Iran and to kill hundreds of
thousands of Iranians during the 1980s, including with chemical weapons. That was our ally, one
should recall, Saddam Hussein, our ally. Who we executed. Of course, who we later executed,
which we do for most of our allies.
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months terms and conditions apply visit bmo.com slash VI Porter to learn more But the point is, we don't seek peace.
And especially after 1991, when we got the idea that not only do we not seek peace with anybody, no one can touch us.
We're the most powerful country. We can do anything we want. We're the world's sole superpower. We're
the indispensable nation. We are the greatest colossus in the history of the world, including
the Roman Empire. Every one of those things was said by, again, I'll say grownups who don't act like grownups.
But the idea was we can do anything we want.
So, Iran, you're our enemy.
Axis of evil.
We don't have to negotiate with anybody over anything. One of the points that's very interesting about the Ukraine war is a principle
that we have. It's stated, it's Article 10 of the NATO Charter that we are so proud of, which is has no say in any decisions we want to make about enlarging NATO up to Russia's borders.
That this is not a matter of any legitimate interest of Russia.
That's explicit.
That's called our open-door policy, which is we don't accept even on principle the idea that Russia has any say or any interest
in whether Ukraine hosts U.S. military bases and U.S. missile systems.
Putin was told by Blinken, according to very knowledgeable sources in January 2022, that the U.S. reserves the right to put missiles in Ukraine next door.
Putin said, ah, but I thought President Biden said that U.S. wouldn't do that.
And apparently I wasn't in that conversation, but apparently the response of Secretary Blinken was no, no, no.
We reserve the right to do what we want. Those are our systems. This is not something you have a say about.
So this is our approach to the world, which is-
Which is Blinken, so you just revealed something interesting.
It sounds like Blinken's running the administration or it's foreign policy.
Well, who knows who tells Blinken what to do?
Who do you think tells him what to do? I think that it's important to understand
this is a big machine. It's a trillion-dollar-plus machine, the military industrial system of the
United States. It gets set in course in a pretty deep way. There's a strategy. The strategy is not changed when a new president
comes to office. They may think they have some say about it, but they have not very much say.
The strategy of NATO enlargement, as I said, goes back literally to 1994. So this has been a 30-year program. It's very deeply entrained. And President Putin has a
nice line that I read recently in a forthcoming book where he talks about the fact that he's
talked to U.S. presidents. He said it in his interview with you, which is, in the morning,
they say one thing, and then in the afternoon, they explain to you, well, it's the opposite because someone has come to them to explain, no, it doesn't work that way.
Condi Rice shows up. Putin is saying that, you know, the president will say something, but then the men in the dark suits and blue ties show up and they explain to the president how it really is.
And I think that this is basically correct, which is there is a permanent state.
It is a permanent security state.
It is a big business.
Remember, we have 750 overseas military bases.
We have 6,000 nuclear warheads.
We have a trillion-dollar military budget on the surface, not to mention other kinds of spending that aren't directly in that budget.
This is a big, big machine and this machine is out explicitly according to every doctrine that is published
also not just private but published is out for what was already defined by the defense department
decades ago as full spectrum dominance in every part of the world. Full-spectrum dominance is an interesting term,
but it means the United States will be the dominant power
of every region of the world.
It's a kind of crazy idea.
I call it completely delusional, in fact.
Because as you travel and I travel,
we see the world in a little bit more symmetric way.
Yes, the U.S. is a powerful country, but it's 4.1% of the world population.
There's another 95.9% of the world population.
They don't quite see themselves as being run by us in every region of the world. And for the US to say, we have full
spectrum dominance in Central Asia or on Russia's border, or over other nuclear powers, or in East Asia, where China has an industrial base twice the size of the United
States and a population four times the size of the United States and hundreds of nuclear
weapons and their own interests and a civilization that is 10 times longer lived than the United
States, that we dominate China, well, that just seems like a
recipe for non-stop war. And in the nuclear age, a recipe for at some moment, whether it's 90
seconds or whenever it is from now, triggering the absolutely catastrophic, unimaginable end.
Because we provoke.
We don't talk.
We provoke.
And this is the most important thing that any president needs to understand.
So if, and I do think Trump understands it. He does, by the way,
and J.D. Vance understands it. J.D. Vance definitely understands it. Yes, and this is
extremely important because we've not even had candidates talking this way from the major parties
for years. So let's say Trump wins, is allowed to win. I don't want to be too cynical about our
system, which everyone wants to believe in. You know, I think it'd be pretty tough
to overcome what you've just described
for anybody to overcome that.
But let's say Trump wins, Trump and Vance win.
What are the first things they should do
to change the trajectory away from self-defeating,
away from the self-harm that we're committing
against our
own country and toward, you know, toward a series of policies that help the United States and restore
sanity to the world. Like, what do you need to do? You know, what both Trump and Vance are saying
about Ukraine is exactly right. And it's completely spot on and it's utterly urgent
that it be heard and understood and that is there is no basis for this war and that it was provoked
deliberately accidentally on a bluff whatever by the u.S. pushing this NATO business up to Russia's border in a way we would never accept in our own hemisphere.
So they both get this exactly, and that's great.
And they understand this is a completely losing proposition, and that's correct also, because if Russia wins, it's a losing proposition.
If Russia loses, it's even a bigger losing proposition by the risk of nuclear war.
So they get that very much.
And Trump is absolutely right also that this war could end in a day.
That's not even a rhetorical gloss.
This war will end the moment a U.S. president picks up the phone or uses my Zoom account,
as far as I'm concerned, connects with President Putin and says, you know, that NATO enlargement, that was a bad idea.
I don't know how that got started.
I know it went on for 30 years, but that's the end
of the war. The fighting will stop that moment. There will be things to resolve, but that will
be the end of the war because that's the whole premise of this war. And to this moment, the
current administration is saying Ukraine will be part of NATO. So they're guaranteeing that the war will go on.
So Ukraine, they got it nailed down.
What I would want to say to them all.
But how do you do that?
Even if you're president?
I mean, you said a minute ago,
presidents arrive in office with the fantasy
that they're in charge, but they're not.
No, the presidents can be in charge.
They are, they will sit down and it's like we now see, I think I haven't read the new
point extra book, which was just reviewed, which dumps on, on Trump and the Bolton book,
which I did read parts of, which I found revolting. But part of what these aides do is they try to trick the president.
They lie to the president.
They try to continue an aggressive agenda.
So it takes smarts for a president to be able to pull this off.
Absolutely.
But the president actually has the power to do it,
but they have to be really tough and really resolute, and they have to know that they're going to hear
a lot of bullshit from a lot of people
in dark suits with blue ties.
They will hear a lot of bullshit
because this is a
deeply entrained process yes and so that it can be done uh it's not impossible and what makes it
more likely right now is that the i think we're at the end of a 30-year neocon cycle. Because remember,
this started 30 years ago. I saw the beginning of it. I didn't understand it at the time I was
advisor to President Yeltsin. I saw the U.S. was not being cooperative. I couldn't understand why
you had a president that wanted democracy in Russia. He wanted normal relations. And the United States was saying, to hell with you, basically, on many different things.
And I didn't get it then.
But now I understand, of course, much better that this was the beginning of 30 years of we will corner you.
We will defeat you.
We may dismember you, but we will make sure you're a fifth-rate country. Okay, that 30 years, I believe, has now been exposed as a terrible failure.
So no one could call U.S. foreign policy over the past 30 years as a success in any way.
Every war we fought has been a disaster.
Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Ukraine. These
are all wars of choice that we decided that we went in and we've spent, depending on the count,
$5 trillion, $7 trillion. We ran up our debt. We busted the economy. We ignored all of our infrastructure
and our domestic issues for this remarkably delusional idea that we would run the world.
So if Trump and Vance come in or whoever comes in, they have one advantage, which was no one
could call the current course successful.
And there are probably people in the deep state, not everybody by any means,
who know, my God, okay, we've done enough.
No more perpetual wars.
We better do something different.
So the president has certainly the constitutional authority and if they're a smart leader the capacity to push
and they're coming in at a moment where maybe the door is a bit ajar to a change of direction
by no means automatic it's not like the washington establishment is sitting up and saying oh we get
it no but they can't be sitting there saying it's all working great so i think that there is
that recognition but the main thing i would say to uh to uh president trump and. Vance, if they win or to whoever is president, is that lesson that you
understand about Ukraine is actually the same with China. That's even a more hard to accept
and swallow idea in Washington right now. Because in Washington, one idea, I think even J.D. Vance says it, but I really
disagree and I want him to use the same reasoning to understand it, is we have no intrinsic fight
with China. It ain't true. We have to compete with China economically. We have to compete with China
technologically. Of course, we have to trade with China also. We have to compete with China technologically.
Of course, we have to trade with China also.
We should go visit China, by the way, because it's a wonderful place.
But we have no intrinsic fight with China.
And it's the same logic that they have understood vis-a-vis Ukraine and Russia.
We have no intrinsic fight with Russia.
We have no intrinsic fight with Russia. We have no intrinsic fight with China.
So that's the main thing I want understood, which is all of these debacles are based on
the idea that we have to run everyone else's business.
We have to determine who's in power.
We can even change their borders if we want. We can overthrow their governments. That whole approach has been a disaster for us, a multi-trillion dollar, millions of lives lost worldwide disaster of U.S. foreign policy. And we don't need for our security 750 overseas military bases.
We don't need that. They're expensive. We need to fix our roads, for God's sake. We need to
make our country work properly because you and I see when we go abroad, the infrastructure abroad
sparkles compared to what we live with in the United States.
And that's the most distressing thing.
And it's not even, I've traveled my whole life, as I know you have.
And, you know, you're used to thinking of the developing world and then coming back to the kind of respite of the United States.
It's nothing like that anymore.
You pull into Kennedy or SFO or LAX or Boston Logan from abroad.
And the first thing you notice
is that it's dirtier and more chaotic.
It's less attentive to the individual.
It's harsher than the developing country
you're flying in from.
And it's so heartbreaking.
You can't believe if people traveled more,
we'd have a revolution in this country.
If they saw that Turkey is nicer than the United States,
what? I had a wonderful- Did you feel that?
I had a wonderful conversation with an Italian political leader who, I was in Northern Italy in Bolzano, beautiful city in the Alps. Yes.
And I was saying how sparkling all the infrastructure is. And he kind of sighed and
said, yes, it's very nice, but it isn't Oslo
and Copenhagen there. It's even more. But then he said, and I was really surprised,
but Oslo and Copenhagen, if you go to China right now, they're leaving those places behind.
And that's what we see, which is absolutely true.
Well, it's just so depressing. It's just so awful. And what's awful about it is that most people don't understand it.
They don't know how thoroughly they've been betrayed by their leaders and by the advisors to their leaders,
the Bill Crystals of the world, who really just don't care at all about the United States at all.
It's not even an afterthought to them.
It's all about something very different.
And they've been screwed.
Like, all the money went overseas.
Yeah.
All the energy is focused abroad.
Maybe in their little communities, wherever they live, things are nice enough.
But for the rest of America, what are we doing?
Why are we pouring unbelievable amounts of money and danger and lives into all of these conflicts.
And so my main message to, you know, I, because I, I really think Trump and Vance get it on
Ukraine completely, but what I don't want is, and you hear it in Washington is the idea,
well, we have to stop that so we can take on our real foe, which is
China or Iran. They're not our real foe in any way, shape, or form. We have issues with them.
We have competition in the markets and technology, as I said, in many things, but they're not an
enemy. And there's no reason for them to be an enemy. And so it's exactly the same logic.
Except on the question of Taiwan,
I think there are a lot of people
who maybe haven't thought it through
who feel like preserving Taiwan's sovereignty,
to the extent it has sovereignty, I guess,
is a core American interest.
What's your view?
The issue with Taiwan is that the United States policy,
absolutely clear, it's the basis of our diplomatic relations with China, is what's called the one
China policy, which is that Taiwan is part of, the KMT, the Kuomintang, fled in their remnants to Taiwan.
Formosa, yeah.
Which was part of, it was actually for a period a Japanese colony because Japan had invaded the Qing dynasty and taken Taiwan away. But it was
part of China traditionally in the Qing period for centuries. But the ROC, the Republic of China,
which was the losing side of the civil war, installed themselves as a military government on the island of Taiwan off the coast of the mainland.
Now, what's interesting is that the Republic of China, that is the Taiwan-installed government on the losing side of the civil war,
said, there's one China, but it's us.
And on the other side, in Beijing, they also said, yes, we agree. There's one China, but it's us.
And so there wasn't a disagreement
of whether there's one China or two Chinas.
There's one China,
according to the Republic of China
and according to the People's Republic of China,
People's Republic of China being the mainland,
the place with the 1.4 billion people.
When the U.S. normalized relations with the People's Republic of China,
it said we do so on the basis of a one-China policy,
that Taiwan is part of China.
But the understanding was that there are two systems,
because Taiwan has developed now actually for
more than a century, partly under the Japanese imperial rule, and then later under the KMT or the
Kuomintang period into a market-based system. And China was not yet a market-based economy at the time so one country
two systems and we said there should be peace across the taiwan straits so that the two sides
should resolve their differences amicably which to my mind is a perfectly sound and achievable standard.
So our policy is that there is one China.
China's policy, by China I mean the mainland,
there is one China,
and lurking in China's mind is don't break us apart
because we had enough of you, the outside world, breaking us apart from 1839 to 1949,
trying in every which way to dismember us, to invade us, which was done repeatedly, as
I mentioned earlier.
So China's position is, yes, there's one China.
We want an amicable relationship with Taiwan.
We have accepted two systems and that principle, but we don't want the United States or anyone else provoking secession, independence, a war across this narrow straits,
because both sides understand that there is one China and we should not be divided.
But in the U.S., because it's part of our deep state ideology, It is provoke, provoke, weaken, create divisions, bad mouth, name call,
support insurgencies, which would lead to war.
Absolutely.
And I tell my Taiwanese friends and I have many Taiwanese friends, don't become the next Ukraine.
Don't let the US create a disaster in your neighborhood.
The worst words from the United States are, we have your back.
That's what we told the post-coup government of Ukraine in 2014.
That is 600,000 dead caused by that kind of idea. So I tell my Taiwanese friends, take a deep breath
and don't be provoked into something extremely dangerous because there are hotheads in the
United States that want to provoke and that shouldn't be provoking and that provoke completely against
our own diplomacy. Now, in 1982, the U.S. and China signed a communique. It's very important.
People can go online and look it up. And it was a statement by the United States that said,
we have no intention to arm Taiwan for the long term. We are providing
arms for Taiwan now because historically we backed Taiwan, but now we have established diplomatic
relations with PRC, but we have no intention of doing this for the long term. In fact, we will taper off our arms support for Taiwan and it will come to an end.
That was 1982.
That's like so many things the United States promises and then reneges on.
It's essentially the same as the promise that was made to Gorbachev and to Yeltsin in 1990,
91, 92, that NATO would never enlarge.
In other words, we say things, we sign documents, we make communiques, but we regard them as
opportunistic moments because we want our complete freedom of action. In my view, our smart diplomacy would be very straightforward. We would not have what we call strategic ambiguity, which is a term that is so wrongheaded in my view, but it is meaning we won't say what we'll really do about Taiwan and what we really feel will keep the other side guessing.
Why?
So that we have an accidental nuclear war?
What do we want them to guess about exactly?
What I would like us to say very clearly is, of course, we
support a one China policy. We will not arm Taiwan over the opposition of Beijing, not only because
it's one country and we should not arm parts of another country over the opposition of the government that we recognize but we understand
it's incredibly provocative to do so but on the other side we and the world community expect
china in the government in beijing and the government in taipei in Taiwan to work amicably so that there is no military
attack by China on Taiwan and there is no reason in the world why they would do so if it's understood
that it is one China and it's a matter of working things out.
What about the argument you often hear that Beijing wants Taipei because of TSMC, because the semiconductors that the world needs, that AI will need in order to become a driver of the new world economy, etc., etc.?
But that that's the prize, semiconductors in Taiwan, and we cannot allow mainland China to have them.
Well, so many things.
First, that supply chain will not be disrupted by the mainland for us and our needs as long
as we don't provoke a war. So from one point of view, we have a circumstance in our country that we design advanced microchips, but we don't produce them.
And that was a decision that went back to the 1970s where we basically decided as a matter of policy, not just at the industry
level, but at the national political level, that we would outsource production to Korea, to Japan.
And then in Taiwan, this came from a very clever person, Morris Chang, who established the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation, TSMC.
So nothing about TSMC per se is at stake in this.
Actually, it is the case right now that the US is imposing sanctions on TSMC exporting advanced microchips to China. I don't support that policy at all.
I think that the idea of doing it is wrongheaded and provocative and not actually in anybody's
interest. It's part of the U.S. misguided attempt to, quote, contain a country that is larger, very clever's ability to innovate around any of the U.S. bans.
So I don't see TSMC as really an important part of this story.
There may be people who do.
I think they're wrong. I believe, and that's the point I'm trying
to make, if we don't provoke, if we treat China as we should, as another great power, as, by the
way, a really great civilization with lots of wisdom and lots of history and lots of beauty
and lots of culture and lots that can be shared with us as a great manufacturing power, but not one that is out to go conquer the I think people should understand China is now a larger overtake the United States.
They're just trying to catch up for lost time.
They're trying to develop.
They're doing an excellent job of it.
They're very clever.
They're working very, very hard.
They're working very long hours.
They're saving and investing a lot.
They're building a modern economy and all credit to them.
As far as I'm concerned, They're doing it the right way, saving investment, education, innovation,
and catching up, which they needed to do after a really horrible 150 years, basically.
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So, everything you've said for the last, I don't even know how long we've been sitting here
but last you know hour and a half or whatever hour and 20 it's been um i've never heard on
nbc's cbs read the new york times i mean these are all ideas and perspectives that are just missing
from big media outlets in the United States.
You've been banned from those outlets after spending a lifetime on them.
So the only reason that we're able to have this conversation is because we're doing it on social media, on alternative media.
It seems to me that if you're running a regime, a government that has really unpopular and destructive policies, you have to shut down
these kinds of conversations. We just saw Pablo Durev, the founder and owner of Telegram,
jailed in France. Unbelievable. It is unbelievable, but it's also believable.
No, but it's so crude and so disgusting and so dangerous, of course.
But it also strikes me as like a harbinger.
I mean, that looks like the future to me.
I mean, will there be a free exchange of information 20 years from now?
It's a big question.
You know, I was on a show with someone that I've liked and known, and you know him as well, and that I've admired for decades, Dimitri Symes, who's a Russian-American who lives sometime in the United States, sometimes in Moscow, he was a young advisor to Richard Nixon, who, by the way, had a lot of intelligent ideas about relations with China and relations with Russia that I admire more and more in retrospect as well. But Dimitri Symes' home was raided by the FBI, and I found it especially unnerving
because I was on his show by Zoom, his talk show, very serious discussions about how to
avoid nuclear war, the kinds of things we're talking
about, and they're raiding his house. And of course, we're seeing more and more of that
all over the United States. We know, you know much more about it than I do, but we know, and your
phenomenal interview with Bobby Kennedy also explained a lot of it, how much is being shut down on the social media,
how the government basically leans on platforms that are trying to get some normal discussion
going on. I don't know how much I'm supposed to say about it, but I think I can say that
one of my favorites, Judge Napolitano, who I discussed these issues with, had his YouTube
account closed for a week because of something that a guest said that suddenly they told him
that's one strike. Do that again, that's two strikes. If it happens a third time, you're off
permanently. This is a weird, dangerous situation we have in our country, which was founded on the
principle that there is a marketplace of ideas, that you discuss things, that if you want to have a free country, you need an informed citizenry. It's absolutely fundamental, and it is completely at risk right now.
If you can be punished for criticizing a regime, isn't that regime by definition a dictatorship? knowledge to some extent about what it does at home, but what it does abroad has been deliberately
made highly secret and confidential for decades. And so some of it is obvious and in broad daylight,
but all denied when it does it. I talked about the US role in the coup in Ukraine in February 2014.
That is a covert regime change operation, according to the technical jargon. We do that
for a living. This is how the US operates, dozens and dozens of overthrows of foreign governments. I've seen many close up because I'm an economic advisor. I'm not a military advisor, but presidents say things to me or I see with my own eyes these occurrences, but none of it shows up in our domestic discourse.
That's why that permanent state machine runs on its own to a large extent and why it is the unique job of a president to stop it.
Because I regard the proper job of a president is to stop the war machine.
It's the number one job.
If you have a president that's not mentally competent, and I think that's probably the
situation with Biden right now, or not a very clever president, which may have been the
situation before with Biden, or one who has bought into the military-industrial complex,
they don't even know what their most basic job is. So whether it's through laziness or being pushed or being lied to by aides or being
of that mindset or being of no mindset, we are a war machine. And that is not known by the american people so that you know the the famous
eisenhower retirement speech yes which i i just watched last year well addressed january 17 1961
amazing i'm almost sure that's the date amazing i'm almost sure i've often heard referred to um but i'd never i've never it's
on youtube i watched it one day on the treadmill uh and i was really struck by it it's much more
intense than it is given credit for being but he seems to suggest this began with the war the
second world war do you think that's right well it began uh with the the National Security Act of 1947. vulgar activities, of course, including assassinations of foreign leaders,
overthrows of foreign governments, and to do so on a completely secretive way.
And with an agenda, of course, the agenda which even predates 1947, it goes back to 1945, and by some accounts, even earlier, was that the CIA was the instrument
to confront the Soviet Union, to defeat the Soviet Union, to overthrow the Soviet Union,
to dismantle the Soviet Union, but that it was the instrument of our, we used to call it the war on communism, but what's interesting is that after communism ended, the war on Russia continued exactly the same way.
So it's not really about communism.
Apparently not.
It's really about a big country that the U.S. resents for being a big country.
That's basically what this is about.
The U.S. resents for being a big country. That's basically what this is about. The U.S. does not like peers.
And that was especially the idea of why should we have peers?
We need full spectrum dominance.
We need to run things.
We need to be the indispensable country.
We need to be the world's only superpower.
It's quite a vision.
It gets you into a lot of trouble because most of the
rest of the world doesn't see things the way you do but that goes back to uh especially the
institutional creation of the cia because the precursor the OSS, was doing things during World War II. Okay, we were in a world war, but that kind of covert operation continued, and it became a cornerstone of American foreign policy.
But it means completely secret.
It sort of took over the whole government, though.
By being completely secret,
you can do things that are absolutely unbelievable. And, you know, I think you believe,
but I certainly believe that the CIA had its role in the coup in the United States in 1963,
which was the assassination of President Kennedy. I think that's confirmed. I mean, it was confirmed by me, by someone who saw the documents.
The implications of that are so profound.
Not only was it a murder most foul, as Bob Dylan said in that incredible song that he wrote about it. But it, in a way, marked the end of our democratic institutions
because the presidents after that, maybe they are afraid for their lives.
Maybe they are absolutely paralyzed.
Maybe the CIA got away with something so extraordinary, a murder in broad daylight with
plenty of eyewitnesses that pointed out that there was a conspiracy underway because shots
were coming from different directions. And they got away with a narrative that was so absurd,
so shoved down our throats
that nobody believed it,
but it didn't matter.
And now it's 61 years later,
so who talks about it?
It's a footnote.
So maybe they learned,
oh, we can get away with everything,
including regime change in our own country.
Well, what'd you think of the attempt
to the assassination of Trump?
We don't know the story.
It's absolutely shocking. We don't know the story. It's absolutely shocking.
We don't know the story.
And whether we ever will know the story
is like so many other things right now
that are huge events.
We talked briefly about COVID.
I think it came out of a lab.
That's one of the biggest events in history.
Oh, that's so passe.
Who wants to talk about that anymore?
Assassination attempt on Trump.
Isn't that weeks ago?
That's old news.
We don't even talk about that anymore.
Blowing up Nord Stream, some cockamamie story.
Yeah, a few people in a sailboat.
Oh, it was Ukrainians.
Oh, it was this.
You know, this is part of it.
We have no attention span.
We have complete lying from the government.
We have secrecy and confidentiality.
So we never actually resolve any of these issues because it's very hard to have a systematic, methodical discussion where one discusses and then where there's a response. The thing that gets me about
Washington is they don't feel they have to respond to anything. And you watch the spokespeople,
Matt Miller at the State Department or Kirby in the White House, they smirk right in your face
to tell you,
you are nothing.
We can tell anything to you.
Do you understand?
I mean, that's my interpretation.
I agree.
They smirk.
The contempt they have
for the people who pay their salaries
who own this country
is shocking.
For the salary they pay,
can't they get the smirk
off their face, you know?
It would be like getting spit at
by your housekeeper.
I'm sorry, you're fired now.
No, no, no, no. It's exactly, you see it, that they know that they have the little laugh at the end.
So it's the carefree lie.
But we're talking about absolutely essential issues.
And that's what's missing in our discussion right now.
And it is closed down systematically if you try.
You just can't discuss the things.
Can I just take it?
I have trouble staying on track as well.
There are so many questions.
But just back to Durov, Pavel Durov, in jail in France right now. Is there any chance the Macron government arrested him without
coordination from the Biden administration? Probably not. I think the network that people
should understand, again, it's not exactly out there to go read off the shelf how it works but the intelligence
agencies are a network in and of themselves so whether blinken knew about this beforehand i
don't know did the cia know about this far more likely it's interesting when you look, for example, at negotiations, these endless,
hopeless negotiations on a ceasefire in Gaza. Hopeless, by the way, because of Israeli absolute
lack of interest in a ceasefire, just to say that. But when you look at when the negotiations take place, who goes?
You would think it might be our diplomats.
No. It's the CIA and Mossad.
It's a little weird. Those are
quote-unquote intelligence
agencies. They're doing
the negotiations. That part's not hidden
because you have to say, okay, Mossad and the
CIA and Hamas
counterpart. Wait, why would CIA, so as if it's its own government or-
As if it's the leader of our foreign policy, exactly.
I thought CIA was by charter an intelligence gathering agency.
By charter, it is two things, by the way, literally by charter. It is an intelligence gathering agency, and it is any other mission. That is exactly how it became the covert operations enterprise. And one more thing I think that is worth pointing out, by the way, of the CIA, and that was 49 years ago.
1975.
Next year will be the 50th anniversary of the church committee.
And maybe President Trump and Vice President Vance, if they're in power, maybe they would call for another congressional investigation. Well, Trump in his intro of Bobby Kennedy on this past Friday, when Kennedy endorsed him,
said that he would like a commission to look into the CIA's involvement or look into the Kennedy assassination.
You know, it's interesting.
It was a very strange confluence that allowed that one time for the CIA to be looked into because Nixon had resigned.
Ford was president but had come directly from Congress.
And so Ford had this sense in 1975 that he wasn't a directly elected president and he respected Congress because he really came
from Congress. So he actually told his chief of staff, who was Dick Cheney, let this happen
because Cheney was trying to close down church and probably could have closed down the church
commission. But there was this odd confluence that enabled this
tiny moment when the cia operations could be reviewed when they lifted the cover it was horror
after horror after horror because when church started he didn't know that he was going to
uncover a plethora of assassinations and assassination
attempts and mass surveillance of the U.S. public and regime change operations and many
other things.
Well, that cover was put back down, as Bobby said in your interview with him.
Those committees in Congress that are, quote unquote, overseeing the CIA are the protectors to make sure that no one looks right now.
But it's been 50 years, a half a century since we've had an account of what has really gone on.
Well, I see things.
I don't like what I see, and I don't see them because somehow it's my area of knowledge or responsibility. I see them on the side, like when the president of Haiti told me one day, Jeff, they're going to kill me. They're going to take me away. And I said,
no, no, no. And I thought he was being figurative and metaphorical. And I said,
no, everything's going to be all right. I'm going to help you get this loan, blah, blah, blah. Of
course, the upshot of it was, as usual, I was naive, and they took Aristide out to an unmarked CIA plane one day as president of Haiti and flew him to the Central African Republic and deposed him.
And deposed him literally in broad daylight.
I mean, it was the middle of the day, and the U.S. ambassador walked him out to this unmarked plane. But the interesting story for me was that I called, since I was an economic advisor a little bit and a friend and don't like presidents getting taken out to CIA unmarked planes and flown to center of Africa.
I called the reporter on the beat of the New York times.
And I said to her, uh, could you cover this story? There's just been a coup.
She said to me, my editor's not interested. That's my editor's not interested. That's a literal quote because i was my jaw dropped so stunned even the phrasing of it
but the new york times would not cover a coup in broad daylight by the cia in haiti when it occurred
and why do you think that is because these are organizations that serve the American power structure.
And they are both suborned by them because they get their information from the CIA.
They probably have literal people on staff that are part of the USG in one way.
And they're sources in everything else.
And they view it as patriotic also when the government says,
not a good thing to handle.
So they don't view themselves as the defenders of democracy. They view themselves as the defenders of the permanent state.
And they absolutely do.
So you think that the intel agencies
play a role in shaping news coverage?
Well, I think that there's no question at all.
Some places are just literal mouthpieces of the CIA.
I don't think anyone doubts that the Washington Post
is just the place where the CIA issues its statements. Sometimes, by the way, helpful,
because sometimes the intelligence community wants the public to understand something.
That's right.
So it's not all wrong or all misinformation.
No, no, that's absolutely true.
But of course, that is the place to go to to hear what the CIA says, period.
And the Wall Street Journal too.
Yeah, it's not subtle.
It's not even close.
What's amazing though is that any counter narrative, there's no room for that in any
of these papers.
So then you have the CIA or the whole panoply of agencies,
but acting not simply as sources,
but really as masters,
like they're controlling the coverage.
The idea is,
I think the most important
cliched word is the narrative.
There needs to be a story.
They control the narrative. It's like Orwell told us,
he who controls the past controls the present, who controls the present controls the future.
They have to shape the past. They have to define everything. They need their narrative.
And that's what these mainstream outlets do, is have their narrative. They have completely, completely
lost the idea of even one time saying, well, there's this argument and then there's the
argument on the other side and perhaps having competing columns or trying to understand this. I think we talked last time.
I tried to get 700 words in the New York Times.
I got up to the point where they actually edited my piece before they killed it.
But they would not run a 700-word story from someone who knows, I think,
about as much about the Ukraine crisis going back for more than 30 years
as I'd say most of the people that write for them. And they're not interested in any other side.
There's a narrative. And so that is how it works. The narrative does not have to be believable,
by the way. Most of the time,
it's not believed.
The Warren- Russia blew up the Nord Stream pipeline.
The Warren Commission was not believed
by the American people.
Most Americans believe that there was a lab leak
that caused the pandemic.
Most Americans,
I would suppose,
believe that the US blew up Nord Stream or
certainly had its role in it. So these narratives are not believed, but they buy enough time
that the attention goes away and you get onto something else. It's just a way to make sure that there's no need to answer anything, no accountability.
That's what this is about, not convincing people of outlandishly weird stories. The lone gunman
who killed President Kennedy when everyone's pointing in another direction and the count of
the bullets says something else and blah, blah, blah. No,
you don't have to believe it, but you need to be able to say something for long enough that
something else comes up and that you stop talking about the previous thing. And it's extremely
dangerous because what it means is that beneath that, it's not to convince people it's to have the ability to do what you want to do and know
that you won't be held accountable for it i do think though a wrinkle in the program
a huge problem for the people who've been conducting uh their affairs this way is
alternative media absolutely which went from being really niche
and kind of far out
and not credible to being the...
It's the only place
you can find information.
Exactly.
So Judge Napolitano, for example,
who's a really sweet man.
Yep.
I worked with him.
Lost his last job.
Yep.
I don't know if he's ever said that
in public, but I know.
He's a terrific guy.
I saw it.
Absolutely terrific guy.
He lost his last job for having views on foreign policy that were not consistent with what you were supposed to say.
He got fired for it.
And so he winds up doing his own little tiny thing on YouTube.
And all of a sudden, it becomes a real thing.
Yeah, because you talk, you reason.
Exactly.
He looks at evidence.
And you can't find that in what used to be. Joe Rogan's like some sort of MMA fighter,
comedian, sitcom actor
just starts doing this little program
on something called a podcast
and becomes the biggest thing in the world.
So that is just a massive,
that's too big a threat.
Elon Musk making rockets,
then buys Twitter and then opens it up.
These are the biggest threats they face.
So, I mean, they can't allow that to continue, can they?
Well, this is a Surov.
They just arrested Surov.
Well, that's it.
You know, Elon is a force of nature, of course,
and may be able to face down the USG. But we know, and Elon has really been very clear,
very brave and doing the right things.
But we know that the other platforms
are already so heavily policed and with US engagement.
And we heard about it again from Bobby Kennedy.
But we know it also, and we saw it with Judge Napolitano also.
You know, here's the threat.
You deviate, even a guest deviates from our narrative.
You got two times, but the third time you're off our network.
Who was the guest, by the way? The guest was Pepe Escobar,
who's a reporter, journalist, provocative,
and I don't even know the details,
but this is the threat.
And I see it on many YouTube channels.
There are certain words you must not say, even if you needed to define something specifically, because they'll boot you off.
And this is already clear now that we're seemingly getting to the next stage of ransacking houses and other kinds of threats. It could be that as all of these foreign policy strategies,
this hegemonic strategy doesn't work and is unraveling on many fronts,
maybe the proponents of that are doing their own kind of escalation to keep things in train.
The interesting thing is I think there are three main points that we're seeing right now.
One is the foreign policies of failure.
So it doesn't deliver whether it's fair, unfair, right, wrong, lied.
It just doesn't work.
It's gotten the United States into trillions of
dollars of failed wars. Everyone can see this. The American people do not back our foreign policy at
all. So that's, I think, one point. Second, we're seeing politicians that are starting to say,
no, we've got to do something a different way. So that's extremely important.
And third, we have the truth coming out in these kinds of conversations that even if the so-called mainstream media won't do it, people are tuning in and they're tuning out of the boring tablum narratives that they don't believe
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It was ridiculous, but it was also a metaphor for the way our leaders run this country.
They're constantly telling you, everything is fine.
Everything is fine.
Don't worry.
Everything's under control.
Nothing to see here.
Move along and obey.
No one believes that.
Crime is not going away.
Supply chains remain fragile.
It does feel like some kind of global conflict could break out at any time.
So the question is, if things went south tomorrow, would you be ready?
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Go to ammosquared.com to learn more. I actually invited you to come talk about the economy since you are an economic advisor.
Yeah, once in a while.
But I couldn't resist asking you about the state of the world.
The state of our economy, many parts of it, but I'm really fixated on credit card debt and how high it is.
It's obviously something to worry about for the people who hold it, but how big a factor is it in the health of the economy?
What do you make of that?
Why is it so high, highest ever?
Well, I think the main thing to understand about our economy is that for the last 40 years or so, we've had two economies.
We've had an economy of college grads and professionals who have done quite well. And
we've had an economy of high school grads and working class that have really had a hard time
and they have a lot of debt and they have a lot of difficulties.
And we've had basically two worlds in our one nation that don't communicate very clearly with each other.
And that's our basic economic reality. So that means that things like, we know that, and many surveys, Fed data, which collects this kind of information, has looked at it.
How many people in this country could not manage a sudden $400 emergency, whether it's dental or some medical or prescription or something?
Truck tires. And it's dental or some medical or prescription or something. Truck tires.
And it's, and it's a, a huge proportion of, of the country. a world of people who are earning good incomes and where things look completely different.
I mean, I'm aware of it because I've written about it for decades and said, you know, this is our challenge and our real problem and we don't face up to it.
But that's the reality.
So the credit card debt is not the professional class out on
big binges. It's people trying to make ends meet and can't necessarily put food on the table for
the family, can't face a medical emergency of which we have a rising number of part of our
population that is experiencing that. And that's our real situation.
We don't deal with it.
We don't talk about it very clearly.
Clearly, our politics has, in a more and more clear way, organized along these lines.
And the irony is the Republican Party became the party of the working class and the professionals became or the Democratic Party became the party of the professionals.
And that was a kind of flip over time. The basic point is that when these divisions the Democrats in the Franklin Roosevelt era through
Kennedy and Johnson felt more and more, well, this party doesn't do anything for us.
And Trump, obviously, with great political savvy, saw his entree into that in 2016 understood that reality and took the working class out of the Democratic Party, basically.
But the underlying economics of that is a country that just spread apart.
It's got many different aspects of it, but the biggest divide in our country is education, educational attainment, because basically that's the, that's the underlying organizing principle for and less, you're struggling. And it shows up in
so many places. It shows up in housing, it shows up in credit card debt, but it actually shows up
in life expectancy, which is unbelievable. There's an eight-year gap of life expectancy between high school grads who have a life expectancy of around 75
and college grads who have a life expectancy of around 83. Can you imagine? This is two
different societies and to the point of how long you live, how you live, whether you're healthy or not. And this has been going on for decades now and completely almost
understood and unaddressed.
And the political system, more or less,
incapable of solving anything, unfortunately.
It's interesting, though, how little anyone cares.
I mean, i think these are
complicated problems very complicated problems you suggested not exactly sure how to solve it
but i know that the first step is acknowledging it and caring about it and discussing it discussing
it and you've been in at least since you're an undergraduate at harvard in one world i have two
yeah um and so i can verify i know can as well, that there's like no conversation
about this, that everyone in the world that I grew up in blames the people who were dying earlier,
hates them for it, hates them for their weakness and their suffering. That just strikes me as such
an ugly, vicious impulse. I don't understand it. Yeah, it's a great observation. You know,
you really can close the gates literally on gated communities.
But even if the community is not gated, we are segregated by residential area, by cities, by where we live, by rent, by cost of housing and so on.
And so you can go on like this without any, you know, real attention. Uh, and, and certainly I, I think it's
right to say that, uh, you know, the, the lucky part of our society is more or less insulated,
not only by how they live and where they live. And they get nice services
from people who are working extraordinarily hard
for extraordinarily low incomes.
But the political system is paralyzed.
But even the social,
so we grew up in a country,
you're a little bit older than I am,
but we grew up in roughly the same country.
There was an acknowledgement
that there were people
who were not as well off as you,
and that was sad. Now, among affluent people, I see only race guilt. I see no economic guilt at all.
And I think you can believe in capitalism or system or whatever system is and still feel like,
gee, I feel sorry for people who are deep in credit card debt. I don't see any of that.
No, no. This is, I think, exactly right. It's another part that isn't in our
discussion, our discourse. And I think it's right to say that basically, you know,
the political system doesn't really want to address any of this because it's complicated.
You have to pay for solutions one way or another. No one wants to pay for anything.
We just run up debt. Anyway, we're, I mean, we run up, if it's not credit card debt,
it's our national debt. And anyway, as we've been talking about, we're much more interested
in blowing up places and overthrowing other governments than we are in addressing any of
these issues. What would happen if people stopped paying their, if a lot of people stopped paying their credit card debt? Well, you know,
the way that our system works is that it more or less goes along on deep trends, whether technology or other trends, until there's some kind of crisis.
We had a crisis in 2008.
That was a very particular kind of crisis where a not very clever move by, I think,
a not very clever treasury secretary at the time decided he would bankrupt a company he didn't like. It was Hank Paulson,
who came from Goldman Sachs. Not my part of the Sachs family, I need to explain.
So I just want to be clear, different branch, I suppose. And he didn't like Lehman Brothers,
so he decided literally one weekend rather than try to sell off Lehman Brothers, he was going to close it down.
And it was a kind of lame-brained operation, and he created one of the greatest financial crises of modern history.
Wait, wait, wait.
Yes.
You think Paulson created the 08 meltdown because he had a grudge against Lehman?
Yeah, basically.
He wanted to teach them a lesson.
He thought they were lazy, terrible firm, which they may well have been, by the way.
But he decided in 2008, there was a housing bubble and the housing bubble was breaking.
And a lot of the investment banks were on the edge because they had invested in crappy mortgages and that they were trying to securitize. So it was a fragile situation. We would have had a normal downturn for sure. We would have had a recession. 2008 that rather than do another rescue where you take a weak bank and you may add some public money
and then you you uh sell it off to a buyer and there was a potential buyer for Lehman Brothers
it was Barclays a British bank and the USG government could have put in a bit of money or taken some of the bad stuff off the balance sheets and given the rest to Barclays.
But Paulson wanted to do two things.
He wanted to teach Lehman Brothers a lesson, I believe.
You know, we can't prove this stuff, but Lehman was kind of a rival of Goldman.
And I think there was that personal bid from what I know.
But also, Paulson thought, well, we should show the markets.
We can be tough and firm and let the markets determine the outcome. So he said, we're not going to do any patch up to get Lehman
into somebody else's hands. We're going to just let it close, let it go bankrupt. And that was
September 14th, 2008. And when the markets opened the next day, he had triggered one of the greatest financial crises of history, actually, within—
Why have I never heard the story?
Maybe they didn't want to advertise how unbelievably incompetent they were.
But this was complete incompetence.
And by the way, it was incompetence of the whole economic team.
It included the Fed, New York Fed, Washington, the Treasury. This was a crisis that absolutely was not only human made, but you can pinpoint the hour and the day and the event.
Because the point I was making, because you asked me a question about-
Sorry, my jaw's open. I mean, I'm kind of interested in the subject.
I read a book on it, I guess.
You asked me a question about credit card debt and the point-
No, but that's just so interesting.
I was making a digression because-
Is this widely, well, I'm digressing again, but is this widely known?
It's not very well understood.
It's not a secret, but I can explain why it's not understood, but, uh,
in a moment. But the point is a financial panic is a specific kind of event. Uh, it is the same
event as when people are trampled running out of a stadium. Yes. Okay. So that happens once every, I don't know how many
hundred football games, something happens. There's a fight, people start running and then trampling,
and then lots of people get crushed. So that's a specific event. It's a panic.
In finance, the same thing can happen. And financial panics happen on occasion throughout history, and you can identify them.
And usually there is a cause that is a trigger of it.
But with a panic, like a stampede out of a stadium, the cause is completely incommensurate with the outcome in other words the cause may be that
someone uh someone punched someone else and that started commotion and that started and a thousand
people got trampled in the end so the cause was some stupid little thing but then it led to a
cascade of disaster that's exactly what a financial panic is or a bank run.
I don't know if anybody ever remembers my favorite movie of my youth and for my children, Mary Poppins.
But Mary Poppins is a children's story, of course, that has a bank run in it where the young boy wants to get his two pence out of the bank and there's resistance
and he starts screaming, you won't give me my money back. And then everyone runs to the bank
to take their money out and the bank fails. And he made it deliberately. The action was deliberate.
The outcome was not deliberate. He had no idea what he was about to do, uh, which was to create,
uh, this rush for the exits by all banks on all loans all over the world within three days. And that's what he created.
And it created the biggest economic downturn since the Great Depression itself.
And so, and that's, by the way, an interesting, very interesting story also, because just like a panic can create something that's completely incommensurate with
any fundamental reason but it leads to a total disaster the opposite can sometimes happen also
which i was reminded because the great depression which was this calamitous event, in the days up to Franklin Roosevelt's inauguration, which was March 4th, 1933, The whole U.S. banking system had closed down because everyone had rushed to the banks to withdraw their money, just like in Mary Poppins, but it was all over the U.S.
So the whole U.S. banking system was closed when Franklin Roosevelt became president on March 4th, 1933. And with a smile and a tilt of his head, he said, and I firmly believe that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.
And with those words, people stopped panicking and they went back and put their money in the bank. And within a few days,
the U.S. banking system reopened. And it was Franklin Roosevelt's personality and his spirit
and his tilt of the head and his smile and his phrase that it's only fear that we have to fear that undid the panic.
After that, many reforms were made like the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and
the SEC and public reporting and many things were done.
But the banks actually opened on a matter of words.
So you ask me a question, why did I make this big digression?
Because financial markets are capable of creating all sorts of disasters. And the first rule that
you learn is be careful. Don't let liquidity mess you up. Don't let panics destroy things.
Hank Paulson apparently didn't know any of that.
And he walked the world into a $10 or $20 trillion disaster loss by a deliberate action because there were better ways.
He never got, that's an absolutely remarkable story.
Remarkable because it happened in front of all of us.
Yeah.
I was paying, I don't know, 30% attention.
I mean, I actually had to sell my
house that year. So, I mean, it affected me and a lot of people, maybe less than most, but still,
it affected everybody. And he was treasury secretary and a famous guy, and he's still
kind of a famous guy. Yeah, yeah, he still is. Probably a nice guy, by the way. Yeah, yeah.
I do doubt that, but I don't know. I don't know. I um trying to let my bigotries affect my view but uh
why does he not carry the stain of that with him the reason is strangely enough people don't
understand what i just described in general though there is a group i'm a finance economist so
i study this throughout history and i've studied these events and I've
watched them actually close up because I've often been called into crisis situations. So I'm very
attuned to them. And another example, and then I'll give you an answer, was in the summer of 1997, when Asia experienced a full-fledged financial crisis
that you may remember called, we know it as the Asian financial crisis. What happened? What
happened was Thailand devalued the Thai bot. Well, so? You want to put your thumb in your
mouth and suck your thumb. What difference
could that possibly make? It triggered a panic. And the IMF addressed it, the International
Monetary Fund addressed it in completely the wrong way. Because both the 2008 and the 1997
or the 1933 story that I told you about Franklin Roosevelt,
if you're in a stampede or a panic and you say,
you see, you're so immoral.
You created this disaster.
We are living in sin.
This is why our banking system has failed.
You will do nothing but crush what you have left standing.
But if you say, oh my God, we just had a panic. You don't have to panic. Fundamentals are fine.
We've got this under control. The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.
You can calm down the situation. This is not a matter of math. This is human psychology. This is understanding what's going on and then responding to it in an appropriate way.
Now, it happens, and now we're getting really into the weeds of economics.
My field is macroeconomics.
So I look at an economy as a whole, and I study business cycles or crises or ups and downs of the economy.
So to go back to 2008, we were going to have a recession. A recession means that
the people stop buying houses and there's unemployment and the unemployment may go, you know, from 4% to
7% and, uh, economic growth, uh, may turn negative for two or three quarters.
And there's a lot of pain and people can't make ends meet and so forth.
But then the economy recovers in maybe 18 months or so.
That's not what happened in 2008. What happened in 2008 was a prolonged,
deep crisis with soaring unemployment, with bankruptcies, with mega bailouts,
with the whole world economy suffering. There was no reason for that bigger outcome.
The normal thing would have been a recession. Why a recession? Because there was
too much liquidity and deregulation of the mortgage markets, and there was a bubble,
and the bubble burst, and housing went into recession, and we had another business cycle.
That would have been the normal. But we had Hank Paulson on September 14, 2008,
pulling the plug on an investment bank
that triggered a panic among all banks
so that by Monday morning, when the markets opened,
first, there were legal problems in Britain
because Lehman had a branch in britain that uh under british rules
created lots of problems but then the investment banks started to call in their loans because they
said oh hell all hell's breaking loose and the stampede started that led to the mega downturn
so then you ask well how was this interpreted afterwards? Because that's your
question. Why isn't this standard? Well, the answer is that it was all explained as the downturn from
the housing bubble, not the panic caused by the bankruptcy of Lehman. So in other words, what would have been a normal downturn
became the narrative for what was the calamitous crisis.
In other words, it was mis-explained.
And that's how they like to explain it
because Hank Paulson did not want to stand up the next day and say, oh shit,
I really did that wrong. That was a stupid thing to do. I didn't understand how financial markets
work, even though I had been the lead of Goldman Sachs. I really messed these things up. Ben
Bernanke at the Fed did not want to say, my God, that weekend we really should have
buffed this up to get it out to Barclays. And he said afterwards, I couldn't have sold it anyway.
I didn't have the legal authority. And then a scholar at Johns Hopkins wrote a long book
explaining very carefully, yes, Ben, you could have done it differently. We could have avoided
this crisis. It could have been sold to Barclays. You had all the authority in the world to do it and so on. So the narrative that I'm giving, the explanation that I'm giving was hidden from view, partly because of confusion, partly because when a crisis happens, you want to blame it on fundamental things.
So it was easy to say, oh, that mortgage market was a lot of cheating, and there was a lot of
cheating, and all the securitization made messes and so forth. So you want to say, oh, if there's a downturn or if there's a panic, it's because you're sinners.
And so that's a normal narrative.
And no one wants to take responsibility.
God, I really messed up.
But it's important to know why things go wrong so you can take steps to prevent them from going wrong again in the same way.
Well, it's also, you know, again, this is now really getting into the
weeds of my profession. Uh, but, um, as a macro economist, I'll just, if anyone's interested,
but this is really getting technical, we have a standard theory that we teach at university level
about why downturns happen. Uh, and it's a theory that's attributed to John Maynard
Keynes, who was a really great, brilliant British economist that I've learned a whole career from
in his writings. But John Maynard Keynes wrote famously about the Great Depression.
And he said the cause of the Great Depression is
this particular phenomenon we call the decline of aggregate demand. The people stop buying,
and that leads to a downturn. So maybe they stop buying houses, so that leads to a downturn. So
that's called an aggregate demand shortfall. And the problem is that all subsequent business cycles after John Maynard Keynes
then became interpreted through that lens that he had established because he was such a wonderful
personality and such a fascinating writer and thinker that his interpretation of the great depression became the standard way to
interpret any event that followed afterwards and my experience because i happen to have
the experience of working in very acute crises like hyperinflations or debt crises or financial panics, which became my
thing for a while in my career, I saw, oh, those are really quite different from
how Keynes described the Great Depression. These are phenomena of their own right. They're very
particular. A banking panic is not just a decline of demand. It's a panic. We need to understand the
panic. Now, I'm not the first to observe that by any means. There's a whole theory and history
about this, but it's kind of, I made a comparison 20 some years ago years ago because I'm jealous of my wife.
She's a medical doctor and an extraordinarily excellent medical doctor.
And she would see a patient and do a diagnosis and save the kid because she's a pediatrician.
And I thought, oh, God, if only an economist could actually save something, you know. But she did what she was trained to do called a differential diagnosis, which means you see a fever.
It's not one thing.
You have to figure out what's the cause.
Right.
So I came to understand you see an economic crisis.
You better understand the cause of it, not just the standard narrative.
And so for me, I'm very much attuned to what really caused that event. Well, Hank,
you caused that event in this case on September 14th, 2008. I'm sorry to say it. Don't want to
make it personal, but you really made a mess at that point.
This was not just world markets having their thing. This was something that we made a mistake.
You should understand that. So given everything you know about the current US economy and the
current guardians of it, stewards of it, what do you think the next crisis will look like?
First, we're in an ongoing crisis, but it's a slow-moving crisis. So, a crisis doesn't have to be an immediate event. A crisis can be a set of unsolved problems that persist and are difficult. And that I think has been true for a long time.
Our economy does not work for half our country. Yes. That to my mind's a crisis. I agree. And
it's not news. It's not something that started this year or under the Biden administration or
under any recent administration. It's been decades.
Why did it happen?
It happened because I think, actually, this is another long digression, but technology changed and jobs that people used to do, good working class high school grad jobs, no longer
existed.
The assembly line ended except for robots.
And I've toured robotic factories
for 30 years.
This isn't something new.
Already 30 years ago,
I went to a Toyota plant,
probably, yeah,
probably 30 years ago.
There were no people
in the whole building.
It was a Japanese plant,
probably in the 1990s, because it was all incredibly sophisticated robots.
What I found fascinating about it, by the way, was that every car that was coming off the line was custom, you know, specifications.
So a truck followed by a sedan followed by, you know, two-seater and so on.
The robots were just programmed. They could put together any different thing and the right parts
would come in and it wasn't, you know, super standardized. It was a very sophisticated plant,
but it meant that the autoworkers didn't have jobs. So those jobs had already gone away.
Jobs in agriculture went away 75 years ago.
You know, we have 1% of our workforce provides the food for the whole country.
Yes.
And for a lot of the world, 1%
because agriculture became so mechanized,
so proficient and so on.
And when I spoke to a farmer a few years ago, he said,
yeah, I still like to ride the tractor. Of course, I read a book when I do because the tractor
drives itself. It puts the fertilizer on the field exactly in the right places. Everything is
geographically specified and so on. But the point is that the fundamental technology of our world changed already 50 years
ago, not just with the chat GPT. This is a long ongoing story. And it meant actually high school
wasn't going to cut it for demand for workers because what was more than 20% of the workforce, which was manufacturing
back in 1980 or so, is now less than 10% of the workforce. And that's not, by the way,
because of China or because of Mexico. That's because of robots. That's because of automation.
That's because of digital technologies. That's because of a sophisticated economy.
So this trend has been deep.
It's been widening for decades.
It has led to two societies.
The professionals are mainly in cities, and they're mainly in the Democratic Party, and they're mainly doing rather well thank you
and the people that are in working class well they're in rural areas or semi-rural areas or
suburban areas in many places and and uh not doing very well and that's been going on for a long time. And, uh, I call that a crisis.
Uh, it's a crisis of our country. What do we do in response? Well, we go to war,
we overthrow governments, we do all sorts of things. We call ourselves the greatest country
in the world and we let our infrastructure go to hell. Uh, and, uh, we didn't address these issues and we didn't face up to the question of, you know,
how to share better, how to address these challenges in a more effective way, or what
are we going to do about it? What are the underlying trends? And now we're going to face
a new wave with our even more remarkable, uh, artificial intelligence, uh, which is actually
going to wipe out lots, lots more jobs.
Uh, and that's going to be a very, very big deal.
And this time, a lot of professional jobs, by the way, because, you know, frankly, uh,
if I need to find sources or to look at the, been written about a topic, what used to take me, and I was hired to do it, days or weeks to go through journals and literature and books, I can do in one minute now on just asking a question to my favorite chat program. And so,
this is going to cause even more disruptions. It also means, interestingly, of course, that
a few people who own these platforms and systems are, you know, getting a wealth that is simply beyond any imagining and any prior experience in the history of the world.
I looked up as I was arriving today's net worth of the top 10 net worth people of the United States.
So with Elon number one,
you know what,
or not of the United States of the world,
because I think one is foreign,
I think maybe of the top 10.
You know what the 10 richest people,
10 people, just 10,
what their net worth is today?
$1.7 trillion, 10 people, just 10, what their net worth is today, $1.7 trillion.
10 people.
This is a funny world.
You've got tens of millions of people who can't pay the bills, can't fill a dental appointment, can't fill a drug prescription.
You have 10 people, many of them really creative, by the way. But even if you're really creative, Elon, I think today, and I love Elon for lots of things and know him and admire his genius.
But he's got 200 billion something bucks.
It's interesting.
You know, this is the economy is changing in fundamental ways and it's bifurcating may not even be the right word in other words dividing in two it may be
dividing in even more fractured ways and we need to figure out what we're going to do about that as a society. And we're not figuring that out.
And also because of the way our political system works, we don't want to do anything that would cost anything because government doesn't want to raise any revenues, even on people who couldn't use their wealth
in a million lifetimes.
So we're a little bit stuck.
And all of this, the reason I mention all of this
is that normal economics,
the way we discuss this issue is as bad
as the way we discuss the wars and everything else
it's at an extremely superficial level that is all about will growth be 3.1 percent next quarter or 2.9% or is the economy in a slow patch or will it pick up where the deepest changes of our lives are underway, where technology is transforming everybody's jobs, everybody's lives, where if you don't have the right kind of job, you're living eight or 10
years less than your neighbor that has the right kind of job, that that's the kind of society
we have right now. And those are issues that are really important, but where do you discuss them?
You're not going to hear about that on the campaign. You're not going to hear about that on the campaign.
You're not going to hear about that in almost all of the financial journalism because financial journalism is mainly about what will the markets do?
Will the Fed raise interest rates, lower interest rates?
Those are not completely uninteresting, but I find them completely boring. So I have to say, even though that was what I went into to begin with,
but I thought how much fun it would be to turn dials and make economies go up and down.
But it turns out to be the least interesting part of the whole story.
Jeffrey Sachs, I do think at some point you should sit down and figure out 10 stories over the past 30 years that have been mistold or misunderstood in the public's view of them and just do four hours each as a university lecture and put them online and just make higher education.
As usual, Tucker, great idea.
Thank you.
Jeff Sachs, I appreciate it.
Thanks for listening to Tucker, great idea. Thank you. Jeff Sachs, I appreciate it. Thanks for listening to the Tucker Carlson Show.
If you enjoyed it, you can go to TuckerCarlson.com
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