All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E2: Rebooting the economy, understanding corporate debt, steps to avoid a depression & more with David Sacks
Episode Date: April 11, 2020Follow @chamath: https://twitter.com/chamath Follow @jason: https://twitter.com/Jason https://linktr.ee/calacanis 0:01 Jason & Chamath catch us up on their quarantines 1:20 Chamath intros David Sacks... 4:40 David explains what their poker group chat has been like since COVID-19 started, and how Jason, Chamath & himself fall on the optimistic/pessimistic spectrum 6:58 How have the past few months defined David's view on the world, and what is his reaction to the US government's response? 12:22 Did the US health apparatus do its job? How could it improve? Why aren't masks already mandated? 19:33 Culture clash between scientific experts & entrepreneurs, thoughts on Chloroquine as a treatment method 27:00 Are US bureaucrats taking the intelligence of US citizens for granted? How liable is Trump? 30:08 David gives his plan to reboot the economy: what now? How does the US avoid a recession/depression? 36:22 Chamath & Jason assess David's plan 43:21 Have the stimulus packages & SMB loans been enough? Will the trickle-down approach work? 49:21 Should the US be allowing companies to declare bankruptcy? How should they decide who gets aid and who does not? 52:02 Chamath explains how corporate debt works through the lens of Ford 56:42 Why is the US not giving a larger % of the stimulus to average Americans? Chances of unrest if quarantine continues? 1:02:17 Trump vs. Biden: who has the edge in 2020 right now? 1:11:24 Was Jack Dorsey's $1B donation the strongest move of 2020 so far?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, everybody, welcome to episode two of the All-in podcast with Jason and
Shamath's and basic ground rules here.
If you're not into speculation, you don't like to debate, you don't like to question
authority.
And you don't like to get a shit ton of inside information.
I'm going to actually turn the podcast off right now and go download the daily from
the New York Times or all things considered or some other bullshit.
But we're here to do speculating and talking about inside information and the real deal.
With me, as always, my co-host, Shamath Polly Hopatia. here to do speculating and talking about inside information and the real deal with me.
As always, my co-host, Chimouth Polly Hapa Tia.
If you don't know how to pronounce it, Polly Hapa Tia.
Chimouth, how you doing?
You hold it up, okay?
I am doing fabulously well.
We are in week four of our lockdown sheltering in place here.
You losing your mind?
I'm not because I'm fortunate to be in the suburbs.
I think if I was cooped up in an apartment in the city,
I would feel a lot worse than I do right now,
but there's a lot of fresh air.
The weather's finally turned.
It's not raining as much.
So we get to see the sun a little bit.
Makes a big difference.
Yeah, can you imagine 15, 20 years ago,
a hold up in an apartment with three kids
who are home from school,
like these people who are in a city, they must be going insane.
I mean, there's so much value to visiting New York, but if you're stuck there in a quarantine
lockdown, I don't know what I do.
All right.
Well, we got a great guest today.
I want to introduce our guest, Jema.
Well, we are really lucky here.
This is a person who I've known now for, I don't know,
maybe 15, 20 years.
What I would call him is one of my best show ponies.
I have ridden this motherfucker up and down
and everything he's done.
He has made me so much money.
It's like owning the publishing rights
to the YouTube back catalog. This is how prolific this guy is. It's like owning the publishing rights to the YouTube back catalog. This is how prolific
this guy is. It's like owning the Beatles back catalog, right? You're like Michael Jackson.
Michael Jackson's backlog. David Sacks, though, no, all kidding aside, David Sacks is one of
the most incredible people that we know, one of our closest friends. Big bit of a background on David. He almost became a lawyer, but dropped out of law school after
going to Stanford and worked with Peter Tio at PayPal and was a chief operating officer
there. Left PayPal, moved to Los Angeles, unsuccessfully kept his virginity found
way to not get late as a movie producer in Hollywood.
It seems to be impossible.
But David found a way of doing it.
Produced a movie, one of the best known movies of that generation
called Thank You for Smoking.
Then moved back up here, started Genie, pivoted, started Yammer, sold that for more than
a billion dollars to Microsoft and became, during that time, frankly, one of the most unsung
heroes of company founders and was a prolific investor in some of the most well-known iconic businesses of this last generation,
Airbnb, Uber, Slack, the list goes on and on, and now is the co-founder of Kraft Ventures,
which is essentially David's early-stage venture business where he helps a lot of really great companies
get to the next level and frankly,
the level that he's been playing at for a while.
Despite all of that again, I just see him as a show pony.
Some money printing machine, if you can get in
on that fund, if you can get in on those companies,
you're gonna do well.
Sacks is an operating machine.
Welcome to the program.
David Sacks, well, welcome to the pub. SACS is an operating machine. Welcome to the program. David SACS.
Welcome to the pod.
Thanks for having me.
How are you holding up SACS, just personally, family, everything companies, just generally
psychologically?
How is this impacting you?
You know, I think we're all fortunate to be safe. And, you know, we started paying attention to the virus, I guess, in February because
of Twitter tech.
You know, there are a bunch of people in the tech ecosystem who started tweeting very alarming
things.
And in February or even going this far back as like January 30th.
And I didn't know for sure if they're ripe,
but some of them were friends of mine.
And so I, we were to get seriously,
and we started doing work from home,
I think on March 1st.
And we've all been kind of self-isolated since then.
And fortunately everyone has been safe
and holding it pretty well.
Saksiput, tell everybody on the pod,
our group chat and basically what it is, what we do on that group chat and what you think about it.
Yeah, so I mean, basically our poker group and sort of extended poker group, which is
about, I don't know, it's probably about 20 players
who rotated it in and out of our poker game.
We have a chat group and we used to just talk about cards
and stuff like that, but very rapidly became a place
to share information about the virus and their response
and what was gonna happen.
And the remarkable thing is that whatever we talk about
ends up becoming, like it's like everyone
else just figures it out about a week or two later and I think it has helped to stay about a
week or two ahead of the curve on this thing. Has it has it generally been mentally reassuring
or has it amplified your anxiety talking about it all the time in that chat?
Well, the interesting thing is that we have people in that chat who are very optimistic,
they have people who are very pessimistic, people in between, and then we have people who
are swinging around quite a bit.
And so I think you get like all the perspectives.
And I think, I guess my view of the future is that very hard to try and figure out what's
going to happen.
You have to think about it in terms of scenarios. And so the, you know, the chat group helps, you know,
understand like what those scenarios, you know,
might look like.
So where would you describe each of us then
on the positive, negative, and then swingy?
You're in which cap?
Are you swinging?
So, I think the three basic scenarios are V, U, and L. And Jason, I would describe you as
a V. I think Jamoth is closer to the U, which is the most pessimistic, sorry, the L is the
most pessimistic, and then the U is sort of sorry in between. And I sort of swing between the U and the L, but I also understand the case
for the V. And those initials really refer to the shape of the recovery to common.
How quickly will come out of this?
So David, before we drill down into your beliefs on the future, let's talk about the past.
drill down into your beliefs on the future. Let's talk about the past. What do you think this entire
episode has shown us, whether it's from a public health perspective or an economic perspective, but how would you summarize your view of the world as it's been revealed to you in the past two months?
of the world as it's been revealed to you in the past two months?
Yeah, I mean, I think that what I really show, you know, we live most of our lives
during, you know, these relatively calm periods, and then our lives get redefined by these,
you know, apoccal events.
And, and, you know, we're not really wired for this, this rate of change. I think it was Lenin who said something like there, there's some decades when nothing happens and
there's some weeks where decades happen. And, and I think that's, that's basically what,
what's happening here and it feels like, I mean, a little bit, the last thing that was
like this was, was, was 9-11 where, you know, you woke up that morning, saw mean, a little bit, the last thing that was like this was 9-11, where, you
woke up that morning, saw the twin towers coming down on TV and you realize that we were
now in a different era.
And something like that's happening here as well, just in solar motion.
What do you think the government did right and what do you think that the government did
wrong?
Well, I mean
You know limiting the flights in from for Wuhan or China was a good initial step but after that
It seemed like the response was very slow and and sort of
disbelieving and kind of incredulous and and we've seen this basically everywhere. The initial response of just about every country
with a few notable exceptions in Asia
that had previous experience with saws.
But what we've seen in just about every country
is that nobody believes it's gonna happen to them
until it happens to them.
And then even in the United States,
it's like no one believes it's gonna happen
in their city until someone in their social network
gets the virus and then almost then they take it seriously.
And so there's almost been this like,
it's like the slow moving train wreck
where you see it coming and people are just a little bit
too slow to react.
And the problem is, it's all about the doubling time
so if the virus doubles
You know every two or three days
In the absence of any action at all maybe even doubles every day in a very density like New York City
Just waiting two or three weeks can make a thousand x difference
in
You know it's over between I guess 10 x to the thousand x difference depending on the doubling time, whether if you wait two weeks or three weeks.
I saw an article on, as a bunch of articles now talking about, why has New York been hit so hard in California has been relatively mild. And the articles were saying, you know, California only declared
shelter in place one week ahead of New York. How can it be doing so much better? And they're
looking for all these different causes and explanations. And, you know, even one week
makes a huge difference. If in New York, New York's been hit about 12 times harder than
California. But if the doubling time is just two days, one week is a 12-X difference.
That's how the exponentiality works.
And so, like being a week, you know, or two weeks or three, behind the curve is incredibly
costly.
How do you break down local government versus federal government and the action there and his America's
Architecture with states rights and powers at benefit in this case or
Is it a negative because we did see the blue states take it very seriously the red states take it less seriously The red states have a lot more
Distance between individuals the blue states tend to be coastal cities. They're more dense
Maybe you could handicap for us.
The spread of the virus with the layer on top of it
of local governments and the political climate we're in.
Yeah, I think the decentralized nature
of the American system is both a blessing and a curse
in this type of situation.
The curse is that it's been very hard
to create a unified national strategy. We're we're doing lockdowns piecemeal
and and so the lockdowns get forward as people move around between areas that are not locked down and
start new outbreaks
very hard to control the virus that way, you know, we're also
You know, we're also not able to act in the authoritarian way that we saw time act and
we want to control the virus for a really long.
But the blessing of decentralization is that it's allowed, you know, the governors of
states to react and it's allowed private companies to react and it's allowed entrepreneurs
to react and you see a lot of people helping in different ways and
and and and that can be that can make up for having kind of a more ineffectual centralized response
which isn't likely to to to work completely in a country the size anyway.
Do you think that the health apparatus of the United States did its job and where
do you think the areas of opportunity are to improve? Well, if you're talking about the
health system, it seems like the health system has done a great job in reacting to the virus in terms of hospitalizations,
you know, hospital adding hospital beds, adding ICU capacity. Even in New York,
it looks like, I think Cuomo just said today that they've got, you know, ICU capacity,
they've got hospital beds. I think the hospital system's done a great job rapidly creating more
capacity. We haven't seen a situation like in Italy or even the UK where
they're literally rationing ventilators and making a horrible triage decisions about who's going
to get a ventilator and who's not, you know, we haven't seen those types of horrors in the US. But
if by health system we mean the FDA, the CDC, the WHO, which is part of the US system,
but we do rely on them to some extent, you've just seen, I think, you know, amazing, really
malpractice or negligence if they're a former company, I think they'd be sued.
You have on the CDC website things that
Haven't checked it today, but as of a few days ago, we're just blatantly not true
I mean saying that you only needed a mask if you were actually taking care of a person
with with with COVID-19 that
That standing say a three-foot distance was sufficient
For that that was sort of an acceptable amount of social distancing,
even if the other person is coughing or sneezing, and that's not true. They're just saying things
that weren't true. And then, you know, on the CDC and the Surgeon General until basically the
last few days, we're telling us that masks didn't work. We're ineffective. And then now they've flipped
to recommending them, but they're still not required. And I just wrote a blog today that I
published about half an hour ago that I thought the best part of that blog post, by the way,
it's up on medium and sacks is tweeted and I retweeted it. David is what you said at the end,
which is we're taking the most draconian measure quarantining
people, which we use this softer term shelter in place.
But it's a quarantine call it what it is.
You're not allowed to leave your house except under rare circumstances.
But we won't do the basic thing of wearing the mask.
It makes no sense.
And Chimath, I think you had a really interesting question early on here, which I think we
should all circle back on one more time, is what what is this reveal right like in this kind of a crisis and I love the statement of
Sacks where you know, you get some decades nothing happens and then a week you have a decade happen
The thing that I am I think is the big takeaway for me is handicapping who you can trust and
What people's agendas are
and how they behave in a crisis
because there are a group of people building models
and what is the motivation of somebody who builds a model?
We think about, we all get pitched as investors
or when we worked inside of companies, we build models
and we know the models mean nothing.
They're made by humans
and what's the motivation of somebody building a model
in today's climate that then people
adopt that model and there's life or death?
What would you handicap?
Would you go conservative?
Would you go aggressive?
Would you lean into people dying in the case of supporting the economy?
And so there's the model makers.
There's the government, local and federal.
You have the media who are trying to get clicks in some cases. You have
a capitalist who are trying to, you know, protect their book and their bets. How do we all
look at and think about people's agendas and like the CDC having an agenda, the local
government and the model makers having agenda. Chimap, maybe you could take that one.
Yeah. I, um, I think that the masks issue is actually the most instructive thing in this whole
debacle. And the reason is that there was pretty obvious data very early on that it was
is something that had unknown but pretty useful upside, and absolutely zero deleterious downside, right?
So if you were thinking about risk management, and I gave you some options, option one is
do nothing.
Option two is, here's some drugs that you can take prophylactically, and I don't really
know either the efficacy
or the long-term damage to a broad-based population
of people taking them.
An option three was a piece of cloth over your nose and mouth.
Yeah.
And for 10 cents.
And apparently, at a minimum, it prevents other people
from smelling your bad breath.
But at a maximum, it prevents other people from smelling your bad breath, but at a maximum, it prevents projectiles of disease, glade, and spit getting into a death vapor, causing
you to die.
Yes.
And we couldn't agree that that was a, why?
Why?
You know, why?
Was the agenda here because they didn't want people buying up the masks and not going
to healthcare workers? No, because why couldn't want people buying up the masks and not going to healthcare
workers because why couldn't we agree on something this simple because it was never about
the N95 masks. You could have worn a cloth mask. A T cloth could have covered it up and
given you 70% efficacy. This has everything to do with incentives and everything to do
with your other question as well, which is like, you know, how wide do modellers behave
the way that they do?
All of this is about being taken seriously.
And so to be taken seriously, you have to understand
the incentives in the game that you're playing.
So for a modeller and a forecaster,
the incentive is all around being conservative
because that's how you're taken
seriously. There's nobody that has any upside in showing a model that shows 10,000
people dying. All of the attention and the gravity with which you're taken and
the attention that you get is when you first put out a model that shows that two
million people could die, which is what Imperial College did.
And then eventually you walk it back and you walk it back.
And after the actuals exceed the forecast,
then the data converges on what actually happens.
And you see that these models were woefully inaccurate.
It's the same with why the CDC or the WHO are just so completely incompetent.
Because the incentives in those organizations are essentially to play their game, and
that game is not one of public health, but it's one of politics.
And so you have these people fighting each other over political territory and the right
to basically make decisions versus the actual substance
and the validity of the decision.
David, is that correlate with your thinking and then superimpose the media on top of that?
Yeah, I mean, so I think there's a couple of things going on.
One is that there is a huge culture clash going on between the people who need conclusive scientific proof before they will
need to recommend any course of action. And then between other people who are
willing to take a more experimental approach to try things to iterate the way
that we do in startup land when confronted with kind of, you know, company existential issues.
And the latter approach is smart when, you know, there's a lot of upside in trying something and not much downside, you know, and the other approach of this sort of this scientific,
the pseudo-scientific sounding approach where you're constantly demanding conclusive evidence,
it's actually people pretending to be smart, you know, with people who want to sound smart,
but it's actually a pretty dumb approach.
And so we've seen this like culture clash playing out over and over again, you know, and
um.
So experts should read a Peter back to you, David.
Experts are afraid to do something experimental with low downside because they have
reputations and they want to sound smart
whereas entrepreneurs
uh... or maybe capitalist or other problem solvers are perhaps even gamblers are
going to say there's no downside here
what's the downside to putting a mascot nothing let's try it the same to
the chloroquine and the z pack
very early on people were saying like el Elon and other folks in our circle.
Why not just do it?
Hold on a second, hold on a second, chloroquine.
Let's not put that in the same category.
Okay, why?
Because it's a drug, Jason.
Yes.
It's a drug from malaria.
Okay, but you have on the spectrum evidence.
No, no, Jason.
I'm taking it if you're sick already.
No.
We still don't know.
Right.
Let's be clear.
Okay.
So masks is a holy different thing.
This is why I said it that way.
Yeah.
If the minute you start to add drugs,
you come off as an armchair epidemiologist
and anybody reasonably smart can poke holes in your theory
and you sound like a fucking moron.
You cannot sound like a moron
by telling people to wear cloth over their nose
and their mouth.
Okay. But the next step, if you were in the hospital and you've been diagnosed and they said,
hey, the doctor says, you might want to try this.
There were people who were saying, don't even try it.
And there was a direct correlation when Trump said he was behind it.
It seemed like the media and everybody were like, this is the worst idea ever.
But this is your point, which is that the incentives of that game are to politicize things versus think about what's in the best interests and the public health
interests of either the United States or the world.
But are we an agreement to try it?
If you were, if you were in the ICU and they said, Hey, you want to try this?
You wouldn't try it.
No, but this is the problem.
It's like the posture of the American political infrastructure is broken.
And moments like this shine a light on how broken it is.
Because as David said, all of the testing and iteration,
all of those things are must-haves in peacetime.
They are nice to have in wartime.
Right.
You don't have a time to walk around and test fire a gun
and make sure this works and that works.
The enemy is in front of you.
You shoot and you fire and you aim later.
And in that posture, we have to have a set of rules that contemplate giving people
at the ground floor on the border of where their life is at risk, the right to make a decision as well informed
as it can be about what they can try to do to save their life.
And doctors need to be equally empowered.
And we've effectively done that,
but we just did it in fits and starts.
And in that, there is all of this noise
that delays the right decision,
which is not that hydrochloroquine is good or bad.
But it's that here's all the published data into the hands of the doctor who can actually
read it, understand it, so that he or she and the patient can make a decision together.
Yeah, agreed.
Sax, what are your thoughts on chloroquine and the Z-pack and that whole sort of unraveling
of this is the miracle, it's not the miracle. It's worth looking at and how that
Debate occurred let's say on the Twitter and then also in our stream when we were talking well well Trump was not the first to
Embrace the potential of hydroxychloroquine
In fact, we were talking about in our chat group before you know it became national news of course once he did
Embrace, it became
political football, and a lot of people wanted to prove it wrong. And so now it's hard to have
a conversation about it without it becoming political. But the, you know, the argument for
Hydroxychloroquine really started with some research papers that showed that it worked in vitro,
basically in test tubes against the virus. And it worked against SARS,
which is a related sort of category of virus.
I'm not an expert or anything.
This is just sort of, you know, me tell you what I know
is a consumer of information.
And so it was not crazy to think this is something
that should be tried in the context of COVID-19.
Now, we don't know if it's going to work or not. I saw an interesting presentation by UCSF and
their working theory on it is that, is a hydroxychloroquine plus CPAC might have some impact in the
first week of the virus when before peak viral replication takes place.
And this might help interfere with the virus replicating.
Once you're in respiratory distress, though, and it's in your lungs, you have to, you're
into a different phase of this and they don't believe that.
I think you need to look at other things.
So it sounded like this was potentially valot in a week, one less affecting week two,
and by week three when you're in severe ARDS,
you gotta find other things.
So in terms of what the right policy is,
I made a favor of the right to try.
I mean, ultimately we be in favor of the right to try. I mean, ultimately, we should let patients and doctors
make this decision together.
And so, I think the FDA did the right thing,
giving emergency trial authorization to doctors
to be able to try this with their patients.
And what I think is happening is that there's sort of rapid decentralized
information sharing happening among doctors and hospitals and you know I think they're
getting to the right answer here.
Okay do we feel comfortable moving on to financial implications of this or are there things
about the modeling?
On upside down side.
I agree with Jamal that I dropped a
chloroquine's a little bit more complicated. Mass or sort of
the really unimpiguous one. Because it's just so easy.
They're so little down just cloth. It's cotton. Right.
You literally could put a band down.
Use your underwear. Yeah, you could use your own underwear and
just put it across your face. I mean, this is what's so
insane. That David's right. I mean, this is what's so insane.
That David's right.
I remember having this argument with someone because on the CDC website, as David said,
he would only recommend it, not as a preventative measure for you, but if you were old, you should
use a mask.
Only if you were treating somebody with COVID-19.
There's a bunch of elements of these authorities trying to manage us.
I really hate that.
I mean, I do think that they thought about will we create a run on mass?
That they don't want to tell us the truth because they're afraid of some of the consequences
of telling us the truth.
And I hate that feeling of being lied to by public officials
because they're trying to manage.
I'm willing to be infantile by people
that are smarter than me.
Yeah, so can you give us a list of the four people?
You think are smarter than you?
Go ahead, Trimoff.
I am not who are those four people.
infantile by nameless bureaucracies.
And I think that Americans deserve to not be infantiled.
I mean, for the amount of money that we pay and the amount in taxes and the amount of
power that we give folks, the one thing that I'm realizing through this whole thing is
like, you know, it is true in some respect that the countries that had some level of authoritarian
management did well.
But it's also true that the countries that had robust civil services filled with people
who are at the top of their class also did well.
Singapore, South Korea, where it is a stature, it's a point of pride to work for the government,
where it's some of the campaign jobs.
Japan.
And so, you know, one of the things that I realize is career bureaucrats really do infantile Americans
in a way that's really unproductive and unhealthy.
It doesn't surprise you and kind of perturb you that the X head of the FDA is way more prominent
and out front with his point of view than the current head of the FDA.
I mean, what the hell is going on?
I think what we know is going on is Trump was elected and he dismantled some of this
and the system was broken.
I heard that.
No, I think that that's unfair.
And I'm not a big Trump supporter, but I think it's unfair to pin it on him.
The reality is maybe he defunded or underfunded a bunch of things, but the hollowing out
of our institutions have been happening for 40 years
and it started with Reagan to be clear.
Because we tilted the scales towards free market
trickle-down economics where government was viewed
as a stop for really smart people to inject themselves into industry at higher levels,
or it was a place that's capable people would never go because capitalism, the way that
it was structured, was set up in such an aggressive tilted manner for those that were capable.
And unfortunately, it hollowed out the government from people that were really strong of character
in a broadly speaking kind of way.
And so what happens is that then bureaucracies form the incentives change and you get what
you've gotten right now, which is again, it is a point of argument on something as simple and frankly idiotic as a mask.
Okay.
Let's move on to talking about the economy and David, you've been quite a heretic on Twitter
because you decided to engage in the one conversation you're not allowed to have, which is talking about
people's livelihoods as opposed to their lives. You can only keep one thought in your mind
as far as the kind of woke far left is concerned and the Twitter mobs. You can only talk about people
in life and death. You can't talk about their livelihoods, but you've been talking and starting a dialogue on how you would structure teams in a startup for how do we deal with the crisis versus how
do we go back to work.
So explain how you would do this if this was a startup company, if you were doing it on
an entrepreneurial level, and what you think the road looks like, let's start with San
Francisco Bay area and then we'll extrapolate to the most acute area in America, New York.
Yeah.
Well, the big question that everyone's going to be asking by the end of April is what
now?
Because I do think you're already seeing this in the New York data that quarantines work.
But that shouldn't be a total surprise to us.
Historically, quarantines have always worked.
I mean, quarantines were the way that people dealt with plagues when they didn't have any technology.
It's the problem is just they're incredibly costly, and if the quarantine goes on for months,
there's only way of dealing with the virus, then we could be looking at the depression.
looking at the depression. So the question really is, you know, once we've arrested the exponentiality of the virus, and I, you know, I think we have to do that first. But once
we've arrested the exponentiality, the big question is going to be, well, now how do we
get out of this? And what I worry about is that the daily update mentality, you know,
I think it's great that our leaders are giving
us these daily updates showing that they, you know, they're showing a bias for action,
which I think is good, but I worry that we're not going to be ready, that this precious
time that we're buying with quarantine is not going to lead to a better plan in May,
because no one's really working on that plan.
They're just working on sort of the triage,
the immediate response,
the making sure that, you know,
hospitals around the country have the ventilators
and beds they need and we put it in the order.
Why is it, David, that people can't keep
these two parallel processes in their mind at once?
You've been attacked viciously on Twitter,
the media attacks anybody who brings us up as like only
Hearing about capitalism when in fact
You need to do both plans. You need to figure out how
People get back to their livelihoods and we avoid a depression which would kill more people
Ultimately, right? I mean, I think this consensus about that whether it's depression or suicide etc. Or people not being able to feed themselves or
You know have nutritious food and health care.
So why can't people put these two things in their mind at once?
And then let's talk about the actual plan.
If you were planning and you were the mayor of San Francisco or you were in Trump's cabinet and they said,
okay David, you make the plan for the Bay Area to go back to work, take us three or one, two, three, and then we'll throw to Trima. What I would do is, like I would do what I would do in a company for a product release,
is I'd have, you know, in a company I'd have a product manager for the one.O release, and I've
a different product manager for the two.O release, because it's very hard for, you know, somebody to be
all in on two different releases, which have two different schedules. So I think the team that we have right now that's basically concerned with the immediate
response, the triage that you keep doing what they're doing, make sure that the country's
reacting the right way.
That has all the supplies they need, that they're berating 3M into giving us more PPE or
whatever it is.
But I think that there should be a separate team, kind of a, a, you know, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, And I think that person and that team should be ready to slide the new system into place in May.
I don't know if it's beginning in May, end in May, whatever, but sometime in May,
these should be ready to slide that new system into place so that this precious time we're buying
isn't wasted. Give us your one, two, three. One is masks, obviously. I would think.
Massive total number, right? So that's number one. Give us your two, three, four. If you want to riff here a little bit.
Yeah, I mean, the other elements of the plan that people keep talking about,
it's rapid ubiquitous testing.
And you have to have same-day results.
This business of it taking two, three, four days in the lab,
the problem is if someone is infected, they could be passing it on during that time.
You don't isolate them in time.
So we have to have massive ubiquitous, same-day testing,
along with contact tracing, so that when you do find out that somebody's got it,
you can not isolate not just them but all their contacts.
That's the system that seems to have worked in South Korea.
And I mean, those seem to be the pillars.
And is quarantining the high risk during this first phase of the roll out with
testing, social distancing and masks. That's, that seems to be the no brainer.
I would add fourth bullet point, which is if you're obese, diabetic, asthma,
or some combination of those in over 60 and or over 60,
you gotta stay home now and you cannot be in touch
with anybody who's out and about,
and part of that first wave to go back to society.
Right, we know that certain segments of the population
are a much higher risk than others.
And so part of having a more fine tune
responsive virus other than just shutting everything down
would say, well, let the people who are at very, very low risk
go back out still wearing masks
and having the right protocols and hygiene,
and all that stuff.
But you keep the high risk population isolated
rather than shying down the entire economy.
All right, Chimath, if you're on the board of directors
and David was the star of the May plan to go back,
how would you, what questions would you have for him
and how critical can you be of his plan?
Let's make this as if we were actually in charge,
Chimath, savage David's plan.
Well, I probably would push David
to consider a more aggressive approach here.
And this is something that I've talked about before, Jason, you and I have talked about
this on the podcast before, but we need a biological Patriot Act.
I know that it's unpalatable for people on the left for certain reasons and people
on the right for other reasons, but it just doesn't matter what they think.
It was reported issued by the
government. But what I would push David to think about if he was the czar of getting back to work
is the following, which is I agree with the broad-based testing. I think that you need to have some kind of, you know, wristband that allows
you to be inside of certain green zones in every single city or town in the country that
allow you to, you know, some way be back to normal. But there also needs to be red zones
where you cannot. We need to have a very, very quick way of restarting a quarantine
if there are hotspots that develop, but all of it needs to be supported by broad-based testing
and a biological Patriot Act. We do need to have immunity cards. And the simple basic reason
is that it is the only way that one can prioritize the economic salvation of the U.S. economy.
Because I think once we have paid the cost from the public health perspective, which we
are doing at the end of this quarantine in flattening the curve or crushing the curve,
our immediate focus has to be in recestitating the GDP of this country. Because otherwise, the number of deaths
and the amount of pain that is caused by economic destruction
will far outnumber the number of people that die
from this, which is tragic already.
And the only way that I can see for us to do that
in a scalable way is with an immunity card,
a biological patriotic. So I would be pushing David to think about that and rip the band-aid off and get that done.
And David, I would also push you on thinking about quarantining, not just at home, but maybe
by region and hot zones.
So if we know the New York corridor or the Northeast corridor is severely infected, nobody
inter out of that corridor without a visa without, and I know this is a very touchy issue
well in terms of civil liberties, but until we're through this, I don't see why people from
New York need to go to Florida without maybe a rare exception or something to that effect,
right?
So if we know we got California out of it, or if SoCal is still in the thick of it, but NorCal isn't, maybe we have some level of testing
required to get on a flight to come to San Francisco or to go to leave New York. So those
are two punch ups. How would you look at those, David, as the news are of getting back
to work?
I think it's all on the table. I mean, I like the green zone red zone idea.
I like using immunity information.
We've been talking in our chat group for,
I think a month about these blood serology tests.
I tweeted, I took one of those tests weeks ago,
I think like three weeks ago before the FDA
had even approved it and I tweeted about it.
So yeah, I think all that,
I think the immunity cars, I think we should use all that information.
I mean, it would all be on the table for sure.
And I, but I think most of all these ideas need to be tied together into a coherent system.
And I'm worried that our approach to date has been so ad hoc that we're not going to
have a coherent system right to go as a replacement to
shutdowns in May when we need it. It's part of this you talked before about how
you didn't like to be managed. I think we all agree we're being managed and
massaged because they really do not want to even talk to us about going back to
work in May or what happens because they're afraid that we're going to jump the gun and we're all going to
just go to Chrissy Field or whatever park or Central Park and just throw a
giant party. But people are not stupid. There is a there is a certain self
preservation here that should be inherent in all these discussions, which is
you know any reasonable person watching the death toll in New York does not want to leave their house.
And so why can't, how much of the lack of discussion about this issue do you think, David, is
because people are afraid to treat people like adults because they think they're going to just go out
to Chrissy Field or, you know, Dolores Park? No, I mean, I think you're right that there was this long
period of time where the authorities were just trying to get
everyone to buy into the idea that the virus was dangerous.
They needed to shelter in place.
And they didn't want to hear any views that
that appeared to be contradicting.
I don't think they were contradicting it.
You know, I remember when the Imperial College
Study came model came out and they said that 2.2 million people would die in the US and I tweeted that I thought that
Number was insane. It was fear mongering
And I think you know, that's turned out to be the case
But you know people responded well good. I mean even if it is fear mark We need to make people afraid because otherwise they won't do the right things.
I guess that's true in a situation in which we're relying on everyone's voluntary compliance
to engage in a quarantine or to wear a mask.
And I guess part of the response here is to figure out what action items should not be
voluntary that we just need to do in order to get past this.
Traumat, you're that's. I think that getting back to work is going to be much, much more difficult
than people think. I think that in the absence of a vaccine which looks like at best 18 to 24
months from now, we will never get to 100% of where we were before, or at least the potential to be at 100%.
And so I just think that over the next two years, we're in for a tremendous amount of difficulty.
And this is sort of where, I'd like to shift the conversation.
I think that we've now poured between the United States government and the Fed, almost $10 trillion.
We smeared it into the economy.
And only $3 sense of every dollar has gone into people's
pockets.
And I think we're hoping that the other 97 cents somehow
trickles down into their pockets in some way, shape, or form.
Now, when you look at that 97 cents, half of it was, you know, things like propping up
the commercial paper market, propping up the repo market.
But it's also been things like propping up investment grade debt, propping up high
yield debt.
And I have a real issue with this because I think that if we're going to take two
years to get back to normal, and I really do think it's two years, because Jason, a lot
of the fears that you express people will have as lingering doubts and will prevent them
from being at 100%, which means businesses will not be at 100% until you can get an injection
and know that you're protected.
We're doing an enormous amount of damage because we're taking trillions of dollars and flooding
it into the economy in a way that's just not going to be effective.
And I don't think that we're taking enough time to really think through these things.
So on the one hand, while I appreciate the velocity or not the velocity of the intention, you know, like I think Jerome Powell's
commentary, I applaud, which is like, you know, he's saying all the right things, which is we will
do everything possible. But the lending program to companies has been haphazard and difficult.
But it did get started in three weeks and some people have gotten money in week four of this.
I mean, it's pretty incredible. Now, you Now, the numbers that I've read is that,
on average, the loans are turning out to be sort of like,
in the tens of thousands.
And on top of that, David and I talked about this
in the group chat, but the math makes it
so that you're better off furlowing or letting people go
than you are taking PPP, which means that a lot of this money
may never get taken.
And so, but again, all of that is still a small rounding error.
We're talking about less than 10 cents on the dollar.
90 cents of the dollar have gone into areas that will not really touch an average American
citizen.
And I think that's just fundamentally wrong because the trickle-down theory of all
of this, you know, was started 40 years ago, and we can see now that it doesn't work.
David, any thoughts on the stimulus?
Well, I think what's happened is that we have a 30% whole on our economy right now. You've
got, you know, like a 15% employment rate going to, going to 25 or 30 maybe as high as that, we don't know
yet.
You've got a, we think that GDP is going to contract in the next quarter by a quarter
to a third.
And so you've got this giant hole in the economy and what the Fed and Treasurer are trying
to do is plug that hole for a period of time until they can get through this health crisis and
And if the crisis only lasts a few months, maybe they can hold it all together
But I do worry that if it lasts longer it's gonna slip out of their hands and
And the result is gonna be cascade of defaults and bankruptcies and effectively a great
unraveling of our economy.
Yeah, I think that though in fairness, this is where I think bankruptcy, it's almost
viewed as a four-letter word, but it's not.
And in many ways, the bankruptcy process could actually be the saving grace of American
business in this moment.
And the reason I say that is that it allows in a bankruptcy these companies to discharge a lot of the debt,
and we could set up a mechanism where these bankruptcies could be done in a way where, again, similar to taking PPP,
you don't let people go.
You know, a percentage of the, of the cap table must go to the pensions if they have them.
A certain percentage of the cap table must go to employees.
And then the remaining percentage goes to the secured bond holders.
And so the existing equity holders and the unsecured bond holders would effectively,
you know, not be made whole, but in that all the employees would be.
And if you combine that with a UBI program where you put, look, in the United States economy,
only $8 trillion is wages.
So we could do so much if we had given every United States citizen their absolute salary
of 2019 right now, we still
have two trillion left to bail out companies.
And everybody could take a year and get paid, like literally have a year of sabbatical
and be paid.
Well, I think what it really does is it guarantees the chances, or it maximizes, sorry,
the chances of a consumer-led recovery.
Like, the United States has never been an economic system
that's been vibrant because of government spending
or other things.
We've always been vibrant because we've been consumer-led.
It's consumer consumption and it's customers of companies
buying products that they need or want
that drive the economy forward.
And if you think about our largest customer base,
they are the US population.
And by guaranteeing their revenue, so to speak,
you actually allow them to then spend
once they get out of quarantine,
and you'll see them spend even in fits and starts.
In this way, you could spend $500 billion
buying a bunch of junk debt.
I really don't see as a reasonably savvy participant
in the markets how it actually helps anything. I think all it does is it saddles you and
me and all of our listeners with a bunch of toxic junk debt that eventually has to get
sold by the Fed as David said in the grand unraveling.
And it would be more healthy.
Back into the market.
Wouldn't it be more healthy, David, to allow a certain percentage of these companies, the
weaker ones to fail so that the stronger ones could then pick up those employees and there
will be some stability.
And I'm curious if you'd think that we're going to be living in a world where, when people
have speculated about this, maybe some, the individual consumer changes their perspective. And maybe people come out of this
crises with a different world view. I don't necessarily subscribe to this, but Chimalt, you do. We've
had this conversation. And so I'm curious, David, if you think the American consumer will forever change,
and maybe they upgrade their phone half as much, they, you know, spend less. And they basically live a more modest, rural lifestyle
and people maybe stay out in Tahoe or Colorado
or wherever they went during this crisis.
Where do you thoughts?
Well, you're really talking about depression
and error values.
And the problem is if we acquire those values via depression,
that would be a pretty bad outcome here.
So, but yes, that could happen.
You know, I think where I agree with Jamoth
is that I think that even though the federal government,
the Fed, the Treasury, have a tremendous amount of firepower
in a situation like this, it may not be inexhaustible.
And we have to kind of pick and choose and prioritize
who's going to get aid and who's going to get bailouts.
And right now it feels a little bit willy-nilly.
And it feels like under those circumstances the bailouts default to the people who are politically connected and powerful, as opposed to the workers, the pension funds,
you know, the Main Street small business owner who's worked their whole life on a business
and now all of a sudden is underwater. And I think, you know, it's going to be very hard to get
the A to the right people. Look, in the last four weeks, in the last four weeks,
oh, sorry, in the last week, this is an incredible set. I apologize. In the last week,
the amount of distress debt in the U.S. has quadrupled in one week to a trillion dollars.
So as an example, to David's point, that's much more visible to Jay Powell or to Steve Benuchin in the
Fed and at the Treasury than it is that thousands and thousands of nameless anonymous small businesses.
Who owns that debt?
Can you give an example of what that debt would be for the listeners?
Sure, like you know.
I mean, so, you know, I mean, a fallen angel today is Ford.
So we were not gonna pick on Ford,
but we're just gonna point to it as a well-known company.
So this is a car manufacturer.
They employ hundreds and hundreds of thousands of people
in very important political states.
You know, did Michigan, Ohio, I think Tennessee, probably, but Ohio
and Michigan obviously, critical states. And they, you know, issued debt into the market
to fund, you know, building factories or buying equipment. Who buys that debt? Pension funds by the debt. Family offices by the
debt. Hedge funds by the debt. Now, those guys were giving out a coupon, and they were
paying, let's just say, four, five or six percent a year on this interest. But now, because
of all this economic uncertainty, people think that their ability to pay that back has gone way down.
And so now they have to issue debt at much higher interest rates. And the existing debt
has a much lower credit quality. It's effectively like you having a credit card. And, you know,
American Express calling you and saying, Jason, I think the odds of you paying your credit
card balance have gone way down. So I'm increasing your interest rate to 24% from 17%.
Yeah.
And then I get another credit card to pay it off.
And so essentially what's happened is the federal reserve has decided to become that next credit card
issue.
What could go wrong?
Instead of doing it for you, they're doing it for companies, but not for you.
And the question is, is that okay?
Well, at some level, companies like Ford should be saved because I think these are iconic
businesses that employ hundreds of thousands of people.
And they're critical linchpins in the economy, right?
Because they have a massive supply chain network.
And, you know, they're really important for many other things beyond just the economics
that they themselves represent. But, there are better ways to help Ford. You could lend Ford as much money as they needed
to meet their short-term obligations, similarly to the way that the Federal Reserve would
allow a bank to borrow from their window. And I think that that's a very reasonable approach.
their window. And I think that that's a very reasonable approach. The question is really when the Fed then basically acts as a buyer of last resort and obfuscates the price of these bonds,
and essentially is saying the American taxpayer will own these bonds for the foreseeable future.
If you think that at some point those bonds that you bought for, you know, 90 cents on the dollar
Those bonds that you bought for, you know, 90 cents on the dollar are worth 90 cents on the dollar than everything is okay.
But if there's a chance that 90 cents goes to 70 cents, the people that really eat that cost are us in the short term and our children in the medium of it. I have a silly question. So obviously not my wheelhouse corporate debt like this. Why wouldn't there be a clause
that if they didn't pay back that 90 cents on the dollar that the American government bought
it for, it converts into equity in the company? It's a great question because the federal reserve
has chosen to go and essentially the equivalent of open and e-trade account and step into the markets by themselves
and just buy.
So they're buying bonds and they're buying individual bonds and they're buying indices
that control or that have exposure to certain bonds.
What they are not doing is going directly to these companies and negotiating, essentially
saying, I will give you four or five billion dollars.
And what I want you to do is retire that old debt
and replace it with this new instrument.
And here are the terms of this new instrument.
The United States tax bearer, it's, you know,
3% or 4% warred coverage of the company.
Yum yum.
You know, you must make sure that the pension holders
are made aware. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, wouldn't we have those closets? It's like basic blocking and tackling that seat funds have.
David Sacks, why is this not like a no-brainer?
Well, I mean, I think we've gotta get a good deal
for taxpayers.
I mean, Jamatha said, and I've heard Mark Cuban
say it pretty eloquently.
I mean, you know, our Trump say that
we have to get a good deal for taxpayers.
I just think that they're in such an emergency.
They're not really taking the time to do that.
They're trying to do things they can do immediately.
Yeah, the forgiveness of this money to me
is the thing I don't understand.
Why is any of it forgivable?
Why is it all of it just a 10 year long,
or 20 year long loan that converts into equity
over some tranches?
But Jason, this is why if you're going to have hazardly fire trillions of dollars out
of a bazooka, why not give more than three cents on the dollar to average Americans?
Why not put it into the pockets of every single bank account?
You know, who knows how much everybody made the IRS does?
And the IRS has a mailing address for everybody.
And the IRS either gets a check or mails a check to every single taxpayer in the United States, which
they also have direct deposit for half of the people. And so, you know, there's nothing stopping
us from saying, well, you know what, why don't we do 10%? 10 cents of every dollar. Why don't we do
15 cents of every dollar to Americans? I really think this is the way that you
Why don't we do 15 cents of every dollar to Americans? I really think this is the way that you limit the amount
of waste that's going to happen.
So the intention isn't wrong.
And we shouldn't castigate people for wanting
to put money in the system as David said to plug the hole.
But we can't be so haphazard as to not think about
the moral hazards we're creating and try
to fix them in real time.
And so this 10 trillion has already gone out the door.
But if the next trillion or two don't touch Americans,
I think it's going to create an enormous amount of damage.
We've only given people a few weeks of a lifeline
and they need more.
And you can't tell companies that they can have effectively a limitless lifeline and they need more and you can't tell companies that they can have effectively a limitless
lifeline but not the individuals because I do think at some point companies will find a way
to get out of these loans and or break the covenants with not much repercussion.
Okay, I want to wrap with two sort of not doomsday scenarios, but I want to touch on politics.
And I also want to know in the chance that this quarantine goes on for May and June.
In other words, San Francisco says, you know what?
We're going to keep going and we're going to and New York says we're keeping going.
And we're talking about not just April being in quarantine, but May and or June.
And we're looking at June 1st or July 1st.
What are the chances, David, that people say,
you know what, I am a free person.
I want to take my, take my life into my own hands.
I want to make my own decision.
I'm going out.
I'm going to go surfing.
I'm going to do this.
And we have this social unrest.
And how to politicians handicap that in this new world.
I think that could happen.
I mean, particularly among young populations who are not at risk as much, you know, for
the relatively younger, healthier people who don't have comorbidity factors could say,
look, I've got a one in a thousand chance or, you know, or less of
dying, even if I do get this. And I'm just going to take that chance. But it's all the more reason why
I think we need a strategy to get out of lockdown that already includes the idea of letting out
these people who are a much lower risk and and isolates the people who are a higher risk.
And against the, you have anything to add to that,
Chimath, that kind of doomed-day scenario or that, that,
eventuality? Well, I think that you're very right, Jason, that I don't think we're going to get
out a lot down until June 1st at the earliest. And I think that's in California.
I think the news and the sposter is basically that
if April looks like the curves are decaying,
it's gonna be mid-May to late May before he lifts this thing.
I don't know if I can handle this.
And, but it's also important that we understand,
like, we just talked about companies.
The only entity that's in even worse shape
than companies and people are states and cities and counties.
Yeah, their debt is incredible.
They have no revenue and massive costs.
Massive costs and their nonprofits.
And think of the garbage collector, the fireman,
the police officer, the teacher.
These are like, these are the backbones
and the pillars of our community.
It's such a good thing that we were so resilient and we thought ahead and built up massive surpluses in our tax bases.
Oh wait, we didn't do that.
Well, there were some provisions to do that, these rainy day funds, but those are going to get exhausted.
And, you know, we're going to have to build those guys out as well. So this is what I'm saying, which is that when you're pumping in trillions of dollars
haphazardly into the capital markets before you think about people or you think about
the states and cities and communities in America, I just think it's a recipe for disaster.
Let me ask this even more simply, David, under what circumstance would you be willing
to go back to our poker game on a Monday night and have six seven of us around a table
sharing a meal and playing cards for six hours
Well if there was if there was a treatment for
For the virus so that you knew that if you got it you work at a die that would be a big deal
There's a Russian to let aspect to the virus right now,
or even if your odds are low, you still don't want to take the chance.
I think the next thing that would probably help would be that if we had this
rapid ubiquitous testing, so I could know that the people who are in the room with me
are all tested. We're all tested and we're all negative and
you know they could repeat the tests on a frequent enough basis that we could all trust in the result.
That would make a big difference I think.
All right let's wrap with politics. All of this is occurring in an election year.
in an election year. Bernie is out of the race. Biden is doing a daily webcast. Trump's ratings are through the roof as he is more than willing to let us all know in his abhorrent narcissistic
way that his ratings are just tremendous right now in the middle of thousands of Americans dying a day.
But we have to touch on this because elections are how we
govern and make these decisions is by who we put into these positions.
So what do we think, and let's just make odds here?
Odds that Trump wins again. Odds that Biden wins.
If you had to lay the odds, if you had to give it a percentage,
or you want to set a line, what are your thoughts, David?
I always think that these things are basically a coin flip.
I mean, this far out.
I mean, right now, it seems like, you know,
Trump's ratings have never been higher.
He's pulling relatively well,
and Biden just seems completely irrelevant.
But if we're still dealing with the virus by November,
if we've cycled in and out of lockdown,
if we have kind of an unresolved situation,
if the economy is in a very, very deep recession or depression,
I think, you know, it's up for grabs.
Shama, I think that if there is a V-shaped recovery
of any kind, Trump will win in a landslide.
Right now, we are in a V-shaped recovery.
The market has come back.
No, we're not.
No, we're not.
Well, if you use the market as a car.
The market is completely
decoupled from Main Street. And so what Wall Street does is irrelevant right now. What
I mean by recovery is what happens on Main Street, because if you have 16, 17, 20, 22% unemployment,
I mean, you could feel the prancing dog and he'll be Trump. So I think that the president needs a massive
victory or so what does the game theory say? The game theory probably says that he'll
try to force people to go back to work as quickly as possible. And if there's even a mode to come, a shred of evidence on
some kind of, you know, therapeutic, they'll, you know, drum it up like it's, like it's
a cure and try to confuse people that there's a vaccine. But I think he needs that because
in the absence of that, again, I just go back to how difficult will it be to start real life?
I think it's going to be difficult. And I think in that people won't have a lot of patience
for the fact that the debt will have ballooned,
deficits will have ballooned, trillions of dollars
will have gone out the door, and people will be
meaningfully struggling going into election day.
I don't think that that helps Trump at all.
And by the way, and we'll talk about this in our next podcast because we should probably get an economist
to talk about it. But, you know, what is putting $10 trillion or whatever the final number
is, it'll probably be $20 trillion, you know, one, one times US GDP. What does that do to
the economy? What does that do to long-term inflation? Like, if you see what's happened
to China, what you pan did and they went through a lost decade or two?
No, I think the best better example is what happened in China,
which is a combination of fiscal and monetary stimulus in 2009 and 10.
And the results are basically a lot of fake growth and massive inflation.
And so, you know, it's probably useful to debate that in the next pod.
What are the chances?
I think it creates a lot of risk for Trump.
What are the chances of a dark horse candidate on the zero?
Zero.
So it's Biden for sure.
Yeah, it's my chance.
No, I'm not.
First of all, I'm wearing a Biden health emergency.
I mean, he is, you know, not a spring chicken.
So either person gets coronavirus, it could be, yeah.
Well, no, I look at anything happen to him.
Yeah, yeah.
Look, I mean, we shouldn't even talk about these possibilities.
I don't want to sound like, you know, it's not like no one wants us to happen.
But look, I think Jamoth is right.
They're not going to replace the head of the ticket absent,
you know, something health wise happen.
What is your game, very then, on how Trump will play this?
Because in Jemoth's mind, getting back to work earlier
makes it seem like we're getting back to normal
and he did that, but a politician might also say,
you know what?
I think there's a chance of the second wave,
so I want to keep a close until June or July 1st,
and then time it.
And I know the sounds incredibly cynical
that a elected official would make health
and economic policy decisions on their re-election,
but that is the reality we live in, is it not?
Sure, of course.
I think the next big political debate
is gonna be around this, what now?
Yes, the quarantines have arrested the exponentially,
the virus, but how do we get out of them?
And, you know, Trump's gonna have to make a decision
about when and how we get out.
And he's gonna be eager to get out of lockdown,
to restart the economy, but on the
other hand, if he mis-times it, and we cycle, you know, the virus then takes off again
and we cycle back into the other lockdown, that's very dangerous for him politically, too.
So he's got a needle to thread there.
I agree with Jamal that if this ends up being V-shaped, Trump is a shoe-in,
but if it ends up being a deep recession or depression, then I think the question is
going to be, does he appear to be more in the, is he a Hoover or is he more in the folder of an FDR, you know, and explain that for people listening.
Well, I mean, so Hoover took the blame for the Great Depression.
After our gets elected in 1932, we're still in the Great Depression in 1936, but he gets reelected, you know.
And because he's seen as a as a man of action, he does these fireside chats and he's doing things.
And I do think that Trump kind of pivoted
from initially being fired.
A little bit flat-footed on the virus
and now doing these daily briefings.
And I think the American public
is giving him credit for action right now.
And so obviously if those actions work,
I think he gets reelected and if they don't work,
the question is, does he get blamed for that?
Is he a Hoover or is he an FDR?
All right, on that note,
encourage everybody to wear masks,
social distancing,
and for those people in the audience who are
start-ups and investors, keep the faith, keep investing, keep starting
companies, never bad time to start a great company in my mind. And
Chimoff, any final thoughts? Here we are. It's, what is today's date? I know it's
April. I think it's somewhere around the 10th. Am I even close? It's Friday, right?
April 10th. Let's just make a decision
To be all in on masks all in on masks
and take it into our arms
We don't need to be told that these things make sense. They make sense. You're an idiot if you think otherwise
Do you have a closing thought? Oh, keep on talking about that.
I don't know what that's all about.
Totally agree with that.
That was my blog today.
We shouldn't have to make it the law.
But I think we should because there's still people who aren't adopting it.
But it's the lowest cost thing we can do.
And if you look at the Asian countries that have controlled the virus, every single person
wears a mask when they go out in public every
Single person. It's a simple no-brainer. Give people a thousand dollar fine if you're not wearing a mask
Give them a warning first and hand them a mask
Like literally the cops should have masks and they should hand them to say put this mask on and if I see you again
You get a thousand dollar fine
The post office should put one or a number of these and everyone's mailbox
the post office should put one or a number of these in everyone's mailbox. This is the first step to having a more fine-tuned policy than just quarantine. And if we can't even get this
right, then I fear for what's coming next. If you, there's a great execution idea, the mail carriers,
every mail carrier leaves them, and then you could also get the private sector. Do you tell every UPS FedEx driver?
The government gives them those masks Amazon Amazon. They just all have it. Hey Jeff Bay somebody clip this and send it to Jeff Jeff if you want to do a Mitzvah
Give all these masks to the drivers and just leave masks on everybody's doorstep and forget about Trump and whatever government officials Going to drag their heels on it. Go ahead. You do it Jeff Bezos
And hey, how great was Jack giving away a billion dollars? I get about Trump and whatever government officials gonna drag their heels on it. Go ahead, you do it Jeff Bezos.
And hey, how great was Jack giving away a billion dollars?
I mean, we saw him get barbecued on it.
Strong, social media, but what a strong move, huh?
And he's gonna be strong.
He put it in a Google sheet.
He's like, here's a cool shit.
And made the sheet open.
I mean, it's the strongest move ever.
It's like, you know, everybody, you know,
I've always been very skeptical of philanthropy
because I feel like it's a dalleance
of the established rich in North America
because they like to have their names on things.
And here's a guy who just basically powned all of that.
I don't need a hospital with my name on it.
I don't need a building with my name on it.
Here's a billion dollars,
and here's a Google spreadsheet to track it,
which means I'm gonna have zero
and overhead and running it.
I mean, it's so strong.
It's literally like, the only thing that could be stronger
is if he connected it to a Stripe account.
And as he swiped his credit card,
it's just so strong.
He should put a Zapier that tweets it.
I mean, he has a Google doc which is set
so that everybody can read it at all times.
I mean, for a billion dollars, it's just amazing.
You should start a slack instance with like each of those nonprofits
having a, they're completely, by the way, he completely
pawned the giving pledge in one fell swoop.
Yes.
The giving pledge, which nobody has any, it's pretty opaque.
Now it's just like, you're, it's basically,
pretend you're going to give your money away.
We don't need to know how much.
You don't really need to do it.
There's no accountability, but we have this fun party once a year. We can all hang out.
And you know, how is the party's a good? I have inside it.
Not so.
It's like the giving much. Yeah. So stupid. It's like the sign of insecurity.
Uh, Saxipoo. Thanks for coming on the pod, Raynman. We appreciate it. Love you, Saxipoo.
We love you, Saxipoo. Love you, J. Count. Love you, too, Tremoth. Bestie C. We love you.
And everybody stay safe.
Seriously, and I just wanted to close.
We're a mask.
We're a mask.
And to those people on the front lines,
the janitors, the Google, the Amazon drivers, Instacart,
people in the food supply.
You are the best.
It's amazing what you do.
You're the best.
What a sacrifice.
Get the money to them. Yeah, and seriously, give the Amazon. Let's amazing what you're doing. What a sacrifice. Get the money to them.
Yeah, and seriously, give the Amazon.
Let us tip those drivers in our
Get the money to them.
For sure, double the pay.
Okay, we'll see you all next time.
Bye, bye.