All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E148: McCarthy ousted, border chaos, Cruise's robotaxi "accident" & more
Episode Date: October 7, 2023(0:00) Bestie intros: Jason's operation! (1:57) Airtable correction (5:03) McCarthy ousted as Speaker of the House, what the eight defecting Republicans are looking for, solving the omnibus spending p...roblem (25:20) US Southern Border: Understanding the situation based on data (44:39) Cruise robotaxi "accident" in SF, lack of risk tolerance limiting technological progress in the West (1:09:09) JSX facing potential regulatory capture from incumbent airlines and Friedberg's trip to The Sphere 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 Referenced in the show: https://apnews.com/article/mccarthy-gaetz-speaker-motion-to-vacate-congress-327e294a39f8de079ef5e4abfb1fa555 https://www.cnn.com/2023/10/03/politics/republicans-vote-remove-mccarthy-house-speaker https://www.wsj.com/politics/nancy-mace-explains-why-she-nixed-kevin-mccarthy-as-house-speaker-32148d9d https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/10/04/kevin-mccarthy-speaker-vote-press-conference https://www.cbsnews.com/news/why-oust-mccarthy-matt-gaetz-remove-speaker-of-the-house https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2023/09/13/congress-has-long-struggled-to-pass-spending-bills-on-time https://twitter.com/zerohedge/status/1709321746673786896 https://www.cnn.com/2015/10/08/politics/house-speaker-republican-vote-mccarthy-webster-chaffetz https://www.wsj.com/economy/central-banking/rising-interest-rates-mean-deficits-finally-matter-74249719 https://twitter.com/CollinRugg/status/1709728378339705099 https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/stats/southwest-land-border-encounters https://gov.texas.gov/news/post/governor-abbott-announces-first-bus-of-migrants-arrives-in-new-york-city https://twitter.com/CBSNews/status/1556727876757737474 https://youtu.be/-09DzvdLaEw https://apnews.com/article/migrants-new-york-adams-abbott-colombia-58d423ab3e84e5692d50f773803254 https://www.nytimes.com/article/nyc-migrant-crisis-explained.html https://www.statista.com/statistics/455813/alien-apprehensions-by-the-us-border-patrol-by-border https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/immigration/border-apprehensions-hit-new-yearly-high-another-migrant-caravan-gathers-n1281995 https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/immigration/migrant-border-crossings-fiscal-year-2022-topped-276-million-breaking-rcna53517 https://www.texastribune.org/2022/06/29/supreme-court-migrant-protection-protocols-remain-mexico-biden https://www.washingtonpost.com/immigration/2023/08/31/border-families-record-crossings-biden https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/23/us/mexico-us-border-patrol-agreement-migration-surge/index.html https://public-inspection.federalregister.gov/2023-22176.pdf https://www.nextgenborder.com https://www.anduril.com/hardware/sentry https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-quietly-auctions-trump-border-wall-parts-stunt-republican-effort-restart-construction-report https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB994028904620983237 https://twitter.com/Cruise/status/1709114532042576305 https://twitter.com/usENTchannel/status/1707035020098142404 https://www.valuepenguin.com/car-accident-statistics https://waymo.com/blog/2023/05/waymo-one-doubles-service-area-in.html https://www.jsx.com https://www.united.com https://twitter.com/PopBase/status/1708164333451289062 https://twitter.com/latest_gg/status/1709948932489445478 https://twitter.com/SBJ/status/1677419552991244289 https://www.wsj.com/business/airlines/jet-service-jsx-lands-at-center-of-pilot-fight-86a4f669 https://keep-jsx-flying.webflow.io https://www.votervoice.net/JSXAir/Campaigns/107888/Respond
Transcript
Discussion (0)
How was your colonoscopy, buddy?
Oh, well, that was a...
Talk about Uranus.
Talk about my anus.
Have you guys had yours recently?
Who's had a colonoscopy?
I have mine in December, my first one.
Yeah, my first one.
Yeah, I was the link one on mine too.
They used to be 50 and they moved the H down to 45.
Yeah, they didn't move the H down.
Free break, have you had one yet?
That's a yes, we got a yes.
I'm due.
Sacks have you had yours?
I'm due.
By the way, I got a report because actually Sacks, we got a yes. Sacks have you had yours. I'm do.
By the way, I got a report because actually Sacks who did have one and they found a bunch
of DeSantis merchandise up there.
You found a DeSantis hat, a DeSantis pin, tons of DeSantis stuff right off your ass.
At our age, we should be four for four on the colonoscopies, we're one for four.
We got to get that stat up every week.
I want to check in here.
Prophefall, shout out Michael Jackson is the greatest drug week. I want to check in here. Prophefall, shout
out Michael Jackson is the greatest drug ever. I counted 15 seconds. I was knocked out. I woke
up and the next thing I know I was in the recovery area.
Were you groggy? I was not grog. No, I was fine. You literally don't remember anything,
no pain, no suffering. I did have...
But were you able to have a regular schedule the rest of the day?
Not really. So I don't want to just wait anybody from having this,
but you do have to take a drink called prep,
which clears you out.
And when I say clears you out, I love that.
Oh, I love that.
I love that.
Yeah, I hit a record low weight on 168 now.
So that was the one benefit.
Well, how much weight did you lose?
Three pounds, maybe.
Come on.
Oh, yeah.
Were you working when you were prepping?
No.
I was working when I was prepping
So Monday when I was prepping, but then literally do you take this prep stuff an hour later?
You're you need to be ready to evacuate at any time normally the diarrhea is coming out of your mouth
Absolutely Alright everybody welcome to another amazing episode of the All in podcast episode one, four, eight. The docket is absurd.
The number of lawsuits and the amount of news
that has happened in just the last week
has been insane.
But we want to at the top of the show
do a quick correction, right?
It's an all-in correction.
If we make a mistake here, we don't hide it in the show notes.
We just talk about it right up front.
Sacks, you are in touch with the Airtable CEO,
Howie Liu, who's been a guest on this
weekend startups.
You're going to have mine again actually soon.
Maybe you could just discuss what we got wrong and how we got it wrong and then what the
correct facts are about AirTable just quickly.
We're at the top of the show.
Yeah, well, we had a segment a couple of weeks ago.
We were talking about these high price late stage unicorn rounds needing to get revalued. And the IPO of Instacart
was a good example of this, where yes, an IPO at about 10 billion, but the last five rounds
at 39 billion. So there is a big wave of revaluations or down rounds coming. And we cited some numbers
off the internet regarding air table. As it turns out, not everything on the internet is true.
And you're talking about specific journalists
in my regarding it wrong.
We would say-
Well, it was actually a tweet storm on X
that from a financial account that appeared on the surface
to be correct.
And in fact, it did have some correct information,
but it was outdated.
It was stale.
So just the quick correction here
is that the amount of ARR that we cited, which I think was around 150 million, was accurate
as of the time they did the last round, but that was like three years ago. Furthermore,
the growth rate that was cited, which I think was around 15%. That was off. That was off
by about a three X multiple. So when you put all these things together, I wasn't
able to get the exact numbers. But if you just do a little bit of napkin math here, my guess is
that air table is somewhere in the half a billion of ARR club with pretty decent growth.
And if you look at the public comps for that, I think the public comps be something like a
Monday, you know, which is doing five to 600 million of ARR coming off a 50% growth rate, maybe
forecasting 30% for the next year, that company has been hovering around the seven or eight billion
dollar valuation range. Twelve X. Yeah, the claim that was made on X was that air table was even worth the 1.4 billion that
is raised in VC money.
I think that's way off.
I mean, yeah.
And furthermore, you know, what we heard is that air table still has something like two
thirds of the money that is raised in the bank.
So look, is air table worth the 11 billion that I was valued at at the peak?
Probably that's not what the public
comps indicate. Would I be a buyer personally at roughly half that price for sure?
For sure.
And I think it'll have a nice IPO at some point when they decide they want to do it.
So just an important reminder for everybody is, you know, listen, if information's on the
interwebs, it may not be correct. But the top news story in the country is unequivocally
Kevin McCarthy being a speaker of the House on Tuesday. He was voted out in a 216 to 210 vote
with eight far-right Republicans joining all of the Democrats. So those H-O-P members include or led by Matt Gaetz, obviously, a group of, I guess, what
would be best described, SACs as T-party-S members of the GOP contingent, they care mostly
about spending and curtailing spending.
And my correct self.
Don't forget all the Democrats.
Well, yeah, I'm putting the Democrats on, I already kind of, I'm just talking about the
eight who made this tip over.
The media is trying to portray them as these far right, you know, wingers.
And I don't think you can just say that because I don't think Nancy Mase fits in that
group.
I think she does care about spending, but she's not just like Mac.
Was it far right to care about spending?
I mean, far right to me would be a Mac.
Exactly right.
I mean, anything that the media doesn't like, they label far right.
But I think, you know, Nancy Mase is a good example of somebody who is very concerned
about spending discipline, but is not like a MAGA type Republican.
But is the, and just to just refine this one more time before I keep going, those eight
would the comment thread would be control spending, we're at, we have out of control spending
is, is the reason they're voting a no vote for Kevin McCarthy.
I think there were a couple other pieces of this. If you listen to Nancy Mason, some of the
other people that were involved here, a lot of the issue comes down to trust. They felt
like they can no longer trust Kevin McCarthy. They felt like the things that he had told
them in private were not matching up with the things that he would then later do or that
he would say in public or that he would then later do, or that he would say in public,
or that he would tell the Biden administration.
So I think that-
And the main issues were-
Well, I think it was a couple.
One was on spending.
He had promised that he would stop doing these giant omnivast spending bills where everything
would be lumped into one bill.
You get like 24 hours to read it, and then you got to vote up or down on whether you pass
this giant spending bill or shut down the government, everyone feels forced to vote for it. you get like 24 hours to read it and then you got a vote up or down on whether you pass this
giant spending bill or shut down the government everyone feels forced to vote for it. He had
promised to do single subject spending bills. So military education, welfare, what happened? Yeah,
that goes through a regular budget process. So they felt like he had broke his promise on that.
I think also on the issue of Ukraine, there were some trust issues there because
what he was telling Republicans in private was not what he was telling the Biden administration in private, where he
was telling the Biden administration, don't worry, we're going to get the Ukraine funding
through, but then he was sounding different notes with various Republicans.
And I think his true feelings on the matter came out in this press conference he did after
he was ousted, in which he goes on this long rant
about how Putin's the second coming of Adolf Hitler,
and if we don't stop him now,
he's gonna be marching into Paris.
And I mean, it was sort of this unhinged,
second grade American history style,
a view of the war, which regardless of what your view
is on it, I think it expressed his true feelings on the matter, which is that when push came to shove, he's more hawkish than Joe Biden on the issue of Ukraine. He feels that Biden has not done enough.
It's safe to say that that that is now very out of step.
Moreover, I think that if he had just acted as an honest broker on the issue, which is to say,
listen, I'm just going to represent the views of my caucus.
My caucus is divided on the issue.
I'm just going to let them have an up or down vote on it.
Then I think he could have survived on that issue.
But instead, again, I think he was trying to manipulate things in a direction of continuing
Ukraine funding, regardless of the views of his caucus.
Gates wants to end CRs, continuing resolutions, those extend the funding deadline from October 1st
of holidays, claiming this bias, Congress time to lump all those individual
part-mortem billes into the omnimus bill as you correctly pointed out.
Gates wants to end that practice and return to regular order, passage of individual annual spending bills, not the omnibus.
The context that I think is important, that I think is that the American public should understand
is how is this actually supposed to work, so that we don't normalize what these CRs are.
So, the way that it's supposed to work is that Congress is authorized by law to create 12
spending bills a year.
And each of those bills have to map to the large parts of the government.
So there's a military bill, there's an education bill, there's a, you know, HHS bill, et
cetera, et cetera.
And those are supposed to be negotiated on the House floor and passed.
The Senate is allowed to do a version of the same.
If those two things are different, meaning the Senate doesn't take the House bill and creates their own,
the law says that you have to create what's called a conference and a group of people, half senators and half
Congress people sit in a room, hash out and mediate a resolution, and that is what goes to the president's desk to be signed.
That's how it used to be done. But about a decade ago, all of that broke down.
And now what happens is you have this thing that Sachs mentioned, which is called the CR, which is essentially a backdoor.
It's this release valve that is supposed to be an in-emergency break-glass
type measure that has become fundamentally normalized. And I think what's important
to call out is what happened here isn't getting the just attention because it's being characterized
on party lines and not actually being characterized with how America is legally supposed to work
as defined in the Constitution.
So the Congress is supposed to pass 12 spending bills a year.
It's then supposed to get negotiated or approved by the Senate and then it should go to the
President.
When you override that with these continuing resolutions, this is the issue that Freeberg's
been talking about.
You balloon the deficit deficit you balloon the debt
you have all kinds of pork barrel spending there's zero accountability
the bullets cost six thousand dollars
the umbrella holders cost fifteen thousand
all of this nonsense that just brings us closer and closer to some sort of
default or
economic contagion
so i actually look at this issue not as republican versus democrat
the far right wing.
I think that's misguided interpretation by the mainstream media.
I think what this is is the first chance in a while where you're not allowed to pass a
continuing resolution where you will have to propose 12 bills the way the law says you're
supposed to.
And what that'll mean is that you'll have to negotiate a compromise to get those 12 bills passed.
Now, what's crazy is the Senate actually
has six of those bills on their desk,
and they haven't even negotiated it.
And I think the reason is because they
know that the CR is always in the offing.
But if this continuing resolution is not allowed
because you fired the speaker, then
they'll have to negotiate those bills. and part of what McCarthy did to get elected was say we will return to the law and
Not use the in emergency break class and I think that's what's not it's not understood well
I think by Americans as that is the actual process
We haven't been doing it for a decade. And I'm not a fan of gates, but I'm glad that somebody did this because somebody has
to draw a line in this end.
The Republicans and Democrats equally have been responsible for breaking the way the American
government spends money.
And so this is the best way to fix it.
Freeberg, you agree?
With what's gone down here and that this is worth shutting the government down, etc.
Or do you think this is like
where to make the stand? Because you've been very pro controlling spending, SFI, and so do you
think that this is the best way to do it, I guess? It's more about the United States'
is facing a fiscal emergency, national debt reported by the Treasury Department increased by $275 billion in a one-day report
yesterday, $275 billion in a day.
The entire tarp program during 08 was $400 billion.
That's how out of control our fiscal condition is.
This is a function of rising rates, a function of spending.
As we talked about many times over, there's an arithmetic to this that at some point,
it becomes ever-escalating until you step in
and do something dramatic about it.
So I'm hopeful, and I mean, there's a lot of rhetoric.
You can watch all the news channels
and see a lot of these congresspeople get on camera
and talk about different things.
I think we're seeing more frequently now,
people talking about the fiscal crisis that the
US is facing, and that this action provides a mechanism as Chamoff points out for forcing
everyone to the table to figure out how do we reduce the impact, how do we chart a path
to a solution, because right now, if you have to anyone in Congress, what's the strategic
plan here?
There is not going to be an answer from anyone.
Everyone's got a different point of view,
and everyone's fighting over the deck chairs
on the Titanic, and we've got a more significant problem.
We're hitting an iceberg.
So yeah, I'm hopeful that this causes hopefully
a turning point in the never-ending spending spree where everyone gets elected and everyone promises to the
folks that they're representing and the folks that funded
their political campaigns. Some amount of money back out from
the government and everyone gets that free money and at some
point something's got to turn around or the whole thing
kind of goes down. So hopefully this is that moment.
I don't know.
Shacks you think that by the way, if the government shut down for weeks and months to try and
figure this out and for everyone to get aligned with, here's the long range strategic plan
presented to the American people on how we prevent the US from either inflation or bankruptcy,
then I think everyone will feel like it was worth it.
Sacks has been tons of speculation about what this is, what this is actually about.
Is it about Ukraine? Is it about out of control spending? Is it about
Matt Gaetz and Kevin McCarthy having some sort of personal grudge against each other?
What do you think is at the core of this, Sacks?
Well, probably all of the above, but I think it's fundamentally a rejection of the status quo.
Kevin McCarthy, if nothing else, is a figure of the status quo. I mean, he's worked for 20 years through the system. He's a great
fundraiser. I actually attended an event for him down the street here, and of course, all the donors
love him. And look, I like Kevin McCarthy. I've contributed to Kevin McCarthy, but at the end of
the day, I'm not sure that Kevin McCarthy is a guy who's going to get us out of this mess.
And the fundamental problem is he's just too conciliatory.
The idea that you're going to impose spending discipline and get us out of the budgetary
mess that we're in, the idea that you're going to make that omelette without breaking
a few eggs, I think is just kind of silly.
I think we need a tougher speaker who's going to actually live up to the promises of stopping
these omnibus bills going back to single subject bills who is going to represent the views of the
majority of the Republican caucus on indefinite infinite Ukraine spending because he's kind
of off center of the Republican party on that.
Why can't the Republican party be in unison on this?
Is it explain what the explain what the
what's the rift inside the the gop right now well that you actually has debates in
this party you will you see is the democrats are in total lockstep and they just
support whatever is the status quo
but the republicans actually have debates inside their party and there is a big
debate right now on how we handle
you crane
and i think there is growing opposition to a blank check
as long as it takes policy towards Ukraine. We've already appropriated over 100 billion.
What's the return on investment of that? The counter-efficiency failed.
So you think that's the key? You think that's the key, not the CRs?
I think it's both of those issues combined with the fact that increasingly McCarthy was
not seen as an honest broker. Listen, I think McCarthy could have had whatever views he wanted to if he was perceived as somebody who actually represented a majority of their public and caucus but
What Nancy May is what Mac aides what these others who rebelled were saying is listen
What Kevin told us is not what he did and I personally witnessed this aspect to McCarthy
Okay, so when I went to this event down the street here,
I heard him gave this whole putler rant.
And then afterwards I came up to him and said,
Ken, what are you talking about?
Did you really want to cause War III?
And all of a sudden he backpedaled
and he started saying these conciliatory things.
And I was like, okay, maybe he just went on this like two
where it was kind of off topic.
And two. He tuned in? He tuned in where, you know, it was kind of off topic.
He tuted.
Did you retweet it?
But after I kind of had this like sidebar with him, I'm like, okay, maybe it's not so bad. Maybe, you know, I think he, he promised that he would impose.
He's in the pocket of special interests. Let's be clear.
Well, I think he, well, no, not quite Jason, because he didn't quote
to it. He's just, he well, no, not quite Jason because he didn't quote to it. He's just
a quote to it. And he just he retuted it. But what I would say is that he was really good in any
particular meeting at saying conciliatory things to get somebody to like him and to get him.
He's a B. S.R. is what you're saying. Well, I mean, I think a lot of politicians are.
Not a part. And so he told me what I wanted to hear. I think he promised that he would get in the council.
Would you have been with the eight or with the rest?
Well, and the guys, the fundamental,
the current, the sex, would you have voted with the eight
or would you have voted with the rest as if you were?
I then would have voted with the eight.
I mean, even though I like, look, I like McCarthy,
he's a likable guy, but again,
I think that press conference he held revealed
the truth of it, which is he was be asking me,
his real view is
That we need to support Ukraine for as long as it takes and he told me something different
His grand bargain was that he would stop these continuing resolution pork barrel bills
That was the grand bargain that was the thing that said and if I don't do it you guys can vote me out
Do you guys remember this? Yeah, you know that was his negotiation?
So it this really was kind of like a feather complete The minute he decided to pass and yet another pork barrel bill, you also seem
kind of frustrated that he just he seemed like he was spent in dealing with all this. So
it's surprising to me is why the Republican Party allowed mad gates to get all of the attention
and to be like the organizing principle because he's such a load some individual to so many people
both in the Republican party and outside.
The guy, the guy broke a fundamental promise and that promise wasn't that provocative.
It's just like, yeah, we're going to pass 12 bills.
We're just going to follow the law and he couldn't follow the law.
And so why doesn't anybody else stand up?
Why does it have to take these eight kind of coalescing with, with the Dems?
It's, it's really nutty actually.
Yeah.
It was a very strange series of events.
And by the way, I think you make a just your last point there.
This would not have happened if Hakeem Jeffries didn't send down word that all the Democrats
were supposed to vote with Mac Ains.
I think that this is a vote against their long term interest because the fact the matter
is that Kevin McCarthy ultimately was a very client speaker and he was giving the Democrats what they wanted on spending,
on keeping government funded and open forever at higher and higher rates of spending and
on Ukraine.
They're never going to get somebody who is more compliant.
To your point, I think what is really interesting and hopefully beneficial for America is we've broken the
seal on unseating the speaker, interterm, if they kind of like violate a handful of these
defined things.
And I hope one of these things is the best thing we could do for America is just force all
of these folks in Congress to negotiate 12 bills a year.
Keep them busy.
Focus on those bills. Get to like
a compromise. Get it to the Senate. Get it voted. Get it to the president's side. That's
it. If they if they just did that, we would probably spend a third to half of less than
we do now. It's gays. The winner and all of us to see it look like just just so you guys
know like when you try to propose elements of a bill, right? In one of those real bills,
okay? It has to go to the the CBO and it has to get scored.
Right?
So for example, we've tried to propose certain aspects of legislation.
And no matter whatever we think about it, there at least is an independent body.
That scores it and says, here's the X year cost, the Y year cost.
Here's the benefits.
And so you get a very clear sense and a transparent sense that's published everybody about what this is. In CR, you can avoid all of that stuff.
There is no close study of any of this stuff. And, you know, David is right. You get it
on a Thursday night at like 8 p.m. and you vote Friday at 6, you know, or like at midday.
How is anybody supposed to approve a multi trillion dollar package logically?
You know it's riddled with nonsense.
It makes no sense that you don't break up the work and do it thoughtfully each time.
I guess should they change this ability for one member to propose a resolution
to remove the speaker?
Yeah.
It's comically easy to make the speaker based on the rules they
passed. However, I think it's important to understand why that will happen. It happened
because McCarthy was so desperate to become speaker. If you go back to the history of
this thing, McCarthy was actually passed over for speaker back in 2015 when he made this
gaff on TV about the Benghazi select committee being set up to hurt Hillary's poll numbers.
Obviously, that wasn't an emission that helped Republicans.
And he only got the job this year by making it so easy to take it away from him.
And remember, they did like 15 rounds of voting.
So this is the problem.
Frankly, one of the problems with McCarthy is he has a little bit too desperate to have
the job.
Sometimes when you get a guy who is so desperate for a job, they're not
that effective in it because they're too worried about it being taken away. What you want
is a guy who is like, look, take it or leave it. I could do this job or not do this job.
That's the only way you're going to get somebody tough in the job. I think the guy they should
look to right now would be Jim Jordan. I think Jim Jordan would be excellent because at
the end of the day, you want a speaker who's going to be fear not loved,
like Nancy Pelosi, quite frankly,
you need a Republican speaker who's going to be tough
who doesn't give a shit if you like him or not.
I mean, this is, I think, Kevin's downfall
is that he cared too much about people liking him.
As a result, in the room,
he would always tell you something that you liked,
but the problem is that he can't deliver on that.
Yeah, so let's get ready to move on to the topic, but just a final question here.
Do you guys think a shutdown in a couple of weeks?
Because that's how long the extension is, would be productive for the country if it becomes
the backstop against out of control spending.
If it stops the CR process, it'll be effective to the tune of about $500 billion.
It'll be half a trillion dollars effective.
So, a couple of weeks of the government not spending on it? $500 billion. It'll be half a trillion dollars effective.
So a couple of weeks of the government not spending money, meaning if you kill the omnibus
bill, or you have an extremely slimmed down version of that bill and you revert back to this
12 bills a year process that's supposed to be the law, there'll be more effect.
You'd save half a trillion dollars, probably.
Just to finish the point on that, I think we have to just look at this Wall Street Journal
article that came out this morning, where it was called Rising Insurance rates mean deficits
finally matter. Finally, there's a recognition. We called it. Yeah. Finally, there's a recognition,
both politically and economically, that our deficits and debt are too big. And the key point
of this article is it says most of the increase
This is in long term rates is due to the part of yields called the term premium
Which has nothing to do with inflation or short-term rates?
So until now our interest rate problems have been about the Fed raising short-term rates to combat inflation
Now we're seeing a separate problem which is long rates are going up and the long rates are going up because of this concern that the federal government has
too much debt.
And so bondholders are starting to demand a higher long-term premium to hold that debt.
It's what we've been warning about for a long time now.
And it's finally happening.
So unless the political system gets serious about reducing deficits, even if inflation comes
down, and even if the Fed cuts short-term
rates, you're going to have a problem with long-term rates remaining high, and that is going
to keep the cost of capital high, and that is going to reduce long-term innovation in
the economy.
It's bad for us.
It's horrible for us.
Yeah, terrible for us.
Let's go to another troubling situation.
What's happening at the Southern border,
obviously, videos of migrants crossing the Southern border
are all over X-rated, YouTube, et cetera.
One side saying it's chaos, the other side arguably been ignoring it.
So let's start with the two numbers that we actually know.
I've put a bunch of time into trying to figure out
if there are any accurate numbers,
talk to a bunch of people on Twitter and other places. There are only, we have very, very flawed data on what's actually happening there.
We do have anecdotal videos. Obviously, our friend Elon went down to the border and did
a video himself. The best data with the caveat that it's very flawed is the count of encounters.
This is not folks who get through. This is folks who were encountered. So this
is the official southern land border encounters from the US Customs and Border Protection
Agency since 2022, 2020 and 2021. There were obviously COVID issues on the border. So it
was much more locked down. Half a million people in 2021.7 and 2021. 2.4 rounding up there and in 2023, supposedly rounding up 2 million
through 10 months, tracking on a pace for 2.3, the exact same as last year. However, it
certainly doesn't look like that. It's the exact same. Again, that's from the border
patrol and that is encounters, not actually people who got through. And then the border states are saying
that those numbers are wrong,
and there's a lot more people getting through,
and Eric Adams in New York,
where a lot of these people are being sent.
And this has obviously been the most politicized issue,
I think, of the last decade.
Governor Abbott, in August of 2022,
quote, New York City is the ideal destination for these migrants who can receive the abundance of city services and housing that mayor Adams has posted about within the sanctuary city. Here are the clips and then I'll get your responses from those when we get back.
This is horrific when you think about what the governor is doing, the governor of Texas, but we are going to set the right message,
the right tone of being here for these families.
Before we begin busing illegal immigrants up to New York, it was just Texas and Arizona
that bore the brunt of all of the chaos and all the problems that come with it.
Now the rest of America is understanding exactly what is going
on. Alright, so this is obviously something that New York City is unable to handle. Those
are from August of last year when this was flaming up. According to Abbott, Texas has given
Bustick as to 42,000 migrants. And as of late September, 119 migrants have arrived in New
York City since the spring of 22. About 30% of New York City migrants have been bust in from Texas.
I'll stop there and just get your general reactions to what you all believe is happening at the
border since we're getting a highly politicized take on each of these. It's become super polarized
and the numbers, any accurate numbers do not exist, sex.
I don't think it's hard to understand
what's going on with the border.
I think there are people who want to...
Well, I said it's hard to understand
the numbers of what's going on with the border.
I don't even think the numbers are that hard.
You have a better source in number.
I have some numbers that are similar to yours, but...
Okay.
So Satista goes back to 2019.
So the numbers I have are about in 2019,
which is when remain in Mexico went into
effect. The number was 851,000. Then it went down to 400,000 because of COVID and title 42. Then in
2021, we had about 1.7 million, which was a new record. Then in 2022, we are up to 2.7 million,
which was a new record. And the the question is what is happening in 2023?
Obviously, we don't have a full year of data, but given that we've eliminated Remain in Mexico and title 42
I don't think anybody seriously doubts that we're headed for a new record and in fact the Washington Post had articles in August
The September is saying that those months were all time records and now they're surpassing
11,000 daily migrant encounters
of the border just twice last week.
So, and, you know, what Elon reported from the border.
You said that link.
He said that link.
So we'll probably have to.
And then also just, you know, that was amazing news.
That was amazing news.
I was gonna say, Statista is an aggregator.
They don't do primary researches here now.
So, which one?
But those numbers were pretty similar to yours.
Maybe from the same source, who knows?
We also have the video evidence.
We have the fact that Elon went down there and reported exactly what we're seeing in other
contexts, which is new records virtually every day and every week and every month.
The Border Patrol agents are basically being overrun.
And so you made the correct point that this only measures encounters.
It doesn't measure the actual number of people going through.
Well, if border patrol is overrun, then the number of encounters relative to them,
people getting through is obviously going to be very understated.
So I think we're on track for another huge record in 2023.
And the point is that the pace is accelerating.
Elon gave the simple math.
There's 8 billion people in the world.
How many of them would want to be in the United States
if they could?
Probably billions.
At least half of them.
At least half of them.
And I don't blame them.
Okay, I want to be in these issues too.
That's kind of real quick, yeah.
Okay, but obviously we can't handle
all the people who want to be here.
And the word has gone out via social media,
via word of mouth,
that the border is effectively open. And we've
seen numerous videos. It wasn't just Elon when RFK went down there to you, Mayor, Arizona.
There's a hundred different countries.
There's a big hole in the wall and people are just lining up and.
Well, but it was a hundred different countries, right? I mean, we it was not a
country. And Elon broadcast the exact same thing coming from Eagle Pass. So the point is
you've got all of these different points where there is no wall and
People are just lining up and being let through and in some cases
They're just running through because the border patrol is overrun. So we effectively have no border
I mean let's admit the truth now
Yeah, and I think that the mainstream media and the Biden administration their policy was basically Cino evil, here
no evil, and to deny the reality of what was happening.
Eric Adams was one of the first Democrats to break ranks saying, listen, we can see the
migrants lining up in tents going around the block.
We are trying to put them up in hotels, it's costing us $12 billion.
We can't afford it.
But Eric Adams has always been a little bit of a maverick inside the democratic party
we talked about how he was tough on crime during the chase of the new era
which is why i support it is a moderate but it was a moderate but then you had
kathy hoax who's the governor
of new york who's nothing if not a machine
politician
just in the last week saying we cannot handle this so she broke ranks
which was i think a big news story.
And now the latest is that the Biden administration itself might be breaking ranks. I think Jamoth,
you posted a really interesting story that, Mallorca, who's the Secretary of DHS, just posted
a notice in the federal register, which said there is presently an acute and immediate need
to construct physical barriers and roads
in the vicinity of the board of the United States.
They don't want to say wall.
They don't want to say wall.
They don't say the devil.
They just don't want to be in a very powerful entry since the United States.
Now, there was no press conference on this.
The way that this got reported is some reporter was doing their job keeping track of the Federal
Register and saw that New Yorkists had posted a notice saying that they need to construct a wall.
Now Biden hasn't said this, no one on the administration said this, but clearly for obvious reasons.
For obvious reasons. So Jason, what do you think the obvious reason is?
Well, the obvious reason is Trump's entire presidency was predicated on, hey, we're going to build this wall.
And but I'm saying you go back and say that he was right is untenable to this
administration.
National security.
It's like, yes.
And so they're going to do that.
They're going to do that.
And obviously, and build the wall, but they don't want to say it.
So it's just ridiculous.
But just one important point to what David said, New York City has the right to shelter.
So that means every immigrant who comes there, they have to put them in a hotel.
And these are like, turns out, $400 or $500 a night hotel.
So this has become cataclysmic. They're obviously needs to be a border. And it's ridiculous to say there
shouldn't be a border. Nobody believes that. I don't know why this administration just
can't admit that there needs to be a border of some kind. And we can talk about what
they want. But Shema. Well, though, actually, it's a better solution than a wall, but we'll
get to that. What is it? Well, I don't want to jump to my feet. I have something to say.
So Shema, I'll explain in a second if you want, or I can jump to it. No, jump to that. What is it? Well, I don't want to jump to my feet. I have something to say.
So, I'll explain in a second if you want.
Or I can jump to it.
No, jump to it.
Okay.
So, obviously people are talking about a wall.
Walls are a terrible solution because there are ladders that can go over them pretty easily.
What you really need to have is eyes on it.
And the two best solutions you can see them here.
Israel has had a really, they understand borders really well. And so what you're seeing,
if you're watching are these towers, which do a great job of monitoring the border. And
you could put about 2,000 of these towers, they have a range of easily a mile. This is
next-gen, bordered by EBIT systems. It's a Israeli-based company. It's 160-foot surveillance
tower. Andral actually has a century tower as well,
our friend of the pod,
Palmer Lockies Company, andral.
And obviously, the Border Patrol already has 10 of the towers.
Well, why do you see as an either war?
I'm just curious, like, why would you go?
Oh, I think that these smart land posts, as I call them,
are the number one first thing to do
because you could deploy these in a fraction of the time.
You could have $1,000 of these in under a year for $4 billion.
And so these only cost $2 million each.
The 10 towers that were put in were put in a 26 million in the pilot.
So if you put $2,000 of these towers in, you just picked four different vendors.
So they do 500 each and you test them.
That would be $4 billion.
That would be nothing.
What do you do when you, when the camera spots person?
You send intercepts there and then you build the walls
where people are crossing most.
So that would be mine.
So you're making the most crossing most.
They're crossing the walls.
You always see you build,
you look for hotspots, David.
So you would, but we don't, there's hotspots
that we don't know about.
So I'd say you deploy these for $4 billion very quickly
and then where there are hotspots,
you obviously build walls.
But you're still good in here.
Can you be frank about this?
Sure, be as frank as you like.
Look, regardless of what you think about Trump,
this may or kiss revelation completely
and utterly vindicates his approach
to wanting to build a wall.
And there's so many people who won't just admit
that he was right, that we need a strong border wall,
not because it's perfect, not because you can't climb over it
if you have the right tools, but because a wall
is more defensible than an open field.
Now look, I'm all in favor of these towers
and the cameras, and my understanding is that
a lot of the parts of Trump's wall did have cameras on them.
Yeah, no, he gets better for that too.
But the point is that you have video now coming out
of thousands of people streaming across running.
Yeah, the word is out.
You need a wall to stop that.
You also need cameras and border guards
and all the rest of it.
Just so you know, 2,000 miles of wall
is going to be like a decade-long project.
So that's only point.
No, okay, it's only a decade-long
if you allow all of these core challenges
that are designed to frustrate it.
The fact of the matter is, look,
we don't need 2,000 miles of wall
because there are a lot of natural barriers along the border,
where you have deep rivers or mountains
or whatever, we're not gonna need the wall.
However, there are pieces of the wall
that were literally laying on the ground.
They were unfinished from Trump's term.
By the way, Trump should have gotten that done.
He didn't in any event, whatever.
The point is, the Biden administration
was actually selling those pieces of wall for scrap
metal for two cents on the dollar.
This was a story that came out.
Now they're admitting that we need the wall.
That was pure politics.
That makes no sense.
They had the construction materials.
They should have just finished it.
That is American public.
Yeah.
The American public.
It's utterly ridiculous.
It's like crazy.
It's because the American government didn't like who said the right thing and the tone
in which he said it.
Yes.
And they didn't like the separating of children from whatever they politicized that.
Both parties are equally just grossed at a situation and in common.
But I'm a competent.
It should be a point-based system.
You lock the border and you allow people in, you in, as I've said, 10 times on this podcast, based
on merit, what they're going to contribute to our society, that's recruitment.
Some amount of people who are need asylum because they're going to be murdered, I.e. Afghanistan,
people who supported us, Afghans who supported us during the war, and then finally the order
in process of people applying to come in here.
Do your jobs everybody. It's just so-
Well, please Nick. What happens when you get to the border guys? Do you just get admitted to America?
Guys, this is insane, okay. The Biden administration started auctioning off what they called
spare border wall parts, okay. I mean, how does Biden live this down?
I think this could cost me a lecture. Yeah, you're 100% right about that.
Yeah, I think this is like, this is a set up for a very bad ad. Absolutely.
Yeah, I mean, I think this is just because it's become so politicized, point-based system, recruitment
over chaos, build a wall, build a sensor tower. What do you do in the meantime? There are
tens of thousands of people a day
hitting the southern border.
We have a national guard.
We have something called the national guard.
We send them there.
They have to be deployed anyway.
You just deploy the national guard.
No, but same or the same term.
But same or same or like you would put the military
to basically turn these people around.
Of course.
Of course you turn the right.
Yes, that's it.
Well, specifically, national guard will be quickest.
The towers we second quickest
and the wall is going to take forever.
But how do you process the asylum claim?
Because isn't the whole point of asylum like you can't send them back to this country
in which they're going to be killed in.
And so it's an imperfect process, Tremac obviously.
So Saxony and a few other folks, we held a fundraiser for Vivek Ramaswamy last week.
And we talked about this a lot.
And one of the things that we learned is that
All the people that come to the Southern border are trained in YouTube and TikTok and Instagram
Exactly what to say so that you have to accept the asylum claim and so far there should be a limited number of them
That's it just you have this many per year that we do I understand but but you don't know whether that person who was helping us in Afghanistan
ends up coming in October and not in March, and that's the reason why they can't get in.
The thing that I learned is that it's a specific script, it's available in multiple languages,
right? So anybody who gets to the southern border knows exactly what to say so that America is
forced to accept you. That's not how asylum should work. The bad news is not everybody's going to get in.
Not everybody will get in.
That's it.
Jake, there's two things we need to do.
In addition to your point about sending troops to the border, because we do need the manpower.
Yeah, it's obvious.
Number one, to Chimas Point, you can't just say the word asylum and get in.
That doesn't make sense.
You should have to produce evidence of actually meeting the case for a silent, which is not being economically
disadvantaged, is being politically prosecuted, where if you're sent back to your home country,
they're going to put you in jail or kill you.
There aren't many countries in the world, quite frankly, where that is going to be a valid
claim, just to be honest about it.
I mean, if you have a freedom fighter from Iran coming over, who's going to be put in
jail or killed, let him in.
But that's not most of the people lining up at our border.
If you're coming from Mexico, there's a very small chance that you are being bullied.
The other thing we've got to do is you got to reinstitute remain in Mexico.
That was the policy.
Yeah.
You can't agree 100% just waiting on this side of the border because they're never going
to show up in court.
Yeah.
I mean, listen, we want immigration to this country.
It has to be logical.
And the fact is everybody wants to come here.
That's a great thing.
We should be taking advantage of that, but it can't be chaos.
It's got to be orderly.
That's what everybody wants.
I don't know why, how this became a political issue.
Everybody wants orderly.
Everybody wants recruitment.
Nobody wants an open board.
Well, but the Jekyll, in order for it not to be a political issue,
you need both parties to agree and they currently don't. I mean, think about it. What's in Biden's interest right now is to do a No one wants an has changed. Therefore,
we're going to change. And we're going to do all these things. And if one of them is building
a wall and you want to say, gotcha, you can say gotcha, but it's the right thing to do because
data has changed my opinion. Where do we get to the point where data can't change your opinion?
Data should change your opinion. The data is clear that more people are coming through. That's
why I made such a point at the top of this is like, we don't even have good data.
What these sensor towers would do would at least give us data and would give us clarity.
And then you only need a unit every half mile.
So you need 4,000 units patrolling the border and they would catch everybody.
It isn't as expensive as people think it is.
This could be, I mean, the last amount of money we gave, what was
the last appropriation for Ukraine, Saxons, I'll give you a red meme. Well, we've already
appropriated or authorized over 100 billion. And there are 4% of that cost. Okay. So for
three or 4% of that cost, we could have these censor towers. It's crazy. We're defending
Ukraine's border, but not our own. It's a very valid point. Independent. The publicist Republicans up in arms. It's this combined with the lack of fiscal discipline.
Now, the craziness about this is if we were sitting here 20 years ago,
the Republicans were trying to open the border to have more low skilled workers to work in restaurants,
to work in businesses. That's not the place we are today. We have too many people coming in.
These are not just low skilled workers to pick vegetables. It's a different group.
There was a point in time, Jason, where the Wall Street Journal editorial page, which is really
the voice of the GOP establishment supported a constitutional amendment in favor of an open border.
This was very much the point of view of the old Republican
party, which was this libertarian open borders, open trade, free markets position. And the
results of those policies have been partially disastrous. I mean, I understand the value
of free trade and so forth, but, and obviously, when I have high school immigration, we've
talked about that. But it was too much of a good thing. I mean, they didn't draw intelligent distinctions, but we still have, I think, this to your point about
the battle inside the Republican Party, we still have that old GOP establishment, and now there's
this new populist wing that wants to make, I think, sensible changes. Here's the Wall Street
Journal story from 2001. Open after worse. Why not? There it is.
That was Bob Bartley, who was the long time
editorial page editor.
He was kind of like a hero in the conservative movement.
When I was in college, I read a great book
by him called The Seven Fat Years
about supply-side economics.
And I think he was right about a lot of that stuff.
But along with that economic policy came,
I think this open borders completely open trade view
that I think produced a lot of negative results
and has to be revisited.
And by the way, there's a third leg of that stool,
which is forever worse.
The Wall Street Journal is one of the most
pro-Ukrain publications there is,
both in the news pages and in the editorial page.
And they have never revisited the results of our disastrous forum policy where we keep
intervening all over the world.
This is the old Republican party.
There's a new Republican party that is emerging.
And unfortunately, Kevin McCarthy found himself on the wrong side of that divide.
All right, so moving on to our next topic, there was a notable accident with a cruise robot
taxi in San Francisco this week or not.
This is being framed by some as the first automated
cruise vehicle to get in an accident,
but what actually happened is not accurate.
So there was a hit and run incident in San Francisco
when a woman was struck by a human driver.
That human driver fled the scene.
The hit and run launched tragically the woman underneath a human driver. That human driver fled the scene. They hit and run, launched tragically
the woman underneath a cruise vehicle.
The cruise vehicle break aggressively
according to cruise, but stopped with its rear tire
on top of the woman's leg.
Police asked cruise to keep the vehicle in place
and lock it, which they did.
Emergency respondents arrived and used the jaws of life
to get the car off the woman's leg.
Local media picked the story up. The way police asked crews to leave the car, leave the car on the woman's leg. Yes. Why would they do that? Well, I think actually, um, sometimes moving. No,
no, I do think, um, for my time as EMT, sometimes moving the person can cause more damage than
leaving it until you have the emergency services on the scene.
So I like to wait for emergency services because moving it, you could have a broken bone
hit your femoral artery and then you could bleed out.
So they just say, stay where you are.
Don't make any more movements until EMT's car on top of them.
That's ridiculous.
It's on the person's leg.
So that would mean that they're not in any danger.
It might be painful.
But if you were to move them, I was taught this
when I was in EMT.
If you move people, you have to be very careful
because you could cause a spine injury.
They can become paralyzed or you could cut a major artery.
You got to be very...
How long were you in EMT?
I was the first class in what was called EMT FRs,
first responders, and I worked at Bravo Ambulance
in Brooklyn as on a volunteer one for about three or four years.
Did you have like a tight outfit, like a tight polo?
What are you wear?
A skinny jeans.
Did you have skinny jeans?
You wore green pants and a white collar shirt, and yeah, I never told you I was the first
call I ever got.
I never told you that story.
Were you like a sexy paramedic or were you just like a paramedic?
I can be whatever you want me to be sure about. Whatever works for your fantasies. Oh, he's blushing. I never told you that story. Were you like a sexy paramedic or were you just like a paramedic?
I can be whatever you want me to be sure.
Whatever works for your fantasies.
He's blushing.
He's blushing.
But I'll tell you my first call.
You are a sexy paramedic.
I was a little sexy as a paramedic.
So I've got him blushing.
Here's my first call.
I swear to God, it's a night before Thanksgiving.
Wednesday night, it's a big night in Brooklyn.
I don't know if another place is, but the night before Thanksgiving
everybody goes out and parties.
So big Wednesday happens.
First call comes in.
I was originally the person who picked up the Aussie operator at the 911, but then my second
job I was on the bus.
And so first call, first shift is big Wednesday.
Guy gets, we get a call, that guy got stabbed.
We go, the guy is outside TJ Boutnese, and I kid you not, the guy was in charge of the
ambulance says, cut the jacket off.
I take my shears, we have these really sharp scissors, and and boom we go right up to sleep. We cut his jacket he goes oh my
members only jacket
We cut him open and his giant hairy chest
Blood is pumping out like it's like a little
Water fountain and the the guy who was running the bus, I remember, I just, he puts his hand up, I show this guy, you got bigger problems in this member only jacket.
He says, get the mass pants. The mass pants, just so you know, are used in war.
We get trained in them, you never use them. Mass pants are a blood pressure cuff.
You put over people's pants to take the blood from their legs,
put it into their chest so that they at least survive.
The guy says, get the mass pants. I said, get the mass pants. The mass pants are packed away. You never use them. I'm getting the mass pants
out. We're whaling down fourth avenue to get this guy and his blood pressure is dropping,
his part reached dropping blood all over the bus. We're trying to control the bleeding.
He survived. He saved him. We saved him. But that was my first call. First call. Nuts.
This was a volunteer gig.
Volunteer paid for?
Nope.
Not everything's about money, free bird.
Not everything's about money, free bird.
Well, I'm not saying it is.
I'm just asking.
I'm joking with you.
Yeah, I guess all of it is meant to be a superhero.
Yeah.
Guys, I texted Jamie, Jason's brother,
and I asked him if this was true,
and I asked for a photo.
Hey Nick, you want to you want to put up the photo?
Oh no, please.
Oh, there I am.
There I am.
If you're a hard stop, this is the guy you want to come research.
Yeah, I'll be Wednesday.
Oh, there we go.
Dave, did your hard stop?
Did your hard stop.
Dave, because I'm going to resuscitate it.
Nick showed the other one.
This is the original outfit that when he became a paramount.
Oh no, this better not be x-rated.
Oh God.
Oh there, I like the second one better.
Yeah, we know which one you like better days.
Oh, is that a nurse?
Is that a thermometer he's got?
What is he having to say?
That's a needle.
That's a needle or thermometer.
I think that's like a coat bottle.
I think that could be at the thermometer.
We might need to check your temperature, David.
It's like a Pepsi bottle. What the hell? We're gonna take your temperature, David. I don't know if you're gonna like it. This would be at the moment. We might need to check your temperature, David. It's like a Pepsi bottle.
What the hell?
We're going to take your temperature, Dave.
I don't know if you were the Lincoln.
This would be a good opportunity.
What kind of temperature does that take?
For you, or like a more like jaco.
Well, I know it's going to be really hot.
Jason, you did a great job.
It was a good time.
I'm happy to be really.
We really appreciate your contributions.
Wow, great job.
All right, back to the story about cruise.
Now, this terrible accident. Wow, we got you, Ralph.
Yeah.
Well, thanks for the work you did, J.Kell.
Thanks for your service.
Okay, so.
Okay.
Yeah.
Oh, it's good to take your vitals.
Okay, local media picked up a...
Do you have that illegal tattoo on your arm too?
That was, that was removable.
Local media picked up on this reporting
that Cruz was responsible for the incident. Director of News for the San Francisco
Chronicle, which is a lunatic publication. Woman run over by cruise self-driving
car on Market Street in downtown San Francisco pulled from under rear axle
circumstances under investigation. The San Francisco standard posted on X,
a woman suffered traumatic injuries
after being trapped under a cruise robot taxi
in downtown San Francisco,
and Monday night,
fire department spokesperson said.
A few weeks ago, as you know,
a video circulated on X, formerly known as Twitter,
of 20 or so cruise vehicles,
causing a massive traffic jam,
and an intersection in Austin.
The Robotaxi provider issue has become very divisive here in San Francisco.
There are now multiple companies working on a mutual in San Francisco.
We'll put pilots in.
They come in to break the car.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Why would they do that?
Because they're lunatics and it represents
technology. That's the real story here. The real story is the very deep disdain for technological
progress. And the second story I think but so important is the total lack of assumption of risk
generally in the US, which limits progress in meaningful ways. Let me just pull up some data
that I shared here. So Nick, if you pull up this first chart,
I'll give you guys some numbers.
For every 100 million miles driven in the US,
there's about one and a half deaths, car accident deaths.
There's about 3.2 trillion miles driven per year
in the US.
So about 45,000 people die from auto accident each year.
This is a crazy number.
2.3 million people have auto accident teacher. This is a crazy number. 2.3 million people have auto accident-related
injuries in the US each year. And there's 6 million car crashes each year in the US. That's
one crash for every half million miles driven. Pretty, you know, incredible statistics.
So if you look at this chart, it kind of shows the car fatalities over time. Now, what's
the leading cause of car fatalities?
We'll go to the next chart.
Distracted driving.
Number one, I should have done this as a quiz.
Number one, DUI.
Jesus, that is unbelievable that even today.
To this day?
Yeah, number two, speeding.
Yeah, number three.
That's not using your seat belt.
So, by the way, all three of those are the same? Yeah, so 80% of those, 80% of deaths
are DUI speeding and seatbelt non-use. Now go to an autonomous driving world. And I think
words, those are all opt-in. So now go to an autonomous driving world. You won't see DUIs.
Those things are programmed to not speed. Obviously, they're not going to run if you don't put your seatbelt
on. And then the fourth one is distracted driving. The real question is what incremental accidents or what incremental errors do autonomous cars make
that might kind of cause new deaths or new accidents.
But the net is that we have an incredible number of car accidents, 6 million accidents a year,
2.5 million injuries a year, 45,000 deaths a year, most of which can be prevented by things
that are just basic human stupidity.
The first three are all opt-in.
So what you're saying is Warren Buffett and Geico
are probably responsible for lobbying
and creating this mess in San Francisco.
Do the insurance companies even need to
do this?
To ex-state Chema.
Conspiracy corner.
Well, I actually think there's a very different driver
for why these things.
So I just wanna make the case, first off,
that if you zoom out and you don't take the anecdotal story
of the woman trapped under the cruise car,
it's an awful story.
But that anecdote allows people to heighten their fear
and heighten their emotion and create a response
to autonomous driving as if that is a cause of a problem.
If you zoom out and you ask the question,
dude, 50,000 people a year are dying
because of human stupidity that we can just completely
take off the streets, it's such a no-brainer
that this technology should progress.
And I'll give you guys another story.
In 1999, the clinical trials for gene therapy had begun.
And there was a guy named Gelsinger.
He was a young kid. I think he was 18 or 19 years
old and he passed away from the gene therapy.
And it turns out that there was actually doctor malpractice that was primarily responsible
for his death.
After that happened, the FDA and the regulators stepped in and they basically put a halt
to all gene therapy clinical trials for about seven years.
The number of lives that were lost during that seven years that went on that we did not
make progress on getting gene therapy programs to market is significantly higher than the
number of people that would have lost lives, which by the way, it turns out when you go
back to this particular death was driven by doctor malpractice, not by the gene therapy
technology necessarily itself, and a lot of the stuff was understood. And I think we've heard
Peter Tiel and others speak a lot about how the US has lost our appetite for
risk. We say that if anyone dies or if any bad thing happens, a new
technology should not progress. But when we look at the benefit of new
technology relative to the cost of it, many of these technologies should
progress at an accelerated pace, not at a decelerated pace, and the stepping benefit of new technology relative to the cost of it, many of these technology should progress
at an accelerated pace, not at a decelerated pace.
And the stepping in to stop these things
from moving forward because number one,
we're really afraid of new technology.
Number two, we kind of want to,
there's a lot of regulatory capture and competency
that wants to see these things not succeed.
I think we're really denying ourselves,
in many cases, the opportunity to realize progress
because we're so concerned about any loss.
Nuclear fission is a really great example of this.
Three-mile island accident and Fukushima, you know, if you look at the total number of
lives off and there's incredible statistics which I should probably not pull off the top
of my head, I should probably make sure I get the right numbers.
But Chernobyl is another good example.
If you look at the total number of incremental cancers and the total number of lives that
were lost from Chernobyl, you look at three-mile island, you look at Fukushima.
You can make a statistical argument that even with those extraordinary cataclysmic disasters,
the number of lives that could have been improved, the number of lives that could have been saved,
the progress that people could have been made, the number of people that could have been improved, the number of lives that could have been saved, the progress that people could have been, could have made,
the number of people that could have been pulled out
of poverty if we made cheap abundant energy available
at an accelerated pace rather than a decelerated pace,
it could have had a much more significant effect.
So I view this in the lens, this autonomous driving
backlash in the lens of what we see with a lot of new
technologies, which is we lose our appetite for risk,
we lose our tolerance for any sort of incremental loss.
And we lose perspective on the fact that that loss is far, far, far, far outweighed relative
to the gains that you gain if you can get that technology into market faster, not slower.
And I think that's just such a real kind of storyline that's not told very often about
how technology and progress is limited,
particularly in the modern age, because once you have enough stuff, you're not willing to take
as much risk. Meanwhile, you see China building 450 nuclear fission stations and the U.S. building
done. And I think that that's part of the story of where the U.S. is today. I mean, I know that was
a big rant, but for me, I'm just like so to this stuff. Like all of this anti-tech stuff and anti-progress stuff,
because you then pick an anecdote
and you focus on the anecdote
and you miss the bigger fucking picture.
Well, what's so funny about San Francisco is
it's the city that both is the first to approve
the testing of it and then where there's a small fraction
of citizens who try to go and sabotage it.
I guess the next issue is how close are we to having these at scale cruises currently
in San Francisco, Austin and Phoenix, Waymo, very expensive cars, by the way.
They are currently in San Francisco and Phoenix, 24-7, they're going to launch an LA soon.
And Tesla has been working on this.
You know what's another example of this?
Space X, some strarapnel got blown into the uninhabited desert lands around Bocachika, Texas.
You're talking about starship?
Yeah, starship.
The big one, yeah.
And they come in and they're like, shut the whole thing down.
You can't have shrapnel flying around.
Think about the risk tolerance equation here.
So if you delay SpaceX by six months to make sure that
Straffinol doesn't fly through the desert, that's six months longer till humans can perhaps
inhabit the moon, go to Mars, do all these extraordinary things. This is what I mean about the lack
of tolerance for risk. We have to assume that there is a cost in moving things forward. There
has to be a cost in progress. You don't go fight a war and try and move the front lines of a battlefield
further into the enemy territory, and assume you're going to have no loss.
And all of human progress needs to be thought about in a similar way. We have to have some
degree of loss and some tolerance for risk as we try and make progress with our species.
And technology always is going to have setbacks.
It's always going to have mistakes.
But if the net benefit far outweighs those mistakes, we have to be willing to accept it
and gets everyone to kind of take a broader perspective on what we're doing.
That this isn't just about maintaining status quo and not getting hurt.
This is about the great benefits we get from moving things forward.
And we've lost that in such a profound way over the last 50 years in Western culture. Another great example of this to
add to your tie rate is challenge trials. And these have been banned for a long time. And if you
don't know what a challenge trial is, is you introduce something like, let's say COVID into a
person who has had a COVID vaccine. And yet, they're assuming some risk in doing this,
but if it was a young person, as we saw,
probably wouldn't be that much risk
and there are people who would do it.
And there are this whole concept of challenge trials
could reduce in the long term a massive amount of deaths,
but it's not allowed because of ethics issues.
What are your thoughts on that free bird, challenge trials?
I mean, it's, look, there's so many examples.
We could just keep going through this.
And from energy markets and nuclear technology to biotechnology,
to space technology, to I've lived it.
I mean, like GMO technology and bioengineering and food systems,
there's a fear and a concern.
And like Rob Henderson said at our summit, I've always viewed those to be luxury beliefs
that this idea that I don't want to have my
precious things changed when the benefit really accrues mostly to the poorest people in the world.
The people that can't afford it.
The people that can't afford it. The people that can't afford it.
The people that can't afford it.
The people that can't afford it.
The people that can't afford it.
That's an important point that people don't realize.
When you make things more productive, whether it's an acre of land to make more food or a
unit of energy and the cost comes down per unit of energy.
Those of us who already have a lot of stuff and have all of our basic needs met, we have
housing, we have shelter, we have food, we have energy, we can afford it, we live in a
great environment, we live in a place that we can do whatever the heck we want anytime
we want.
We don't care if the price goes up by 30%.
I'm happy to go down to Whole Foods and feel good to plop down an extra 50% to buy an
organic banana.
Someone who only makes $8,000 a year cares very deeply about that cost delta.
They need to see the cost of food go down, the cost of energy go down, the cost of medicine
go down, the improvement that's driven by technology and has been for 10,000 years,
mostly accrues to the poorest people in society first.
Well, that's the problem.
And so we all who are in charge, those of us who are rich, who are elite, who have power,
who have control, who have influence, who run the fucking government, we all get to raise
our hand and say, I don't want to take any more risk because one person died.
Meanwhile, a million people are starving to death over the next three months.
And you can make that same story, and you can connect those dots in every area of technology
that humans have lost their risk tolerance for
in the wealthy industrialized West.
And we are largely, I think, not just in hurting ourselves
because of the economic costs and all the other stuff
that's going on that we're now seeing as very apparent,
but we're also limiting the intelligence and the energy to
make technology and progress it that could benefit the whole world.
We're limiting its ability to diffuse.
And I think it's really profoundly sad.
And I hope that we one day look back at this era as almost like a pseudo-dark ages and
we wake the f*** up someday and recognize that we need to take some degree of
reason, have some products for making progress.
All right, listen to me, I'm like, whatever.
It's a family problem.
I'm a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of
a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little I wanted to see that progress. People took risk. That's it. No risk, no reward. To that point, I think it took two years
to create the Bay Bridge and 17 years to do
the repair to it.
I mean, that's how crazy things have gotten.
$2 billion to $2 billion to build those suicide nets
on the side of the Golden Gate Bridge
and some fraction of that to build the whole frigging bridge.
And even on a dollar adjusted basis, it's ridiculous.
It's interesting.
It's interesting.
You said, $550 million to build the bridge in US dollars.
And yeah, it was the same amount to build the nuts.
So they have-
You can ask a question about the cruise thing.
So do you believe that cruise will have a good solution to self-driving?
I'm just like a little bit skeptical.
Are they owned by GM now?
Yeah.
But didn't they raise money from soft bank?
Isn't there some like independent funding as well that happened?
I thought it was sold to GM. I'm just like, what?
Part of it was sold to GM and then they set it up as a sub and they like like Alphabet did with Waymo Alphabet
raised 5 billion and outside money in the Waymo and I think that crews or GM tried to do the same thing where they've got soft bank and a
bunch of institutional investors in crews
It's matured
Yeah, right. It was spun out because GM didn't have the ability to bankroll it. It's obvious that these are getting there.
The question is, is I think it's more like 10 years before this is fully deployed.
I'll see you have to build all the cars. If Elon does get out this robot taxi vehicle for
25k, which he seems like is well on the way with the model 3 to getting to, this was an
early mockup from Walter Isaacson's book,
which looks pretty sharp and it doesn't have,
it's like a two-seat car.
So these things zipping around San Francisco, et cetera,
at a reasonable speed 25, 35 miles an hour,
I think is pretty close to having this.
I use the self-driving beta, full self-driving FSD.
I use it all the time. I used to only use it on FSD. I use it all the time.
I used to only use it on highways.
Now I use it on side roads.
I disengage it when it's on roads
that are not clearly marked.
Have you guys taken a cruise or a Weimo road?
I haven't taken either.
I got invited to the beta though for cruise.
You guys want to take a look?
Personally, I would not trust the cruise ride. I don't believe they're responsible for
this accident as it turns out, but I'm just skeptical that some of these initiatives
are going to pan out. I think Tesla is getting it. Why are you skeptical? Yeah. I think
it's a hard problem to solve. And I'm just dubious about GM's ability to develop tech at this level of sophistication.
You and Tesla will get there.
I think Tesla is already there.
Well, if an autonomous Tesla drove up and picked you up, would you do that when you take
a ride to that?
I mean, not today, but I mean, when they get there, which I don't think will be 10 years,
I mean, it seems like Tesla is this way out of everybody else.
Timoth, what do you think?
Where do you think the tech is?
I think this is an inference problem for Tesla, and it's a learning out of everybody else. Tim off, what do you think? Where do you think the tech is? I think this is an inference problem for Tesla, and it's a learning problem for everybody
else.
So, I think in order to build level 5 autonomy, you have to have good reasoning, and I think
in order to have good reasoning, you just need to have enough training data where you literally
see every potential branch and node in a decision tree.
And so, it's one thing to be able to scan a light,
know that it's green and then go forward.
But when you multiply that by every intersection,
every light in every city, it's a massive,
massive learning problem.
So the thing that GM and crews don't have, in my opinion,
is a path to acquire enough data to be credible.
Could they solve a limited set of streets in San Francisco?
Yeah.
Yes.
And so if you have the city sort of block off
certain parts of the neighborhoods
and say no more human driven vehicles in these sections,
only these three or four licensed providers
can be inside of it.
I think that cruise and Waymo could work.
But if you're going to live in a world where there's autonomy,
meaning like humans can drive wherever they want,
I think Tesla's the only one because I think they've acquired
and they are acquiring so much training data
that for them, they're fine-tuning reasoning.
And it's exactly what Jason just described.
Jason is a perfect example of a consumer now
who has adopted it, call it 70% of his use cases,
and is incrementally kind of like getting towards 90% or 95%. And I think that that's
impressive. I would agree with Jason. I use FSD 100% on the highways, and depending on where I'm
going, so like this weekend when I came to David your house, Saksis house, full FSD the whole way.
Yeah, two way 101, it's bullet proof.
Bullet proof and then in the city.
Yeah.
And navigating to get into David's house, I thought it was it was pitch perfect.
And there was one or twice where actually the person that's panicking and disengaging
FSD's like intersections, right?
Left turns.
And also just on the highway,
like I get a little skittish at times
if it goes, if it speeds up or whatever.
My point is Tesla is so close to it.
So I do trust that they'll have a credible solution
in the next four or five years.
And these other companies, I think that they need
to have a solution for training and I don't see it.
Yeah, the point is there's over a million cars recording,
because when you buy a Tesla, you turn on self-driving.
It's in every car, and so every car is recording data
all the time, as opposed to GM.
GM doesn't take the time to put the $10,000, $20,000 package.
Half a million new sensors, collecting millions
of miles of quarter, being added to the network.
Exactly. What Tesla did years and years ago is even before self-driving was a thing,
they put all the cameras in the cars to collect the data. And you're right, GM doesn't do that.
If GM did that to their legacy gas cars and then funneled that into cruise, I think they would
have a decent shot, but they are not doing that. Here's a map of Waymo.
And I brought this up because I think there's two different strategies going on here.
Tess was going for the whole Mugula.
They want to be able to do dirt roads you've never been on.
Waymo and crews are working from constrained areas that they can perfect.
And Phoenix is the perfect area because that's a grid-based system, very wide highways, and
it was planned.
And so if you have a planned community, you know, it's not like a city in Italy or France
where it's like the roads have been there for 800 years, when you have some modern city
where it's a grid-based system, Austin falls into this as well for a large portion of Austin,
it's going to be fairly easy to do those.
And so that's what we'll see.
My prediction is we'll see this.
Also, it's very flat and obviously no hills
and also weather.
So, the northeast will be the last place.
When you go to Boston or you're in other places
that don't have a grid-based system
and you have ice and snow, this stuff is 10 plus years out.
But in a dry place with consistent weather,
like California Phoenix,
etc. It's now, right? It's now, I think. Okay, in Bill Gurley's regulatory capture corner,
we have an interesting story about JSX. If you don't know Jetsuite X, that's what the JSX stands for. This is an airline that offers hop-on public charter flights out of FBOs,
tiny airports usually reserved for private jets, and they give passengers the private jet
experience for the cost of roughly a first-class ticket at major airlines, maybe double the
cost of a coach ticket, 700 bucks one way, from Westchester to Miami, 1400 miles around Trip, not a bad deal.
By comparison, United on the same day
are between 5800 for first class from Newark to Miami.
Jet Sweet X has 47 airplanes with 1200 crew members.
Let me cut in and give you my anecdote.
On Saturday, I took a JSX flight from Vegas to Oakland.
What were you doing in Vegas?
I went to the opening night of the YouTube concert
at the sphere.
Opening night at the sphere?
At the sphere?
Yeah, the sphere.
I looked at the photos in the video
as I wasn't super impressed.
Is it impressive in person?
Because it didn't come across in the videos.
Yeah, it's incredible.
You got to go see it.
I think it's the first.
Incredible how?
So it's the first live experience that I think you have kind of live analog elements like
a band and this incredibly immersive digital experience because it's a 360 foot tall dome
and the entirety of the interior of the dome is a digital screen.
So there were these scene shapes that they created that were like dynamic video on these walls
that it's hard.
I don't think the videos do it justice.
Like when you're actually,
when you're in this room during this shot right here
and I was kind of sitting center,
I was also, I went down on the floor.
Looks like you're in the dasager or something.
It's like you're there.
Dude, I mean, it's inexplicable.
It's more real than VR.
It's like you're in this world.
And they even did these amazing integrated scenes
where they had like helicopters flying overhead.
And then they had spotlights coming out of the ceiling while the helicopters were flying in the
video above you. They did like a hot air balloon flying above you and they dropped like a rope
down. So it was this total integration of like physical and virtual content. And I think like you
too, to be honest, as great as the the concert was is almost like the most boring thing
You could probably do with that setup over time you could probably integrate a lot more thing
You could have giant
Sets and giant scenes and people you know doing stuff physically a scar worse movie
Star Wars movie in real life you could have like the the siege of Carthage and you could have ships on the ground
And then you could see the battle scene behind you and you'd be like in the middle of it. The whole thing was really incredible. I heard about the sound.
I heard about the sound. Hundreds of speakers. So when I was down on the floor, I went right by the
stage on the floor. The some of the sound is actually distorted down there and it's not that good.
When you're in the seats that set back where the sound is really designed, hundreds of speakers
like built into the wall. I heard each seat. That's a bit submitted. There's seat speakers, but really it comes from the dome.
And the dome sound when you're sitting in the seats
is really like immersive and incredible.
Okay, so you took Jetsu X back.
And then I took Jetsu X.
By the way, my prediction on this fear,
I think there'll be like dozens of these things soon enough
because this can become like a new form
of live entertainer.
It's not just a stage where someone stands on it. And you stand someone stands on it. It's a new model and more than musical artists. I think you'll see like new kinds of art and you kinds of things happening on these things.
Anyway, it's also video on the outside so you can do advertisements or make it look like a pumpkin or make it look like a basketball. I saw that.
And then we'll get cheaper and cheaper over time. The first one was what two two two and a half billion dollars. They'll make smaller versions of it. It'll be a couple hundred million. It's almost like I'm
X-feiter. It's a roll amount all over.
Okay. So back to JetsuiteX.
240 bucks. You drive up just like an FBO, like a private terminal. Drive up. Walk in.
No security. No lines. No check-in. Get on. Get off. It's like flying on a...
Wait, that hasn't been some check-in, so they know your name and stuff.
Yeah, they walk up and they give them the ticket. And then they do a to be some check-in so they know your name and stuff on the right-hand. Yeah, they walk up and they, you give them the ticket,
and then they do a gate-side check-in,
they take your bag and they put it all,
they take it under the plane.
See, save an hour on either half hour
on the,
oh my God, it's so bad.
It's so free, it's ridiculous.
And like when my mom comes to visit,
she takes it, she loves it.
But obviously, it's gotta be some catch.
I don't really know these regs,
but there's some catch-up.
I'll explain that now.
So, they have 47 airplanes, 1200 crew members, American and Southwest, and several major aviation
unions are choosing JSX of exploiting a regulatory loophole that they can hire pilots who are too
old to fly for commercial airlines and who don't have the requisite 15 hour, 1500 hours of flying experience because
they are a smaller airline.
JetSuitex says it's captain's average over 8,000 flying hours and first of all, average
over 3,000 flying hours.
So they're blowing past the regulation.
So that's obviously a red herring.
According to JetSuitex, two huge US airlines and their labor unions want companies like
JetSuitex, small air carriers airlines and their labor unions want companies like Jetsuitex, small
air carriers that actually care about providing you with much needed choice and high quality
service to be legislated out of existence. And by the way, Jetsuitex has a couple of the other
airlines, I think, united as an investor. So the other airlines actually want this. They're
obviously is a difference in security. But one difference is not how many hours the pilots have, obviously.
It's going through TSA.
So, the ability to not go through TSA is such a key part of this experience and to not
go through a big terminal.
JetBlue and United support JSX and I think they're exploring doing this themselves.
So, regulatory capture had its best, I guess. I'll take the unpopular side of this. I think it's easy to blame this regulatory capture
bogeyman here. Okay. I think JetSuiteX seems like an amazing service. It has starlink,
a bunch of my friends have taken it. They seem to enjoy it a lot.
But here is the the the clever arbitrage that Jet Suite X is taking, which is that they
fly under what's called part 135 of the FAA. And that is when you take a private plane
and you charter it. The airlines fly under what's called part 121. And the rules are very
different if you're 121 versus part 135. And the biggest rule is the training of the pilots,
which is that there are minimum
hour requirements to be a commercial airline pilot, which is about 1500 hours versus 250
hours for a part 135 charter pilot. So I think the question is, is that it's one thing where
you charter a plane with two or three of your friends. That's a part 135 license in a small plane.
But when you take a large plane with nobody else,
you don't know, I think there's a pretty credible argument
that that's a commercial airline.
And I do think that it's reasonable
that if you're running a commercial airline
through a loophole, at some point, if you get big enough
that loophole is going to be obvious enough
that people will ask it to be closed,
I think what you want to have is this loophole closed,
or you decide that part 135 where there are so many people, the pilots should be at a certain flight train on standard.
And to Jets Redaxe's defense, they reported their captain's average over 8,000 flying hours. So that is a magnitude
more 5X, more than five times the rules and first office average over 3,000. So why not just
up that number of hours to 500 or 1,000? Or just make everybody 15,000.
Or just to your point, just like say, go to the FAA and say, look, we're going to continue
to fly part 135. But here are the except we promised to never hire a pilot that is not under
this 1500 hour threshold, et cetera, et cetera.
There's all kinds of ways to go around it, but I do think it's important to acknowledge
that they're basically running a united, but they're pretending that it's a private plane.
And I think that there are some mini united.
Yeah, it's a mini united.
Somewhere between the two.
No, because united runs those regional legs as well. Because in equivalent sized planes.
So I do think it should exist.
I just think that it should exist on a relatively level playing field.
I don't want somebody else to use a loophole,
so I would not want them to use a loophole either.
Part 135 exists.
I'm actually in agreement to take a private plane in charter.
Not to run an airline.
All right, everybody.
This has been another amazing episode of the All in Podcast.
Thank you to from his fear of influence, David Freiberg, the Sultan of science, and the
Rain Man himself, Hot Water Burn Baby, David Sacks, and the dictator himself, Moth Polly
Humpet.
Love you boys.
I am, the world's greatest moderator, and you'll see you next time.
Bye bye. Bye bye!
Bye bye! I'm going all in! What? What? What?
What?
What?
Besties are gone!
Go thrifty!
That's my dog taking a wish to drive away.
Sit next!
Get it off!
Oh man!
My ham is a bit out of your room.
We should all just get a room and just have one big huger.
Because they're all just like this like sexual tension
but we just need to release that out then.
I'm doing all the good