All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E127: Presidential Candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in conversation with the Besties

Episode Date: May 6, 2023

(0:00) Bestie intros! (0:49) Jason and Sacks intro Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (3:46) Foreign policy: Ukraine / Russia (17:17) Foreign policy: Taiwan / China (18:57) Government spending: Fiscal responsibili...ty, where to cut budget, debt ceiling (33:22) US Govt Intelligence Agencies: "Deep State," increasing accountability, "agency capture" (46:04) COVID: mishandling, more "agency capture," vaccine policy (55:10) Broader thoughts on vaccines in general (1:05:54) Energy policy: thoughts on nuclear (1:15:29) Culture wars: trans issues, CRT in schools, public vs charter schools (1:23:09) Media: declining trust, misaligned incentives, conflict of interest with large advertisers (1:30:07) Mainstream media coverage, ABC News debacle, evolving with new information, money in politics (1:40:37) The Besties do a post-interview debrief (1:57:30) Announcing All-In Summit 2023! Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow Robert F. Kennedy Jr: https://twitter.com/RobertKennedyJr Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Sacks you're ready. You got your quick time going. Oh, let me do that real quick. And just a quick note, Sacks Mr. Kennedy doesn't have earpieces and so he we just have to be careful of the crosstalk we're talking over each other I'll direct questions to each person and then follow up so you can obviously just use your judgment of when to insert yourself but be gentle on the insertion there because we don't want that came out wrong. Just be gentle when you interrupt. God, there's your cold open. Yeah, at least if you did it incorrectly, it'll be quick. Okay, here we go in three, two, one. What?
Starting point is 00:00:34 You're like your winner's ride. Rainman David's hat. And it said we open source it to the fans and they just go crazy. Love you, Wes. I'm Queen of Kenwa. I'm going to the league. All right, everybody. Welcome to the all in podcast.
Starting point is 00:00:52 As many of you know, this podcast has gotten quite popular the last two years, typically in the top 10 or 20 each week. And we talk about politics. We've got a big following in DC. And why are you calling these self-absorbed, Chabad? I mean, listen to how your co-host opens a show. Calm down, everybody. It's okay. Yeah. Yeah. And as part of that, our ongoing discussions about politics
Starting point is 00:01:12 and presidential candidates has resonated in particular, communities, and today, we are lucky enough to have one of the top presidential hopefuls in the 2024 election joining us, Robert Kennedy Jr. And we will be inviting all presidential candidates to come on to the all in podcasts and have candid discussions that are unfeltered. The way the audience would expect them, we're going to play with different formats, but we decided for this first one. We've got a series of topics we'd like to cover, and we're going to play with different formats, but we decided for this first one. We've got a series of topics we'd like to cover. And we're going to treat it like any other all in podcast with that.
Starting point is 00:01:50 I'll have David Sacks, who has is the most conservative of our panel, who has been also the most enthusiastic, I think, of everybody here and one of the most enthusiastic supporters of Robert Kennedy's jun's pursuit of the presidency of the United States. So with that, David, would you like to introduce our guest? Yeah. Let me give Bobbi a proper introduction here. So Robert Francis, Kennedy Jr. is entering the political arena as a candidate for the first time at the age of 69. But it's perhaps no exaggeration to say that he was destined for the mission he is now pursuing. He is the nephew of President John F. Kennedy and the son of Attorney General
Starting point is 00:02:28 and Senator Robert F. Kennedy. When Bobby was 14, his dad was running for President on a platform of civil rights, civil liberties, lifting Americans out of poverty and opposing the Vietnam war. He had just won the California primary when he was tragically assassinated. RFK Jr. graduated from Harvard and the University of Virginia Law School and became an environmental lawyer who aggressively litigated against corporate polluters and government agencies that were failing to regulate them. He has always put the health and safety of the American people at the forefront of his activism, and this has made him controversial at times as he has questioned the safety of some pharmaceutical products and also criticized COVID restrictions during the pandemic.
Starting point is 00:03:03 For this, the mainstream media has tried to paint them as a, quote, conspiracy theorist. But given that so many conspiracy theories about COVID have been vindicated, tablet magazine wrote, quote, at this point, the fact that Robert F. Kennedy is a country's leading conspiracy theorist, alone qualifies him to be president. But the biggest reason why I think his candidacy
Starting point is 00:03:22 is so interesting and relevant is that it harkens back to a democratic party that believed in peace instead of war free speech and civil liberties to have censorship Building up the middle class instead of the donor class and opposing corporate greed especially the military industrial complex Which is a message you just don't hear much anymore coming from the democratic side of the aisle so with that Bobby Kennedy welcome to the program Thank you so much for having me. So maybe we could start with foreign policy, something we've discussed here, specifically the Ukraine and Russia's invasion of Ukraine and our support of that war. Sax, would you like to te up a question for Mr. Kennedy? I think Bobby's tweets on the subject show that he has a really deep understanding of it
Starting point is 00:04:09 he's been saying a lot of things that i've been saying since the beginning of the war which it not just the fact that we're risking war three over you know getting involved in a in a country that isn't a treaty ally the united states and a relevant interests united states but i think your critique goes deeper because you actually understand the causes of how this war started. So maybe, Bobby, you could speak to that. How did we end up in this proxy war with Russia from your standpoint? Well, you know, first of all, let me start by saying this. I supported the humanitarian aid to the Ukraine, which is what we were told initially was the mission, although I had.
Starting point is 00:04:55 I was suspicious of it. And you know, my son, as I've mentioned, actually went over, left law schooled and not tell us where he was going and went over and joined the foreign legion and fought in the carcube offensive with a special forces group. He was served as a machine gunner. He was in engagements with the Russians. But he feels the same way, essentially, that I did it. This is no longer a humanitarian mission. And all the decisions the United States have made since the start has been about prolonging the war,
Starting point is 00:05:37 about maximizing the violence of the war and being absolutely in transigence against the many opportunities to actually settle the war. And that my understanding of the war is that not that Zelensky is pushing this war as hard as he can, but that the Neocons and the White House want this war. They want it regime change with the Russians, they want to exhaust the Russian armies. This was not this fence secretary Lloyd Austin said in 2022 our objective is to exhaust and to grade Russian forces so they cannot fight anywhere
Starting point is 00:06:17 else in the world. And President Biden acknowledged that one of his objectives in the war is regime change in Russia removing Vladimir Putin. Well, if those are the objectives, that is the opposite of a humanitarian mission. That is a mission to maximize casualties to prolong the war. It's essentially a war of attrition, and that's what we're seeing. And the brunt of this is being paid by the flower of Ukrainian youth. There have been over 300,000. This is something that the US government and the Ukrainian government have worked hard to hide. The number of casualties which have been catastrophic. This is the most violent conflict since World War II that's taking place probably anywhere in the world. And the casualties are enormous. All over 300,000 Ukrainian debt. The Russians are killing
Starting point is 00:07:07 Ukrainian, depending on who you believe at a ratio of five to one to eight to one, which is the seven to one in the recently, recently, the whistleblower leaked Pentagon documents. And the Russians cannot lose this war. We're being told they're losing. They cannot afford to lose this war. This is existential for them. And they have been building up their forces. They have a tend to want artillery advantage on us. And this is an artillery war. So it's simply and we do not have the artility to replace what we've lost up there. This is a war that is proceeding in a very cataclysmic trajectory. The answer to your question about how we got in this war goes back a long way, but I
Starting point is 00:08:01 would say that the real story starts in 2014 when the US government and particularly the Neocons in the White House in elsewhere participated and supported the overthrow of the Democratic Party against the democratically elected government of the Ukraine and put in a very, very anti-Russian government. This prompted the Russians, so that I believe that the US, Navy, was now going to be invited into the Black Sea to have a port at Crimea. It prompted the Russians to preemptedly invade Crimea. At the same time, the government that went came into the Ukraine. Began enacting a series of laws that turned the Russian populations of the Dumbass region into
Starting point is 00:08:58 second-class citizens. They illegalized essentially their culture, their language, they illegalized essentially their culture, their language, and they began ultimately killing them. They killed 14,000 of them. And it was as if prompted a civil war in the country. And the Russian response, which it was illegal, I have no sympathy or Towards Vladimir Putin Vladimir Putin is a gangster and he's a thug but his His response in the dumbass was not irrational So I guess the question becomes if you were elected president Would you stop sending armaments to Ukraine? I would immediately I Have a ceasefire and I would saddle the war.
Starting point is 00:09:50 And I think it can be a saddle. I don't even know. I mean, it lives in the best settlement for this war, which is outlined in the Minsk Accords in 2014, in the Minsk Accords, which all the European countries agreed upon, was when the Russians sit and the Russian people in Tampas voted to leave Russia and Russia did not want them, Russia said no. Let's develop an accord, an agreement which would make Dumbas an autonomous region within the Ukraine, which would agree to not put missile systems in
Starting point is 00:10:26 Ukraine, NATO missile systems, which would agree that Ukraine would not join NATO. If Zelensky says no, I want to keep fighting, would you stop sending US weapons? I would settle this. I would settle this for the Ukraine cannot fight without US support. So then at some point you would tell Zelensky if I'm reading into what you're saying correctly, Hey, settle it. You're out. I would settle the war. Do you think that we somehow allowed Zolinsky to believe that we would allow him into NATO. Meaning, do you think that US foreign policy somehow
Starting point is 00:11:08 almost induced this thing to happen? I just want to try to understand the boundaries. We have been doing integrative military exercises with the Ukrainian military. So we were actively integrating them into NATO forces. There was no question that, you know, the one thing that Putin said from the outset, this is a red line. You know, when I uncle was present, one of the things that he said, he said a couple of things. He said, number one, the principal job of a president in the United States is to keep the nation out of war. And he succeeded doing that during his term in office. He said 16,000 military advisors to Vietnam who were not authorized to participate in combat.
Starting point is 00:11:54 That didn't mean that some of them didn't. They were not authorized. But in fact, that was fewer federal troops than he said to get James Meredith into the University of Mississippi. Oh, he sent few of the in-nom and two weeks before he died. He signed a national security order ordering all of those troops home by 1965 with the first thousand to come home that month in November and he died two weeks later. So, and then of course Johnson came in and he handed the war and sent 250,000 troops over there, which is what all of my uncles, military advisors wanted him to do.
Starting point is 00:12:32 And he stood up to them. One of the other things my uncle said, and the anniversary of his speech at American University, which is an extraordinary speech, probably one of the best in American history. Jeff's acts is called the most important speech in American history. It was a speech to the American people, and it was an extraordinary speech because he read it, is asking them to put their themselves into the shoes of the Russians, and understand that the Russians bore the brunt of World War II. They lost one out of every 13 Russians died in that war. Third of their country was occupied and leveled to the ground. It's like he said, it says if the entire East Coast
Starting point is 00:13:18 of the United States, the Chicago was put into rubble. And he described this in detail for the American people to say, you know, we're all people, we're all on an arc, and we need to understand each other's motives, and not just vilify each other. And what we're seeing now is this formulae vilification, this narrative that we saw as Zod Hussein was, you know, Putin with every little war that we want to get into. Those guys are pure evil, we're pure good, and we're going to go rescue, you know, the damsel in distress. Just on that, could you contrast and compare just maybe the last three or four presidents on this very narrow dimension of that of JFK's promise of what a president should be doing
Starting point is 00:14:05 Bush Obama Trump and now Biden, how do you see the things that these guys have gotten right and or very wrong here on that dimension, just on that dimension? You know, I've been friends with Joe Biden for many, many years. Joe Biden is, you know, he's a go to war guy. He was one of the strongest supporters of the Iraq war. He's been supportive of every war that's come along. And that, you know, I think that's one of the reasons that, you know, some of those, that portion of the Democratic Party, which is a very, very powerful kind of kingbickers, was very happy with him getting an office that he never says no to a war.
Starting point is 00:14:46 I think Trump, you know, I liked a lot of what Trump's had about foreign policy, about disentangling us from this knee jerk reaction of, you know, of constant wars and that the cause that that imposes on our country, what it's doing, it's hollowing out our middle class. But then Trump did a lot of things, including walking away from the intermedia nuclear missile treaty, which was another provocation for Russia, because that treaty, we're putting these inter these intermediate missile systems all along the Russian border and Romanian pull and you know and in Ukraine. And that those missiles can hit Moscow in a few minutes. So there was a very destabilizing system. We all signed it, and he walked away from it. And I don't think that was a, I think that was another provocation. We should be de-escalating these provocations,
Starting point is 00:15:51 though, you know, the why it didn't aid, this is what George Cannon said after, you know, the Soviet Union collapsed. Why do we even have NATO anymore? Why do we have it? Why do we have it? Unless we're going to involve the Russians in it? Why don't we do a Marshall Plan for Russia? We won the war. They are the losers. They admit they're the losers, but they want to join the European community. Let's make that easy for them. Let's not continue to treat them as if they're the enemy because that is a self-fulfilling prophecy And that unfortunately is what we did Let's pivot then You want to contain and you would force everybody to the table to a resolution if I'm understanding correctly You weren't explicit in terms of would you remove support?
Starting point is 00:16:41 But I think we can infer from it you would have a point at which you would stop sending armaments to Ukraine. We have tremendous moral pressure and economic pressure and everything else on Ukraine. How about this, Jason? I mean, would you be willing to take NATO expansion off the table if it helps resolve this conflict? Yeah, everybody's willing.
Starting point is 00:17:00 Because Biden won't. Well, Biden won't, right? Yeah, no, it's absolutely. Why are we trying to expand? We gave our word. We would not expand NATO one inch to the east. And now we've gone into 13 countries. You know, it's a, it is a provocation.
Starting point is 00:17:17 Let's talk about Taiwan. So we got to stay out of wars. If Xi Jinping decides Taiwan is strategic and he invades Taiwan, what would your response be if you were elected president? Well, my response would be to de-escalate that conflict. There's essentially a war party in Washington that is encouraging that conflict, that is drumming up that conflict. What I would do is I would de-escalate it. I would stop looking at it as a threat. I now and allow the Chinese and the Taiwanese to come to their own solution about what kind of relationship they have. And I think that that if we stop our provocations toward the Chinese, that that would naturally
Starting point is 00:18:10 de-escalate. And if China decided it's strategic and we're going in anyway, would you, if you were president to fend I want? That's a question that I would not answer. I'm curious why not. Why don't presidential candidates just answer that question? Because you're committing the country to a war in the future. That would be probably the bloodiest war ever fought.
Starting point is 00:18:35 And it's not something that strategically is not good strategy to project your intentions. You want to leave room for negotiation. You want wanna leave room for negotiation, you wanna leave room for all kinds of movements and you wanna have a debate with the American people and with Congress. But Biden's been clear that he would defend it, right? So it's an interesting insight right there. Freeberg, do you wanna talk maybe a little bit
Starting point is 00:18:59 about the economy and the spending that we're seeing? Yeah, so Robert, I think my biggest question, I've referenced this on the show a number of times, is this extraordinary concern I have about the fiscal deficit and the debt level of the U.S. Running deficits north of a trillion dollars a year, 33 trillion in total debt.
Starting point is 00:19:24 Some people use the debt to GDP metric, which at this point is approaching or has exceeded 130%. And 52 nations that have reached that level of debt to GDP, only one of them has not had to restructure their currency or restructure their debt payments. Obviously with the debt ceiling approaching and some fiscal conservatives using this moment as a point to try and generate leverage, I guess my biggest question for the country now
Starting point is 00:19:56 and going forward is, do we actually have the ability to pursue all of these interests on a social, a geopolitical, a security agenda, and do so without having either a balanced budget or a plan that says, here are the boundaries and here are the boundary conditions. Because in the last couple of years and particularly in the last five years, we've seen almost like a bipartisan, unmidigated spending spree that is largely driven to do what the electorate wants, which is to give people stuff. And giving people stuff costs money,
Starting point is 00:20:36 and that money has to be paid back at some point. I guess, how do you think about the importance of this? And how do you think about the importance of this? And how do you think about the boundary conditions that you would look to articulate and impose as you think about this role with respect to the deficits spending and the debt levels for this country? In terms of a boundary, I would love to hear arguments about that.
Starting point is 00:21:06 As you say, I think the debt is now 32 trillion, GDP, our GDP's around 25 trillion. So that is, that's just a really alarming ratio. If you look at why, you know, the primary cause are our military expenditures. It was spending eight this year, I think, eight, eight point four trillion dollars on the military budget this year.
Starting point is 00:21:33 But if you throw in the homeland security and all that surveillance and security expenditures that are home, it's one point one trillion a year. Well, that's one point one trillion a year that is attributable to essentially to our, you know, war mongering. And I don't think we can afford to be police another world anymore. We have 800 bases around the world. We need to start rebuilding our middle class at home. We need to be responsible with our debt. And we need my grandfather always said, that we should
Starting point is 00:22:07 make America too expensive to conquer. We should make fortress America. We should arm America to the teeth at home so that notes are too expensive to conquer. And then we should concentrate on building up our economic power and a robust middle class, that's what's gonna make America strong. And instead of projecting military strength abroad, we ought to be projecting our economic strength and a marketplace of ideas and economic power. I, you know, right now we're borrowing six billion dollars a day, mainly from the Chinese and Japanese, just to serve the interests on
Starting point is 00:22:47 that debt. That's not a healthy thing for America to be. We got to figure out a way to do impolish fiscal discipline. I can't tell you exactly what my boundaries would be. That's something I need to think about. But how do you think about that? Like I think of discretionary spending, you know, defense is about 800 billion, non-defense is about 900 billion. And then obviously there's social security benefits, Medicare and Medicaid.
Starting point is 00:23:19 In order to get the budget balanced, you think cutting defense would be kind of the first priority and you could kind of get there through that approach. But I, there still seems to be a big gap to me on, you know, given how much we're spending on how do we actually get there? Are we ultimately going to have to kind of change retirement benefits, restructure, Medicare, Medicaid, or are we going to raise taxes or are we going to do all three to get to this point? Otherwise, we have this obviously kind of never-ending debt spiral that's going to cause a massive crisis, whether it's not this year, maybe it's in five years or ten years.
Starting point is 00:23:54 Right now, it's projected social security will go bankrupt in 2035, 2034 around that range. So this is coming up fast. Where are we going to be cutting besides defense, or are are we gonna be raising taxes to 70% do you think to kind of bridge this whole? I can't answer that question any better than I already have. I think with our targets for opportunity and the home insecurity,
Starting point is 00:24:20 I think once we stop fighting these wars all over the world, there's a lot less need for us to have a surveillance state at home. So the real cost in the military is 1.1 trillion a year, not just the 800 trillion that shows up on the books. And I think those are targets for opportunity. And I have to need to study more the issue about how to get back into a balanced budget. I, you know, one of the things I'd say disturbs me is that I don't think we should be playing chicken
Starting point is 00:24:54 in Congress about raising the debt ceiling because I think I don't think we should mess around with the full faith and credit of the United States, particularly at this point time. One of the things that's happened in the world, Bobby, is that there's been a couple of countries, France is probably the best example that had to raise the retirement age. And irrespective of the view that one has on whether that was right or wrong, the practical reality of doing it is just that when these initial social safety nets were passed, the average life expectancy of folks was 10, 15 years less than what they are today. And presumably as we keep inventing technologies, folks are going to live to 80, 90, 100 years
Starting point is 00:25:44 on average, which may seem implausible, but is likely, if you look at the trend, I'm just curious how you think about the state of our social safety net and what has to change, what would you keep the same and what has to be totally reimagined for what the world will look like in 30 or 40 years? I would say it's a red line for me to touch social security or Medicare, or Medicare, I think we need to take care of people, particularly people who have spent their whole life paying into a system with a promise at the end of work hard and saved and done what they were supposed to do. I don't think they, you know, it's right to pull the rug out from under them. But again, I, this is an issue that I need to spend more time looking at and studying. Maybe the next time I come back here, I'll
Starting point is 00:26:39 have better answer for you guys. I think this is my concern is, sorry, but Robert, the comment you just made is the same comment I hear from both sides of the aisle, that we can't touch those social security, Medicare, Medicaid, because it would be so unpopular we wouldn't get elected. And that's ultimately kind of what a democracy like ours may lead to is that folks vote and elect representatives that are gonna create these systems that benefit them,
Starting point is 00:27:07 but in aggregate, we may not be able to support those benefits over time and at scale. And we may be facing that moment sooner than any of us want to. And I think it's one of the more pressing issues and concerns, not just for the United States, but for the global economy, that if the US doesn't resolve this massive whole talking about social security, for example, going bankrupt in the next 12 years as one acute example of that problem set, you know, we may
Starting point is 00:27:38 not be able to turn it around. And I mean, do you think that politics is set up to solve the structural economic problems that the US is now facing? Because so much of politics ends up leading towards what additional benefits can I provide to my, the folks that get me elected? Here's the thing, is we spend $8 trillion in the war in Iraq. $8 trillion and we got nothing for it. Yeah, that's pretty nuts. That's nuts. war in Iraq, $8 trillion, and we got nothing for it.
Starting point is 00:28:05 Yeah, that's pretty nuts. That's nuts. In fact, we got worse than nothing. We killed more Iraqis than Sonic Moose and we killed a million Iraqis probably. We created ISIS, we turned Iraq into a proxy for Iran, which is exactly what we've been not trying to do for 40 years. And we drove two million refugees with the Iraq war and it's after Syria and Yemen and Pakistan and Afghanistan,
Starting point is 00:28:31 two million refugees in the Europe, destabilized democracy in Europe. And we go ahead, so $8 trillion there, we spent $16 trillion on the pandemic, on the lockdown. And again, got nothing in return. So that's $24 trillion and now we're doing bank bailouts every you know couple of months. The Silicon Valley bank fed said that it was printing 300 billion dollars for that made up for all the deflationary made up for all of the deflationary steps that the Biden administration had previously taken.
Starting point is 00:29:17 You go to a American who has been working their whole life, and has been promised at the end of the life that they're going to get a few bucks every month. I have a friend who I brought to my speech with me who is during the same month that we committed another 750 million during March. And 750 million dollars extra to the Ukraine. We got 15 million Americans from Medicare. My friend got a call from the government on his cell phone, a recorded call saying that your food stamps have just been cut by 90%. He went from $283 a month to $25 a month. So you try to feed yourself on $25 a month. There are 30 million Americans who are starving right now. And that to me is unacceptable. And it's hard to go to people like that. People who have been honest, who have played by the rules, who have done everything that they were supposed to do with the promise that they
Starting point is 00:30:20 would be taken care of, that their health care would be taken care of an old age. You go to those people and say, okay, now we're going to cut your food stamps and try to feed yourself on $25 a month, try to feed yourself for $25 a week. We're telling them that. And then spending $800 billion to make a plane. How are you going to cut the federal budget when you're sending over 100 billion to Ukraine? There's, you can't, you have no more authority to do it. I want to finish that by saying, you know, you're like tankering in the engine. We're on when the ship is sinking, you know, because, you know, the order or switching deck textures on the Titanic.
Starting point is 00:31:02 Let's deal with the real problem. Let's figure out how to make this nation a nation that is really focused on taking care of our people Inside rather than saying okay, well in order to pay for the Ukraine war We got to screw every American on Social Security and Medicare We've had by the way the inflation that we've created from just printing money is making my friend keys food twice expensive. The cost of stables in this country is raised by 76% in two years. Now they're cutting these food stamps and bailing out the same month, $300 million dollars
Starting point is 00:31:41 that's still going to Valley Bank, we got it. I mean, it doesn't make any sense. And having this kind of conversation, how do we screw the poor to make sure that we can, you know, we can milk them while we're doing all of this great thing? It's that this country is acting like the alcoholic who is behind on his mortgage and who takes the milk money and goes into the bar and buys rounds for the strangers. You know, that's what you're dealing with. That's a pretty good analogy.
Starting point is 00:32:12 Shots, everybody. So let me ask a follow-up question on this debt ceiling fight, which is a game of chicken. And the country's economy might go off a cliff in the next month because Republicans and Democrats can't agree. So Biden's position is I want a clean debt ceiling increase, no terms on it. House Republicans have passed a debt ceiling increase, but it contains things like a 1% cap on spending growth. It clause back unspent COVID-19 relief funds,
Starting point is 00:32:47 and it would halt Biden's student debt forgiveness plan. So, Robert, I guess a question to you would be, would you negotiate? Like, what would your posture to house Republicans be? Would you be willing to negotiate? Because Biden is basically saying, I will not negotiate at all. So, negotiate or not negotiate. I guess that's my question to you. You have to negotiate. I'm not sure if he's poshering or what. They have to negotiate. They have to work out something that's good for our country. And they're going to blow sides. They're going to have to give up something. We have to put our country first. And it's insane to play this game of chicken with a, you know, with this doing
Starting point is 00:33:30 the stakes or so. I, there's been a lot of talk. Robert about the deep state, the FBI, DOJ, CIA, your family, obviously having dealt with two tragic assassinations, your father and your uncle has dealt with this firsthand in terms of just having the CIA information about these assassinations released. I'm curious your position on some of the most radical proposals people have, this election cycle of dismantling the FBI CIA, DOJ, AKA the deep state. Do you believe there's a deep state? And how would you as president deal with this intelligence operation we have? And then also personally, what are your personal feelings on it? Well, on the, you know, I have, I have a pretty clear idea about how I would handle the intelligence agencies, and in fact, my father was thinking very deeply about that at the time.
Starting point is 00:34:36 My father, who believed his first reaction on his brother was killed, was that the CIA had killed them. And in fact, the first three calls he made on that day. And I was home at the time. And John McComb, the CIA was right across the street from my house. And so John McComb was the CIA director. You would come to our house and swim every day after work during the spring and summertime.
Starting point is 00:35:03 And my father called the CIA desk and talked to a desk officer and said, did your people do this? That was his first call. Any call to Harry Ruiz, who was a Cuban, who was one of the Cubans who had remained friendly with my family. You know, while we were surrounded by Cubans growing up because who were Bay of Big Refugees, my father had got them freed after a year in the cashier's prison. And my father and mother spent a lot of time finding houses for them schools, integrating them to the US military, finding jobs. And so we were all raised very, very closely with the Cuban community, but gradually they turned away from my family. But this
Starting point is 00:35:52 one Cuban who had been, been an engineer, had fought with Castro, and then turned against him when he can't become communist was very close friends with my father. The second call that he made was to a Harry Wu-Way use, and he said, did our people meaning the CIA people do this? And that was, and so my father was thinking very, very, very carefully about how to handle this CIA. He had been, you know, he had been essentially managing the CIA since he came into office. He recognized that the problem, and as I talked about my speech and I think David on
Starting point is 00:36:32 this show mentioned this during the Bay of Bigs invasion, I uncle realized that he had been lied to by Charles Bell and Alan Dulles and Richard Bitts, so the heads of the sea, as well as his joint chiefs. And he came out in the middle of the invasion when it turned against them, and he realized these men were being killed on the beach, and he said, I want to take the CIA and shatter it into a thousand pieces and scatter it to the wind.
Starting point is 00:37:00 So he recognized that the function of the intelligence agencies had devolved and that they were, they had become captive of the military industrial complex and the military contractors and their, their function was essentially to provide our nation with a constant pipeline of new wars to feed the military industrial complex and the growth of the surveillance state. And my father, when he ran for president, Pete Hamill, who was one of his favorite newsmen, asked him on the bus during two weeks before he died, asked him what he was going to do about the CIA.
Starting point is 00:37:42 And he said, what we need to do is we need to remove the espionage division, espionage branch from the planned division. The planned division of the CIA is essentially the dirty tricks of the provision. That's the division, the action-prefid division. They do the assassinations, they fix elections, they do paramilitary operations, black ops, torture, black sites, all that stuff. The SB&A's division, and CIA was originally set up by Cuba, by Truman, as an SB&A's agency, SB&A's means information gathering and analysis. It's not violence, it's about information acquisition.
Starting point is 00:38:27 And unfortunately the the the the the clandestine action division was wagging the espionage dog. So the function the espionage division was to provide new, things to do for the glenetistide division and then cuttering up their mistakes. So there was never any accountability. And what my father understood is that the SVNI division should not be working for the glenetistide services, they should be overseeing them and particularly doing accountability. Uh oh, you know, what if the CIA looks the way that the CIA looks at one Iraq is it was a success because we accomplished a mission of opposing Saddam Hussein. But and you know, the CIA was George Kenned who lied to President
Starting point is 00:39:22 Bush and said it's a slam dunk. So they got us to go in there and weapons of mass destruction. So as president, would you rethink it? And then just as a final question, as final follow up to that, do you believe they murdered or were involved in the murder of your uncle? What would have you come to personally? They were definitely involved in the murder and the 60-year cover-up. They're still not releasing the papers, legally they have to release.
Starting point is 00:39:52 But I don't think there's any doubt if you look at this huge mountain, monumental mountain of evidence and confessions. So many people have confessed to their involvement. And we understand that if you look, for anybody who has doubts about that, I would recommend a book, I Jim Douglas called The Unspeakable, because I think he's done a better job than anybody else that kind of assembling
Starting point is 00:40:21 and distilling all of the millions and millions of documents that have been released over the past 50 years. And these things, these revelations are released incrementally, and so nobody really takes notice of when you put them all together, the story is very close. So you would definitely rethink the CIA, the FBI, DOJ, the whole intelligence operation. I think what you're saying as well as maybe you would also release the documents that maybe would at least provide some more transparency. I just wanted to build on that because you had a very provocative tweet. Part of what you're talking about is accountability and we need data and transparency to have that.
Starting point is 00:41:04 There are people that have whistleblown, there are people that have leaked. And I think it's fair to say that they've all been treated by the security apparatus in largely the exact same way. But you treated recently about your desire to see some of those folks forgiven and pardoned. Do you wanna just take a few minutes just to talk about some of those folks that you think has allowed us to actually see the truth if we want to see
Starting point is 00:41:29 it and why you think that and what you think should be done with folks like that? I mean, Julian Assange is an example Julian Assange is a newspaper publisher. He published leaked documents. You know, why are we? I mean, if I was any newspaper publisher in this country, I would be worried about that. Now, he can go to jail for life because he published leaked documents of great import to the American people of things that should not have been secret that we should have known about the revelations that affect our civil rights, affect our foreign policy, affect things that we have right to know. And it's really, it's strange that there's any support for his imprisonment among the press. And I think the press is beginning to figure this out finally. The most controversial
Starting point is 00:42:18 of those figures is Edwin Snowden. Edwin Snowden released documents that showed us that we were all being spied upon. And that's important for Americans to know. And in fact, it was so important that Congress passed laws based upon his revelations to protect the American people. So why are we punishing the whistleblower rather than punishing the people who were, you know, who were illegally spying on us? That's what we should be doing. We shouldn't be jailing dissenters in our country. We shouldn't be jailing whistleblowers. We should be jailing the people who break the law.
Starting point is 00:42:59 To keep this bipartisan, do you believe the deep state is acting to subvert the Trump presidency and that they are framing him on these three or four indictments that they are working on, some that have dropped, some that haven't? Do you believe there's a deep state conspiracy against Trump? Because you might be facing him. I don't use the word deep state. I mean, I've described how these bureaucracies function. It's not so much a group of people that kind of deep state implies there's a group of people in black coats in a smokey room, pulling strings, but the corruption is systemic. All of these agencies are captive agencies.
Starting point is 00:43:49 The CIA is ultimately working for industry, like the oil industry, the coal industry, and the military contractors. They've always had that ties since the very beginning, Alan Dallars, who would work for Selvin Gromwell and ended up doing coup d'etat's. I have his former clients like Texaco and United Fruit, Texaco and BP and Iran in 1953, his former client, United Fruit, when Jacob Arbohans and Guatemala tried to nationalize United Fruit, you know, the CIA under dollars went over through the government to protect the interest of his former clients. So there's always been these ties to the industry and the ties now, and particularly the oil
Starting point is 00:44:35 industry, and the ties to the military industrial contractors really drive CIA action and CIA intelligence. And you have to stop. And this is systemic in all these agencies. I mean, USDA is run by Cargill Smithfield on Santo, Bob Pilgrim, John Tyson, EPA is run. When we sued EPA, we got discovery documents that showed that the head of the Pesis-I division, Jess Rowland, had been secretly working for Monsanto for a decade and you know, sending them back and forth with Monsanto directing them, you need to kill this study, you need to kill that study.
Starting point is 00:45:24 And this, unfortunately, is not the exception. It is the rule. Most of the people who work for those agencies are good citizens, they're good Americans, they're honest, and they're patriots. But the people who tend to rise in those agencies and occupy these very, very powerful keepers' actions from decades or years like Anthony Fauci 50 years are people who are in the tank within the industry. And what we need to do is unravel that across the government. And that's really what people say that's the deep state. That really is what is a systemic corruption within our agencies. That is driven by agency capture. Can we actually just talk about the coronavirus maybe pandemic for a second? And I just want to tie in two concepts.
Starting point is 00:46:11 Sometimes again, there's a lot of mainstream misinformation about it. There is a lot that came out about you, particularly as it relates to vaccines. I just want to give you an opportunity to set the record straight just on what you think happened, COVID, all that corruption, your thought on vaccines, the efficacy of our programs, how we should change, what we keep the same, just maybe a chance to clear the ear so that we can get some of the gobbledy-gook on the internet set straight. I mean, it's hard to, you know, I wrote a 250,000 paid book about it. And I've written a couple of books and so it's hard to summarize, you know, what went
Starting point is 00:46:49 wrong in a second, but essentially we had instead of a public health response to what public health crisis, we had a militarized and monetized response that was the inverse of what, of everything that you would want to do if you actually wanted to protect public health We've known you know if you look at WHO protocols or the CDC protocols the EU the NHS and Britain All those they all had protocols are how to manage the pandemic. They all said unanimously You do not use lockdowns, mass lockdowns, you quarantine the sick, you protect the vulnerable, but you keep society moving because the consequences of not, of shutting down society will be cataclysmic beyond anything that the disease is going
Starting point is 00:47:40 to impose. Everybody knew that. And so, you know, we had these agencies that had drilled for years and years, this alternative, you know, militarized response. And instead of, you know, doing what you want to do, which is to get early treatment to people, to have, I mean, you know, we live in the age of the internet, we should have had a grid that connected all 15 million frontline doctors every country around the world and figured out what are you doing that works in your country, you know, and try and then distilling that information and processing and getting it to other doctors. Well, we knew it was working, we knew Ivermectin and hydroxychloric and we're working, we knew that since 2004, because NIH did the study that said hydroxychloric and obliterates
Starting point is 00:48:30 coronavirus. We knew it would work at that time and what was the response? The response was they could not allow early treatment to occur. Why? Because there's a little non- known federal law that says if there is a drug that is shown effective against the target disease, it is ill, a drug that is proof for any purpose. It is illegal to issue an emergency use authorization for a vaccine. So if they admitted that a hydroxychloric on our
Starting point is 00:49:05 Ivory Mecton worked against coronavirus, it would have destroyed their whole $100 billion vaccine, you know, enterprise. So they had to kill early treatments. And they went after stuff that they knew worked. They, this was the first respiratory virus in history, where people would go to the hospital and they would test positive for coronavirus and be symptomatic. They were sick. That's why they went to the hospital. And the hospital would say to them, there is no treatment. Go home until your lips turn blue and you can't breathe and come back and we will give you two things that are going to kill you. I'm Desiver and Hydrooxic and ventilation. So people still look at in this country, Anthony Fauci is a hero. We were doing things a couple
Starting point is 00:49:55 of miles from me in Malibu. There were police pulling servers out of the surf and giving them thousand dollar tickets and telling them to go home. And out of the surf and giving them $1,000 tickets and telling them to go home. And I'm out of the sunshine where coronavirus doesn't spread and lock him in their home where it does. And every time they sent one of these people home from the hospital sick, it was a super spreader of that. Oh, you look at our record of coronavirus. And this is when nobody can explain who is defending Fauci et cetera. We had the highest body count in the world by far from Corona virus.
Starting point is 00:50:33 We have 4.2% of the world's population. We had 16% of the COVID deaths. How does anybody explain that? And you go to nations that didn't do what we told them. Nigeria. Nigeria is the highest malaria burden in the world. So everybody gets hydroxychloric once a week. They call it Sunday Sunday.
Starting point is 00:50:53 Everybody in the country takes it on Sunday. They had the highest river winds burden. So half the country's on high for mectin. Nigeria never had an epidemic. It had a death rate in Nigeria a 14 people per million population All our death rate 3000 per million population Blacks in our countries were dying at 3.6 times the rate of whites
Starting point is 00:51:16 Why were American blacks dying in Nigeria and blacks weren't and And then you go to Haiti Haiti had a and by the way, Nigeria had a 1.3% vaccination rate, Haiti had a 1.4% vaccination rate. And they had a death rate of 15 per-po, per million population. These are the countries that Donnie Fauci and Bill Gates said, we got to get them vaccinated, we got to do whatever you can, because they're going to get totally wiped out because they're poverty. And guess right, they never had a pandemic across Africa. There was a 10% vaccination rate. And guess what, they had a death rate of about 340.
Starting point is 00:51:56 Some people think that the death rate here was overstated because of incentives to do that. Do you believe that as well? So maybe part of that death rate is it was over and said, but you believe looking back on this, that Fauci, as well as the pharma companies, Bill Gates investments in those areas, that let us down a path, we'll call it the medical industrial, the pharma industrial complex.
Starting point is 00:52:20 You believe the pharma industrial complex dictated our response to coronavirus and then free-break all that you jump in. But you believe that. That's the... I don't have any question. I believe this was, you know, as I said, it was a military response.
Starting point is 00:52:40 I mean, looking who is running, the, look at who is running the coronavirus response, wouldn't you think it would be HHS? Well, when they at one warp speed had to present its declassified, its organizational charts to show to the FDA committee called Verrpack when they demanded it. And warp speed went in and showed me the organizational charge. The agency running Warp Speed and Pandemic Response was not HHS, it was NSA, the National Security Agency.
Starting point is 00:53:18 Avril Haynes is the Director of National Intelligence. So she was running Operation Warp Speed. And who was manufacturing? It wasn't Pfizer and Moderna. It was 140 military contractors who had lines ready. And you say, you know, and all of this clamped out on civil rights that we saw, the censorship, the closing of the churches, the closing of the right to assemble,
Starting point is 00:53:48 the banning of jury trials against pharmaceutical companies, they crushed the seventh amendment, the first amendment, they closed down 3.3 million businesses with no due process, no just compensation, they obliterated the fourth amendment right to, you know, to against more endless searches and seizures with all these intrusive, you know, you have to show your medical records to go out of your house or to get into a public building. Freeberg, what is correct here? Do you believe in what is incorrect about Roberts? What's Roberts saying, if anything?
Starting point is 00:54:21 Well, look, I mean, there's obviously a lot of things I could say. By the way, I was on the executive team at Monsanto for a couple of years. So, you know, one thing I will say is I sat on the table facing the EPA and the USDA and certainly didn't feel like a very cozy relationship. And at least what I saw in the few years I was there, it was, it did feel like a very kind of independent regulatory and challenging, frankly, regulatory process that Monsanto had to manage and deal with and go through and releasing new products. I don't think that this notion that there were embedded parties that did our whims and
Starting point is 00:54:58 wishes really placed through, at least for my experience sitting there. I'm not a long time Monsanto executive. I built a software company, sold it to Monsanto and sat on the exact team for a few years after the acquisition. But I guess the more kind of, I think bigger framing question for you, Robert, is really around vaccines in general. I think your commentary around the COVID response and the influencing forces there didn't start with COVID, right? I mean, you've been a kind of outspoken voice on vaccines in general for some time. Is that a fair statement? Because I think that that's part of the media narrative around your history and legacy is that you have been kind of outspoken on vaccines and the risks and the effects that you consider to
Starting point is 00:55:47 be, I don't know if it's implied or explicit with respect to the use and wide adoption of vaccines over time. Maybe you could share a little bit about your broader perspective in the years leading up to COVID and how that then informed your point of view specifically on COVID. I'm not an anti-faction. I fully vaccinated my objective is not to vaccines. I'm not anti-vax. I fully vaccinated. My kids were fully vaccinated. I wish at this point that I had not done that
Starting point is 00:56:11 because I know enough about them now. But my principal objective is that vaccines in the childhood vaccines are immune from pre-licensing safety testing. Of the 72, when I got, when I got, I got three vaccines. My children got 72 doses of 16 vaccines. And the vaccines are the one medical product that does not have to go through
Starting point is 00:56:38 placebo controlled trials where you test and expose, or expose population, prior to licensure. And there's a number of historical reasons for that, the kind of military beginning, is the, these vaccines were regarded as national security defenses against biological attacks in our countries. So they wanted to make sure of the Russians attacked us with anthrax or some other biological agent they could quickly formulate and deploy vaccine at 200 million Americans with no regulatory impediments. So they call them biologics from medicines and exempted biologics from pre-liciting safety. I've litigated on
Starting point is 00:57:17 that issue. Not one of them has ever been tested, pre-licent or against. So nobody knows what the, you know, you can say that the vaccine is effective against the target disease, but you can't say that it's not causing worse problems. Now, I'll just summarize this story. In the vaccine schedule exploded in 1986, the vaccine industry succeeded in getting Ronald Reagan to sign a law and my uncle was also a group that was pressured by why it was losing $20 and downstream liabilities on every vaccine it made because it was lawsuits for every dollar that it made. And they went to Reagan and said we're gonna get out of the vaccine business
Starting point is 00:58:07 And you're gonna be left without a vaccine supply unless you give us full immunity from liability and Reagan you know reluctantly sign that So today no matter how negligence the company no matter how grievous your injury no matter how reckless or conduct you cannot sue them That caused it gold rush because now you've got a product that there's no downstream liability, you're immune from that. There's no upstream safety testing, so that's a $250 million saving. And there's no marketing or advertising cause, so because the federal government's going to mandate this product to 76 million
Starting point is 00:58:45 American children where they like it or not. And there's no better product in the world. And so there was a gold ration instead of three vaccines, we quickly ended up with 72 and now we're going to, you know, toward 80 right now. And there's no end in sight. And a lot of those vaccines were unneccessary. They're not even for casual disease cause disease. Here's what happened in 1989. We experienced a chronic disease epidemic in this country. It is unlike anything in history.
Starting point is 00:59:16 We went from having 6% of Americans affected by chronic disease to 54% by 2006. And what do I mean by chronic disease? I mean, neurological disease that I never saw when I was a kid, 80-D80-HD, speacial, a language like TICS, TRETS syndrome, ASD, autism, narcolepsy, all of these suddenly appeared. Autism rates went from one to 10,000 to one every 34. 1989 was the year this began. A allergic disease, peanut allergies suddenly appeared. Food allergies, eggs are my sonly appeared. And it relaxes and asthma, you know, which had been around, but it exploded. And then autoimmune disease is like rheumatoid arthritis and juvenile diabetes.
Starting point is 01:00:05 I never knew it. I had 11 siblings about 70 cousins. I never knew anybody with any of these diseases and son, why do I find my kids' allergies? So, so then if you look at the manufacturer's inserts for those 72 vaccines, there's 420 diseases that have been associated with the vaccines that are listed, including every one of those diseases that went epidemic in 1989. And this is the country which most have been vaccinated and this was happening here unlike any other country in the world. And so we have this, you know, and, you know, it's good for the pharma. This pharma now makes 60 billion on the vaccines.
Starting point is 01:00:54 When I was a kid, they were making 250 million. Now they make 60 billion a year plus 100 billion from COVID vaccine. Friedberg, do you believe that these vaccines are over-prescribed and are part of the rise in ADHD and all this litany of diseases? I'm just asking Friedberg, who's our resident scientist here, do you believe this explicitly as a scientist? I'm curious. I don't think there's direct evidence supporting that relationship. I think that there's a lot of environmental factors that have been driving changes in the rate of problems with auto-immunity.
Starting point is 01:01:33 It relates to our food products, our food system. It relates to environmental chemistry. Robert has talked about generally, I think there's a lot of environmental conditioning that's caused this rise in problems in human life. And I interrupt for a second because I don't think it's solely the fact that our children today are swimming around in a toxic zoo, but there's a timeline. And actually, a toxicologist that I've used in many of my lawsuits, probably the most famous in the country, Phil Landrigan, looked at the timeline of the explosion of all these chronic diseases. And he said, there's only
Starting point is 01:02:12 a finite number of things that have caused it. You know, one is glyphosate. Things that went, became ubiquitous against it in every demographic, beginning around 1993, 1989. One of them is glyphosate, neonic to a patented size PFOA's cell phones, ultrasound, and he made the whole list. And so it's a finite number. And the question is, and vaccines are part of that. And you know, it is suspicious because the vaccine solicits all of these aside effects. Now I've put together books, you know, one of my books on this subject on connecting these as 14-inch references and 400 studies digested. So the science out there is pretty clear, but NIH refused to study these things because it knows that whatever they follow the dots, it's going to end up with a big shot. And so they simply have stopped studying them and they've turned themselves into an incubator
Starting point is 01:03:18 for pharmaceutical products and they don't do this kind of basic research. I want to just give you guys one example. The most common vaccine in the world is called the DTP vaccine, the Theria tetanus and Tussus. We gave it in this country and beginning around 79. It was killing or causing severe brain injury in one out of every 300 kids who got it. UCLA studied funded by NIH that found it. So they got rid of it. That's what caused all the lawsuits and eventually precipitated the passage of the vaccine. We stopped it here. They stopped in Europe, but Bill Gates and WHO are still giving it to 161 million African children every year. It's the most popular vaccine on earth. Bill
Starting point is 01:04:01 Gates has publicly saved 30 million lives. He went to the Danish government and said, we've saved 30 million lives. We'll use support this program. In 2017, the Danish said, show me the study that shows that it saved all those lives. He couldn't do it. So they went down and they conducted a study in West Africa with a dance operator, all these health clinics, and they looked at 30 years of data. And as it turned out in a nation called Kinnebysau, half the kids in that country at the age two months had received the vaccine and half had not. It was a perfect natural experiment and they looked at 30 years of data and what they found was that the kids who received the vaccine were not dying of diphtheria tendus and protitis. But girls who received the vaccine were not dying of diphtheria, tendus, and pertinences, but girls who received the vaccine were dying at 10 times the rate
Starting point is 01:04:51 of unvaccinated girls, and they were not dying of anything ever, anybody ever associated with the vaccine. They were dying of of Bill Arzia, malaria, anemia, minor cuts and scrapes, and mainly pulmonary respiratory disease and pneumonia. And what the researchers concluded, and this was a study funded by the Danish government and another Nordic which is a vaccine company, and the scientists were all pro-vaccine. The day said, is this vaccine is killing more people than the disease ever were. Nobody knew it because nobody associated the people who were dying because they were dying all these different things.
Starting point is 01:05:33 That was only the unvaccinated kids. So the vaccine had saved them from diphtheria, tetanus, and potassium, but it had ruined their immune system so that they could not defend themselves against other diseases. And that's the danger of not having placebo controlled trials prior to introducing the product, particularly when you're going to demand a product for healthy people. Let's, with our remaining time here, move on to energy. You end the environment. You've got an incredible track record. I remember growing up in New York, the amazing work you did for the watershed project, and I'll let you expand upon that in a moment.
Starting point is 01:06:09 But the only confounding thing I found in your position, and I'm curious if it's changed or not, is that you spend decades trying to close the Indian Point nuclear power plant in a time when clearly nuclear power has gotten safer and is clearly, I think, the world believes, and certainly everybody who's on this panel believes, nuclear is a key point in the transition to renewables. So what is your actual position, explain it to us, as basically as you can, on nuclear power and do you regret, or have you read thought your position on Indian point? No, I mean, any point is really leaving Tritium and the odds every day. I don't see how you can say it safe and you know they still haven't figured out what to do with the ways
Starting point is 01:06:58 they're now storing it. You know, it's 18 miles from Mid-Dumman Hatton. it, you know, it's 18 miles from Mid-Dumman, Manhattan. If the shack where they were storing the fuel rods at the structural integrity of a K-Mart, terrorist attack against it would, you know, would basically render New York in a haven uninhabited for the next 5,000 years or so. So to put something that risk is so close, 10 million people doesn't make any sense. Now, nuclear power, I'm all for it if they can ever make it safe, or if they ever make it economical. And it's not me saying it's not safe. It's the insurance industry. They can't get an insurance policy. If they can't get an insurance
Starting point is 01:07:50 policy, then I would say, I don't want it. The American nuclear industry, I mean, you go look at what Fukushima, they're poisoning the Pacific every day with huge amounts of really deadly radiation, and they end out their only solution to it is to suck the water out of the groundwater and store it in these big tanks. And if you just go on the internet and look at a picture of the Fukushima water tanks and they go on to the rise and there's no end to it. Robert, can I just make a point? The thing with nuclear that's worth separating is it's not the fundamental technology there that's broken in either example that you use, but it's the profiting motive that caused both the industrial engineering of both plants to be subpar.
Starting point is 01:08:37 Because Fukushima for example was engineered not to the seismic levels that you really needed. Or elevation. Even considering all that, here's what I would say, is that, you know, in our country, there's not the nuclear is regarded as so dangerous, and they can't get insurance, so the industry had to go to Congress in a sleazy legislative maneuver in the middle of the night and get the price Anderson act pass so that to shift their accident burden onto the American public. So if their plan goes up,
Starting point is 01:09:12 I and I was 10 miles from that plan and I'm going to have to pay for it. So I don't think that's free market capitalism. I believe in free markets. And I can tell you this, there is no public utility on the face of the earth. Well, build one of those plants without massive public subsidies, not one. Nobody will ever do it. And then they have to store the waste for the next 30,000 years, which is five times the length of recorded human history. And if you tell me how that, you know, if they had to, amortize that rate up front, there's no way anybody do it. Number number two, or three or four, whatever I've gotten to, it costs now between nine and
Starting point is 01:09:56 sixteen billion dollars to build a nuclear power plant, just the construction costs. And then you've got to get the technicians and then you've got to get, you know, the waste disposal the regular outages and all of this. There's no way that it could compete in a free market. I believe in free market capitalism. I am a radical free marketer. I believe that our energy systems should reflect the marketplace. And right now, you can build a solar plant for a billion dollars in gigawatt. You can build a wind plant for $1.2 billion in gigawatt. A coal plant will cost you about three and a half billion dollars
Starting point is 01:10:35 at gigawatt, and then you have to pay for the fuel by cutting down the mountains of West Virginia, poisoning 22,000 miles of stream,, burning, you know, putting mercury that gets into every fresh water fish in America, sterilizing the lakes of the Appalachians. If they had to internalize that cause, coal, which says it's, you know, it's for nuke, which says it's too cheap to meter. It turns out it's the most expensive way to boil a pot of water that's ever been devoured. I'm just trying to make the point that if you look at the levelized
Starting point is 01:11:07 cost of energy now, what you're saying is exactly why solar and wind are winning. It's just so much cleaner. It makes so much more sense. There's not fuel cause, and if the impediment is distribution, is that we don't have a grid system that can effectively, you know, orchestrate a variable power. And that's what we... Let me provide a counter that maybe it's not about distribution, but it's about scaling production capacity. So, if you look over nearly any historical time scale
Starting point is 01:11:35 since we've had industrial energy production on Earth, for every 1% increase in GDP per capita, you see a roughly 1.2% increase in energy consumption per capita. And so if you forecast out by the end of the century, the GDP per capita estimates in the US and around the world, we need to increase global energy production by roughly, you know, anywhere from 5 to 10X. And, you know, the current system of pulling carbon out of the ground and burning it up and pulling heat energy out of it doesn't scale, doesn't make sense, obviously. Put aside the carbon effect problem.
Starting point is 01:12:10 And there appears to be a reasonable chance of a pretty serious material shortage for renewable sources by the middle of next decade. So what do you think is the right answer to long-range energy security and what sort of technology should we be embracing? And do you think that they scale fast enough to allow us to have our economy grow in the way that it needs to to support the population demands over the next century? I'm agnostic about the energy sources, and I think you need to be eclectic about it, and a lot of them make sense you know, make sense locally.
Starting point is 01:12:45 But we have enough energy, we have enough wind energy in North Dakota. North Dakota is the windiest place on earth outside of the Arctic. North Dakota, Montana, and Texas, we have enough wind energy to produce five times the amount of our entire grid. The problem is, the North Dakota wind farmer cannot get his product to market because it dissipates in a, you know, we have an antiquity-dated grid system that simply will not efficiently move electrons across country. And we need a DC grid system that you know with Off-Ramps and the big cities etc that can do that in
Starting point is 01:13:30 North Dakota If you have an acre of farmland It's worth about 300 bucks if you put a wind turbine on it. It's worth about 3,200 bucks So every farmer in North Dakota wants to put wind turbines in their cornfields, and the problem is they cannot get that energy to market. That is the only choke point. And the same is true. We have great solar power in this country.
Starting point is 01:14:01 We have an abundance of renewable energy in this country. And the problem is, the incumbents were, were, were operating on rules under rules that were written by the incumbents to reward the dirtiest, filthiest, most poise, most toxic fuels from hell rather than to cleat cheap, clean, green, all some fuels from heaven. And we ought to reverse that and make it make them all competitive. Seems like technology and economics have reversed that in a way. Yeah. One last question on this. So as president, would you support initiatives that could advance and allow approval of safe
Starting point is 01:14:40 nuclear fission production systems to be built here in the US? Well, I will, like I say, I support new and new technologies of new that are safe, you know, where they, but as long as they can compete in a marketplace, you show me, and by the way, I think we should be doing science even when there's no, you know, economic end to us. We should be looking at this stuff. I would not promote new if it's not competitive in the marketplace. And that means cleaning up your mess after yourself, which is a lesson we were all supposed to learn in kindergarten. If they show us what they're going to do with the ways, how they're going to internalize their
Starting point is 01:15:22 costs, rather than what they're doing now, which is to externalize their cause and internalize their profits. Okay, we have covered a lot of territory and I hate to get to controversial ones like culture wars, but it's going to come up in the presidential election. I personally don't think this is what's important in the presidential election. I think the fiscal stuff, the energy stuff, the wars and political stuff we've discussed today are much more important. But I'm curious, you're take on the issues around Disney, DeSantis, Trans, and this cohort of issues which have become an obsession, it seems between certain members of certain political parties or both parties,
Starting point is 01:16:05 the media, and certainly it's taken over a lot of discussions amongst the generation on social media. What's your take on all this? And when you get caught up in these debates and the presidential debates about trans athletes, as put one example, do you think a trans woman who was a biological male should be able to be put in a female prison? Do you think a trans woman who was a biological male should be able to be put in a female prison? Do you think they should be able to play on a female basketball team and change with a bunch of 15 year old girls in a high school locker room? I've already said, at first of all, when I say this, I think that people, I believe in bodily autonomy, and that people's choices about what they want to do with their body should be respected, and people should not be ashamed.
Starting point is 01:16:51 I do not believe that as somebody who was born a biological man, should be able to compete later on in life, whatever choice they made on a woman's team. I mean, I have a niece who is playing softball at BC. She has worked. She has devoted her entire life to getting that scholarship and it's it's consumer. And I've watched, you know, during my lifetime women sports go from essentially non-existent to equitable mainly with men's sports. And I think that's important.
Starting point is 01:17:30 And I don't think that women should lose ground in any way. So I would, you know, I've said, I don't believe that that's the right thing, but I think everybody should be respected. Let me ask a question then about parents who are struggling with this issue. At what age should a doctor be allowed to perform gender reassignment, surgery on a individual?
Starting point is 01:18:01 You believe adults. So at what age should you be able to have gender surgery Because this is gonna come up multiple times in this debate. I think I thought I have that choice. I don't think a child should have that choice Except with you know, certainly not without apparent brand optimization, and I really don't you know I know that the, the, you know, it's a, and let's start by saying this, this is a difficult issue. And it's an issue that we should not be judging people on and we should not be hating people about. We should be trying to solve people's problems and give people as much leeway as possible too and as much respect as much leeway to exercise their choices and much respect those choices we possibly
Starting point is 01:18:54 can. Within that framework, I don't believe that it's that a child without their parental permission should be allowed to choose that kind of surgery because what if their parents agree to it should a 15 year old be able to be I that's a very difficult question I don't feel like I'm equipped to answer it. I'm not gonna You know interfere. Yeah, I think this panel agrees with this is a very difficult issue and you know people should be what do you think about? and people should be, yeah. What do you think about things like critical race theory? And maybe we can just use that as a way to just talk about the state of US education in general.
Starting point is 01:19:32 Are we preparing our children for the task at hand? And what is the task at hand maybe in your eyes and how does it need to change, if at all? Now, I think critical race theory, as much as I understand it, is, you know, though, listen, we should not be hiding from people, we should be honest people about the history in this country of genocide of racism and those things. We need to be honest about that with each other, not to shame people, not to make people feel
Starting point is 01:20:05 badly, not to make people feel guilty, but to understand the milestones that we never want to go near again and to move forward with those things. In turn, I don't really understand the battle over a critical race area in schools, but to the extent, if somebody would say that this has to, that that theme has to dominate all historical teaching, I would be against that. I think it's very, very important. America, our country has done wonderful things in the world. We have a history of idealism.
Starting point is 01:20:45 We have a history of moral authority and leadership. And we have a history of doing bad things too. But I think for children, for the sake of national unity, for the sake of, you know, we need to instill children, with the sense of optimism and hope and love, and also with love of history. I mean, I grew up learning history and learning, you know, kind of the heroic aspects of history, which I now understand are not the only parts
Starting point is 01:21:11 of history, but it's really important for children to have role models to look up to and have an optimistic view of our country and to have to understand what the shared values are and by values, I mean aspirational values. You know, the things that our country is supposed to stand for, when we are at our best. For example, in San Francisco, we canceled advanced placement classes because it made people feel bad. Do you think that was a good decision in the name of equity? No, we should be inspiring our children towards excellence. And we should be able to, as adults, give the measures of what we mean by excellence. And you know, that inspires kids and inspires the best out of them. And, you know, we need to, we need to have those kind of metrics. So that doesn't make any sense to me.
Starting point is 01:22:04 Then what's your view on, for example, just educational diversity in charter schools and your position on the teachers unions? I mean, my view is that we ought to be putting huge resources into public schools and making them the best schools in the world. And I think if we, you know, right now we're making just out of bombers for a billion dollars, that cannot fly in the rain. And I think if we just cut production of a couple of those, we can make all our schools, the best schools in the world. Do they need competition? Do you believe in vouchers? And parents getting to choose which
Starting point is 01:22:42 school they go to because it does seem like there's not a lot of competition and that these teachers unions have a stranglehold on these schools. I have to look at that issue more. I mean, my inclination is that we should be putting resources into making our public schools the best schools in the world. But you said you believed in free markets when with regard to energy,
Starting point is 01:23:02 why not free markets in regard to education? Well, it been. I need to look. Okay. Fair enough. Yeah, let's talk about censorship. Let's talk about the media. One of the things that happened during the COVID pandemic is that a lot of people grew suspicious of the mainstream media, even more suspicious than they already had been. It seemed like the media was curing water on certain issues. It was almost impossible for the media to take seriously the idea that the virus might have come from the Wuhan lab for example people who put forward that I think reasonable explanation were called conspiracy theorists. The media didn't want to look into why for example, this is an example, Fauci
Starting point is 01:23:43 lifted Obama's moratorium on gain a function of research, couldn't get the media to really cover whether, you know, masking toddlers in schools did anything positive. And then, you know, when we found out that the mRNA shots didn't prevent COVID the way they said, they never even really asked the CEOs of Pfizer and these other companies, when did you know this? When did you know that the vaccines didn't do what you said they're going to do? I remember at Davos, you had a rebel news.
Starting point is 01:24:14 It was this guerrilla media outfit that Acosta and Burla, the CEO of Pfizer out on the street, and they were just asking him questions that the media is supposed to ask, like, when did you know, what did you know and when did you know it with respect to whether the vaccines prevented the spread? And you couldn't get the New York Times or any of the mainstream outlets to cover this at all. So it felt to this guerilla media outfit.
Starting point is 01:24:41 So any event, that's a long wind up. But Robert, what's your take on the media? Why can't we get what seems to be on as media coverage? How does this fit into your theory of regulatory capture? Who are they sort of carrying water for and why? You know, I, in 2015, I wrote a book on Simon Rissle and there was a documentary that came out of that time called Trace Amounts. It was a really good documentary on the Mercury-based preservative that was in a lot of vaccines at that time. And it's been removed from most except for the flu vaccine now. But I took that. I had a very close relationship
Starting point is 01:25:26 with Roger Ailes, who is the founder of Fox News. I had this weird relationship because when I was 19 years old, I spent three months in a tent with him in East Africa. And we, you know, he would like, wouldn't he start at Fox News, he became like Darth Vader to me and we were anacetic one. Every issue but we always, he was a very funny guy and very clever and he was also very loyal to his friends and he wouldn't make all of the hosts of Fox News put me on. So I was the only in farm Alice who was going on Hannity and Bill O'Reilly and Neil Kavuto. It said regularly like weekly and he made them do that, but I went to him with this this movie and showed it to him, and he found it compelling, and he had a relative
Starting point is 01:26:15 who he believed was vaccine injured, a very, very close relative. And he bought, he believed what was going on and what the documentary, you know, the thrust of the documentary was. And he said, I cannot let you talk about this on Fox News. I'm sorry. It was the first time he ever saw me this.
Starting point is 01:26:33 And he said, um, if I let you, if any of my hosts let you on to talk about this, I would have to fire them. And he said, um, and if I didn't farm, I'd get a call from Rupert within 10 minutes. And he said to me at that time that 70% of the revenues for his not on network news, on prime time, were pharmaceutical ads. And that he said of 22 ad spaces that we sell on the net work news, on the evening news, 17 of those are pharmaceutical. We cannot afford to offend our biggest funder, his advertisers.
Starting point is 01:27:21 And I had this interesting experience with Jake Tapper where when I worked on my rolling stone article deadly immunity Which was about this secret meeting that took place in Simpson with Georgia by CDC and all of the vaccine companies and FDA et cetera where they decided to hide the autism Effect from the American people and we I got the transcripts for them and published in Rolling Zone. And Jake Tapper worked for 21 days with me on a exclusive story and he was going to add simultaneously with Rolling Zone publishing it. And Tapper the night before he went on, he called me in total distress and he said it's been pulled by corporate all things gone he said never in my career as corporate killed one of my stories and I'm really angry and then I called it back in XA he's never spoken to me again
Starting point is 01:28:18 but you know there are consequences for these newscasters who depart from the orthodoxy consequences for these newscasters who depart from the orthodoxy. And they know it. If you look at Anderson Cooper, he's got now probably a $13 million year salary. But if you actually do the math, probably around 10 million of that comes from Pfizer, which sponsors his show. So that's he's working for them. He's not working for us. And they know who they's working for them. He's not working for us. And, you know, they know they're working for it.
Starting point is 01:28:47 Expulsive stuff. And I can't disagree with you as having been a publisher of my whole career. There. Why, why, why even have pharmaceutical ads on TV? I mean, only doctors can prescribe them. Yeah. It was illegal.
Starting point is 01:29:03 Prior to 1997. So there's only two nations in the world that allow pharmaceutical advertising on TV. One is New Zealand and the other is the United States. We both have these huge pharmaceutical sales. So we take three to four times the amount of pharmaceutical drugs as a European take. And we have the worst health results were 79th in terms of health impacts, you know, health outcomes among all nations. And also pharmaceutical drugs, the third biggest killer of Americans, after cancer and heart attacks. So it is not helping
Starting point is 01:29:40 when FDA changed that rule. The AMA was against it, like all the medical institutions that you can't do this, it is gonna destroy health in America, but you know, they did it. And the problem is that these, that the pharmaceutical companies now know not only, you know, have this platform for broadcasting their product, but they also control content on the answer.
Starting point is 01:30:07 As far as I can tell, I think the left just to be blunt hates you more than the right. And so do you want to just comment on your ability to get the mainstream media to pay attention, particularly folks on the left and give you the air time so that you can get your message out. And how much of the party matters in this process for you? I don't know. They're gonna. I mean, it was kind of dramatic what happened this week to them, not to me, because I'm used to it, the ABC, you know, one of their, the person who describes herself as the journalist journalist and gave me a long talk when I got to ABC that when I got to the green room that she was not somebody who had ever censored or cut and they're not working a cherry pick because I said to her, I'm very uncomfortable doing it taped
Starting point is 01:31:00 interview with you because I know what you guys do when I tape an interview. You cut it up, you cherry pick it, you die said, and you then you play things out of context. And she said, you won't do this. See that from me? I'm a journalist journalist. I don't take orders from anybody. I do it. And then she asked me, she says, you know, in the interview,
Starting point is 01:31:21 I didn't want to talk about vaccine. I'm not going around the country talking about vaccines. If you see my speeches, I don't mention vaccines. But if somebody asks me about vaccines, I'm going to tell the truth. I'm not looking to talk about them. I know a lot about them, but I'm not leading with that. Because I'm interested in a lot of other issues. So she says, everything you've said about vaccines, about vaccines, notism has been debunked. And, you know, vaccines, it's cleared to not cause autism. What do you have to say by that? And then I said, oh, and then I went into a long diet chart where I cited the cases, the dates, the publications, and the studies
Starting point is 01:32:06 of it, show that, yeah, obviously it caused autism. And she cut out that whole section. And then, and then, so she had her question, which stated the industry talking point, and then she brackets the news report on me with something at the beginning that says, you know, he's known to be a chronic liar and a disinformation spreader. And then the end, she said, we had to remove things he said because they were false. The whole thing was so weird that she has gotten criticism even from the left. Because, you know, I mean, what is the news can cast are supposed to do and they're supposed to manipulate public
Starting point is 01:32:48 information is their job protect Americans from dangerous thoughts are the audiences do they have such contempt for their audiences at the thank that the audiences can't make up their own minds and what is their whole vision about the traditional role of the American media as the guardians of free speech in the first amendment on its contrary. You can be sure our commitment to you is to not take out one sentence of anything you said. There's some stuff I'd like you to take out.
Starting point is 01:33:18 I mean, I also found that a crazy decision for them to make. If you're, if they actually believe that what you're saying about vaccines, which they put on the table, is incorrect, or what you said about autism or COVID is incorrect, they should be trained enough to rebut it and have a thoughtful debate about you. I'll be even more blunt than the discussion. My short takeaway about you, Robert, is that you are this odd person, which is born and raised by the establishment, but raising a lot of very uncomfortable questions about the establishment. And I think that that's very complicated for people to deal with. And I don't think that folks
Starting point is 01:34:00 will be very supportive of you in the mainstream. And i think the reason is because it'll cause him to question all these systems that they put a lot of trust into that they work with it and so i'm not even sure whether they're trying to play gotcha journalism about vaccines or which is a much bigger thing which is here is a guy that i do think it's very similar to trump that says he came out of the house and told us what was happening in the house and it actually turned out that was happening the Dave Sheppell quote from Saturday Night Live. I think you're a very different person than him, but that comment is very much the same. I think people are Attracted to the truth and the confirmatory evidence about when they think that there's frankly corruption and When it's laid bare in plain English, I Think it's validating for those on the outside
Starting point is 01:34:46 because we're like, we knew it. And then for folks on the inside, they're like, we need to bury it. And I think that that's what you're going to be up against this entire election cycle. So whether it's us, whether it's Rogan, folks that will give you the chance for you to just lay your case out for millions of people who can smartly and intelligently make up their decision. I think that's what it comes down to. So I really just want to say thank you for giving us so much time and just being as honest as you were and transparent as you were.
Starting point is 01:35:13 Sacks closing thoughts here with. Yeah, I agree with that. I mean, I think I think that's a great reference to Moth to the Chappelle quote. I think that the ABC News interview was really telling because I think it's one thing if they had edited the interview for time and just cut certain things, but they didn't do that. They cut out your side of the conversation and then declared you guilty of misinformation, but not letting the audience hear what it is that you said.
Starting point is 01:35:45 They simply declared you guilty of it. And I think, in that case, I think this is an example of how dissenting views are labeled as misinformation, as really a suppression tactic. You know, they can't prove that it was misinformation. They didn't give you the chance to say your side of it. And I think this is a tactic now of the elite to declare certain inconvenient truths or viewpoints out of bounds. They don't want them being considered.
Starting point is 01:36:14 And I think what's very interesting about your campaign is you are going to force, I think, elites and various kinds of policy elites. Anderson Cooper. Political elites. Media elites Anderson Cooper political elites media elites financially consider views yeah that I you know whether you agree with them or not I think you've made them in a very articulate way and I know enough about Certain of your views like with respect to the origins of Ukraine war to say yeah, I agree with that I believe that's true. So I don't think they can dismiss you. Today's conspiracy, there is. Saks, as we've talked about, are tomorrow's pollers. Today's conspiracy, there is are tomorrow's pollers.
Starting point is 01:36:51 Go ahead, Jama. I really think that this is what's going to be scary as if you're, as its election kind of rolls forward, the contrast and compare on the democratic side is going to be very troublesome to the establishment. And I just encourage you to just, just keep sticking to it and telling people what you think. Freiberg any final thoughts as we wrap? Can I say one last thing? Yes, and my defense.
Starting point is 01:37:15 And I want to, because it's such a great platform. What I've always said to people, you know, if I'm promoting misinformation, which I'm constantly accused of, show me what it is. Identify, don't just say I'm an misinformation promoter, show me the piece that you don't agree with or that, you know, I made a false statement. I would say that I have not promoted any misinformation, unless misinformation is just a euphemism for anything that departs from government orthodoxies, every post I have probably the most robust fact checking operation in North America because I know these attacks are coming. So we have 300 and over 320
Starting point is 01:37:59 MD physicians, PhD scientists on my advisory board who see everything that goes out. And everything that I posted on Instagram was cited or sourced for it to a government pay database or peer reviewed publication. I don't know anything. And by the way, that doesn't mean I won't make a mistake at some point, but guess what? If I made a mistake, people would point it out and you know what I would do, I'd change it. and a public opinion in the face of new facts exactly I just show me fact that's the only thing that
Starting point is 01:38:31 I'll change my opinion show me facts and I will change it so fast but you know you need to show me facts. So just on on the competition between you and Biden for this nomination I want to say that the Kennedy family has been involved in public life for decades, and many Kennedys has served in public life. And I honestly don't remember one time with any Kennedy who served in public life where they've been accused of receiving money from a foreign government not once.
Starting point is 01:39:01 And we're now up to 12 Biden's, I think, who've received a payment from foreign governments, potentially in this larger 100 Biden scandal. Do you have a point of view on that? I mean, the fact that it appears that 100 Biden and other members of the Biden family receive payments from foreign governments is that? How do you interpret that? Is that something that you think is fair game in this campaign to talk about uh... i you know i don't know enough about it david to be able to with render judgment on it i don't know the intricacies of those relationships
Starting point is 01:39:37 i think the optics are are unfortunate but uh... you know i would leave it i think it is fair game for people who are looking into it to criticize and question it. I'm not in the position to be able to do that. All right. On that, I would just like to say I grew up in a Catholic household Irish Catholic in Brooklyn, on the wall, in my grandmother and grandfather's dining room. We're three people, Bobby Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, and Jesus Christ. It's been an honor to have you on the program.
Starting point is 01:40:12 And thank you for giving us two hours of vibrant debate. We wish you well. And we'd like to have you on again. And perhaps if this platform allows for debates and they will not host you on the debates, we will. Here on the All in Podcast, I'll let you go. And on behalf of all the besties, thank you for giving us two hours and deeply engaging on these topics. That was a thank you. I really enjoyed it.
Starting point is 01:40:36 All right. This I think went spectacularly well. Let's go around the horn here and get immediate reactions. Friedberg, I want to start with you because I think you on the science issues maybe held back a little bit and let him speak. We didn't have much of a dialogue with him. I'd say we all kind of had a few opening statements, but let him kind of speak his mind. I don't know. We'll see how the episode plays with listeners.
Starting point is 01:41:03 It was really him having a platform to speak his mind for the past two hours. And it's interesting. I mean, obviously he's a candidate that's challenging the current sitting president for his own party's nomination. So really kind of interesting moment to participate in, but we did kind of give him the platform to kind of speak his mind. I think my observation is this guy Robert clearly has a very deep rooted anti-establishment energy and that plays through in many of his points of view. Anti-establishment kind of energy I think manifests as both conspiracy theories, where, you know, as people have kind of classified some of his claims, which typically, you know,
Starting point is 01:41:53 involves looking at call it correlation or circumstance, but not necessarily having the causality or the tie to demonstrate or have proof of point or evidence of point. And I think that that's really where he trips me up on a couple of points personally. Which ones would you say are the points that strip you most? Where were you like? I think the general statement that there are embedded interests in government is a good general statement.
Starting point is 01:42:21 Then you start to try and tie together different kind of correlations or circumstances and say that's evidence. It doesn't resonate true with me as someone who likes to kind of see empirical truth kind of be demonstrated. I think some of these points around, we know that PFOA is one of these, one of these chemistries he talked about, that's in the environment. They're very damaging to the environment. They're very damaging to human health,
Starting point is 01:42:46 and there are others that he makes claims around that don't have that same level of evidence, but they all get kind of bucketed together that all this stuff is bad, that all nuclear is bad, because there is a facility that was built in the 1950s and 1960s that had some degree of bad engineering, and what some might argue isn't necessarily a major hazardous radioactive leak
Starting point is 01:43:06 but has above kind of standards of radiation leak and therefore all nuclear is threatening. Those are the sorts of things that kind of trick me up with him. That one can't have a little bit, yeah, as well. The nuclear issue, I think that matters to me. This is all just bullshit talking, rambling about social issues and, you know,
Starting point is 01:43:23 like what the fuck are we gonna do with education and wars? None of it fucking matters. If we cannot solve the debt and budget crisis problem in this country, we are running into the ground. The United States is really just a panic. I know you do. And I think the US isn't a tight-getting moment. Let's not make that then. You're a key issue. So for me, this is the thing that I told you guys I'm focused on with every candidate is how much do you think about the prioritization of the fiscal, the federal budget? How do you think about the debt level and how do you think about the boundary conditions? And it's clear that that's not really a concrete part of his platform. Nor is it, by the way, for any other candidate that I've seen so far.
Starting point is 01:44:02 I do. So that's kind of where I sit. And it's very unpopular. Chimoff, let's have your response here too. I think it's good to have your opinion. I just think that your opinion is an opinion. And you present it as this canonical fact, and that's what I have an issue with.
Starting point is 01:44:15 I just think that's intellectually not accurate. So I respect the fact that you think that that's an issue. But I think there's a lot of smart people that would say that's not the issue that you think it is, and there are other issues. Where did you find yourself, Tramoff, in this process, agreeing with him or disagreeing with him? All political candidates at some point have a fork in the road, which is that they're going to be a truth teller of their own truth truths or they're going to be conformist to talking
Starting point is 01:44:48 points to try to offend the least amount of people. And the first path is much riskier, but it actually has much larger discontinuous outcomes i.e. Trump. The other path is a good antidote to the first path. When the first path is what's in power and you saw Biden take that path. So for me, I don't agree with some of the things that he said. In fact, there are things like nuclear, which I just think he's wrong about. Sure. But what do I appreciate is that there is a version of his truth that is researched and reasoned from his own lived experience as well as history and facts. And then he's also
Starting point is 01:45:36 willing to say, I just don't know enough about it. So let me rethink it and then come back to you. I thought the comment about, you know, school choice was an example, right? And I think that that's healthy. So on balance, I would rather have candidates in that first bucket, which are truth tellers that have the potential to cause disagreement versus the placators who say nothing. And this is where I do agree with Freeberg. Whatever the issues are that may be important, the point is placating doesn't work anymore.
Starting point is 01:46:09 And you need some kind of confrontation on hard topics for there to be any progress now. And so I prefer those kinds of people that are able to draw a hard line. Agitators, non-conformance. And I personally, I've always been, and I have been very anti-establishment, the idea of tearing down all these institutions of power gives me glee. I find it gleeful.
Starting point is 01:46:36 Sacks. When we look at this, this incredible, you know, almost two-hour conversation we had here, I think we did hold him and force him on certain issues, more than you would normally get an in-in interview without being sensational. We didn't lead with vaccines, we didn't lead with culture wars, we talked about really important issues. Where did you find yourself in most agreement with him and where did you find yourself in least agreement with him? Well, I want to make sure we see the forest for the trees here because I think you can
Starting point is 01:47:03 disagree with this or that tree, you can get lost down the rabbit hole of some of these very technical scientific debates. But here's the forest, is you've got this sion of wealth and privilege who comes from the most prominent, famous democratic family. And he was set in his life to go become an environmental lawyer who go fight against big corporate environmental polluters. and he was set in his life to go become an environmental lawyer who go fight against big corporate environmental polluters and somewhere along the way he realized it wasn't just big corporations is the problem it was the agencies the government agencies that were supposed to be regulating them
Starting point is 01:47:35 and he realized that there was a revolving door going on between industry and these agencies and so he ended up litigating not just against big companies but against government agencies. I think that's a really interesting place for a candidate to come from. And what you heard him say or what I took away from it is that he has a very sophisticated critique of regulatory capture. And it goes beyond just the environmental area. It goes also to big pharma. And it goes to the military industrial complex. When he's talking about all these unnecessary wars that the United States has gotten into, and who can doubt that after we spent 20 years and $8 trillion bogged down in forever
Starting point is 01:48:17 wars in the Middle East? Who can doubt that the military industrial complex has played a malign role in our foreign policy? And we've got all these generals, when they retire from the Pentagon, they go right They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts.
Starting point is 01:48:30 They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts.
Starting point is 01:48:38 They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. They're just facts. things that I know would be true. And there's a lot of other areas where I don't know what the truth is, but he is making, I'd say, sensible arguments
Starting point is 01:48:48 that he's presenting data, and he's asking you to challenge him on the data. So in any event, I think he's got this very interesting critique of regulatory capture. What he's basically saying is that we have a ruling elite in this country that is managing the country for its own benefit, and that is screwing the middle class. And that critique actually is very similar to what Trump and DeSantis and people on the right are saying. The only difference is that I think people on the right are blaming ideology.
Starting point is 01:49:16 They're saying that the ruling elite is following this woke ideology. What Kennedy is saying that is at the ruling class is following the money. But you know what? They could both be right. I think these critiques are very compatible. So look, you might disagree with this or that part of it, but I think that this overall critique, the forest, forget about the trees, I think this forest could find purchase with the electorate because I think people just feel like there's something true about this. What I will say is this is exactly how Trump got elected. And there was a great piece, I think it was in the Atlantic when he was running the first time around that talked a lot about the psychology of his appeal, that he comes from wealth,
Starting point is 01:49:57 he comes from the system, but he is the anti-system system product, that he came out of this machine of wealth, this machine of industry, this machine of influence, and he said this entire system needs to be torn down. And by the way, the psychology that they highlighted, and it speaks to Trump not necessarily to Robert, but what they highlighted was if you look historically at the rise of authoritarian regimes coming out of democracies, it's typically the folks that are come from an influence of, from a point of influence and from the point of privilege and power.
Starting point is 01:50:31 And they then decided they wanted to tear down the system that produced them. And you trust the bully that comes out of the machine versus the outsider who doesn't really know the machine and doesn't really have access. And that's partially why I think maybe he has a shot at being the anti-biden alternative more so perhaps in this go-around than Trump is. Look, he's not a bully and he's not going to tear everything down. Yeah. Listen, I've heard him on other interviews and what he said is we need a peaceful revolution.
Starting point is 01:50:59 We need to reorganize these government agencies. So he's not saying like me or... So maybe that's why he does win over Trump right maybe he becomes the less extreme He's not the bully, but he's like I know how to dismantle and and you know, you know, he's like these systems quite They're incredible free speech supporting the rule of law Burgeoning the middle class. I mean these are not things that are really controversial in the end and they're good moral right They're good values. He's very morally grounded. I think my concern is just the framework
Starting point is 01:51:27 for how you kind of rationalize and make decisions. If you're allowing kind of influence in you endo and correlation be kind of the driving force instead of having, you know, make sure you just at least gather and sort the empirical evidence to make those decisions. That's what he's doing. He just reached a different conclusion than you. Yeah, he's just exactly because he's saying that the other conclusion is just the orthodox conclusion, which is nothing to see here. Yeah, by the way, I'm not an orthodox guy and I'm not
Starting point is 01:51:55 like following orthodoxy. Folks have said you're pushing RFK because you think he's a weaker candidate against the Republicans your response No, I don't necessarily think it'd be a weaker candidate for all the reasons we're talking about I think he'd be preferable to to Biden in a lot of people's views So so look for me. This is not like partisan. I just think he's really interesting I think he is a breath of fresh air. I think there are many aspects of his critique of our system and the corruption of our ruling class that hit home. I think regulatory capture is a huge issue. I think a lot of these agencies
Starting point is 01:52:33 do need to be reorganized. Well, it is the invisible hand that we don't know how to quantify well in all these other discussions that we have. And he does put his finger on this really ugly, uncomfortable truth, which is there's a cloistered set of insiders for which there's a revolving door between power and money. And it's going to be very awkward for a small number of people to hear that message
Starting point is 01:52:54 as he gets more attention, which is probably why the media industrial complex will not, you know, will do his best to prevent that message from getting out. The media is going to block this guy at every angle, because what you know, will do his best to prevent that message from getting out. The media is going to block this guy at every angle because you know, why podcasts could play a huge role? Just like in 2016, social media broke through and played a huge role. I think in 2024, I think that podcast could break through the way that unorthodox candidates get their message out. It could be the way it's getting their message out because if after two hours of
Starting point is 01:53:24 this, you don't want to learn more about him, or you're not going to consider him more fully, I think it's impossible because he's so well spoken. I should say he's got a moral compass. He's got a track record. And he's got interesting thoughts. What he isn't saying is he's not just throwing bombs. And there may be things that you can debate with him about his interpretation of what he
Starting point is 01:53:47 looks at, you know, and that's very fair criticism, I think. But his critique is well reasoned. And so you have to unpack the nuances of it to understand why he got to it. And also to try to prove him wrong, that is very powerful because it's not just him randomly screaming about how things aren't working. No, and the moments I thought were very important here, and especially for the listeners who are listening who are making important decisions
Starting point is 01:54:12 and want to maybe change the political system, there were multiple times on the issue of trans surgery and I'm going to be very nuanced here with the permission of the parents. He said, I need to do more research on it. On Freeberg challenging him about spending, he said, I need to do more research on it. On Freeberg challenging him about spending. Spending. He said, I need to give that some more thought, but broadly speaking, you know, I think we can take money out of the military budget and billion dollar planes that don't fly in the rain. There were many moments where he conceded, I need to give that some more
Starting point is 01:54:37 thought. I need to be thoughtful about that. That's not something that you typically hear, but in a platform like this with the nuance that we've created on this platform having discussions, and the audience also being nuanced and having depth. We know the fans of this podcast are in a lot of positions of power. I'm sure 100% or very high percentage of the people who listen to this podcast actually vote and are very influential within their own circles. I think this kind of platform, we have a very deep discussion. And somebody could say, you know what, I need to go deeper on that
Starting point is 01:55:10 and think about it. When I asked him about weapons in Taiwan, and then I said, hey, why wouldn't you give an answer that you defend Taiwan? Biden gave it. So I don't want to check my car, I just wouldn't want to do that. That was a really good answer.
Starting point is 01:55:21 By the way, the official policy of the United States towards Taiwan is strategic ambiguity, which means we don't say whether we'll defend it depends on the circumstances and and Biden when he he's now said multiple times that he would defend it and his own staff walked it back because they said we're not changing strategic ambiguity so yeah I mean the policy he said in that case actually is the united states policy so let me ask you guys a question if If he won the Democratic nomination and he's up against Trump, who do you vote for?
Starting point is 01:55:51 Obviously. At this RFK. Yeah, of course, a RFK. And I think Sacks would have a hard time. He won't say who he's voted for previously. I think Sacks would vote. Or if Sacks is not going to say, are you? Are you saying that?
Starting point is 01:56:02 Sacks doesn't like to say. He's just not a valiant. I'm a serving judgment on the general and tell I know who both candidates are. Okay, you wouldn't even, Sacks won't even tell us who we voted for. I would love for RFK Jr. beyond the ballot and have that choice for sure. And as possible, I would as possible, I would vote for him.
Starting point is 01:56:19 It depends who the other person is. Isn't really, because you wouldn't even tell us who you voted for or if you voted in the last election. Well, that's my right, Jason. I don't have to tell you. I just think it's it's intellectually dishonest since you talk about politics so much That I do I think you should tell us who you vote I talk about issues now. I decide to balance those issues because every candidate is a complex mix of issues That's ultimately my decision of issues, that's ultimately my decision.
Starting point is 01:56:45 Yeah, for somebody who injects politics into everything to not just say it, I'm not the one injecting. So to follow up on the question I asked, I would love to see Donald Trump come on the show and give him an opportunity to have a conversation and see if folks can have a different point of view coming out of that as well as Joe Biden. And maybe some of the other candidates running for the Republican nomination. And I want to see if the points of focus for us can, you know, maybe match up with one or more of these candidates.
Starting point is 01:57:16 So far, I still... Well, Nicky Halley will come on, right? We think? Yeah. So Nicky Halley's in, and then Trump will do it, and then Biden will not. And then Trump will do it. I then Trump will do it and then Biden will not. Trump will do it. I think Trump will do it because he did something with Bart's tool.
Starting point is 01:57:30 Jason, do you want me to do the announcement on the summit? Oh, please. Okay. But we are confirmed and signed on our venue and so we are confirmed for all in summit 2023 in Los Angeles September 10th through 12 Secure the bag baby, let's go. We'll put out the and I think it's gonna be Really exciting because we'll have an opportunity to at this point in the year We have a lot of time to put together a really high quality
Starting point is 01:58:05 agenda for conversations we each want to have with really amazing people. So I'm excited about that. We've kind of started to put together some ideas on what we want to talk about, who we want to invite to have those conversations of us put out some invites. So very good job, by the way, and you'll be leading, you're the, this is your AI summit. So I'm handing everything off to you. I'm helping with the parties basically, but you're driving. Congratulations, your team is exceptional. I just want to let the audience know.
Starting point is 01:58:30 We're doing it together. And I mean, I'm stepping back and letting you drive. I consider this like you were, I care very deeply about content and I want to make sure that we get a chance of. Yeah, and the experience and have a chance to have the conversations we want to have with the folks we want to talk with so
Starting point is 01:58:45 It would nothing could be better than you building on top of the first one and then we just keep going from there Trimoff and sax if they want to build on it from there. There'll be three This is what everybody wants to know is tickets. There's gonna be three ticket tiers There'll still be a VIP one for 7500 that gets you into the dinners. Oh, sorry Yeah, that's that's an important point the VIP experience this year We got some feedback on the last go around Um, that we needed to make sure there was a degree of differentiation so the VIP experience this year, we got some feedback on the last go around that we needed to make sure there was a degree of differentiation. So the VIP experience will include special VIP dinners early access to the theater, gift bags, special sections during the parties.
Starting point is 01:59:15 So hopefully it elevates the experience a bit for folks that are able to pay the higher ticket fee, which actually helps support the whole program. No bottle service. I mean bottle service if can bring your card. But hopefully, as a way to kind of support the overall program and keep the cost down for everyone else, and then it's a $1,500 general admission pass, which includes access to the parties. And then we'll still have the scholarship class.
Starting point is 01:59:35 Can I take you guys a funny story? Yeah. When I joined the ownership group that bought the Warriors, I heard a rumor, which was that when we were competing, it was us versus Ellison to buy the warriors. And Ellison had an idea, I don't know if this is true or not, this is what I heard, that he had an idea for a new stadium.
Starting point is 01:59:54 And he's like, he wanted to make it an ultra VIP stadium. And so there's only 5,000 seats. And they were like Singapore Airlines first class seats. So you go to the stadium to watch it, but it'd be like everybody would be like up close and you could touch. And outside that also had a thousand guillotines. So you could just, yeah, I mean, it's hard enough for a family to go see the North-East or not, but I thought it was very funny.
Starting point is 02:00:19 It's a crazy expensive now. It's like, it's crazy expensive. Hunter, it's a dollar is for nosebleed seats. For the dictator, Traumov Polly Hoppatiya, for David Sacks who set up this episode and Friedberg, the Sultan of Science. We hope you enjoy this. It's the first of many to come. We will still be doing regular dockets.
Starting point is 02:00:38 We might have to go to two episodes a week on weeks like this, who knows. But give us your feedback, share the show, and we'll see you all at the all in summer. I squee-na-kin-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w- We just have one big hug or two because they're all just like this like sexual tension but we just need to release that out. I'm going on leave

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.