All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E12: Biden wins, Pfizer vaccine, markets rip, Trump's next act, COVID endgame scenarios & more
Episode Date: November 11, 2020Follow the crew: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/...allinpodcast Show Notes: 0:00 Besties reflect on the election night special, comparing Trump's case to Al Gore's in 2000 4:44 Was this election devastating for extreme-ism in politics? 12:13 Pfizer vaccine, withholding the vaccine from the political news cycle 21:54 COVID endgame scenarios 28:45 Public markets ripping, gridlock great for the economy 34:43 Analyzing exit polls, death of identity politics 50:57 Biggest loser of the election: Journalism 57:43 When will Trump concede? What will his next move be? 1:07:37 San Francisco's collapse - will it eventually go bankrupt?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everybody welcome to another all in podcast. This is an all bestie. No guestie episode of all in the last time you heard from the besties
It was election night and it was a shitsho a
Fucking crazy shitsho. Let's be honest. I mean we if we go back and look at that historical document
I mean, if we go back and look at that historical document, we had moments where we thought Trump was going to absolutely crush,
then we had moments of confusion.
And now here we are.
And I think we have to give a couple of bestie kudos to first off,
Chimoff, pointing out Pennsylvania was going to be big.
And then second, when we went through
the possible scenarios of who, what could possibly happen, a big giant blue wave, Trump
winning it all. And then maybe something in the middle option three came through. And
that was sacks who nailed it. I think that was your... The soft...
The assumption, sax, the soft landing.
The soft landing, yeah.
So why don't we just for the people
who didn't tune in live?
Sorry, Jason, can I ask you a question?
Saxipoo, Saxipoo, was that your...
Like projection or was it from that guy
who lives in his dad's basement?
His mom's basement, you brought it from. My researcher. Well lives in his dad's basement? His mom raised me. But you brought me to the front.
My researcher.
Well, Newman works for me.
So, he, uh,
Newman,
Newman,
yeah,
Newman, uh,
Newman and I worked, worked together on, on those takes.
But yeah, the, the, the, the take that we thought was, was possible,
but probably unlikely, but could represent a really good scenario was the,
the soft landing,
where you get
a split decision.
And I think that's what the American people voted for.
You know, you had the Democratic frame on the election was that we needed a return to
normalcy and decency.
The Republican frame was that the radical left cannot be trusted with power.
And voters basically said they were both right.
They sort of surgically removed Donald Trump while thwarting the radical left's dream of
total control in Washington.
And what the electorate seems to be saying is they want the parties now to work together
instead of voting for extreme ideology.
But TBD sex, I mean, Georgia still up for grabs.
They're going to go after it hard, right?
They filed in Pennsylvania.
Yeah, so I think there's a series of court challenges we can talk about. to go after it hard, right? They filed in Pennsylvania.
Yeah, so I think there's a series of court challenges
we can talk about.
I think that they're unlikely to prevail very, very unlikely.
I think Joe Biden will be the next president.
We can kind of compare this to Bush v. Gore from 2000.
And if you want to compare Trump's case to Gore's case, it's weaker in every
respect. I mean, first of all, with Bush v. Gore, Gore only had to overturn one state,
which was Florida, whereas Trump has to now contest and overturn three or four states simultaneously.
Second, you know, Gore was within a few hundred votes of Bush. It was extremely close.
Trump is no closer than about 12,000 votes in Georgia. That's the closest one. Third, you know, Gore, or Bush never
trailed Gore in any recount and Trump has that problem that he's never, and he's very
far behind Gore as well. So you look at those three things and you'd say you know gore couldn't overcome it
and he had a closer situation than this and of course
i'd say finally you know a w had uh... the velvet hammer james baker working
for him whereas
trump frankly has rudy juliani
who's throwing press conferences in the parking lot of forces and
escaping
uh... between a a dildo shop and a crematorium.
And I mean, you can't make this stuff up. I think somebody somebody was tweeting, you know, it's this perfect because, you know,
they were saying they wanted Rudy to fuck off and die.
So it was so appropriate that this press conference was held between a dildo shop
and a crematorium.
So, you know, it's not exactly the A team that Trump's got playing for him
here in the courts, but I mean, David Bosse, by the way, David Bosse, who is in charge
of the whole thing, David Bosse is not even a lawyer. And then he gets COVID. So now he's
on the sidelines. I mean, just there's so many angles we can take here, including the fact that,
am I correct that Trump's campaign advisor got COVID
like the day after, or is it not an a mark matter?
Keep a staff, keep a staff got it.
But David Bossy, who's in charge
of this whole recount process got COVID as well.
Okay, so I wanna just shift us now now to what could have so many things went
right for the Democrats. But there was also something very clear here that happened, which is
the what I call the HSP, the Historical Socialist Party of America. I think was dealt a death blow.
of America, I think was dealt a death blow. If you look, this was very close. And so, you know, even if we want to talk about the electoral college, et cetera, these are still very
low numbers. I believe if the Pfizer news comes out last week, Trump wins, or if any combination of AOC burning or Warren were in any way involved in this election process
and Warren pushed to the side, the squad was squashed because we knew that if they got any kind of
play, Trump sells into victory. So when we look at what happens going forward,
and I'll let anyone of the three of you take this, what does this say about the hysterical,
socialist party, the HSP, the squad, the Bernie bros, what does this say about them?
Well, you have a, you have a look, you have a, you have a loud group of people on both sides.
And the reality is that both extremes of both parties actually after this election have
very little to stand on, that's unique.
Because if you think about what the plurality of Americans want is actually just a common
decent centrist,-no-harm alternative,
and they're going to pick that more times than they're not going to pick it. It's only
when things get extreme like in 2016 in order to send a message, will they do it? And
until it's resolved, they tried to do it again now, so we should actually talk about that.
I don't think that this was a runaway, it was way too close on too many dimensions
that actually matter for the future prosperity of America. But that being said, what does
it mean for the future? I think the future is like a peep-buttagech must be high-fiving
the people in his camp right now because a common, decent, thoughtful, centrist platform
will win. For example, like, let's just say you believe in gay rights.
Guess what?
You don't need to be at the fringes to believe in that.
That's mainstream.
You believe in like a reasonable form of health here.
That's mainstream.
If you believe in climate change, it's mainstream.
You start to go and tick off the things
that the extremes would want to believe.
There's very little room for them to stand on.
So one party is going to be basically about like a federalized nanny state and the other
party will be a bunch of conspiracy theorist crazies.
And I think it's going to force more and more people to the middle.
I think that's the future.
To me, that's a much safer place to be than I think where we could have been if Trump
had won or if the extreme left had basically been validated with the candidate that one.
Right, and I would add to that, the proof of that, the proof of the electress desired
attacked towards the center is you look at the down ballot elections.
So in the Senate, the Republicans are still holding onto majority, pending the Florida runoff.
But the Democrats failed to take out Susan Collins, Tom Tilla, Steve Daines, these were
three incumbent Republicans who were way behind in the polls hanging into election day.
They didn't come close to taking out Lindsey Graham or Mitch McConnell despite spending
two million dollars.
How did Lady G get out of this one alive?
Explain that.
Susan Collins?
No, Lady G. Lindsey Graham. Oh, I see. You know,
Lindsey Graham, they said that it was neck and neck and he actually ended up winning that
state by like 14 points. It wasn't close. The polls were wildly off. And you saw that across
across the board in the House, too, Democrats expected a gain of 10 to 15 seats. Instead,
they've lost about 10 seats. They failed to defeat a single GOP incumbent. The GOP House members ran about two or three
points ahead of President Trump. And then the Democrats were completely shut out in
Texas, which was supposed to be going purple. There were eight open GOP seats. Democrats
won none of them. So this, you know, so anyway, I'm providing some support to the idea
that this was a split decision election.
The voters voted to remove both of the,
or to vote it against the extremes of both parties.
So Friedberg, when you look at this,
you see, I think an absolute,
just people don't wanna deal with Trump anymore.
And how much of this do you think is Trump to arrangement system, uh, syndrome and what
got Trump into office eventually taking him out, which is the guy just takes up too much
oxygen in the room.
And that's coming from me.
And the guy is just incredibly annoying to have to deal with day to day.
That's also coming from you.
And that's also coming from you.
Freeberg, what do you mean?
I think we've been at a rave for four years and everyone's coming down from the Mollie
and you're not going to go to a Maryland Manson concert right after being at a rave.
You want to go sit in the parking lot and you just want to chill out a little bit and
we all just want to have have a beer and relax,
you know, like, I mean, I think that's it.
I need some five HGP and a banana.
You just, yeah, you want to go sit
the 7-Eleven parking lot and four in the morning,
and you want to like go get a fucking sweet cappuccino,
smoke a cigarette and relax.
Like, it's been, it's been too much.
And I think it's like, everyone's just kind of ready
to chill out a bit.
And so this whole fucking swinging back to the,
to the concert across the road sounds just as bad
as what we've just been through.
So let's just, you know, let's just live our lives
a little bit.
And you know, we'll come back in four years
and figure out how to fuck things up again.
I think that's kind of the psyche.
That's right.
I think voters won a presidency they can forget about.
You know, I think Trump's sort of Achilles heel is he demanded too much of the voters constant
time and attention.
There was like this psychic cost to it.
It obviously antagonized the other side and drove turnout for the Democrats, but it seems
like voters are saying, look, just leave us alone.
We want to just forget about what's happening in Washington for four years.
And now they can, because you know, pending the Georgia runoff, it looks like Mitch McConnell and Joe Biden will have to be in a power sharing
arrangement. And nothing gets done unless the two of them agree.
And by the way, just on that, there was a great tweet by Paul Graham. He said the day after
the election, something to the effect of, it feels like some background process in my
computer had was just killed. That was consuming 5% of my CPU.
And it's so true.
Like that weird thing, that mac operating system spinning wheel of death.
But it's, David, it's so right.
It's like, you know, it's been this omnipresent thing in all of our lives over the last four
years.
And it's just exhausting.
And, you know, there wasn't that much value that came from paying so much attention
and worrying so much.
And so it's just a great opportunity
to come off the sugar high
and reset ourselves and take a nap.
I think that's a very astupoint,
Tremoff and that.
What was gained from this Trump derangement,
from this Trump sucking all of the attention
and constantly tweeting.
And I think the big win here, freeburg, is,
if you look, the proof is in the pudding.
Trump, we find out on Saturday morning
that Trump has lost and Biden has won.
And 48 hours later, we find out Pfizer has 90% efficacy
on their vaccine.
Obviously, these two things are highly correlated.
Biden has already delivered the vaccine in just 48 hours.
And then today, we got the rapid testing
has been approved by the FDA.
I mean, look at this.
If at this rate, Biden's going to cure global warming by the end of
the day.
Look, first off, I think it's a little, it is pretty paradoxical that the vaccine news
came 48 hours.
Yeah, and it's paradoxical.
I mean, that was crazy.
I mean, you know, there's supposed to be
a noctober surprise, not an November surprise.
I think if Trump has any legitimate argument
about being done dirty in the selection,
it is over this vaccine news because, you know,
the Chinese announced it three hours
after Biden's declared president,
Pfizer announces it a day after Biden's declared president.
I mean, you know, when Trump went around this,
the, you know, was campaigning saying a vaccine
was mirror weeks away.
I've never thought that was bullshit,
but as it turns out, he was selling the truth.
And if those guys had announced it,
Jason, like you're saying two weeks before the election,
it might have changed this thing.
But you guys might have 100% and this is not something
he can go to the courts.
It's not like he can go to the courts
and get the election recounted can go to the courts. It's not like he can go to the courts and get the
Election recounted overturned because of this so it's not something that's legally actionable But I do think that on this news alone Trump in four years will be able to claim on some level that this was a stolen election
But couldn't the same be said about Hillary's email server, right? So like one
I used came out like oh and it was like timed around the election.
And I do think that there was a concerted effort
to not let, you know, the progress with COVID
get in the way of the election in any way, you know,
biased it either way.
And I think it was like pretty reasonable and fair to say,
like, let's just not make this part of the news cycle
leading into the election.
And this was expected, like, if you guys go back
a couple of podcasts, like, you had go back a couple of podcasts like you had a prediction
on when we would have a vaccine,
I think I predicted end of September
because of the way that they set up the production cycle
in parallel with the testing cycle
and the way that they were fast-tracking a lot of the testing
and a way that wasn't normal for this sort of a development.
And it was gonna happen this fall.
If I'm an executive at one of these companies,
I don't want my vaccine to become a politicized event, right?
Like I just wanna be like,
I think it's the reasonable thing to say,
like let's just put it on hold,
let's deal with it all after the election.
We're still moving forward.
We're not holding anything up in terms of production
and getting the Stank Cross of Finish line.
It's just the announcement of where we are.
So why make that part of the new cycle, you know?
And I think like people learn their lesson with Hillary's server last time.
It's like this one new, you know, bombshell drops and the new cycle spins up and she loses
the election.
Everyone blames her losing the election for that coming out.
No one wants to be culpable for that, right?
I'm a Pfizer exec.
I'm just trying to make fucking medicine.
Like, I don't want to be on the hook for-
Set another way.
Somebody wants to go to election. medicine. Like, I don't want to be on the hook for set another way. Some of my fingers are losing an election.
I said another way, Chimoff, nobody wants to go to a warriors finals game
versus the Lakers and have the refs called, you know, decide the game
in the final couple of minutes.
So do you think Chimoff?
This is if you were running Pfizer, if you were on the board of Pfizer and you have this information
and you know it can come out in this two week window at any time, what decision would you make
Chimoff? Well, just imagine that the vaccine was 90% ineffective and it was announced two weeks
before the election. You'd have an entire cohort of people saying this was meant to basically sabotage the election in the other direction. So the point is it's a no-win situation. The
only answer is to wait until after the election because that's the only way
that you can actually say, you know, we were not... we were being impartial. So I'm
sympathetic to this idea that all the news had to wait two or three days,
or maybe it was two or three weeks. Now, knowing in advance what the answer was, obviously,
you can read into that. But I think even if it was 90% ineffective, it should have waited
till after the election as well. I don't get the sense that you do agree with that, Saks.
Well, let's put this way.
I mean, we know from our time working in large companies that it takes them weeks to even
approve a press release.
And so Pfizer had this news weeks ago.
Now I understand their reason for not wanting to appear to be influencing the outcome of
the election.
So that's why they held on to it.
I think everybody saw the way that Facebook was scapegoated four the outcome of the election. So that's why they held on to it. I think everybody
saw the way that Facebook was scapegoated four years ago for the election and no one wants to
no corporation wants to put themselves in that position of being accused of affecting the election
outcome one way or another. I'm sure that's why they did it as opposed to a conspiracy against Trump,
but you know this news was available. I think we will find out weeks ago. And
so I guess you would have to blame or there'd be some capability on the part of Trump's election
team or, you know, his head of the FDA or what have you. They must have known some of this
information and you would think they would have done a better job getting it out there.
No, he did say it every rally. It's just around the corner.
It's just around the corner where we're rounding the corner.
And we all thought it was bullshit.
You thought it was bullshit.
We thought it was bullshit, right?
And you know why we thought it was bullshit?
Well, because Trump does have a tendency towards hyperbole.
Hyperbole?
On Trump's most honest day, he's hyperbolic.
On Trump's average day, he is lying incessantly.
So if anything, if he was right,
and he was right that we were turning the corner
and the vaccine was coming
and it was gonna be beautiful,
a beautiful, perfect vaccine
and everybody was gonna get it.
He's paying the price for being a liar for four years.
Right, but it's the kind of thing
where no boy who cried wolf.
Well, and so does the media, by the way, but it's the kind of thing you know. No boy who cried wolf. Well, and so does the media by the way,
but yeah, look, in order for a piece of news this big
to be believed before the election,
it can't come from a candidate.
And it's pretty amazing that none of this news got out
there through some other source.
You would think that some of the people
on the healthcare task force that Trump appointed might have been surfacing this or paying attention
to it.
Maybe Pfizer did a really good job of hiding it, I don't know, but it is pretty amazing
that it didn't come out sooner.
Well, the other crazy thing is, even the Pfizer team didn't exactly know what was going
on.
The head of vaccine research, she said, we're not part of the federal government's
warp speed program. And then two days later Pfizer was like, actually, we are part of the warp speed
program. It's just that we're a supplier. The whole point is that I'm not sure that Pfizer actually
knew two weeks in advance, David. I think that they were probably trickling stuff
together and they probably had a sense of it at the end of the last week. I'm surprised
it didn't leak to be quite honest. That's the more shocking thing, which means that it was
probably something that very, very, very few people knew about.
Well, the CEO put out a statement saying that he would be first in line to take the new
vaccine, which I thought was great statement because a lot of people were questioning whether
how real it was or how rushed it was.
But in order for him to do that, in order just to get a press release announced, I don't
think that's the kind of thing that comes together in the, you know, one or two day period between the announcement of Joe Biden winning the
election and their announcement. So, you know, I just think they had to know weeks ago.
I just want to say to my Greek brother, Alberto Borlaus, the CEO of Pfizer, a great Greek who has led to the saving of the world.
Oopah, Kranis, Saginaki is on me.
If you take a 90% efficacy and you assume that most in the United States 40% of people will
take the actual vaccination, you'll have 36% of the population covered, which is still not
enough to get the R0 less than one.
Is that correct, Freeberg?
What do you think?
I don't know.
I'm not an epidemiologist.
I'd have to.
What, I mean, does it sound directionally correct to you that?
I don't know. I don't know if the states are going to take it. I mean, I think I think I think it does it sound directionally correct to you that?
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know if the states are gonna take it.
I mean, I think I think I think I know
to take it, isn't this like a?
Oh, the everyone is high risk will take it.
Yeah, and as of about two months ago,
you know, it was estimated that 30% of people
on the East Coast had already developed
immunity due to the CiroPropvelin studies
that showed antibodies.
On the West Coast, it was much
lower, closer to 3%. You could estimate based on the growth in cases since then, and assuming we're
kind of missing a bunch, we're probably on a national basis, we're at 10% back then. On a national
basis, you're probably up to 20% right now of Americans have already been effectively immunized
by getting the virus. So, you know, if that's true, then you're at 55%,
and you're getting pretty close to, you know,
an ability to kind of inhibit this thing from,
from spreading rapidly again.
So, how do we each feel?
I'll just go around the horn.
How do we each feel about the COVID-19 end game?
When will we see all schools open,
all NBA arenas open with no distancing,
give us a quarter in 2021 when in America,
enough vaccines will have been delivered and distributed
and rapid testing, that life goes back to, let's call it,
85% of normal.
I don't think you ever get there.
I mean, it's like, we talked about this a couple episodes ago,
but it's after 9-11, you know, the TSA emerged
and American travel never went back to the way it was before.
And I think there'll be a lot about the way we live
that's gonna be, you know, kind of permanently scarred and permanently changed here for a while.
Whether it is taking people's temperatures at football games, wearing masks and, you know, farmers markets, who knows?
There's going to be all these weird rules they're going to pop up. They're going to last for years.
Regardless of how much immunization takes place, regardless of how cheap and available testing is,
we're going to have this scar for a long time in terms of how we live as a society.
I don't think we should kid ourselves that we're going to go back to quote unquote normal.
And I do think kids are going to get tested and schools are going to be like this friggin,
you know, almost like TSAs now.
You know, kids are going to go into school and get tested regularly and they're going to do all sorts of stuff that we would have never dreamed
imaginable in a free country a year ago.
And I think that's permanent.
I think, you know, we're going to, you're already seeing people go nuts at bars and restaurants
and people that have had it or out there partying and living their life again.
So there's certainly a lot of people.
But with the don't you think if you get the vaccine, you're just going to be like,
Yolo, I've had enough of this.
Yeah, but I don't think that that systems
are going to change back to normal.
I think systems have changed to the point
that we've now got a way of living that we think is safer,
that we think is we are now kind of
inhibited because of the system.
And if you agree.
Yeah, there'll be a lot fewer,
is what Dave Chappelle said on Saturday. There'll be a lot fewer mass shootings.
The pandemic is on a great job of keeping the whites at home.
We watched it. Oh, you
fuck. We had to forecast these watched it together. All you all you guys
go on your mass shooting red pages, you know, the whites are at
home. They're frustrated, but they're at home. Thank God. So I think
there'll be some advantages. Well, I mean, but let's talk about it, Jamal. Does 2021 mean kids go back to school?
2021 September? No problem. No, I think freeburgers, right? I think that the best we'll get back to
is sort of this 80% state. And I don't think it happens until probably 2022. And maybe 2023,
but probably 2022. Because you have to remember, like like we have to ramp up now billions of vaccine
production like it's say this is a non-trivial pattern here to quote unquote mass market and
that takes a long time I think we have to figure out how we're going to administer it by the way
it's and the way that the Pfizer vaccine works and maybe these other folks is you get the shot
and then you know three months three weeks, I think you get a boost stroke.
So you have to take two cycles of this thing.
And it's not going to last forever.
And it's not going to last forever.
So this is freeberg's right.
It's the beginning of a very different way of living.
I think that the good part about it
is that we've made a lot of changes
that makes our lives a lot more efficient.
The bad part about it is we're even more detached
from our neighbors and we're probably even more likely
to be a little bit more separated
if we don't make an effort to be together.
Sacks, do you buy this?
Because I get the sense that you might be more optimistic
than free bird, cha-cha-mah.
I guess I am.
I think COVID is going to be a distant memory by next summer.
I think we'll have one to two quarters of transition, but I think that once the vaccine's
widely available, plus the treatment of the testings for the people who slip through
the cracks, yeah, I tend to think things are going to snap back very fast.
And COVID will just be this bad memory,
a very distant bad memory.
And I think in fact, I think things may bounce back
the other way.
Everyone having been cooped up and afraid
of getting some life-threatening illness
are gonna come out of this.
Really wanting to party.
I think the whole world's gonna be like Tel Aviv
for a few months or something. And yeah, I mean, I really do think it's going to bounce back. I think
to the point politically, where a few years from now, people could ask, wait, why was it
again that Trump lost, you know, you know, this COVID thing will be, it will be so in the
rearview mirror that we'll wonder why we are so afraid of it. I think this is, I'm going to go with David's sacks as position here because of the simple fact
that we had 130,000 confirmed cases, you know, up until this election period the last week or so.
And deaths still not spiking. It's just a minor uptick. You know, we had a day with like, I think maybe 1500,
but still staying in that, you know, a thousand range,
even with cases spiking.
And I think that we were so incompetent
with test and trace in this country
that we didn't see exactly what happens
in an authoritarian country or a country that is lucky enough to be
in Ireland and has easy borders, which we almost do.
I mean, we basically have two borders.
We're like two thirds of, you know, 50% island, but Hawaii, Taiwan, Japan, and Australia,
all quarantine people on the way in.
They tested them and they had extremely, extremely low
death counts and extremely low case counts.
With the vaccine being half as effective as, you know, they claim end rapid testing, which
some of us have no, some of us know people who have experienced rapid testing at homes,
that combination, I believe, is going to make this go so low.
And the people who are high risk are still going to be scared staying home.
I think like David, come the summer of next summer,
people are going to be at a rave with freebergs, you know, custom made
Molly or whatever he's making during this
downtime going absolutely bonkers. I think Burning Man next year becomes like
the the greatest Burning Man ever. It'll be it'll be the burn of of of all burns.
Why was let's shift a bit over to the economy.
What a rip, did we see when that Pfizer,
I mean, the election and Pfizer this week,
let to a huge rip, obviously,
there's a little bit of cyclical movement,
the tech stocks were the big winners.
Now people are starting to buy Disney back up to 140,
I guess people assume the parks will reopen.
What's our outlook for the stock market in David Saxx's scenario three?
I don't say gridlock government, but forced to compromise government.
What do we think the markets look like the next two years?
I think you have to go ahead, Saxx, I don't know.
I was going to say gridlock is great for the markets,
but both when Bill Clinton was president
with a Republican house and when Obama was president,
and there is a Republican house,
and I guess, Senate for a period of time,
gridlock is great for the markets,
especially given the amount of stimulus that's taken place.
I mean, you had the Trump tax cuts,
especially those corporate tax cuts, really set the market on fire. And then you've got this pumping by the Fed and
the Treasury, all the stimulus money for COVID. I mean, those conditions, and then, you know,
it's good.
Why is Gridlock good? We didn't explain that here. Well, because we'll be visiting it.
Explain to somebody who doesn't understand why Gridlock is good, why Gridlock is good.
Well, because it creates predictability for business and it means that Washington's not going to get in the way
and do something to screw up the good times.
I mean, we have fundamentally, you know,
great underlying conditions for economic growth,
which is we have now pretty low taxes,
and we had this, for better or worse,
we had this tremendous amount of stimulus,
physical stimulus.
What we know historically is over the past 100 years,
right, since the 20s, independent
of Republican administrations or Democratic administrations, you know, more progressive,
less progressive, more conservative, less conservative during World Wars, not during World
Wars, the markets go up 8% a year.
So the do-no harm solution is that things inflate naturally by 8%, especially if those
things are public stocks. So, you know, the markets love the fact that there's nothing that could
theoretically get in the way of that natural 8%, and then when you layer on top of it, as David
said, all this free money, that's just like rocket fuel, jet fuel. But you saw though that there was a rotation,
right? There was a rotation out of these high growth software names, particularly the work from
home bid kind of got crushed. I think Zoom was off 25% over two days or some crazy thing like that.
Meanwhile, sort of all of these theme park stocks and cruise lines and airlines, all of a sudden
ripped.
So, I mean, look, the reality is the scary thing about all of this is if any of that stuff
actually comes to pass, we're going to see inflation.
And the reason is because if you start going out and spending a bunch of money on tickets
and vacations and flights and this and that and pumping money into the economy and taking
all that stimulus money and putting it back to work, prices will go up. And by the way, that's not such a bad thing for the economy, which needs a
little bit of it. So all of this is, I think, generally very, very good news.
Freeberg, do you have a position on what you think will happen in the coming?
Let's, I would think the midterm is what people care most about so that would be let's call it two to six quarters
There's one potential speed bump still which is what I mentioned at the beginning which is Georgia
The the Democrats could still win both runoffs in Georgia for Senate and they could
Because Kamala Harris would then have the breaking vote, it would be a 50 Republican, 50 Democrat Senate, and the Vice President would break any ties.
The question is, if you have that same turnout, where do the libertarians break?
Because I think the libertarians were almost 2% of the vote.
Well, I think, yeah, what's interesting is, I don't know if you guys have, but I've
gotten emails from a lot of people asking me to donate money for this
runoff campaign in Georgia. I think we're, I think we're going to see literally the biggest
the biggest funding for a Senate runoff race in history by far. Don't you think SACs?
Like probably north of a hundred million being spent, maybe $100
to $200 million being spent on advertisements in Georgia to try and get people to go vote
one way or the other.
The Democrats think they have a real run at this.
They think it's make or break two years to kind of get their history changing policies
in effect.
Republicans think it's saved the nation time.
So everyone's rushing to Georgia right now. So the markets are going
to have a very close eye on what's going on over there, I think. I'm very nervous about it.
If the Democrats look like they're getting much more money into the state and they're actually going
to get people to the polls and to the voting booths and actually get into this runoff on January
5th and actually get both of those seats to be blue. It's going to be a very different market environment. I mean,
you could see the market drop by 30, 40% in the next six months.
So we have a situation where it's 48, 48. There are two seats up for grabs. Those two
seats are in a runoff. And I want to get into the exit.
Let me correct that, Jason. It's 48, 50.
Yeah. There are probably seven, 50 to 48 advantage with two open seats in the runoff.
Actually, sorry, one seat has opened.
The other, it has an incumbent Purdue who's facing awesome.
Purdue won in the last election.
He got like 49.9%.
You have to get 50.
You have to get 50%.
You have to get 50%.
You get to this runoff in January.
Georgia, the only place that has this where you have to get to 50 in order to
Yeah, it's crazy. It's crazy. So weird. Are they is just they want the extra attention or who came up with this idea?
This seems just like every state's got its own history. It's crazy. I mean, it's one of the unique things about living in the United States of America
I suppose to America. Let's talk about exit polls
in the United States of America, I suppose, to America.
Let's talk about exit polls.
Well, this is what's incredible.
Here, let me tee this up for you.
So in 2020, Biden got 80% of the Black vote.
Trump got six.
This is aggregate.
So we can break this down by man and age grouping.
And it looks even more interesting.
Latinos, Biden got 67, Trump got 22% of the Latino vote.
Between the ages of 18 to 34, so boomers,
or sorry pardon me, Gen Z and millennials.
Again, I would have thought 100% Biden,
it was 62% Biden, 23% went for Trump, one in four.
Amongst women, and again, we thought, oh, okay, suburban women are breaking Biden 80-20.
It turned out Biden got 58% of women, Trump got 35% of all the female vote.
And the Kudagra whites with a degree.
Again, you would have thought this would have been 80, 20, 90, 10
and said it was 53% Biden, 38% Trump.
So this really was something,
if we look at this, if we look back on this, the pollsters were completely wrong in thinking once again that these groups of people are monolithic.
And then I think the most mind boggling to me, and I had a candid discussion about this was
the term Latin X is a
a catch all term for people who are of Latino
Spanish speaking Descent and what somebody told me who is in this Latin X group is that it's the most insulting thing they've ever been told
it's almost as a term like the term saying oriental, to describe people from Asia.
You're just grouping us all into one thing, people from Cuba, Venezuela, and Mexico, or
think the same.
This is the absolute end game of identity politics, which is we have to put you in a corner.
We own you.
We own your opinion and you belong to our party, whichever party it is.
Oh, you don't have a degree.
You're a GOP hillbilly.
Oh, you're Latinx.
Okay.
Well, then we own you.
You're a Democrat.
David, what and I know that this is an area where you have a lot of expertise.
What are your thoughts?
Well, as it turns out, promoting socialism to people who fled Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela
to escape it, it turns out not to be a great election strategy.
And so yeah, this idea that Latin X is one block. It's not. It consists
of a bunch of different immigrants from a bunch of different nations. And the ones who fled,
socialism, are not eager to reenact it in the United States. There are Republicans flipped to how two house seats in South Florida where there's a lot of Cuban Americans.
And even in the heavily Mexican-American counties along the Rio Grande in Texas,
Trump improved, let's see, it looks like he improved,
39% respectively over 2016 showing.
So this is not just some fluke of the exit polls.
It seems like Trump really made progress in a lot of these groups that seem to defy
their, you know, what the promoters of identity politics, the way that they wanted them to
vote.
Gay Americans were another one.
I think Trump improved his share of the gay vote from 14% in 2016 to 28%
this year. So I mean really it's it's pretty amazing. People are not voting the way that they're
supposed to vote. Trump also improved from 12 to 18% with black men and 4 to 8% of black women.
I mean those are still pretty low numbers but but there was improvement there. And I think part of the reason is that not all of the African American
community is on board with defunding the police. Well, I also think what it means is identity politics
is a stupid strategy. Forget whether you're offended by it or not. At this point, what's clear
is it's a stupid fucking strategy. It doesn't work. It's a path to losing. Because the more
and more you do it, the more and more you're going to disenfranchise individuals who want
to be judged sort of a sound mind and body. Right? I mean, if he took a thousand Sri
Lunkans and put them in a room and said, Chimath, I'm going to judge you as a Sri Lunkan
vote, I would tell you to go fuck yourself. You know, I would be deeply offended by that.
And this is where I think that radical left is going to have to retool because they're
theory of how they take power in America was always that demographics is destiny. That,
you know, as the country simply becomes more diverse, we're going to, they're automatically
going to vote for us. And there's a lot of data in this election to show that that's
not what's going to happen. You actually have to run on issues that people care about.
Let's think about this in the context of internet advertising.
Right?
The world prior to internet advertising, you had channels.
And you would have an audience that was estimated to be made up
of some demographic set on that channel.
And you would buy an ad spot on that channel.
And that's who you would reach. And so you would create a message for that.
Now today we can create personalized ads and personalized messages and internet advertisers
are much more thoughtful about targeting, targeting based on psychographic, profiling,
behavioral targeting.
And I think that's where politics has to head in the United States.
It's kind of keeping up with this personalization of both products,
but also of media and ads. And I think that's what we're going to see. If you listen to James
Carville, who's like, you know, a classic kind of democratic campaign advisor, and he did a podcast
just leading up to the election. And if you listen to this podcast, these guys are very old school.
It's like, the whites are going to do this and the blacks are gonna do that and the college educator are gonna do this
and the others are gonna do that.
And they don't realize that the segmentation
that's possible today, I think,
reveals a lot more about the character of the population.
They're basically, I think it's such an astute point,
Freiburg, they're basically living
in the level of granularity of cable TV.
It's like cable TV.
Yeah. And it's like, they got to cable TV and they're like,
okay, BET, ESPN NASCAR.
And guess what, like the world is much more complex.
Individuals have found their own personal voice
and they found their own personal voice
through social media, through Instagram,
through this ability to kind of define themselves,
not fit within a cohort.
And I think that's what.
Maybe they always did feel that way and we just had never had the technology to get there. Yeah, but I think that's what maybe they always did feel that way.
And we just had never had the technology to get there.
Yeah, but I think it's also about people.
Like people have complex points of view, you know,
the four of us sit here and neither of us,
none of us identify as a party anymore.
We all identify with certain points
that we think are important to us individually.
And then we have a point of view on those points.
And I think that's the case for the majority of the population in the United States.
I don't think people are like, I'm just a fucking Democrat no matter what, and I'm a Republican
no matter what.
People care more deeply in a more complex way.
And I think politics needs to resolve to that.
And that's going to require a shift in how you communicate, how you message, how you get
feedback, how you drive blocks for voting.
And it's going to be a really interesting change
over the next 15 to 20 years.
And it may be what saves the Republic.
I think this is an incredible observation.
I think it might be the observation of the episode.
And I just want to point to a tweet I did because this election has really led to me doing
two things.
One, I've been just thinking deeply about what do I actually
understand about Americans and America. And then I also, you know, there's all these red
pills around. So I decided I would crush up a red pill. And I would just, you know, put
a little on my finger and I try a little red pill for a second. And everybody told me,
I've been red-pilled now on Twitter and then I'm a Trump fan. I am not. I hate the guy.
I think it's horrible. But I did this quick survey here down on Twitter and that I'm a Trump fan. I am not. I hate the guy.
I think it's horrible.
But I did this quick survey here.
I said, if you voted for Trump, I want to understand what percentage of your vote was
based on the combination of A, cancel, culture, B, identity, politics, C, socialism, D, coastal
elites telling you how to live, explain other issues that contributed in a reply, IE
spending, immigration, SC, the Supreme Court, et cetera.
And I just said 0% 1 to 25, 26 to 50 at over 50.
And I got 12,000 votes.
Go ahead and look at the results.
Not the replies, but go ahead and vote.
And it doesn't matter which one you pick.
Over 50% of people who vote if for Trump.
And I know this is unscientific,
it's my followers,
but it definitely feels directionally correct.
The people who felt 26 to over 50%
was part of the cancel culture identity culture
was what they were trying to communicate with their vote.
Well, this is such an important thing
because I think this is what we're fighting over.
Every single poll.
70% of them.
No, every single election going forward.
Like if you put this on top of the 70 odd million people that voted, this kind of roughly
makes sense, which is that, you know, there's probably about 20 million people who will
completely vote Democrat, no matter what, and 20 million people who will completely vote Democrat no matter what and 20 million people who will completely vote Republican no matter what
They're just eyes are closed their ears are closed. They don't care
But when you take those people out there's this enormous amount of people in the middle who have the ability to
vote a split ticket, you know, and as and as as Saxi who said like they'll vote
vote a split ticket, you know, and as and as at a saxey pussad like they'll vote a
Democrat into the White House, but then down ballot they'll vote a bunch of Republicans and they'll just make sure there's a balance of power
So they've been telling us about this kind of centrity for years and so if you want to win an election you do two things
Part one is you understand this dynamic that centrist wins and part two is what Friedberg says, which is you understand that we need to enter sort of the Google CPC world of political advertising and really cater not just the ads,
but also the message to individual people and stop the, you know,
the cat, the gross high level categorization, which isn't working anymore.
of the growth high level categorization, which isn't working anymore.
Yeah.
And Jason, can I add the connection
between cancel culture and the selection?
So obviously, the pollsters got everything completely wrong.
And again.
But the reason is because of cancel culture,
so in exit polling, 45% of Republicans
with college degrees express fear
that their careers could be at risk if their views became known compared to only 23% Democrats
saying that. And so there were these quote unquote shy Trump voters who were afraid to tell
pollsters what they really think. Now it wasn't the Trump voters that you think of when you
see the pickup trucks and the convoys go by or the rallies, those were the voters from 2016 who weren't counted.
It was sort of the non-college blue collar voters.
The Michael Moore people who turned out for Trump and big numbers and weren't properly
counted four years ago.
The pollsters actually counted those people correctly this time.
The people they completely underestimated was actually the white college vote who swung
from a lot of swung from Democrats to Republican.
They voted for Trump because of this issue and they were afraid to say anything about it
because they're afraid of getting canceled.
And by the way, they are every other person everybody listening to this podcast works with.
And so deal with that one. Right, exactly.
Anybody who's not actively virtue signaling on Twitter
for Biden is a Trump voter.
Not sure if that's exactly correct,
but I don't think it's wrong.
Roughly.
You know, if people aren't,
if people in tech aren't explicitly endorsing
Biden on Twitter, they're probably closet from voters.
It is going to be very interesting for people to go back to offices,
because now we have had a resolution and identity politics,
cancel culture, and extreme is among both sides,
hysterical and trolling, trolling, Republicans, hysterical lives.
This has been a loss for both of those parties.
And now the pandemic is ending.
We're gonna be back in offices at some point.
I mean, what is office culture going to be like?
Are people going to go with the Brian Armstrong?
Let's just get worked on here.
Let's not talk about politics.
It's just too charged or not. It's gonna get worked on here. Let's not talk about politics. It's just too charged or not.
It's going to be a very interesting, it's every, it's every company's right.
It's every company's right to care about what they want to care about, every board, every CEO,
every controlling shareholder, and then it's every employee's right to vote with their feet
about whether that's okay or not. And I think that look, I mean,
the whole Brian Armstrong thing, again,
just to say one of the most pathetically poorly written,
you know, pieces of English prose I've ever fucking seen.
You know, like-
He's a cryptographer, in fairness.
My dog, my dog's, he's not a coder, he's a CZCO.
My dog slamming his herpon,
the keyboard would have created a better pros than that.
But he was coming from a reasonable place. He had the right to say what he said.
The problem is that it's so antithetical to what you're allowed to believe, for example, living in San Francisco.
But I think that that's going to change because you can't ignore every other person telling you that there are
meaningful
economic issues that matter and that the prioritization and the policing of these, you know, sort of high-value
social signaling issues are no longer a priority. And I think that what's going to happen is there will be room for a party that focuses on that
and a group of people, but they will be room for a party that focuses on that
and a group of people, but they will be relegated.
Just like on the other side, that will happen to the Republican version of that as well.
I just think this whole thing, this honesty for me, it seems like such a tight election,
it is, but I really think the huge winner here is centrism.
I agree with that.
And I would say that this election proves
that Brian Armstrong was right,
because the average American is tired
of these highly charged political situations.
And the last thing they wanna do
is have these conversations at work
where they can get reported to,
where they can offend their coworkers
and get reported to HR.
They can make them feel unsafe, right?
That's why they don't want to have these conversations
that work certainly.
By the way, only 5% of Coinbase's employees
took Armstrong up on that offer to leave.
So the number of people who actually want to have
a politically charged workplace is very, very small.
They're just the noisiest, they're the squeakyest wheel.
I mean, that was a ridiculous deal. I mean, what did he say six months and we've
vest of something? He made it really attractive to leave if you didn't agree with his policy.
Was that written because I couldn't figure that out?
Yeah, it was written. It was an attractive deal to leave if you
wanted to leave. And 95% chose to set. Yeah. Did I say it was poorly written?
I didn't understand it because it was so poorly written. So anyway, so 95%
stayed. So my point so 95% stayed.
So my point is just the number of people who actually like this highly polarized,
politically charged situation, which we're all arguing with our friends over politics,
and children are divorcing their parents because they're not woke enough.
I mean, people don't want to live in that kind of country anymore.
And I think this is the thing that Joe Biden really got right in his campaign. I mean, this is why, I mean, this is the only way that
his basement strategy could actually work. And result in him getting elected is people
actually do want this return to normalcy.
You know who the biggest loser is going to be coming out of this, I think, not when you
think holistically about the ecosystem, it's going to be the media because they have made
an absolute fortune over the last four or five years picking aside. What is the point of watching
Rachel Maddo, January 20th? What is the point of tuning into Fox News or reading the historical
opinion page of the New York Times? All of these places that were being propped up by either Trumpism
or anti-Trumpism are now going to find themselves
where they started, which is without a job.
And we just wanted you to tell us the news.
There was a great article.
One of the New York Times have an opinion page?
Rip the opinion page out of the wet New York Times?
Rip it out of the wall.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
I disagree. I think the opposite happens, which is that opinion page was meant to be where
people could have an opinion so that everything else was fact.
And the problem is that all the other pages became opinion as well as nobody told anybody.
Yes, but nobody can tell the difference.
And look at that.
But nobody can tell the difference.
That's right.
They can't tell the difference.
And look at that expose about how Barry or Barry Weiss
was run out of the New York Times.
It basically the activists ran her out.
And the reality is activists have completely captured
the New York Times, ANC and NM, MSNBC.
And there is no...
And they always had Fox.
And the New York Times.
They always had Fox, but now we have no objective, neutral media.
And so who's going to call the election?
I mean, you complain about the fact that Trump is sowing dissent, but who is the universally
trusted spokesperson for neutrality the way that Walter
Cronkite was when he could just declare it and that's the way it is and people believe
that's the way it is?
Who did the best job, Friedberg, that night?
When we were doing that, let's reflect on the live stream.
I have two questions for the live stream.
Number one, who is your bestie, Guestie?
Who did you think get it the most as a Guestie?
And why?
And then number two.
We're doing, what are we doing?
We're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we Brad before before we go there there was a there was a really good article in the New York Times about Maggie Haberman right and Maggie who's a fantastic
journalist but built an entire career it really amplified came to a head in
2016 and she just scoop after scoop about Trump but the most compelling thing
about that whole article was somewhere near the, you know,
third of the way from the bottom.
She's like, look, at the end of the day, she said something like, I'm dispensable and I
know it.
And it was the most honest thing because it's like despite her popularity and despite
sort of, you know, how big of a stick she carries, the reality is, Sans Trump, there's
just nothing to do. There's nothing to
leak. There's there just is not nearly as much to do. I did just put in the the chat here,
the Washington Post, Fox News, the Hill, basically like the full gamut of media opinion have highlighted that the media generally
is the biggest loser of the 2020 election.
And I think they've just lost the faith of their audience
and it's to SACs' point.
I don't know how many people were,
you're either looking for objective and you've lost it
or you're looking for opinionated and you feel like your aligned opinion setting media partner
has betrayed you. The fact that Fox called it for Trump and now saying Fox is a liar,
the fact that the New York Times doesn't feel like they're being objective anymore and they're
running people out of the newsroom.
In general, I just feel like we've been disenfranchised.
And I think that's something that's gonna be really hard
to kind of recover from and resolve.
And the love of God can somebody please get,
I don't want you to break any laws,
but however, if we could read the slack channel of the New York Times
reporter's leading up to the hundred days of this election, that would become the greatest
best selling book of all time to watch the New York Times writers bicker with each other
sacks. I mean, we could do 10 hours on that. No problem. Let's
talk. Okay, bestie, Guestie. Guesties, what do you think of our guest? I thought they're
all great. I thought they're all great. Are we now becoming a media critics? We're gonna
now. Yeah. Who do we like? I don't know podcast. Why don't you go for it? Why don't you
go for it? We got naval gazing. You go for a stable gazing, but we become so so sick that naval Jason
and Jason, Jason wants, Jason wants to throw
Mew Thunder the bus.
Go ahead, Jason.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Oh, contrary.
Does anyone have a video they want to share?
One person on the pot, you have to put Mew Thunder
in his place and it was not, it was not the point guard
in this case.
Somebody pulled a Dremond and pulled,
you know, how many of the sides had stopped,
you gotta pass the ball.
I do think Brad did a great job,
he had some great insights.
I think Bill Gurley had some great insights.
I think it was just a really good job
of getting some people to rotate in.
I enjoyed it.
Yeah, I thought it was really well.
Everyone was great.
I'll give a shout out to my bestie, Newman.
He was better. He was better as a political analyst and all those jokers on
CNN and Fox and MSNBC.
The dude with the, with the map and he kept touching the map and yeah,
it's like, I got to get paid to do that. I can't believe he gets paid to do that.
I'm gonna get my daughter on CNN. She could do that.
When I on CNN CNN who does that?
John King.
John King, John King.
God bless this guy because I don't know how much
Adderall he's on, but I turned it on at 8 a.m.
and he was zooming into Pennsylvania and he's like,
oh, well, of course, in 2018, this time, 2016,
he's like, let's zoom out and let's go back to Arizona.
Of course, in Arizona, this place, I was like,
is this guy a Geography teacher? I mean, he was amazing and just
the dexterity. He looked like he was Tom Cruise in Minority Report with the finger. I don't
know. I don't know if I'd call him Tom Cruise. When they look like Tom Cruise, but the minority
report, pinch and zoom in and out. It was incredible. When, uh, when, when does Trump call this thing? That's a great question.
Well, I think he has to run out these court challenges, which will take a few
weeks, but I, I predict by Thanksgiving, but it may have to go up to the
string court, but he's gonna, he's gonna dot the dot, dot every eye and
cross every tee that he's got legally. Um, but he's got like, we talked about
the very beginning, he's got a huge uphill challenge. I. I see the court ultimately really against him or throwing it out.
What is the point, David? What is it? Well, because why shouldn't he exhaust everybody?
No, he's not going to win. No, I don't know that he knows that he, I think it's his right
to exhaust every legal possibility. And let's remember, Al Gore didn't concede for 37 days after the
election. So I certainly think Trump is within his rights over the next few
weeks to run this out. In terms of what the point is, I mean other than the
obvious attempt to challenge it legally, I do think this is partly a branding
exercise by Trump. It's a marketing exercise. I don't think he's going to come
up with enough malfeasance to overturn an election, but I do think he'll probably
produce a lot of smoke, and this is about protecting
his brand as a winner, and if he kicks up enough
examples of voter fraud or what have you,
he'll always be able to say years from now
that this was a stolen election.
And when you combine the fact that COVID really did drive this election, you could
call that Chinese election interference if you want. The fact that the vaccine is now here
already, you could call that, you know, some sort of election interference. He's going to have
enough arguments where if he wants to run four years from now, I think he probably gets to Republican nomination again.
What's the percentage chance, Chimoff, that he runs again in four years?
Zero.
Freeberg.
From?
Yeah.
I think he's gonna be making so much money.
He's not gonna know what to do with him.
So he's not going back to that fucking tortures, torture house.
He's gonna be thinking about the way that I him. So he's not going back to that fucking torture house. He didn't even have the white house,
like some terrible Blumhouse production movie set.
He's like, fuck that.
I'm not going back there.
It was awful.
Where's he going?
Where's he going?
He's going to Shanghai.
Is he going to Washington?
You can be in New York.
He's going to buy a law firm
because you're going to need a law firm
to keep everyone at bay.
And he's going to be probably printed
a hundred million bucks a month.
You know, I put it at Dubai Saudi Arabia. I think I think he's definitely going
to launch a media business and he'll try to become Kingmaker.
I think I think he will become a Kingmaker Republican politics. He will launch a competitor
to Fox News, but it will also be Fox News hybridized with a grassroots movement like the
Tea Party. And every Republican will need to go get his endorsement or they will be
Primarily by the Trump party and I would not put it
I would not put it anymore
Could not disagree more. I think he's a disgrace. I think he will be I think what David said why he's gonna come not you David
I'm talking about Trump. I think David's incredible.
No, I think the stuff that comes out after this, the day loose, the number of SDNY suits,
all the grift and the graft, it's all coming out. Not only is he not going to be a kingmaker,
he will not be able to get the backing for this network.
It'll be bright, bright light, and it'll be shut down within 24 months.
He'll fail so miserably that when he walks into a restaurant, it'll be like Game of Thrones.
Shame, shame.
Well, I don't think so.
I think that it's very likely that the Donald Trump that runs for President 2024 is Donald
Trump Jr.
Oh, God no.
He's horrible.
The whole Republican Party has to start over.
Let's end on this.
Pompeo did a press conference.
Is the State Department currently preparing to engage with the Biden transition team?
And if not, at what point does a delay hamper a smooth transition
or pose a risk to national security?
There will be a smooth transition to a second Trump administration.
All right, we're ready.
The world is watching what's taking place here. We're going to count all the votes.
When the process is complete, they'll be elected selected. There's that process. The Constitution
lays it out pretty clearly. The world should have every confidence that the transition
necessary to make sure that the State Department is functional today, successful today, and
successful with the president who's in office on January 20th, a minute afternoon will
also be successful. Can I just say I don't disagree with the position they're taking.
It's not immoral.
It's customary and traditional to concede your election, but, you know, December 15th is
the date that Congress ratifies the electoral votes to determine who the next president
is going to be.
And these guys are just taking a very kind of pragmatic legal line that is not immoral
in a way.
They believe that they have some case on what the vote should be.
The votes are all very close.
Yadiyatta, I'm not saying that he's going to win by any chance, but I don't think that
folks saying like let the votes be counted and let Congress do their job of having the
states tell
them who their electoral votes are going to is, uh, is an inappropriate position to take. I sound like,
I might sound like, uh, some conservative, you know, Trump head, but I'm not. I think that, um,
these guys, what I'm just saying is that these guys aren't that immoral in, in kind of asking for
that for that, you know, sorry, I also think at the fringes of the Republican party, this is what you keep all these militia folks and all these other folks at Bay
is just you show a really methodical, you know, stepping away from the spotlight.
And I think that this is, you know, honestly, it's, this is a very deliberate,
safe, calming thing to do.
As I think there's been nothing about the Trump administration from 2016 through to this very moment that
has been customary or traditional.
I don't know why we all expected him to step in and say, I can see the way that we've
been doing it for a lot.
It would be worse if we were if he had conceded and all of a sudden was holding a bunch
of protests in rallies all over the country.
That's not.
He's not doing anything illegal.
No one has any legal requirement to concede and you know, and I think as long as these
guys on December 15th, which is the date that we should all be watching and waiting for,
as long as these guys do the appropriate thing at that point, then you know, that's the
only point at which I would have any sort of concern or worry about what's going on with
the transition in the government.
Sorry.
I think this is about saving face and saving brand as sexy percent.
He'll be out by December 15.
Meaning this will all be done.
Yeah, I agree.
And look, let's remember that Al Gore was able to challenge the election result for 37
days without being hysterically accused of undermining democracy.
So let Trump have his day in court.
It'll play out over the next few weeks.
I expect that the obstacles he has to overcome are too large and he will lose these lawsuits.
It might go to the Supreme Court.
It would not be a bad thing if the Supreme Court were the ones to make this decision.
They're one of the last institutions that still trusted clearly.
The media are not.
And I think that, you know, Trump will accept the result.
He may not concede, but he will accept the result. He may not
concede, but he will accept the result when it comes from the Supreme Court.
Is there a non-zero chance that he could win on a recount?
He would have to prove systemic fraud because it's not like Florida where there's
just one state and a few hundred votes. He's got to overcome over 12,000 votes in at least three
states. So that's the issue is is it's put a percent on its acts if you had to lay money on it.
Oh, I mean, it's like sub 10% chance, I think. Sub 10% chance. One in 10, you'd give 10 to one
odds. No, I'm saying it's under 10%. I'm saying it's a very small chain. Well, hey, here's the thing. So Bush v Gore, the Supreme Court ruled seven to two.
I mean, you would have thought it was nine to zero.
So clearly, there was some sympathizers in Bush v Gore.
So hopefully, you know, it's something like seven to two and, you know, we move on.
I believe if it gets this from court, it will be at least seven to two, if not a one or
nine zero.
Just because I think Trump has a much harder case to prove.
And Florida, the issue was simply whether the recount should be allowed to continue.
James Baker went to the Supreme Court to stop the recount that was in process because
of the fear that the local corrupt election officials basically steal the
election for Gore.
But Bush was always ahead in that election.
There was never a time when Bush was behind.
Biden is now ahead in every swing state that matters.
Trump has to now overturn that result in at least three of those states.
I don't know how he does that. By tens of thousands of votes. I I don't know how he does that.
10,000 votes.
By 10,000,000 votes.
I just don't know how he does that.
He has to prove some sort of systemic fraud that took place across the nation.
That and look, I think from a like a marketing or branding standpoint, he'll be able to create
a lot of smoke.
I think they will actually find quite a bit of misconduct because I don't think our elections
are perfect.
But will it rise to the standard that the Supreme Court is going to set for overturning an
election?
I don't think so.
I mean, they'll probably find it on both sides.
There's got to be some crazy Trump supporter who has 10 ballots they signed, and there'll
be some crazy liberal who did the same.
Well, the nuance issue is whether they can do a constitutionally valid
recount by, you know, the time necessary as well.
So the longer that this lays on, then they'll be forced to basically say no to that also,
because otherwise it will be effective rethering out an election.
And so as we wrap here, San Francisco's continuous to devolve revenue down 40% in terms of taxes, budget is double, what
it's been just a few years ago.
Crime is going crazy.
Walmart is closing their stores and leaving because of Walgreens.
I'm sorry, Walgreens, we don't have a Walmart here.
And there's 20, there's more homes on the market now than there have been too much of anything
is a bad thing. If you eat too Too much of anything is a bad thing.
If you eat too much broccoli, it's a bad thing.
You know what I mean?
So too much of a single party model culture is bad,
whether it's Republican or Democrat.
You need a diverse centrist plurality.
And in the absence of that,
many cities that veer in one direction or the other will decay and die
And San Francisco is going to be the tip of this beer for the left's version and there's a been a bunch of cities that have already been the examples of the right's version so you know what?
Apparently the water is warm and they want to join
Anybody else Friedberg I can't I can't find a lot to disagree with there. I think San Francisco the city's community. The city's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's community's without having it getting broken into, they won't prosecute people for crimes, including
increasingly violent crimes. The cities about to go bankrupt and the entrepreneurs are all disappearing. They're all leaving. I mean, it's right out of the shrugged.
Yeah, I mean, it's the action is the wrong action, right?
So San Francisco, the biggest disappointment of election night for me was the new business
taxes that were passed for San Francisco businesses.
And there was also this like for 99.99999999999% of people, they're gonna shrug and say,
I don't give a shit, but there was this new tax of 6%
for homes that gets sold over $10 million.
Now, if you're a successful entrepreneur, an investor,
or a CEO of a company in San Francisco,
and it's like a slap in the face,
you add the business tax with that kind of high end
property tax, and it's almost like an invitation
to leave the city. And some people are nodding their head. This 6% is on leaving or buying
transaction when you sell. So you literally 6% off the top when you sell a home.
The city basically just took 6% of my house. The city just took 6% of my house.
It's a state tax. They're now a part owner of my house. Yeah, it's in a state tax.
And so there are people like,
there are people in San Francisco who we all know.
How much warning did you have before they took your
non-bedroom?
Yeah, I mean, there's a London breed
put some people in taxes 13 bedroom on the third floor.
And they're all living there right now.
But I mean, it's okay.
I got like wings I don't even know about.
It's like Richie Rich's house or something.
So like nobody cries for super rich people.
And you know, it's a short sighted, it's the point, right?
Right, exactly.
I'm not complaining about the taxes on me,
but it's gonna do tremendous damage to the city.
People are not gonna wanna move here.
And we, yeah. Yeah, I look, I've built business since San Francisco since 2006, and I will not build
another business in San Francisco. And I hear the same from other entrepreneurs. If you're going to
build a business, do it in the South Bay, do it in the East Bay, do it in the North Bay, or do it
in Austin, or LA, or somewhere else. But this is just not a place to build businesses. The city
is basically saying, we don't want you here. Now, that would be fine and dandy. If the city was being conservative
in the way that they spend, and if they were actually reducing their budget and, you know,
kind of reducing the city's activities, the problem is these taxes diverge with the budget,
because the taxes are now going to go down, because businesses are leaving, people are selling their homes,
they're not going to buy expensive homes anymore.
And we are seeing a budget crisis.
San Francisco, I think, is looking at a $1.7
to $2 billion budget shortfall this year.
I mean, like, where's that money going to come from?
This is a city with 800,000.
Well, and we have, and there was that exposé
in the San Francisco Chronicle,
talking about how there's over 20,000 city workers
making over $150,000 a year over 20,000 city workers making over
150,000 dollars a year.
30,000. Yeah. Yeah. What are we getting for all of that? The evidence is not apparent.
And this is where, okay, look, I'd be happy to give the city six percent of my house and pay all these high taxes if we actually got something for it.
But the city just keeps getting less and less livable City budget in 2013 when some of the fiscal crisis you know fiscal crisis and we have a livability crisis that I think is even worse
And that that's a huge problem and let's be frank San Francisco was always the accidental
Beneficiary of Silicon Valley if you will San Francisco was the accidental billionaire
It was Silicon Valley that created this enormous wealth and all the jobs and the companies.
It wasn't San Francisco policies or politics that created any of that.
It just so happens that Silicon Valley got big enough.
It started around Stanford.
It got big enough that San Francisco as the nearest metropolitan area really was a beneficiary
of that.
Because they never really did
anything to create the conditions for that prosperity, frankly, they took it for granted.
And now that the rug's been pulled out from under them, I don't think they're really going
to know what to do.
Local San Francisco politicians treated Silicon Valley success as a grab bag. And Uber
set up here and Twitter and Square and Salesforce and San Francisco politicians put their
hand in the honey jar and took as much as they could. And it's now backfiring because new businesses
don't want to set up here. Entrepreneurs don't want to operate here. And as Saks is pointing out,
the rapid kind of inflation has caused this tremendous decline in the quality of service.
There's zero accountability, zero checks and balances.
So San Francisco is in for really Frank is scary reckoning and a lot of people are really
worried about it.
And it's like a very real problem.
It's not like, oh, the city's fucked.
Ha ha, like a $2 billion budget shortfall.
You're either going to have to cut a lot of jobs of public employees or you're going
to have a city that's going to go bankrupt and you know, bonds are going to get defaulted on. And at the same time,
you're going to have this mass exodus of people and businesses. And it is a very kind of
unwinding not right now. So it's a scary moment. I don't think it's a real great answer
for what to do. It's more nuanced.
I think it will happen. Mark, my words, San Francisco will file for bankruptcy in the next 10 years.
Wow.
I mean, Pelosi, you know, Pelosi held out
a major city filing for back.
Maybe 15, maybe 15 years, but yeah.
10, 15 years.
I remember a big part of what Pelosi held out on,
the big thing she held out on
in the stimulus negotiations last month
was for local and state governments
to get bail out support in this stimulus package.
She's acutely aware. She lives one block away from me down the road here. She's acutely aware
of what's going on in San Francisco. The solution may not be to bail out these cities and these
states if they're going to continue to operate the way they are because it's-
So, state needs to break in order to rebuild.
Well, you need to cut budget.
I mean, any of us running a business know like, you know,
if you have little revenue coming in and you're spending too much,
where the fuck's the money coming from?
You can't just keep going to big Papa and DC
and asking him for more money.
What about Masayoshi-san?
Maybe he'll, he consider coming in and...
Well, maybe it's back.
Maybe he can do a second time.
I really, fine.
I'm gonna smack San Francisco. Fights back. Maybe we do a second. I really fine. I'm gonna smack San Francisco.
Fights back. I've got a Kamasi Yoshi's on to the secondary then. Yeah, we're
back.
Francisco. Listen, I think, I think,
Jamal, that Jamal is right about San Francisco being the proof of what happens when you
have a one party system. And I really hope that the tech community, the tech
liberals who are listening to this
podcast, they're not going to listen to me because they probably think I'm too conservative.
But, you know, Tramoth is pretty liberal. And, you know, he makes the right point. And,
you know, we cannot have a one-party system that remains healthy for very long. We need
the pendulum to swing back towards the center. And, you know, I really hope that, yeah.
Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts. Absolutely. As you've, as you've said many times.
Yeah, look, that's true. That's, yeah, Lord Acton said that.
We, this is literally what the Dark Knight Batman series is about. it's literally about not having a basic standard of policing and allowing
criminals to run a city.
We've turned into a goddamn comic book.
Like you have to arrest people who commit crimes.
I'm sorry if that hurts your feelings.
And one of the things that's has to be.
Yeah.
You're right.
And one of the things that's like the comic book is the sense of fatalism.
You know, it's like everybody knows him,
which this goes broken,
but nobody thinks they can do anything about it.
That's really the tragedy of it.
That is the tragedy.
And you know what?
If any of us, I've said it before,
I'm like, I know exactly how you can stop
all these car break ins.
You, there's a thing called the bait car.
You put 10 bait cars out, you put cameras in them.
And now that Einstein is broken, boys, I love you.
I love you all.
I love you.
I miss you all.
I gotta go wait to see again.
And for those of you who'd like to advertise on
our own podcast, the advertising rate has been set
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For however many episodes we do, I will read the ad at the end of the show. If you give $10 million a year for however many episodes we do, I will read the ad at the end of the
show if you give $10 million to the charity of Chimaltz picking, which apparently is going
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There's room enough for four people. Maybe on a live show, Bestie Guesties, you're not
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And I cannot introduce you to Chimoff to SPAC your company, enough of that.
I love you, Besties.