Up First from NPR - Jamie Dimon on Iran, Trump and why he’s optimistic about AI | NPR’s Newsmakers
Episode Date: April 7, 2026In this bonus episode of Up First, we’re sharing the latest episode of NPR’s Newsmakers, featuring Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorganChase, the nation’s largest bank. JPMorgan has a stake in almost ev...erything. But unlike many CEOs, Dimon says it’s his job to speak out on many things. This week, Dimon released his annual letter to shareholders — a document that comments on banking issues and also assesses risks to the economy, from inflation to the war in Iran. The letter asserts his company is ready for anything — noting, among other things, that it has profited during economic booms and also during recessions. In this episode of NPR’s Newsmakers, Dimon tells host Steve Inskeep he didn’t worry much about the way President Trump’s contradictory statements tend to send financial markets sliding and soaring again, saying, “I have to deal with the world I got.” NPR's Newsmakers is where you'll find NPR's biggest interviews. Follow the show wherever you listen to podcasts or subscribe and watch on NPR’s YouTube channel.To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below:See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, this is Steve Inskeep with a special episode of Up First,
a conversation from our sister program, NPR's Newsmakers.
In each episode, we interview some of the most influential people of our time.
You can watch the show on NPR's YouTube channel or search for it wherever you get your podcasts.
Jamie Diamond is the CEO of J.P. Morgan Chase, this nation's largest bank.
He's also connected to many of the wealthy and powerful in New York and here in Washington,
where we spoke with Diamond and the J.P. Morgan offices on the occasion of an annual letter
in which he gives his opinions about almost everything.
Thanks for welcoming us here. It's good to be here.
Thank you. Thanks for coming here.
And I read your letter. It's really compelling.
Yeah, absolutely. Every page. It is more interesting than the average corporate document
because you have opinions on many topics. And that's my first question.
Why do you feel you should as a CEO be speaking out?
out on topics all across the news when you probably could stay silent. Yeah. So it's very important.
So when I do these letters, I think to myself what's important to the company, what's important
to our employees, what's important to our shareholders. I actually make a list of questions,
talk to people. I want to answer the big important questions. And the thing you're asking about
motors about the company, but the last section, which is about America and the world, I always say
it's predicated upon the fact that if America doesn't do well, J.P. Morgan will have a real hard time
doing well and that we have a deep interest in that. And the second reason is that, you know,
policy, we shouldn't, I'm not saying that government can't do it. We shouldn't rely on government
alone. Collaboration works. Collaboration works in Detroit. It worked in World War II. It worked in all
these things. So I think it's good for business to get involved, to bring their expertise to bear to
to help all the citizens of the country. And that helps the country and your company.
Do you assume that the interests of the country are about the same as the interests of your
company? No, but I think that we have common interest.
so that if all of our citizens do better, we'll all do better.
I think a lot of people come to Washington, tons of special-index groups.
I think they're like 17,000 lobbying organizations, and they all fight for them stuff.
I'm kind of more in the camp that we should also fight what's good for the country.
If the country grew faster, we'd all be better off.
And people talk about polarization and things that don't work.
I also think it is our job to lift up all our citizens.
That is what we should do.
We should be civic-minded, not just about ourselves.
And so, and banks have been doing that for years.
You go to, actually a lot of companies have been doing that for years.
As part of just the normal culture, sometimes it's local, sometimes it's national.
The business roundtable here gets involved in public policy that's good for the country.
Not the public policy that's good for banks or private equity or chemical companies or pharmaceutical companies or movie companies.
And I think we need to do more of that.
What's good for the country?
One of many things you comment on is the war in Iran.
You talk about geopolitical risk.
It's right up there.
I know that you've said in recent days that you approve generally of the idea of the idea
of the war to attack a threat in Iran.
I'd like to know, though, what you think of the president's leadership in the war
and particularly his recent threats to bomb Iran back to the Stone Age to use his words.
I'm not going to comment on that, but I want to put this in a broader context.
The most important thing that we can do is make sure the world is safe for democracy.
And it's being challenged today in Ukraine, Iran, North Korea, somewhat by China.
I think that is probably the most critical issue.
what world are we going to have the next 45 years.
This is a part of that.
So I'm not supporting and not supporting.
What I pointed out in my letter is, you know,
people talk about being an imminent threat.
It's not a threat.
They've been killing and murdering innocent people,
including innocent Americans, you know, for 47 years.
They have ballistic missiles that can go 3,000 miles,
and they clearly am trying to develop nuclear capability.
I agree with the concept they can't be allowed to have nuclear capability.
And so that's what I'm saying.
I'm not an expert in it.
I don't know all the choices they have.
I know the military is exceptional.
I don't know what their plan B, their plan C is.
I'm simply pointing out that you've got to look at that risk as being an enormous risk for mankind.
And so I hope we prevail.
And I know it causes other problems in society and the cost of fuel, the cost of oil.
I completely understand that I'm quite sympathetic to that.
But this is a really important subject that has to be properly dealt with eventually.
What are the economic risks, which is your area of expertise,
of the potential destruction of this war.
As we're talking, the president has just had a press conference
and talked about destroying Iranian power plants.
The Iranians have talked about destroying infrastructure and response.
The economic blast radius could even be bigger than it has been.
Yeah, no, so again, I'm simply in morality from some of economics.
I think the morality may be more important than free and safe world may be more important,
and that's hard to understand.
You know, we did that in World War II.
You could pay tremendous sacrifices.
But economically, you know,
There's tons of uncertainty, and I list like tons of them out there, not just these wars,
but obviously they can cause help.
They usually ends up in some form of recession.
You know, recession is unemployment.
It could be stackflation, recession, which is the worst.
It could be, you know, where it pushes inflation down.
It could be short.
I don't know.
It may not happen at all.
So I'm not saying it's going to happen.
I just think it increases the odds of bad economic outcomes.
And we should just be clear-eyed about that.
To be clear-eyed, is there some way to measure the economic damage of this war so far?
I think the best way to look at it so far is that, you know, people here are paying more for gas and might not have paid more for food.
But it ends up in the right place.
You know, you got to look at that quite carefully.
So I don't know yet.
You don't know yet.
I don't know yet.
Do you have in mind a worst case scenario and a best case scenario?
I think the worst case is that somehow we don't get control of the straits or our moves, that we have to back out, that oil and gas, that Iran doesn't give up.
And oil and gas price go even higher today.
That's probably the worst case scenario.
And the best case is that they negotiate something where they don't build nuclear weapons.
The Straits of her moves is opened up, and we go back to a more peaceful world.
Listening to your worst case, I think I hear you saying as a citizen, the United States has to win this, that losing it would be...
I don't want to go that far because you're...
That's putting words to my mouth.
I don't know what all the potential outcomes are, and neither do you.
Fair enough.
We all, after the fact, would be having strong opinions in hindsight.
Even hindsight is not perfect.
I say even in hindsight, you don't know history.
I point out my letter that we're still analyzed
to what happened in World War I.
Without a doubt.
Right.
Without a doubt.
There's a thing that's happening in real time
that's particularly interesting
and that relates to the financial markets.
The president regularly has made statements
about this war and other issues
that have moved the markets.
Now, that's normal.
You've been around a long time.
Every president moves the markets.
But they've been quite sudden, quite frequent,
quite dramatic.
And sometimes there is news,
suggesting that someone profited in the moments when that happened.
What do you think about when you watch that?
Look, I have to deal with the world I got, so I don't spend that much time worrying about it.
I think if people are profiting, that's bad.
I think when the president changes his mind, I don't think it's always a bad thing.
You know, he wants to do X.
It doesn't work that well.
He tries something different.
That's okay.
So I don't look at that as a terrible, terrible thing.
And I think they've learned.
You know, he was president years ago.
He's president.
Now I think they've learned what works and what doesn't work.
And so I hope what he does works.
You know, some of that causes a confusion.
In fact, there's great lesson for those you look at the market.
Like, you can see that words of a president matter.
And, you know, presidents are careful.
This president's less careful.
He's also willing to stand up there, take questions, and change his mind.
What do you think about people who are either profiting in those moments
or frantically buying and selling based on whatever the president just said?
I don't know.
Profiting illegally should be against the law.
For us, any insider information that you trade on,
whether you trade in securities,
we're trading the prediction markets,
we told our people that is against the law.
It's certainly against J.P. Morgan policy.
You know, people who just speculate in those stuff, that's different.
That's just some form of gambling,
and I defend your right to gamble.
You say in this letter, and you've said elsewhere,
the fact that the United States remains the safest investment in the world,
especially in tough times.
that seems true to this day.
And yet at the same time, I as a layman have observed that the interest rate that is charged
on U.S. Treasury bonds has gone up and up and up, several percentage points in the last few years.
Are we collectively doing something that erodes confidence in the United States?
Yeah, again, I want to put this a little bit of context.
And I really do mean I'm about to say to your listener or viewer, if we opened up our borders,
billions of people move here.
They want to be American.
They want to be American because of the values of America.
And if you say it, I'd also mean this true, if you can only invest all your money in one country,
and that's true for anyone around the world, what country would it be?
This country is defended by the Atlantic of the Pacific, our military, the rule of law,
our courts are an unbelievable innovative system.
It doesn't mean it doesn't have flaws.
So when interest rates are going up, generally, there's two, I mean, I hate to overgeneralize,
but it's because some people think they're inflationary pressures, and there are some,
deficit spending, you know, oil, gas, depending how long this war goes on, if it ends quickly,
you know, that can adjust rather quickly.
And then also deficit financing.
You know, we have a lot of deficit financing.
And I think the world looks at that and, you know, questions it.
And then the whole world is doing it, by the way.
You know, our deficit actually happens to be the, I think the largest in the world, like 6% of GDP.
And we're going to eventually have to deal with that.
I don't know if that's going to be a problem.
But I think those are the reasons you have, you know, the dollar, the trend,
year rates going up.
What are the risks if we don't deal with the federal, and we're talking here just for the layman,
the federal budget deficit, the federal government borrowing more every year than they spent.
So, you know, the best way to deal with the problem is to actually deal with the problem,
to acknowledge it, to work on it.
You know, years ago, we had a solution, the Simpson Balls Commission.
It didn't get done.
I wish it had gone done.
It would have been a home run for all of Americans, and it would have resolved some of these issues.
So we have 60% of our spending, I think our spending is like $6 trillion,
it's almost $4 trillion, is set in stone.
It's Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security.
I think we should work on it.
But I don't know, and again, I don't think anyone can predict.
Does it become a real problem in six months, six years?
I don't know.
I do know it will become a problem.
And the way it would exhibit itself is volatile markets, rates going up, you know,
they're kind of the bond vigilantes, the people not want to buy, you know,
United States Treasury will still be the best economy, but there'll be not want to owning U.S.
Treasuries.
So we should deal with it sooner than later.
Maybe.
And if it gets done that way, it'll be kind of crisis management, which we'll get through it.
It's just not the right way to do it.
Maybe you're partly answering that question.
When are we going to know when we've borrowed too much, when we've gone beyond the point of no
return?
Usually rates going up and volatility in the marketplace.
You come to Washington a lot.
You talk with a lot of powerful people.
it seems to me as a layman that people, when they're out of power, are concerned about deficits,
and when they're in power, they cease to be concerned about deficits.
I think there's truth to that.
I mean, this hasn't, neither Democrats or Republicans have really focused on this for a while.
It comes up all the time.
When you talk, I mean, you walk the halls of Congress, I mean, almost everyone knows.
It's just we haven't had the will yet to actually deal with it.
And it's unfortunate because it can end up with a real problem.
Worse than it would otherwise have been.
Good policy is free.
And if we grew with 3% and not 2%,
that number debt-to-deficit was
the deficit start going down
and the debt-to-GDP start going down.
And yet we're saying if the economy grew
a 3% of it.
I think if we had good policy,
which I mentioned in my letter,
what that might be, education
and immigration and certain regulations,
stuff like that, we can grow 3%
we should aspire to 3%.
We could do probably even better than that.
You know, this is the most innovative nation
the world's ever seen.
And so I think we should focus a little
than that to solve the problem too, not just raise taxes or cut expenditures.
I want to ask about another kind of borrowing by private companies, five giant tech firms that are
called the hyperscalers. They're building out data centers and other things for more and more
AI. You note in your letter, they borrowed $450 billion last year. They're borrowing $750 billion
this year. When would we know when that is too much and leading to a crisis? Yeah, it's hard to tell.
So we have, you know, we've had huge investments like that before.
This may be the largest ever.
If you compare it, you know, some of our economies have done that to other, you know,
the interstate highway program and internet or electricity.
Real roads in the-hands.
These are fast.
Now, the total cap-x in the country is like $2.5 trillion.
So it's a big part of that.
It's not unbelievable.
Capital expenditure.
Capital expenditure is how much companies invest in the United States.
And so I don't know.
I don't look, I look at it.
If you look at AI in total, okay, we're not going to know who.
all the winners are, how much is too much, we might overspend a little bit, but AI itself has
huge potential, and the use of it is going up very quickly, very dramatically, and the greater
context of stuff, and I think this is important for the younger viewers here, I think it's going
to cure certain cancers. I think it'll save a lot of people, you know, highway deaths. I think it's
come with composite materials that make planes safer. It may come up, come up with solutions for
pollution and climate. So that is a good thing, and it may reduce the work.
week, you know, 20, 30, 40 years from now. So there's good things. You can also focus on the potential
negative ones. There's both. It's not just one. Of those things you mentioned, the most interesting
one to me was your suggestion that we might have a three and a half day work week someday.
As opposed to firing a lot of people, which is the other scenario, that people would work less
and maybe still be paid or paid the same amount or paid more. But the firing scenario seems like
the most obvious one to a lot of people. What makes you think the shorter work week would be the
way that companies will go? I wouldn't make that the solution. I think that, you know, people
are going to adopt AI to do a better job for the customers. And if it does a better job for the GDP,
the country will grow. I think the risk you're talking about is that, and there are a lot of jobs
out there today, okay, well-paying blue-collar jobs, well-paying white colleges, which are open,
cyber and AI and welding and electric and all things like that. So I think the question we should ask is
what, and most other major technology innovations came in slowly. It took, you know, 10, 15,
20 years for cars and electricity and even the internet.
The internet in total paid off.
It's just you don't know who the winners and losers were, but it didn't change jobs
that much.
If, and I'm saying if this changes jobs too much, here's what we all should do.
We in government, business and government, relocate, income assistance, early retirement,
maybe reduce the work week a little bit, you know, not mandate it, you know, let the system
work.
The system will adjust eventually.
I just think if you look at the history of, you know, developed nations, we went from
working six and a half days a week to six days a week to five and a half days a week to five days a
week to 12 hours a day, 10 hours a day, eight hours a day. I do think that there's a good chance
to be three and a half days a week in many years. They'll be living wonderful lives. And you could
say that in Europe, they're already working four days a week. What do you think about when somebody
says on NPR as they did the other day, one of the risks here, one of the goals here is to replace
almost everybody's job? I don't like that. I don't think that's going to happen. And a lot of jobs are
not replaceable, and you're going to wake up in the morning, you're still going to have to eat
something, and go somewhere, and go hiking and talk to people and need shrinks and all, there are
tons of jobs.
I mean, I just, and even to build these data centers, you're talking about tons of labor,
engineers, people who are building the stuff, cement, steel, servers.
So there's a lot of jobs.
They're building whole towns next to new data centers.
And this will adjust over time.
They really question if it goes too fast to have.
the adjustment we had in prior large technological advances. That's the real question. And we're
starting to really think about which society should do to deal with that if it happens.
Is AI going to eliminate a lot of entry-level jobs? I don't know yet. I don't know because
we're still going to need people who bank clients. So what it may very well do is change
what that entry-level job is. A lot of those entry-level jobs are a lot of paperwork.
Sure. They'll be eliminated. And you can say, well, then you can do it less people. Maybe,
but I also need those people to call in clients.
That job may change.
You know, their job may, IBM is doing something really neat.
They're hiring as many young people, but a lot more of them are AI experts.
They've been using AI kind of their AI native.
They started with AI.
So there may be jobs that were doing so they can train people.
And one day they can go, you know, be the client exact, you know, covering a large global client.
Is something like that happening at JP Morgan?
A little bit.
We've always done what I call redeployment.
And we've always been, you know, jobs that are going up and going down.
We always say, hey, Steve, we really like you.
you know, here's a whole bunch of other jobs.
You know, sometimes there's no fit or you don't want to, you want to retire.
But other times, yeah, we retrain, you move to another job.
So, you know, there are people in our branches who are in the mortgage business.
There are people in the mortgage business used to be in their branches.
There are people who want to do different things.
So one of the things that Jay Moore and do is offer you great opportunities in life.
You know, in the United States, sometimes around the world.
And I think people, the next generation will probably have a lot more jobs, changes in their career than we've had in ours.
There is a line in your letter that I want to try to decipher for someone like me.
I think you're telling me that asset prices, things like stocks and real estate and so forth,
are grossly overpriced.
The actual language is that they're more valuable relative to the economy than they were before the 2008 financial crisis.
What's happening?
Yeah, there are a lot of ways to measure asset prices.
So one is PE ratio, price to earnings ratios.
One is the total, in Warren Buffett's favorite, one is the total value of stock.
to the GDP. I put something like that in my letter. What I said is they're at the hot,
they're not as high as they've ever been, but they're in that upper 15% or something like that.
And then credit spreads for debt are kind of low. They're not the lowest they've ever been.
So what I'm pointing out is that that is not in and of itself bad, but it creates a risk
if things go south. That's what I'm pointing out, that, you know, you're going to have a quick,
quicker adjustment asset prices. Do I need to be prepared for my pension fund or my home value
to go down drastically? I think you should always. I think you should always
be intelligently invested. I mean, you know, if you're 100% in stocks, I'd say, yeah, you should
have something and something more concerned. I'm a little more concerned. I have, you know, short-term
investments. And I obviously have a lot of J.P. Morgan. But, you should always be thoughtful about
how you invest your money. And you should always not assume it's going to go up forever,
go down forever. You know, people make mistakes when they overreact, when they over-concentrate,
you know, like buy five stocks. Yeah. So. You also say,
cities need to compete. Yeah. And you're, you know, you.
You've said this before, but what is distinct here is that you name exactly one city.
It's your hometown, New York City, and you talk about their high tax rates.
What, if anything, is your message to your mayor, Zoran Mamdani?
Yeah, it wasn't meant just for him.
It was answering a question.
I get asked by a lot of people.
You know, we just built a new headquarters there, which is extraordinary, and we try to take
very good care of our people.
Individuals compete, cities compete, companies compete, countries compete.
That is not me guessing.
That is the truth.
And when I grew up, when I was younger, you know, Singapore was in a great city.
London wasn't a great city.
You know, Nashville wasn't a great city.
Detroit was.
And I was reminded that in New York City, 60 of the Fortune 500, they had 120, 60 left in the 70s.
This is a bad time for the city.
They're going bankrupt.
But today, New York City's got some wonderful things.
And if I was any mayor, I'd make a list of strains and weaknesses.
You know, it's got arts, it's got Broadway, it's got restaurants, it's got,
It's a melting pot. It's got brains. It's got financial. It's got media. All great. It also has the highest individual rates, the highest corporate rates, the highest estate tax rates. And that tends to drive people out if you want to be competitive. So it's people vote with their feet. And then I point out in there that this happened before. It's happened to other cities. It's happening to California in general today. And that's not because that's not a moral statement. That's an actual, what's actually happening and why is it happening. And so, you know, that's what people should do is think about those things. And any,
mayor should think about how you fix that. And most of what mayors have to worry about is sanitation,
crime, schools, hospitals, things like that that make living standards better for the people of the
city. Have you spoken, read the opportunity to speak with Mayor, Mom Donnie, about this? He wants to
raise taxes further. Yeah, let him do what he wants. I mean, he can try. He can do what everyone,
whatever his rights are. I'm not going to worry about it. He say hello to you? Does he
reach out? I have not. I spoke to him right after he got elected. You know, if he wants to call me,
I'd be happy to help figure out how he can do things.
It doesn't mean I'm going to agree with him.
I'm interested in what you think of the results so far in that Mamdani has not raised taxes.
He certainly tried.
He just hasn't gotten it done yet.
But it seems that services are getting done.
There are all kinds of stories about potholes being filled.
How's he doing?
I don't know yet.
I'm going to reserve my judgment in that.
And I just also I want to point, my real loyalty is to my country, not to my city.
Okay.
So I'm a New Yorker by birth.
I'm a Yankee fan.
But I'm not going to do bad things for my country because of my city.
I just want to be a little careful about that because very well people say,
how come you not I'm more loyal?
Well, there's a lot of reasons.
I'm much more loyal to my country.
You also point out that you now, as a company, have more employees in Texas than in New York.
Yeah.
Why?
Because they're hugely hospitable.
And, you know, Florida is going on.
You see a lot of people moving to Texas and Florida, both individuals and companies.
And so Texas is a melting pot.
When I first started working in Texas, it didn't have opera.
It didn't have the restaurants it has today.
It didn't have, you know, it's got some wonderful universities.
And then it's conducive to business.
The mayor calls you up.
You need a big plot of land.
They'll change the bus lanes for you.
They do a whole bunch of things.
And I think their tax rates are very low, both corporate and individual.
So people want to work there.
And so that's why.
Could you envision your company doing as Elon Musk's has and relocating the headquarters to Texas?
I would do whatever's right for my company.
You would abandon that tower.
I would do whatever's right for my company.
I'm not saying I abandoned the tower.
I'm just saying I don't think our headcounted
that dramatically that we wouldn't fill that tower.
But it couldn't 10 or 15 years.
You know, people, bad things happen.
I mean, you know, we had, you know,
I remember, you know, Detroit, the unemployed hit 25%.
You know, the population went from 2 million to 700,000.
You know, and again, and this new mayor
has done an unbelievable job.
Mayor Duggan, what he did to save that city is extraordinary.
And it was all collaboration, business, civic society, schools, teaching people, advanced
manufacturing, getting anyone who can help them.
It should be studied.
They should write case studies about it.
He turned the city by that attitude.
I was running for a governor of Michigan on an independent ticket.
You recently put out a thing about the American dream.
Saying that your company wanted to support that.
I don't want to make you talk all about it again, but it's everything from homeownership
to improving health care.
But I'd like a basic definition from you.
Yeah.
What is it?
What is the American dream?
Yeah.
And I also point out to kind of a universal dream, home ownership, health, jobs, skills, wages, less crime.
That's the American dream.
That's the dream for most people who have a good life, you know, and a safe life.
And so, and we've always been financing the American dream.
Small business formation, there are 30 million small.
all businesses in this country. We bank $7 million. So fortunately in that. And the reason it's so
important is that it has freight for a lot of people. And I think it's wrong. I mean, I think it's part of our
job to say, what did we do wrong? A third of the population or 25 percent, their wages effectively
didn't go up like everybody else was for years. And almost for 15 or 20 years, depending on how you
look at it. And a lot of those folks also go to neighborhoods where their schools don't work.
So most of the people, a lot of neighbors, their schools work fine. Their neighborhoods have more crime.
they have less social outcome.
So what do you do?
And so what I try to be is, here's what we are going to do.
Here's what we're going to do for small business.
But I give three really important suggestions there.
Okay.
One is schools.
I think schools should be a value.
I'm talking about high schools, community colleges, and even colleges,
on outcome, the outcome being, what job do you get and kind of what does it pay?
And because you could teach kids.
I give one example, but there are hundreds around the country where there are kids
and not far from my group, Jackson, Ice Queens,
their kids go to aviation high school, high school,
they teach you how to maintain a Cessna aircraft.
They travel sometimes one or two hours each way, by subway.
Their mom and dads want them to go,
and they learn how to maintain the hydraulic system,
electrical system, the engine system of Cessna.
95% graduate making $75,000 plus a year.
They could be 17 years old.
That's what they should be doing.
So way, way back, when a school taught you how to read and write,
that kind of was the ticket.
So now it's not.
You know, so we have to, and there's schools in cyber and aviation, program management,
hotel administration, tons of these things that people are going to need.
So outcomes.
They should be certificates.
They should count for college degrees.
They should do all those various things.
That would be an unbelievable thing to drive jobs, skills, and wages.
Is the economy almost moving too quickly for education to be organized that way?
No, no, because I think if you were, we already spend a trillion dollars or something in K to 12.
So I would say, so every high, if you were a principal of a,
a high school, you should be thinking every year, what should I add and which should I subtract.
So now you may be saying, I need less coding, but I need more cyber. I need more AI. Because of all
these building we're doing, we need more skilled trades. Unions do an excellent job teaching people
skilled trades. Those jobs, 100,000 a year, $120,000 year. And they're not pounding just nails in.
They're actually managing equipment. If you go to these, I've been to some of these advanced
manufacturing schools, you know, you and I would have to spend the 12 weeks how to manage that
a piece of machine tooling thing.
And so, no, that's what they should be doing.
That is their job.
And so the second thing I suggest in there is the earning of tax credit.
Yeah.
If you are a single parent making, I think, $18,000 a year, the government gives you $7,000
at the end of the year.
And if you, with two children, if you have no children, they give like $600, I would get
rid of the child requirement.
I would probably double the earning income tax credit.
If you were making 18, the government will give you a 14.
I would make it more like a negative income tax.
It comes in monthly.
And the reason I like it so much is you give the money
that people directly who need it.
It's not going through government programs, lecturing you,
what you should be doing with it.
For the most part, it's going to be used to help their families, schools,
health, tutoring, you know, fixing the car, all those things.
It'll be spent locally.
So it'll actually be spent in those neighborhoods that need some of the help.
Yeah.
And it has great social outcomes.
Every study you ever read, less recidivism, less crime, less suicide, less depression, more household formation, and you're sending people to work.
So I think it would actually be a home run.
And Paul Ryan supports it, Democrats support, Republican support.
I just, I think it would be better than most of the programs.
So I'm thinking as you're talking of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, your fellow New Yorker who has been on NPR.
It was last year.
and she said a lot of people feel increasingly that everything is a scam, that they're being ripped off.
What would you say to people who think that the people you deal with, people in your class,
the very successful, wealthy people in this country, have lost sight of the national interest,
are not taking care of the country?
Yeah, I think that's kind of a broad statement.
It's a broad statement, but it's made in both parties in different ways.
Well, I think there are people who don't care.
I mean, there are people who don't care who are not wealthy, and people who don't care who are wealthy.
I personally don't like those kind of people.
So, you know, I don't think that proportion is that different than it was 10 years ago or 40 years ago, 80 years ago.
And the other thing, which I always point out is that it's very often people look at quote capitalism and say, well, these are bad, greedy people.
But there are bad greedy people in communism.
Sure.
In socialism.
They're in every institution.
I'm not supporting it.
I think it's bad.
It's not the reason we have flaws.
We have a lot of flaws.
Like I can point out policy flaws.
I already mentioned education.
I make a whole list of permitting certain regulations, hurt mortgages.
The regulates hurt mortgages, and I would agree with AOC, I hope you can help me on this.
If we fix those regulations, mortgages would be a lot more affordable for $200,000 home.
If we fix some of the affordable housing stuff and you could build more affordable homes,
you'd create a lot more homes, starter homes.
The people would buy those homes, would be able to get a mortgage,
and they'd be leaving rental units, you know, which would reduce the price of
rental for the people who need the rental. And so there's so many things we can do to make this country
better, faster, healthier, and help everybody. I want to note that you turned 70 recently.
Yeah. Is there something you've learned in those many years that you wish you knew when you were 30,
say? I'm, I grew up with the same values. You know, my parents, my grandparents were weak immigrants,
didn't finish high school. The values were to have a purpose in life. Treat everyone well. Do the best you can.
Leave the world a better place.
And that hasn't changed.
Obviously, I've learned some stuff like when I was 30, like anger doesn't help.
Okay?
Like making big decisions on a Friday when you're tired is a really bad idea.
So I can give you tons of lessons like that.
I always call them lessons learned and relearns.
You still make some of those mistakes, unfortunately.
You said a purpose.
What's your purpose?
To make the world a better place.
You know, I, you know, and purpose, when they say on the cover of annual report this year,
It's the 250th anniversary, the Statue of Liberty, American Flag,
life liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
When they said the pursuit of happiness, they didn't mean happiness like we mean happiness.
Oh, are you happy?
Do you feel good?
They meant purpose.
That purpose could be an artist, politician, reporter, you know, business person.
You could be just a caregiver, a mother.
You know, there's a great op-ed that someone wrote that who would receive the Medal of Honor
saying 50 years later they realized that some of those people who day in and day out
helped other human beings that they are the real heroes, that they never gave up.
And they did it through, you know, health and sickness and things like that.
So that's the purpose.
You made the world a better place in the way you can contribute.
Jamie Diamond, it's a pleasure talking with you again.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Pleasure was mine. Thank you.
All right.
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