This Past Weekend - E510 Nate Halverson

Episode Date: June 13, 2024

Nate Halverson is an independent investigative reporter and producer behind the documentary “The Grab” which explores the international race to control access to food and water. He also writes for... the Center For Investigative Reporting covering topics such as organized crime, social media, food access, economic inequality and more.  Nate Halverson joins Theo to talk about what he learned producing his documentary “The Grab”, why every world power is working to control the access of food and water, the financial incentives behind it, what he saw firsthand in countries affected by this, why China is buying large amounts of farmland in America, the implications this power dynamic will have on future generations, and more.  Watch “The Grab”: https://www.magpictures.com/thegrab/home  ------------------------------------------------ Tour Dates! https://theovon.com/tour New Merch: https://www.theovonstore.com ------------------------------------------------- Sponsored By: BetterHelp: This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp — go to http://betterhelp.com/theo  to get 10% off your first month. Chubbies: Your summer wardrobe awaits! Get 20% off @chubbies with the code theo at https://www.chubbiesshorts.com/theo  #chubbiespod Morgan & Morgan: Text TPW to 4-THE-PEOPLE (484-373-6753) for your chance to win 2 tickets to UFC 303 to see McGregor vs. Chandler, or click this link https://my.community.com/morganandmorgan?t=TPW  Blue Cube: Follow @BlueCubeBaths on Instagram for a chance to win your own cold plunge this Summer!  ------------------------------------------------- Music: “Shine” by Bishop Gunn https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3A_coTcUek ------------------------------------------------ Submit your funny videos, TikToks, questions and topics you'd like to hear on the podcast to: tpwproducer@gmail.com Hit the Hotline: 985-664-9503 Video Hotline for Theo Upload here: https://www.theovon.com/fan-upload Send mail to: This Past Weekend 1906 Glen Echo Rd PO Box #159359 Nashville, TN 37215 ------------------------------------------------ Find Theo: Website: https://theovon.com Instagram: https://instagram.com/theovon Facebook: https://facebook.com/theovon Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/thispastweekend Twitter: https://twitter.com/theovon YouTube: https://youtube.com/theovon Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheoVonClips Shorts Channel: https://bit.ly/3ClUj8z ------------------------------------------------ Producer: Zach https://www.instagram.com/zachdpowers Producer: Ben https://www.instagram.com/benbeckermusic/  Producer: Nick https://www.instagram.com/realnickdavis/ Producer: Colin https://instagram.com/colin_reiner Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Everyone's got a thirst, a drive to be the next big thing, to put the world on notice. If you answer when your thirst calls, Sprite's for you. Sprite's for the makers and creators, the visionaries putting in the work to build their dreams. Whether you're shooting a cinematic masterpiece on your phone, filling notebooks with sketches, or up all night turning your bedroom into the booth, thirst is everything. Obey your thirst. Right. Today's guest is an independent writer,
Starting point is 00:00:32 journalist, and reporter. He contributed to the documentary, The Grab, which is all about the money and power controlling the food industry in America and beyond. Outside of that, he writes for the Center for Investigative Reporting. I'm really fascinated to spend time with today's guest, Nate Halverson. I love the stuff. Nate Halverson, thanks for coming, man. Dude, are you kidding me?
Starting point is 00:01:22 Thank you so much for having me. Yeah, I appreciate coming, man. Dude, are you kidding me? Thank you so much for having me. Yeah, I appreciate it, man. I watched the Grab, uh, which is the documentary that you guys are putting out. And just so I'm clear, what was the goal of the documentary? Cause to me, it seemed like you're trying to show that a lot of land or arable land. Is that land that can grow crops? Yeah. Okay. A lot of land that can sustain crops is being bought up by, um, different countries that it's kind of like a land grab for that land right now,
Starting point is 00:01:56 because they're not making more of it. That's it, man. I mean, it, it is in the 21st century, it's looking more like, you know, oil was the commodity of the 20th century, you know, gold diamonds, these things. But in the 21st century, it looks like the rich and powerful are increasingly turning to control food and water as, you know, like the basic necessities. Um, and we're just seeing a ton, whether it's foreign governments, you know, wealthy wall street corporations are all beginning to turn to it.
Starting point is 00:02:26 You know, I think now Bill Gates, his family, they're the largest farmers in the U S right? Like they have, they're now the largest farm landowners in the U S. Right. And that's interesting because he's obviously a guy with a lot of foresight, a guy who's able to kind of envision the next step, obviously from his past, from his history of being able to acquire companies that are doing that in different realms.
Starting point is 00:02:51 You kind of broke this story that this was happening years ago. Yeah, because before this, before I started working on this, dude, I do nothing about any of this, right? Like I came into a cold turkey and I was asked to look at China's largest meat company buying the world's largest pork company, which was based in Virginia. And at the time Congress was kind of
Starting point is 00:03:14 freaking out, you know, like is China buying, you know, our meat supply? And so I started, I was asked to look into it because I had this background and dig it into Hong Kong financials where this meat company was publicly traded. And I went to China. I talked to folks in the US. I talked to people in US intelligence. And it turns out, yeah, like the Chinese government was behind this purchase that's effectively
Starting point is 00:03:40 one in four American pigs. And the reason is because the Chinese government kind kinda clued into something before other folks, which is that in the 21st century, food is power, right? Like you need to control food to control your political future. And so the Chinese government began putting into these five-year plans that they put out, an effort to go overseas and begin buying up
Starting point is 00:04:04 food and water resources so that they could control it. an effort to go overseas and begin buying up food and water resources so that they could control it. So it's a strategy that was happening. Definitely. Right. And so they want to get the pigs because that's a source of food. Yeah, it's a source of food and that's a source of,
Starting point is 00:04:17 you know, for China political stability. Right, if you have food, then the people will eventually follow you. It's like, yeah, you'll do anything to eat. Yes, that's exactly it. And I've now traveled the world. That was the first one, the first food story that I looked at.
Starting point is 00:04:33 And I thought, OK, it's a story about food. It's a story about farming. So I was surprised when then I'm talking to US intelligence people, and then I'm talking to people in the Defense Department. All of a sudden, food this like big national security. And so as I began traveling the world, I mean, I began going to other countries where those governments were using the food supply to control the population.
Starting point is 00:04:56 Right. And I think that's what people are worried about going forward into the 21st century is that by controlling the food, you can control the people. Right, they're just thinking, okay, how do we need to control the people next? How do we still have control over people? And they start to look at what could become a scarcity. Yep, yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:15 And they believe it's food. Yeah, exactly. And so like the country I had gone to was Venezuela. And Venezuela at the time was having all these food riots, right? Like people, you'd go and you'd work your nine to five job, and then you'd come home and there'd literally be a one mile line, long line to get into the grocery store.
Starting point is 00:05:33 And there's no way you're going to work like a 10 hour day and then stand in line all night, right? And then go back. And so, you know, I was talking to these guys that were working class that had jobs and they were literally eating out of dumpsters. I saw these dudes eating raw meat, right? And he's like, I've got a job. He's like, I just can't afford food. And so then I went to this, you know, like secret location, this, this, this warehouse full of food after watching people like starving people, people scraping by trying to survive without food in Venezuela. I went to this government warehouse full of food on a Sunday when it was supposed to be closed and who was there?
Starting point is 00:06:10 It was a bunch of Venezuelan military and police. They were open. The government has opening it up and these guys, these big buff dudes were wheeling out cart fulls of food that like I hadn't seen in like my one week there and they were giving the authority, like the authorities were giving the police and the military, the guys that were knocking down the population food so that they would, of course, continue to control the population. Wow. But how do you start to see that it becomes a bigger story, though?
Starting point is 00:06:40 I mean, I just it was crazy, man, because I just started seeing these dots, like these stories that you would see around the world, you just, it was crazy, man, because I just started seeing these dots, like these stories that you would see around the world, you know, like, oh, this country is running low on food and its people are migrating out, or like this country just bought up, you know, like half the farmland in like Madagascar, right? You know, like when I think Dai Wu out of South Korea
Starting point is 00:06:59 bought up like, made like a secret deal for like half the farmland in Madagascar, and then the people rise up and overthrow in the countries in civil war and you you begin seeing these stories and then you begin being like oh my god like all of these seemingly separate stories are all connected as part of this like bigger trend right and that's when I began tapping into people who were beginning to follow it like in the shadows
Starting point is 00:07:23 right like the government the intelligence community others were beginning to sort of piece this together But it for my reporting anyway It appears that like it really was the Chinese government was probably the first to wake up to this to really tap into it And there's a reason for that. I mean The leadership of China went through the great famine, right? Like Xi Jinping has told stories about living through the great famine, which was the late fifties when estimates are that like, man, 37 million people died as a result of starvation in China, in China. Wow. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:00 And so when you go through a period where you're looking around and dude, I've heard, I mean like stories, I don't even like to tell because they're so awful about what it's like. You know, if you have 37 million people that actually died as a result of starvation, that means you got like a hundred million people that are close, right? And people are just like doing desperate crazy things. And so when the leadership of China can remember that, like they are more keyed in when that trend starts, you know poking up its head
Starting point is 00:08:28 When there are these you know when there are these forecasts things are gonna get more and more dire in the future They moved quickly to begin to sort of control food and water supplies for their population, right? So they're kind of like obviously they're a little more sensitive to it. But But you notice that they were kind of at the head of the trend. Yeah. Um, yeah, my father grew up in Nicaragua and he grew up there like in the 1910s. Okay. And so he would tell me stories about people starving and, um, kids in his
Starting point is 00:08:57 village and stuff eating dirt and like their stomachs becoming distended. And literally making dirt. Like people say mud pies and stuff that kids make, like, but literally making mud pies and eating them, you know, just to like be able to put something like, feel like you're putting something in. Yeah. Where in Nicaragua was your dad? He's from Bluefield, Nicaragua.
Starting point is 00:09:17 Oh, sure. Out in the coast. Yeah. So I'm not, I know his, some of his family was down there being missionaries and that's how his parents met each other. But, um, yeah, he would just tell me stories like that when I was a kid and it was just, it was unbelievable. I mean, I've even thought I've been on a fast for a couple of days and seen, um, and this is a little off topic, I guess, but I seen a guy at Best Buy. I had been on a fast for four days.
Starting point is 00:09:42 I seen a guy at Best Buy. Yeah. And I was like, I will, was like, I could eat that guy. And it was like, I'd never had a thought boat like that before, I've been to Best Buy probably 70 times, and I'd never thought, you know what, I could eat one of these sales attendants or whatever. But it was just in my head, it was like a little bit
Starting point is 00:10:02 of that hunger was like, what are we gonna do here if this guy looks the other way. Yeah, dude. Yeah, I know, man. It's weird. Like, and, and that's what it comes down to. And that's the thing that like, and then people are surprised. They're like, why are all these Venezuelans coming to our border? And you're like, because they're hungry. They've been staring at other people thinking about eating them.
Starting point is 00:10:20 So they're like, maybe it's time to leave. Yeah. You don't even think that that's one of the reasons why people were coming up. Um, what are some of the other dots you start to connect? Cause I see in the documentary, there's like, maybe it's time to leave. Yeah, you don't even think that that's one of the reasons why people were coming up. What are some of the other dots you start to connect? Cause I see in the documentary, there's like land that's bought in Arizona. There's a huge focus on land that's bought in Africa. Like what are some of the other dots you start to connect
Starting point is 00:10:38 that really make this in your mind, like bring it to a boil kind of, besides just paranoid Chinese, like, and with forethought. Yeah, right. I mean, you're right. It was all over the place. It was like, you know, I began thinking, OK, so if China's focused on this, like what other, you know,
Starting point is 00:10:58 wealthy countries are focused on this? And, you know, lo and behold, the kingdom of Saudi Arabia was won, right? Because believe it or not, even though it's a desert country, it had these huge underground water reserves, aquifers underneath the desert. And that's why like, you know, there are springs, you know, flow into the surface of the desert that are mentioned in the Bible 2000, whatever years ago. And started in like the nineties, they began using their oil derricks to tap into that water and actually use that water to grow wheat in the desert.
Starting point is 00:11:34 So this like wheat country by the nineties was the world's sixth largest exporter of wheat. Wow. It doesn't Saudi Arabia, Saudi Arabia, but dude, that water doesn't last. Right. And, and so that they drained it. And so like those Springs that are mentioned from 2000 years ago, they went dry.
Starting point is 00:11:50 Gosh. And so then it's like, where are they going to go? And that was the question I had in my head. Okay. So like if they drained their water with this program, like where are they? Yeah, man. That's when I found them in like the Arizona desert. I'm talking like saguaro, cact, wiley coyote, like desert, desert.
Starting point is 00:12:09 Yeah. And they were doing the same thing, pumping up this ancient water that doesn't get replenished from rain because it's there from like the last ice age or something. And then they use that water right there to grow alfalfa. And then they ship the alfalfa from Arizona basically to Los Angeles, put it on a ship, and then ship that alfalfa, which is hay, all the way back to Saudi Arabia,
Starting point is 00:12:28 because that's how you move water. Like, you couldn't fill enough oil tankers full of water to effectively move water. What you do is, if your water's short, you use the water wherever it is to grow the crops, and then you ship the crops, because we use 70% to 80% of the water, fresh water around the world, we use it for 80 percent of our the water fresh water around the
Starting point is 00:12:45 World we use it for food. That's what we need fresh water for. Okay So if at one entity shows up in another space and you and grows a crop really what they're using is water That's the real resource because they could grow it at home if they had the water 100% China doesn't have the water to grow enough food to feed its population Wow, and even with the pigs does that come back to water too or no? Even more so because right? Like you can, you can grow alfalfa in the Arizona desert, and then you can ship all that alfalfa back to Saudi Arabia. Or like when the case of pigs, you can grow all of the grain, right?
Starting point is 00:13:21 That the pigs are going to eat here in the U S and then you feed that grain to the pigs and then you ship the pigs back. And so like a pig is an even more concentrated form of water. If they call it like virtual waters, what an economist would call it. Wow. So wait, explain that part to me more time about the pig. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:40 So like, yeah. So you would grow the grain here with the water here. Yep. And then you would feed the pig here. Yeah. So like, yeah. So you would grow the grain here with the water here. Yep. And then you would feed the pig here. Yep. And then you, then you slaughter the pig here and then you send the meat back. Right. And so now you've used the water to grow the grain here and animals require a lot of livestock feed. So it takes even more grain than if like you were just eating like a, a meat-free diet. It takes just more water to eat a meat filled diet, right? Okay. Yeah. And
Starting point is 00:14:08 so then you grow the grains here, you feed it to the pig, the pig, the pig craps all over the place. You end up with these like giant manure lagoons, which are toxic. Those are here and you slaughter the pig and then you ship the meat back. So you get stuck with the shit and they get the meat. Wow. And so how does, like for the example in Arizona, how does that affect like Americans? Like how does that affect us? Totally.
Starting point is 00:14:33 So like when I broke that story about the Saudis in the Arizona desert in 2015, the locals didn't know, right? Like they knew that their groundwater, the water that they relied on for their homes, like it was getting lower every single year, right? What they didn't know was that some other country had run out of water and had come here
Starting point is 00:14:52 to grab that water, right? And so when I broke that story, people are like, yeah, it's like our water has been going down and it's just been getting worse. And so what ends up happening to the people here is like, I talked to people and they were like, one woman, she was a nurse from California, worked her whole life, wanted to retire somewhere more affordable.
Starting point is 00:15:09 The desert's beautiful, man. It's beautiful out there, right? And so she and her husband get this like little like ranch, you know, small piece of property, super modest, like double wide trailer. They drill a well and now they got water and they got their lives. They're gonna retire there.
Starting point is 00:15:23 They're gonna, you know, the grandkids can come visit. Well, what happens is these big international farming's move in. They keep drilling deeper and deeper and pumping more and more water up. And pretty soon these families are going like, dude, I can't pay half a million dollars to drill a well deep enough to find the water that's still there. And so they're at risk of losing like everything, like all their life savings that they put into their homes. Right. Because now their land has been sold out kind of from under them really, or their water has been sold out from under them.
Starting point is 00:15:53 But isn't there an agency that would protect the homeowners there? Isn't there some sort of. No, I mean the, the law is, is that if you, it's different in every region, but in this part of Arizona, if you buy a piece of land, you can pump out as much water as you want. Doesn't matter how it impacts your neighbor. Wow. Yeah, so like if you're a multi-billion dollar corporation,
Starting point is 00:16:15 you can go in there and buy up land, put in the deepest well, and just suck out as much water as you want. And the folks, the people living modestly around you, their water goes away and that's just tough. That's how the law is written. Right. Yeah, it says right here,
Starting point is 00:16:33 according to United Nations World Water Development Report, 2024, 2.2 billion people will still lack access to safe drinking water, and 3.5 billion will not have access to safe sanitation by 2024. But that's about drinking water, I think. Because drinking water, is that the same as water for that you're talking about? Well, like if you're pumping water to grow crops, you're eventually going to, you could have the potential of taking away somebody's drinking water. And that's what I see. Right. But like,
Starting point is 00:17:02 when it turns to like quantity, like what we're actually using water for, like, you know, cause people will say this to me, like, oh, Nestle bought up this aquifer, they're gonna bottle it, they're gonna use it up. And I'm like, okay, but like put in perspective, one 10th of 1%, one 10th of 1% of the fresh water we use is for drinking. 70 to 80% is for growing crops.
Starting point is 00:17:23 Wow. Right? And so when you're talking about somebody tapping an aquifer to bottle water, like 1 tenth of 1% is how much we as humans drink. Right? That's nothing. It's nothing.
Starting point is 00:17:33 What we're pumping water out of aquifers for, like huge, huge rates, huge amounts, is to grow food. Right. Yeah. And so these are, and then like, and if, you know, like, if it were just drinking water that was an issue, there are ways to move around enough water to get everyone drinking water in theory, right?
Starting point is 00:17:54 But when you start talking about food, that's when you're talking about, like, what people really need to move water and they really need water for is for food. Yeah, so drinking water, we can, we have enough water for that. Pretty much, man. drinking water, we can, we have enough water for that. Pretty much, man. I mean, like the vast amount of water, like you use as an individual is the
Starting point is 00:18:11 food you put into your body and not the water that you drink. Got it. Like vast. Understood. Yeah. So, okay. So you start to connect some of these dots. You see the, um, the issue in Arizona from Saudi Arabia, or there are other
Starting point is 00:18:24 things like that happening around America, or is that just kind of a one-off? are there other things like that happening around America? Or is that just kind of a one-off? No, no, it's happening around America, right? Like it's going through this pretty big transitionary period where like, I think like, and maybe, you know, you and I are roughly the same age. I think like a lot of people still kind of have this view of like farmers as like, you know, Willie Nelson's farm aid, right? Like small medium sized farmers, like, you know, both of them, you know, Willie Nelson's farm aid, right? Like small, medium sized farmers, like, you know, both of,
Starting point is 00:18:46 you know, my family were all farmers in Minnesota and Iowa. My dad grew up barefoot on a farm, right? Like we kind of envision it as like these smaller farms, but increasingly what they are are these really large farms, increasingly owned by like Wall Street pension funds or foreign governments or foreign corporations, right? Like that's been the trend line is that these smaller farmers,
Starting point is 00:19:10 these medium medium sized farmers are getting bought out by bigger and bigger conglomerates. Um, and so like we're in this transitionary period in the U S is to like how food is getting made. I see. And so not getting made by smaller farmers, but getting made by larger corporations that could have other interests and that farm is just a placeholder. That's it, it's another profit mechanism
Starting point is 00:19:37 because if you're a country and you're like, we need to buy up food and water resources to make sure our people get fed and that they don't overthrow us, right? And if you're Wall Street and you're like, we need to buy up food and water resources to make sure our people get fed and that they don't overthrow us. And if you're Wall Street and you're looking at that, you're like, oh, if there is a crunch on food in the future, food prices are going to go up.
Starting point is 00:19:53 And if food prices go up, that's a profit margin. And so I've read these reports put out by some of the biggest investment banks. And they're just saying, water is the new oil, food's the new gold of the 21st century. This is where things are going to happen. He says right here, as of December 31, 2022, foreign entities owned about 43.4 million acres
Starting point is 00:20:15 of US agricultural land and forest, which is about 3.4% of all agricultural land and almost 2% of all US farmland. I wonder if it's grown since then. Well, there's two things about that is. Because that doesn't seem like that much. No, it's a trend line. But the other thing was, as I pulled all of that data
Starting point is 00:20:33 and there's an old law in the books that says, if you're a foreign company, you need to register if you're gonna buy US farmland. Some states just ban it outright. But I looked, and I was like, I know that this farm is owned by a foreign corporation, and it wasn't in the database. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:54 And so the government wasn't really following up and making sure. And so I have great, those numbers to me come with a huge asterisk, which is like, it requires them to report it. Not huge asterisk, which is like, it requires them to report it. Not everyone's reporting it and the government doesn't seem to be following up to make sure, right?
Starting point is 00:21:11 Understood. Yeah. And then the other thing is, is like, you have huge amounts of foreign wealth that are then put into intermediaries like BlackRock or something, right? Like these huge asset management. What does BlackRock got? Nine trillion dollars that they manage. And so you'll have a sovereign wealth fund from another country that'll put
Starting point is 00:21:28 money there. And then, so then BlackRock or some subsidiary of BlackRock or subsidiary of a subsidiary of BlackRock might own the land, but the financial backing is a foreign government. I see. So just like a lot of loopholes and like hidden LLCs, that sort of thing. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Well, how much of the land in America can be used and even on the planet, if you know, it can be used to grow crops. Oh, that's interesting, man. I don't know how much of
Starting point is 00:21:57 the land. I mean, like what you see in the Arizona desert, it's like it's desert, but if you pump up the water, then you can grow alfalfa, right? And so it kind of comes down to like, do you have the water there to do it? What we know is what they'll say is that like, some huge percent, 40 or 70%, I can't remember off the top of my head, some huge percent of the world's, remaining available farmland is in Africa, right?
Starting point is 00:22:20 And so that's why there's this huge push now for corporations to go down and to try to grab up land in Africa, because now they'll say, oh, Africa is going to feed the world. Africa is going to feed the world. But I'm not saying no, but I'm just, I remember 20 years ago when we were having to do, wasn't there the annual music every year to feed Africa? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Wasn't there the annual music every year to feed Africa? Yeah, yeah, yeah. And again, man, the problem with that thing is, so then I went to Africa.
Starting point is 00:22:52 I was like, okay, so where's all of this vacant land? And it wasn't vacant, man. People had ancestrally been living on that land and they'd been farming for their needs, for their families, right? And what had happened was, is these huge international corporations had come in and just moved people off.
Starting point is 00:23:09 And so I was visiting these places where people were literally dying, um, having had their land taken from them by one of these international corporations that then could ship the food to a wealthier country, you know, whether that was Europe, China or Saudi Arabia. Um, you know, they were literally had their land taken from that, everything taken from them. Right. And you saw it firsthand. I saw firsthand.
Starting point is 00:23:33 Yeah. There's a really tough part in the documentary where there's a woman crying, really breaking down because of the fear of losing, uh, their land. She was really having a tough time with it. You know, that was pretty hard to watch. Yeah. I mean, that stuff's a downer and, and, and what's, you know, and, and when I, when I showed the film to, to people there that are fighting back against this,
Starting point is 00:23:54 what they didn't see is that it's part of this like giant international trend. Right? Like it, it, it, it really is where you've got like, again, like intelligence communities, governments, like all like kind of behind this big push and this big movement, right? And like you said, it's like when you're, when you don't have access to water because somebody upstream, let's say,
Starting point is 00:24:17 has dammed the river to grow food and now you don't even have drinking water, oftentimes the thing that's gonna get you is your body begins to just slowly get sicker and sicker from not having food or good water. You just, you pick up a parasite, you pick up a disease, your body just becomes way more vulnerable, you know?
Starting point is 00:24:34 Yeah. Oh, you even, yeah, you pet a strong shrimp and you could be done, you know? I mean, a lot of things could happen. You eat one bad oyster or whatever, and it could be lights out. Did you know that our friends over at Morgan & Morgan are the official injury law firm partner of the UFC?
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Starting point is 00:26:57 20% off your order with our code Theo at chubbyshorts.com. That's code T-H-E-O at chubbyshorts.com. Support our show and tell them we sent you. Don't blend in with the crowd. Stand out with Chubbys. So in Africa, it's even more prevalent, you're saying. Yeah, and I think what, I think, you know, it does seem to be, I talked to a bunch
Starting point is 00:27:24 of African investigative journalists at this thing in DC, and they saw the documentary and they came up after and like, dude, I've been seeing this in my country. I didn't realize it was part of this like giant international trend, right? Like it's all sort of tied in. And that's how that was like the same revelation that I had as I started digging in deeper and deeper was just how interconnected these things are, right? Cause like, you know,
Starting point is 00:27:48 And when you say that, like, yeah, what do you mean when you say that? Well, I just mean like, I think the dude was from Sierra Leone and he was talking about a big rice farm that had come in and plowed down the forest and moved people off their land and then they were exporting the rice to wherever, you know, a wealthier country. And he's like, you know, how do I contextualize that? Like it's obviously an injustice, right? Like people have been, their, their ancestral land has been taken from them, but like, where does that fit in?
Starting point is 00:28:12 And then you see, oh, it fits in that like people in Arizona are basically dealing with the same thing, maybe not to the same degree, but all of a sudden they're finding what like was once there's being taken by somebody else. I see. You know, and I think like, I think the, and so that's what I mean. It's just like, there is this big, little push. And yes, I do think it's probably happening. And these kind of numbers are super hard to get.
Starting point is 00:28:33 And this is the only reason I hesitate. Anecdotally, I would say, yeah, it appears to be happening most prevalently in Africa. But like, getting any good numbers on that, like nobody, you know, like they're not going out. And nobody's going out and and documenting every single instance. So as a journalist, I always hesitate, right? So in the documentary, you've seen it.
Starting point is 00:28:55 Just to give you a sense of what we go through, I took every single fact that's mentioned in that documentary, and I put it into a spreadsheet. And then me and a woman who's now a fact checker at the New Yorker, we went through every single fact that's in there spreadsheet and then me and a woman who's now a fact checker at the New Yorker we went Through every single fact that's in there and then we put three sources making sure it was true And then we hired an outside fact checker to fact check our fact check You know like like and so like I always and that's like that's the value to me of good investigative journalism is like
Starting point is 00:29:20 We're gonna we're gonna put in that extra effort so that like everything is documented. And so, you know, I love this format because this is how, like when I'm hanging out with friends, this is how we talk, right? And we're like sharing knowledge. And like as humans, we sit around the campfire. This is how we've been telling stories. And I love stories, you know?
Starting point is 00:29:38 But I'm always like a little hesitant because I'm like, I don't got a fact checker behind me to whisper in my ear, like, oh, Nate, you screwed that fact up. But she doesn't have a fact checker behind her to be like, oh no Nate you screwed that fact up But she doesn't have a fact checker behind her to be like oh, no you screwed up the fact check on the fact check You know right so yeah, you're just having a yeah, you're just doing your best Yeah, you know, but you obviously spent a lot of time investigating it Yeah, and what at what point do you start to go down a trail with investigative journalism where you're like? I've already gone too far. I have to
Starting point is 00:30:04 fluff this thing up to at least make it hold the value of the weight that I've already put into with my time. Is that a weird question? Well, I think- Or does that ever happen, you know? Well, you made me laugh when you said fluff. Like, no.
Starting point is 00:30:23 Do you ever get going on a story? Yes, and you abandon it. Yes. Yes. You just, you're like, there's this not enough here, even if you spend a long time. Yeah. What often happens, man, is, is you'll be like, huh, I'm, this is what happens to me. I'm like, huh, I'm curious about that. Right. And then I'll start like digging into that. And that thing that I started digging into, I'll be like, Oh no, actually that makes sense. No, you know, like I don't, I don't think the world needs to know more about that. I don't think it's going to make anyone's lives better.
Starting point is 00:30:46 I don't think it's going to change anyone's perception on how they interact with the world. But as I was doing that, like I started seeing this other thing, right? And then so then I start looking into that other thing and I'm like, well, that is pretty interesting. But in the process of looking into that, then I'm like, holy shit, look at that thing over there. And then I'm moving in and these things are these things are sometimes, they could be totally unrelated. Oftentimes, they're somewhat related.
Starting point is 00:31:08 And then it's that thing that I end up really going after. And so I would never, I don't want to waste my time. I don't want to waste your time. And I don't want to do an injustice to a story by being like, well, I spent time on looking into A, and now I have to do something on A. Because oftentimes, it's just A slowly shifts into B. And the next thing I know
Starting point is 00:31:25 I'm like, dude, I think people need to, would want to know about C, right? Like I think people should take a little break from their lives and lives are tough, lives are complicated. We've all got so much going on. I want to like, you know, I want to honor people's time, but I'm like, but I think C is probably worth their time. Right. Yeah. What parts of this, as you went through this, did it start to be like, okay, this is something that makes me realize I have to keep going here. Oh, I, you know, with this one, I think it was, it was Connor early on because it, again, man, it's like when, when, you know, before this, I'd been doing organized crime and now I'm doing food and I was asked to do it and I'm like,
Starting point is 00:32:01 okay, it's a food story. You know, like, it's not going to blow my mind. It's like Papa John almost his story. Yeah, dude. And I was just like, but then all of a sudden I'm like, wait a minute, this, you're an intelligence officer for the CIA or you were, and you're like telling me X, Y, and Z like, that's pretty
Starting point is 00:32:17 interesting. Well, let me go talk to somebody else to try to corroborate that or get like another hot take on it, you know, and it just kept building. And I'm like, and then I started seeing the stakes. But the number of people that it was going to impact, and we're talking about billions. We're talking about when you have Wall Street saying,
Starting point is 00:32:37 this is going to be the biggest trajectory. When you have the World Economic Forum saying, this is one of the top five existential threats to our species, you start going like, food and water? You know? And you're like, this is probably worth my time and a lot of sleepless nights. At some point, you just realized.
Starting point is 00:32:58 I just think this is this story. This is what can I tell you? Like, when we, so we made a film, right? And I'm super lucky because I worked with this amazing director, Gabriella copperthwaite You know and she knows how to tell an amazing story the grab the documentary Yeah, it's just like she made this thing like an international ripper, right? And and but when we're going out and we're pitching it to the studios are all like well What do you want to come with this and I wanted?
Starting point is 00:33:19 I wanted what I wanted to happen when people see this documentary is the same thing that happened to me. When I started working on this stuff, it shifted my perception of how I see the world. I fundamentally see the world differently now, having worked on this story. And so I wanted people to have access to that same information because I think when you begin to, when you see this, and I don't know if this was your experience or not, but when you see it,
Starting point is 00:33:41 you're like, oh shit, food isn't just food. Food has become like a weapon. Food has become like a power tool for, for governments to control people in other countries. Like it becomes way bigger. Like how, yeah, how would we see that start to show up in our daily lives? Oh man, food prices. Right. Go to the grocery store. Right. I mean, do you remember during COVID when, when they were like, Oh, everybody can stay at home except people that work in slaughterhouses. We got to get everybody that works in slaughterhouses back. Cause we're really worried that there's not going to be meat on the shelves.
Starting point is 00:34:16 Well, dude, as I recall during that time, pork exports to China increased. So the executives of these big meat companies are like, oh, we gotta get everybody back. We're worried about getting meat. And then they were shipping more meat to China. Well, it might've even been their farms. Well, yeah, they own, they own, you know,
Starting point is 00:34:38 this company that's in China that was, you know, this deal that was backed by the Chinese government. Yeah, they control one and four American pigs. Wow. Yeah. Can you bring up that article that we're talking about if you can on April 28th, 2020, president Donald Trump issued an executive order invoking the defense production act to keep meat packing plants open the executive order, exempted
Starting point is 00:34:59 plants from state and local orders to close nonessential businesses, but did not solve plants problems with sick workers. Wow. It's interesting. Yeah. I mean, it's just interesting because if people are going to need to eat, people are going to need meat, you're going to need people to be able to continue to eat or they're going to freak out. So even if they're stuck at home, as long as they can get a burger, then they're going to, they're going to keep going until their next burger.
Starting point is 00:35:29 You're right though. I mean, you're kind of like put your finger on it, man. It's like, it is like food is that one thing, uh, that people want to keep going, right? Like the Chinese government, everybody. Um, and you know, and that's kind of, that's what takes you to the Arab spring, right? Like when you saw all of these middle Eastern governments getting toppled, right? Like the Arab spring, it was like, what do you mean the Arab spring? But Arab spring was like a little over 10 years ago now.
Starting point is 00:35:54 And it was that period where you just saw civil wars breaking out across like North Africa and the middle East. And those things never happen. It as just like one single issue. They're like super complex. People don't like their leaders. They don't feel like they have hope. But increasingly, the thing that the intelligence community is saying is driving those issues is food prices.
Starting point is 00:36:19 You were talking about food prices here, or we were talking about food prices here in the grocery store. But like Americans, man, we only spend about 7% of our income on food, on groceries, right? Other countries, they spend like 50%. So whatever they're making, like half their paycheck is going to food. And so when food prices go up for us, it's only going up on like 7% of what we're spending on, right? Right, so it's not hitting us overall as much.
Starting point is 00:36:48 Exactly. Why do they spend so much on food? Because, I mean, we're just a wealthy nation, you know? And so we have bigger incomes. Oh, I see. So we have larger income. Yeah. So obviously, yeah, if you're making $100 a day,
Starting point is 00:37:01 then that's just $7 a day. Where if you're making $10 a day, then $'s the seven bucks a day where if you're making a hundred dollars, if you're making $10 a day, then $7 is 70% of your income. And a lot of people, you know, like we're buying, we're buying food that's like finished, we're buying processed food, we're buying things you can like open a package and eat, but a lot of people in these other countries,
Starting point is 00:37:20 they're just buying like commodities like grain and they're baking their own bread. And so when those prices, you know, basically double, um, all of a sudden those people are seeing, you know, 50% of their income almost eat up their entire income and they can't feed themselves. They can't feed their kids. And I think that's what it comes down to. Right. Like, so in the Arab spring, there was a ton of that. It was a ton of that food prices shot up. You know,
Starting point is 00:37:43 they went to historic highs and that sustained and people started taking to the streets, right? A whole grievance issues, but this was a big one. Um, and you saw it move just across these countries. Yeah. And how was it alleviated? How did they, like what kind of catharsis did they get into? Is catharsis the right word or no?
Starting point is 00:38:03 A lot of, a lot of them just took out their leaders. Oh yeah, like Egypt overthrew their leader, didn't they? Yeah, that's right. Yeah. And so you just saw, yeah. So you saw like, man, you saw, this is the thing about the 21st century is like, that was probably the first blip that we saw like that.
Starting point is 00:38:23 And the forecast is for an increasing number of those. And when countries fall apart because of civil wars, oftentimes their people then migrate out, right? And then they put pressure on the countries around them because now they've got to feed more people because now you've got a failed nation next to you. And it became almost like a domino effect. Wow. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:43 And are the forecasts saying that there is going to be less water, that there's going to be less food? Where are we getting those forecasts from? Yeah, so we could pull something up, but it's like 70% of the world's population or some number is going to be living in some form of water scarcity by 2050.
Starting point is 00:39:04 It's like a huge number, right, of people that are dealing with water shortages. And again, like, usually you can eke out enough water for your drinking water, but can you, do you have enough water to grow the foods you need to eat, or for somebody else to grow the foods you need to eat? And so, and then the other thing we're looking at, it's like some places are gonna have, you know,
Starting point is 00:39:29 are gonna have droughts, of course, but then some places are gonna have floods, and too much water can have the same impact as not enough water, right? Like we just saw this in Pakistan, where like their crop was wiped out by these massive floods that just kill off the crops. Yeah, I used to work on a soybean and corn
Starting point is 00:39:45 and cotton farm for a couple of years. And it was amazing how like water was just, I mean, you would stand around and talk about it. You would go look at a radar. You'd ask somebody if they'd seen any water. Like it was just crazy. It was unbelievable how that was the biggest thing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:04 That was the biggest thing. It. That was the biggest thing. It was like, is it going to rain? Is it not? How are you going to manage your crops if it doesn't? And then how are you going to get subsidized by the government if it doesn't happen at all? Yeah, that's right. And what happens is in those countries
Starting point is 00:40:16 that are dealing with all these economic hardships, these dictatorial leaders weren't subsidizing the farmers. And what's worse is they were given their buddies access to whatever, better, better. And so this is what you see in Syria. What you're saying in Venezuela, when you open the, and you see that the people who are going to maintain the status quo of keeping starving people at bay are getting full groceries. Yes, that's it. It's crazy how quick you will become the Gestapo in that moment, you know?
Starting point is 00:40:48 Yeah, yeah, food becomes the ultimate currency. Yeah. What else were you going to say? I interrupted you. Well, I was going to say something similar in Syria, where a drought hit Syria, and all of these farmers are losing their crops, people having to move into the cities, food prices are going up.
Starting point is 00:41:04 And rather than being like, OK, the government being like, OK, we need to make sure everyone's taken care of, from what I've read, was an insurer at the time. But it was like Bashir was just giving subsidies to his buddies. And then you're just building up this. You're just building up a lot of anger. And you can't feed your kids.
Starting point is 00:41:23 And this is what the, when I, when I talk to people that are in the intelligence community, this is the thing they say, it's, it's not when this, and this sounds shitty, but this is what they say, it's not when the lowest income, the people that are the poorest can't eat, that you see a country topple.
Starting point is 00:41:38 Because unfortunately those people have already adjusted their mental mindset to just being shit on. Yeah. It's when the middle class can eat. People that are used to being comfortable. Right. And with Honda Accords. Yes.
Starting point is 00:41:53 And then when they can't afford to eat and when they're, they're having to tell their kids, sorry, we can't eat today. We got to wait till tomorrow. Right. Those people take to the streets. Fuck yeah. Yeah. And then they overthrow governments, you know. And sometimes the government turns out better,
Starting point is 00:42:06 and sometimes the government turns out worse, and people live in violence and bloodshed for years. So it's, yeah, and this is kind of the trend line that we're seeing. And you believe it's an overall trend, after all your research and all your digging, you believe that it's an overall trend that's going to continue?
Starting point is 00:42:23 It's totally, I think, personally I think it's solvable. Okay. Right? I think it's solvable, but it is the trend line that we are on, that if we don't get into another lane of traffic, this is the direction that this road is heading. Got it. And this is straight up from like,
Starting point is 00:42:40 the US government, I keep saying intelligence community, right? But there is the ODNI, the Office of Director of National Intelligence that oversees the CIA, the DIA, the NIC, all of these intelligence agencies. And the highest level work product they do is something called a National Intelligence Estimate. And they did a National Intelligence Estimate
Starting point is 00:43:02 on water in the year 2012. So basically they came out and the guy who was spearheading, and this is like the highest level work product the US intelligence community does, said business as usual is going to be a catastrophe. That was their prediction. Basically, yeah. And they lay out solutions.
Starting point is 00:43:22 We can move things, right? But that's going to have to happen on an international level. Yeah. And, and then they lay out solutions like we can move things, right? But it, you know, it has, that's going to have to happen on an international level. And like we look at our domestic politics and we're like, there's a mess. You look at international politics and you're like, there's a real mess. So, you know, we all, you're going to keep doing what we can and we all, you know, keep living, but like, but still this is, I mean, having foresight is super important, especially in a time where it's like we don't even, there's so much artificial sight that you don't know what is foresight anymore.
Starting point is 00:43:54 You know, there's so much manipulation. It's so hard to know what's real. On March 22nd, 2012, the National Intelligence Council, which you're saying is a conglomerate of all of those then the Nick Exists underneath the ODNI. Okay. Yeah the ODNI but yeah Release the unclassified report the intelligence community assessment on global water security The report concludes that several regions of the world such as North Africa the Middle East and South Asia will face major challenges coping with water problems and that during the next 10 years many countries
Starting point is 00:44:24 Important to the United States will experience water problems that will that during the next 10 years, many countries important to the United States will experience water problems that will increase the risk of instability and state failure, exacerbate regional tensions, and distract them from working with the United States on important policy objectives. Yeah, I guess how you barter and trade and deal with things is gonna become a lot different.
Starting point is 00:44:41 Yeah. Wow. You mentioned Africa, and you guys to become a lot different. Yeah. Um, wow. You mentioned Africa and you guys go into a lot in the doc. Um, why, why is Africa always gets screwed? I mean, since the beginning of time, whether it's the British coming in or a foreign entity coming in and enslaving or claiming, whether it's them enslaving each other, whether it's the tribes that just can't get along, whether it's them enslaving each other, whether it's the tribes that just can't get along, whether it's a government that starts up and then sells out.
Starting point is 00:45:11 Why do they have so much trauma there? Yeah, man, it's a good question. And I always try to operate from a place of historically informed journalism, right? Because some of these trend lines are massive. And what we saw was that Western Europe for some centuries just had this intense power as they sort of globalized the world and Africa had a lot of resources that they wanted.
Starting point is 00:45:36 Um, and they went in there and they grabbed them and they created artificial boundaries and borders around, um, you know, that, that, that suited Western Europe. Like Africa, that, that, that suited Western Europe. Like Africa got carved up into territories that suited Western Europe and their treaties so that they wouldn't fight with each other in Europe. Right. And, and that wasn't always the, the boundaries that of like the, of the governments and the nations that had lived there.
Starting point is 00:46:00 Um, and you know, that, and you go back even farther than when Western Europe was sort of the, the, the international dominant player, right? Like you look at Genghis Khan, right? Genghis Khan, born in the central steeps of Asia, the dude became a slave, then went from being a slave to controlling like the entire Mongolian empire. Then they went into China and they took over China. Then he pushes East and starts taking over Eastern Europe. And then he drives down into Southern Asia, you know, the Middle East,
Starting point is 00:46:30 dude controlled the largest empire of any human in history. Right. And when he, this is the thing, and I'm getting a lot of this. Yeah, totally. At Denver nuggets. It's like the kind of one person, but go on. Sorry. Yeah. Yeah. And he gets to Europe at that time. And I'm getting this from this guy, Jack Weatherford's book, Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World. He's a historian in Minnesota, somewhere, one of those colleges.
Starting point is 00:46:55 And when Genghis Khan gets to Europe, he's looking around. He's like, these people are too dumb and too poor for me to bother conquering. You know, like they didn't even have pants at that point. Like pants, like pants are an Asian invention, right? Like pants came from Asia at that time in Europe. People are just wearing cloaks. Like they didn't even have pants yet. They didn't, you know, that gunpowder came from China, movable type from China. And so Genghis Khan gets to Europe and he's like, these people are too dumb, too poor and too ignorant. from China. And so Genghis Khan gets to Europe and he's like,
Starting point is 00:47:22 these people are too dumb, too poor, and too ignorant. And he just drove south into the Middle East where people were doing like algebra and advanced math and like had all of this technology, right? And then that set up these trading routes. And those trading routes connected some of these great advanced technologies from the Middle East and from Asia.
Starting point is 00:47:40 And they started working their way into Europe. And then boom, Europe has the Renaissance. And boom, the Renaissance blows up into the industrial revolution. And then that industrial revolution, now you have like the Pope carving up the entire world between Spain and Portugal. Like Portugal gets one half, Spain gets the other half. And then they're going down and they're carving up Africa.
Starting point is 00:48:00 Right? And then you just, you get to where we are today, which is that, you know, Africa never had a strong say in how they were and what went on in the, in the, in the last few, you know, centuries, what things did you notice when you started to explore some of the stuff happening in Africa? Well, issues in what sense, like, I guess like the ownership, like who was doing the, like you say, land getting bought up that had guess like the ownership, like who was doing the, like you say,
Starting point is 00:48:25 land getting bought up that had ancestral value, of course. Yeah. Who was doing that? Like who was, is it hard to know who was doing it? Well, oftentimes it's really hard to trace back who's doing it because you can be like this rush. It can just be these layers of LLCs and who ultimately is behind this LLC can be really tough.
Starting point is 00:48:45 Like I can go there and be like, okay, so this is the white South African dude or white Zimbabwean dude who now is in like Zambia and he's, you know, moved people off their historic ancestral land and he's doing this like super modern farming. Right. And, and these other people that had been there for the families have been there for centuries are now like dying, right? Cause they don't have access to even enough drinking water, much less enough water to grow food. Right. Um, and I can, I can be,
Starting point is 00:49:11 I can see that, but like, then I look at the property ownership and it's just a jumble of LLCs and that can be pretty tough. Um, but you know, in the film, one of the things we were able, we got this like trove of information documents. I mean, we see that in some cases, it's the leaders of foreign governments that are paying essentially mercenaries to go in and gobble up these resources. Right. And, and one of the ways they do it, you know, in these, these emails that we get,
Starting point is 00:49:40 we see they just talk about giving gifts to the chief, right. And, and, and, you know And essentially bribes, right? Is how I'd interpret that. And what is a mercenary just so everybody knows? Well, a mercenary is effectively somebody who can provide military logistics on behalf of another government. Okay, so like how would I use a mercenary?
Starting point is 00:50:04 Well, you could use a mercenary to go into- Are they good guys or bad guys? Or they can be, this is interesting. You brought up Rwanda just a minute ago and I'm trying to remember the name of the actress that was going to hire a mercenary outfit to go in. Like when no one on the international level was stopping the Rwandan genocide,
Starting point is 00:50:23 this Hollywood actress wanted to hire a mercenary group to try to go in and stop it. So she was using it potentially. She thought of using it as this force of good. But so there are these examples of people wanting to use these types of groups to quell violence, to bring stability, to move food into areas that are being controlled by warlords, right? Like, so you can, you know, sometimes people make an
Starting point is 00:50:49 argument that you need to meet force with force to do good, right? And then you also see them being used by corporations to make deals with warlords, um, you know, to extract resources. And those tend to have a more deleterious or, you know, fucking create, make life shittier for the people who live there. Did you see some of that? Like what were some of the things that you saw, like people struggling with,
Starting point is 00:51:10 Oh dude, just feeding themselves, having shelter, you know, like super basic stuff. Super basic stuff. And it sucks. It sucks to see that stuff. I don't want to see that stuff, you know, and then I got to carry it home, you know? And then, and, and, you know, it's like, it's that thing that we say, like, you, you see these people who have done nothing wrong or just like struggling to survive, you know? And I go in there as essentially like a storyteller and I'm like, you know, and they're like, dude, like we need food, we need water. And you're like, Oh, you know, like, what can I, what can I do?
Starting point is 00:51:42 That's not my role. My role is to tell people about what's happening to you and then I fly back to San Francisco And I turn on the faucet and I can drink fresh water, you know, and you're like, you know So these are the these this is these are some of the challenges Of going in and anyways, I went off a little bit. I like this Yeah, I've seen this shit, you know and like there's you know, there are stories I've heard and there are things that I've seen that, you know, like I, I wish, you know, which didn't happen to people.
Starting point is 00:52:09 And then I wish that I didn't have to experience firsthand, you know, do you feel like we're doing the same thing in other countries though, the U S government or like U S corporations. Yeah. Like, are we doing the same thing that's happening here and other places for sure, for sure. Yeah. So was it all just even out? Well, no. I mean, I would say that if you're like,
Starting point is 00:52:32 if you're looking at it like, oh, China's a bad guy, or the Saudis are the bad guys, but, you know, the US is okay, it evens out in that sense, right? Like, we have massive corporations that are going in and are contributing, I think, to this pattern of people who are living on land, losing their land, or people whose water supplies are being taken from them, right? And it's destabilizing the world, is like the short of it. And then you end up with a destabilized world,
Starting point is 00:52:54 and you end up with like mass migration, and you end up with countries being like, we don't want any more immigrants, you know? And you're like, yeah, but they left because they were hungry. And like, why were they hungry? Like, what was happening to them, right? And so you- Right, you're like, yeah, but they left because they were hungry. And like, why were they hungry? Like, what was happening to them? Right.
Starting point is 00:53:06 And so you're not getting just immigrants. You're getting starving in some cases. Increasingly, that is the case. Like, at one point, the State Department said the reason, you know, the number one reason people were leaving Guatemala was because they were hungry. And think about Guatemala, man. Like, think about that region of the world.
Starting point is 00:53:22 What have they given us? Avocados, chocolate. I think tomatoes come from that region, right? Yeah. Like it, it, it. Um, I think all when you go under the stick or whatever under the state, the Limbada or whatever. I don't know that the limbo limbo.
Starting point is 00:53:38 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Like those countries have given us so much food. Like how is it possible that a country that is the source of so many, like you think of tomatoes, you're like, oh, Italians must've invented it. Right.
Starting point is 00:53:49 You're like, no, man, that came from the Americas. Potatoes came from the Americas. Chocolate came from the Americas. Avocados came from the Americas. Right. And how do you have now a region like that where half of the children are stunted because they're not getting enough calories and nutrition.
Starting point is 00:54:05 Right. And so like people are leaving Guatemala because there's not enough food. And that's crazy because this place is growing plenty of food. So what's happening to the food is just being exported to wealthier countries. So do you think that we're like some of the reason for China's low water supply is because of us? No, I don't think that's the case with China. I think China is a really interesting example, right? We manufacture a ton over there. Yeah, yeah, totally. No. China is an interesting case, right, man?
Starting point is 00:54:34 Because this is like, I don't think this is well enough known, but one of the greatest achievements, in my opinion, of the 20th century was what China accomplished. And that was pulling 400 million people out of poverty in like three decades, right? Like you'll hear people talking about all of the great achievements of our species, you know, over the last, you know, whatever, 50 years.
Starting point is 00:54:59 And they'll be like, you know, we've reduced, we reduce poverty and hunger by this much. 80% of poverty reduction, as I understand it, be like, you know, we've reduced, we reduce poverty and hunger by this much. 80% of poverty reduction, as I understand it, 70 or 80% of poverty reduction in the world is what China accomplished. One country, 400 million people they pulled out of, out of poverty in like two or three decades. They now have the world's largest middle-class, right? I think their middle-class might be bigger than the entire population of the
Starting point is 00:55:23 U S the challenge there, man, is that they want to eat diets more like our diet, right? Like in the 1980s, you basically had a country full of vegetarians because they couldn't afford meat. Now you have the world's largest middle class and they want to eat more meat, right? They want sausage patties. Yeah, exactly, man. And, and, and to have meat, you have to grow more grains, more feeds for the animals. It's kind of an inefficient way to develop a calorie.
Starting point is 00:55:49 And they don't have enough water to grow enough grains to be able to feed all of the animals that the people want to eat. Right, so they're doing it over here. They're doing it over here, they're doing it in Brazil, they're doing it across the world. Oh, so they're doing it in a lot of places. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:03 Wow. Probably, this might even be one of the fewer places. It's just that the US is an agricultural superpower, right, like we are one of the largest exporters of food in the world. And this, you know, then takes you to like, so who are the other ones? And you're like, well, it turns out now Russia is,
Starting point is 00:56:19 and that's not by accident. Putin has built the country up over the last 15 years to be a food superpower, right? And then you're like, well, huh, so if, if, if Russia is becoming a food superpower, what does that tell me about, you know, the Ukraine war? Because you know what Ukraine's been known for, man, Ukraine is the bread basket of Europe. Yeah. It has for, you know, for, for centuries been considered the breadbasket of Europe.
Starting point is 00:56:46 And when the Nazis, they invaded Poland, but what do they do right after that? The first place they invade when they go into USSR. Stop over to Ukraine for a little bit of bread. Exactly. And Hitler said it, we need to control food to keep our soldiers fed. And people don't realize this,
Starting point is 00:57:01 but the Nazis had what they called the hunger plan. And by controlling Ukraine, they intended, according to these little known documents that historians of honor earth, you know, from the Nazis, they intended to starve 30 million people to death by controlling Ukraine. And if you're the leader of like Russia, right, and you're trying to build a food superpower, right. And just below you is the most fertile soil, right?
Starting point is 00:57:27 And that country was deeply aligned to your country until like 2010, right? And now all of a sudden it's moving its way to the West. Right, it was thinking about going into NATO, right? Yes. Ukraine was. Yeah, and then moving in closer to Europe and that food supply, you know, and so that historically, that food supply has been used as a weapon against Russia, right?
Starting point is 00:57:48 It's been used as a weapon against others, right? It's a huge strategic asset. It's Ukraine's biggest strategic asset. And so you think that that basically for water is one of the reasons why we're why that war is going on. I think all of these things have many facets and are super complicated. But when you're saying what is Ukraine's strategic importance and its food, production of food, and you see Putin saying, you know, like in the film, you know, because I went to Russia in the film, I go to Russia and we sit down with the largest, the CEO of Russia's biggest beef company says, yeah, Putin came to me.
Starting point is 00:58:24 He said, whatever you guys need, because food and water are gonna give us more strategic power in the future than all of our weapons and oil does, right? Yeah, I mean, some of my fattest friends have the most guns too, to be honest with you. Because they wanna keep eating. I think they just, you know,
Starting point is 00:58:42 if you're fat and happy, you'll start shooting, I feel like, and if you're not happy, you'll start shooting. So it's really kind of a, yeah, right. The circles meet in the back. Yeah. It's like on this end, it's kind of fireworks, like, but on this end, it's like, I need to survive. Yeah. Um, today's episode is brought to you by better help. That's right. Better help. If you've been struggling with something in your brain or in your life. There's something that's not making sense anymore. You're not associating to your world,
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Starting point is 01:00:11 That's BetterH-E-L-P, BetterHelp.com slash Theo. A lot of you guys know we started off with our first advertiser ever was Grey Block Pizza. Get that hitter baby. And the owner of Grey Block Pizza, my friend Thomas, evolved his business up in Oregon to start Blue Cube Baths and he sent me one and it's absolutely beautiful. A wonderful cold plunge, the best cold plunge in the market. If you value American-made and pinnacle cold exposure, this is your cold plunge. Blue cube baths. What I love is you can set that temperature, get it down to, I mean it might just, you might be able to ice skate in there. I haven't put it that low, but you can set it to a place where you feel comfortable. I'll get in around 50 degrees for about 10 or 12 minutes. And that's what really sets me and
Starting point is 01:01:09 activates me. I've done it before podcasts to really put me in, just put me in my body and put me in the moment. You know, the positive side effects of cold plunging are countless. You can follow BlueCube's Instagram for a chance to win your own cold plunge this spring and summer. That's right. They're giving one away. They will announce the giveaway soon. So follow them at Blue Cube Baths. And we wish them the best of luck and thank them for supporting the podcast so early on. And so I just think you start seeing like a bigger picture, you know, like you start seeing how these things interplay with each other.
Starting point is 01:01:50 Yeah, no, I look, that's what I mean. Yeah, that's cause I was watching the documentary, I was like, well, is this just kind of fear? Is this creating fear? And then that's what I wanted to get talked to. I was like, I was just, I was like, is Nate like just creating fear here? Is the director, or are they, is this just a trend
Starting point is 01:02:06 that they're seeing and is this like something that they really believe in in notice? Yeah, dude, that's a great question. Thanks for that. Cause it is like, it doesn't do anybody any good to just be afraid, right? Just to like stress people out, bum people out. And, but no, I mean,, I think fundamentally when the landscape is shifting
Starting point is 01:02:28 in front of us and the most powerful people are shifting with that landscape, I'm a big advocate of the everyday guy. And I'm like, dude, we've got to empower ourselves with that same information. We have to know how this thing is shifting. Because otherwise, those people in Arizona, they just see this big farm come in and they're like, well, okay.
Starting point is 01:02:47 What they don't know is that it gets part of this big international trend and they're coming for the water. Right, they don't know that their own government is allowing that, which in some ways are nice things that America does, allows, you know, and that we've also, we've done a ton of, like of open handedness, you know? But there does become a point where, yeah, if it gets back to survival, that, um, you're going to change your tune.
Starting point is 01:03:12 Yeah. And America's, I don't know if you'll do it as a country, but you, as an individual, you won't have a choice, but to do it. Right. I think for some people, yeah. I mean food prices will probably continue to climb, right. And people are going to have to make real lifestyle decisions based on that. We'll probably see food potentially becoming a bigger and bigger percentage of our take-home
Starting point is 01:03:34 incomes. Potentially. That's the trend line. Yeah, so I think information is power. And what I'll tell you is that the most powerful have access to better information today. I think that the disparity of information between the powerful and the everyday person has just grown. Like we always talk about income disparity and it's a real thing.
Starting point is 01:03:57 Totally. I get it. But information disparity, man, it might even be worse. 100%. Even just to go to accredited news sources online, not to get information, you have to pay for it. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Even to get what used to be just a newspaper, right?
Starting point is 01:04:12 You have to pay for that information. So whether you even believe it, it's going to be true or not to have information that's even kind of sourced, you know, that's put together, that's formatted, that's not done by AI. You're having to pay for that. Yeah. And I hope that we get back to more of that, man,, that's formatted. That's not done by AI. You're having to pay for that. Yeah, and I hope that we get back to more of that, man, because that's how it used to be when we were kids, right? Like you pay of a newspaper subscription.
Starting point is 01:04:34 Right, I think people decided they couldn't trust the news anymore. I think a lot of that has occurred in the past 10 years for sure. I think, I feel like the news, every time I turn it on, I feel like it is, there's some lobbyists behind it. There's some, um, you know, I mean, people say big farm all the time, but we have so many drug ads on our television. It's like, you know, it just feel,
Starting point is 01:04:57 I wouldn't be surprised if it's compromised. That's what it feels like. I, the news industry is in a tailspin and I'll give you my two cents for what it's worth because I've been a journalist now for like 25 years, some insane amount of time. I can't believe that. But when I started as a daily newspaper reporter, like we had a nice big staff man, like we had, we had librarians on staff, we had researchers on staff, you know, we had photographers, a sports desk, a business desk, you know, and, and I think, I don't know, man, was it like there's like a third as many journalists
Starting point is 01:05:29 as there used to be, right? Like if there's fewer people doing anything, it's gonna be a shittier job. You're gonna get a crappier product, right? And so, and the trend line that gutted journalism wasn't initially that, because I totally agree, all the stats say what you're saying. People don't trust the news like they used to.
Starting point is 01:05:47 But it wasn't, the trend line wasn't that people stopped subscribing. What happened was is that newspapers used to make huge profits from things like classified ads, right? Like, you know, we used to read the classified ads in the back, right? Like you could meet a woman or even get a adopt a pet. Get a new BMX bike or like a dirt bike,
Starting point is 01:06:03 like your new car, like it was all back there, right. And that stuff, man, that subsidized the journalists. And so of course that went away and that was like a lion's share of the profits. Right. Craigslist kind of killed that. Totally. And it's fine. It technology is going to do and like the newspapers didn't, they didn't react in time. You know, they lost this big thing. And so like you just started seeing the industry shrinking and shrinking and now the layoffs in the last two years have just been like brutal.
Starting point is 01:06:28 But the problem there is, man, is like, I could quit journalism and I could go become a private researcher doing the exact same thing I'm doing now as an investigative journalist. But instead of giving it to the public, I would be giving it to hedge funds. I'd be giving it to super wealthy people that would, literally I'm not shitting you, would pay me four to five funds. I'd be giving it to super wealthy people that would literally, I'm not shitting.
Starting point is 01:06:45 You would pay me four to five times what I'm getting paid now. Right. And, and, and that's actually what's happening. Right. And so like you, you, you have the public who is increasingly just getting not as good of much information, especially if you're in like a local news market, right? Like you're not getting information. People aren't paying for it. There are fewer journalists and then the wealthiest are paying for it still. And they're getting incredibly in-depth information. Right. And now you're starting to see privatized spaces have the journalists almost on their side,
Starting point is 01:07:18 working for them to give them information that better helps them to market to the everyday person. Yeah, and I wouldn't say call that person a journalist, but that same like deep research or investigative project, especially in tech, man. Well, I think it's like, you know, they had, even if you look at the case of the opioid epidemic, right? And there was a documentary, there was a television show,
Starting point is 01:07:43 I can't remember the name of it. All the beauty in the bloodshed was a doc that came out that looked super deep at the opioid or I can't remember. Alex Gibney maybe on HBO looked at the opioid epidemic too. This one had Michael Keaton. Okay. You know, is that a real person? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:07:58 Yeah. I mean, I don't know Hollywood, so I don't know actors and I don't know the space as well, but yeah. Yeah. They had this, there you go, Dope Sick. They had this, this series came out. It's unbelievable. It's how, um, it's how the opioid companies pay, like basically hired people that had been working on the food and drug
Starting point is 01:08:16 administration to come and work for them so they could work the loopholes. Totally. And then I'll, I mean, I'll just tell you my two cents. The reason that we need to often know stories like this, like how FDA former employees were then going, is because a journalist went in and dug it out and published it, right? These types of fictionalized versions get written off of hard work of investigative journalists.
Starting point is 01:08:39 And there are fewer and fewer people pulling out stories like this. And I'll tell you, man, as a journalist, my problem 20 years ago was that I was always worried that some other journalist was going to scoop the story and get it before me. Today, my problem is that people are coming to me with important stories and I don't have the time to work on them because I'm already working on something and I don't even have another journalist I can tell them to go to, right? Like we're just not getting out as many important stories like that as we used to, because there's just fewer of us.
Starting point is 01:09:08 Like, and, and, and, and there are more people working for the lobbyists. There are more people working for the PR firms that are spinning stuff. And so this is, we're getting into this really imbalanced place of information. And a dark time. And that's why conspiracy theories rise. I totally agree. Because it's like, well, people are going by their gut. People are looking to fill a void and people want some truth.
Starting point is 01:09:29 I think if you don't have truth, you can feel it. Yeah, I think so. And I always say, and this is the other thing, man, is for me journalism, it's okay. So like take a football, right? Like the, the surface of a football is imperfect, right? It's why a quarterback spirals the ball. Because if you throw the football without spiraling it, because the surface of the football is... Fancy, yeah.
Starting point is 01:09:52 Yeah, it's like imperfect. It just flops around. Yeah. And, but you spiral it and all of those imperfections get smoothed out. And journalism is the same way. Like, no, journalist is the voice of God. But when you've got 10 journalists covering the same thing, you're going to get as close to the, to the obtainable version of the truth as possible because you have 10 different people that are competing to get it out. They're going to, they're going to check each other. They're going to, they're
Starting point is 01:10:16 going to point out if somebody else misses something or screw something up and you get at the closest possible obtainable version of the truth. Now when you just have one person, it's like a football that's not spiraling anymore. It just gets totally off kilter. And I think we're getting closer to that. And I think that's like in a democracy, when we're supposed to be an informed group of people that are gonna go to the ballot box and vote,
Starting point is 01:10:38 it's a problem. If we were in China, it wouldn't matter because the government's gonna tell us what to do anyway. But in a country where we're like, no, no, we need to be informed so we can go to vote. That becomes a problem. How does that end for us? Was that football analogy, the dumbest analogy you've ever heard?
Starting point is 01:10:51 It just kind of came to me. No, I thought it was pretty good. Okay, cool. Yeah. But I'm also dumb a lot of times. So it's like, I wouldn't have asked me, but I thought it worked for me. All right, cool. I'm easily susceptible to just whatever.
Starting point is 01:11:05 But yeah, I wonder what does that look like for us if we, when you get to a place where you don't trust, I wonder if it's that we don't trust authority now. But I never trusted authority. Right. I never trusted authority either. Yeah. I always thought there was this level of integrity, maybe in the distance that I,
Starting point is 01:11:25 maybe I thought I'm, it's so hard for me to figure out what I feel like is missing these days. I feel like as individuals, a lot of us are missing purpose and our purpose is being farmed out to technology and to big corporations instead of things that are meaningful. I think we're losing community. Yes. And then that's going to happen too. You have no purpose. You don't have a local newspaper.
Starting point is 01:11:49 You don't have like a local place where everybody can even go meet up. People aren't going to church. So there's the, at that point, you're just a lot of strangers living near each other. I think that's it, man. I think that's a huge problem in this country. And how does that change? I wonder, you know, like, what does the future of that look like?
Starting point is 01:12:06 Do we just turn into like these lemmings just waiting for the next cheeseburger? Like, you know. I, you know, I've done some investigative reporting on big tech. And that's a space, you know, like, that I, you know, like, man, my reporting has shown me, like, things that just like as a human, as a person, concern me, you know, like,
Starting point is 01:12:27 it's like really cool because they become these beautiful creative spaces, right? And like, as people that are artistic and like to share their stories, people get on there and they can connect with communities and there's all these great things that happen. But I increasingly see those spaces as a hunting ground for big tech companies to target specific people and take them down. And I'll give you one of the examples I'm talking about is that I did this investigative, where I got this investigation, where I got internal emails from inside of Facebook
Starting point is 01:13:00 and I got documents from inside of this company that was like a social casino company. It was essentially like you could play games on your phone that looked like a slot machine and you would never win any money. Like you just gotta understand it. You would never win any money back. And if you used up all your coins that they get in the day for free, you would then have
Starting point is 01:13:23 to buy more coins. Something like 99% of people never pay for coins. It's like 1%. And then it's something like 1 10th of 1% drive like 97% of the revenue at that company. And those companies that again, you can never win your money back, we're now generating more revenue than the Las Vegas strip.
Starting point is 01:13:45 Billions and billions of dollars. So who were the people that were spending money? Well, I found one of those women. She was living outside of Dallas. She was living modest middle income. She spent $400,000 buying virtual coins that she could never win back. So who does that, right? Well, it turns out that a certain slice of people,
Starting point is 01:14:09 very small slight, have a type of brain that can get super fixated on this. Like they compulsively can't stop. And the technology companies devised algorithms, they used artificial intelligence, where the CEO of one of these companies said, the first time somebody opens that app and starts playing, they can identify them from all of the little habits
Starting point is 01:14:32 and immediately mark them as what they would call a VIP or a whale, right? And they would put them down this path where they would actually get a special representative, an actual human who would call them. This woman outside of Texas who lost 400,000 when her mom died, they sent flowers to her mom's funeral. Right, like they immediately identify
Starting point is 01:14:51 that you have this type of brain that's gonna keep spending money that you can't afford and B, you'll never get back. And they just target you and they push you and they pull as much money out of you as they can. That's what I see, man. I see this like, I see now like people are spending their time on there, but people are watching you
Starting point is 01:15:11 spend your time and they're building your behavior and they're looking for your weakness. And as soon as they can exploit your weakness, man, they are gonna grab everything they can. Wow. It's really the devil, it's what you would think of as the devil using yourself against you even. I mean, what if your own shadow could pick your pocket? What would your life be like?
Starting point is 01:15:32 You know what I'm saying? Like, I mean, maybe that's a crazy thing. That's almost as bad as your football thing, but but no bro. It's the, it's the dark arts. It's like the algorithm learning you and learning you and learning you, massaging you and all that matters. But is it for profit or is it for control? I don't understand. I'm guessing it's probably both. I just don't understand how that behooves anybody. Like who closes their eyes at night and was like, yeah.
Starting point is 01:16:05 Dude, those companies that I just talked about went from nothing in like 2009 to 2010 to being billion dollar companies. And they were owned by a few dudes who started them up. Like it behooved those dudes. Those dudes are killing it. I found one of the women who worked at one of these companies who was pushing this woman
Starting point is 01:16:24 outside of Dallas to spend all of this money, right? And I got on her Instagram, that girl was just flying around the world, living it up. Egypt. Oh, look how cool I am now. Oh, look at me. And I'm photos in front of the Sphinx. Now I'm in Italy eating in Tuscany, right? Right. Living this life. And in the meantime, she's just encouraging people to lose their money. Yeah. Wow. And can we name these people or is it kind of private information? Well, I can, you know, I mean, I wrote my story, Suzy Kelly is the woman outside of Dallas. Let's see, product madness. Is that the name of the company that was targeting? I want to pull up the story to make sure I was getting this right because this is the challenge I have as an investigative journalist I miss speak just a little bit. I can get sued. Yeah for sure
Starting point is 01:17:10 We can get sued as well. And so I always want to be accurate, right? And so, you know, we can pull up the story and because I did this story now. What was that? Six seven years ago These are companies where you can't win really. Oh,'t win your money back. But people have like figured out that there's a type of person with a behavior that can, that it's basically a definitive victim. Right here it says social casinos now use behavioral analysis software to quickly identify people who are likely to become big spenders. Behaviors like increasing your bet or playing frequently are signals to the companies and they target these players with heavy marketing and label them proto whales.
Starting point is 01:17:50 As Broton's explained to a room full of game developers back in 2015. If I remember correctly, that guy, Jose Broton, was like a Stanford graduate, you know, in like computer science or something, took that knowledge, you know, they pair it up with, like essentially like behavioral with, like, essentially like behavioral scientists, psychologists,
Starting point is 01:18:08 and then they just start getting better and better at focusing on these people who they can extract from. Yeah. Man, it's like you're up against it. And sometimes though, there's a part of people that go to gamble like that, there's a part of them that wants to, sometimes I think that there's a part of them that wants to, some, sometimes I think that there's a part of us
Starting point is 01:18:33 when I'm amazed that we don't stand up sometimes as a population, right? I don't think we always know that's the problem, man. I don't think we have the information to know this story. Like how many, like that to me, that story is mind blowing that that's going on. Right. Yeah. How many people are gambling on their phone or looking at playing solitaire and then it turns into a finite. Yeah. Right. Um, or, or, or how many of us are just aware in which like the patterns of ads that we see are like, Oh, because they have your behavioral profile, right?
Starting point is 01:18:57 Like you're getting a pattern this way or your newsfeed looks this way, or you're getting content this way. And how is that affecting you, right? Like how is that affecting your everyday decisions? And in Susie's case, it was affecting her everyday decision to the point where she was lying to her husband. She was taking out, if I recall correctly, second mortgages on her homes and spending $400,000 that she did not have.
Starting point is 01:19:18 I had the emails, the messages back and forth with her and the rep from that company and she was begging them to cut her off. I've spent $4,000 last night. Please don't let me cut me off. Oh, Susie, no Susie. We love you. We'd hate to see you leave.
Starting point is 01:19:31 Here's a billion free coins. You know, if you still want to quit when you're done with that, the drug dealer. Well that's what's interesting to me too. It's like, when would we stop allowing certain things you would think like even pornography right like I've fallen victim victim to it obviously and um a lot of people use it right but it's like at a certain point I recognize oh I'm not using this safely right like I go use it when I'm feeling down or when I'm agitated or something. It's like, and then, um, just like it's bad. We know it's probably bad for us, right? I'm not disparaging any of the people that use it or
Starting point is 01:20:13 that, that perform it. I have friends that are in the industry. It's not anything against any person, but I wonder if overall, sometimes we know that it hurts us or like they just had that documentary on Ashley Madison, right? Yeah. And it was so strange. You had this couple, um, pushing the company and they're married and the husband was the owner and they're saying, well, we don't cheat, but you might need to, right? Life short, having a fair, just like, it's just evil. It feels like, I mean, like, why would we allow that? Like it seemed like if you took a vote amongst people, would we, do we want this in our lives that most of them would probably say no.
Starting point is 01:20:55 But if you are tempted with it, if it comes in, like if a cat comes on your, if you tell me, Hey man, do you want a free cat? I'll tell you, dude, honestly, you can fuck off, right? I'll tell you straight up. But if a cat keeps coming on my porch, you don't go out there and touch it I'm saying yeah, like at some point even if I might be like man fuck this thing I might be out there petting at the same time. Yeah. So it's like You know, and is that our responsibility or is that cats in your pocket? Yeah Around in your pocket with you all the time. I guess you can get a baby cat
Starting point is 01:21:29 But yeah, it's like I guess I often wonder like is that just our responsibility and or is there should there be a Yeah, I guess you can't depend on the government, but you would think as a society We wouldn't want these things does that make sense to you? No, dude totally makes sense And I think part of it is like these things are being developed and in San Francisco Silicon Valley wherever Faster than like we can learn about them and adjust to them. Yeah, the government's always a few years behind Yeah, yeah. Yeah, and and and again like I mean, I don't mean, obviously I'm biased because I'm an investigative journalist, but like, this is the role that I think we're losing in our society as journalism keeps going away
Starting point is 01:22:10 is because like in that story that we were just talking about with Susie and the social casinos, those dudes would suit me if I got it wrong, right? Like, they are gonna ask for a correction if I got something wrong, right? And they didn't, right? In the end, Susie and a bunch of other people got $155 million back from them.
Starting point is 01:22:29 Really? Yeah. Fuck yeah. Right. So you know, and like, I don't have it out against anybody, man. I just want good information out there in the public. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:22:39 You know, like it empowers all of us. Even if like, dude, it could be the same piece of information. And from that same accurate, good piece of information, you might decide that A is the best course and I might decide that B is the best course. But to me, that's a democracy because now you and I are passionate out whether A is better or B is better, but we're operating off the same good information.
Starting point is 01:22:59 Right. Yeah, and if you're saying that other, that information is also becoming like what's valuable and what isn't and that there's better Information out there that obviously corporations can afford that they can afford the researchers now to privatize them and put them To work for themselves. Yeah, then yeah for the regular person. It just gets it gets a little interesting, dude I'm never gonna have good enough information to tell you who are the people most likely to compulsively spend on something, right?
Starting point is 01:23:27 Those companies do. Yeah. But if I, if I'm given enough time, I can probably find out what the companies are that have that information that are targeting people like Susie. And I can at least make us aware of it. So we probably as a society will never have access to that. We probably don't want all of us to know who the compulsive gamblers are. Right.
Starting point is 01:23:44 But at least we want to know who the companies are that are targeting people who have that behavior. Yeah. Right. Or targeting people for whatever their weakness is, right? Cause we all have them, man. We all have our weaknesses, right? Yeah. And they can all just be, it can, they can almost be mathematically equated now.
Starting point is 01:23:59 Are mathematically equated now. And they're attacked. And then that's used to attack us. I mean, that's the scary part. It's like, I want to say it's like our reflection is using the fact that it's our reflection against us. I don't know. I can't know what I'm trying to say.
Starting point is 01:24:20 No, you know what it is, dude? I think you're right, man. It's like they're creating a data profile, like a virtual one of us, like evil Kirk from star track, right? And then like that person's telling them our weaknesses, right? It's like, you're looking in, you're like, God, that's like a, a version of me they've created and that person is ratting me out and they're coming at me with that dude's info.
Starting point is 01:24:40 Yeah. Right. I mean, it, and it's getting stronger and better, that technology. Yeah. And then it also makes you a little bit upset at yourself because you're the one feeding into the same thing. That's, um, you know, beckoning you with things that'll end up being painful to you. Yeah. And I look, I have a stoic philosophy on these things. Like I, I, I believe that we can't control, you know control what happens outside of us, but we can control
Starting point is 01:25:06 how we react to it, right? And I think this is some of the, you and I were talking about cold plunges or like, just like how you can reset, and it's super uncomfortable, but like you can control your body and your body's like, dude, I do not wanna go in that cold water. And you're like, no, no, I control you. I'm gonna dip you in there for two minutes
Starting point is 01:25:22 because I know that when I get out, I'm gonna feel better, right? And part of it is personal responsibility. Part of it is being like, I control you I'm gonna dip you in there for two minutes because I know that when I get out I'm gonna feel better Right and and part of it is personal responsibility part of it is being like I control me. I'm gonna set the phone down, right? I'm gonna delete that app right right like we do have personal, but we also shouldn't be targeted in that way, right? It's crazy to let somebody continue to be targeted Yeah, it's like at a certain point you would stop a pedophile from coming near a child You know Yes at a certain point if somebody had a hatchet and somebody was just trying to sit there and eat a sandwich You would stop the hatchet guy. Yeah from bothering the sandwich eater. Yes, you know, it's like yeah Could the sandwich eater get up and leave the restaurant?
Starting point is 01:25:59 But maybe the solution is just getting the hatchet guy out of the restaurant, right? Yeah, right Yeah Instead of making this huge hullabaloo, like now every sandwich eater can only eat sandwiches in this air or yeah, it's just cause I'm saying it was a good man. You don't, you just want to sit there and finish your sandwich. Yeah. Yeah, dude. Yeah. In the end it comes down to our own personal responsibility for now. That's it. I think that's a piece of it.
Starting point is 01:26:20 And I also think we should be demanding better environments for ourselves and our children. I don't have kids, but you know, I always bring in kids cause people seem to be more responsive, you know, but I think kids are living in, yeah. And they're living in that environment. Right. And I don't know that those, you know, I think we just need to be more proactive about what are the environments we want as a society, right? You know, but how do we get this? Cause it feels like everybody has kind of the same things
Starting point is 01:26:46 in mind, but we never seem to get them. And it feels even more like the voting is coming from the other side. Like that it's big business. Like, you know, like tech is the new fossil fuel. I've said that for a long time where it's like, that's the thing that's power. It's like, you know, they control everything.
Starting point is 01:27:05 It feels like they have a lot of information, man. They do. They do. Um, yeah. Trump's information then I wonder, well, I think like people like the, like if all of us have better information, right? Like again, like we can, we can push like the part, like the documentary, man, like you were talking about it earlier, like, you know, like I do think there's stuff in the documentary. It's gonna freak people out, freak me out when I learned about it. Right? So at the end of the day, it's the point of it just to freak people out.
Starting point is 01:27:35 No, it's to be like, you know, we have no national water policy in the United States. You know that? We have no national water policy. So that means that, uh, people from anywhere or any country, whatever can move here and use our water to grow their crops. Is that true or no? It's true in some places, like different states, different counties have different laws, right?
Starting point is 01:27:56 Okay. But we have no national water policy that just says like, wait a minute, wait a minute, water's a big deal. Let's make sure that we're not using it for just like any old thing. Let's make sure that just like as a general little thumb, we're using it for like the best purpose. Right. Right.
Starting point is 01:28:09 And then let's help states and counties and these places come to the decision on what's the best purpose. We just don't, other countries do, right? Other countries have put that in place. But if water is such a, is solid like a, if it's so important for the future, wouldn't that be one of the first things
Starting point is 01:28:22 that we would do probably? But this goes back. It's like, I don't know that people know, I don't know if it's so important for the future, wouldn't that be one of the first things you would do probably? But this goes back, it's like, I don't know that people know, I don't know if just like, when I go to family reunions, I don't know that all my family knows, and a lot of my family, they're like farmers, right? But I don't know that they know
Starting point is 01:28:36 that this is the trend line that's happening, right? And so you put this documentary out there, not to freak people out, but so that we all just have this baseline of information. And then we can push our elected officials who, and man, you hear about all the different lobbies that push the government around. The agricultural lobby is one of the most, if not the most,
Starting point is 01:28:57 powerful lobby in the country, and in part for really good reasons, man. You screw up farmers, you can really jack up a country. Like, we need to support farmers, growing food's great, right? And they should have a voice. Amen. But at the same time, like communities
Starting point is 01:29:14 that are around the farms and others, and who's coming in and who's controlling it, that needs to make sense too, right? And so it needs to be a conversation. And until people have good information, it's tough to have a good conversation. So whether or not we're talking about tech and like people targeting you because they're a big technology company and they know that you're going to be compulsive about this one thing and they can extract
Starting point is 01:29:32 something from you, whether it's like how you choose to behave or how you choose to spend, or whether it's like foreign companies, foreign countries coming in or Wall Street coming in and pumping out water in places that really need that water right there. You know, like we just need good information. Yeah. Yeah, because the days are over where people have anybody else's best interest, a lot of over, like it's where companies certainly don't
Starting point is 01:29:57 cause they're not an individual. It's a spreadsheet they're thinking with a different. Yes, they are. They're thinking it's a spreadsheet, trying to have a brain. Yes. And so like, if you're China,'s a spreadsheet, trying to have a brain. Yes. And so like how, if you're China, right? And you now have like some of the biggest sovereign wealth funds, you know, which is, what does that mean? Oh man, it's, it's crazy. Cause you know, I have friends I grew up with, some of them got advanced degrees from college and some of them
Starting point is 01:30:17 barely graduated high school. I mean, I was somebody that barely graduated high school, but you know, they didn't go to college, right? And so like, I have a huge spectrum of people I love and someone will tell me about like the Illuminati, the Illuminati are controlling things. I'm like, dude, no, but go look at sovereign wealth funds, right? Sovereign wealth funds are countries like China that are pooling together these huge pools of cash, trillions and trillions and trillions of dollars. And then they can use that strategically to buy things, to drive the markets how they want.
Starting point is 01:30:49 Now here in the United States, we just believe that the profit is how everything. So like, oh, if you can make more money doing A than B, then you should go do A, because that's how our system operates. But China goes, no, no, we want to create the most jobs we can for the country. Therefore, we're going to take all of our assets, we're going to try to create the most jobs, not the most profit, but the most jobs. Then what happens is you have Smithfield Foods, one in four American pigs, and you have a Chinese company, and they go like, we don't care necessarily about, per se, driving the right? Like our government is saying to us
Starting point is 01:31:25 that we need to go overseas and buy up food and water. So we'll pay you a 30% premium over the share price. Well, for the American company, that's like 30% premium over the share price. Like I have a fiduciary responsibility to my shareholders. Like I have to sell the company. Like I have to give you guys the company. Otherwise I can actually legally get in jeopardy here
Starting point is 01:31:43 for saying no to that offer, right? Because I'm, I am, I'm legally obligated to return profits to the shareholder. Well, the Chinese company is operating under a completely different system, right? And so that's where you begin to see, gosh, this is probably super in the weeds, but that's where you begin to see like this international power play. And like you're talking about, like where the U S is so focused on profits, China's like, cool, you're super focused on profits. We're focused on the future. And we can manipulate you because you're super focused on profits. Oh, because if they own a fourth of the industry. Yeah, or they just know like the American company is always going to do whatever is most profitable.
Starting point is 01:32:20 And we don't like, so we can buy that. You know, they know how our system works. And they're getting better at manipulating that system. Is like right out of the gate when I started looking at this. Oh, I see what you're saying. So instead of this American company saying, hey, this is an American company, let's keep it here. Let's keep it American. It's a part of like, it affects our GDP,
Starting point is 01:32:40 all these sorts of things. They just think, oh, for profit and China knows that. So it's like, let's just pay more and we'll definitely get it. That's exactly it. It's a wrap. That's it. Because the way that the American companies built,
Starting point is 01:32:52 their shareholders would get upset if they didn't, if they took a vote, the shareholders would be like, why didn't you do it? We would have made dividends or whatever. Not only why wouldn't you, but we could sue you and probably win if you didn't return us the max profits. And so China has sovereign wealth funds,
Starting point is 01:33:07 which are literally trillions and trillions of dollars of pools of cash. Whose money is it, theirs? It's their money, yeah. Individuals or the government? The government's. Okay. Yep, and the government can decide
Starting point is 01:33:17 how to allocate that, right? And so if the US had that, you'd always be allocating it for whatever's gonna make you the most profits. you'd always be allocating it for whatever is going to make you the most profits. China is going to be allocating it potentially for whatever gives them the most political strength, whatever makes them the most powerful country. It's very different.
Starting point is 01:33:34 And that's what sovereign wealth funds are. And they've become huge. They're like, as I understand, I want to talk to this professor, this academic at Stanford, who's one of the foremost experts in the country on these things. As I understand it, they're fairly new. The Middle Eastern countries, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, they also have really big sovereign wealth funds.
Starting point is 01:33:53 China's got really big sovereign wealth funds. Surprisingly, Norway has a really big sovereign wealth fund. But they can use these things strategically, especially against a profit-driven country like the US. Wow. So it's crazy to think that being profitable could be your weakness. That's interesting, right?
Starting point is 01:34:14 Yeah. Wow. The world's largest sovereign wealth fund as of December, 2022 was China Investment Corporation, managing assets reaching around $.35 trillion US dollars. Where do we rank in that? Pull up like the top 10 list of sovereign wealth funds. Norway, Qatar, GIC, the one we just talked about,
Starting point is 01:34:34 National Welfare, oh no, China Investment Corporation. And TAMISEC, that's Singapore. Public Investment Fund could be us, but who knows? Oh, it's Saudi Arabia. Huh? So those are the big 10 biggest sovereign wealth funds. So those can really, somebody's got to have a list for how much assets each of them have at 1.7 trillion seems small to me, but we're not even on the top 10 list.
Starting point is 01:34:57 We don't, we don't operate a sovereign. It was as far as I know, the U S doesn't operate a sovereign wealth fund like this because it's not how we think. Got it. Yeah. Hmm. Yeah, you start to, yeah, you don't think about how perspective and mindset affects how an entire country operates really.
Starting point is 01:35:16 No, the United States does not have a federal sovereign wealth fund, but several states do. These funds are usually smaller than international SWFs and can serve different purposes for example the Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation established in the early 1980s has roughly 67 billion in assets and was created to ensure that Alaskan citizens Benefited from oil extracted from state lands Wow So that's important and that's like Norway to Norway's is very similar to Alaska where it's like they they are an oil wealthy nation And so they created a sovereign wealth fund To bet to benefit the citizens. Oh, that's smart Texas Also, it says has two sovereign wealth funds including the Texas Permanent School Fund
Starting point is 01:35:54 Which was founded in 1854 and manages forty six point five billion in assets to benefit public schools. Wow That's pretty incredible. Yeah, just to think that they had that forethought. Yeah. Yeah, totally And they're gonna think maybe I I'm going to own the land, the schools on just different things like that. Yeah. And then so these foreign countries have these massive pools of cash that they can use strategically. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:36:13 It's interesting, man. You start seeing the chess players on the board moving in different ways. What states are looking out for their land? What states are kind of at the head of the forefront? Were you able to notice any of that? Uh, off the top of my head, you know, so like, I think Iowa has a law that, that foreign companies, uh, can't own farmland in Iowa.
Starting point is 01:36:41 It's off the top of my head. And, um, but like, is it, you know, like the question is, is like, does it really matter if it's a foreign company or a domestic company, if they're doing good by the local people, right? Right. Like ultimately in that, like who cares? Like, are you doing well by the local people? Is there enough water there?
Starting point is 01:37:02 Are you creating jobs? Like, you know, is it like people, local people prospering? Like that's like, I don't know, at the end of the day, like what people are going to care about. Right. Right. Like I think what becomes dangerous is when you see these things that are just like highly extractive to the, to the detriment, you know, of the local folks who are seeing their water disappear, um, who aren't seeing like a lot of job creation, you know, like.
Starting point is 01:37:26 Right. There's no return on it for them. Yeah. Right. And especially if it's their space, you know. I even pulled up on that Saudi farm. I remember, I think I pulled up visas and they were bringing in workers, if I'm recalling correctly, from the Philippines, you know, so they'd be like, well, we're creating jobs. And I'm like, man, you guys are pulling visas. So you're bringing in workers from the Philippines to work on your farm. Yeah. You I'm like, man, you guys are pulling visas. So you're bringing in workers from the Philippines to work on your farm. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:37:45 You know, like, yeah, you probably have, yeah, you'd probably have farmers right in the area that would do it. Yeah. So, um, yeah. So these things are so many loopholes and stuff. There's so many tricky ways out there. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:37:59 So when you look at like places, not having enough water, right? Yeah. America has a lot of water. Totally. Right. And a lot of land in a small population. Okay water, right? America has a lot of water. Totally. And a lot of land in a small population. Okay. So we're probably in a really good space.
Starting point is 01:38:09 We're in a good space. Right. Yep. What places aren't in good spaces? And we're in a good space, except for like these like regional examples, right? Like places in the West and the Southwest, places that are going to get potentially a lot hotter, you know? So I got these classified cables answering your question,
Starting point is 01:38:25 like what places aren't in a good space. I got these classified cables, and I'm from the US embassy that had gone. What does that mean? Like diplomatic cables that the State Department was sending back from its embassy in Switzerland back to the US government here. Sometimes that stuff goes to like CIA, the State Department,
Starting point is 01:38:42 other. But cables, what's the term? It's paperwork or information? Yeah, it's like a report they'll send back. Yeah. Got it. And so some folks from the US embassy in Switzerland had gone to the headquarters of Nestle. And Nestle is like the world's largest food company.
Starting point is 01:38:58 And the chief economist at Nestle sort of gave them a tour and like a perspective from the world's largest food company about how screwed up everything was And they talked about the regions that were gonna get hit hardest by not having enough water. And so that's like China It was like India the Middle East but it was also the Western United States You know like the Western United States is in a pretty tough spot when it comes to having enough water to keep doing all the things are currently doing. Um, and so, um, yeah. And that was like the hot take from Nestle was like, you know, forget about it.
Starting point is 01:39:35 That time it was like the, the, the, it was 2009. It was the great recession and Nestle is just like, forget about it. That's going to resolve itself. The world is running out of enough water to feed everybody. Right. Yeah. And so do states start to plan ahead? You think some of them would.
Starting point is 01:39:49 I think some of them do these things like water. People will always tell you water is super local. All right. And so some counties, some regions within states and some states themselves are doing better than others and some countries are definitely doing better than others just in terms of like planning ahead, you know? And it is solvable, man. That's like the thing with a lot of the issues that we face, you know? Like we can, we're a super smart species, you know? Like we've done a lot of stuff. We could still do a lot of stuff. We just have to move off of the trend lines that we're
Starting point is 01:40:20 currently headed on, you know? And those trend lines are more like me, me, me, instead of us, is that it? Or is it like, because is there enough water for everybody? There is enough water to grow enough food that everyone in the world could eat. Not even like today, man, which we were, do we seven billion people or so? Like there's enough water to grow enough food to feed 10 billion people.
Starting point is 01:40:40 You know, like it's not just a population issue. It kind of goes back to what I was saying about China, where it's like, they just, now they're just wealthier, man, and not just a population issue. It kind of goes back to what I was saying about China, where it's like they just, now they're just wealthier, man. And they're eating more meat. And Nestle in that, in that classified cable said, like, if everyone in the world ate as much meat per capita as Americans do, we would have run out of fresh water in the year 2000.
Starting point is 01:40:59 Wow. Right. And I'm not a vegetarian. I'm not a vegan. Right. I'm just like, this is what the world's largest food company is saying. And I know people love beef, and I know people love steak, and it's there.
Starting point is 01:41:11 But that's- And now it gets all of it. But when it comes to how can we shift, how can we take some personal responsibility to putting us in a place we want to be, that's one area we can look at. And it's not even saying you need to become vegetarian or vegan, it's just like, how much meat do you need to be, that's one area we can look at. And it's not even saying like you need to become vegetarian or vegan.
Starting point is 01:41:25 It's just like, how much meat do you need to be a healthy human? Right. Right? And you got people with obesity and heart attacks, you know, and all these issues. Oh, you got people damn snorting meat out there. Dude, you know that?
Starting point is 01:41:36 You got some real, um, mammal pervs out there, you know, people who will just cook anything that's wandered up on their porch even and eat it. I don't even share it with their spouse either. I had a buddy that had a t-shirt and this is in San Francisco. So he definitely, he definitely pissed people off, but his shirt said, meat is murder. Delicious, delicious murder.
Starting point is 01:41:58 Just trolling people. Yeah. Yeah. That's definitely, definitely people love it. Um, well, you do have businesses like, Bill Gates is starting like a Beyond Meat, is that his company or no? I can't remember if he invested in that one.
Starting point is 01:42:15 There's like, yeah, Beyond Meat, Impossible Burgers. Yeah, I think it's Impossible Burgers, maybe. Yeah, a lot of those guys got really, they got funding. And again, those were like, that's a way to replace meat with a less water intensive meat substitute, something that tastes like meat. Right. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:42:31 Right, so that's one way that people could preserve water probably. We used to have to grow the... Yeah, it just requires a lot, lot, lot less water to eat a grain than it does to feed enough grains to eat an animal. Got it. Yeah. And what about other methods that people, you hear about like desalinization, to eat a grain than it does to feed enough grains to eat an animal. Got it.
Starting point is 01:42:45 Yeah. And what about other methods that people, you hear about like desalinization, you hear about cloud seeding. Yeah. I'm not sure what other methods they are. I believe cloud seeding is very expensive. Yeah, and I don't know as much about cloud seeding.
Starting point is 01:42:57 And I remember like one of my buddies, he learned I was doing this and I'd moved off organized crime. And I was looking at this, you gotta look at cloud seeding. And I was like, dude, that's some conspiracy shit you read online. And I looked at it and I was looking at this thing, you gotta look at cloud seeding. And I was like, dude, that's some conspiracy shit you read online. And I looked at it and I was like, oh no,
Starting point is 01:43:07 people do really do cloud seeding. Like I think the ski resorts are doing cloud seeding. I think the Israeli government was doing cloud seeding. But yeah, I think it's expensive. It hasn't really found a practical application. As far as I know, this isn't my area of expertise. Like, de-sal, de-sal I'm more familiar with. Cloud seeding is a weather modification technique that improves a cloud's ability
Starting point is 01:43:26 to produce rain or snow by introducing tiny ice nuclei in a certain types of sub freezing clouds. So you have a cloud that's already there and I guess you then, it looks like just fire ice particles into it. And precipitates the rain out or something. Four hour operation, a four hour operation that seeds 24 clouds can cost around $5,000. Wow.
Starting point is 01:43:52 So rich people could have rain or something if they wanted to have like a Noah's Ark party or like a, um, um, like a, the perfect storm, if they want to do a perfect storm reenactment of that movie. Um, per acre cloud seeding operations can cost around 40 cents per planet acre or 10 to 15 dollars per acre foot for additional water that's in Utah. Well that's actually not, you know, this is not my area of expertise but 10 to 15 dollar for an acre foot of water that's a lot of water and that's a
Starting point is 01:44:21 really low price. So if that, you know, and that's in Utah specifically, right? So they've going to have their own like climatology, their own hydrology, like, um, so it can be super specific, but 10 to $15 for an acre foot is really cheap for water. Yeah. Because you start talking about desalination
Starting point is 01:44:39 plant and now you're talking about $2,000 per acre foot. Really? Yeah. So that's very expensive. Yeah. And like we're talking about $2,000 per acre foot. Really? Yeah. So that's very expensive. Yeah. And we're growing tomatoes typically with $50 per acre foot water.
Starting point is 01:44:50 An acre foot just, it's actually super simple. It's how much, an acre foot is the equivalent of flooding an acre of land with one foot of water. OK. Yeah. The global cloud seeding market is estimated to have a valuation of $131.4 million in 2023. Over the forecast period from 2023 to 2030, it is projected to experience substantial
Starting point is 01:45:13 growth with an estimated compound annual growth of 5.8%. By 2030, the market is expected to reach a value of 194.4 million. So it's getting more popular, they're saying. This is a Market Insights website. So if, I don't know if that's legit or not, but what else does it say? Anything else on there? Here's an article right here. Not since, not since Charlemagne was crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 800 AD has the American West been so dry. A recent study in nature climate change found the period 2021 was the driest in 22 years and more than a millennium attributing a fifth of that anomaly to human caused climate change
Starting point is 01:45:55 hmm Lake Mead and Lake Powell have reached their lowest levels ever triggering unprecedented cuts in water allocations Cloud seeding operations have also expanded in water-stretched regions outside. Let me see, within the past two years, Idaho, Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, and California have expanded cloud seeding operations.
Starting point is 01:46:18 So they're trying it. Yeah, and I remember the ski resorts doing it and people doing it. I wonder how much water ultimately you're going to be able to squeeze out of the atmosphere by shooting these minerals up into it. But yeah. Ian, how effective is it? Like if you, if you spend the money to shoot the water, to put the particles out there, but cloud seeding should not be thought of as a response to drought. Experts agree in a drought, there are likely to be fewer seatable storms. That's a good point. And when there are storms, even the estimates from cloud seating companies themselves show the practice increases precipitation by only
Starting point is 01:46:53 around 10% in a given area. That might be worth the effort when every acre foot counts, but it's not going to end a drought across an entire region. So you have to have a storm already there. I see. Yeah. So that's kind of interesting. Super interesting. You can't just completely create a storm. Not yet. Anyway. Right. Right.
Starting point is 01:47:10 It's like terraforming the earth at that point. Yeah. Yeah. That gets right. That would get, yeah. When it becomes like air Sims or whatever it's gonna get weird. And what about desalinization? It's super expensive. Okay. Because like basically it, it takes a ton of energy, like electricity to basically push water a ton of energy like electricity to basically push water through what's just like a giant filter and pull out the salt or whatever it is that's contaminated the water.
Starting point is 01:47:34 And so it ends up the water ends up costing 100 times what farmers are paying for it now. And oftentimes it makes crops unaffordable. So it's good for like drinking water, dude. People use desal all the time for drinking water and, and for some industrial use, but at the price, uh, it becomes very difficult to create food, um, with that expensive of water. Or some countries saying you can't buy land here.
Starting point is 01:47:59 Some countries are like that, right? For sure. Right. Yeah. Yeah. They, you know, and, and, and they're saying you can't grow that type of crop here because it requires too much water yeah right um there there are people or the other countries getting really selective um as to how their water is going to be used and what what it can be used for it's so tough for us because we've manipulated so many other markets and
Starting point is 01:48:19 done things ourselves you know you would go upstream from your neighbor and split that river that split that creek that's headed your way. If you had to. And that's what, that's what you're seeing. And that's, you know, people are just seeing like the river, their village relies on all of a sudden now is diverted and it's a, it's for a palm oil plantation. Right. Um, and that's more and more of what you're seeing in Africa and places like that. You mean, yeah.
Starting point is 01:48:41 Central America, like Guatemala, I think has one of the largest expanding, um, palm oil plantation in the world. We have, what do you think there's a way, a solution? Like, yeah, what do you look at is? Well, first off, I think people just need to know what's happening. Right. It's like bottom line. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:48:58 Bottom line. And then, and then dude, we just need to empower and push our government to putting forward like the best minds. You know, I think like right now, basically the laws that we have on the books for water around this country were, are from like the 1800s. Yeah. Right? Like when water, when there were few people, there was water was plentiful. Yeah. No gargling water in church and stuff. You're like, that shouldn't be in the, in the state the, um, state doctrine, you know? Yeah. And, and now, and now water's tight and there's a lot more people. And so we, you know, they need to go back onto the books and revise the laws to be like, okay, so what do we want
Starting point is 01:49:35 our water laws to look like in this place, given the realities we have now in the 21st century and not the 19th century, right? Like it's kind of, it's like all these stuff, man, it's kind of common sense, but we're just not getting it done. Yeah. And it's like, how is it tough to get it done when, um, a lot of the great minds, it feels like are working on the other side of, uh, popular sentiment. Like a fair statement. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:50:02 How do you mean? Like, which, like that the best research is in a lot of great journalists and lobbyists even are working for bigger companies or in the private sector more to garner information and learn information to give that to the private sector to better do the doings that they're doing. Does that make sense? It does. I think journalists are always going to try to give the information to the public the doings that they're doing. Does that make sense? It does. I think journalists are always going to try to give the information to the public. There's just fewer of them.
Starting point is 01:50:29 And yeah, I think the private sector has a lot more resources to manipulate the markets to what they want, which oftentimes can be quarterly profits or annual profits. And we need our government to be like, OK, OK, OK. But what's in our long-term best interest, right? Like, what do we want for, for your, for your kids and your grandkids? Um, and I think that's where, where we really need to be pushing folks.
Starting point is 01:50:54 Yeah. And some of the, some of the companies are doing it not because they're beholding to their stockholders who are the very people who are wishing they wouldn't, that companies wouldn't do this sort of thing. That's really crazy, isn't it? I mean, dude, you've seen the doc and it's like in the doc, man, it's like, so Holly Irwin is the county supervisor in Arizona that we follow.
Starting point is 01:51:13 And what county is that in? It's in La Paz County, right? And that's like a deeply red county. Holly is a Republican, like a conservative Republican. And now she's fighting for what people might be like, that's an environmental issue. No, she's fighting for the water of the county, right? And she's working with Democrats, which is great.
Starting point is 01:51:32 Like you got Republicans and Democrats coming together finally to like work on something and come up with solutions. But what I showed to Holly was, and she didn't know this, she's like, oh, the Saudis have come, they're taking our water. And I said, but Holly, look here, this is your pension fund from the state of Arizona. Look what it's invested in that farm right over there.
Starting point is 01:51:54 That shipping hay to China and the UAE that was bought with your pension fund money. Like it's your own pension fund. Your retirement fund is, is helping export the water that you need to stay, to be here and for people to retire here. But how I'm not following that. Yeah. Right. So like, how they use the money. So they had a pension fund. Yeah. But the Saudis came in and bought the land. So that's a separate one, right? So you got the Saudis are there. Um,
Starting point is 01:52:18 but there's another big farm, um, owned by, uh, uh, a company out in North Carolina. And the Arizona State Pension Fund gave a bunch of money to that, to IFC, this company out in North Carolina. And then IFC rented it to a company from the United Arab Emirates that's controlled by the brother of the ruler of the country, that's
Starting point is 01:52:43 controlled by a guy whose's like job it is to control national security in the country. And so they're shipping it overseas. And so like at the end of the day, Holly's pension fund, you know, she's like fighting so hard to keep the water there in her county so her people can stay there. And then her own pension fund is financing a deal
Starting point is 01:52:59 that's shipping water overseas. Right, cause it's more short-term profit than it is a long-term vision. Yeah, and so how do you try to align those things? How do you, how do you align with Holly wants money to retire on Holly wants water for her County to live on for the next hundred plus years? Right. Wow. Interesting, man. Um, what were some other,
Starting point is 01:53:18 there was some other stories that I was investigating that you had, uh, or that I was researching that you had looked at. Um, one that I found was interesting was this Somali pirate scenario. Yeah, isn't that interesting? So this was a guy from the intelligence community who told me this, you know, and wasn't the only person that told me this. But he just said, look, like, Somali pirates, like we think of them as like pirates, like they took to the high seas, you know, like, but what they were, they were fishermen. They were just fishermen along the coast and foreign trawlers from other country, the countries, I think
Starting point is 01:53:49 his example was primarily China were coming in and just depleting the fishing stocks. Right. So these guys that are on the Somali coast, they got pretty basic systems for fishing. Yeah. And then these big bad-ass boats come in with these super deep nets and they just scoop up all the fish.
Starting point is 01:54:06 So what do the dudes do? The same thing you and I would do if somebody was doing that to us. We come together, we sit around, we have a drink. We're like, dude, how do we stop that? And we're like, dude, next time one of those things come through, we're going to go out there in our shitty little boat with some guns and take it over and tell them to stop doing it. And we create like a little small coast guard.
Starting point is 01:54:24 Well, that sounds like what they kind of did, right? And so then they have a little coast guard and they're trying to fight back against these trawlers. And then they take one hostage and they're like, dude, you guys have been taking all our fish, give us money and we'll give you your boat back because you've been taking all our fish. And they do, right?
Starting point is 01:54:38 And then they're like, well, that kind of escalates because maybe we should get a bigger, we should hijack a bigger boat next time because now we don't have any fish. Like we're not selling anything. We can't buy our kids books. We're not in the boat abduction business. Yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:54:49 Right. And so that's how these things evolved. It started as some dudes just being like, we just wanted to protect our fishing stock, right? To being like, now we're taking over huge oil tankers and demanding, and then, and then when that happened and then the oil tankers hire mercenaries or private security corporations to come in oftentimes former like special forces guys Or you know guys that have that have a background working for for a national
Starting point is 01:55:12 Military service and they come in with guns and they're blowing everyone up and you're like these dudes at the beginning of this story These dudes just wanted their fish, right? They just wanted their food supply. Yes Which is so ironic because it's really the same other, same thing we're talking about. It is, man. It's like they just wanted to eat. Yep. It's super basic. And when they did, when you're not eating two months later, you are a pirate. Yeah. It turns out, man, if we saw like something super basic, like just making sure everyone around the world has enough food, we're going to see, because this is
Starting point is 01:55:43 the other thing is like. Boko Haram again. I mean, I could go on to these stories forever. And what is Boko Haram? It's a terrorist organization, um, in Nigeria and in that, in that region of the world. Well, that was where Lake Chad was. And if you look back on maps, a satellite maps of Lake Chad, like 30 years ago, it was the giant lake. And now it's just like a pond.
Starting point is 01:56:02 It's shrunk way down because people have been diverting the rivers of flow into it for farming fields and the people that lived there that were fishing out of that. It was a huge lake. They lost their livelihoods and then people start getting pissed. They start getting radicalized. People are hungry. Then some people with crazy ideas start being like, well, you join my group. I'll feed you. People are taken from us. All of a sudden, you know, just like, and it just spirals, man. And then you just end up with these crazy groups that are abducting children, that are blowing things up. And like the beginning, like the origin of that story was like, people got thrown into shit by not having their basic necessities met,
Starting point is 01:56:39 like food, and then things spiral out of control, right? A little like Mad Max kind of style. Yeah. You know? I mean, it Mad Max kind of style. Yeah. I mean, it could get really weird everywhere. Yeah. So that's what we're hoping doesn't happen. Right.
Starting point is 01:56:52 But then it's life. It's always going on. Society is always going on in some form or other, whether we end up in tribes or whatever. It's like that's humanity. You start to get this idea of what humanity is based on your own childhood and things you've heard, or, and also the safety that we feel in America. Don't you feel like we've lost our tribes, our community though? Like everyone's got their little like a hundred percent sub sub suburb.
Starting point is 01:57:17 They don't have to interact with anybody anymore. And like a hundred percent. Everybody's just like, like, yeah. And it's, um, I feel like a country of loneliness, man. I feel like half the problems we see is just cause people feel isolated and lonely and depressed. And they're not like, they're not like in a community anymore. And they're not seeing the same people every Sunday or they're not going out. Like, dude, I play ice hockey, right? I play ice hockey and those dudes are awesome.
Starting point is 01:57:41 And I am so lucky to be able to go and see that same group of cool dudes and just play hockey and have that community. And I am so lucky to be able to go and see that same group of cool dudes and just play hockey and have that community. And like, I think a lot of us in so much of our communities around what, going out to the bar and getting drunk? And like, I used to drink a lot. And now I think alcohol is a shitty drug, right? Like, I think it's bad medicine. Like, you know, I think I view like, you know,
Starting point is 01:58:00 a lot of this stuff, I think they should be viewed medicinally. Yeah, it's just like sports piss almost really. You know, I mean, yeah, I don't drink. I mean, I prefer cocaine probably, but that's not even that good for you. And it's like, I think, yeah, I definitely feel you though. It's like, where do you meet up with people?
Starting point is 01:58:18 I mean, I go to a recovery meeting. So I've seen people there all the time. So you have like some semblance of groupness. But yeah, it's like everybody gets their food delivered a lot of times. The family, it's just, you're staring at a phone, your food's getting delivered. You're not going outside. And it's like, how do we reinstill like a stronger community in the US? Right? Because like, I okay, dude, I have a little cabin in a teeny town, like 100 people. And those people are across the board politically on the spectrum. And it doesn't matter if somebody's voting one way and somebody else is voting the other way. If somebody's like house floods,
Starting point is 01:58:52 people are gonna show up, right? People are gonna help each other out. Like that's what it is to be a good person. It's not who you vote for or what you necessarily like, your political ethos. It's like, dude, did something bad happen to you? Does your community come out and support you? Like that's community. And that's what I feel like we're losing, right? We're so distracted about, political ethos, it's like, dude, did something bad happen to you? Does your community come out and support you?
Starting point is 01:59:05 That's community. And that's what I feel like we're losing, right? We're so distracted about, I feel like petty crap right now that we're forgetting it's time we just need to show up for each other. Yeah. I wonder if you're going to see more of an influx towards like religious services, even not even entirely for religion, but for community. It's like some of the first places you go back to
Starting point is 01:59:25 for community. Like one of the things I always loved about church was just seeing like the kids play together. You're all sitting there in peace, even it's like, if you're just in your own thoughts, like thinking of something bigger than yourself, no matter what your denomination was or whatever, or yeah. So I grew up, my dad was a Lutheran pastor
Starting point is 01:59:44 and I don't go to, I don't go to church anymore. I don't follow those beliefs anymore. But I miss that Sunday get together, man, because you would show up and, you know, there would be like a tax preparer there. And you knew you would see them every Sunday and you could rely on them.
Starting point is 01:59:59 There was a mechanic that was there. And you knew that they'd show up every Sunday and you would rely on, they weren't going to screw you. And there was a sense of community, like in that community were people that had vocational trades across the board. And you could trust each other and you could know each other and you could ask them questions. You could get knowledge, you could share experience,
Starting point is 02:00:14 you could carry each other, right? Like showing up to that one place every week and having that community, that's what I feel like so much is what that's been lost. I feel like it'll be a few generations and I feel like there will be a rebellious generation that will throw off the VR headsets and masturbate naturally if there's a way to do that into the
Starting point is 02:00:35 ocean or whatever, and reclaim what it feels like, or at least go in search of what it feels like to be human. Yeah, man. That's what I, I think would probably happen. And are you talking about this with other buddies too? Cause I feel like having this conversation more and more with buddies, like dude, how do we
Starting point is 02:00:53 create community again? Like, like I said, it can be as simple as like finding a good hockey team, right? And just like, cause after every game man, it doesn't matter if that game starts at 10 30 PM at night and we're not in the parking lot until midnight or like 1 a.m. Dudes are gonna stand around and drink a beer. Oh, yeah, just catch up have a blast have a nice time
Starting point is 02:01:10 It's the same after any real get together people always kind of mill around see what's going on You and one buddy or two guys might stay late if one of them's having a problem and they'll talk about it Yep, if everything's cool that you're out of there kind of like one of the first couple of guys out But you're joking around. Yeah, I think that thing is, I feel like we would find ways, in the end, I feel like you just believe enough in something that we can't create outside of us,
Starting point is 02:01:39 that's inside of us, that would lead us to victory in some sense. Like some human spirit or something that will prevail. It always kind of feels like that. I think it just feels like we're down maybe two rounds to one right now. Yeah, and I feel like it's tough for that human spirit to connect through a phone. Yeah, I think it's hard, man.
Starting point is 02:02:00 And I think there's a lot of like, I have to be doing something all the time. There's a lot of factors in it. It's interesting to think about, um, before you leave, I know you worked in organized crime. You mentioned that a little while ago. Yeah. And was you, what'd you do in it bookies or what was it? Pretty close, man.
Starting point is 02:02:16 It was a lot of casino work. It was a lot of Asian organized crime. I went over to Macau, uh, which became like, this by Hong Kong, huh? Yeah. I went there once. Hong Kong or Macau. I went across the ferry there. I went to both of them. That became like, I made this by Hong Kong, huh? Yeah, yeah. I went there once. Hong Kong or Macau?
Starting point is 02:02:26 I went across the ferry there. I went to both of them. Yeah, yeah, that's a fun ferry ride. Yeah, it was nice, dude. Some lady I think was either flirting with me or trying to tell me I had some on my shirt or something. Yeah, it's a wild place, man. They do more revenue than Vegas does now.
Starting point is 02:02:39 It became massive. When I was there, it had become just like, in a very short period, it had become massive. And I was there, it had become just like, in a very short period, it had become massive. And I was over there because we were looking into how what the US government largely considered was organized crime, people connection to triads, et cetera, were working inside of the casinos to bring money from mainland China that could be gambled in Macau.
Starting point is 02:03:00 Cause at that time there was like, I think it was a $5,000 cap, right? Like this was the law. Like you could only bring 5,000 from mainland China into Macau, but then you'd there was like, I think it was a $5,000 cap, right? Like this was the law. Like you could only bring 5,000 from mainland China into Macau, but then you'd go and you go into the casino and people are betting like 500,000 US per hand. You're like, well, how is that money? And it was basically this informal credit network, which is like, we know you're good for it in China, so we'll spot it for you in Macau, right?
Starting point is 02:03:22 But if you don't pay your debts, you're probably gonna be found burned up and shot in your car. Wow. You know, and so like that was the ecosystem and then these big US casinos were operating in that ecosystem and so how does all of that? And so I went over there and like my job was to try to get these guys to go on camera
Starting point is 02:03:39 to open up to me and to tell me about this operation. And as one of the US casino bosses, a white guy from America said to me, he's like, man, that dude whose casino you're staying in for the six weeks you're here is known if people say stuff he doesn't like for hanging them out their window. And that's where I was staying. And yeah, and it was-
Starting point is 02:04:00 Gosh, that's a rough start. Yeah, yeah. And so it was- So you're just down there looking, and we say triads, what does that mean? Triads are like a British word for what they would describe as Asian organized crime networks. And the triads actually have this super interesting history that go back to martial arts, to the Shaolin temple,
Starting point is 02:04:19 and to like all the way back to like the overthrow of the emperor, man. It's like, that's why the triad guys are known for being such badasses with regards to martial arts. Like, I still get calls from federal prison pretty frequently from a guy named Raymond Shrimp Boy Chow. And... Shrimp Boy? Shrimp Boy.
Starting point is 02:04:37 Amen. Yeah. And, uh, dude, just crazy badass martial arts guy. Um, but, uh, yeah, he'll call, you know, he, he, I, and I, I went to him because I knew I was going to Macau and he hadn't been arrested. Now he's, now he's in prison doing, I think, multiple life sentences. Um, yeah, but, uh, but that's just, uh, that's a different world, man. Cause you're operating, um, in a world of violence. Right.
Starting point is 02:05:02 Yeah. That's how they solve it there. If you do, yeah, that, you know, things are punishable by real violence. Yes. That's how they solve it there. If you, yeah, that, you know. Things are punishable by real violence. Yes, exactly. Yeah. And it's kind of organized. So it's difficult to go in as an investigative journalist
Starting point is 02:05:14 into that, you know, and so the first thing I'd always do is just tell people right away, like, I am an investigative journalist, I'm looking into this. You know, that's my role, and I don't necessarily need to push people for answers right away, but like, I don't want anybody thinking that like I'm sneaking around behind their back or like, trying to be transparent about it. Super transparent.
Starting point is 02:05:31 So there's a different level of respect if you come in like that over there? Yeah, and I do that with everybody. Like, as a journalist, if I'm working on a story, I always identify myself as a journalist right away. You know, like, this is what I'm working on. This is my interest, you know, and then over there, it's like, we don't got to, you know, deal with that right away. You know, like, this is what I'm working on, this is my interest, you know, and then over there, it's like, we don't gotta, you know, deal with that
Starting point is 02:05:47 right away, you can just identify me as a person. You know, in parts of China that I've traveled to, one of the things people want to do when they're gonna get into business with you is they just wanna get hammered with you. They just wanna get hammered because they wanna see what kind of drunk you are. Are you gonna be a total dick when you're drunk,
Starting point is 02:06:03 or are you gonna still just be like, kind of funny and happy and upbeat and like honest, or what kind of drunk you are. Are you gonna be a total dick when you're drunk or are you gonna still just be like kind of funny and happy and upbeat and like honest or what kind of drunk are you? And so like there are just different ways and so sometimes you identify who you are and then you just kind of a human for a little bit, just like just hang out.
Starting point is 02:06:18 Yeah, I never wanted to be Chinese that much really. I mean, I haven't not wanted to be it, but I haven't, I'll be honest, yeah, I haven't really wanted to be it, but I haven't, I'll be honest, I haven't really wanted to be it. I guess I would be willing to be it, but I don't, I would probably think about it a lot more than I have recently. Why do Chinese businessmen insist on getting you drunk? That's interesting.
Starting point is 02:06:38 In a culture where relationships can make or break you in business, getting drunk with a potential business partner is often viewed as a crucial way of solidifying That relationship and showing that you are in fact friends, huh? Let me say anything about the liquor Anything more about booze alcohol is a very long tradition in Uh, anything more about booze? Alcohol is a very long tradition in Confucian society. Confucius who advocated only eating at meal times and not in between
Starting point is 02:07:10 made an exception for wine. He said only wine drinking is not limited. So Confucian really liked to have that. He liked to have a little sip in the daytime. No, no shade, no shade. Before you go, have, is there, have there been stories that you wanted to go and you just didn't have the time? Oh dude, that's all the time. That's like the thing that haunts me most right now.
Starting point is 02:07:30 Just like really important stories that people come to me and they want me to look into. And it's just like, it's super tough to find the time. There's just too many things that I would love to be able, I wish, you know. Yeah, so it know, yeah. So it happens. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:07:51 And who funds like investigative reporting, who funds like guys like you? So I work at a nonprofit called the center for investigative reporting. Okay. It's like a super old nonprofit. It's been around since the seventies. It was a bunch of Rolling Stones reporters when Rolling Stones used to be based in San Francisco. They ended up moving it to New York and a bunch of the reporters didn't want to move to the East coast be based in San Francisco, they ended up moving it to New York, and a bunch of the reporters didn't
Starting point is 02:08:06 want to move to the East Coast. They liked San Francisco. And one of those guys was one of my mentors, Lul Bergman, who, I don't know if you ever saw the movie Insider with Al Pacino, but Al Pacino was playing Lul. Lul was the one that got the documents from inside the tobacco companies that showed that they knew that it was a carcinogen. They knew it was addictive addictive and they were hiding
Starting point is 02:08:26 and not being straight up with Congress. So I work at a nonprofit, which is a super fortunate place to be, because we're not profit. Like, you know, I worked on this documentary, that documentary could make a gazillion dollars and I'm not gonna make it die more, right? It's just not like what the drive is, right?
Starting point is 02:08:42 You know, like, and so, and it's also because investigative journalism isn't profitable. Really? Yeah, no, dude, letting me spend a year and a half diving into like, is Facebook and this social media company targeting your weakness? It is not profitable.
Starting point is 02:08:58 And so we have to get foundations and others to give us money, to give us the time and people, people donate to us to give us the time to look into this stuff so I can just share it with the public. It would be hugely profitable if I wanted to take that my same skills and go work for a hedge fund. I can make four or five times what I make. But people are willing to pay me to do it,
Starting point is 02:09:21 you know, like a modest salary. Like, I'll do it, man, like, because I love stories. Dude, I love stories. I love, like, I used to sit and I was a little kid and I used to tell my grandma, my mom's mom, just tell me a story from your mind, you know? And she would just wax. And now meeting people, you know,
Starting point is 02:09:38 like I just like to hear their stories, like what's their background, where'd they come from? You know, it doesn't have to be like totally revelatory. It's just like, we're all so complex. We're all so interesting, you know? But when I can spend time diving into something like Susie Kelly's story, where like this crazy technology company identified that her brain had this weakness and targeted her, then I want to spend a bunch of time and share it with
Starting point is 02:09:59 people, right? Because we know it's not just happening to Susie. Yeah. I mean, and it's so sick that that would happen. It was almost if you saw someone who was disabled and somebody, someone had a broken leg and someone kept kicking them in it, you know? Yeah. And, and, and that's, and I do that. I think that's a really good analogy.
Starting point is 02:10:15 And then like they were kicking them because it was making them money. Right. Yeah. And you're like, what are you doing? How are you? And I don't, I don't get it. I'll just tell you that like fundamentally on a personal level, I don't get it. I'll just tell you that fundamentally on a personal level, I don't get it because I couldn't do that. Yeah, that's the thing that's tough. And then sometimes I feel like, am I normal or am I the weirdo that gives a fuck about stuff? You know what I'm saying?
Starting point is 02:10:38 Does that ever cross into your mind? Yeah, dude, it does. It does. And I don't know, I think whatever. I think we're all broken in our own way and whatever my little broken way has made me an investigative journalist. But whatever.
Starting point is 02:10:50 It feels fun though to be Paul Revere, whatever, even though somebody said he was trying to meet men, that's the only reason he was going through town. Is that true? That's what I've heard. But to be that kind of guy who's like, yeah, we've always loved the underdog, dude. We are, you know, like, yeah, we've always loved the underdog dude. We, you know, underdog, that's who you, you want the underdog. Yeah. You know, like everybody's like,
Starting point is 02:11:12 everybody wants a nude picture of like, um, Pam Anderson or something. You know, I wanted a new picture of Aaron Brockovich on my wall, you know? Yeah. Yeah. That was a bad asset. I'm covered a lot of stuff and got a lot of good out there in the world and pretty dying me too. In her time. I'll say that. And I think it's a compliment Aaron, but, um, what else do we have?
Starting point is 02:11:34 Anything else that we wanted to talk about? I don't, I feel like we covered a really good bit night. So we can, people can donate to the center for investigative research reporting. Yeah. So the center for investigative reporting, that's a legitimate company? Yeah, man, it's a legitimate nonprofit. And people can even just check it out. We got a radio show we do
Starting point is 02:11:52 that's just all investigative journalism. Really? Yeah, we print, we work with other folks, and we have the documentary out. I mean, at the end of the day, dude, just trying to get good information into people's hands and call to account people that are targeting other people. If you don't have food, you'll get so caught in the moment.
Starting point is 02:12:09 You don't even have a chance to look ahead at that point. It's going to be moment to moment. I mean, that's totally right. So then it's a wrap. Then, then you're just trying to get food for you and your family and you start doing weirder and weirder stuff. And even people that, you know, do you ever record Mac McCarthy? He wrote like the road.
Starting point is 02:12:27 Yeah, dude. He wrote some real, no country for old men. Yeah. Strange stuff. Super. And I love it. But like, um, the road, he basically breaks it down to like, Oh, are you willing to kill if like, if it comes down to it, would you kill somebody else to
Starting point is 02:12:42 eat them, right? And like, you're a good person if you're willing to just like be like, damn, I'm just going to have to starve to death because I'm not going to murder somebody else to eat them. Or are you going to murder somebody else to eat them? Like kind of bifurcates humanity along that, along that track. Yeah. Uh, and people get weird, man.
Starting point is 02:12:56 People get weird when the basic necessities aren't there. Yeah. You'll say that you wouldn't, right? But you would also say you would now, I wouldn't eat out of a dumpster. There's a dumpster outside right now, I would not go eat out of it, but give me three days without food. Right.
Starting point is 02:13:09 If you're about to eat a dude in best buy, right? Like, yeah, you're going to get out of that dumpster. Oh yeah. Yeah. That's what's crazy. You would eat that alley sashimi baby. You'd eat whatever out of there. Yeah, for sure.
Starting point is 02:13:21 And you'd be, you'd be stoked and dude, you know, like. Yeah. And there's a crepes, that's what I keep yelling. I was going to go forage in with you. Yeah. I'm going to be in just garbage. You'd be like, dude, that's a crepe. And I'd be like, really? I think you got to trick yourself.
Starting point is 02:13:36 It's all crepes. Yeah. Yeah. We'll both just go into like mentally just redesigned, whatever garbage we're eating. Okay. That's a wet napkin. I mean, what are you talking about, brother? Don't tell me that. Yeah, that's a damn.
Starting point is 02:13:47 It's gotta be nutritional value. That's a damn crepe. Nate Halverson, thanks so much. The Grab, it's coming out on Netflix. No, it's coming out on June 14th in theaters. Yeah. And then people can rent it online, and then it'll be on one of the streaming platforms
Starting point is 02:14:03 in the fall. OK. So The Grab, it's coming out on June 14th in theaters. Yeah, it's really interesting, man. Just thought provoking to get me to start thinking like, yeah, what are, cause you just think, Oh, that's just a farm in my neighborhood. Or you just think like, Oh, that's just the way things are. That's just the way things go. You don't sometimes see like maybe the
Starting point is 02:14:26 Chest board that's being put together or that's already been you know, the plays that have already been played Nate Halverson, thanks so much for being an investigator and for spending time with us. Hey Theo. Thanks so much. I'm young man Yeah, you bet man on the breeze and I feel I'm falling like these leaves I must be cornerstone oh but when I reach that ground I'll share this piece of my life out I can feel it in my bones

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