All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E172: SBF gets 25 years, Trump's meme stock, RFK Jr picks VP, Biden's 2025 budget & more
Episode Date: March 29, 2024(0:00) Bestie Intros: Late night poker snacks! (2:33) SBF sentenced to 25 years (16:41) Trump's meme SPAC: modern trading card, protest vote, or something else? (34:59) RFK Jr. selects Nicole Shanahan... as VP (47:46) Biden's budget plan for 2025: how to confront America's existential crisis? (1:11:59) Science Corner: Why the price of cocoa has skyrocketed! (1:16:41) Movie talk and wrap! Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://twitter.com/Jason https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://twitter.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@all_in_tok Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://www.reuters.com/technology/sam-bankman-fried-be-sentenced-multi-billion-dollar-ftx-fraud-2024-03-28 https://www.cnbc.com/2024/03/25/ftx-estate-sells-majority-stake-in-startup-anthropic-for-884-million.html https://coingeek.com/ftx-founder-sam-bankman-fried-sentenced-to-25-years-in-prison https://www.google.com/finance/quote/DJT:NASDAQ https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1849635/000119312524036093/d408563ds4a.htm https://www.sec.gov/news/press-release/2023-121 https://apnews.com/article/trump-media-gamestop-truth-social-meme-stock-666e62b4f3f788bd6276764056bc7c0d https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/18/business/melvin-capital-gamestop-short.html https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/comments/lau37c/we_can_stay_retarded_longer_than_you_can_stay https://www.wsj.com/politics/elections/rfk-jr-to-name-nicole-shanahan-as-running-mate-for-presidential-bid-4b9a698e https://twitter.com/CollinRugg/status/1773147897439436939 https://www.cnbc.com/2024/03/01/the-us-national-debt-is-rising-by-1-trillion-about-every-100-days.html https://www.reuters.com/world/us/bidens-2024-us-government-budget-is-also-campaign-pitch-2024-03-11 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/budget_fy2025.pdf https://manhattan.institute/article/the-limits-of-taxing-the-rich https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/09_effects_income_tax_changes_economic_growth_gale_sawick.pdf https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/FYFRGDA188S https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/FYONGDA188S https://www.oecd.org/tax/revenue-statistics-united-states.pdf https://www.visualcapitalist.com/inflation-chart-tracks-price-changes-us-goods-services https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/USGOVT https://www.blackrock.com/corporate/investor-relations/larry-fink-annual-chairmans-letter https://www.kakaoplattform.ch/about-cocoa/cocoa-facts-and-figures https://www.movieposters.com/products/daliland-mpw-138836 https://twitter.com/stillgray/status/1773234188663054751 https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1773240336292393144
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Nat and I have goals when I play poker.
She always leaves me with the following.
Play well, check.
Have fun, check.
Do not eat late at night.
Never a check.
Not a chance.
As soon as we finish dinner within 20 minutes
back at the poker table,
Chinmoth's like, may I have my Haagen-Dazs now?
May I have my second Haagen-Dazs now?
Hellmuth, you are buying the melts tonight.
Hellmuth is literally on the melts.
Hellmuth, fire up the cheeseburger melts, don't you?
Did you see?
Freeberg, you should have seen last week.
Hellmuth at the dinner table,
Sean made some incredible, I thought,
fresh sorbet of some fruit or whatever.
He at the dinner table ordered from DoorDash
double stuffed Oreos, some Nutter butters, some cherry beets.
Nutter butters.
They arrived when we left dinner
and got back to the poker room.
It was so disgusting.
And then the next day, my whole household, everybody,
Nat, the kids are like, what are these things?
They were like holding up these Nutter butters.
They were looking at like never seen Nutter butters.
The best part about Phil Homemute's door dash addiction
is that like at least once a month,
Chamath will be like, somebody ordered like four entrees,
like pastas and two desserts to my house.
And I didn't order it.
And it feels like, oh, that's me on the group chat.
That's me.
Because he doesn't take the time
to change his address back to his house
And then you see the naked truth of what he's ordering
We open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy.
Love you. That's the queen of.
One person who's not going to be eating well is SBF.
He was just sentenced.
Breaking News Thursdays continues here at the All In podcast, episode 172.
But SBF was just sentenced with me again today on the pod.
Of course, the dictator, chairman Chamath Palihapitiyaya, Sultan of science, David Freberg and the Rain Man. Yeah, David Sachs. I'm Jason
Kalakannis. Welcome back to the number one podcast in the world. Episode 172 of the only podcast,
your favorite SPF just sentenced 25 years. You're always over hyping.
SBA just sentenced 25 years. You're always overhyping.
Always hype man.
Overdeliver.
Absolutely.
I'm a hype man.
I'm like favorite flavor, flavor, flavor of this organization.
SPF Sam Bankman Fried of FTX was found guilty.
As you know, a couple of months ago in November, and he just got sentenced to 25 years. In total, FTX customers
lost 8 billion investors lost 1.7 billion and lenders lost 1.3 billion.
Is that without parole? When is he eligible for?
That is a good question. Doesn't say what the parole could be. The prosecutors had
no possibility of parole in federal criminal cases.
Yeah, so federal prosecutors start 40 to 50 years. So the judge went a little bit light, I guess,
give half in a sentencing Judge Lewis Kaplan said SPF had lied throughout the trial and showed no
remorse. Quote, he knew it was wrong. He knew it was criminal. He regrets that he made a very bad bet about the likelihood of
getting caught. But he is not going to admit a thing, as is
his right. In related news, FTX is also selling the majority of
its stake in anthropic for 884 million to move out of the
sovereign one of the sovereign wealth funds from the UAE and
other investors, including Jane Street, where SPF worked for a hot minute,
the Ford Foundation, Fidelity and some other investors from CNBC lawyers representing the
bankruptcy estate told the judge in Delaware last month that they expect to fully repay
customers and creditors with legitimate claims in the FTX case that doesn't take into account
equity holder. So it looks like that one investment
could save a lot of people their deposits.
I saw an analysis recently that showed
that they were gonna be in a surplus.
So investors were gonna get money back
and all the depositors were gonna get their full 100% back.
Yeah, I don't know how much Bitcoin
or other coins they owned,
but if they didn't sell that Bitcoin at 30 or 40 and it's at 60 or 70 now,
yeah, that would be material, right? The crazy thing is that SPF was not,
it turns out, a terrible investor. He made a seed investment in athropic that's worth billions now.
He made a seed investment in Solana that I think is worth billions now, especially now that Solana
has recovered. I think that Solana was hard with the brush
of being a Sam coin because SPF invested in it. But as it turns out, as far as we know,
it's a completely legitimate developer project. Sam was an investor but not a participant.
And you look at the price of it, it's now rallied to something like an $80 billion market cap.
The point being that a lot of the investments you made ended up being pretty good investments.
FTX itself, the trading platform, as far as we know, was a functional, workable business.
It was an offshore crypto marketplace, so I don't want to necessarily use the word legitimate,
but I think that it was, I think, as good as any of these trading platforms.
The crazy part of this is I'd say, unlike the Madoff case, where from the beginning
with Madoff, it was entirely a Ponzi scheme.
There was nothing of value there.
In this case, you had a, call it legitimate or semi-legitimate crypto platform combined
with some legitimate angel investments. And so what I think went wrong here was Alameda
that Sam decided to siphon off customer deposits
to gamble with his hedge fund,
which was completely optional.
He didn't need to do that.
I mean, he already had a winning business
and winning bets in his portfolio.
So this whole Alameda thing he didn't need to get into.
And then of course, siphoning off customer deposits to spray around for political donations to feel
like you're a big shot was also really stupid. So this is the crazy thing.
I think about SBF is it was sort of like this, this manic,
there was like a manic element to it. There was a messianic element to it.
He wanted to take shortcuts.
He wanted to believe he was going to save the world and then did
all these criminal things in pursuit of that, that he didn't
really need to in order to be successful. And that's why I
think it's such a curious case is it's not, it wasn't full
made off in a way because there were some legitimate elements
to, to his portfolio.
You're right about the messianic thing. These guys were all drunk on this effective altruism concept that I think whatever crimes
they committed by stealing the deposits and then going and investing them, they saw themselves
as Robin Hood.
We're going to take these deposits, we're going to make a ton of money, and then we're
going to give it all away.
Of course, they didn't have a CFO.
Nobody did diligence on these investments.
There were no controls in place. And he was literally stealing his customers money to gamble. I sure said. And I think, I think actually one,
one quote that I saw reported from the judge was that if you
steal customers money, go to Vegas, gamble it,
yes, you're still guilty.
Even if you can pay them back with the winnings.
Yeah.
But that suggests to me that actually the,
the FTX trustee is on a basis of the trustee is on a basis of Yes. You're still guilty even if you can pay them back with the winnings. Yeah.
But that suggests to me that actually the FTX trustee is on a path to repaying the 11
billion of customer deposits that we're absconded with.
I just found it.
I don't know if that's true or not.
It is true.
In early February, the trustee said they now expect 100% payment back to the depositors
in all the accounts and
all the excess will go to the shareholders in FTX, all the preferred holders that invested
in the stock.
I don't know what the total press stack was in FTX, but it sounds like there's going to
be recovery there as well after all of the customer deposits are made whole.
Wow.
So this is my point is he didn't need to do this.
I mean, it was so insane.
I mean, FTX, like I said, was a workable business.
He made workable seed bets,
but then he went crazy with Alameda and the Robinhood stuff.
And so it's just such an interesting case.
By the way, Sax, Alameda is what he started with.
So he started a firm that was meant
to arbitrage crypto markets
because there's all these different markets
that didn't
connect around the world.
So the original concept was that he would set up a hedge fund
like a Jane Street to arbitrage.
And so he would arbitrage crypto pairs using different
exchanges around the world.
He set up all these different accounts and he would trade
long one way, short the other way and make a spread.
And then he made so much money on the hedge fund
and he said, why don't we just do this all centrally?
And that's how he started setting up FTX,
was his own cryptocurrency exchange.
So like the legacy was that Alameda was there
from the beginning and the arbitrage across these illiquid,
no transparency type markets was really
the core driving principle when he started all this work.
The crypto exchange came later.
And so it was like, he always had this orientation
that he was trying to arb everything.
And I think I told you guys this,
when I saw that video on YouTube right after he got arrested
and then they took it down off of YouTube,
it was like an hour long video showing him trading
and doing his day job in the office.
It reminded me of like a mouse in a maze,
like chronic, like everything was like,
he was finding
little arms he could make everywhere nonstop.
They weren't great.
They lost a ton of money and then they lost money.
Yeah.
And then he puts this dingbat in charge of Alameda who proceeds to lose billions of dollars.
I mean the whole thing was so stupid.
I mean it's going to be such a great movie.
I can't wait for the movie. I think one of the craziest parts of this is he had co-founders in FTX who weren't
part of Alameda and they just let him do this.
Why would they do that?
I mean, their own stakes in FTX minus Alameda could have been worth many millions of dollars,
hundreds of millions of dollars, maybe billions of dollars.
I mean, the truth is in business, you can do all kinds
of criminal and crazy things until you get caught. And these
folks were doing insane, crazy things that the system is based
on trust. And people can break that trust. We saw it remember
with what was a full tail poker, they were also taking the
customer accounts and gambling those dollars. They literally mix the operations budget and the
customer deposits at Fulltile poker.
I think part of the part of the rationale, if I remember right,
I read the Michael Lewis book on this. And part of the rationale
SPF gave to Michael Lewis was that Alameda was supposed to be
a market maker liquidity provider to the exchange.
So they were playing an active role on the exchange of making trades
available to create the market.
And that was a key aspect of getting the market moving was that they had this
well-capitalized market maker and they knew how to actively trade on a platform.
And they just built their own platform.
And then they were able to attract with more liquidity,
more participants onto their exchange.
And that was the aspect of the business model.
Yeah, but that could have kickstarted it,
but like, you know, five minutes into it,
you could probably turn that off.
I mean, you know what I'm saying?
Like, they didn't need to do that
once you get to a certain point.
Also, these people were all on speed.
So there's that.
It contributed to the mania. Yeah, I think like they were hopped all on speed. So there's that. Pete Slauson They contributed to the mania. Jared Slauson Yeah, I think like, they were hopped up on speed and they felt that they
were gods and that, you know, stocks go up, coins go up, they can do anything they want,
they can hang out with celebrities. They just got diluted and they were super entitled. I mean,
this is a level of entitlement and criminal behavior that we rarely see.
Doesn't matter if their tokens went up.
When I had my one and only interaction with SPF, which was
over zoom, I asked for a model. And this arrogant ding dong that
worked for him sent me like a five line
Excel spreadsheet. And I thought, and I thought this is
the worst example of arrogance and hubris I've ever seen.
I had one interaction with SPF. Oh, do you want to hear it? Yeah,
I got a little bit of a tiff with him.
So it was at a tech conference.
This is a few years ago.
This is when he was absolutely at his peak.
Everybody wanted to talk to him.
He was sort of holding court.
He had a bunch of lackeys around him.
And this is a pretty exclusive tech conference.
I'm not going to tar their name by mentioning them in this context.
So a friend of mine said, you want to go over and meet with SBF?
And so I said, sure, whatever.
So we go sit down and I start asking him about this ballot initiative that he was funding
in California to raise our taxes to fund a pandemic prevention center.
And as it later turned out that his brother was going to run this thing. And so I said to him, you don't even live in California.
What are you doing funding a ballot initiative here in my state where I live?
You live in the Bahamas or whatever in order to fund this boondoggle, which, by the way, is looking in the rearview mirror.
We don't need it like COVID is over.
And even if we did need a pandemic prevention center, the federal government should do it,
not California taxpayers.
And he starts getting very animated defenses thing.
We end up, we sort of get into an argument.
And so I kind of, you know, ended it by saying,
well, listen, I'm gonna just let you know,
like I'm gonna publicly oppose this, you know, vigorously.
And cause I, you know, I just wanted to let him know,
like I'm gonna call you out for this. Standing up for the little guy, David Sacks.
David Sacks, come in.
Stand up for his state.
So when I got back from that conference, I actually talked
about it on this pod.
I talked about that ballot initiative in California.
I remember.
And that was the origin story.
They capitulated, right?
That's right.
Yeah.
Like a month later, they dropped that thing because it was too
much heat, but little did we know that they
were in mesh and all this criminality and they were
absconding with all this money.
What is Sam Bankman Fried's brother's name? Bam Bankman
Fried?
Was it like Gabe or something?
Gabe. Nice.
I have one interaction with him at some at a annual general
meeting. I got asked to interview him.
And it was like a private affair a couple of months before this
all blew up. And he's dressed like a slob. You know, like
literally doesn't look like he showered clothes don't fit.
He's wearing flip flops and shorts is kind of like the
schnick. And he's a billionaire, blah, blah, blah. And I start
talking to him and his leg is shaking. Like, restless leg syndrome. I
mean, it but no, it's he's got his hand on it. He's trying to
control it. He have restless leg syndrome. It's bouncing. I kid
you not like 100 times a minute. It was disturbing. And so I'm
wondering if this guy's got a panic attack or what's going on.
And I kind of like tone down my crypto skepticism questions
because I felt so bad for him that otherwise having a panic
attack. And then I realized this guy's hopped up on speed. And
he's got so much of Adderall, whatever these these kids were
taking some patches that you wear to release this stuff. I am
convinced that these guys were taking a level of speed.
Unbelievable. That would kill an elephant like Vietnam War level. Yeah, like these guys were
out there. I mean, he would, I mean, patches, these guys were wearing patches. And he was shaking.
Was it like this? No. Oh, did Hitler have he was apparently also on speed. That looks like he's on amphetamines
there. Yeah, it did look like it was kind of almost exactly like that. Oh my God. Where's
that for people who don't know the Third Reich was on speed. There's like many, many stories about this.
Yes, X, that they were hopped up on speed.
I believe so.
I'm not sure.
Yeah.
I believe so.
I think entire books have been written about drug use
by the Third Reich, but I haven't delved into it.
Yeah, no, no.
I've listened to a couple of podcasts about it, in fact.
And so it must be true.
Um, I've listening to some podcasts.
All right, moving on in the-
If it was on MSNBC, it must be true.
Or Fox, or Fox, or if it was Beep the Great,
your anonymous friend on Twitter, it must be true.
All right, Trump just made $5 billion on paper
with his meme SPAC. Trump's network has finally de spacked it's now
publicly traded you can go by Donald Trump's back at DJT is
the ticker symbol. They are on pace for a whopping $4.5 million
in revenue on a $60 million lost. They're growing like three
acts year over year. And the company is not disclosing any user metrics. This quote from
one of their recent filings is next. At this juncture in its
development TMTG, the Trump Media and Technology Group
believes that adhering to traditional KPIs, such as sign
ups, average revenue per user ad impressions and pricing or active user accounts, including monthly and
daily active users could potentially divert its focus from
strategic evaluation with respect to the progress and
growth of its business. So they're not tracking
isn't that the business?
It's so laughable, like, you can barely get through it.
That's crazy. They said that. Literally, they said it. It's a quoteable, like, I could barely get through it. That's crazy. They said that?
Literally, they said it.
It's a quote from their SEC filing.
According to similar web estimates, Trit Social had about 5 million visits last month.
As of Thursday morning, it's worth about 8.5 billion.
Same as Reddit or close to 2000 times top line revenue.
Company had about $300 million million cash after the merger.
By comparison, Reddit has 800 million in revenue. Their market cap is 8.4 billion, about 10
times revenue. So it should be about five, six, seven times revenue would be more realistic,
according to basic media comps. Reddit had 2 billion visits last month with 73 million
daily active users. That's pretty
significant. This SPAC took a long time to close. There was an SEC investigation into three men,
allegedly making 23 million buying then dumping shares of DWAC after the merger was announced.
They all face at least five fraud and conspiracy charges. Of course, this is what happened before it was de-spacked.
And so what do you think, Chamath?
Thoughts on this meme-spack or stock?
I just think we should be really clear
because you're just floating this insider trading thing
out there as part of the introduction,
which is a huge allegation.
And we have to be really clear that is related to
a few investors and not to the company itself. And there's the
company's SPAC was approved by the SEC. So I just think it'd be
clear.
Here's the SEC chart. Yeah, just to be super clear. SEC
charges former DWAC board member and others for insider trading.
DWAC.
I just don't think this is the story.
This is just not the story.
Well, no, this is the reason it was delayed.
So just to be clear, it was the whole,
this whole thing's been delayed for a couple of years
because of this. Okay, fine.
So it was delayed, the SEC approved it.
The company is now trading.
Yeah. What do you think of the valuation?
And that's the real topic, isn't it?
Here's what I'll say.
I think that this is a really important
watershed moment. And it reminds me of 1997. Nick, throw this little image up. In 1997, David Bowie
issued what was then famously called the Bowie Bond. It was $55 million that yielded 7.5%,
which is about 80 bips above the 10 year at the
time. These were 10 year bonds. That's awesome. I didn't know that. The bond payments were linked
to 20 albums that Bowie had released before 1990. And so these are like 280 songs.
And what he basically said was like, listen, folks, you're essentially buying a piece of me.
said was like, Listen, folks, you're essentially buying a piece of me, and in this case, my past work, and I'm going to
take this $55 million upfront, and you're going to get paid
this interest based on the royalties that I generate off
that historic library for a 10 year period, we think you're
going to get paid the 55 million plus a seven and a half percent
a year, and then I'm going to take back the rights and if I
default, if these bonds default,
you will own the songs.
And it turned out that it was an incredible bet.
The people that bought it, I think it was Prudential,
which was an insurance, I think it's an insurance company,
they got paid, the bonds did not default.
In 2007, Bowie took back the ownership of that catalog,
of that back catalog, but instead what he had was 55 million upfront, which allowed him to go and buy all kinds of other parts of his catalog that he didn't otherwise own. So why is this interesting? This was the first example, I think of people monetizing themselves, their name and their likeness. In this case, it was done via debt. I actually think when you look today, what's happening is a more sophisticated version of
that movement, but at much larger scale. I mean, we were
all joking that there was a bunch of meme coins that
launched, not with any of our support, by the way, but you
know, with our names with all these other quasi famous
people's names, those things went up and were worth
millions of dollars of value.
And I think what this Donald J. Trump, the DJT company, what it represents is effectively a trading coin,
a baseball card, if you will, a trading card via a stock on the value of Donald Trump's enterprise value, his name, his recognition and his likeness.
So this I think is the modern instantiation of the Bowie bond. And what's incredible is you can see
Bowie 30 or 40 years ago, he could have generated $55 million in inflation adjusted dollars. That's
about 100 million in today's dollars. Trump three and a half, four billion. I think it sits on top of this idea
that these very famous people,
the Kim Kardashians of the world,
the Donald Trumps of the world,
the Mr. Beasts of the world,
can eventually take companies public.
And when you take a company public,
you have to remember, Jason,
there's the revenue and the profits, right?
But if you look at the balance sheet of a company,
there is always a line item called goodwill. And goodwill is what people use to separate
the assets and the liabilities and whatever's left over to generate the shareholder equity.
So in this case, Donald Trump, the DJT company's balance sheet will show a ginormous entry in
goodwill. And that is the value of his name.
Coca-Cola has such a Goodwill line item,
PepsiCo does, Gatorade does, Nike does,
and this company does.
And I think there's gonna be a lot of other companies
that will go public that effectively generate
a huge Goodwill line item that represents
the name brand value of the person associated with it.
So you're a buyer? I'm not saying that, I'm just saying that there is a lot of people that will be buyers
that essentially will buy this as a Donald Trump a directional bet on the value of his brand.
And I'm also predicting that many other individuals
will go public and have enterprise values that are levered in the same way as DJT.
And that is a modern version of the boy bond from 97.
Freberg, your thoughts on the Trimont's argument that this is a proxy for the value of Donald
J. Trump's brand?
I think that's certainly one reason why people are buying the stock and driving the price
up.
And another one is probably a vote against traditional media, that there is a contingent
of folks who are basically voting with their dollars and saying, we want an alternative
to traditional media and traditional publishing platforms that have censorship that we don't
agree with or have editorialization that we don't agree with, or have editorialization that we don't agree with.
And that this investment, I think, represents a way for them to vote and say, I don't want
the old way, I want a new way.
And while this may or may not be the new way that succeeds, it may or may not be a great
business and it may or may not even have much viewership or usefulness, it's a mechanism
by which people can put some money down and say, I'm voting on an alternative. I want to see an alternative. So I do think that there's a flash
point indication that arises from this, that's more than just the memeing aspect of it, which
is certainly fun. Everyone crowds into a stock, stock price goes up. It's kind of like to the
moon and so on. I think there's also this element of demand for alternative media. There's demand for a different type of publishing platform.
And so I think that that's what this most represents to me from what the market is telling
us perspective.
I think there's one other thing going on here, which is that this represents a populist reaction
to the lawfare against Donald Trump.
That I think Trump supporters want to support him
against all of these lawsuits and this persecution
that he's been facing.
And I think one proof of this is if you turn the dial
over to MSNBC, they've been losing their minds
all week over this because they thought they had finally gotten the man.
There was this $450 million judgment in New York
that he was fined for supposedly inflating the value
of assets against which he got loans,
even though the bank did its own independent appraisal
of the properties, and even though the banks
fully got paid back and said they wanted
to keep doing business with him.
They thought they had finally gotten DJT and he was going to have to pay hundreds of millions
of dollars in fines and then lo and behold, the SPAC comes along and he makes millions
and millions of dollars.
Now, that's not locked in yet.
We're still in this lockup period where for six months, there's a very small float and
it's probably the case that once there's more shares
on a liquid market, we'll find out what the real valuation is.
So let's call the valuation we're seeing today,
based on a very small float,
let's call this more of a preliminary number,
and Trump can't sell yet.
But presumably after six months, when the lockout comes off,
he'll be able to sell.
So look, I think fundamentally what's going on here is this is political.
Trump's enemies are angry about this SPAC because they see that it gives them a lifeline.
And I think Trump supporters are deliberately buying the stock to support their guy.
And to say that this lawfare against Trump that basically seeks to imprison the man or
bankrupt the man, instead of simply run against him, is a new low in
American political discourse. And I think there's millions of people who agree with that. And some
of them are willing to buy this stock as a protest vote. I agree 100% with the protest vote. It's,
you know, he had what 60, 70 million people vote for him. He got 74%, 74 million rather, 46.8%
vote for him. He got 74% 74 million rather 46.8% to Biden's 81 million if but 2% of those people want to buy the stock,
it's a million and a half people. And that's exactly what's
happening here. They don't care if they lose the money actual
value of this company with 5 million in revenue 4 million
yearly revenue. I mean, if you really want it to be absolutely
insane and give it a 100 X
valuation, it's worth 400 million.
And so then if whatever goodwill Donald Trump's likenesses, maybe that's
another 500 million, but you'll lose a large amount of money, I predict if you
buy this and if you're buying it as a protest vote, sure, go for it.
Why don't you, uh, J Cal, why don't you short it as a J trade?
I never shorted a stock. And I, I, I think. Remember you know, you get these Trump voters and it starts going up because of the small float, which is what's happening now.
They might send this thing to $80 billion.
And I think that's the only way to get the money.
And I think that's the only way to get the money.
And I think that's the only way to get the money.
And I think that's the only way to get the money.
And I think that's the only way to get the money.
And I think that's the only way to get the money.
And I think that's the only way to get the money.
And I think that's the only way to get the money.
And I think that's the only way to get the money. And I think that's the. I've never shorted. I think that you know, you get these Trump voters and it starts going up because of the
small float, which is what's happening now. They might send
this thing to $80 billion, you know, who knows what is possible
with the short float and a mode motivated, you know, million,
2 million people,
you guys are bringing up something else as well, which is
we've shifted from fundamental based stock trading being the overwhelming driver to there's a lot of
very speculative day over day activity that you can't control anymore. And I think it's part and
parcel of what's happening in other markets in America as well. So when you look at what
happened in 2016, where the Supreme Court said each state can regulate sports gambling,
the Supreme Court said each state can regulate sports gambling.
All forms of like online gamesmanship and betting just started to skyrocket.
It could be casinos, lotteries, sports betting. It didn't matter, but everything just caught a massive ginormous bid.
And when you look at the products that service the retail market, they've
also become increasingly gamified.
Robinhood is probably the best
example of having built an incredibly good business by making things more like a game.
Then recently adding fuel to the fire are things like zero-day options, which are just like,
and there was a big article in the Wall Street Journal where one of the reporters,
she became addicted to it. The Wall Street Journal gave her, I want to say like,
a few thousand bucks, but she had to disgorge the profits. And she got like a 2000% return or
something, specking zero day options via Robinhood. So the point is that on top of the whole
movement to sort of allow individuals to monetize their own name
and likeness via the stock market, which we just talked about, the second movement is
that a lot of these things are becoming less financialized and more gamified.
And so you just have many more participants.
And so to your point, you can have a GameStop moment in any of these things.
You can have these zero-day options run the stock to the moon.
I would be, I would tread very lightly. Yeah. And just another warning, you know,
the stock market bases things ultimately on like earnings and profits. And so when we look at this as a proxy and Mr. Beast would the same issue, or Martha Stewart, you have a key man, key individual
risk here, IE this person goes to jail, they die, whatever,
which Martha Stewart always had in her businesses. And then what
is included in this is key. So when if he does another TV show,
and it becomes a hit again, is that included in this? No. If he
has another building or his buildings included in this? No, the golf course is included is no what's included in this included in this deal when you buy DJT is apparently just a really crazy, you know, social network that nobody uses. So just be clear what you're buying. No, you're right. The more sophisticated version of this trading card analogy would be if
Donald Trump contributed his brand licensing revenue in perpetuity to the asset. And then
it really is a longitudinal forward bet on the Trump name. And that's sort of more like if
the Trump name. And that's sort of more like if Virgin, like if Richard Branson took the Virgin Holdco public, that's effectively what that is as well. Like, you know, Branson over 40 or 50 years
has built an incredible business. I think the stat that I heard when I got to know him was he's
created 20 businesses worth at least a billion dollars or more over his lifetime.
With the Virgin brand.
With the Virgin brand. And the Virgin brand is a licensing model where he holds that right and
he will license it to you for a share of the revenue. That's independent of anything else
that he may do with these businesses. And so if he took that Virgin hold co-public,
then what you're buying is a longitudinal discount of cash flow on the value of Virgin. And to your point, if Trump contributed that name and likeness licensing capability into this,
by the way, he could also still do that. So to the extent that this business saw a contraction,
and maybe the truth social thing didn't end up being that valuable. But the other aspects of
the media business he could create by basically saying, Okay, look, this will get a share of my licensing revenue for my name, would
effectively be a proxy to do that. So he's got a lot of outs here to maintain this market value.
And then on top of that, to your point, there's 70 million odd people who would want to support
him in one way, shape or form, I would not go anywhere near shorting it given his, uh, his fan base is incredibly likely to keep buying these shares.
And if you want to know the actual value of this business today, I'm an expert at this.
It's a hundred million dollars.
It's $200 million.
It's not anywhere close to this.
Put your money where your mouth is.
We just, no, no, we just explained when you have a small float like this and a rabid group of people who are gambling, you will get your
face ripped off.
You'll get absolutely stupid.
What's that?
You'll get plunked.
Yeah.
I mean, it's, it's disastrous.
I mean, they, what did they say?
We can be stupid longer.
It can be retarded longer than you can be solvent.
The red is such a great line.
I mean, but you can gamble like this on stocks, yet you cannot invest in private companies.
I don't get the legal system in America.
Be careful out there, folks.
You will lose a large portion of money, is my prediction, if you buy this stock.
But feel free if you want to gamble.
Look, I think this is all part of the ongoing backlash to lawfare.
Yeah.
Joe Biden instructed his Justice Department to prosecute Trump.
In my view, it's utterly impressive in American history for one president to try and prosecute,
imprison and bankrupt his main opponent in the political election.
And there are millions of Americans who are absolutely disgusted by this.
I think it's a new low in American politics,
and God bless all the people buying these shares
to support Trump.
Just as a protest vote,
I don't know whether they're gonna make money or lose money.
Like I said, I don't think you can justify the valuation
based on fundamentals,
but you can sure as hell justify it based on payback.
Yeah, I mean, if you wanna give your money to a billionaire,
buy the stock, absolutely.
Go for it. I think probably, I mean, if you want to give your money to a billionaire, buy the stock. Absolutely. Go free. I think probably I agree with you, like maybe two of the six lawsuits are a bit weak. I think
the three or four other ones, you know, he committed the crimes
and he's just paying the price. But you know, we can agree to
disagree on this pod. Tell us people do. Speaking of
intelligent people, RFK Jr. just picked up his running heat. This
is a little bit crazy. And I'm really interested in hearing your
thoughts on it. He chose a 38 year old Bay Area lawyer, Nicole
Shanahan as his VP RFK explained why he chose her. She
knows big tech very well, how they use AI to exploit the
public how they censor and surveil Americans push certain
agendas. She understands the health consequences
of toxins in our air, soil and food. And he wanted a younger person to represent millennials and Gen Z.
He says younger generations feel like nobody represents them in Washington.
He also wanted an athlete in good shape to inspire Americans to live healthier lives.
And Shanahan donated four million in support of RFK Junior's Super Bowl ad
that ran earlier this year. Sax, what do you think of this pick?
Well, this pick does not excite me. I'll be frank. But since I'm going to say something critical,
I want to start by saying something positive
because I really, you know, I love Bobby Kennedy.
I mean, I think that he represents a number of really great issues that I agree with.
I mean, first of all, he's been the most articulate critic of the Ukraine war, understands it
deeply and has explained it extremely well.
He stood up for sealing the border.
He went down there, showed that it's out of control, completely agree. He was a vocal critic of Fauci and lockdowns, was completely
right about COVID. He supports civil liberties and free speech. So, you know, I want to say
like, Bobby Kennedy is great. The issue I have with this pick is that she doesn't represent
any of those issues. She has a completely different issue matrix.
I watched her speech.
Just to say something positive about her, I like her enthusiasm.
I think she's 38 and it's nice to have someone running for political office who's not in
their 70s or 80s.
I think she's genuine.
I actually think she's saying what she really believes and that's really nice and refreshing.
But again, if you go back to the issues themselves, she brought up three issues.
Number one is she says she wants to make Americans healthy again. It's the focus on chronic disease.
I'm not saying she's wrong about that. That's not my issue.
Number two, she brought up criminal justice reform.
This one concerns me. Apparently she donated to Gascon, who's a Soros DA who helped destroy San Francisco
and then failed upward to LA.
So apparently she's a Gascon supporter that does not fill me with confidence.
That is a quite frankly luxury liberal belief in this decarceration idea.
So I'm not excited about that. Her third issue was climate and environment related,
but in a very specific way, she went after big agriculture.
She said, we can no longer support
extractive corporate agriculture.
I'm gonna let Freeberg speak to that one.
I can't really say whether she's right or wrong,
but that's not one of my issues.
So listen, at the end of the day,
I feel like this pick accentuates and underlines
the issues in Bobby's platform
that appeal to the left, frankly, to liberals.
And look, I think Bobby's candidacy
is a complex candidacy that brings together
people from both left and right.
But again, this pick does not speak to me. It speaks to the more liberal parts of his
coalition.
Does it increase his chances? And who would have been the
person who would have increased his chances most?
Tells the person who would have been amazing would have been
Tulsi Gabbard. Okay, if he had chosen Tulsi, that would have blown the doors off.
Slam dunk.
Yeah, I mean, and Tulsi has been saying Chamath publicly
that she would be proud to serve with Trump
and it's seeming likely that she's got a shot at that, yeah?
Being the VP for Trump.
I'm not gonna comment on that.
Okay.
Let me just say something else.
I think Tulsi Gabbard is really
impressive. I think she's independent and I think she really stands firmly on her own two feet
in a way that I find inspiring. I, like Sax, have many, many positive thoughts about Bobby Kennedy. I think he was really a breath of fresh air, Jason,
in this election cycle because he was able to say the unsayable things and made those things more
easy to be said by others. And I think that there's a really important role in that. And I think he
deserves a lot of credit for that. And then the fact that he said things that were so unconventional and not
mainstream that are now mainstream views, I think says a lot to the fact that he was pretty grounded
in first principles thinking on those topics. And I think that having those kinds of people in office
are really good for America. All of that said, I do agree with David that I think the pick was meant
to be more about covering his left flank. And I found that an odd calculation. And I wonder whether
it wouldn't have been easier to cover the right flank.
And there are different folks that could have been in the mix to do that.
And so I think that it was a calculation though.
And I think it's about, he has a core set of issues.
It's about whether he appeals more to this side or to this side in order to get the totality
of the votes that he think is possible.
Second, he was under a little bit of a time constraint because some of these states need
the VP candidate named and he's under a shot clock that the other two are not.
So I mean, I wish Bobby the best because I think some combination of Bobby doing well
and some upheaval between the Democrats and the Republicans is really the only chance we have of
having a credible third party. Well, let's see now what happens. By the way, we should just say,
like, you know, Joe Lieberman passed away, which is really unfortunate. You know, he was a really
independent thinker as well. Let's see what No Lab labels really does here. There's a little bit of chaos over at
no labels, I think. So there's a lot of moving parts. So it was clearly calculus. I don't totally
understand what that formula was though. Just to build on something Jamas said, there's a report
by Colin Rugg that the DNC realizes what Jamas said about this covering Bobby's left flank rather than his right flank.
And apparently they're in somewhat of a panic about this.
And I think what you're going to see is that lawyers from the DNC and the Biden campaign
are going to fight tooth and nail to keep this ticket off the ballot, at least in the
major contested states, like the five or six states where the presidency will be decided
in 2024. And of course, they'll be saying they're doing this to save democracy,
but you're going to see I think a full court press by DNC lawyers to keep the Kennedy
Shanahan ticket off the ballot.
Yeah, this seems really like it's going to damage Biden, which was my original prediction.
And that reason why a lot of the right wing were
supporting RFK was because they wanted, they saw this as a clear path to take away a couple
of points from Biden. And it seems like that's what's happening.
Yeah.
First part of what you said is a hundred percent right. I'm not sure that a bunch of Republicans
are going to get organized, J Cal to vote for RFK in that way.
Oh, no, I don't think they're going to do that. I think
they supported him publicly in order to build him up as a centrist candidate, knowing that it would
take away from Biden. So I just think on a strategic political basis, all these Republicans-
They didn't do that for Marianne Williamson. Why not? Because she didn't speak to them.
Yeah, no, she's not electable. Yeah, no, no, it's because she's not electable. I mean, she's like-
By the way-
... like, into crystals and not like a viable candidate. It's's because she's not electable. I mean, she's like, not like a viable candidate.
It's pretty clear she's not.
Why can't you just accept that people on the right
like the issues that Bobby spoke to?
Isn't that the simple explanation for-
Yeah, no, I don't think that they're partisans
and they just want to win.
So I don't think it has anything to do
with what you were saying, which would be like
authentically liking and connecting with what he's saying.
I don't think it was that.
I think it's a strategic plan to try to pull Biden votes. And I think Republicans are smart for doing that.
You think Bobby's a plant? You think he's a plant?
I think their support for him is for nefarious reasons. They're supporting him to take votes
away from Biden. And here it is. We're all agreeing that this is going to take votes
away from Biden. So I think it's a very clever strategy on the GOP's part.
Hold on. Just to add one point to that. Remember that when Bobby entered the race,
he did so as a Democrat.
He did so challenging Joe Biden
for the nomination of the Democratic Party.
How did the Democratic Party react?
They kept him off the ballot.
They wouldn't give him a fair shot.
That's why he went independent.
So he did not have to be this sort of,
well, you're kind of implying
like a flying the ointment type third party candidate.
He tried to be the Democratic candidate. Yeah, they wouldn't let him
compete. If they let him compete in a fair way. Maybe he would have stayed a
Democrat.
I would have loved to have a massive competitive field of Democrats. I think
the Democrats are screwing this up big time. I think this could be the most
this could I think they could peel off a couple of percentage points. Yeah, in
those more. I think you're right. I think it's more than that. So I mean, I think it's more than that. So we all agree
that's what's happening here. Then we're just disagreeing. No, I think this is I think it's
taking points away. Yeah, I think we agree about that. But what I'm saying is that this is where
we've ended up. I don't think it was constructed to be this way. Ah, interesting. Freeberg, your thoughts on this candidate
specifically around her love of organic food
and wanting to take on the pesticides, toxic food,
you know, and the industrial food complex.
I remain steadfast in my commitment
to there being only one major issue facing this country,
and that is the federal debt and the deficit. We are increasing the federal debt by a trillion dollars every
hundred days. That number is not slowing down. The current budget proposal from the Biden
administration calls for over seven point two trillion dollars to be spent next year.
That makes the U.S. federal government roughly one third of our country's GDP.
The outrageousness of the condition that the US is in right now makes it so insane to me
that we are talking about any other topic like big agriculture or whatever other nonsense
was being spattered about as important topics to this particular person.
If every voting citizen of the United States
does not recognize the severity of the deficit
and debt problem that the federal government faces,
you are wasting your vote.
And no candidate is speaking to what is clearly
the biggest issue of our time,
and we need to address this issue headlong.
So I don't care about this person or anyone else
who's running for office that is talking about stuff that we
cannot actually address and problems we cannot actually
solve. If we don't get our fiscal affairs in order. That's
my point of view.
Got it. And respect for that. Can anybody win the presidency on
a, hey, we're going to balance the budget, we're going to cut
spending platform? Nope. So they can't win.
And it's an existential issue.
That's why I look, I mean, I'll keep shouting into the abyss.
Hope a few people hear it.
And that at some point it becomes a topic that folks do begin to focus on.
I think that the net necessity of raising tax rates, the necessity ultimately of cutting entitlement
programs, the necessary inflation that will arise because of the condition of the federal
government's debt level, because we're going to have to keep printing money. These are the sorts
of things that are like a boiling pot that one day folks will wake up and say, well, what the heck
happened? Everything got mismanaged. and it's not a Democrat problem.
It's not a Republican problem.
It's a it's a fundamental problem of people voting themselves all the money
and people getting voted into office by saying, I'm going to do more than it's
being done today, and that costs money and no one actually addresses
the rampant misuse of funds, the lack of accountability in spending,
and the fact that we have an incredible amount
of negative ROI spending,
and the fact that we've effectively created an economy
that's fundamentally dependent on federal spending.
And I'll go through some statistics
when we talk about Biden's budget later in the show,
but I think that the significance is just overlooked
by all of these candidates,
and we're not really talking about the thing that matters.
All right, so let's break down
Biden's proposed budget of 2025.
Proposed budget was 7.3 trillion for fiscal 2025.
That starts in October of 2024.
It's up 18% from 2023.
Projected deficit, 1.78 trillion,
which is similar to the deficits we ran in 23 and 24.
The budget projects an average deficit of 1.6 trillion per year over the next decade.
National debt, as Freiburg was alluding to, is insane. It's at 34.5 trillion.
But we made some charts here to go through all of this. Let's pull up the first chart. And this is comparing Biden's proposed budget in 2025, with budgets
from 2005 and 2015. defense spending has actually grown
pretty modestly during that time, but entitlements, interest
payments and non defense spending have jumped
significantly us will owe 965 billion in interest on its debt
next year. That's 65 billion more than the pros defensed budget.
And in 2026, the US will surpass one trillion on interest owed on its debt.
And we'll talk about that more in a minute.
But let's start here with this first chart.
Anything jump out to you, Chamath, here that's notable and worth discussing.
All the areas that we need to cut, we can't even have a conversation about, so they'll
never get cut and they'll keep growing. So I think that we probably need to figure out what the
alternatives are. So if you can't have a conversation about expenses, the only logical place is to have a conversation about revenues. And what that means
for the government is in taxation. And so I don't know, Jason, what we do here. There could be a
couple of saving graces. So there are some things happening, for example, on the Medicare side that
could be profoundly disruptive.
They are, now, again, I'm just gonna put this out there
as it's happening, I don't know if it's good or bad,
but they are looking at reimbursing things like Wigovia
and Ozempic and whatnot.
If you look at the underlying costs
of those kinds of chronic diseases,
diabetes, heart disease, et cetera,
and you put a large swath of the American population on those drugs, the reimbursement value of those drugs versus the cost of actually the
chronic care management would save you many hundreds of billions of dollars a year. So
that's something. Second is on the defense side, there's a large portion of that budget that's
migrating away from traditional tactical warfare
to things that are unmanned vehicles and cyber and whatnot that could save two or three hundred
billion dollars there. So there are places where you could save 500 billion to a trillion dollars,
but I think it's going to be a almost impossible conversation and it'll happen by accident.
So then the only forced conversation that I think we
are going to have as a society is around taxation. And that's
really bad for, you know, a lot of people that don't believe
that's the path to generating growth.
One of the challenges is that there are, and we should
reference these in the show notes, Nick, but there are well
researched economic studies that show that when a government
tries to increase the taxation level north of 20% of GDP of that economy, that you actually
see GDP growth go negative.
There's a certain natural equilibrium on which you can tax the system.
Beyond that level, investment dollars go down and growth begins to shrink.
And that's what triggers the spiraling problem.
Cause then the government spending needs to go up
to continue to grow and support growth in the economy.
And it creates this inevitable spiraling.
Would you call this the Atlas Shrug?
The Atlas Shrug effect is investment goes down.
There's a Fred chart showing percent of GDP
that's federal tax receipts, and then percent of GDP that's federal tax receipts,
and then percent of GDP that's spending.
And then the gap is your deficit, okay?
And Freeberg's right that I think
in the absolute best economy,
or best years of the best economy,
so it's like the best year of the Reagan boom,
and the best year of the Clinton boom,
when we had the government surplus,
I think the government was extracting just shy of 20% of GDP. In the 70s, when marginal tax rates
were at 70%, so before the Reagan tax cuts, we were actually extracting a lower percentage of GDP.
There's only so much blood you can get from a stone. If you raise tax rates on a marginal basis high enough, the economy performs worse and
you actually end up collecting less or people spend a lot more money on lawyers and accountants
to basically figure out more structuring schemes to avoid paying taxes.
So the years in which we've got the highest percentage of revenue out of the economy are in good economic years,
where we've had reasonable levels of taxation, as opposed to the highest levels of taxation.
The problem is with the spending. We used to be able to keep spending to somewhere between,
I'd say in the best years of the years of the Clinton surplus, I think spending as a percent of GDP was like 18.8%.
It's around 20% of GDP goes to federal spending.
That was normal.
But then the spending got out of control during COVID
and it went up to like 25, 30% of GDP
went to federal spending.
It's starting to come down,
but it's still way too big a number.
Anyway, my point is that a starting point
for dealing with next year's budget is free spending.
Just free spending.
You know, the 18% increase is not a good idea.
If we wanna get this problem under control,
freeze the spending, we can talk about taxation,
but you're only gonna get so much blood from a stone.
An increased spending is stimulatory, and so it works well in an election year.
I would say we took two major crises and we had crisis level spending and then we normalized
that spending and allowed it to carry forward.
Starting with the 08 financial crisis with our monetary policy and then being accelerated
with COVID and our fiscal policy.
I'll give you guys, I did some back of the envelope map.
I'm sure there are economists
who have done a better job of this than I.
There are directly 3 million Americans
that are directly employed by the federal government.
There's 167 million workers in the US.
So 3 million are directly employed
by the federal government.
If you take the rest of the federal spending
that flows into the economy,
it's about three and a half trillion a year, and assume 30% of that capital goes to equity
holders and businesses that own businesses that benefit from that spending and the rest
flows through to labor, that's about 13% of GDP flowing through to labor. And assuming
average annual income, that's another roughly 45, 50 million people that are directly benefiting,
that are directly earning income because of federal spending. There's, 50 million people that are directly benefiting, that are directly earning income
because of federal spending. There's another 50 million people in the U.S. that rely on
Social Security. And here's another important statistic. There's somewhere between 12 and
20 million people in the U.S. that pay more than 50% tax rate today. So those people are
effectively working for the federal government because half of their income goes back to the government.
So when you add this all up, there's over 100, 120 million people in the US that are
directly working for or getting paid by the federal government in the US.
That is such a significant percentage of our economy.
That is such a significant dependency on individual income on a federal government, I don't want to use the term socialism, but the ability for US labor to earn is so largely dependent
and largely driven by federal spending at this point, it becomes this critical linchpin to enabling
progression economically, to enabling the labor force to continue to participate,
that the federal government is now the primary customer or employer of most of the labor
force in the United States today.
That is a deeply and profoundly different circumstance than what I think the founding
fathers envisioned when the federal government was supposed to be this lightweight
overseeing organization of a federated republic of states.
And unfortunately, I think we find ourselves in a condition, as Jamal points out, that's
very hard to get out of.
This is going to require a dedicated multi-decade effort to create a slow unwinding from this
deep dependency that our labor force has on federal spending.
And I'm just like so shocked that this isn't the critical problem of our day that we're
not all spending time on.
Folks have pointed out that this only goes one way at this point.
Hey, Nick, can you bring up that first Fred chart?
This is federal receipts as percent of GDP, and it goes all the way back to World War
II.
To Freeberg's point, we've never gone above 20%.
Look at that.
And we've had tax rates as high as 90%.
I'm saying top marginal tax rates as high as 90%,
I think after World War II,
because we're trying to get out of the deficit
that was created by the war spending.
You can't get above 20.
Yeah, exactly.
The economy shrinks.
No, but hold on.
I gave you this OECD report.
It says that since 2000, we've been
in the mid 20s and the OECD average is 34 in terms of tax to GDP.
Tax to GDP. This includes state and local then, right?
Probably, yeah. Yeah, I just showed federal.
I think this probably includes state and local.
Yeah, and if-
Which, by the way, is a whole other Bollywood, because I didn't include those numbers in
my employment statistics.
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that about 20.2 million Americans are employed
by local and state governments, directly employed by local and state governments.
So again, when you add this all up, the majority of the US labor force is employed by the government
or is a beneficiary of the government as the primary customer or is supported by government
entitlement programs.
If you go back to that Fred chart for a second, I mean, if you basically acknowledge the point
that 20% is the ceiling on how much we can extract from an economy based on 80 years of data, okay, with all
sorts of different tax schemes, then I think what we should say is that federal spending
will be capped at 20% of GDP.
We should, you see what I'm saying?
Like if we can't go above 20% on receipts, cap federal spending at 20%.
That should be a constitutional amendment.
That's it. spending at 20%. That should be a constitutional amendment. Right. And then on the revenue side,
we should say what is the best tax code
to achieve that 18, 19, 20%.
Because what we do right now is we just say,
well, just tax the rich.
But what we've seen is we've been taxing the rich
as high as 90% in the past,
and you didn't get more revenue.
So we should be much more scientific about saying, well, given that our target is,
let's say 20%, what's the best way to do that? And no one
really has that conversation.
No, none of the conversations have to do with data, or
building a bulletproof system, the same thing we could say
about immigration, where we try to talk about the numbers here
of what's a reasonable number of people and tying that to an actual number. And it's pretty obvious we should have one
immigration policy when we have 5% unemployment and a different one if we had God forbid,
15 or 20% unemployment.
Can we just stay on budget for a second?
It could be tied to the unemployment rate.
The fundamental structural problem I'm highlighting is that we've created an economy
that is so deeply dependent on federal spending,
that the federal spending levels are what support
so many employed and so many companies in the US.
You're answering your own question.
That's why it can't stop.
Right.
I don't think the real economy that creates
all the innovation and all the value
and all the good paying jobs, I think that is separate from what the government does.
That's the true market-based deflationary economy. The problem is once we've layered in all of these
layers of dependency from federal dollars flowing into businesses or into people's pockets,
it's very difficult to back out of that. I don't call that dependency, I call that
special interests. I think there's a dependency. I call that special interests.
I think there's a lot of special interests
who are basically looting the federal government
and taking all this money,
and then they turn around and use some of it
to donate back to the politicians
and lobby for more spending.
So what you're calling dependency
is really more special interests,
meaning that I don't think we need
to have this level of spending
in order to have a successful economy.
I think it makes our economy less successful.
Yeah.
It's still stimulatory.
Cause, Sachs, remember Mitch McConnell,
when they were talking about supporting Ukraine,
his primary argument, as you remember,
was that all of these dollars are gonna go
into defense contractor's pockets,
which is gonna go to employees' pockets,
which is gonna stimulate our economy.
That's the fundamental thinking, kind of.
But that doesn't create value.
I know, but that's the thinking behind it, right?
I mean, that's the political system.
Okay, let me just walk through this real quick.
If the government prints a bunch of money and hands it to people with STEMI checks,
we all understand that creates no economic value, it just creates inflation.
Okay, now, if the government does the same thing, but instead of a STEMI check pays people
to dig holes and fill them back up, that's the exact same thing.
No economic value, just inflation.
Now let's say the government pays people to create bombs that create holes in other countries.
Exact same thing.
No economic value for the country, it just creates inflation here.
Why is that?
Because the only thing that creates economic value in the United States is the production of goods and services that people can actually consume and use and that they want.
And so federal spending on basically make work projects or things that people don't really want or they don't use or even worse, bombs that get dropped on poor people in other countries, none of that creates any value.
But I don't think it's a real economic dependency.
I think it is just a special interest that keeps lobbying for all this stuff.
But, Zeiss, what about housing and healthcare and education?
Because those are the three biggest line items, and it's been inflationary across all three
of those line items in the US economy.
The federal government has stepped in to provide broader access to housing, broader access
to healthcare, and broader access to education. And in the process,
that's why the price goes up. Yeah. You know,
there's that famous chart showing inflation by category and all the categories
where the federal government provides subsidies, the prices have gone up.
And education, healthcare, and housing.
And the more the government tries to subsidize it,
the more the providers realize we can charge whatever we want because the government's paying.
Correct, there's one customer and they'll always pay.
There's one customer.
Yeah, so that's got to be completely reformed.
Yeah, here's a chart of all employees in government.
And I think this Fred chart includes all employees in government, which would include state and
local.
And as you can see, we're-
Yeah, that's right.
It's 20 million local and state 3 million federal.
And then the math I was highlighting was just my back of the envelope math, where
there's 50 million people that are on Social Security in the U.S.
Plus, if you do the math on how government spending flows into employers
and into employees pockets, it's about another 45 50 million people that benefit from federal
spending in the US. We're already kind of at a point of maximal dependency, if you will.
Yeah, I mean, if you look at this chart, we have had 20,000 people working in government
since the late 90s. Yeah, 20 million since the late 90s. It's it's now hitting a peak.
And the question is, you know, how far up does it go from here? It's
23. Obviously, the country is growing as well each year. So as
a percentage, we don't have the percentage, but as a percentage
of Americans, it hasn't grown that dramatically. But it
certainly feels like this could keep going in the wrong
direction.
The one thing to keep in mind from all the doomsdaying,
I would just offer you two data points. The first is that our debt to GDP,
either historically, but also in relation to other countries is still relatively reasonable.
And what that basically shows is we have a lot more debt that we can issue, which means that
there's a lot more deficits to run. Not saying that it's right. Yeah. Before the great financial crisis, it was running at 50, 60% our debt as a percentage
of GDP. And to your point, Shamoff, it's now at 1.2. It's 120%. Other countries have much
higher.
So we have a lot more to run. Yeah. So Nick, if you want to just throw that up. And so
it means that the countries on the right haven't failed. They haven't done great necessarily, but they haven't failed in the way that we would
define failure. And it's not as if the countries on the left are crushing it the way that we would
define crushing it. And so it's not clear that there's a real correlation between debt to GDP
and the performance over large longitudinal periods of times as a country. That's the first
thing I'll say. The second thing is if you actually look at all of these countries,
the thing to keep in mind is where are populations growing and shrinking because at a very basic
level, J. Cal, you mentioned this earlier, but when countries are shrinking, there's no fundamental
ability to grow GDP. And you're just debating how much it shrinks. And the interesting thing about the United States is we are
the only Western country that is forecasted to grow at reasonable rates above our replacement
population. And so, you know, by the end of this century, we'll be around 400, 400-odd million
individuals and other countries will have been cut in half. And so again, there's
some positive news as well. Now, to your earlier point, the problem is politicians will use
this as a reason to continue spending because they won't be forced to. And that's not a
great thing, but this is probably why the status quo will go on for a very long time. So grab the bag, get your bag. Figure out
what your thing is.
I don't know. I just want people, like voters to people to just understand.
They're not going to. Get your bag like everybody else.
The problem we have is if, okay, Nick, can you pull up the Fred spending chart?
We've talked about this a few times.
Well, okay.
So if you look there, there was a huge spike because of COVID,
because of all that COVID stimulus that was eroded off of the economy.
I think we're now down to about 22% for 2023, but that that's a big number.
You know, we talked about how the absolute max you can extract is 20%.
So what they should do is just freeze spending until the federal net outlays as a
percentage GDP is down to 20%. That would be the simple
such an easy solution.
What's great about this, it takes out the politicians
making this partisan, hey, there is a logical amount of, you
know, taxation we can do before we freeze up the productivity of the
country, which if you talk to anybody, when taxes get high, people just start getting
protecting their wealth. I think you alluded to that, which strategies as opposed to investing.
The hard part of it is that, I mean, look, I think we should do it, you know, 20% cap and
free spending until we get there. The hard part is that our interest expense keeps growing because as our debt rolls onto
more expensive, higher interest bonds, then our interest expenses increasing.
Just a few years ago, our interest expense was only 300 billion a year.
Now it's over a trillion a year.
And that's just going to keep growing and growing.
And then the other thing that's going to grow is all the
entitlements related to, to demographics. So the country's
demographics are getting worse. And so the entitlement expenses
are going to go up. So even holding it to 20%, if we could
get there is going to take some work.
The Larry, I don't know if you read Larry Fink's letter from
BlackRock. It was really good.
And he talked about his 2030 business plan, J. Cal. Basically, yeah, it's his way of extracting
value from it. But he did make some salient points in it as opposed to just him talking his book of
why you should do his retirement, your retirement savings with Blackrock is a fair point. But just
getting the what age do people retire at that discussion we need to have and we're not having that as a
country and then what percentage of benefits do people get at different how do we incentivize
people to stay in the workforce? Well at a minimum don't you agree we should just allow people to
opt out of social security and in a simple way of saying I don't need it and I'll take care of
myself use these proceeds for somebody else that could use it, that who has a better need for it.
Yeah.
I mean, and then getting people to participate in the 401ks, you know, at an earlier age
and defaulting those to on as a defaulting them to off.
There's a lot of small behavioral things we could do in this country to get people saving
earlier.
Well, I saw that Robinhood was running a scheme
where if you moved your Roth IRA, they gave you 3% cash back.
And I thought, is there an upper bound limit on what on how much
you could move over? Because I wonder if I could, you have to
keep your money in there for five years. Yeah, but that's
okay. I'm just wondering, like, will they really write like a
hundred million?
Actually, Robinhood just sent me something. So we had a portfolio
company called X1, which was making a new like credit card and
credit card app. It was like awesome. I don't know if you
guys used it. Anyway, they got acquired by Robinhood. And so
the guys are just sent me their new Robinhood gold card. Yeah.
This thing is the heaviest card here. Just listen to it drop.
Hold on.
Don't cut yourself.
Don't cut your toe off.
Apparently it's got $1,100 worth of gold in it.
I have one coming myself and I'm proud to say I've sold no shares of my Robin Hood.
I keep all my Robin Hood shares.
If I move my Roth IRA, they'll have to give me the whole building.
They'll give you a gold plated building. Actually, they sent it to me in a Louis Vuitton with a
Louis Vuitton wallet. This is like unbelievable. Yes, it's got a look. They got a $50,000.
And then $50,000. Add on the look at this. Yeah, like a little LV wallet there. Oh, I like they
have it folks send a Louis Vuitton wallet get a free $50,000 on the pod. Sign up now for your
Robin Hood gold. Yeah, but what is it a credit card? Yes, credit
cards, credit card. Yeah, their whole plan was always to provide
the full suite of services. Do you guys carry credit cards and
money? Do you have any money? But I always carry money. You
have money. I always can money. You have money?
I always carry money.
You know, like to tip people or something?
Always have some cash each.
Never.
You always got to have a couple of hundi.
Just in case.
It's a really bad habit.
You got to keep a couple of hundi in the bag.
You put the 100 on the outside, Jake Allen has a bunch of ones.
No, you can't do that.
You can't do that in Brooklyn.
You get your ass in.
Got the Brazil on the outside.
No, no, no, no. What we do is we get rid of the ones, the fives and the tens. You just get rid of those. You don't even keep them in circulation. That's the best line.
I get cash when I go to Vegas.
But that's it. was a woman comes up to Sammy Davis Jr. and she says, Hey, can
you? Can you can you break? You know, this whatever amount of
money, and he just pulls out 100 and gives her 100. And she
says, No, no, can you make change? He says that is change,
baby. That was strange. And that's what he considered change
was the hunting.
There's a story out of Jeju. So you know Triton Poker?
Yes.
Okay, I'm not gonna say who it is,
but there's a guy that was playing
the high stakes cash game.
And apparently, so he lost like 8 million bucks.
Okay.
He tipped out 450K and 25K chips to like the staff
and like the person giving him a massage and stuff.
So it apparently became a free for all trying to get into this game where everybody was
like, are we pulling tips?
Are we pulling tips?
And they were like, no, we're not pulling tips.
Just flags.
He was tipping off flags.
Wow.
That is incredibly, incredibly generous.
All right.
Science Corner, Rapid Fire, you want to get to cocoa? Here we
are. We're at cocoa. Freiburg. You have
you guys asked about cocoa, you want to pull up the commodity
price chart on cocoa? Look at that. Okay. This is not cocaine.
This is cocoa. This is chocolate precursor to chocolate, not
cocoa. This is chocolate. As you guys can see from this chart,
cocoa is moved in price from about 2000 bucks a ton, which is where it normally trades at to $10,000 a ton. 70% of cocoa is grown
in West Africa, in Ghana and Ivory Coast. And in that area, they've been severely hit by this El
Nino weather year that we're just kind of coming out of. So here's all the cocoa production. 73% of it's in Africa, mostly in Ghana and Ivory
Coast. That's where most of the world's cocoa beans are produced. Cocoa is grown from the
cacao tree, which is about 10 feet tall. These bean pods, you take them down, you roast the
beans, crush it, you make cocoa. When you eat a Hershey's bar, for example, 11% of that
bar is ground up cocoa powder.
So cocoa is like the critical ingredient
in all the chocolate products we consume.
So we had this massive El Nino event last year.
So here you can see sea surface temperatures.
So in Q4 of last year, El Nino spiked like crazy
and that caused a lot of rainfall
to hit the West coast of Africa.
And as a result, this fungus was spread in cocoa trees.
There's a fungus called Black Pod disease.
And this fungus spreads when rainfall hits the ground,
and it splashes up, gets in the tree.
And then the tree has really bad yield,
and the cocoa production goes down.
So now if you look at the cocoa production out of Ghana,
you can see that we've seen a 50% rough decline in cocoa
production on the final bar chart. So that's the effect. So when that happened, basically,
everyone started to corner the market. So all the buyers of cocoa went in and started
buying cocoa like crazy. And then all the short sellers got squeezed because there's
typically a pretty good balance on the short and long side in the market. So the short
sellers got squeezed and it caused this big parabolic jump in price.
And that's where we're at today.
The chocolate companies, again, 11% of chocolate that you're buying at the store is made from
this cocoa powder.
They're talking about cutting the size of their chocolate bars, raising prices, and
starting to use other ingredients.
So you'll start to see that happen in the shelves in the next couple of months.
But this is the big news in the commodity markets right now is this parabolic spike
in cocoa prices.
And you know, consumers will get hit with high prices and smaller
chocolate bars.
Isn't there a scene in trading places?
The OJ features.
Orange. Yeah, or she's
that's right. They squeeze the orange market. That's right.
That's basically what's happening cocoa. So there was a
bad weather event yields dropped by 50%. So we got half the
production. And then all the traders came in and they squeezed the short side of the market and
Price spike so that's kind of what's gone on if I had a dollar for the number of times a fungus has ruined a good
time man
Well, you know, it's interesting I was looking at this and I was worried about
prices
Worried about chocolate prices. I was really worried about chocolate prices.
Specifically, I'm on Amazon right now
and these edible anus and uranus prices have gone up somehow.
So these chocolate uranus prices are skyrocketing.
How did you find this?
I just typed in Uranus.
I typed in Freeberg's Uranus and chocolate and this came up.
It was the number one result.
There it is.
Uranus.
Chocolate prices are going up.
I know what I'm getting you guys for Christmas this year.
You notice it was priced in euros, not dollars.
It's not available in America.
It was coming from Belgium.
I guess they got some serious kink going on over there.
That's if you want a chocolate Uranus,
it's there for you.
I mean, I just was like, Google search chocolate Uranus.
And yeah, I don't recommend you make that search
if you're listening to the pod.
When I heard there was a spike in Coke prices and made me think
of this.
Say hello to my little friend. I went to last time. When's the
last time you watched Scarface beginning to end not like just
caught a couple of it. I watched it. Yeah. It holds up.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, man, it is, by the, I saw it you in two two month. Have you seen it? No, don't say anything
I need to wait till it comes to see me. Okay. I loved it
Going back to see it again. I'm going to see it at IMAX. I'm sure you're with me. I didn't hate it
I just think it's overrated like Spielberg said it was like one of the greatest moments
It is one of the greatest movies I've ever seen. No no It's completely overrated. I'm not saying it's bad. It's just not that scale of one to ten. Give it a number
I will do anything to have this guy do dune three. He's talking about whether or not he should do it
He's like i'm only going to do it if it's going to be better than dune two, you know, he's
Canadian guy. Yeah, he did sicario sicario and the arrival like he's honestly one of the top three directors of our
Denny business the villain of the
I don't know that the hero in that movie is like the boy type. I mean, I don't really believe that he's leading an army
It's not credible. You know the story I read read a lot about, you know, these were all
like short stories published in magazines by Frank Herbert.
serialized. They were serialized. And he was really
into drugs. He was really into mushrooms. So the spice came
around from the mushrooms. Makes sense. It was written in
1965. There was this idea that we needed to move towards zero
population growth because
the population spike on earth was going to cause resource constraints and we were all
going to die if you guys remember this. And so there was this big movement. It's what
launched the hippie movement. Did they not have math back in 1965?
Yeah, they really did think this and that there wasn't going to be improvements in productivity.
So there were limited resources, the world was going to run out of land
and the ecology or the environmentalist movement
kind of sprung out of this effort.
So a lot of what he wrote about was the ecology
and the connection between the fungus
and taking mushrooms and better understanding
the world around you.
So, so much of this was rooted in a hippie movement sacks
to your point when he wrote these original short stories.
Do they ever explain what the spice is in dune. No, and it was tied
never explain why he was interviewed was interviewed
later he talked about how it was meant to be about fungus is this
degrader of life and this greater of life. And he wanted
spice to be representative of mushrooms of fungus, so it's
either kind of like it opens your mind and you get more
connected with nature and
all this stuff. So it was rooted in that, but they never really get into details on it in the book.
So this film to you, Freyberg, is a 10 out of 10. I give it like, okay, I was about to, I was going
to give it an eight and a half out of 10. I think the first half was slower. I'd say like the second,
I mean, like, Chamath, I'm not ruining anything. I really like Zendaya. I think she's super cool.
I agree with you, Sax.
I'm not a huge Timothée Chalamet fan.
I think he's too skinny for me.
Is it his name?
Is it the name or is it the whole package?
No, no, no.
I grew up in Canada with a lot of French people,
so I'm cool with that.
I don't like, he's just too skinny.
Like do a couple pushups or something.
It's the vibes, generally. What do you give it, Sachs? And?
I give it an eight and a half. I won't give it a nine.
What do you give it Sachs? Give it a nine.
I'll give it a six and a half.
Six and a half. Now, if it had a proper lead, who was more than 120 pounds,
Sachs, who is a good, who's a good lead for you Sachs, where you would have
given it a nine. Exactly the same. Everything is the same.
Jake Gyllenhaal? Was that what a soy boy? Oh, Jake Gyllenhaal? Is that Sax, where you would have given it a nine? Exactly the same. Everything is the same. Was that what a soy boy?
Oh, Jake Gyllenhaal? Is that more of a Sax nine? Like ultimate fighting body Jake Gyllenhaal?
He's, yes, I mean, who? Tom Cruise?
Ryan Gosling?
Ryan Gosling?
Sax, what movie is a 10 out of 10 for you?
I don't know. You need like a young Russell Crowe or something.
Right.
Don't you?
But have you seen the original Dune?
That guy, if you think that this guy was-
Kyle MacLachlan.
Oh my God, that guy.
In a David Lynch movie.
Yeah, the David Lynch movie.
That was good, actually.
Yeah, it was a little, I mean, it was similarly,
it was like a soft protagonist.
What is a-
What is a nine out of 10 Sacks movie?
Yeah, what's a 10 out of 10 for you, sex?
Gladiator.
Goodfellas, Casino,
Sicario. Casino's incredible.
Sicario's incredible.
All those are good.
All those are good.
I know, those are all great.
You have the same taste.
I might give this a seven.
I mean, I gotta see it again.
May I revise it up to a seven,
but it's not more than a seven in my book.
Isn't there like a Sicario three coming out?
I hope so. Sicario one and two are so rewatchable.
Oh, those are like the ultimate rewatchable.
Sicario one was unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
Sicario two does it for me.
That scene with Emily Blunt at the border
where you hear the noise of like,
what are those locusts?
Totally.
You know, oh my God.
No, no, when they're in traffic and the cars are parked.
Yeah, that's what I mean.
Yeah, that scene is like.
That scene to me is like the Bane scene in Dark Knight.
Yeah.
And also when he's at the dinner table of the drug lord.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
That scene is intense.
I think that film has probably the best cadence
of any modern film.
Like the way he kept pace in that film did not turn off for one second.
You were hooked from beginning to end and you could watch it.
And by the way, Godfather was also like that.
The pacing in Dune 2 is terrible.
I mean, he spends all this time in the wilderness and the.
I want to know.
I haven't seen it yet.
Then why are we talking about?
No, because we're trying to come to this whole conversation this time it to come to stream. We had this whole conversation last time.
Does anyone else think that The Arrival is like one of the best films of our generation?
No.
I mean, it's good, but it's not.
I think it's good.
Great.
It's like such a mind blowing film.
Oh, Sacks, you know, maybe like a young buff Matt Damon.
No?
Matt Damon?
No. Matt Damon?
I don't really see him in the role.
Okay. How about, what's that guy's name?
Adam Driver.
Yeah.
Young Adam Driver.
Oh yeah, Adam Driver would work.
Yeah, he could do it.
He would, yeah.
That's kind of like a Kyle McLaughlin type pick.
You know, he's a little offbeat.
Yeah, exactly.
Little emo.
Yeah.
Yeah. But not so skinny. Yeah, I mean, the idea that he's a little exactly little little emo. Yeah. Yeah, but not so skinny.
Yeah, I mean, the idea that he's gonna win all these fights and
he weighs 120 pounds wet out of the showers makes no sense. Like,
yes, defense.
Zendaya does.
Doesn't she kick his ass?
Basically. Yeah. I mean, let's not give it up.
Now that scene with best opening scene of a film. What do you got,
Sax? What's your best, most intense scene? Of any film, any opening scene?
Most intense. I mean, the Joker bank heist scene is incredible.
That's good. Daniel J. Lewis in the shaft of There Will Be Blood.
Absolutely. Climbing out of there with the broken leg. Oh my God. That sets the tone. That's incredible. He was in the shaft of there will be blood. Absolutely. Climbing out of there with the broken leg.
Oh my God.
That sets the tone.
That's who he is as a person.
That's everything.
That's your spirit animal.
That's it.
You're bitter and angry.
And you have a competition in me.
I don't like to see others succeed.
I'm David Friedberg.
I'd like to see the world burn.
Strike. Strike. Strike. Actually, it's true. It's accurate. succeed I'm David Friedberg I'd like to see the world strike strike strike
actually it's true it's accurate it's your favorite movie just own it I drink
your milkshake keep the lie alive I do have a competition in me yeah it's funny
the only like opening scene of a movie that I really remember is like
Reservoir Dogs, you know, when you talk about like an opening scene that's memorable. Pulp Fiction?
Well, no, what was the opening? Oh yeah, the opening scene Pulp Fiction is pretty good too,
where they're robbing the diner. Yeah, the diner. It's like you're hooked on the dialogue right at
the beginning. Yeah. Yeah, probably some Tarantino movie. There was nothing like that, right? When that came out, you're like, what is this?
And then you're just like-
Actually, the opening scene of Goodfellas is really good,
where the guy's kicking the trunk from the inside.
They think he's dead.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Da-dum, da-dum, da-dum, da-dum, da-dum.
Yeah.
Saving Private Ryan.
Also, I'd say Heat.
Pretty great.
Jamal, if you want to go see it at IMAX.
You got to put Heat on that list jaco he amazing yeah I
mean he is definitely top 10 they're coming out with heat
too by the way they wrote a book and then this coming out I can't
wait for heat to and gladiator to where where do you go to see
the IMAX they have a good one in the city in San Francisco the
metric on it's a 70 millimeter IMAX.
It's ginormous.
And they're doing the full print
at that theater of Dune II.
So it's like the, he shot the thing in 70 millimeter IMAX.
I saw it in a smaller IMAX.
Which is like extremely expensive.
Absurdly expensive.
Absurdly, he spent like $190 million on this film.
It's fantastic.
Everybody goes to see Dune II.
Sax, what films do you have coming out?
Anything interesting?
You producing anything? What's in the production line? You bought the rights, right?
Something we released Dolly land earlier this year with Ben Kingsley playing Dolly. Yeah, and actually Ilan just posted a
long
Reminiscence about how we made thank you for smoking which was kind of cool. Did you guys see that? Yes
No, I didn't see it. He tweeted it or? Someone tweeted like, hey, did you know that like Elon Musk and Peter Thiel and Max Lovechin
and David Sacks produced this movie? Thank you for smoking. Because it's been like almost 20 years.
And so-
I remember.
People don't know about it. So anyway, someone tweeted it and Elon responded. There's like a
really crazy story behind it. And they were like, oh, tell us. And he wrote up a long tweet explaining
how he got the rights
and his memory was actually really good.
I was like impressed that he remembered all of these details from 20 years ago.
Yeah.
I tweeted back like, look, if, if Jason Reitman's up for the SQL, let's do it.
Right.
That's doing pretty good.
He's doing okay.
All right, everybody for the rain man, David Sacks, Shamoff, Polly Hoppity,
the chairman dictator, the Sultan of science,
and the world's greatest moderator, blah, blah, blah. We'll see you. Oh, and by the way,
if you're listening to this, go ahead and check out all in podcast on YouTube and subscribe.
When we hit a million subscribers, which we're well on our way to halfway there, I think,
we're going to throw a million subscriber party. And so
yeah, subscribe and you might get an invite. And we're going to
try to have as many people at the million subscriber party as
possible when we hit I think 600,000 we're going to do a live
Q&A on the channel. So really cool milestones coming up for
the pod. And we'll see you all next time. Bye bye. Bye bye. Love you boys. I'm going all in What, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, all just useless. It's like sexual tension, but they just need to release them now.
What?
You're the B.
What?
You're the B.
What?
You're the B.
What?
We need to get merch.
The Gs are back.
I'm doing all in.
I'm doing all in.