All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E150: Israel/Gaza escalating or not? EU censorship regime, Penn donors revolt, GLP-1 hype cycle
Episode Date: October 20, 2023(0:00) Bestie intros (0:49) State of Israel/Gaza: Information wars, delayed ground war, domestic political pressures (23:20) Understanding Israel's political dynamics, feelings throughout the Middle E...ast, why a two-state solution has failed in the past (42:56) Harvard and Penn megadonors cut ties (50:43) The EU's DSA: consumer protection or censorship regime? (1:06:05) GLP-1: the second biggest hype cycle of 2023 Follow the besties:Â 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://twitter.com/robbystarbuck/status/1714629327134834975 https://twitter.com/EndWokeness/status/1714416589724864790 https://twitter.com/CollinRugg/status/1714432578852438392 https://www.axios.com/2023/10/14/iran-warning-israel-hezbollah-hamas-war-gaza https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/11/1/far-right-ben-gvir-emerge-as-key-player-in-israel-election https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/7/27/israels-far-right-minister-leads-incursion-of-al-aqsa-compound https://thehill.com/policy/defense/4252590-americans-israel-palestinians-hamas-survey https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/05/what-obama-meant-1967-lines-why-irked-netanyahu/350925 https://www.timesofisrael.com/netanyahu-gaza-conflict-proves-israel-cant-relinquish-control-of-west-bank https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2014/07/21/the-two-state-solution-r-i-p https://www.timesofisrael.com/judicial-reform-boosting-jewish-identity-the-new-coalitions-policy-guidelines https://www.cnn.com/2023/10/19/business/harvard-upenn-donors-israel/index.html https://www.cnn.com/2023/10/13/business/harvard-idan-ofer-board/index.html https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/15/business/harvard-upenn-hamas-israel-students-donors.html https://nelc.sas.upenn.edu/events/2023/09/22/palestine-writes-literature-festival https://www.phillyvoice.com/opinion-upenns-moral-compass-navigating-controversy-surrounding-palestine-writes-festival https://rankings.thefire.org/rank https://twitter.com/samaberman/status/1713687680280641596 https://twitter.com/ThierryBreton/status/1714637297939788107 https://www.theverge.com/23845672/eu-digital-services-act-explained https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/speech_23_5126 https://www.reuters.com/technology/big-tech-braces-roll-out-eus-digital-services-act-202308-24 https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/QANDA_20_2348 https://www.google.com/finance/quote/NVO:NYSE https://twitter.com/calleymeans/status/1714863716968308931
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Well, you're talking about three very different actors there.
Wait, David, David, behind you is your security cameras, Ron.
Do you want to turn those off?
Yeah, I don't know how that went.
I don't know how that went.
You sit there and watch those all day.
Security apparatus.
It's just a security.
What is this guy, the Batman?
He fits them back down to all day and watches the security.
You're saying, hey, did you see that behind him?
It was so dystopian.
Oh my gosh.
You must have caught some crazy shit on those security cameras.
That's what you do with that footage.
It's so funny.
Oh, it's so funny.
You know what, your winner's ride.
Rainman David's hat.
I'm going home.
And it said we open source it to the fans
and they've just got crazy with it.
WS Ice Queen of the Kid.
I'm going back to the league.
Okay, everybody, welcome to episode 150 of the All-In Podcast.
Yes, we've made it to 150 episodes somehow, talking about technology, business, and of
course, politics.
And this week, we will continue our discussion
tragically about the situation in Israel and the war with Hamas and a lot of the down stream
effects of what's going on here and try to make sense of the world as we do. We gave a disclaimer
last week we're not experts and I suspect many of you are not experts on this, but we're going to try to talk about the
heart topic here and do it in good faith. And then we will move on to topics that don't have to do with the war in Gaza.
That could, by the time you read this again, another disclaimer, by the time you listen to this podcast, a ground invasion may or may not have started.
We taped these on Thursdays and you listen to them generally speaking on Saturdays and Sundays.
With me again this week, Tomoth, Paul, Hapatia, David Sacks, and of course David Friedberg.
And gentlemen, I'm just going around the horn here quick before I tee up the first topic.
going around the horn here quick before I tee up the first topic.
How's everybody feeling about the events in the 10 days since 10 7 in the terrorist attack that occurred in Israel?
I skipped last week.
I was too emotional to do the show, just so folks know it was difficult to see what I saw on the internet and the reporting. I think I was really moved because I thought a lot about the like how lucky we are and
I thought about my children and seeing what I saw and being a parent.
It's really different.
I remember 9-11.
It was really shocking.
I was really upset from 9-11 as well.
But when I saw the events last week, it immediately projected onto my kids and the care I try and take for my kids and thinking
about the experience of other people in this situation.
I was also, I'll be honest, really moved and saddened because of the bombing of children
in Gaza.
And I was really saddened that there were innocent children suffering there as well.
And the whole thing just felt so horrific to me.
I don't think about the justification or the morality of one side over another.
I was just more moved because I felt really sad about the experience of a lot of families
and a lot of children caught in the middle, a caught in this environment.
So I was pretty hurt last week.
I was in a really bad state and I couldn't do the show.
I think time has allowed me to kind of become
a bit rational about things and try and understand
where things are headed.
And it's a really complicated, confusing situation.
And it's really sad.
I worry a lot about where things are headed, not just in the Middle East, but also domestically
coming out of this conflict.
So that's where I'm at.
Yeah.
Thank you for sharing.
I wasn't sure if you would share your absence last week.
I think it's fair.
I too have been thinking about my own children and it's N911 and it's very dark.
And so it's hard to talk about, but we're making progress here, I think.
And today we'll talk about a lot of the issues, Chama or Saks, any opening thoughts before
we get started delving into what's actually happening.
And then more importantly, I think where
this is heading and what the possible outcome or resolution could be if there is a resolution
here.
I think things are getting better, actually. I think from where if you had to graph your expectations
of how bad things could get, I think what most people would probably
say is somewhere last week, there was a sector of some potential World War III like contagion.
And I think in general, it hasn't stopped some of the bloodshed, but the extent to which
we expected this thing to escalate, it actually
hasn't happened.
And so if you take a step back and you kind of calmly and coldly look at the facts, I
think that there are a lot of people on all sides trying to maintain their composure in
a moment where there's a lot of brush fires. So I actually think that this has been much, much better than it could have been.
And so I'm generally optimistic that we're going to find our way out of this. So, uh, sacks any thoughts? Well, to be honest, I can't be as optimistic as Jamath. It's true that World War
3 hasn't started yet, but I think the situation is incredibly volatile still.
Just the last couple of days, the headline story was an explosion or bombing of this hospital
in Gaza. Blame immediately fell on Israel. The claim in the New York Times was that they had dropped a bomb on it.
From a plane, social media was aflame with that.
I think in the last day or so, the perspective seems to be changing.
There's video now showing that it wasn't the hospital, but rather the parking lot next
to the hospital that took the
run to the damage. I think that it's far from clear that Israel did it. A lot of
people are blaming Islamic sheath. In any event, it's very unclear. So I'm going to
continue to do what I've done, which is to spend judgment until there can be some
sort of proper investigation of of what happened. And we find out exactly who's
really responsible.
But it does seem that over the last day or so there's been now a backing off of the idea
that Israel was definitely responsible for this.
Nonetheless, you saw immediately in the wake of that story coming out that there were There were protests and riots all over the Middle East. The Arab Street was absolutely ignited and
I think that
The Arab Street is not going to be convinced that Israel wasn't responsible for this
I just think that they're convinced and I think partisans on both sides are convinced
About who did it and they're going to be immune to whatever evidence comes out
So I think that's kind of the situation we're at right now. I would consider
The riots that we just saw in regards to the hospital and the eruption on social media to be a a prelude or
dress rehearsal of what we can expect to happen
Almost every day if Israel proceeds with the ground invasion of Gaza
Now they haven't done that yet yet and that's why the situation seems tenuous but stable but we're still waiting
to find out if Israel is going to go into Gaza and if they do I think all bets are off in
terms of where this is going. This was my biggest concern last week. I think the thing I was most anxious about was that the imagery
that would come out of Gaza with the action from Israel would be the fodder for escalation
worldwide, that there's this perception already with half a billion people, maybe two billion people,
maybe more, that there's an oppressor and there's an oppressed and the oppressed is suffering
under the oppressor and that there would be the creation of fodder to support that narrative.
And I think that the hospital bombing, the kind of point I made to someone who reached
out to me two days ago or yesterday about it, was I don't know if it matters that we I think that the hospital bombing, the kind of point I made to someone who reached out
to me two days ago or yesterday about it, was I don't know if it matters that we get
the corrections from all these people that may have said something that turns out to not
be true, because it was almost like that media became confirmation bias for people that
already felt that this is what was going on, and this is simply evidence of what is going on and it justifies
the next step. It justifies the beliefs, it justifies the morality. And I don't think that if it wasn't
this, it's going to be something else. There is a Tinder box ready to be lit. And that Tinder box
is just looking for a match. And whether it's this match or the next match, there's going to be lit. And that Tinder box is just looking for a match. And whether it's this match or the
next match, there's going to be a match. And the Tinder box will be lit. I think that a large
number of people feel like they're on the right side. Everyone thinks they're on the right side
of something. Everyone feels like they have the right moral stance that there is a regime on the
other side that has the wrong moral stance, I am good, you are evil.
And therefore anything I see is my confirmation bias for my belief, and it'll, it gives me
permission to take the next step.
And in that framework, it will only escalate.
And we are only going to a dark place.
And I think the real question for me to Chimau's optimism is, what are the muting factors? What are the factors
where one side feels like they're getting something that forces them to say,
I'm not going to take the next step. I'm not going to justify the next step.
And it's a really hard question to answer at this stage.
Let's take that other side and just explore it for a second. So the question that I've been asking myself is, because I agree with you, it doesn't matter
who was responsible for this bombing, because it's already been defined.
But in a moral sense, it does.
In a moral sense, it does.
But I'm saying practically, in the theater of war and the theaters near the war, it doesn't
matter because it's about
how is it framed.
And to your point, people have already made up their minds.
The pro is real side have made up their mind, and the pro Palestinian side has made up their
mind.
But the question that I ask myself is, okay, is that how much of an incremental escalation is it from what
their status quo is? You know, one of the interesting things I learned from the Jared Kushner
interview with Lex Reedman, it's like a lot of this tension, you can trace back to the
Alaxamost and all of the misinformation around that, right? He spends
a section of that podcast talking about how that's been framed and reframed the mis- and
disinformation to basically get people fervently up in arms. And it turns out that it isn't
under the supervision of the Israelis. And in fact, you know, you can go get a visa to
visit al-Axamas again. It's under the custodian ship of the King of Jordan as an example.
So that is the fact, but those facts aren't necessarily shared on the ground,
and that is where a lot of this original tension comes from. So then I ask myself, okay,
well, if that's been lingering for decades,
how much more incrementally bad does it get for this specific thing? And I think you see it in people's actions, which is they try to use it to escalate.
And my honest measurement of that escalation is that outside of the actual theater of war,
most of these escalations died down pretty quickly. Now, if all of these
embassies were overrun, and all of a sudden you saw a bay route like situation, right, the U.S.
Embassy in Bay route in the early 80s, I would agree with you that this is getting really bad,
really quickly, but that's not what we saw. And I think what that speaks to more is how much hatred is actually in the heart of people
versus not.
And so I think that this was a moment for people to channel their anxiety and some of their
aggression and some of their hatred towards America or Israel, but what it didn't was
escalate.
You didn't see these embassies get burnt to the ground.
You didn't see these embassies get burnt to the ground. You didn't
see people getting dragged out. And so I'm not trying to justify that behavior. I'm just
trying to look at it in an absolute sense and answer the question, is it escalating or
is it not escalating? And my assessment right now is that it is not escalating. I saw
on Sunday something that I thought I would never see, which is Iran put out a press
release through the United Nations to Israel.
You haven't seen that.
That's de-escalatory.
That's not an escalatory action from a country whose mission statement includes the destruction
and demise of a country.
So I think when push comes to shove, there are a lot of people in positions of power who
understand the stakes here and are trying their best on both sides.
And I hate this word, so I can't even believe somebody used it to find some proportionality
and try to de-escalate.
That's how I measure and judge what I see over the last week. A lot of people use labels to
characterize the actions, the tonality, the behavior of the other side because
everyone believes that they're on the right side. And the point of view that
there is hate and anger on the other side comes from a place not out of the blue.
Hate and anger doesn't just emerge from nothing. It typically comes from a place of deep hurt.
I think the biggest question for me is how do you resolve the deep hurt that is being felt and
has been felt by either side over a very long period of time. It's the hardest thing to answer
because what do you give millions of people
that have lived feeling hurt for so long,
feeling challenged for so long,
that makes them feel resolved in that sense?
And I get there to meet about the study of people.
I'm speaking about these really people too.
Okay.
And I'm speaking about the fact that like, these actions don't, they don't come out of
the blue.
They don't come out of a place of like greed.
Let's go to, let's go to, let's go to an example in our own lives.
Let's just say that we have a friend or, you know, we had a girlfriend at some point
where there is a deep betrayal.
Okay.
And then there's just an unrelenting anger.
To your point, before you can talk about the hurt, you have to de-escalate the anger.
So there has to be an active process of de-escalation before you can actually resolve this stuff.
I thought Israel was quite clear last week. We are going into Gaza on Sunday,
Israel was quite clear last week. We are going into Gaza on Sunday, but then they didn't. That seemed de-escalatory. Again, I'll just say it again. Iran puts out a
press release to Israel through the UN. That seemed de-escalatory. There was a
moment where Jordan, the Palestinian Authority and Biden were supposed to meet. They ended up not meeting in a man
But that seemed a deescalatory
Biden Tony Blinken Tony refused to leave the IDF until he got some assurances about
humanitarian aid into Gaza that seems deescalatory
Biden spending time and then reiterating those assurances from Netanyahu
again all of this stuff seems like both sides are in the middle of all of this chaos,
not trying to light the tinderbox.
And it doesn't mean that they're on a path to resolution, but I just think that they
understand the stakes.
Fact is, when we look at the hospital situation specifically and the fog of war, you had the New York Times getting
attacked for maybe taking Hamas's word for it, then flipping, and then now there is conspiracy
there.
The United States is, you know, carrying water for Israel, and then the fog of war, oh my
goodness, maybe the hospital wasn't even hit. It was in the
it was in the parking lot and so it didn't even get hit. So when we look at all of that and then
Shaman says, hey, wait, things haven't escalated. I actually, I happened to be here in Dubai right now
on a business trip and I'll explain some of the feedback I've gotten from people
some of the feedback I've gotten from people
who are Palestinian ethnically, or Jordanian and of Palestinian descent,
I should say, and we'll get into that in a second.
The ground war hasn't happened,
and this seems to be one of the,
as Jamal this pointing out,
it's fascinating that it hasn't
because it was supposed to have happened already.
Do you have any thoughts on why it hasn't happened? One of the conspiracy theories, and I hate to go down these roads because in the fog
of war, I think people try to fill a vacuum. And then, of course, as you were pointing out to
Maude and Freiburg, people then use it as evidence for their side. The people here in Dubai, a number of
people have pointed out this ground war is not going to happen. That it's saber rattling, but, uh, Israel is going to black back down and get the
hostages back.
And this has been told to me by many people.
I know I don't know if that's wishful thinking or some kind of conspiracy
theory, but, but what do you take from the ground war not happening?
And then if you want to go back and touch on the fog of war issue here with
things flipping back and forth and what
is actual reality. And just probably speaking escalating or de-escalating.
Look, I think that there's a few possible reasons why Israel hasn't gone in yet. Number
one is they may perceive it to be a very difficult military operation. They're almost certainly
walking into a trap. There's going to be ambushes everywhere, snipers, IEDs, Hamas as an elaborate
tunnel network, they can disappear down that tunnel network when the fighting gets too
hot, they can booby trap the access points, they've got anti-tank weapons, they can take
out armored vehicles, it's going to be a very difficult fight for the Israelis.
And so they may be taking a pause here just to assess that situation
and maybe get organized for it or maybe think better of it. So they may be either stopping
to organize or getting cold feet. I think second, they have to think through the consequences
of going in there. His Bala has basically threatened to open up a northern front and invade Israel if Israel goes into Gaza.
You also saw, as we saw with the reaction to the hospital bombing, that they have to be
concerned about the Arab street erupting.
And again, if they go into Gaza, this could ignite the whole Arab world.
It seems to me that if you're Israel, you don't want to become the focal point for all
of this anger in the Arab or larger Muslim world
There are important differences in that world. There's differences between
Sunnis and Shiite there's differences between
Arabs and Persians and Turks and the last thing you want is to paper over all those differences by having everybody's
is to paper over all those differences by having everybody's anger targeted at you. So I think there's very big consequences that could follow geopolitically.
I think again, the war would almost certainly not just be a single front war against
Gaza.
It could turn into a multi-front war.
So that's, I think, the second reason.
I think the third reason is you have to believe that there's furious diplomacy going on
behind the scenes.
And I think this is what Timothy is referring to.
What we don't know, obviously, or the content of those conversations,
we don't know what the Biden administration has told the Netanyahu government.
We don't know if they've said to them, listen, we are not going to get involved in this.
A publicly they've said that we stand with Israel, but you just have to wonder what they're privately
telling these Israelis.
All of that being said, I think that Israel has declared
that it's at war with Hamas.
There are these stories that are coming out daily
of these atrocities that were perpetrated by Hamas.
I saw once by paramedics who discovered the bodies
and described the way they were tortured.
The population of Israel demands retribution. by paramedics who discovered the bodies and described the way they were tortured, the population
of Israel demands retribution.
And so Netanyahu is under intense domestic political pressure to deliver on that.
So I think that Jamatha is right that things haven't escalated yet, but I wouldn't say
they've de-escalated.
Blinken did demand and Biden did announce those relieving of some of the humanitarian issues
in Gaza, but to my knowledge, they have not been implemented yet.
They turned the water back on, I believe, then.
Okay, so I think this thing is still a powder keg, and it could have ruffed.
And again, it all comes back to this key question of does Israel go into Gaza or not?
If they don't, then I think that creates room for some sort of international diplomatic
effort to get the hostages back and maybe de-escalate the situation. And I guess we'll find
out over the next week or so.
And that you didn't even mention that there could be some deep diplomacy here going on
in terms of releasing the hostages and maybe somehow they believe if they go in too early,
the chances of getting those hostages out of life could be seriously diminished, yeah.
You know, it's strange to me
that I just don't hear that much about the hostages.
It seems like the Israeli population,
just in terms of what they're publicly saying,
seems to have almost written off the hostages.
There was some video of the families of the hostages
being upset that they don't feel like the government
response is adequately taking the interests of their families into account that they just seem
hell-bent on this invasion of Gaza. But, you know, we don't know what's happening behind the scenes.
And again, that would be the way to de-escalate this is you get an international effort to release the hostages in exchange for
maybe it can't be stated but Equip Pro quo where Israel does not go into Gaza on the ground
and maybe the bottoming stops. Yeah, okay. So maybe we can pivot discussion here. I will say,
let me make one other point here, delving into the internal politics of another country is not
something that we typically like to do or that Americans are particularly good at.
But when a situation like this happens, that could drag us into a war. We do have to kind of understand the internal dynamics of these countries.
Israel is a country that for the last several years has been very internally divided. There's been something like five elections in the last four years.
Netanyahu got reelected in December of 2022 by creating a new coalition with far-right elements of the Israeli political system. And Jamat, you mentioned the Al-Aksa mosque, and I know Jared's
take on on this was a thought that this was blown
out of proportion, but I'll give you a different perspective on this. I've just been researching
this. If you read Al-Jazira, what they point to is the emergence of a far-right figure named
Idemar Ben-Gavir, who has become a member of Netanyahu's government as a result of this
coalition that was forged in December.
And Ben-Gavir has been, previously he was a fringe sort of anti-Palestinian far-right
provocateur, when he was 19 years old.
He basically had somehow stolen or taken the hood ornament from Yetsukber being the then prime minister's car
and was waving it around saying that if we can get to your car we can get to you.
Through weeks later, Yetsukber being was assassinated by a far right religious extremist in Israel
because they felt that he had committed treason by signing the Oslo Accords.
Now, Ben Gavir was an implicated himself, but it gives you a sense of kind of where he's coming from.
And Bengavir has led over the past year several incursions
into the Al-Aqsa Mos area.
And the reason he said he's done this is to show
that the Al-Aqsa Mosque in the Dome of the Rock,
the Haram al-Sharif,
which is the third holiest site in Islam after Mecca Medina,
he says that that is under the sovereignty of Israel,
that that belongs to Israel.
There is also a faction of the Israeli far right
that wants to build the third temple on the temple mount.
You have to understand that that cannot happen
while the al-Axamaos is still there.
So you have these, I don't mind saying, phrases,
I mean, to destroy or even to imply that you would ever destroy the Al-Aksa Mosque is such an
explosive issue. It would turn the entire Muslim world against Israel, and basically I think it
would be the end of Israel. But you have these figures who've now been incorporated into Netanyahu's cabinet.
And they are, I think, far to the right of Netanyahu, but they are prepping Netanyahu. They
seem to be bang for some sort of religious war. So, you know, the domestic policy of another country
is not something that we're totally familiar with, but you have to understand that Israel does have
these elements. And, man, I hope that the Biden administration is
telling Netanyahu that yeah we stand with Israel but not if you're going to follow the advice
of these far right religious extremists. This is um I think a very important point to pause on here
and maybe unpack which is uh as I said I'm I'm here in Dubai and had this trip planned.
And I'm actually, tell us what you're here.
And what are you hearing?
Look, what do they, what do people say?
Yes, fascinating.
And this is gonna get a little touchy.
And so I just wanna be clear,
I'm gonna tell people what the conversations are here.
It's not necessarily me endorsing any of
these positions. And of course, and on Saturday night I went to a Bob Mitzvah, my friends,
daughters had their Bob Mitzvah. And Tuesday night I had dinner. Sorry, where in Israel?
No, in the Bay area. And then I flew here. And this juxtaposition where I had dinner last night with five
tritidians who are of Palestinian descent and
they
are universally are appalled by Hamas and they're what happened, right? So you just say that right out front
and then they are perplexed why there is no discussion in the West in America of the conditions
that could have led to this and the treatment of the Palestinian people who they believe are living in
apartheid and that word is used over and over again and that they have you know now a generation of people who have no hope
and a generation of people who have nothing to lose and that they have nothing
to live for.
And this is the piece of the discussion that has gotten a lot of people in the West, I think,
in trouble talking about it.
We had a conference producer who was tweeting, hey, listen, you know, very early on, like
on the on 10, 7, Israel has to abide by, you know, international law, et cetera.
And this came up over and over again from Muslims here in Dubai that the West is not,
and the free world is not holding Israel accountable to human rights standards, basic
standard tenants of war.
And I was coming into the trip a little bit more positive.
And now there's such a deep
hurt on both sides of this that I got to see, you know, from from both of these events and people
suffering that my normally positive outlook has been a little bit shaken. If I'm being honest,
this feels very intractable to me. And yeah, to even go near the topic of what has Israel contributed to this situation
and the treatment of the Palestinian people, that's what the people in the region want
to hear us talk about or just hear the world talk about.
Any reaction to some of the protests that happened in Europe and the people that took to the streets, what was their perspective on that?
I think their perspective is a very small percentage of Americans care about the Palestinian
people. And, you know, if you look at the surveys that have gone on and I have some of the
survey data that's been done, and I'm not sure Americans' views on this are the most important views for us to
be focused on. But a very small percentage of people are aligned with the Palestinian people
as opposed to with the state of Israel. So, well, I mean, the biggest challenge in finding a path
towards, I don't want to just be so generic and say the word peace.
No, I think that's the word, yeah.
But towards some form of understanding and settlement with each other is that there's
a framing right now that you have to pick a side.
You're not allowed to be pro-Israel and also be sympathetic and empathetic to the plight
of the children in Gaza.
You're not allowed to say,
I'm looking out for the Palestinians,
but I believe Israel should have a state.
You're not allowed to point out the fact
that there are multiple Muslim, majority countries,
and there is only one Jewish state
while also saying that what the Israelis have done
may also not be right.
You're not allowed to take a nuanced point of view
and you're not allowed to address the variance
in behavior over time with each of these different sides
and how there is a massive complicated mess here
that it has to be pick your side, your pro-Israeli,
we need to wipe out x, y, or z,
or your anti-Israeli, and as a result, your anti-Semite.
And the fact that we can flate all of these things together
and force people to jump on a side
is what is also escalating that we can't actually
have conversations around these topics
that it all ends up being, pick a side,
and then let's figure out how many people
and what resources are on one side and what people and what resources are on the other.
And I think that this notion that we have almost a cancel culture behavior that's now leached into this discourse,
that if you try and talk about the plight of Palestinians, you cannot also be pro-Israel,
is what's keeping us from making progress in finding a path
to resolution.
And I think that's the biggest issue right now and we leverage the you're not a loyalist,
you're not moral, you're not a good person, you're evil, if you don't stand on our side.
And both sides are act that way.
And that's the hardest thing to change.
It's, I think, the only way to find a path is to change that first.
And I think starting with empathy is the only way, but man, that's impossible right now.
Fucking impossible.
Yeah, it's hard.
Sorry.
I'm just super emotional about this because I just don't like the, like, you know.
So there are broadly speaking two factions
that we're seeing out in the streets,
either denouncing Israel or supporting the Palestinians.
I think there is a group of people
who genuinely hate Jews or hate Israel
and do not believe in Israel's right to exist
and are preaching things like decolonization,
which is a recipe for genocide, then there are people and probably a larger group who I think are
concerned with the play of the Palestinian people who recognize the conditions they have as
deplorable and that the tactics that Israel uses to enforce its security, whether it's the occupation of
the West Bank or the blockade of Gaza, are unsustainable and create unfair conditions
for the Palestinians.
So, in other words, they're not saying that Israel doesn't have a right to exist.
They are principally concerned with helping the Palestinians in achieving a Palestinian
state. It seems to me a paramount importance that Israel
separate these two groups by understanding the concern
and I would apply this to American leadership as well,
by understanding the concerns of the latter
and hopefully getting us on a path to resolving them.
Totally.
So as to isolate the haters. Totally.
Because otherwise this whole thing is headed towards a gigantic disaster where, and I think
it's a disaster for Israel most of all, is that Israel could be destroyed. But I think the whole
world is being asked to pick a side too. And that's where this escalates into a much bigger,
broader conflict. It's that. Yeah. And the tradition of...
And even within the US, we're being asked to pick a side.
And now we're seeing civil unrest in the US.
The frustration as well amongst people who are Muslim or who are Palestinian descent
or Jordanian or just in the region generally is that Hamas set this process back decades.
And there's like a great frustration that maybe some progress was being made,
and that we could come to some normalcy in a two-state solution, and that Hamas did this exactly because
so much progress has been made recently.
I think that is the best theory about why this happened now, is that there was a process of normalization happening
between Israel and a number of these Arab states. And we talked about it last week that Jericho's nurse of this emotion. There
were three or four deals that were signed between Israel and the Gulf Arab states bringing
about normal relations. And Saudi Arabia was on the table as being the next one. There was
a effort underway to negotiate a normalization of relations between Israel and
Saudi Arabia.
That is now completely on ice.
And at risk of the other agreements maybe being ripped up because if Israel goes in and
has a massive ground invasion and there's more suffering and death, that that will maybe
blow all those accords up.
I think that what Hamas may have been concerned about, to say you want to impute strategic
logic to their decisions, even those decisions are atrocities, but if they have a strategic
purpose in mind, it's to derail that that process of normalization because if the entire
air world basically normalizes relations with Israel before the Palestinian question is resolved,
world-based normalized relations with Israel before the Palestinian question is resolved,
it takes a major carrot off the table in their negotiations or whatever they want to achieve.
So I think that to thwart that process was a big part of the goal here.
But I do think that what this has shown is that getting to a larger Middle East piece without resolving the Palestinian question is likely to be a failed strategy.
I just don't know.
It's impossible.
It's impossible.
And so it's impossible.
Again, this does not justify anything Hamas did.
But I think that what these events have now created
is a dynamic where the Palestinian question is now front and center and everything else
is basically paused until this gets resolved.
Now, as we're seeing about the two-state process, again, I was doing some research.
There really hasn't been any work on the two-state solution for roughly a decade.
Obama was the last president who tried. He explicitly said that Israel should try to make peace
based on the 1967 lines, but with landswops
to accommodate for the changes that have happened
on the map since then.
Netanyahu was very irate at that formulation by the way.
He never had a good relationship with Obama
because of that.
And then John Kerry, who is secretary of state
under Obama, made a major effort to try and
bring about a two-state solution.
And frankly, it went nowhere.
And a big part of the reason why is that Netanyahu said that, listen, the only situation that's
acceptable in Israel from a security standpoint is that we must control all security west
of the Jordan River.
So in other words, we must control all security west of the Jordan River. So in other words,
we must control security in the West Bank. And his argument was that look, adjacent land
is very important. If you create a Palestinian state there where they have total sovereignty
over their own security, they could be digging tunnels under the wall, basically said,
it could turn into 20 gazes. And he's got his point of view. And when people challenge
him on this, he said, listen, you don't live here.
You know, we live here.
We understand this security situation.
That's what he said to John Kerry.
So the whole process fell apart.
And since then, the idea has been for Israel
to move forward, again, on this larger normalization project
with the rest of the Middle East,
putting the Palestinian question to one side.
The idea has basically been, listen, if you won't make peace with us, and this goes back
to Arafat at Camp David, turning down the deal that was on the table that Clinton brokered
with, a hood, a hood baroque, if you won't make a deal with us, we'll just go around
you, your two rejections, your two difficult, your two hard to make a deal with.
So we're just going to put that to one side. Not really has been the process for the last decade, I would say, since John Kerry's initiative
fell apart, the process has been starting with cushioned under Trump and then I think
Biden tried to extend it by brokering the Saudi Arabia deal. The idea was, let's put the
Palestinian question to one side, we'll work on these other deals, I think now that that process has fallen apart. So the two-state
solution, that process died back in 2014. This idea of going around has basically fallen apart now.
And so I think this is why people are pretty pessimistic about where things go from here is,
what is the process? And meanwhile, you have this hard shift inside
Israeli domestic politics to the right.
You've got these religious factions who believe
that the entirety of the West Bank,
what they call Judea and Samaria,
is their God-given right.
And if you go back to the Netanyahu's government forming
in December of 2022, the first plank was to say that Judea and
Samaria belonged to us. We have
sovereignty over them. We're not
giving them up. So what room is
there for compromise? And since
then they've been expanding the
settlements in the West Bank.
Let me ask you a question just to
shift the question for a second.
The thing that surprised me the
most over this past week were the extent of the protests, some violent
in the United States and in Western Europe. And I'm curious to hear from you guys.
Was that overwhelmingly about pro-Palestine and making sure that there wasn't a human rights atrocity in Gaza, or was that
an emergence of like a simmering anti-Semitism that we hadn't seen?
Well, both.
That's kind of my point.
Is there type one and type two?
Yeah.
Type one is the true hatred.
Yeah, definitely.
It's the denial of the Israeli right to exist.
However, there is a type two, which is legitimate concern over the condition of the Palestinians, and the desire to resolve that by creating a Palestinian
state. And until you separate those two things, you're never going to make progress.
Your type two can breed a type one is the real scary reality. The simmering and decemitism
that you can have a legitimate concern about the people of Palestine because you always are going to be concerned about the oppressed being oppressed by the oppressor.
And that then translates into an anti-Semitism because you say that it's the Jewish people that are perpetrating this upon those people, therefore the Jewish people need to go. And I've heard friends of mine in the last week
who have said awful things like all Muslims need to go.
Well-known, well-respected public people
have said this to me in private.
I can see where the hatred can come from a place of hurt.
I can see that when people feel sympathetic towards
the Palestinian plight, they can then turn into anti-Semitism.
And so I do think that there are two distinct groups today, but my concern is that just
like what happened in the past, that that can then breed into a more generalized, more
fiery, and more scary situation where it really is anti-something, genocidalidal on both sides by the way.
I think what we're describing here is a classic vicious cycle where you start with there's
conditions of occupation that breeds resistance that breeds extremism extremism breeds fear on the
part of Israelis because they get attacked and then that breeds harsher security conditions,
the next level of occupation or blockade.
And then that just sees the cycles.
And so the question is how you break that cycle
because the Israelis right now,
and I'm sure NetNial would make this point,
if we open things up, if we gave you a Palestinian state,
what's to stop 30,000 Hamas fighters?
If we opened up the walls around Gaza,
what's the stop 30,000 Hamas fighters
from mastering us in our homes?
And if you do a ground invasion,
are you inspiring more radicalization
of course, of course, because for every,
and so, for every, kill, they've got brothers,
they've got sisters, they've got parents,
they've got kids, they've got aunts and uncles, and they become the next generation of extremists.
How does the cycle break, I think, is the frustrating part here.
And just looking at the reaction in the US, we saw a lot of discussion over young students writing arguments that Israel had brought
this on themselves and were solely responsible for the Hamas attack.
And this has led to massive outrage amongst donors to Ivy League schools like Penn and
Harvard.
And obviously those have very large endowments.
And this is now leading to many of them
pulling out of commitments they've made.
The Wexner Foundation founded by Victoria Secrets billionaire
said it's breaking off ties with Harvard.
D'don O'Four, quit the executive board of Harvard's Kennedy School, sit
it else, Ken Griffin, who's donated more than a half a billion dollars to Harvard,
please to call away. Last week to the head of Harvard and F.C. University,
come out in support of Israel, and then more than a dozen anonymous donors told the New
York Times they felt they had a right and an obligation to weigh in here.
And before this all happened at 10, donors had started pulling out
because of a Palestinian rights festival
that happened two weeks before the events of 10, seven.
From September 22 to 24th,
the Upan hosted the Palestine Rights Literature Festival.
The festival was built as a gathering to explore
the richness and diversity of Palestinian culture,
but according to multiple sources,
it mostly focused on Jews, Israel, and Zionism. One speaker called for ethnic cleansing of Jews,
another said violence was a necessity. Any thoughts, Tramoff, who were talking last week about
these work madrasas, and then I guess this is the second order and third order effects coming into
play. If you said it more generically, this would be a perfect opportunity
for these leading universities to actually provide nuance and teach people the history
of both sides and to show the perspective of both sides. That would take leadership,
yeah. That would take courageous leadership on the part of the people who run the university. Yeah. Let's just be honest. I think these elite universities are essentially asset management
businesses that have an education, the thick leaf of education wrapped around them. So they're
more like black rock than they are like a school. And so they behave like any for-profit asset manager
would, which is that I think that as they didn't try to intervene in one way or the other over the last 15 or 20 years.
In actually making sure that they were graduating the best kids so instead what happened is they get hijacked by.
Professors and people who wanted one very specific strain of thinking And I don't think it matters which strain it is.
But it betrays what the point of a leading university is supposed to be.
And then as a result, the people that graduate from these places are closed-minded.
And what that does is that that screws America.
Because you have all of these other places graduating kids with a different mindset
who then go and build the things that matter, and America just keeps falling back.
And we are just slower and we are not intellectually capable of thinking in a way that allows us
to see more than just what's right in front of us.
So I don't know what you want me to say.
It's just like these...
No, I'm just...
It's a follow-up to what we talked about last week. And so I thought it was pertinent
sacks looking at the free speech issue. There was some pushback online. Again, not my position.
I'm just putting it out here for you to comment on sacks, which is black listing young college
students who had an opinion about Palestine is wrong and you're trying to cancel people,
which are response to holding people accountable or canceling these students for their positions
on the Israeli Palestinian conflict. Well, what's happening now is that these campuses that took
outrageous positions on this whole issue are now trying to wrap themselves
in the cloak of academic freedom.
As if that's a value they've been respecting.
Free speech is not a value they've been respecting.
Free speech is a value they've been imposing.
And this was revealed by a survey that was just done,
the fire survey that surveyed students
on 248 campuses on a range of free speech issues.
So it asked them about how comfortable you feel expressing your views on controversial topics.
What is the tolerance on campus for liberal speakers or conservative speakers?
How acceptable is it to engage in disruptive conduct against the speaker on campus,
such as shouting them down to prevent them from
speaking. What sort of administrative support do different views get on campus and how open
is the campus to hearing about different issues. And what they found was that the most elite schools
ranked the worst. The only elite private school to score above average on free speech was University of Chicago,
which got a score of about 65 out of 100, which made them rank number 13 overall.
The rest of the top schools, the IVs, were abysmal.
Brown rank number 69, Duke rank 124, Princeton rank 127, Stanford ranked 207. This is again out of a total number of 248.
And Penn, which is where the donors are up in arm, ranked second to last, number 247.
They scored 11 points on the survey.
And then Harvard finished 248 out of 248 schools ranked.
Also known as dead last and
Get this the rating in the survey was zero point zero. They scored a blue Tarsky
And we'll house he scored 0.0
Harvard 0.0 point
zero. Yes. So look, I think it would be it would be one thing if these schools
said to the alumni, we agree with you that some of these speakers were over the top, but this
is what academic freedom's all about. But they have no standing to say anything like that because
they have been suppressing views on campus. There's no consistent allowing speakers to be shoted down. They have been
stifling the presentation of alternative views. So this is clearly these types of
speakers, these types of views that I think absolutely cross the line from
again what we talked about, which is type two support for legitimate support for
Palestinian state into hatred of Israel and Jews and denying
the right to exist.
It absolutely crossed over.
And many of these cases is a outrageous talk given by, I think, a Cornell professor who
was outright praising this massacre.
Oh, God.
That was disturbing.
So look, it is exciting about it.
He was excited about it. Yes, he was excited about it. So look, I think that these alumni have a point in saying that you, these elite campuses,
have been clearly putting your thumb on the scale in favor of certain views.
You've been suppressing certain views.
So this must be a view that you either share or endorse or permit given that the rest of your speech regime is
so restrictive and oppressive. So even though I would in a different circumstance support academic
freedom, I don't think these colleges have a leg to stand on. All right, we're going to talk about
some other topics today because that's what we do on the all-in podcast. And so tangentially related to the speech issues
in the EU, officials held a meeting to discuss enforcement
of the DSA, where Digital Services Act,
for some background here, the EU's Digital Services Act,
updated the EU's electronic commerce directive
of 2000, which was inspired by Section 230 here in the US,
Common Carrier Laws, where the Common Carriers,
be those AOL, Yahoo, Google, Facebook are not responsible
for what individuals post on their platforms.
And so that protection's been critically important,
not making social media sites or WordPress
into editors or having them have to censor content on their platform.
So the DSA officially went into effect in August of this year.
The main goal was to quote unquote, fosters safer online environments.
The DSA aims to do that via tighter rules around disinformation, illegal content, and transparent
advertising.
Those last two, not controversial, that first one, disinformation is obviously the one
that's gonna be pretty challenging.
The DSA has been called a new constitution of the internet
and an effort to shape the future of the online world.
Some things the DSA covers,
it forces VLOPS,
a new term, very large online platforms to disclose how their algorithms were.
They must give users the right to opt out
of recommendation systems and profile,
and they must share key data with researchers and authorities.
They must cooperate with crisis response requirements,
and they must perform external and internal audits.
They want to force transparency
on how content moderation decisions permit.
That seems logical. They want a forced transparency on the ways advertising is targeted. Then it also seems
reasonable. And then they want ways to flag illegal content. Obviously, obligations around
protecting minors. I don't think anybody will debate those. But it forces them to cooperate
with specialized trusted flaggers to identify and remove this illegal content. I don't know who those people would be.
Freiburg, you had some thoughts.
My thoughts are that the era of the open internet as a decentralized technology platform for
the benefit of individuals and not to be overseen and run by governments is over.
The Digital Services Act, I think, is one of the most overreaching threats to any sort
of open, transparent, democratic opportunity on the internet.
The idea of the open internet, the idea of creating a network of computers
That could share information and make services available to individuals around the world
freely
uncensored and
an easy-to-access way
was the reason that the internet has transformed society, improved productivity, and
provided extraordinary benefits.
The Digital Services Act is an example of a government seeing that a decentralized technology,
the internet itself is meant to be a decentralized technology.
There's no central servers.
They are all part of a network of computers that anyone on the network can access anything
else on the network can access anything else on the network. Blockchain, obviously, is the more modern kind of
exciting decentralized technology concept
that is meant to avoid the scrutiny, the oversight,
and the control by central governments
or central authorities of any sort.
And the language in the Digital Services Act,
I think, got squeezed through in a way that most of the people that I'm guessing past the Digital Services Act don't fully comprehend the implications of some of the decisions that they're making.
It can be easily framed as this is good for people.
You cannot sell illegal content online. You cannot sell illegal goods and services. We're trying to safeguard young people. But the protection of minors means that you can no longer
do personalized web experiences for anyone under 18,
which means you need to know the age of everyone.
And now your web experience, if you're a kid,
is not going to be personalized.
The overreach gets even worse when they say we can now go in
and run evaluations of the algorithms and allow open access to your data to third party
researchers to get into your systems and look at how you guys are running the services
that you're offering on the internet.
So not only are you no longer allowed to have an open internet where people can provide
whatever services they want to provide, but if you're on the internet, you now have to
make your service and the inside part of your service available for scrutiny by governments.
And so you have...
And researchers, who are these researchers?
Who sounds like a stagy type of wing?
And the way it's written, it gives this commission, as the primary regulator, effectively a lot of leeway,
in deciding who, what, where, and how they can go into companies, go into individual servers, individual computers,
I could run an individual company on my computer at home.
And it gives this government the legal right in the EU
to go into my computer and pull information out of my computer
and scrutinize it and make decisions about what I'm doing
and whether or not I'm compliant
with whatever the commissions and enforcement standards are
of that day.
I mean, this is about as 1984 as you can get.
And it's a real serious threat.
I don't think people are recognizing the second and third-order effects
of what this is going to do over time to internet services
to the quality of experience we get on the internet
and to the role that government is now going to play in policing, scrutinizing
and providing restricted access to content and services for each individual
that wants to use the internet.
But it's important to say, if you're a European, it'll just make Europe even more of a place
you go to vacation and never to live.
Yeah.
Right?
I mean, we're not talking about America, right?
We're talking about Europe.
This is all the changes that are going to happen inside of Google, which is going to affect
more than just the EU users because of the requests and the demands of the EU.
And so, you know, the services that you are going to get around the world are going to be
affected by this EU compliance regime, and it's going to be dynamic.
It's a commission, basically a bunch of individuals that get to decide who, what, where, and
how.
The man that's going to create a really scary, scary situation where a bunch of people who are going to have their own motivations,
their own political leanings, their own objectives,
they're going to be able to leverage their particular role
in applying, in order to provide some things to internet services.
We saw Canada do something similar and Facebook's reaction.
Google pulled out.
And Facebook's reaction was we're not going to syndicate
links.
So I don't know, I would go back to another argument you make a lot, which is which I
agree with, which is the free market will act rationally here.
And if Google deprecates a bunch of features and or completely pulls out of Europe, that
will be the death knell for these kinds of decisions because then other governments and other people will see the cost of trying to get this kind of
control. I think the bigger issue in a moment like this is Europe has such a
checkered past on these things which is that they somehow try to find this moral
high ground and there is just this overreach and this quasi-central planning that
just never works. And so if this is another example of it, I would encourage all four profit
companies to make the practical decision. Oh, can you imagine Google's decision making here?
They've got thousands of employees in Europe. They make billions of dollars in revenue in the market.
It's such a difficult situation to be in. Not if what you're saying is true. Not if what you're saying is this
is the threat of the internet. I think it'll be very easy for Larry and Sergey to say,
cut it, move on. No. The Europe is too big a market for Google or any other major tech
company to exit. There's just no way. What they're going to do is comply. There won't
be a market. Well, hold on a second. What this new DSA rule does is apply penalties to social networks for not censoring what they
call legal speech, which is whatever speech they say it is.
So freeberg's right, there's going to be some sort of committee and Brussels that basically
sends out takedown requests now to all these social networks.
Yes, the DSA commission.
Yes, the DSA commission.
So Europe, again, is just too big an area not to serve.
And then what could happen is that because it's easier for companies just to have one
approach where they can, there is a risk that these same policies get applied in the
US.
That is what happened with privacy.
Remember, Europe went first with GDPR and then a lot of regulations came to America.
Now the First Amendment may stand on the way here, but there is some risk that tech companies
of their own accord decide that it's cheaper
and easier to comply with the European regime everywhere
than trying to parse their service in different markets.
I'm just saying that's a risk.
But look, let me frame it in a different way
in an economic argument, okay?
So Europe is about 25 cents of every dollar revenue that Google generates.
So if you think about that, that's called a $60 billion year, plus or minus.
So the question is, at what point is the cost of trying to get $60 billion?
So great that you say it's not worth the 60 billion. And my point is that there is an economic rational argument here for it, if it costs, for
example, 10 or 20 billion dollars to implement this stuff, that's probably the efficient
frontier where when you factor in multiple compression and you factor in behavior change
in Europe, which may actually degrade the 60 billion to 50 or 40, where you just throw your hands up and say, it's just not economically
worth it.
You see these actors make this trade off in Canada.
It's not totally unreasonable that they run a model to figure out the cost.
Maybe they just take the perspective that whenever this DSA commission sends us a takedown
request, we're just going to do it instantly.
Why wouldn't that just become the norm?
In fact, I'm pretty sure that's what they'll do.
The management at most these companies
really had all of them except for Elon.
They don't really care.
They have the same app on my C's.
Yeah, they're, they don't care about free speech.
They're not founders.
They're not founders.
They don't care about the free speech moreover.
They have a lot of the same political biases
that these e-dia commissioners have.
I'm not supporting the DSA.
All I'm saying is I think that economic ration, no actors will do the right thing here.
I think the most likely outcome is that tech companies will be craving and they'll
fold those, do whatever these e-dia commissioners want.
Which then could be an opportunity for, you know, distributed blockchain, you know,
good luck with that.
Yeah, I mean, it's hard to scale them, but the devil's in the details.
Yeah.
Or, and you guys feel this every day like Jason, you know, you're right now in the UAE.
You can communicate in certain ways through WhatsApp.
You can't communicate in other ways through I message.
There are just rules of usability on products and they exist all around the world.
If you go to India, there are certain apps that are blocked and certain apps that are not. And so maybe that's just what happens where there is just a gradient of user
experiences around the world for people and we all deal with it. And we don't know exactly
how heavy-handed they're going to be here. This is by definition heavy-handed. I don't agree with it.
But hold on. We don't know what, this is the problem with how they've done this.
This is all being done in a star chamber.
We don't have any insight into what kind of content they want to take down.
If it's obviously abusive content, fine, but if it's, you know,
COVID information or misinformation, obviously,
there's going to be a problem that we saw here in the United States,
just so people know, you know,
you can respond to them.
Yeah.
And once that, and just so you know,
the much credit, Jake, how?
I'm not giving them any credit.
I do not want to see this happen.
I'm not giving them any credit.
I'm just saying, we'll see how heavy handed they'll be.
You're assuming they're going to be super heavy handed?
We'll see, and then we'll see what their own citizens respond.
I think the fact that a room full of commissioners
in the U can send take down requests
to social media
companies is by definition have we handed. Let me back up. What the Twitter file showed
okay is that we had 80 FBI agents being the conduit for take down requests to Twitter and
presumably other social networks. No, no, but that was all on the deal.
On the deal. Exactly. Yes, that was not long. And yes, moreover, when they did that in their takedown request, they would always point
to, well, this tweet violates your terms of service. Okay. What the EU is doing is different.
They're actually defining the terms of service. They're saying that your terms of service
need to do X, Y, and Z. They're doing it explicitly. This is not on the deal. They're
expressing it. They're not saying what policy needs to be what we say it is. And when we tell you to take something down,
you're going to do it. They haven't defined what that is. That's, I think, the issue is
where is the actual definition of what's going to happen here? And that's why it's hard
for us to have a discussion about this is because we don't know what they're talking about
with this content. That's still problematic. Whatever they say in the future is disinformation needs to be taken down. That's the framework. The fine is going to
be up to 6% of global revenue for companies that do not comply. So the EU has
also figured out that speeding tickets don't work and they're looking to give
pretty heavy penalty please. So we'll see. This is a moving target here. We don't have complete
information, but yeah, it's not a moving target. We do have complete information. This is
a censorship regime, Jason. We just don't know what their term for illegal or problematic
content is here. And again, I don't want I don't want to be pitted as your adversary here.
I am not in favor of this. So we're clear. But I and I don't think to be pitted as your adversary here. I am not in favor of this.
So we're clear.
But I don't think there should be a star chamber where people get to pick what goes up
and what goes down there.
I think the private companies can do a good enough job there and there should be freedom
of speech.
Yeah, you're going to see some things you don't like grow up, change the time they feed
you like it.
Basically, as they say, it sets a horizontal rule covering all services and all types of
illegal content and disinformation.
Illegal content could be fine, right, freeberg?
Like, illegal content, putting, doxing somebody, child pornography, illegal content, I think
we would all be okay with.
It's the disinformation part, right?
I'm not trying to be okay or not okay.
I'm just saying that, like, you're basically saying that whatever the rules are that they
come up with,
that may be different than somewhere else on the internet,
they get to then regulate other businesses on the internet.
I think the internet should be open.
Well, I'm there on the last.
I don't want to have a commission approve
what I write in my blog post.
I don't want the commission telling me
that what I put on Twitter or put on my website
is up to them to decide whether or not it's okay to put
up because they think it's illegal because it has what they need to be misinformation.
Right.
When already laws that exist, so disinformation, illegal content, two different things.
But those laws provide some authority to a commissioner.
I mean, that's the problem, right?
It's it's right.
Look, the problem is in the vagueness of this.
The law says that social media companies have to take down
a legal content, but it doesn't say what a legal content is.
It delegates the power to define it to this group of eurocrats
led by theory Bretton, and they're meeting this week
to hammer it out.
So, look, in practice, a legal content is going to be
whatever they say it is.
That is explicit censorship.
Okay.
Let's move on to our final topic.
Second largest hype cycle of 2023.
Perhaps GLP ones, Chamath, you brought this up in our group chat so maybe you could tee
it up.
Well, I was just interested in understanding everything that's been happening around GLPs, mostly because it just seems like people
think it's a panacea.
We have a lot of our friends, Jason, you were the one that said this in our poker group,
like four of the 12 or 13 regulars are on it, is that right?
I think it was four of like, yeah, four of 12 people are on it.
Yeah, it was a third. Yeah.
And then and then I got this really interesting chart neck. You may want to put this up. It basically showed
how the GLP one market was tracking very similar to the AI market in terms of the hype, which is if you separated companies as a basket of people
who were positively affected by GLP ones like Lily and Nova Nordisk, and you had a basket
of companies that were disrupted by GLP ones, those would be like Dexcom or Davida or
folks like that.
It eerily mimics the same hype cycle around AI, which is there's those businesses that seem to be feeding the hype train around AI and then all of these companies that
theoretically will be disrupted and it just brought up to me that there's this incredible
market movement here where I think people think that these GLP ones are
a solution to everything and I thought it was just an important thing to discuss,
because scientifically, the mechanism of action
is still a little questionable and murky.
On top of that, I think we don't know physiologically
what the real long-term ramifications
of taking these things are.
There's still a lot of mixed evidence around
the total amount of weight loss you can lose,
the percentage of muscle versus fat that you lose.
And so yeah, I just thought it was important for us to talk about it and see what we've got.
This would be a basket spread trade.
Here are the companies that win, here are the companies that lose and look at that gap
between the two.
It's exactly mimics people who would benefit from AI and people who lose from AI.
Yeah, the GLP1 hype, the summary is the GLP one hype cycle is as overextended as the
AI hype cycle.
So we should probably separate the wheat from the chaff and start by understanding what
GLP ones are, because I'm sure there's a lot of people in our listening community who
are on this stuff.
They should really probably understand.
Well, that's where you think we should go next.
We should then throw it to the
saltant of science himself. David Freiberg explained to us, while we prepare our Uranus jokes,
GLP ones.
These drugs have been around for a while.
They're small peptides, little proteins that bind to this GLP receptor in your gut that causes insulin to be released
from your pancreas and triggers a couple of other hormones that reduce your hunger and appetite.
So basically gets you to eat less. And your brain. And your brain. And it's effectively a way
to make you feel not hungry. And you can then run a calorie deficit.
When you run a calorie deficit, your body starts starving and starts burning.
Other parts of your body, besides the glucose, it can get out of the stomach where you
otherwise have food and ends up in your blood.
It starts generating energy from your stored body fat and your muscle mass. So these have been around for a while.
Novo Nordisk is the developer of two of the main drugs.
And here's a chart of Novo Nordisk stock price.
You can see that in the last five years,
their stock has five X.
They've basically gone from, you know,
call it a $60 billion company
to a $350 billion company to a $350 billion
company in five years, largely on the back of the promise of this drug.
So these drugs have been around for a while, and there's actually one that's been on the
market for a long time, but it only causes 5% body mass loss, so 5% weight loss.
So people are like, oh, it's not that great.
It didn't really get widely adopted.
Then this new class, they added a little side chain, added another little molecule to the peptide. And as a result, it didn't get degraded as fast and it was far more bioactive
in the body and caused a much greater benefit. And so suddenly, people on these drugs started to
see massive weight loss, massive improvement diabetes. And metabolic health all moves together.
So as you burn body fat, as you have less glucose in your blood, your metabolic condition improves.
The problem is when you're starving normally,
if you were to just stop eating,
you would typically see that your body
starts burning, first of all, the glucose,
and then it burns off the glycogen in your muscles,
which is the next energy store.
Once that's gone, your body starts burning fat.
And as it's burning more fat, it also says,
hey, I need to get these other molecules,
which I'm not getting just from the fat, I need muscle.
Your body actually starts burning muscle.
That's how your brain gets energy that it needs when you're starving is actually primarily
from the degradation of muscle tissue.
Normally, if you're just starving yourself, you'll see a ratio of weight loss, where it's
about 20% coming from lean muscle mass.
In some of the studies that have been done on these GLP1 agonists, we're seeing up to
40% of the weight loss coming from lean muscle mass being burnt off.
So Jason, I don't know if you've done a dexascant, because I think you've said it publicly
that you've tried it, right?
I mean, you should check out what your lean muscle mass is versus your fat composition in
your body.
I don't know if you have it from before, but this has been one of the concerns.
Obviously, if you're not working out and you're not doing what you need to to eat protein
and build muscle, you're going to be burning through a lot of that muscle mass.
So that's problem number one that's arisen that people are concerned about.
The other one that's really, I don't know if it's concerning or not, but when people
go off these drugs, they gain the weight back in a very quick way.
There's two reasons for this.
One is, if you haven't actually changed your behavior, you haven't changed your exercise
patterns, and you suddenly have the appetite-suppressing drug taken out of your system, you start
eating more food again. And when you've been in a state of starvation,
your metabolism, your baseline metabolism goes down.
So instead of burning on average,
2,000 calories a day, your body's only burning
at 1,200 calories a day.
So suddenly if you go back to eating 2,000 calories a day,
because you're no longer have the appetite suppressor,
you're going to have a calyx.
You're going to re-inflate. You're going to re-inflate.
So your metabolism goes down, the appetite suppressant goes away and you gain all the
weight back.
If you haven't changed your behavior otherwise.
I don't know if you guys saw this clip I sent out of Arnold Schwarzenegger talking with Howard
Stern, but he was talking about how I can't do a Howard accent, J.K. how you could probably
do it really well.
Yeah, it's one thing.
What do you think of the young Sampec?
Well, you know how the theo-Zampic is, you know, Americans used to be very interested in
working hard and I don't know why that's so bad, but you get up at 5 a.m. and you work hard
and you do it and you make yourself strong.
Right.
That's what it's about.
You don't need to do a little baby girl of Sampec and you start, oh look, I'm going
to eat less food.
Thank you.
Wait, did you listen to eat less food.
Thank you.
Wait, did you listen to the clip? Is that is how he said?
That's exactly what he said.
He told exactly what he meant.
I don't make it.
That's what I see.
What do you mean?
This was epic.
Hard work.
How was that?
I say in the in my book, you know, work,
a work you're asked off.
And because it's there's no shortcut.
What built this country?
Is it people that were wimping out?
No, I want the people that want to become through.
No, this was a ballsy of women and men that went out there five in the morning and got
up and they struggled and they fought and they
worked their butts off. That's what made this country great.
Yeah, he actually, he said that in response to I think Howard Ceren's question about
Ozanpec. Yeah, like don't take a trouble. Like we're basically creating a new
multi-billion dollar pharmaceutical drug system that people are going to have to stay on in order to stay healthy.
Do you know what the long-term effects of taking semi-grewtide are and can be and will be?
Do we really know?
These drugs have been around for quite a long time. So, you know, the
there are various side effects, but in terms of like, are we debilitating our health over the long run?
You know, it seems to be a reasonably safe drug
and it seems to be a drug that folks are
kind of recognizing as being well worth the cost
and whatever the risks may be.
Well, what are the implications for the benefit?
Do you lose 40%?
Well, it's about 16% of your weight loss.
You typically lose, right?
I mean, that's the reason.
Yeah, they'll say up to 20% if you lose weight,
you'll usually see up to 20% of
lean muscle mass of the weight you lost coming from lean muscle mass loss. And you know 80% or 85%
as you say, coming from body fat loss. But with the ozepic drugs, they're seeing as high as 40%
coming from lean muscle mass, which is obviously concerning. I just made an adjustment. I
everybody knows they lost like 40 pounds or so or talked to me for more than five minutes you know I have.
Cause I'll tell you, and the first 20 was just fasting
and doing keto.
And then when this drug came out, I tried it,
I tried ozampic and then I did wagovian.
I lost the next time.
I'm gonna give you some math.
But I didn't gain it back.
I, I, I gained back about four or five pounds
and I also increased protein in the morning
and I do a lot of walking.
Okay, so, so let me give you this math and tell me if it maps to what you have felt or not.
So if 250 pounds, let's just say you lose 16% of your body weight, that's 40 pounds.
Okay, so you get to 190.
I was right, to 210.
And of that, you lose 16 pounds of muscle.
Is that what you saw or did you see something less in that?
No, much less muscle because I use weights
and I do a lot of walking and I eat a ton of protein.
Right, so you're doing the exercise.
You're doing the exercise.
That's a hard, correct size.
But I do have to exercise.
You have to do exercise.
And the challenge, J.Kell, is that the vast majority
of people that go on the drugs.
By the way, I'm not saying the drugs shouldn't be adopted.
I think that there's extraordinary benefit, health benefit to the majority of people that are on the drugs. By the way, I'm not saying the drugs shouldn't be adopted. I think that there's extraordinary benefit, health benefit to the majority of people that are on
these drugs, but the downside is that if you're not exercising, you are going to lose muscle mass.
And then obviously there is the fact that you're now hooked on this thing. If you're not going to
figure out ways to change behavior. I cycled off of that two or three times and
had very minor weight gain back three, four, five pounds, but I deliberately changed
my relationship with food, portion size, and I work out now.
And what I found was as I lost weight, my interest and the joy I got out of working out
dramatically increased.
So running, walking, skiing, everything got easier, and I just got more into it.
So I like working out again.
Now that I'm 40 hot
pounds, 42 pounds off my peak weight. I think it's an amazing wonder drive. But you have
a lot of experience on this, like a take on this, like you think that these things are overhyped
right now and we're just in the middle of a hypo cycle or what's your key takeaway? My key
takeaway is that for many people from a health perspective, I think that it could be a really great
But for many people from a health perspective, I think that it could be a really great solution. I think that these triple agonists that are coming out are going to be probably even more
effective than these double agonists that we have right now.
Yeah.
I don't understand the triple.
Muncharro is the triple agonist, yeah.
A people who title Muncharro told, it is unbelievable how not hungry you are.
Yeah, it's super fast too.
Super fast.
I just wanna see, you know, like for example,
when, you know, when you get older in your 60s and 70s,
one of the biggest risks you take on in your 80s
is actually like, you know, muscular skeletal
and falls and things like that.
And one of the best preventative measures for that is muscle mass.
And so you get into this weird catch, 22 of you are placed one issue with another.
So longitudinally, if you use it for a long time, I'm concerned about that.
I do think that these GLP ones, if when we look back on it, will probably be like statins.
And in as much as when statins first came on the market, it was a wonder drug, right?
And we were all teetering towards heart disease
and heart attacks and all of this stuff.
And then once people got on these statins,
I think there was a very meaningful impact
to the percentage of people that suffered heart disease
and cardiac issues.
But heart disease still continues to grow.
And you would say to yourself,
well, how is this possible?
Because statins are effectively free. They're generic. They're widely available. And today,
right now, because of the lack of supply, the emergency FDA order around these semiconductors
allows you to make generics right now. Right? So the cost of those are not really a thousand
bucks a month, but can be as cheap as a few hundred. So you're getting this widespread adoption and usage.
I think the open question for me is, if human history is a guide, we're going to replace
this issue with a different kind of issue.
Because unfortunately, maybe people take it and then they physiologically adapt and then
they just continue to eat the same or more, because they think, wow, this is a get out
of jail free card for me.
And maybe they overpower that satiety that that's sent that G up you want to supposed
to give you.
I don't know.
I find it from a sort of public societal help perspective really interesting from an economic
market perspective.
I think that these things are priced to perfection.
It's kind of like in video, which is like,
people are assuming everything, people are assuming everything is going to work.
It's a tough point in the cycle to be a buyer, I think, as an economic actor.
But as a person, it's a trade.
If you're making a trade, that seems like a hard trade to make.
And just to give even some more color to it, Nouveau, Nourdesk announced that it was haunting
in so Zempoch and in his he's trial early.
Well Nick showed that so much.
Because it was so conclusive.
Yeah, I mean, if you look at that,
it sparked a $3.6 billion sell-off
in shares of dialysis providers.
I mean, remember over 40% of Americans are clinically obese.
It's almost 60% now.
It's an extraordinary health epidemic in the
United States. And, you know, if this drug can have this sort of an effect, it can reduce cost
across the healthcare system. So, you know, there is still a, I mean, Jamas Point,
otherwise the key is the right number. This affects cardiovascular disease, diabetes,
kidney disease, liver disease, Parkinson's, how does it, does an average 16% weight loss reduction actually get people from
obesity to unobesity? Or are they still obese? The obesity trial seemed to, I mean, remember,
you have to get FDA approval for a particular. Yeah, sir, this is what Jason was mentioning. So
this is a basket that Morgan Stanley created, which was essentially starting at the beginning of the year
when the hype was really starting to get out of control. Morgan Stanley created a basket of the
GLP1 winners and a basket of the GLP1 potentially disrupted healthcare stocks, so you could trade
them off against each other. And this just shows how it's performed, which is just the blockbuster
trade in the last 10 months. So if you went long, the GLP-1 winners
and short these potentially disrupted,
I've never seen a spread trade pay off like this
in such a short period of time.
80% of your unbelievable.
And the nature of creating...
Would you take the other side of this trade right now
or like how do you...
I would, I would...
And the reason is because of two, two, two practical factors. One is that when, when a, when a market gets this exaggerated,
what you're pricing in is essentially like a panacea solution, but, and those tend to
not really be realistic. And again, I would point to statins as a good example of that.
And so there's a part of it, which is just like these trades are so overextended
that you can probably be pretty safe on the other side. And then the second part is that
I don't think we really understand yet. The other half of the point, which is, you know,
for every one of us that's generally positively inclined around GLP ones, who isn't getting
enough attention right now, are the doctors who've spending a lot of time researching
this stuff, who may actually have a perspective
on the other side, probably the most prominent one,
like Bob Lustig.
So you have to give that a little bit of time
for it to play out, because nobody wants to hear
the bear case on GLP ones, as a drug that people take.
So I would just say that it's probably, again, when you see it an economic trade like this, it's probably okay to be on the other side of it.
And then just from a public health perspective, you know, take a weight and see.
But for a lot of people who are clinically obese, it doesn't seem like the math is such that
if you're at a BMI of 30, reducing your weight 16%, I think gets you to like a 26. It doesn't seem like the math is such that if you're at a BMI of 30, reducing your
weight 16%, I think gets you to like a 26. It doesn't get you under.
I think it's meaningful.
I think it's meaningful.
No, no, I'm not saying it's not meaningful. I'm saying it doesn't.
You're still obese.
Yeah, I think the key thing, and I don't want to give medical advice, but I think you need
to do this holistically. So you got to keep your diet and you got to keep working out
in mind when you do it. That should be fairly obvious. And those are always good things to do this holistically. So you got to keep your diet and you got to keep working out in mind when you do it
And that should be fairly obvious and those are always good things to do is make you take it your whole life and sports
Jekyll or how do you know? I'm five pounds from my lowest weight as an adult and my the weight
I used to be when I ran marathons and so my plan is to come off of it
Like by the end of this year and then and I had taken like six months off twice
by the end of this year, and then, and I had taken like six months off twice in doing this. So I did it like in little intentional, in-spirits, in-spirits, friends, yeah, just to get where I wanted to be.
And this last five, last five pounds, right?
What is your, do you have a sense of if your behavior changes
when you're on and you're off, like, do you?
I do feel more hungry, but then I remember how bad I felt
when I was overweight and I just weigh myself every day.
And if I see myself get above a certain number,
I consider that like a red alert.
And I just, you know, either start fasting,
working out or just eating super healthy.
So it's just the discipline of weighing myself every day that I've gotten into and just
understanding, hey, if I make two or three bad decisions, you're not going to make two
or three bad decisions when you're on these drugs in my experience because you feel so
bloated and so painful when you overeat that you don't want to do it.
So it's really like it hurts.
You feel distended and there are reports and it did happen to me twice over two
or three years of doing this.
But if you take it and you eat too much, you could get sick and actually vomit.
Some people just don't have the stomach for it.
I think a lot of people just tap out and make their stomachs feel too
distended or gnarly.
And that's why the dosage actually really matters.
They have dosages that are like a very wide range,
maybe 10X.
And so the dosage getting that right,
working with your doctor is key.
But yeah, I'm excited to get off of it
because I want to really start sincerely weightlifting.
So I'm getting a personal trainer
to do like weightlifting twice a week
and get really into that next
because you can't do hardcore intense working out with us
because you're just lower calorie.
But I think it's a miracle drug,
and I'm excited about it.
The one question I have for you on the spread trade
before we end in Jamoth,
does the nature of making those indexes
and giving people the ability to put the trade on,
exacerbate the trade,
because then I saw everybody was tweeting about this
over the last week, does the nature of an index being made impact the action stocks.
You know, Morgan Stanley is particularly good at these basket creations and they tend
to make it for their biggest hedge fund clients and their richest families.
So it tends to be pretty isolated.
They give an edge to a few folks.
So these things are not broadly published.
And so I doubted in the end.
But so they come up with this idea.
How many names are in each index?
It all just depends.
And they're very smart about being able to create these
on the fly based on what themes they're seeing.
And then like I said, they share them with their best
hedge fund clients and their biggest families.
They don't trade, they don't share them with us.
I got it.
Jason, when did I told you like, at the end of all of that,
at the end of that graph?
Yeah, everybody put the trade on and got the win.
So let's get you to.
Yeah, but so they didn't actually share it with me in January.
I wish they did.
All right, listen, we got to wrap up,
ratio boys and we're praying for peace and the return of the hostages for
the Sultan of science, the dictator and the rainman. Yeah, David Sacks.
I know. Well, it's gross. My mom will see you at episode 151. Enjoy the 150
fan meetups this week. Anybody who's going to love you, boys.
Love you. That's fun.
We're like your winners ride.
Rainman, David Sacks. Love you guys, and I love you guys so much. You're one of us right Besties are gone
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug George because they're all just like this like sexual tension But we just need to release that out
What your that beat beat what your beer beat We need to get my cheese I'm going to be your bb What you're bb What you're bb
Bb What you're bb
We need to get merch these aren't that
I'm going to leave
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you