All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E136 Hacking the pod, Threads launches, Fed minutes, immigration debate, balloon farce, heart health
Episode Date: July 9, 2023(0:00) We hacked the pod! Jcal is on vaca (5:34) Meta launches Threads (17:15) Chat AI interest in decline? (28:36) Fed meeting minutes, economic data and outlook, and EU risk (56:07) Florida Senate B...ill 1718, jobs, and immigration debate (1:21:48) Chinese balloon: political farce? (1:31:47) Gerstner Science Corner: preventative heart health Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Let me get everything cute up here.
How does Jake hell open the show?
What does he say?
Hey everybody, do it, Jamal.
Hey everybody, everybody, I'm Jason Galcanos.
I am the grifter with the mostest.
The mostest, that's the shortest.
The shortest, that's the fastest, and the fastest, and the fastest, and the dumbest.
He's not even here. You can't do that.
That's just boy.
It's all for you.
What like your winners ride?
Brain man David.
And I said we open source it to the fans and they just got crazy with love you. I sweet.
You can go.
Going all in great, great open to my welcome.
Welcome to the first.
Jacob.
He wanted the week off and anytime any of us take the week off, Jake.
Hell says the show must go on and he rings up Brad Gerstner and says, Hey, we need a sub.
Come on in this week.
This week when Jake.
I wanted the week off. He said, guys, we need a sub. Come on in this week. This week, when J. Cal wanted the week off,
he said, guys, we're all taking the week off. And Sack said, the show must go on. J. Cal refused
to show up. His producer editor refused to show up. So we are here solo hacking our way to all
in pod episode 136. As your moderator today, Dave Friedberg. I am extraordinarily joyous and happy
to bring you the first episode of the All in Podcast without the hostess with the most
est Jason Callicanis joining me today. Il Buce from Elba Island,
Chimath Polyhapatia, Chimath firing up tweet storms lately, taken over the Twitter soon to take the threads by storm. I'm sure
Rainman, David Sacks joining us from a curtain showroom in the south of wherever
and from an attic in an old house, the man who manages 10 billion dollars to generate
50% plus returns year to date. The one and only Brad Gerson or Brad, welcome to the show. Great
to have you. Good to be here. Appreciate the call. Half hour ago. Yeah, great. Are we
even going to be able to drop this episode? How are we going to actually upload it to Apple
podcasts and all the rest? So here's the deal. I have the email
login. I think I can get into the accounts. I'm gonna like do the request for password reset on all
the accounts. I also have I have I movie on my computer. So I'm gonna use I movie to edit it.
It's gonna be fantastic. I'll send you guys a little link before I'm gonna create a descript
account so we can edit our show and comment on it. I'll see how that shows is magically going to appear on YouTube and Apple
podcasts and J.C.L. is going to be like, what happened?
Exactly.
So let's not tell.
What's freeberg is freeberg is Bernard or no during the take over of LVMH,
which is a great story if you've never heard about it.
I'd love to hear like he basically is like, he says he's going to partner
with this Irish entrepreneur to basically buy
Alvia Match. And, you know, they're going through and if the 11th hour, he pulls a rug out from
stabs him in the back, basically does the deal himself gets to own Alvia Magen, the rest of the
history. But this is you, free, brood. You're pulling a Bernard or no at the last minute. No,
no, I would never stab Jake Helen the back. I would just. Oh, you would pass word in the front.
You'd stab in the front. You'd stab in the the front. You said, you should show up to work.
No, it's not it's not savvy in the front. We showed up. He didn't.
Yeah, he's trying to get exercise, passive aggressive control over the
pod. He's been outvoted. He does not control the pot.
We've done 135 episodes. And every time we've suggested taking a week off as a
group and he doesn't want to, he says, must go on and he calls up a guest and he keeps the show going at his whim and his discretion.
So this week we are doing the want the show to go on is he has a deep insecurity that he might get replaced at some point. Yeah. By someone smarter than him. So, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, year. Remember the fateful morning,
when I get a call from Chema,
and he said, hey, we need you to come in,
Jay Cal's out, we got,
and we need you in as the fourth.
And I'm looking to talk into Chema.
My phone rings, and it's Jay Cal.
And he said, freeberg's out
I had both guys going at the same time and it's been that way for the last 12 months
Yeah, I was in Vegas
with
When I had to sort this out it burned an entire day a
Year ago it was a year ago. It was a year ago.
It's right.
Well, at least we got our LLC dox eye.
That's what came out of it.
It's literally like the show Billions, you know,
all the intrigue or whatever.
But that's why Jake I wanted to sabotage the show rather than
have it go on without him because he's afraid that the audience
might like the show better without him. There's certainly been a lot of commenters saying that sort of thing.
So I guess we're going to find out the fans, let us know what they think of this episode.
All right. Well, let's kick it off. First topic on the docket today, which I think is
a great one. And Shemak, you've been tweeting a lot lately as we just talked about. I think
that'll end up probably being our cold open. But, uh, Zuck announced, uh, and Facebook meta announced the launch of
threads, uh, Gerstner, big shareholder of meta, I think, right? Reasonable, reasonably size shareholder.
This, uh, Zuck this morning announced 30 million downloads of the app overnight.
Threads is Instagram slash Facebook slash Meta's competitor to Twitter.
Looks almost like a clone. I mean, it is so similar in features, in interaction, in everything.
Brad, maybe you can kick us off and talk a little bit about the importance of threads
and how this is important to meta and that we can talk a little bit about the app itself.
Well, I mean, the first thing is if rumors are true, they
develop this over a period of six to nine months with 20
people. Okay. And so the extraordinary pace that's now
occurring with inside or inside matter, we've heard from
several people inside that said people are pumped, they're
actually updating real time, are pumped, they're actually updating real time,
user counts, they're over 30 million users already
on Instagram.
And it just gets back to this culture
of flattening the organization,
speeding up the organization.
I think everybody's excited.
The best engineers in the world
want to see their products set free.
And so, I think threads is really interesting
for a couple of reasons.
Number one, if we flash back to what went on in China
with Toteon, Dwayon, remember that text-based social networks
were where kind of it started there.
And so it's a bit anomalous.
Dwayon, which is the TikTok equivalent in China,
was started based on Toteon, which was a text-based newsfeed.
And so it doesn't surprise me to see the social graph
being leveraged into a text-based feed.
I think initially they're seeding it obviously
with all your friends, so it looks more like celebs
and entertainment, and my team is like it's easier to use.
It's faster, it feels more free.
I think Adam, sorry, he posted on threads
that he stayed up all night last night.
So excited with a product launch.
He and Zucker responding to people actually live on threads.
And so part of this just goes to the pulse of the company.
Over the next four to six weeks,
they're gonna have massive launches
out of the AI side of the business.
I expect a lot more support for their OpenAI model
or for their open LLM.
I also think they're gonna launch a bunch of agents
on WhatsApp and Instagram.
So what I see is just velocity and cycle time
within the business improving.
And then one final thing, in the age of AI, right,
you want to collect as much data as you can from your users. And we know that Facebook is
very heavy on video and pictures, but what they're light on is text. And so in a world
where the most important thing on the internet to train your model is the word right now they're going to collect a lot of words a lot of conversations a lot of sentiment among the users.
And you know maybe we'll come back to this you know I just want to kick it back and get people's thoughts on the product but. already by my estimate, these guys get to a hundred million, which is looks like they may be able to get to tonight.
Based upon the monetization that Twitter has, that's already a business that's doing something like two and a half billion dollars in revenue.
If they chose to monetize it, one point two or one point five billion in EBIT, apply their current multiple to that.
That's about a 20 billion dollar increase in enterprise value built by if rumors
are true, 20 people over a course of six months.
Yeah, it's pretty impressive.
I remember in the early days of Friendster and MySpace, and then even Facebook, these social
networks launched and everyone thought it was going to be a conversational system.
And so much of the usage and the page views and the minutes spent ultimately accrued
to photos and over time video. And now it's almost like this interesting reversion back to the origin
that it's back to this conversational system. But these systems always seem to kind of evolve to
hey, just images or what win and what kind of gather up all the mind space. I mean,
I'm up having worked at Facebook. Maybe you can share a little bit about your point of view on threads as a product and as an evolution away from social network
on Facebook to Instagram and out of threads. I think what people don't understand is that
the successful category winner in each of these categories needed to invent something
denoval that nobody else had.
In the case of Facebook, we invented photo-tagging
when it didn't exist,
and then we invented the newsfeed when it didn't exist.
And then there was a bunch of people that copied it,
but it didn't matter because we had refined
and owned that use case already.
So I think the real challenge for Facebook
isn't can 20 people copy Twitter. I mean, you know, massed it on challenge for Facebook isn't, can 20 people copy Twitter?
I mean, you know, Mastodon is a copy of Twitter. There's a bunch of parlors, a copy of Twitter,
truth social is a copy of Twitter. The challenge is going to be, can you invent some
denoval feature that makes people actually want to use this? And, you know, rage quitting Twitter because you're not a fan of the product right now,
or Elon isn't a successful long-term use case, because all of those people will eventually come back.
So I don't know, I'm a little bit more skeptical of the whole thing. I think that right now,
what you see is not even a full copy of the system. It's, you know, a 50-60% copy with a lot less usage
and so as a result, a lot less traffic. But I think you need something new. You know, TikTok,
the reason why it became successful was it was a fundamentally new use case relative to the
alternatives. And I think that that captures people's imagination in mind here. So this is not what threads does. And so
in as much as it's a copy of something that is already an established behavior, I don't think it has
very high chances of success. But don't stories and and and and reels undermine that argument. I mean,
reels was a copy of TikTok and stories was a copy of Snapchat and they're both giant products today.
And stories was a copy of Snapchat and they're both giant products to them.
I think that you can definitely copy features into an existing product with new distribution, but to invent a new product, holy from scratch, that's a carbon copy of something. But again,
reels attaches onto Instagram, which is a unique use case.
And so I think that again, it goes back to you have these five or six established
modes of social media that essentially are from large pieces of content to small pieces.
That's probably the best organizing principle that we have. And then that's one axis. And the
other axis is text video audio. And along that spectrum, you can basically compartmentalize all these things. And then there are about four of them that have real scale.
And, and so in as much as you have established distribution,
yes, you can copy a feature from somebody else and it will get used.
But that's not what this is.
So if this instead gets integrated into Instagram, I think it's much more dangerous
to Twitter than as a standalone product.
As a standalone product, I tend to think it's DOA for the most part.
I mean, unless again, it invents something totally new that we're missing.
Sex, you're an advisor to Twitter.
What do you advise Elon and how do you think about this as a competitive threat?
Yeah, I'm not a formal advisor to Twitter.
I was just a guy hanging around during the transition. No look
I mean I tend to agree with with Jamoth the thing that Facebook did really well here is there's a one clicks
Sign up flow from Instagram where you just click to download threads and then you can log in with your Instagram account and
Port over your bio and all of your data and your social graph. So it's super easy to get
set up, but by the same token, you know, if they have 10 million or even 30 million signups, that's
really just a 3% conversion rate on the billion, you know, users at Instagram house. So a lot of people
are just going to make that a click because they're curious they wanna find out what threads is.
I wouldn't be surprised that I got 100 million users
or 200 million users that way,
just people clicking over from Instagram
to see what this new thing is.
The question is what's gonna be the habit forming behavior
here and the people who use Twitter
are really addicted to using Twitter
is where the conversation is.
There is a strong network effect there,
not just around the users and the social graph,
but like the habit of daily usage.
So, you know, how many of the people who are signing up
are actually gonna go use every day?
Are they gonna take the time to copy,
over to kind of copy pace,
all their Twitter posts,
over to this new medium and
then what about all the comments and replies. So I wouldn't just look at the
signups here. I think you have to look at the amount of posting and the actual
usage before you know that Twitter has a threat.
Did any of you guys use it this morning or last night?
Yes.
I mean, would you think that you would? We had our team playing with it all morning
and I started sharing with you.
It feels to our team like common words being used
were snappier, faster, lower hurdle.
Like it felt more fun and social.
Therefore, it wasn't as considered a post, right?
Because most of the posts, at least,
that our team engages in on Twitter
are for mostly business purposes, right?
And so there's politics and business
and more serious topics, right?
Instagram's the home for fun.
It's for frivolity, it's showing pictures of your friends.
And so I think it's going to orient more in that direction. And again,
there's probably room in the world for a text-based social network around entertainment and culture and food and
and the fun stuff. And there's probably room for one that's more about politics and business and, you know,
more serious topics and perhaps they'll converge more over time. I, you know, I think it's an interesting thing. Yes, it's one click,
but you have to download a new app. I mean, this isn't, you know, just open up your Instagram
and all the sudden click on a new tab, right? And by my account,
I think it's just in the US that they launched, so their conversion rates probably over 10% already
in 24 hours, and you got to download an app to get there.
You know, that feels to me like a little bit more of a hurdle,
but I agree with both of you.
At the end of the day, it's going to be about engagement,
not about how many people you got to download the app.
And if they get high engagement,
and I think there's plenty of surface area
for these guys to monetize,
that combined with, you know,
Chimath pointed out, you know, as much as we love Elon, certainly there are people, Chimath, you brought up with, you know, Chimath pointed out, you know,
as much as we love Elon,
certainly there are people,
Chimath, you brought up with respect to Tesla
that are orienting away because of the brand, right?
Like it may make sense or not,
but we know it's happening.
And so I do think that there's a natural momentum.
I think this was, you know,
like if this was the cage match, right?
If this was the MMA between the two of them, this is certainly, you know, like if this was the cage match, right, if this was the MMA between the two
of them, this is certainly, you know, an offensive blow that, that, you know, metagest landed
here. And I expect that, you know, it's going to amp up the heat.
So, it's interesting because at the same time as threads is launching to compete with
Twitter, there's some really interesting data coming out showing the
climbing usage of chat GPT and interest level in Bard. So both if you look at Google Trends as well
as data coming out of similar web which tracks usage across sites. Chat GPT usage seems to be falling
GPT usage seems to be falling from a peak in May. And it had a modest increase from March to April and then even less modest increase from April
to May and May to June, we're actually seeing a decline in usage.
The question is, is this driven by educational usage?
So a lot of kids were using chat GPT to write essays and to use it in school and that seemed
to be a primary use case. Or does it speak to a more broad kind of challenge
with chat GPT really disrupting search
and disrupting other ways that people are kind of accessing
and browsing the internet that as an interface,
maybe it's a little bit too challenged.
And it doesn't replace the simple two word keyword click
and click on the result.
I'd love your guys' point of view on the product
and the experience as well as why do we think
that there's declining usage in Chachi.
Well, you had these products launch in a moment
where there was in many ways a usage vacuum.
What I mean by that is if you look back
over like the last 15 or 20 years,
there were these
waves that would create these layers of innovation that consumers would infatuated with and
try.
It actually came right on the heels of a pretty massive head fake, which was around
VR.
And that was supposed to be this next big tidal wave massive head fake, which was around VR. And that was supposed to
be this next big title wave of consumer innovation, which turned out to be just a total fart
in the wind. And so I think that there was a set up here, where consumers were, you
know, anchoring for something really interesting and unique in new and novel. A lot of people wrap those labels around
the chat versions of these LLMs.
And so you had, again, this explosion of usage,
but I think what we're going to find there
is that there's some pretty useful use cases,
but narrow where these chat interfaces are very useful
and the usage will decay to that number
and that number is probably a fraction of what the peak was.
So then people will get disillusioned
and the press will say this was another fad
from Silicon Valley.
But then I think the reality is that the real stuff
which is around enterprise software,
healthcare, the physical sciences, that's where the real AI leaps, I think, will have really
momentous value. Those are still 18 to 24 to 36 months away from seeing the light of day,
in terms of real products that actually work. So, yeah, again, you know, it's part of the hype cycle
and we all kind of fell for it.
The only winner here is Nvidia.
I think the loser here are most of the VCs
who pumped in hundreds of millions to billions of dollars
and Randos stopped early.
And the consumers, they tried it, they didn't like it,
they moved on, they're waiting for the next thing.
It's actually great, disagree?
Well, I think that's, that's going a little bit too far.
I mean, I think that there may be a couple of things going on here.
One is that the curiosity factor may have been played out.
I mean, the novelty has worn off a little bit.
I think there was a lot of people using it initially
just to see what it could do and hearing about it
and wanting to test it out.
So I think people have sort of scratched that itch. Also, school is now out of session. So
for all the people who are using it to do some kind of academic research, there's not a need
to do that right now. I do agree that the use cases that are most exciting to me are enterprise
uses. And I agree with Jamoth about that. And I think that is all still to come.
I think in terms of the consumer, I don't think it's going away, but I think that they're going
to have to improve the accuracy, they're going to improve the performance, the speed of it,
maybe improve the interface, add some more features if they want to get to the next level of usage.
I mean, think about the product today.
You know, 100 million downloads.
The whole, the whole down tick here is explained by kids being out of school.
I mean, it's down 10% and like kids have to be more than 20% of the usage of this.
Totally think.
So I think you said that said,
but just think about how hard it is to use this product.
Right.
If you, most people, you have four million people paying 20 bucks a month. Could you imagine people
paying 20 bucks a month to use Google? Then on top of that, try downloading plugins.
It's still a pain in the ass. And if you don't have a plugin, I think there are only 500,000
people using plugin. If you don't have a plugin, you have no new data past 2021, which makes
it dead on arrival as a product. So I don't even think,
I think we're so early in this that to judge the chat interface based upon the product that exists
today, I think it's a huge mistake. I think that what we're going to see is kids come back to
school, you're going to see the normal uptick in traffic. It probably hangs out around this 100, 150 million level in terms of usage.
I think the next 10X for a chat-based interface, at least in so far as it concerns the consumer,
is when we move from information retrieval to action.
And you've heard Zuckerberg talk about this on the Lex Friedman podcast. You've heard you've
heard meta talk about you know this outside of that context and then you've
heard Mustafa talk about it from Pi which is this idea that I say hey show me the
five best hotels in Milan. It shows you five hotels and then you say book me the
Chippuriani for these dates and it
actually will book it directly with a hotel engaging with an agent there.
Now Mustafa from PICE says this is months away Zuckerberg alludes to the fact that they're
going to have action bots on what's happened Instagram and the not too distant future.
I think all of the links exist in the world to do this today.
So I would say look for that as the next 10x feature
for consumer-facing chatbots.
And then finally, I'd just say,
I was at the Snowflake Summit last week.
There were 600 applications,
so new startups that applied for their startup contest.
They were each using an application of chat GPT,
build on top of snowflake data.
600 new companies, and they just launched their application layer.
So there's a tremendous appetite for people to help enterprises,
access that information and build much more seamless discovery on top of it.
I tried to use chat GPT, the mobile app on July 4th.
I was just trying to find a good quote to use in a, you know, by like an American
patriot or founder framework of the Constitution, something like that to use to
tweet out for July 4th, and it just erred out on me.
And it was like one of these error messages that you can tell an engineer wrote.
It's this totally not anticipated error.
And I tried it like two or three different ways,
a couple of different chat threads,
distant work, completely inexplicable.
So when you have those kinds of experiences,
it makes you just wanna go to Google,
which is what I did.
I actually went to Google to find what I was looking for.
I thought ChatGPT could do a better job
because I thought it could help me find things
that would be specifically appropriate
for July 4th.
So I was curious to see what opinion it might have.
But Google is just much more performant.
So they have to like work out those kinks.
I mean, that's pretty clear.
I think like natural language prediction as a capability is certainly here to say, to stay
along with the agents and the action
bots that can integrate behind the scenes to do things for you. The real
question for me is, is this a wintering interface? If I think back to you,
you, user interfaces, user experience in the history of computing, we can kind
of go back to the original terminal interface on DOS and you would, you
know, have like lines that you were typing, you know, you would kind of
program the computer to do stuff. That was almost like the first real computing terminal interface on DOS and you would have lines that you would type and you would program
the computer to do stuff. That was almost like the first real computing interface that people could
use. And then there was Windows. And when Windows came along, it was a new type of interface,
a new type of interaction model. And then we had the icons that arose with the iPad iPhone
revolution. And obviously the internet, the browser was a new UX.
And the browser provided hyperlinks and in one window you would click through and go
to lots of different things.
And then that browser interface eventually integrated images and video.
And then the interface that we're almost used to lately that we all probably spend most
of our time on is the scrolling interface where there's infinite personalized content created
for you and you just keep scrolling, whether that's on Facebook or Twitter or Instagram or what have you and
that's where we spend a lot of our time now.
And if you think about the transition, you're getting more for less, meaning you're getting
more content, you're getting more output with less input.
The challenge with the chat interface is that you're getting almost today and it's current
iteration a little bit less output because it's mostly today, and it's current iteration, a little bit less output
because it's mostly textual,
and it's requiring more input.
You're having to write sentences and ask it stuff.
And so I think, if you think about the evolution
of user interfaces in computing,
chat as an interface faces quite a bit of friction.
The output of it, however, is so compelling.
In certain use cases, it's a chip-op points out,
that there's certainly gonna be places
where it's absolutely gonna in certain use cases, that Chimap points out that there's certainly going to be places where it's absolutely going to replace the current modality.
And then the back end of it can do incredible things
that no other computing interface can do.
But it needs to have a revision or rebuild on the front end
for it to really work.
That's my point of view on how I think about the long trajectory
of where we've all been trained mentally
with respect to computing interfaces and how this might kind of be challenged.
I think that's the key.
How, you know, four older guys have been trained.
Watch how kids interact with their phones.
First, they're never on a computer.
They're always on their phones and they're always talking to their phones and it's always chat based.
And so I think we have a whole new generation that like it's so native to the way
that they interact with the world. And you know, to be honest, I was sitting there this morning
prepping for the pod. And I had a brilliant conversation with chat GPT about what happened
with rates and inflation, et cetera. In 2000, 2001, 2002 is interactive. I was using my voice.
I wasn't typing anything. I thought it was terrific way better than the experience I would have on Google. So again, I think we're early in the evolution of this.
But you know, I think that you know, for my kids, this is completely native.
Yeah, I mean, I think for kids, it's amazing. I just don't think kids will have 20, 30, 40 bucks a month to spend on this. I mean, they some kids will.
40 bucks a month to spend on this. I mean, they some kids will. But that that'll just further exacerbate the divide of the kids that can versus the kids that can't. But I don't think that that's
what's going to create a valuation framework for a multi-decade billion dollar company. If you
want to see a well-used education product, you know, Cheg's got something probably,
that's probably as good. And that's a three or four billion dollar market cap company
last time I checked.
So yeah.
Well, Brad, you mentioned that you were doing a little research
for the pod talking about rates.
Obviously, that was in anticipation of the discussion
on the federal reserve meeting minutes that came out
a couple days ago.
I'll read a few excerpts from the published minutes
where obviously the federal reserve meets
to discuss overnight rates, whether to raise rates
and their outlook for rates,
driven in part by current economic data,
including their view on inflation,
their view on economic activity, et cetera.
Reading from the notes directly, participants agreed
that inflation was unacceptable high and noted
that the data, including the CPI for May, indicated
that the clients in inflation had been slower than they had expected.
Participants observed that although core goods inflation had moderated
since the middle of last year, it had slowed less rapidly than expected
in recent months.
Despite data and reports from business contacts,
indicating that supply chain constraints had continued to ease.
In their discussion on the household sector,
they noted that consumer spending so far this year
has been stronger than expected,
and that aggregate household wealth remained high
as equity and home prices had not declined much
from the recent highs.
And a few participants mentioned that while overall, the household sector still retain much of the excess savings it had accumulated during the
pandemic. There were signs of consumers were facing increasingly tighter budgets given high
inflation, especially for low income households despite savings. So Brad, maybe you can give us your
quick read on the minutes and they did say that they're not raising rates, but they do expect two more
25 basis point rate hikes later this year. Maybe you can tell us what market data is indicating
is that actually the case. And is the Fed not giving a clean reading on economic activity
and inflation as it's being published in other places than what the Fed is currently
reading?
Well, I mean, I think the most interesting thing here, and perhaps the most non-consensus thing here is,
the Fed kind of seems to be orchestrating
a pretty soft landing, right?
Nobody wants to hear it.
The market fought it for the first half of the year.
The NASDAQ was just up 39% in the first half,
and most people didn't participate.
So everybody wants to talk this down
and say that inflation's still out of control.
Chema has been talking about inflation higher for longer, but notice he doesn't say that's
a problem or the economy therefore is going to crash.
Just like inflation is going to be a little stickier on the way down.
Rates are going to be a little bit higher for longer.
I think when you look at this in totality, the reason they hit pause is because they've
come a long way quickly.
They know that things are starting to trend in the right direction.
So their own forecast for CPI is that it comes down a lot by the end of the year.
Goldman Sachs is now at 3.3%.
And I know we have readings like true inflation that say the inflation today is actually
lower than that, but you don't even need to get to the debate between true inflation
and CPI.
They're both trending a lot lower.
But we got a really interesting reading this morning because like, why do we want to
raise rates?
Well, we want to cool off the economy.
And so everybody's looking for that indication that the economy is cooling.
The leading indicator for this is jobs.
So we had a really hot ADP jobs report this morning, right? Over 450,000
new jobs created and everybody got nervous. The 10 year shot up to over 4% the market turned
down at the start of the day. And then we got the Joltz report. Now Larry Summers has described
Joltz as a much more of that job openings, okay? So this is more of a leading indicator,
like how many of the job openings are we consuming?
And that actually came in better than expected.
So what it suggested is that more people took jobs
than we had anticipated.
And remember, Joltz peaked closer to 12 million
and now we're at about 9.8 million.
And so when I look at that, you know, and then look at the jobs report, ADP jobs report,
over half of the new jobs created were in hospitality and leisure.
So think about what was happening a year ago.
Airlines were trying to hire people, restaurants were trying to hire people, hotels were trying
to hire people, and nobody took the job for two reasons.
Number one, they were afraid of COVID.
But number two, they were getting
stimme checks from the government.
They didn't need to work.
Now what we see is people are starting to take jobs.
Those show up as higher employment numbers in ADP,
but in lower jolts, right?
So fewer job openings.
To me, again, that probably speaks
to a healthy trend
in the economy, but clearly the economy is not crashing.
We had a lot of people who said that the economy
was gonna hit the skids in Q1 or Q2 of this year
due to these higher rates.
The economy's incredibly resilient,
but if I had to describe the rate trajectory,
the Fed has said, listen, we may have two more rate hikes
that's basically priced in.
And if you look at real rates,
so this is the interest rate that really acts
as the break on the economy.
So this is effectively the 10 year
versus future expected inflation.
It's now at one of the highest levels we've had since 2008, 2009,
back closing in on 2%.
So it seems to me that the Fed's got its foot pretty strong on the break.
It's jawbone in the economy, saying we'll do more if we have to.
But the things that they're looking at, job openings are coming down, inflation is coming
down.
So I don't know.
I think you have to leave open the possibility that the fat part of the distribution curve looks like a softer landing than most people want to admit.
Yes. So, Chema, Gersner is predicting a soft landing. Do you agree? I mean, you've said we're
going to see rates stay high for a very long period of time. Yeah, I mean, I think I've said this
for the last few weeks. So I'll just say it again, but I think that it's, there's no hard landing,
right? That's the hard landing was sort of the drunken Miller thing that, that I think that, you
know, I said, I think it was a few weeks ago.
It's very difficult to see a hard landing when China stimulates just because of their
natural gravitational pull in the world economy.
And, you know, we can talk about that again, because it just looks like China's in super,
super, super trouble. Meanwhile, I sent this little image to you and freeberg you may just want
to throw it up here just to look at. But when you look at inflation, we've done the best job of
the developed nations and getting this thing under control. And so I think now it's just about
And so I think now it's just about making sure that we adequately contract the money supply
and making sure that we have bullets in the chamber in case things get bad. What do I mean? When you look at this chart, the thing that I think about is I'm glad rates are almost at 6% why?
Because when you look at the UK, Italy, Germany, most of the euro area, France,
Japan, and then China, it's not existing, but China has a different issue. The reality
is that a pretty bad set of economic circumstances could actually touch the Western developed nations.
If you start to see some of these countries rip rates higher to like
7, 8, 9%. The UK, it seems like, I don't know what you guys think, it's definitely going to 7.
And it could go to 8. I mean, it could be a very bad situation for the UK. There are a lot of trouble.
And so I think it's important that the federal reserve have tools. So by continuing to constrict the money supply, have rates that are relatively
elevated, maybe a quarter or two longer than they need to, it gives them a lot of positive
optionality if they need to step in if something bad really happens. And so I generally think
they've done a very good job. And I think, good.
Tim, now it's interrupt to your point. what's really interesting is the symmetry with what happened in 2000
So I think I think we had all agreed that the last time we saw the zaniness that we saw in
2021 in the Zerp environment was probably like 1999
2000 era well in 2000 remember we had the huge asset bubble and the fed raised rates from five and a half to six percent in 2000
Okay, and the first half of 2000 and they were saying that they're gonna stay high for long and
Remember in 2001 we entered a recession and we ended
2001 with rates all the way down at 1.75
Those are the bullets in the chamber that you're talking about that then pulled us out of the recession
You know, and some people blame them that they caused that reception recession
But you know when you look back from this case it looks like yeah in this case
It looks like the recession is really not a bar making but you know
We may actually have a soft landing, but the economy could actually contract because when you look at these western economies turning over
It's it's not a good situation. I think the Eurozone, quite honestly, is probably a quarter into a recession
already. So, you know, we have six or seven of the really important countries, probably in a recession,
the UK in really big trouble, the US relatively keeping things in a pretty
good place, China economically, I don't know where the demand is going to come from.
On the same time that their internal demand is imploding, they're creating all these
export controls that I think are not going to actually help them solve the problem because
it just accelerates Western economy economies desire to deliver from China. So the whole setup, I think, is very complicated
one, but the US looks really good, frankly.
Well, yeah, look, I don't think we're out of the woods quite yet. So, so Dr. Kim Miller,
by the way, said that he was predicting a hard landing in the second half of the year.
We're just starting the second half of the year.
So he's still got six months to be proven correct.
I find his analysis compelling or I did at the time I heard it.
But think about our situation.
We still have an inverted yield curve.
It's the most inverted it's been.
I think this is the longest it's been inverted.
Now the Fed is signaling that we're going to get two or three more quarter
point rate hike.
So it's about to become even more inverted.
And what that does is it puts incredible pressure on the banking system because the whole
banking business model is to borrow short, which is from depositors and lend long.
And if short rates are higher than long rates, that whole business model doesn't work.
So either they can't engage in lending activities,
meaning there's a credit crunch or deposits to sleeve the system. And that's happening too. So any
business out there that's dependent on credit, the real estate industry or auto industry, I mean,
any industry that depends on loans and credit, they're going to continue to be hammered by this.
on loans and credit, they're going to continue to be hammered by this. So, I mean, to your point, Zach, I'll just read the minute commentary on this.
The meeting did include a discussion on the stress on the banking sector and economic
activity in general because of decreased lending.
Participants generally noted that banking stresses had receded and conditions in the banking
sector were much improved since March.
Participants generally continue to judge that a tightening in credit conditions spurred by banking sector stress earlier in the year would likely wave further on economic activity, but the extent remained uncertain.
So obviously a wait and see and that they mentioned the credit conditions and not appear to have tightened significantly beyond what will be expected in response to the monetary policy actions taken since early last year.
So at this point, saying it's a wait and see
does not seem to have overstretched in terms
of credit tightening at this stage.
But it could.
Yeah, I mean, so here's the thing is that the Fed
engaged in an extraordinary intervention a few months ago
to save the banking system with the bank term funding program, right?
Where they basically said to all the banks that if you have US treasuries, and I think it also
applied to mortgage back securities as well, we will, we will basically take all of those assets and
give you power value. We'll give you 100 cents on the dollar in exchange for I guess you have to pay you the bank would have to pay the
the one year I think it was the what the 12 month interest rate with like 10
10 base points or something like that. So if you're sitting on bonds that have gone down 20 or
30% value, you can go get all that money back by you're presenting to the Fed. And then you
just have to, you know, you have to then take the hundred cents on the dollar you get and
make sure you loan it out at higher than the one year interest rate, which is around,
I guess, 5%. Right. Which you can still do in residential, right? Because mortgages are still
something like over 7%. So the Fed has provided a lot of liquidity
to the banks through this BTFP.
It hasn't helped the commercial real estate guys,
I don't think, that's why they're still,
I think huge problems in the commercial real estate sector.
But the Fed did engage in a huge intervention
to save the banking system. And they may not
be done with that yet. So I just wonder, you know, I just wonder if the, if you didn't have
all these distortions, what would the real shape of the economy be? You know, another one on
the fiscal side, on the fiscal side was the whole, um, Biden's energy bill, which is supposed
to be 350 billion. But as our energy investor friends
are saying, it's probably going to be more like a trillion when they added all up.
No, but that's honestly, hold on. Those guys are being hyperbolic and they're just stupid and wrong
because I know which friends they are. And I know them to be mostly stupid and mostly wrong.
Most of the time. Look, the good thing to know about, oh my god, I'm going to get a text after this.
Well, yeah, you should because he doesn't know
the fuck he's talking about, and he keeps saying.
But there's a lot of stimulus as the point.
Whether it's half a million,
sorry, half a trillion or a trillion.
Right, so a lot of stuff.
He's just talking, he's just talking his book.
But where can I just go back to where you're fundamentally
right and where I think both of us can be
in unison on this, which is there is a looming
credit crisis in the United States. And, you know, we've talked about this before.
I tweeted something a few weeks ago, but the debt wall that corporate America is about
to hit is pretty meaningful.
And to your point, David, a lot of these companies will have to threaten needle because if
rates don't go down materially in the next 18 to 24 months,
these folks are gonna be paying rates
that they cannot bear.
And they'll probably go into still breach a covenant
of some of the debt.
So, one thing that's important here is that,
there's some very strict guidelines and covenants
that debt issuers sign up for.
And one of them is, how much debt can I have as a percentage,
and or as a multiple of my EBITDA.
And so that's the way that bondholders govern the risk that you don't overborrow.
Now, the problem is if you have a ratings, you know, an earnings recession and
or rates go up, you can get one of these two things to go wrong.
And all of a sudden, now you have seven or eight times your EBITDA and you're in a very, very bad state. So I do think that that's possible. But at the same
time, I don't think that that's a calamity that touches the entire economy. I think there are a
whole portfolio of over levered companies in real estate. And there's a whole portfolio of over levered
companies and private equity. Those folks will have to get recapped.
And that will probably cost trillions of dollars
of capital impairment,
but I do think that that can relatively be done
without impairing the economy, Relarch.
I'll make a prediction right now.
My prediction is the federal government
is gonna help to monetize that debt,
and they're gonna help to support
that commercial real estate sector
through some sort of structured lending program.
I don't see why do you think that?
Why do you think that?
Because of the donors, because I think that there's a significant amount of capital that
gets donated to.
So you think there's going to be a tarp for like program for real estate private equity.
A real estate private equity.
I think there's going to be tarp.
No, you think there's going to be a tarp like program for real estate assets and for private.
I'll take the other side of that.
Yeah, I'll say real estate assets. I don't know about the private equity assets,
but I think for the real estate asset, just because so much of it is held. That's bet.
And I'll tell you I'll tell you 1000 to the SPCA. Yeah, I'll do that.
Wait, what's the timeframe? Maybe you do tell me you want to let it? No, we'll do it until the
Fed starts, no, until the Fed starts reducing rates. So once the Fed does their first rate cut,
that's the end of our bet. Oh, wow, that's an easy one. I'm in for 25.
No, you can take a hundred. I take a hundred. For the SACA for myself, for the SACA for
a second. Can I just take the action for myself? I'm doing it for the dogs. Yeah. You know,
freed bird on that. Sorry, let me just just let me just tell you why. Sorry.
Yeah. In addition, in addition to the significant donor dollars that come from real estate to politicians,
campaigns. But so much of those assets, so many of those assets are held in life insurance companies
on banks, balance sheets. I mean, you guys may have seen this report this week that because of the
rise in interest rates, there are several insurance companies that now be tech may be technically insolvent according to D.O.I.
Department of insurance regs in their respective states because the impairment on the bond portfolio has declined as caused them to now not have enough capital reserves to pay out the claims they have. So the same, I think ultimately will come true once you have to do a mark to market on all these real estate assets, that there's a significant number of those real estate assets that
are held in pension funds, that are held in life insurance companies, that are held as securities
in large pools of capital that are meant to support people's long-term needs. And the government
isn't going to let the federal government isn't going to let that just get written down and have
people's future pensions or insurance claims get hampered. So that's why I think there's going to let that, you know, just get written down and have people's future pensions or insurance claims, you know, get hampered. So that's why I think there's going
to be a moment or two where there's going to be some step in and some structure of program
to support this, this dad. I just don't think it's ad draconian rates are not that high.
You know, we're still talking about a 10 year that's flirting with 4% and the fact that I'm
just talking about commercial real estate because there's also a demand problem, right? Yeah, I know, but the the other side of this is the trend again, there is no doubt over supply and a problem particularly in a place like San Francisco, we're going to see some blow ups because nobody wants to, you know, to enter a long term lease in a city that's under siege. Right. Understand that.
But the fact is that the market is telling you that rates are going to start going down,
right?
That the feds going to come in battle until the edge, right?
And then they're going, you know, feds are going to come, rates are going to come down
a little bit.
Why is that?
Because if they have two more quarter point rate increases, now you have restrictive rates
at something like 200 basis points.
That's higher than the Fed once.
That's the foot really hard on the break.
So it's not like the market's crazy and thinking that we're going to have a couple rate cuts
next year.
I just told you in 2000, we went from 6% to 2001 ending the year at 1.75% and the Fed was
doing the exact same job boning in the
summer of 2000.
Okay.
So they do evolve rate policy based upon what's happening in the economy.
All of the things are rolling over, CPI's rolling over, Jolt's rolling over, et cetera.
So again, I just don't see the heightened concern. I think to the bank issue, Sachs, to me, that was the much scarier concern.
Druck and Miller actually pulled forward his hard landing expectation to queue two of this
year as a result of the bank crisis, and now has pushed it back out to queue four of this
year.
I think if we had another Black Swan know, Black Swan, like banks or something
that I can't foresee today, then, you know, that could certainly be the thing that would
be the catalyst to toss us into a hard landing.
Barring that, I think that, by the way, you know, you distribution of probabilities, the
fat part of the curve is that we have a softish medium, you know, sort of landing here.
I think you're right.
I think you're right. I think you're right.
And by the way, like, if the UK had not left Europe,
then the whole contagion of Europe
could be one of those Black Swan events
that we would all be talking about as theoretically possible.
But it looks like the UK is probably going to, it's really bad, I think.
Britain is now the only major economy where inflation is still rising.
The OECD said Tuesday that you're in your inflation and the G7 fell to 4.6% in May down from, you know, 5% in April.
So inflation is, is tempering a bit, but UK consumer prices rose to 7.9% in May, which is up from
7.8% in April. So in acceleration in the UK, it seems like it's a pretty nasty spiral
problem.
This is where the benefit of being part of a larger economy really pays dividends. Obviously,
there's a lot to do with language and currency, language and currency. And there's a whole bunch of issues rolled up into why the UK left the European Union. But
my gosh, one of the real obvious advantages is, you know, you're smoothing out the variants.
Right. And smoothing out variants is really valuable. So if you think about like all of these
economies in Europe, you know, like PMs in a hedge fund, right, Brad?
You can, you know, you know this.
It's like you sometimes some guy crushes it,
you know, look how millennium or SAC or Citadel
makes the real money.
It's by smoothing out variance.
And that's a great thing about being part
of an economic union, like the EU offers.
And in the absence of that, in times like this, it really exposes the weaknesses of a small sub scale economic system, which unfortunately the UK has.
Right.
The Europe Europe is going into recession too.
I mean, Germany has huge problems that again stems from the cutoff of cheap rushing gas,
economies in the EU, they're going into recession as well. So it's not just
not with the same levels of inflation. My point is like, you know,
it's one thing for an economy to start to receive, but here, it's
you don't have the benefit of balance sheet borrowing of the scale of the EU,
nor do you have the disinflation of the EU.
And I think that's problematic.
Much more for the UK than it is for any individual country in Europe.
That's just my point. That's all.
Can I, can I, you know, one just philosophical thought, you know,
because if we rewind the clock to the beginning of the year,
you know, there was absolute consensus in the markets,
right? And you can go back and look at all the headlines.
Mike Wilson's consensus was that we were going to have a hard landing in Q1.
Hege funds, long-only funds had their exposures super low. Everybody had post-traumatic stress
from last year. It is a sure strategy to lose a lot of money or not make money. If you're trying to always call the market as though you know,
you have no idea, right?
Q wanted Q2, sure, there was a possibility
we could have a hard landing, right?
And the bank crisis made that look
as those a possibility.
What we try to do is look at that distribution of possibilities,
right?
It's a distribution curve.
And so I put up on the screen here, what the markets
implied Fed fund rate changes are from today. What the market is betting on, which from my
perspective is better than any one of us trying to forecast, what's going to happen with future
rate increases? It's saying, yeah, we're going to go from 5.08% today to something like
peaking at 5.45% in November of this year. And then at some point, beyond November,
could be December, could be Q1 of next year, right? We'll see a enough turning over of CPI,
enough turning over of Joltz that now we'll say the balance of risk has shifted to being too punitive on
the economy.
So we're going to reel back in one of those rate increases.
And I think that, you know, so Friedberg just to clarify on the bet we just made, which
I'm excited about, you have to have this tarp commercial real estate rescue program before
they reel back one of those rate increases, which the markets telling you could be as early as December.
Yeah.
But I encourage everybody who listens, you know, like don't listen, you know, it's not
like go all in because Dr. Miller says hard landing or don't go all in soft landing because
we say soft landing.
Our net exposure has come down over the course of the year at Altimeter because we've
moved, the markets have moved up a
lot. They're pricing in more of a soft landing today. So the
idea is to have high exposures when the world's panic and then
to reel in your exposures a little bit, but never be all or
none. I mean, the the fascination with calling the big short,
the big hard landing, soft landing, it's just a sure way not to
make much money.
the big hard landing, soft landing, it's just a sure way not to make much money.
Today, there was a red hot US jobs report, Brad. US job openings dropped below 10 million in May,
but the labor market remains piping hot. Like I said, the market, I think, is, it's reading way too much. I mean, it's one of the, I mean, we'll get the official
jobs numbers out of the federal government tomorrow.
This was an ADP report, which have been not particularly good,
but I already explained there's a rationale.
Look, peel behind the ADP report,
250,000 of the 400, you know,
1,000 jobs that were created were in hospitality and leisure.
I mean, these were desperately needed because we have a peak summer travel season going on.
So you have hotels that hire a bunch of people, those show up in the ADP job numbers, right?
But the great news is the Joltz job openings goes go down. And, you know,
summers was complaining last year that Joltz wasn't going down fast enough.
He also said something that was really interesting.
When Joltz, he said when Joltz goes down by over 10%,
so think we've had a move from 12 million to 9.8 million.
He said when Joltz goes down by over 10%,
we have a reduction or an increase in the unemployment rate
by two and a half percent in the subsequent 12 months.
So, Joltz is a leading indicator. You got to reel in those job openings and then you start seeing unemployment bump up.
So, with the tight economy, you know, the feds foot on rates, some of the contraction thatACS has been pointing out. And then we start to see these early indicators in jolts. I mean, people need the job clearly or they wouldn't have taken them.
They're stimme as run out. All of these things are what the Fed is trying to manufacture.
Right. So I don't look at that job's number. In fact, we were doing just the opposite,
you know, in the market this morning to, you know, what the market was giving us. I don't think
that was a very good read through it all giving us. I don't think that was
very good read through it all. Okay, I want to talk a little bit about jobs. The Florida State
Senate bill 1718 went into effect on July 1st. This bill now requires that any company with more than 25 employees use the e-verify system to verify the legal immigration status
of their workers of their employees.
And this will create a real impact on businesses
that employ more than 800,000 illegal immigrants
in the state of Florida to do a lot of work
and a lot of labor.
It's unclear how many of those 800,000 illegal
immigrants that are working in Florida today are working at a firm with more than 25 employees,
but the impact is going to range from the construction industry to farm labor and a lot of other
manual labor sectors. It is state that has 2.3% unemployment.
DeSantis has made this, you know, an important speaking topic.
When he's spoken publicly, he did quite a bit of press around the passage of this bill
as a way to counter Biden's quote, open immigration policy.
Sax, I know that you've talked about DeSantis in the past.
Do you have a read on the impact that this immigration policy
will have? Do you agree with it? Would love your thoughts.
I mean, I don't think this is a jobs bill. This is an immigration bill. Or it's an immigration issue.
And look, I don't know what the impact on Florida is going to be from this. I don't trust a single
story that's out of it. I guess there's just a story in
the Wall Street Journal about it. I mean, this feels like a campaign story. So I want to see
more stories before I reach the termination on what the impact is going to be. But politically,
do I think this is smart? Yeah, because the border is the number one issue in the country right now.
I don't think you guys are as clued in to like how
on fire the country is about what's going on at the border.
I don't think raise our RFK talked about the border
because he went there.
There's a bunch of really good clips online.
I don't care who you are.
You can't listen to that accounting.
It's just an accounting, right?
So anybody could do it.
So it doesn't matter what your political perspective is on RFK.
Anybody who listens to that accounting
can't be anything but shocked.
I don't know what he described is.
What RFK's described is he went to the border at Yuma
and there are literally holes in the wall,
you know, from Trump's wall. I've just he went to the the border at Yuma and there are literally holes in the wall
You know from Trump's wall and literally the building materials to finish the wall and plug those holes are sitting there on the ground And the Biden administration refuses to use them and to plug the hole because they don't want to give any credit to Trump presumably
I mean literally that's how petty it is or it's actually their policy, they actually like having an open border.
So something like seven million illegals
have come in through the Southern border
since Biden's been in office.
And they're not, they're not from Central America,
it turns out.
These folks are from Eastern Europe,
and Africa predominantly, many men of military age.
And it's an entire business that's run by the cartels.
And as he describes it, it's really just plainly shocking.
Can I ask you guys?
If one of our, if one of our enemies
wanted to get thousands of sleeper agents into the country,
it would have been very easy for them to do this.
OK, can I just think about that?
Yeah, I get it.
Yeah.
Can I pivot away from the border policy question to one of labor?
We obviously, as evidenced by the jobs report from ADP this morning, remain in a very tight
labor market in the US.
And we as a group often talk about H1Bs and the importance of allowing educated immigrants
into this country to meet our knowledge workforce needs.
But there obviously is a pretty sizable manual labor
workforce need in this country,
and a very tight labor market to fulfill that need,
ranging from construction where we have deep
and significant aspirations as a country
to improve infrastructure,
to farm labor where we have the largest agricultural
export market in the world. And many of these industries rely on low-cost labor for those businesses
to meet their economic objectives, to be able to be profitable. And we simply may not have
enough of a labor force of legal immigrants or legal citizens or residents of the U.S.
to meet those obligations. What is the answer, SACs, is it that we
are supposed to take anyone that's illegal in the country and make it impossible for them to work here? And is that not going to have a very adverse effect on these important segments of our
economy that today rely on that labor force that is here illegally? And I'm not saying I'm not stating it. I'm asking the like the important
I get what you're saying. I think we can start to resolve that issue when you solve the border
crisis. The problem is the average American doesn't want to hear anything about, you know,
quote unquote, comprehensive solutions to the border crisis or immigration or whether you want
whether I forget I'm not talking about politics. I'm not talking. I'm just talking about your
personal point of view.
My personal point of view is we need to seal the borders
so we stop having this problem.
Okay, but what about the work?
What about the labor?
Yeah.
Yeah, let me, I'll take a crack at this very bird.
Okay, I'm just trying to diagnose the difference
between the border policy question
and the real economic question.
I know the California Ag sector very well.
There's an important migrant visa that the entire farming economy depends on in the California. And these are illegal
immigrants that are legally allowed to work in the farming sector. And it allows farms to be able
to do the work they need to do because there is absolutely no labor to do that work without
this immigrant population. And there's other elements of this that are critical across the economy.
Sorry, Brad, go ahead.
No, so why can't we have a common sense migrant worker
program, worker visa, predicated on that?
The problem is, I think where most people are in agreement
that if you have a relatively secure border,
then you design good policies.
We should have a relatively secure border, right? Then you design good policies. We should have a policy for people who want to come and work
and earn some money.
And, you know, we have job openings in this country.
And then return home, right?
Or go through a normal process, right?
To get in line to citizenship.
But the problem is people cutting the line,
you know, skipping the system and giving the social safety nets that states on the border have lined up and we as a, you know, a nation have lined up.
That's just unsustainable in a world where we're already whatever 35 trillion dollars in debt.
So I think these things can coexist. You can treat labor humanely, you can create a safe harbor for labor to come to the country,
but that doesn't mean that you should just have holes in the wall and anybody who wants
to come here can come here in whatever capacity they want.
Tomah, assuming that the border is closed and we fix that problem, what do you think the
right solution is to the millions of illegal immigrants that are residing in the country?
I'll answer that, but let me ask you a question.
Do you think we should seal the border?
Yeah, for sure.
And why do you think we should seal the border?
So that we have a system that we can use
to manage the flow of labor and decide what's
appropriate for our country.
And we can actually have a conversation
about what qualify someone to come across the border
and to immigrate into the US.
I totally agree with you.
Yeah, I agree.
I think that's a thing saying that you assume that the border was sealed.
What would you do about, you know, low school immigration?
That's kind of like asking other than that, how is the play Mrs. Lincoln?
I mean, this is the hair on fire political issue is that we can't get the border sealed that you've had seven million
plus a legal's come across it during the Biden administration and the administration obviously
doesn't have the will to do anything about it. So you're kind of assuming away the central
issue. This is the issue one of the main main issues. I got Trump elect in 2016 was building
the wall.
No, but I think we're all saying we're all saying this hasn't gone away.
We need to seal the border. We're all saying that right. Does anybody think we
shouldn't seal the border? No, I agree. But then why isn't the analysis and why that doesn't
happen when everyone in the country agrees that should happen or just about everybody?
But I do think that there's a that there's a low-scale labor market need that's not met in this country.
There isn't a public restaurant company that doesn't talk about the challenges that they're
having with labor.
They cannot fill the jobs that they have.
All right.
Well, let me, all right.
If you want to talk about that issue, I want to flag a report that was presented to Congress.
And this is about 15 years old, it's back in 2007 by Heritage.
But I don't think the numbers have changed much in the interim.
In fact, they probably gotten worse. The point that this researcher made is that if you look at the cost of low-skill
immigration, the average low-skill immigrant household receives approximately $30,000 in direct
benefits from the government. By contrast, these households only pay about $10,000 in taxes. So even though
those low-skill immigrant households, let's assume that they're working and do contribute
to the economy in the way that you're saying, there's still a $20,000 gap between what they
contribute and what they receive from the government. And that is a big problem for the country.
My guess is that the counter argument would be that more than $20,000 of economic benefit
accrues to the businesses that employ that labor because they can now be profitable, they
can now get the work done that they need to do, they can grow their revenue, they can expand
their footprint, they can service their customers, all the things that otherwise,
they might not be able to do without having access to that.
I think that's a big assumption.
I think that's a big assumption.
One of the problems with the system that we have is that
there's a lot of government benefits.
Right.
And so if you want to have a more open immigration policy,
that's sort of inconsistent with the idea of having a super generous policy.
No, I think, I think there are three distinct things.
One is, is it open or closed and second, if it's closed, what are the qualification criteria
and how many, and I think that's totally reasonable.
The third is what government benefits are provided.
You could reduce the government benefits if it's too costly.
You could improve the qualification criteria and increase the number of folks that are coming.
I know this may sound crazy, but I think that tying together immigration and jobs is like the best way to a restaurant, for example, and the service has decayed because
they can't get enough staff, right? You don't walk out of that restaurant thinking, well,
we need comprehensive immigration reform. You say thumbs down on you, I'm never going back
here again. And so unfortunately, if it's that, if it's service sector jobs in particular, by the way,
there is no closed loop way where you actually tie these two issues together.
And so, the issue becomes stranded, which is what it has, which is why I think what Brad said in sacs said is right, which is there's an order of operations here where the American people probably want an immigration system that says something like,
here's some, you know, a point-based approach, right, where we try to attract the world's best,
think about it like a draft, right, and we want to attract the world's best athletes to come play
on our team, team America, team USA. We have all of the capabilities to do that. But before we do that,
we have to kind of close the border. And I think that that's the only way it's ever going to get done.
Meanwhile, the problem with the job thing is a bit of red herring towards immigration because
people just don't tie the two things together, practically speaking. Well, I was going to say one
final point on this is that when you admit lots of low-skill immigration or labor into the country,
you're creating wage pressure for Americans at the lowest end of the totem pole.
And that is why they are so resistant to it.
This is why average working class Americans are very upset about the border.
It's also a security issue.
And there's drugs pouring across as well, the fentanyl crisis that we see.
But it creates a lot of wage pressure for Americans who are at the lowest end of the latter.
What's wrong with this pain? A little bit more.
So here's some statistics for you guys. The total population of unauthorized immigrants
in the US peaked in 2007 as declined slightly since. California felt at first, from 2010 to 2018,
the unauthorized immigrant population in the state declined
by 10% to 2.6 million, mostly impacting the farm economy.
So the state, California state reports that from 2010 to 2020,
the average number of workers hired by California Farms
for crop production declined to 150,000 from
170,000.
I talk with a lot of people in the farm economy as you guys know, and this is an endemic
problem in California agriculture is that the lack of a labor force that allows the farms
to be profitable is really impacting folks' ability to operate and to grow.
And you know, that ultimately translates into consumer price and so on.
So there are huge consequences as to having effectively an open-border policy that go beyond
just farms or vineyards not being able to hire enough cheap labor. I mean, look at what's
going on in France right now. You've basically got riots, you've got a civil war going on. There's
a large unassuminated, poor immigrant population in that country.
That's where open borders gets you.
That's the end result.
So there are huge consequences
to allowing in huge numbers of low school immigrants.
Yeah, especially illegal ones.
I don't think there's a lot.
This is where we get to, you know, last week,
we had the Canada H1B announcement about their
Technomatic Visa program and I sent it to two members of Congress. I sent a tweet.
Sorry, just recap for us what happened, Brett.
Okay, so in Canada last week, you know, the government announced an aggressive push to
recruit technology workers from around the world to Canada. So they made it easier for tech workers to get what they
are calling a digital nomad visa. So you can now go and work in Canada if you have a job offer.
And then they also, in kind of a gangster move, said, if you already have an H1B visa in the United
States and it's starting to run out,
just bring you and your family to Canada and work from here, right?
So it was like we've been talking about, we need H1B visa reform, we need to recruit
the world's best and brightest and artificial intelligence, et cetera, to the United States.
And they were, you know, they were doing it quite aggressively.
Now, the point is, I sent that to two members of Congress, a Democrat member of the House, a Republican member of the Senate. And I got back nearly
identical answers from both of them. They said, no chance that happens here, debt on arrival,
because nothing's going to move until we have a comprehensive immigration policy in this
country. And then I said, well, why isn't that happening? They said elections,
right? Show me the incentives and I'll show you the outcome. The problem is all four of us agree.
We should have, you know, we should have sealed borders, but at the same time,
immigration is what makes this country great. We want to treat people humanely. We need my
grit workers like this is not that hard a problem to solve in this country, but there's not even a conversation.
The first that is Washington, DC on this topic is there's not even an honest conversation or attempt to get to a solution here.
So with a presidential election, you know, less than, you know, if you're in a half away, we're just back to the same old tribal war that we've had
before.
Now, I understand, Sachs Point is like, listen, nothing happens until we have close borders
and maybe sequentially that's what we have to do.
But it doesn't stop there.
I think we all agree that what makes this country special is that we, you know, Fourth of July,
you know, we throw open the doors and we welcome,
you know, folks from around the world to contribute to this great experiment. Some of them are on a path to
citizenship and some of them are not. What doesn't sit right with anybody is breaking the rules and skipping the line.
I understand the desperation and the motivation of some people to do that. But that is not ever going to be a
system that works for the majority. So it sounds like it wasn't happening. It sounds like it's
happening. It's been used for the right right, right, right, sex? Yes, yes. The way I interpret,
listen, when you say that we can't do anything until we have comprehensive immigration reform,
by the way, I heard future Democratic nominee Gavin Newsom say the same thing on
Hannity. What the party in power is doing is holding the country hostage and saying that we're not
going to close the border. We're going to use the border as a bargaining chip until you give us the
immigration package that we want. But that really shouldn't be allowed because really it's the
obligation of the federal government to have a secure border. That's not something you trade. That's
something that we should already have. Well, it's what we pay for. That's what we pay
for. So that when they talk about comprehensive immigration reform, that's basically what
they're saying is we're not going to give you a secure border until you give us enough
policies that we want. Just to give you guys the, and, and, and, freeberg and sacks are immigrants, but
you guys got your citizenship through your parents.
Um, I actually did the process myself,
as an a TN visa holder who then went to an H1B,
um, to I think went to EB1.
So, you know, I've had to go through this
and I've literally had to wait in line.
And you can't describe to you the anxiety you have
when, you know, you know, your visa's running out.
You're waiting for a constant some integration
to basically give you the meeting
so that they can actually approve or tell you
that your H1B is approved or your EB1 is approved.
And you go to this website, it's our campaign, you refresh it every day, you do it for six months,
straight every day a few times a day. You go into the forums where all these other immigrants
are talking about how frustrated they are and how scared they are, but we all stood in line.
And I think what people don't understand who think that this other
border should be totally open is the anxiety that those of us who actually played by the rules
went through for months. And in some cases, if you come from countries like India and China,
years, right? By the way, that's not fair., you're saying is exactly why the Hispanic population, the
Hispanic citizens of the United States are increasingly voting Republican because they
have gone through the process.
They have suffered the the rigour role and they don't want to see an open border policy
that, you know, isn't fair and doesn't feel right.
You know, we're first generation Americans and And I remember my parents went to the process.
I think my dad got a green card based on being a doctor
before we came here.
And then after five years, we became citizens.
It seemed a lot more orderly back then, by the way.
Oh, the process distinct to work.
I've seen all the statistics showing the insane percentage
of Silicon Valley startups that had at least one immigrant co-founder.
It's something like 40 to 50 percent of unicorn of unicorn companies in Silicon Valley
have at least one co-founder whose first generation American or an immigrant.
So I understand full well the benefits to the country and our economy by being able to
have immigrants come to America. But generally speaking, those are high school immigrants.
And we should be able to have that as a feature of our system without having
an open border. And the problem is all these things get conflated right now.
And I think what's happening is it shouldn't be so hard to get extensions to H1
Bs. It is really crazy that we're giving Canada this opportunity and that we're
potentially driving out really talented high school workers.
But the problem right now is that the southern border is such a mess that the African-American
doesn't want to hear anything about each one bees or they don't hear about any of it.
They're just like I would encourage people to listen to that RFK clip where he describes.
And he's one of the rare
presidential candidates that has taken the time and gone down there, and he just describes it
very plainly. So irrespective of what you think of him, listen to it because it's pretty factual
and it's very scary. This seems to be to be of such significant strategic national interests, similar to the national debt that there
really should be a commission of centrist folks appointed by whatever president, this president,
the next president, that tries to craft something we can pass, break it down into two or three
bills. But this is really undermining our ability to compete in
the world, and we need to solve this problem, and I think we've been discussing this you know for
as long as you know we've been in Silicon Valley, but certainly it's become an incredible problem
in the age of AI, etc. And you know you know having the tip for Tad of what's going on,
these news articles shipping off illegal immigrants
to Martha's Vineyard,
I happen to be on Martha's Vineyard right now.
I think they sent 49 folks here,
Venezuela, and most of them Central American.
And I'll tell you, this island is made better
because it has a tremendous number of Portuguese and Central American and I'll tell you this island is made better because of you know it has a tremendous
number of Portuguese and Central American workers you know who are active members of the community
go to the school here etc. So maybe that is part of the solution SACS that you know when we do
have you know people want immigrant you know immigrate to country, the burden is not just on the border states,
but the, you know, folks have an opportunity
to locate anywhere in the country.
Well, yeah, and what happened with the Martha's Vineyard thing
is I have seen some articles like the New York Times
says articles saying how wonderfully it's all worked out,
but when it first happened, the people living
in Martha's Vineyard were up in arms
and there were a bunch of angry press conferences and they were almost hysterical that the San Francisco's sent them there.
But what that did is it exposed their hypocrisy because there's a lot of people in the country
who are just fine with having an open border when they don't think it affects them.
Totally.
But when it does affect them, then all of a sudden, they're holding press conferences
denouncing it.
So I think what...
Tid for tat number works. Tid for tat number works.
You can have me a tit.
You don't need to.
Well, can we, can we,
speaking of the way, wait, wait, wait, hold on,
lightning down.
Who left the cocaine in the white house?
What's the answer, Tim?
I actually don't think it was Hunter Biden.
I think it was probably like some young kid
who has working like long hours
and was like, I need a little upper here to long hours and was like, I need a little
upper here to stay up and was like, I need a bump and some of the kids brought some nose
candy to me.
Well, how stupid is this kid?
And by the way, they said that there's no security footage.
It was in a, it was in a cubby.
It was in a cubby.
He put it in the cubby, whoever did it, which is, which is so stupid.
Why would you take it off your, off your person?
Yeah.
I mean, it's clearly clearly clearly a conservative reporter who's
not in there to frame honor. And by the way, it was in the
cubby where you're supposed to put your cell phone when you go
into classified meetings.
sacks, have you been to the White House lately?
No, have you had any of you guys been in the oval office?
I have, yeah, I'll tell you a very funny story about my meeting in the,
in the, it was in the Rose of Altroom,
where I had a fighting meeting where it was like me and Dreson,
me and Dreson, I can't remember who else was.
This was like years ago, a decade ago.
This was during Obama's administration.
And something like we were meeting with like,
I don't know, the chairman of the joint chiefs
and all these big muckety mucks.
And I remember the military guys,
because there was four of them.
And at the time, there was like, oh my God, no,
this was right when the first Ukraine thing was going on.
Okay, so what was that, SACS, 2014 maybe?
2013, 2014?
The first Ukraine thing of 2014, maybe. 2013, 2014. The first you can't do Ukraine thing, which anyways.
Oh, yeah, 2014.
Yeah.
2014.
Okay.
So we're there and they're talking about, we're talking about new technologies, whatever.
And I said, guys, I mean, this is insane.
Like, why are you not, are you guys not dropping, you know, small sets so that you can get internet service into places like
the Ukraine so that people can get the message up, whatever's happening. And I said, these
things are really small. Like you can bring them anywhere. And I said, you know, I could
have smuggled one in here right now. One of the guys says, no, we've been watching you
since you've got it. It was so very funny. I thought it was hilarious.
Well, speaking of political forces, here we go.
Red meat.
Red meat.
No, that's not red meat. I mean, I want to do a, just do a quick recap on the whole Chinese
spy balloon thing. I actually think there's a serious statement here about how our political
system works. But do you want to see this up free
burger? Or do you want me to go for it? Yeah, lead in, yeah, go
for it. All right. So basically, you guys remember a few months
ago that we had this whole Chinese spy balloon thing that went
on for a week. I mean, we had 24 seven wall to wall cable and
use coverage of this thing. And the administration was accused of being soft on China and allowing
this by balloon to traverse across the United States and people were posting photos and videos
about mine. Yeah, then finally, the White House deployed some F-16s to shoot down some $16
hobbyist balloons with $400,000 sidewinder missiles to show that they're really tough.
Anyway, it was this whole farce. Now it turns out that the Pentagon just released a statement.
So Pentagon Press Secretary Brigadier General Pat Reiter said the balloon not only did not transmit
data back to China and never collected any. And he said, we're aware that it had intelligence collection capabilities, but it has been our assessment now that it did not collect while it was transiting the United States.
So if it wasn't collecting any data, it wasn't transmitting back to China. And then I've also heard that it didn't contain any special equipment at all.
It just, I've read article saying that was just standard equipment that you could buy.
How is it still a spy balloon?
Yeah.
And remember, I got worked up about this thing that turned out to be a big.
But is it Chinese?
Was it actually Chinese?
I think it was Chinese.
With American technology.
So now all the reporting is covering the fact that it had quote, American technology on it.
Like, Saks's point is you could just buy the stuff off the shelves.
And if you guys remember around the time
that it was discovered,
we talked about this,
but it wasn't widely covered in the media
that there was an upgrade to the domestic radar system
where they increased the resolution
and the frequency of capture of these radar images.
So they were starting to pick up more fine tunes, smaller objects that were otherwise being missed,
including things like little, you know, weather balloons or, you know, stuff that otherwise wasn't getting paid attention to.
And that this, you know, balloon may have been the sort of thing that could have been a blip and ignored in the prior system.
But then when they upgraded the system and became a thing, and to Saks's point, which interesting is how it got spun
into a domestic threat by the Chinese.
Well, we had this debate on the pod months ago, where I was like, look, this is just, this
cannot be true. It's just, it makes no sense. I mean, the Chinese have spice out of lights.
So if they wanted to spy on us, they would just be imaging from space.
So then people started speculating, well, this, this, this, this,
the balloon must have new kinds of equipment, you know, new sensors or sound, maybe they're
trying to collect sound patterns, make recordings.
So in other words, over farmland, over northern Canada and then farmland and, yeah, like
some sort of interesting stuff to pick up there.
Instead of recognizing that the story was completely far fetched, they had to invent a narrative
about why it made sense. And then, you know, if you basically raise any questions whatsoever
about this narrative, you were looked on as if you were like Chinese spokesman like a spy or something. Exactly. This Pentagon statement came right after Tony Blinken's visit to China, right?
He just got back from China.
And there was a lot of closed door meetings and then they gave the usual hoopla about
what was discussed.
And there was nothing new that was introduced in the public statement about what was discussed
behind the closed doors.
But do you think that maybe there was something that was negotiated behind closed doors
where they said,
our, this balloon was not a domestic threat.
You guys made it out to be,
you need to make a statement to correct the record.
Yes, I actually think that's exactly what happened.
Is we know Blinken went to China,
he had seven hours of meeting meetings.
The readout from those meetings
said that they were very candid conversations.
That's usually diplomatic code for a row of five.
Yes, exactly.
Exactly.
And I think I think the Chinese were very upset that the story was
relentlessly pumped for days and days that they were spying on America.
And I think they demanded a correction.
And I think that that is exactly what the Pentagon did is they put out this
press release. They put out the statement.
But the way that the media covered it, it's like the back page correction of a front page story
I mean this Chinese buy balloon story went on for days and days and days and the correction gets no coverage
Now look, it's also possible that
That's somehow the statement is not true now. I mean look either they were hoaxing us then or they're hoaxing us now
Because the statement they're saying now is incompatible with what they were saying
three months ago. But I believe the statement now and not what they're saying three months
ago because it just makes a lot more sense. But, you know, remember a few months ago, we had,
you know, Mids on Twitter, here, let's just.
It's on Twitter, it's become a thing.
Mids on Twitter. Here, let's just just become a thing. It's on to remember. Remember when
mids on Twitter, you know, when I
invented that I came up with that.
My take was Aaron balloon major
provocation could incite war blown
up pipeline referring to Nord Stream, which also
got blown up around that time. Not a provocation
could never incite war get it straight.
And then the mids on Twitter were, you know, chasing was air at wheeling.
And you learn a new vocabulary word. But in his view,
Aaron was not a strong enough word to describe this unprecedented national security threat.
By the way, for those of you listening, the mid that responded to SACs was Jason Calligatus, formerly of the
All-in-Bot.
It was so funny.
So funny.
I gotta go to talk about how farcical our political system is, because, you know, I,
here's what I think actually happened, is that the story just picked up steam because
it just, it was, it's too good not to, right?
So cable news starts picking it up. And everyone's always trying to pump
up the threat that China represents because there are central global competitor now. And
the White House, I think very early on, had a decision to make, which is do you try and
fight the story or do you just roll with it? And I think they just decided to roll with
it because they would be seen as being soft on China if they tried
to fight it and say it wasn't true.
And so then you had this whole farce of them shooting down all these balloons and so forth.
This is the whole course and trajectory right now of the United States, Democrats and
Republicans, both sides of the aisle, have this vested belief that we are on a collision
course with China and you know
whoever kind of steps it up first ends up having the better footing and so
every opportunity that exists whether it's on chips or Taiwan or human rights or
the the spy balloon is going to be levered and amplified in some way to paint
China as this conflicting force against the United States in some way.
And it's not going to get toned down anytime soon.
Clearly this is part of a continuous escalation cycle that may take years, may take a decade
or two, but ultimately there's going to be a point where this all comes to a head.
And it's really unfortunate to see that rather than have this, you know, deeply cooperative relationship.
And sorry, you think this thing with China is going to come to a
head.
At some point, I think we're just going to continue to escalate the
tension. I'll take the other side of that too.
What do you think it's going to be peace and prosperity forever?
No, I mean, I think I've talked about this a little bit, but I think
China has just got so many internal issues.
They're not going to be fighting wars. A issues. They're not gonna be fighting wars, but they're not gonna.
No, look, I mean, my point is more around the orientation
of the politicians, and the orientation is,
we have this escalating force in China,
and we need to kind of be ahead of the game.
I think the electricers are not sure who's doing that.
I don't know.
Well, I think the point freeberg is making is that the domestic politics, the politics
inside the United States leads to a cycle of Republicans, Democrats constantly trying to
one up each other in terms of who's or hawkish towards China.
Right.
Exactly.
That's what I think is going on.
But also what happens on the Chinese side? And by the way, I mean,
their domestic politics probably have the same tendencies. I'm sure that
G's got hardliners and hawks around him who don't want to back down.
And so, I think in I think in a few years from now, we won't be talking about this.
We talked about Japan for eight, nine years. We were worried. They were the
boogie man. They turned out not to be and we all moved on
Yeah, it's a good data point. So yeah, I mean you're referring to a period
I think it was like the 1980s where Japan was seen as a giant
Yeah, but it was never seen as a security threat to the United States and
China is a different kind of geopolitical competitor, right? There's a very
vigorous security competition. But we have military bases in Japan. It was, it's a client in
the United States. It was never a security threat to the United States. That was resolved.
No, I think that's fair. I just think that dollars tend to lead these things. And I think that in
the next five to six years, five to ten years,
we're not going to be talking about China the same way we are today. Okay, prediction made will come back.
I episode eight, 1247. Brad, do our outro. I gotta find three hours. I'm flying. I'm
flying. I don't know what Brad's gonna do. Brad's gonna do a really quick. I gotta go. Fun.
Have a great time. Brad's gonna do a quick science corner for us.
And then we're gonna wrap Brad.
Go ahead.
Well, you know, one of the things I love about this pause
we cover everything's from science to politics
and and Chimath last year, you know,
in his biohacking series told us all to get pre-newvo scans,
which I did, which is interesting.
And I think I don't know, Timoth,
maybe 10 people have sent you notes and said,
hey, you helped me discover a tumor, you know,
really amazing.
Well, so this year and I did that,
you know, this year you've been talking a lot about heart flow.
So I said to my general practitioner at my annual checkup,
hey, I want to do this heart flow.
And she said, oh, you don't need to do a heart flow.
Your LDLs, all your stuff looks really good.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, you have a female GP.
She's fantastic, fantastic.
Stanford educated really to read.
I don't care where she went.
Who does the prostate test?
He does.
Hey, listen, it's in the parks that come along.
Checking the PSA.
I mean, nobody's here, you have it really?
I do.
I do. That's a level of intimacy. I didn't expect
from you. Wow. And so, you know, but what I found interesting is when I suggested I get the heart
flow, she said, oh, you don't need it, et cetera. Your LDLs are low. You're very fit. And she said,
but on second, you know, maybe you could go get this calcium score test, right?
I didn't know anything about this, but I did a little quick research and it turns out, a
big JAMA study in 2017, over 50% of men and women over the age of 40 carry plaque.
Blacks and number one killer, it's a source of heart disease and heart attacks.
And as Chema has been talking about, there's a prophylactic called statin,
which is basically like a supplement, very little downside, no long-term downside effects,
but it immediately starts cutting down the amount of fatty cells and plaque that's carried in your
blood. So I thought it was interesting. I went and I had Chema, as you know, the coronary calcium
scan, it takes five minutes, it costs between $100 and $400.
The fact that we don't have every person taking this over 40 is crazy.
And frontline doctors should all be prescribing it, but particularly if there's family history.
But did you also do a contrast CT with heart flops?
Yeah, so I started with the calcium score 150 box over at Stanford took five minutes.
And you know know it told me
You know, which wasn't terribly surprising. I was one of the 50% that did carry some level of calcium So it was called a non-zero score and then what they suggest is because you have a non-zero score
You get this you know, Chim off you told me go do the contrast CT
Which then will image what this looks like actually in your
arteries. So this past week in Boston, I did the contrast CT again. This took 10 minutes, not invasive,
like, you know, it's just they run you into it. Well, no, invasive because you have to put the
dye. So they put, yes, so a tiny bit, I suppose they shoot a little die into you, but you know,
didn't feel like anything. I was in and out of the place in 40 minutes. And what it found is,
you know, fortunately, that very little of this calcium had turned into what they call stenosis,
any narrow enough of the arteries, okay? But then it gave you just a very clear picture that if you are one of the 50% who carry
plaque over the age of 40, you should be on a prophylactic statin.
So as Chimato's, I signed up to 10 milligrams of Crestar, which I'm taking daily, has had
zero, you know, zero adverse consequences.
And in two or three months, they'll test the amount of,
you know, we'll revisit this calcium score. But when I talked to the head of cardiology,
what was so interesting is that every one of his friends over the age of 40, he has them do
this calcium coronary scan. It's so cheap. And if they're zero on their calcium reading,
then that's the end of the line. But if they have a non-zero reading, then he'll do the CT coronary scan, which is again very cheap, more expensive
than the calcium test, but very cheap. And when you think about the costs of the patients
in this country, right, in our healthcare system, due to heart disease, and when you think
about the needless lives cut short, I was shocked how easy all of this was and how empowered I feel by the data and how fortunate I feel that I'm actually taking a supplement.
I called a supplement instead of statins because I think statin has some spooky name. It sounds to me like a better supplement than any vitamins I can take. And it's reducing the LDLs or these fatties in your blood. And I'll keep
you posted, but I was very grateful. And as you know, I posted it in our thread. And I think all
the besties, we saw responses out of a bunch of folks in the thread this week are going to go get
their calcium, coronary scan. And I think it should be common sense on the front lines for people
over 40, particularly if there's any family history,
go get this calcium test done this summer while you have a little extra time.
There you have it folks.
100 to 400 dollars could save your life calcium coronary scan Brad Gerstner, thanks so much for science corner this week.
This has been great. How did you guys enjoy the show with our new for some?
Zach love it. Love it. I
Got to go boys. I really love you guys.
Okay, stuff your face with some truffles. No, no truffles until the ball. All right. Bye. Bye.
Love you guys.
What your winners ride?
Brain man David. I'm going to leave We'll let your winners ride Rainman David's act
And it said we open source it to the fans and they just got crazy with
Besties are gone. Go through the teeth.
That's my dog.
Take it out.
Oh, man.
I might have to get out of your room.
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug.
George, because you're all good.
It's like this sexual tension that we just need to release that out.
What?
You're a beat. What you're the beat.
What you're the beat, what you're the beat.
We need to get murkies out of that.
I'm going on the earth.
I'm going on the earth.
you