All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E31: Post-vaccination virtue signaling, pandemic lessons, immigration, Caitlyn Jenner for CA Governor, Big Tech earnings & more
Episode Date: May 1, 2021Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr....ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Referenced in the show: MIT Technology Review - Some vaccinated people are still getting covid. Here’s why you shouldn’t worry. https://www.technologyreview.com/2021/04/29/1024301/vaccines-covid-breakthrough-infections-immunity-cdc/ David Sacks on Medium - Caitlyn Jenner Is Right: Crime is the #1 Issue in California and Gavin Newsom Bears Ultimate Responsibility https://davidsacks.medium.com/caitlyn-jenner-is-right-crime-is-the-1-issue-in-california-and-gavin-newsom-bears-ultimate-381b3cee42db Tweets https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1378856861970038784 https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1388125436241223682 https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1388135440843251714 https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1388129450651492355 https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1387582236573175809 https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1387598770825830404 Show Notes: 0:00 Bestie intro, Jason's trip recap 2:47 Sacks on hypocrisy and virtue signaling surrounding wearing masks post-vaccination, Biden's address 16:07 Pandemic lessons 30:02 Immigration, Americans self-selecting as hard workers, understanding two different types of immigration 48:04 How Darwinian free trade has negatively impacted the US middle class 1:00:44 Caitlyn Jenner for CA Governor, crime & homelessness 1:07:48 Big Tech earnings
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an incredible fashion disaster we have today.
David Sacks is dressed like, where's Waldo?
Okay.
Freeberg, freeberg is dressed like
a
driving a fucking Subaru Alpac.
Oh God.
Unbelievable.
I mean, this is ridiculous.
Three, two, one.
Go, go, go, go.
Go, go, go, go, go, go.
Go, go, go, go, go, go.
Go, go, go, go, go, go.
Go, go, go, go, go. And it said we open source into the fans Everybody everybody to another episode of the all in podcast episode 31 with us today from
Was this rolled out of bed the queen of Kenwa himself
David freeberg is here. Let me do my hair. Get that hair. It's not gonna help
Setting the homeless problem by by yourself going out on the streets or
We do it intervention
I'm gonna go change
He's doing intervention. All right, I'm gonna go change.
Give me a free bird. 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, 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, The skipper, David is that a red man here? The skipper is here?
Don't change my nickname.
Don't change my nickname.
I'm comfortable with reading, man.
Don't throw me off.
Yeah, definitely.
I'm definitely okay with reading, man.
Of course, not the skipper, not the skipper, Ed.
The dictator himself got a full night's sleep.
I hope this time.
I did.
I really did.
I really did. I really did.
And of course, I'm Jake Hal, the baby seal here.
In Miami, look at the view, how beautiful.
It's been an incredible, incredible week.
The tiger has been unleashed.
I went to Austin.
Now I'm in Miami.
Jake Hal, you're more like a Pajeyaina.
I said, listen, wait.
No, let's go to the tiger. I don't know. You're not like a Pudgy Haena. I said listen, wait. No, let's go to the top.
I don't know. You're not really a tiger.
The quarantine 15, big announcement, 10 pounds are gone.
Five to go.
I'm lifting weights outside in Miami.
It's been amazing.
Field report.
I get to Austin, I kid you're not.
I got my mask on.
10 people, first of all, 10 people say,
love the oil and podcast, every like 15 feet walking
in Austin, and in Miami.
But somebody looks at me with my mask and says,
are you okay, son?
And I was like, what?
I can't do that.
And he said, are you vaccinated?
And I said, yeah, he's like, why are you wearing a mask?
And I realized it's time for independent critical thinking.
Sacks, I gotta give it to you.
Another great, great tweet for me to copy and adapt
to your deal flow.
But I love this tweet that you had where you said early
in the pandemic, explain the tweet,
or maybe read the tweet.
This is, this is to me.
I've been blasting.
One about masks.
About one group of people wouldn't wear masks.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Well, at the beginning, that's right.
I mean, the dysfunction of our politics is that half the country wouldn't wear a mask
at the beginning of the pandemic.
And now the other half of the country won't take them off at its end.
This is the problem is that the mask has become, it's the equivalent of the red mega hat for team blue. This is become some sort of virtue signaling
Even when it's not necessary
But it's actually destructive because it's
Performatively sending the signal to people that the vaccines don't work. And we have a third of the country today
is still vaccine hesitant.
And this is not helping.
What we need to be sending the message to them is,
look, get vaccinated so life can get back to normal
so you don't have to wear a mask.
And we still have the CDC putting out
this ridiculously conservative and timid guidance
saying that, well, if you get vaccinated,
you can take off your masks outdoors,
as long as you're not with too many people.
Well, like, no, I mean, look, once you get vaccinated,
you should need to wear a mask outdoors or indoors.
And, you know, we had the state,
this sort of mini state of the union this past week
with Biden.
And it was this really like-
No, nobody was saying it.
It was like an empty room.
And empty room.
Because of social distancing. and they were all wearing masks
even though you know every single one of them is vaccinated.
And so I think Biden really missed an opportunity in that speech.
Yes, he said that everyone should get vaccinated but show not tell.
I mean, you know, he walks up to the microphone in a mass saying that we should all get vaccinated.
Well, what is the mass for?
Why don't you tell people that if you get vaccinated,
you don't need a mask anymore.
And so, you know, we have this sort of contrast.
It's actually really, it's really incredible
because to your point, he was trying to make
some very important points in that speech, David.
And when the camera would actually pan from behind him,
so instead of looking at him in Kamala and Nancy Pelosi,
it would look, there was
nine people. And you thought, I'm not there. So that crowd for no, no, no, no, no, because
typically when you give these sort of state of the union or, you know, these kind of like
100 day addresses, it is packed because you have everybody in Congress. You have everybody
in the Senate, you know, you have, you have typically like a bunch of other officials, you have the Supreme Court, like in a state of the union
address, and there was nobody, and it felt really striking to watch that.
If Trump's mistake was not wearing a mask in April of 2020, I think Biden's mistake is not
taking it off in April of 2021. Why can't we get a political leader who is willing to put on mass at the right time
and take him off at the right time?
No, I don't know.
On a list, Cassette.
I think, man, just we need a political leader who's reasonably scientific and will actually
say, here's the intersection of science and common sense that everybody can map to and
copy me because it is to your point, David, you know, the
leader of the free world is given that title for a reason.
It's not, it's not completely, completely ignore what I say.
I've been put in this position because I am, you know, on some dimension,
expected to be the most thoughtful person in the room and set the example for everybody.
Let's just talk like the important consequence of this.
And I agree with sex. The important consequence of this, and I agree with SACs.
The important consequence of this, however, is the economic effect it has.
For example, in San Francisco, restaurants are only allowed to be at a quarter capacity.
So there are restaurant owners that want to get back to business, that want to generate
income again, that want to get off of the PPP loan program and all of the government support.
And they should be able to, because most people in San Francisco at this point, the vast majority,
in fact, are vaccinated.
And the restaurants for no scientific reason are shut down or limited to a quarter capacity.
And this is the case across a lot of cities and a lot of states in the country right now,
where the conservatism with respect to coming out of the major part
of this kind of pandemic is what's now keeping the economy, or not just keeping the economy
because we're fueling the economy with stimulus, but is keeping business owners and keeping
people that want to participate actively in building and running their businesses from
getting back to work because we're so conservative about this. And you know what, SACS is totally right. Yeah. Like take the masks off, let people
go into restaurants and let people go have dinner in San Francisco, let these places get back to work.
By the way, we have a we have an AB test that's actually nobody's talking about, which is that
the more conservative version of America's posture, right? America's sort of like half we don't
care and half we care too much. But in Europe, you could see a more homogeneous approach to the problem.
And we printed a negative 0.6% GDP growth in Europe.
So to your point, with all the vaccines that are out there, with all of the logic and all
of the science, not being able to just take the mask off and get back to life as normal
was negative 0.6% GDP growth in a quarter where they also printed
hundreds of billions of dollars.
And now you come into the United States.
Last year, I don't know if you guys remember this, but every forecast I saw had from the
smartest folks saying Q1 GDP would be on a run rate to be around 10%.
It would be one of the best in history.
It was only 1.6%.
So we're on a 6.4
percent GDP growth run rate. Guys, that's not 10 percent. Now, it's still a lot, but the
point is we got to get back to life as normal. We have to show that these vaccines work. We
have to tell people that you can have a normal life. You should be going out, spending
money, going back to the office, live normally.
Yeah. And we should, we should, we should just cover the data.
I mean, we should, I mean, it'd be great to put up
the latest CDC data on the screen.
Yeah, if you use the CDC as a source for the data
as opposed to listening to their interpretations of it,
their policy interpretation, it's actually pretty illuminating.
So out of 87 million people who've been vaccinated,
there have only been 408 serious cases, which would be you count as
Hospitalization or death related to COVID. So those are odds of one and 213,000. The odds of being hit by lightning are one and 180,000
So your odds of being struck by lightning are greater than your risk of getting seriously sick. What the odds of a oil flush? I need this in poker terms
than your risk of getting seriously sick. What are the odds of a royal flush?
I need this in poker terms.
I think it sounds like hitting a royal flush twice.
Yeah, exactly.
It's crazy.
How many royal flushes have we each hit?
I'll put this article up and you guys can share it
in the show notes.
Is it technology review one?
Yeah, and I think it does a good job
of speaking to SACs as statistic.
Now, yeah, so I think SACS, I think this represents the CDC data and
the first paragraph in this article, but it goes on to kind of speak about the statistical
likelihood of these events. So, you know, basically, you know, it opens up by saying, you know, as of
April 20th, 87 million people in the United States have been vaccinated and only 7,157 or 0.008
percent when on to become infected with SARS-CoV-2, 330 of whom were hospitalized
and 77 of whom died from the disease.
And I would guess that of those people,
there is likely some immune dysfunction,
which is a likely reason why.
It doesn't mean that every individual has that risk.
It means that there are certain people out there
that are gonna have immune dysfunction
and won't develop the appropriate kind of protection from the vaccine.
And that's small, small, small, small, small percent of people are where we're kind of seeing,
you know, actual risk like.
That's where I get the 408 number is it's the number of hospitalizations plus deaths minus
the ones that they say in the footnote were not related to COVID.
Right.
So there's some other like cause.
So 488 out of 87 million.
And by the way, I think it's worth just highlighting,
you know, just think about the rationale
for why there is conservatism here still, right?
So if there are still pockets
where people have not been vaccinated in the country
and there are still areas where people are hesitant
to get vaccinated and there's a large
unvaccinated population.
The official guidance, the official kind of reasoning, I believe, is that we need to be
conservative to get all of those people to behave in a conservative enough way to keep a,
you know, a surge from occurring regionally around the country.
And the loss, the downside is very negligible where people still have to wear masks.
What I don't think that that calculus accounts for
is that the loss is actually not negligible.
The loss of telling people broadly to keep wearing masks
is a hesitancy to go back to work.
A hesitancy and a conservancy to engage
in normal economic activity.
And so, I think that we're kind of missing that point
in the kind of officiating of this exit strategy here.
And it's certainly, I'm aligned with Saxon
as I certainly think it's biting us more
than it's helping us.
To give you an idea, just like experience wise,
when I was in Austin, every restaurant
is at 110 capacity.
The locals there were like,
I can't get a reservation for a week or two.
The town is packed.
Everybody in the country is going to Austin and Miami
because they've just learned that Austin and Miami
have officially declared, if you are the vaccine,
you can go have your life.
But there is still a little bit of theater on the margins.
When you go into a restaurant,
I went in to get a meal and I didn't have my mask on.
I kid you not, 110 capacity,
100 people sitting at the bar, 200 people at tables. She hands me a mask and I didn't have my mask on. I kid you not 110 capacity, 100 people sitting at the bar,
200 people at tables.
She hands me a mask and I said,
I'll have one, I put it on,
I said, can I ask you a question?
And she, the host says,
why should you wear a mask
when there's 300 people in here without a mask
and the doors are closed?
I was like, that's the exact question.
She goes, it makes no sense.
The governor wants no masks, the mayor wants masks,
and so they're having their own little version
of the national conversation in Austin,
which is locally scared,
or at least the politicians are,
and then reasonable otherwise.
So you literally put your little mask on,
you walk 10 feet to your table
and then take it off for the rest of the time.
In Miami, I just was sorry.
I go to Miami, I walk into, I haven't been out in 14 months, so I decided I would
check out a club. And I went to a nightlife club and people were dancing and having a great
time. People were also popping bottles. And I was like, oh my god, it's over like a nightlife
club. It was a nightlife club. And no, it was not a, yes, anyway.
It was a legitimate club, you know, here in Soft Beach.
And so I took a little insta,
and I shared, I fed the insta,
and immediately I got three comments from friends
who were like, what are you doing in that club?
And I wrote back to all three, I'm vaccinated.
And they were like, okay.
I was like, it's not I mean, but I think this was the point I made a few months ago, which is I do
think that the the subconscious training, the fear factor that's been kind of, you know, built
into us over the last year, year and a half, it's going to take a while to kind of train our way
out of, you know, people aren't gonna be that rational
and that conscious about, oh, I've been vaccinated.
People are basically the default is fear,
the what-its, the butts, but oh my God,
people are still getting COVID even though they're vaccinated,
but there's variants, but, and everyone looks
for a conscious, you know, a kind of conscious reason
why they're rationalizing their subconscious fear.
And everyone's got this fear to go and do things
and this fear to go back in the world because we've literally been trained and beaten into a corner
for the last year. Now, the conscious reality is, you don't need to be fearful, but I'm fearful,
therefore I'm looking for reasons to maintain my fear. And I think this, this is like what,
again, I'll say that I said it like four times before, but this is what happened after 9-11
and it lasted for years. And you know, we still have ridiculous TSA processes.
We need our leaders to take their masks off.
Get, tell everybody they're vaccinated, take their masks off, go back to normal life,
so that everybody else will feel that it's okay too. Because even if you're,
even if you're not fearful, David, the other thing that you are is just guilty.
And, you know, and you gotta get rid of that as well.
And the only way you'll do it is if highly visible people
are now actually going back to life is normal.
Yeah, like the peer pressure element of it.
It's like I feel bad going into a store
when everyone else is wearing a mask.
And like I'm an asshole.
I mean, this is crazy, this crazy MSNBC moment,
one of the hosts of one of their shows
said I've been fully vaccinated, but I went running in Central Park
so I double-mast.
And I'm like, the furniture signaling was so insane.
And I'm like, wait a second, you're outdoors.
That's insane.
I'm gonna tell the man.
This is the joy-read thing.
Yeah.
I don't want to say the person's name, because then if you
mention who it is, then you might be attacking a person of color
or a woman host.
So I just said, well, now you're avoiding it, which makes it think that you are.
So who is it?
How am I supposed to say it without being?
Does anybody want?
I mean, nobody watches MSEC.
What is MSEC?
What is MSEC?
MSEC was the Trump, Trump derangement syndrome therapy was MSEC.
The radio is going, I have a question for the three of you.
Knowing what we've seen here between the illogical both sides and the media and the insanity, what
do you take away from the year of the pandemic as it comes to a close in how you personally
look at the world?
Sacks you want to start?
Yeah, I'll tell you, I feel like the American people
are constantly being propagandized and there is almost like an information war being perpetrated
on the American people where we cannot get the data, the facts and the truth. I think
it's true now in terms of people not taking off their masks, even though we have the CDC
data that basically shows the lightning strike probability
of getting COVID.
But we saw at the very beginning of the pandemic,
remember, I have all these people on Twitter
telling me every time I tweet about this,
why don't you just listen to the experts, right?
They want me to shut off my brain
and just do whatever the CDC says.
And I'm like, well, do you realize the CDC was against mass
at the beginning of the pandemic,
back in March of 2000 last year, when I was saying we need to wear masks because looking at the
success of the Asian countries and some of the data coming out of that, the CDC
was very very slow in adopting masks. They were against it. They were telling us
we didn't need to do it. And that was the historical CDC, like right, they've been
around for a long time, and then also Trump was anti-mask.
Trump was slow to the dot-mask too, and yeah, and absolutely.
Yes, I've said that there's a Venn diagram of American politics, where one circle is
favored mass wearing one year ago, and then once again, rate of mass mandates today, the
Venn diagram of overlap between those two groups
is very small.
I'm in that overlap.
I feel like I'm in that like a very lonely part
of the political graph.
Yeah, Chimoff, how has your thinking,
you know, now that we've had to process
this event in our lifetime,
that is probably the most consequential,
you know, moment. Yeah. I have thought about this a lot, Jason. You ask a really important question. And I think
everybody should probably try to take five minutes and actually write this down because I think
I'll tell you what I learned. I learned I learned three things. The first thing I learned is
intellectual and it's exactly the same thing that David Zach said.
It is completely shocking to me
how much disinformation there is.
And also how we are so prone to turning off our brains
and not thinking for ourselves.
So it's really shocking,
and I think 2020 was the year that that was laid bare,
that the institutions that that was laid bare.
That the institutions that feed you information can't really be trusted, that you can't
really trust the interpretation of actual simple data that nobody wants to think in first
principle.
So that's the first one.
We have stopped thinking for ourselves and that's a recipe for disaster.
And so that's an intellectual thing that I've realized. And I don't want to do it.
And so I'll think for myself, and I'll take the consequences. The second was economic, which is,
wow, we have really over rotated to this crazy form of globalism that is going to get undone
over the next 30 years. And that's going to have a lot of implications. And it can be done in a way
that can rejuvenate the United States, which I think can fix a lot of implications and it can be done in a way that can rejuvenate
the United States, which I think can fix a lot of the stuff that was created.
And we should talk about that later today.
And then the third is physiological, which is if you didn't know before, I'm going to
tell you now, and it's this three-letter word that we make into a four-letter word in
America, which is the letters F-A-T. We have a fat epidemic in the United States. Almost 80% of every single person
that was hospitalized because of COVID was clinically obese. And you can't say it. And you're not
allowed to say it. If you say that somebody is fat or if you say that somebody is obese, it's all
of a sudden like, you know, you're going to get virtue signal canceled.
And instead what we're doing is we're leaving an entire generation of people completely
abandoning them because we're not confronting the problem that by a combination of food
and the lack of movement, we are setting them up to either die acutely of something like
COVID or chronically by heart disease and diabetes.
And that it was like, it is now so obvious.
And by the way, that's the other thing where these healthy, fit people were running around
double vaccine or double masking in Central Park.
And they don't even know the basic data.
Like even if you thought you were going to go to the hospital, the 80% of all of those
millions and millions of hospitalizations
were from people that were obese. They had physiologically completely taken their body to a place
that it wasn't able to fight. Right. So those are my three takeaways. Intellectual, economic, and
physiologically. And start one thing on that is because I agree with everything to Martha said is this this idea of laying bear
That laying bear the the sort of
Corruption of these like institutions that are supposed to be coming with good policies and educating us and it turns out
They you know keep giving us this foolish guidance
But there's also another institution. I think that was laid bear which are these education unions, right?
We had school closures for a year. The learning loss and the isolation
that kids have experienced,
we don't even know what the results of this are gonna be.
This could be a generational consequence.
And what do we see from the education unions?
They didn't wanna go back to school.
They fought it.
You know, we had the whole Oakley School Board resign
because they just said, well,
they want us to go back to work to be babysitters for their kids so we can smoke pot.
These are people who don't care about the kids.
And after this year, I don't know how anyone can be against school choice or charter schools
or giving parents more involvement in their kids' educations.
100% freeberg coming out of the pandemic and looking at your own psychology and your own life what
Have you learned and what do you take forward in terms of lessons and how you're gonna approach?
post-pandemic life. I'll kind of flip it a little bit
One of the first experiences I had with how broadly
People could be influenced in a way that doesn't have grounding or rooting
in facts and reality is when I sold my company to Monsanto in 2013.
And, Jake, I think you came with me on one of these trips that I took.
Yeah, I visited Monsanto with you.
Yeah, I visited Monsanto.
And, you know, there was an incredible bias by my team and by me personally, prior to
even engaging in conversations
with Monsanto against that company
because they were deemed to be evil.
And as I spent a lot of time personally
kind of digging into the facts and the history
of the business and kind of how we got here,
it was surprising to me like how much of the bias
against Monsanto was not rooted in fact
and was in fact a series of claims
that then became truth and reality because of the perception, and
it just became, things got stuck that way.
GMOs are bad, GMOs are evil.
The science of how they work, what they do, why they're useful, was never contemplated,
never became part of the dialogue.
It was just this assumed fact that this is an evil company that this stuff is bad.
This is a long, long topic. We can talk about this.
I'm sure for an entire hour and a half about the science and technology behind GMOs and how we
make food and all that sort of stuff. And I'm be happy to do that another time. But like for me,
I was just so surprised when I engaged with thoughtful friends of mine who were scientists even
and they had this bias. And then when you engage them in a dialogue about like, why, where does that
come from? What's the rooting? It just wasn't there.
And I got, and I mentioned this to you guys,
when I was an executive at the management team in Monsanto,
we had a WHO ruling where a guy got himself elected
to the IARC, this is the Cancer Research Group within WHO.
He was this liberal guy who was very anti-technology
who got himself elected to the IARC board
and got a ruling made that Roundup is a possible carcinogen.
And that ruling led to a $10 billion lawsuit that Bon Santo or now Bayer is settling,
which wasn't rooted in the science or the facts that the other scientists on the committee had kind of previously kind of previewed and gone through and said,
this isn't cancerous.
And it's incredible the implications it's had.
And so I've always, you know, for several years now, I've had this kind of belief that
like people can be led to believe things that aren't necessarily rooted in objective
truth, or in fact, or have empirical evidence to behind them.
And this goes back to the origins of religion and monarchies and like, you know, these
myths and these tales we color ourselves
where we all end up believing something
and there's some influencing factor that drives that.
I think this has just been an incredible manifestation
of that, the misinformation on both sides
from the beginning to the end of the pandemic.
And it's just been extraordinary to watch.
I don't think you change it.
I think social networks amplify it.
I think that the rate at which information or misinformation
flows back and forth is making it easier and quicker
to adopt this systemic, inaccurate belief system
that people might adopt.
And so it's a big question mark for me.
I don't know how we as a people kind of move forward
with objective, fact-based decision-making
and belief systems.
And I don't know if we ever will.
But, well, yeah, I just have humans are wired maybe, you know.
I haven't given it a lot of thought.
And I really like all of your answers,
because mine is very similar.
Number one, I feel like I was always an independent critical
thinker in my life.
And then I think I kind of started to pick sides
because of Trump that like I just found him so offensive
and I realized I have to go back to being just an independent critical thinker. I fill out with no party. I assume all new stories are fake news.
I assume all data is being manipulated. I assume everybody's got an agenda. I believe everybody's virtue signaling now and I'm making the decisions for myself.
And I in the one of the things Doug tells exactly
with you said, Chimoff, which is,
this was a disease of, you know, old people and fat people,
obese people, of which I have been one for far too long.
And this is my commitment is just,
I gotta take my health 100% seriously now
that I'm 50 years old.
I got a trainer, I got a masseuse.
I'm working out, doing weights, I'm doing everything. I changed my diet, I'm a trainer, I got a masseuse, I'm working out, I'm doing everything.
I changed my diet, I'm taking supplements,
the stuff we talked about here, I went right to my doctor
after that episode, we did Chimoff,
I'm getting that body scan for four fucking grand,
or whatever it cost, and I'm just doing it all.
Are you saying your masseuse is gonna help you lose weight?
No, but I've had shoulders.
Maybe that's the ****, maybe the ****.
No, no, beep that out. I'm just gonna, no, I just had I've had shoulders maybe that maybe the
No, I just realized I don't stretch. I don't stretch and my shoulders were getting very tired of being on the computer and everything So I'm just what a man of the people
I got a personal. I got a personal money.
I'm making myself out.
The third thing, and this is heartfelt and sincere, is that friendship and our loved
ones are really, with along with health, is so important.
And I am cherishing every moment, every experience with every friend knowing that the world can shut down and whatever,
and we have to take advantage of every moment. And that for me is the take away.
Just to build on something, I'm really proud of what you're trying to do, Jason, for your health.
When I remember, you know, how do you all have these great school pictures? Yep.
You go to picture day or whatever.
And there was this crazy contrast that I had in my grade school pictures.
There was two of them when I was in Sri Lanka.
So I was like, five and six.
And then, great, then I was seven or eight.
And then all of a sudden, this crazy, A, what's up, Antonio? I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I'm telling you, I say is like, I think when I was like nine or ten, I had gotten really
fat.
Really?
Because when we moved to Canada, it was a very different food supply, and then economically
we were in a different place.
We ate what we could afford, and I put on a lot of weight.
And that weight carried with me until college, and then after afford, and I put on a lot of weight. And that weight carried
with me until college, and then after college, and that's when I said, I got to get in shape.
Exactly for the same reason, Jason, because like my dad was getting dialized, he was constantly,
you know, dealing with these health issues. And I said, I don't deal with this shit. But
that's a rare thing that happens. If you think about the number of people that are put
in this predicament of like not even forget you're able to get
a trainer or whatever, but there are a ton of people that can only eat what they can
afford.
Right.
And the reality is it is just meaningfully cheaper to eat at McDonald's than it is to go
to Whole Foods and be able to buy organic food.
And so it's just not even on the agenda for people.
So this is what I mean by you, we have to be able to say that it's not that people are
fat because they choose to be, that there are these systemic imbalances that make
people sick, you know what I mean? Education and health. These are the education that
we need to work on in America. Like, you said it, I was it last week, Zach, you said,
you know, the, I think this is a great bargain that could happen in America with all this polarization.
If even a Republican conservative, like Sacks can say, everybody should get a great education
and everybody should be healthy, right?
And Sacks isn't a socialist, but this is important.
And it's so easy to just get a happy meal then to eat a salad or whatever.
I was in Washington, DC this week, and I met with this organization, which anybody who is interested
in this should check out called Third Way. And what Third Way is is a centrist organization,
right? So they largely work with Dems to try to pull them here.
And I think the Republican version is called the NISKAN center, I guess
center. But the idea is I sat with these guys and I was like, just teach me something.
And they taught me the most incredible thing. You guys know who Puy is, Puy goes out and
does all these surveys. They've been doing it for decades. They're the most respected
I think in service. Puy does this incredible thing where they go to like a whole bunch of
countries in the world.
And they ask this basically very simple question, I'm going to ask you guys what you think
the answer is.
On a zero to 10 scale, where 10 is important.
What do you think Americans think to the following question?
How important is hard work to get ahead in life?
Meaning right, so it's a proxy for how Americans think about hard work to get ahead in life. Meaning, right, so it's a proxy for
how Americans think about hard work.
How important is hard work to get ahead in life?
Freeberg.
What percentage of Americans do you think that
say that hard work is important to get ahead in life?
I'll give you a couple of data points.
I would use 80%.
Yeah.
But the setup is Indonesia, 28% India, 38% Germany, 50%.
Go ahead, what do you think the answer is?
Well, it should be 100%, but what do I think it is in the US?
I'm hoping it's about 60.
I agree with you, SACs. A hundred percent is the right answer.
And I believe Americans don't believe it.
I'm going to put Americans at 35%.
Because we've seen so many people get lucky and get rich.
Or just people think the system is rigged,
or the victim culture where people tell everybody
don't bother trying because it's rigged.
And you just...
I think the argument... Sorry, Chimato, I'll let you
give us the answer in a second.
But I think the argument is that, like,
entrepreneurism fuels these moments of extraordinary success,
but the perception creates the opposite effect,
which is someone can get rich very quickly
and therefore there's this luck factor
or this unfairness factor that is inherent in the system, right?
And so while it does enable hard work to drive,
you know, tremendous outcomes,
the perception is that holy crap in three years,
Kylie Jenner went on Instagram and became a billionaire,
or whatever, right?
And people get really blown away by that.
And I think it's discouraging.
Or one person's success makes such that other people
can't, that it's zero sum, when in fact,
a company, what's your number for America?
80% the number is 73% and we are the third highest ranking country in the
server. That's great. So it's amazing. Now, if you if you ask
then Americans who better represents the interests of hard working people
among Republicans and Democrats, the overwhelming answer is now Republicans,
which is really interesting.
Democrats, even in exit polling,
basically voted for Biden because they just really
found Trump distasteful.
And a lot of the people that basically said,
he's an ass and so they voted him out.
But it was not because they believed that Democrats
could do the job
of actually reinforcing the values of hard work.
And this goes back to...
They don't want hand-dests.
People don't want hand-dests.
People want a fair shot.
They want an even starting line.
They don't want an even finishing line.
Yeah, no one wants paternalism.
And everyone wants opportunity.
But you take what you're given
when it's available to you.
No one says no.
I spend a lot of time with farmers in the Midwest in the United States, very die hard conservative
generally, right?
And farmers benefit greatly from significant government, federal government support programs,
primarily a crop insurance program and some commodity price support programs, but they
are very anti-government. And there's this tremendous irony there, right? Because they don't want to hand out. primarily a crop insurance program and some commodity price support programs, but they are
very anti-government. And there's this tremendous irony there, right? Because they don't want to hand out,
they want to kind of be left alone, they want to be able to run their business, they want, and I'm
generalizing, right? But I'm just speaking broadly to kind of the theme of things I hear when I meet
with farmers. But when the crop insurance program shows up and direct support payments show up,
you're like, okay, I'll take the check.
And so it's hard to say no, but I think the motivation for everyone is universally the
same, which is, right, I want to have the opportunity to be successful independently.
Are we creating policies that reinforce this and are we creating the condition that makes
people feel less like a victim, less looking for handouts and less, I have a concern about
these stimulus checks.
I do think it was a smart thing to do to get us out of this.
But do you guys wonder if this generation, which is not going back to work, we have a shortage
of Uber drivers, we have a shortage of bartenders, waiters, a lot of people are just choosing
not to go to work because they have their stimulus.
America is a place where you come to because you want to grind.
You want to find your own little engine room and you want to be in there and you want to
put in the hours.
The people that it attracts from around the world speak to that.
The way that you can explain why Indonesia and India are so far to the left on that same
question is because it's an extremely homogeneous population with zero immigration.
No immigration.
Yeah.
I actually think the reason why America so far to the right is it itself
selects not by some kind of gender, age, or religion, or color of skin.
By motivation.
It's motivation.
Yeah, totally.
And it's like, if you're motivated to crush, you come to the United States.
You come to the United States.
Yeah.
We've all, we're all, what are we?
Like, you know, one generation away,
except Jason, you're two generation American.
My Irish side is six generation.
We're all three.
We're all three generation, except for Jason, right?
We all moved here to the United States as immigrant.
As immigrant.
Would motivated family?
Yeah.
I think that's why I'm the least successful of the group.
Is that what you're saying?
Yeah, you're the lazy, complacent American, whereas we're the immigrants. I'm trying why I'm the least successful of the group. Yeah, you're the lazy complacent American,
whereas we're the immigrants.
I'm trying.
Hey, listen, you're the Daniel Day Lewis character
in the podcast, so you're the Daniel Day Lewis character
in gangs in New York, you know, you say immigrants,
you sit at the boats, you throw eggs at everyone.
It's interesting, you bring that up.
Do you know where my Irish poor bearers came from,
and when they immigrated
to? I don't know.
They're looking for the five points. Oh, the five points. We were in the five points.
Of course, they're exactly accurate. Yeah. Of course I was. It makes no sense. You're
not Daniel DeLewis. You're the heavier shorter guy, though. That was kind of a lot.
A lot. I dropped 10 on my quarantine 15 and I gave it to Sacks. Yeah, you did. You're
looking good. You look good. You look good in Miami.
Miami suits you.
In a weird way, I gotta give Jay-Kale
as much credit for where he came from as Jamoth,
because I don't know, those parts of Brooklyn
are maybe as tough as Sri Lanka.
Oh, kids with guns.
Kids with guns.
Yeah, you know, child warriors.
You're gonna get jobs. Always with a posse. By the way, on know, child warriors. You're gonna get a job with a posse.
By the way, you know, on immigration,
I don't know if you guys saw this, you know,
George W. Bush is a paint now,
and he paints immigrants.
Yes.
So I bought his book, I bought a signed copy of it,
I should have brought it to the podcast today,
but it's a great book, I highly recommend it.
Trigger warning.
No, but he actually has some writings in there
that talks about the power of immigration
and how immigration is so core to the success
of the United States just to our point.
So this conversation made me think of the book
that I just bought this week.
Really cool book by the way.
George W. Bush, amazingly great artist
really captures the personality of immigrants
in his work.
I think the thing is, like everybody wants to come here to work hard.
Everybody that's here is willing to work hard, right?
Whether you're first generation or not.
And then the question is, can government create policies that allow us to do that and actually
just create a safety net to catch us if we fall?
Because that's what we also all want.
So there are parts of Biden's bill that I think made a ton of sense like, you know, making community college free. That's a really disruptive idea because it'll put
a ton of pressure on for-profit colleges, right, to like get their act together or not.
That's a good idea. The child tax credit so that you can actually have subsidized, you
know, child care for your kids. That's a good idea. But then where you kind of go astray is then when you start to figure out, you know, the levels of taxation, again, we talked about this last
time, but, you know, I just think that that's where you can kind of demotivate people to
not then put in the hours.
I think this is a good segue also into immigration through our southern border and this incredibly
polarizing issue and how the media is polarizing it, how the
parties are polarizing it.
Just to ask a question to see if we even understand the data, how many people do you think
are illegal immigrants in the United States right now?
Twenty million.
Okay.
Freeberg's tax?
I guess.
Yeah, I guess 18 million.
I'll take a slight under to Jamal, but about the right.
That's about the right sort of magnitude.
The last time I heard was like 12 million, but'll take a slight under to Jamal, but about the right, that's about the right for a magnitude. The last time I heard was like 12 million,
but that was a few years ago.
Big O, it's 12.
Now, how many people are apprehended
at the Southern border a year since 2010 every year?
Half a million.
Anybody else want to take a guess?
50,000.
All right, it's 350,000.
So we literally are tearing the country apart.
And I know that because I watch the movie,
Sicario, and I'm estimating based on the scene
where they ran everyone up at the border and took them away.
So that's my, that's my, that's my film.
Terrifying film.
Yeah.
And awesome.
Awesome.
You think incredible film.
Just bring us in. My, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my Dennis Villain-O-Wave, he's unbelievable, but we digress.
Yes.
That scene when they're racing the cars
into the border crossing, go to checkpoint.
What it is.
It's so intense.
It's so intense.
So intense.
So if you guys are into sci-fi,
that guy directed the arrival,
which is one of my favorite films.
Yeah, that's a fabulous, beautiful film.
Beautiful film.
Yeah, beautiful film.
So literally, the country's being torn apart.
A country of 330 million.
Over 3 million would be 1% coming into the border.
And we just said immigration is all these amazing people coming here to who want to strive
and who want great things.
Why are we tearing the country up over this issue?
This is a tough topic.
This is a tough topic.
Well, I think, I think Jason, I think your point of view on immigration really depends on where you're sitting in the economy.
So I think for all of us who are in Silicon Valley, we know that something like half of startups have an immigrant co-founder.
Totally. So we've seen, you know, like PayPal've seen PayPal, I think, they were like
through a four immigrants on the founding team.
Peter was born in Germany, Elon was born in South Africa,
Max was born in Russia.
I was born in South Africa,
and then you go down the list.
Same thing with Google.
Sergey Brink came from Russia and just on and on and it goes.
So if you're sitting in Silicon Valley as a tech worker,
you see that these immigrants bring tremendous dynamism Sergey Brink came from Russia and just on and on and it goes. So if you're sitting in Silicon Valley as a tech worker,
you see that these immigrants bring tremendous dynamism
to the economy.
However, if you're in a low wage job,
maybe low skill service,
then a lot of this immigration is competition
and it creates wage pressure for you.
So this is why historically the unions
have not been in favor of, you know, of
immigration. You have, you know, a lot of service workers in the minority communities. You
know, there's a lot of animosity towards immigrants because of that. Fundamentally, it creates
job competition, a wage competition. And I do think, and well, so, so, so look, it's easy
for us to sit here and look in Valley where we sit in the economy and say, oh, well, so look, it's easy for us to sit here and look in Valley where we sit
in the economy and say, oh, well, this is having limited immigration.
It doesn't matter.
Well, yeah, it doesn't matter to us.
But if you're in the low school part of the economy, it does matter a lot to let in a
flood of immigrants who are in that low school category.
And by the way, we're worried about these jobs getting automated in a way as well.
So, I think you have to have a sensible policy.
I mean, yes, to immigration,
but I think you have to think about
how much sort of low school immigration
can we assimilate and absorb?
Right, but aren't a lot of those people
who are coming in also then taking lower wages
because they're off the books and they're illegal,
whereas if we had a more reasonable policy
of letting whatever percentage in,
like we could just pick a number.
If that actually worked and they were getting paid on the books, then it would remove some
of that downside pressure.
So you're not paying somebody under the books to be a delivery person or a dishwasher or
whatever the entry-level job is, they have to get paid that minimum wage.
Jason, I think this speaks to the broader set of political topics which relates to the enablement of competition. It speaks to some of the trade policy points
that I think the last administration made, which is to limit trade and to limit access
to global markets to provide services and products to the United States and to tax them,
because the lower-cost labor ultimately outcompeats with higher-cost labor in the United States and to tax them, because the lower cost labor ultimately outcompeats with higher cost labor in the United States.
And so, you know, you get lower cost goods, but the balance is, is it worth having lower
cost goods and services where you could actually see too much of a decline in the employability
or the wages of people that are currently producing those goods and services in the United
States?
And that's the tricky balance, right?
There's no blue or red right way to do this.
We wanna enable competition, we wanna enable progress,
we wanna enable lower cost of production,
lower cost goods and services,
but we also don't wanna have the economic impact
and the social impact of people being under employed
and unemployed.
And balancing those two,
one of the tricky pieces of that balancing puzzle
is immigration.
Another one is trade, another one is regulation,
et cetera, et cetera, right?
So a lot of these things kind of drive that tricky balance.
I really bounce around on this.
I evolved the four of us.
I was the only one that immigrated myself.
So I didn't, you know, it's not that my parents did it.
Oh, you did it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I did it myself.
I drove to the border.
I got a TN visa stamp.
I crossed the border into Buffalo.
I stood in line.
I got my own social security number.
And I started a life in America in the year 2000.
How old were you?
22, I guess, or 23.
You had a job lined up already?
I had a job.
I had a job offer. I had my offer letter.
I did the whole thing.
Then I transferred on to an H1B visa.
I had to go through all of that.
Then I had to wait in line.
I got delayed.
I had to refile.
So as a person that went through the immigration system and finally got their green card
in 2007 or 8 and then my citizenship in 2011 or 2012, I bounce around on how I feel because I remember the insecurity I felt
in not wanting to lose my visa and have to leave and go back to Canada.
And so if somebody was in that situation, I could see why they would get very agitated if they
saw a lot of immigration being lumped in into one broad brush. And because if you look at it,
actually, there's a really
interesting conundrum because it's not like immigration is a thing where all immigrants
are pro-immigration, right? That's right. It's actually not that at all. It tends to be sort
of cultural elites are pro-immigration because it's a synthetic way of showing openness and open
mindedness. But then, you know, inside, no, right? I mean, it's true. It's because it doesn't get affected
by it. It doesn't get affected by it exactly. If anything, it makes it easier for them to maybe
find people to hire. Well, at someone that lived through it, what I would say is, if I was still
waiting for my green card and waiting in line and having the idea that there was some amnesty program,
would have made me feel very insecure. I'm not sure how I would have reacted to it,
but in that moment, I would have felt insecure.
So the broad solution to immigration is you have to separate the two problems and say,
this part of the problem can be solved almost like a professional sports team,
which is to say, we have the ability to draft every year
the smartest and most interesting capable people that want to come here and work hard.
That will probably, you know, it be a rising tide. smartest and most interesting capable people that want to come here and work hard.
That will probably, you know, be a rising tide.
Then there are these two other buckets.
Bucket in the middle is just compassionate openness.
You know, family members and other people, refugees, you know, because I was emigrated
into Canada, not in the first bucket, because we didn't have much to contribute economically,
but in the second bucket, which is for social justice and refugees.
And then there is a third bucket, which is there are people that are not going to be
in a position to wait in line.
They are going to come to the border.
And we have to have a mechanism of saying, okay, you shouldn't have done it, but you did.
And now here's a pathway where you can earn the right to prove that you should be here.
And I think that there is a, but we can't have that nuance
because nobody wants to hear it.
You want to lump it into one,
this is where, for example, like last year
when Trump, you know, decapitated the H1B program,
I thought this is just so dumb.
Yeah, no nuance.
It's basically telling, you know, like,
it's forcing a star athlete, you know athlete to go and play a different sport.
Why would you do that?
It's so artificial.
It doesn't make any sense.
There's such a reasonable discussion to be had here because other countries have solved
this exact thing with the point-based system.
Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and others have all worked on a system like this, which
is you get points for each of the qualities that you bring and then you put some numbers on
it.
But there's no difference.
Yeah, but Jake, out those countries are much, much harder to get into than the United
States.
You're lucky to get to New Zealand.
You better buy a property or something like that.
It might be that the point-based system is letting in the people that make the society
stronger.
No, Canada has a really progressive view on this.
I mean, they have a point-based system,
but they do a lot.
They're really compassionate about, you know,
they'll take in a lot more refugees
than most other countries.
And I think that they've never lost that spirit.
And I think that the point is,
I think I agree with Jason, it's possible,
it's logical, the problem is it's too logical.
And, you know, and so it has to, it's like the mass. I Let's call it. It's like the math
Freeberg made an interesting connection to the issue of free trade so you know look
I you know I major in economics in college
You know I I was like a believer in free trade like sort of completely ardent free trade because why it creates economic efficiency
And so you know logical it's logical and It's logical. And if people lose their jobs, their factory closes
because we're not as good, then yes,
you let the chips fall where they may.
I think what we've learned over the last 20 or 30 years
is that we have to consider the distributional consequences
of a policy like free trade.
Because that's about, well, who benefits and who loses?
And yes, American consumers have benefited
from the flow of cheap goods from China and other places,
but we've seen our manufacturing
and the use of these lost.
Have lost, yeah.
And so throughout the Midwest and the rust belt,
you've got these empty factories,
they just line up like tombstones up in places like Detroit.
And you've got these towns that used to be factory towns
are now just kind of empty and
the people are hooked on fentanyl and it's a social disaster.
And so I think what I've kind of learned about this is you have to take into account the consequences
of these policies and I can't just be about-
So you've evolved your position.
I have, it can't just be about a Darwinian economic efficiency anymore.
You have to think about who wins and who loses.
And by the way, what was the little history?
What's ironic is, sorry.
Everybody's got feedback on this.
No, what's ironic is,
It's a lot of the current globalization policy
that the United States embraced over the last two or three decades.
I think, Zach's correct me if I'm wrong,
but a lot of this originated during the Clinton era,
which was a democratic president.
And then ironically, the free trade Republicans are the ones who have flipped over the last
couple of years to realize the economic consequence on the production side of the United States is
so severe that we need to now limit free trade.
And if you remember Paul Ryan, who was the House Speaker a few years ago, had this six-point
plan for the Republicans going into the primaries.
And one of the key points was to enable the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
They were trying to continue to push free trade.
And I think that the policy shift is ironic because it's always been kind of a red issue,
that it became a blue issue, that it became red issue.
And I think, like everything, we are evolving our points of view as we experience and learn
more things and get more data.
And perhaps the rate of progress isn't the thing
to optimize for, but the rate of progress
balanced against the equality of progress
seems to be where the United States is at right now.
So it's a response to what Friedberg said about
how this happens.
So there's an old saying in Washington
that the worst ideas are bipartisan,
and the idea of bringing China into the World Trade Organization and
giving them sort of MFN trading status, that happened under Clinton, but it was absolutely
a bipartisan decision. And part of the reason why our politics are so royal today is proposed.
It was proposed Clinton. It was passed in Bush.
Right. Okay, but they both supported it. It was a bipartisan sort of disaster. And I think
one of the reasons why our politics are so royal today, you've got this populism
on the right, and you've got a populism on the left, and where they both agree is in restraining,
is having a more protectionist trade policy.
That's right.
So I think a little bit of history here is important.
I think you got most of it right.
But if you go even one step back under Clinton, there was nothing that they actually did,
but it was something that Deng Xiaoping did, which was that, you know, for a large time,
I think until the mid-90s, 94, the Remimbeague was firmly pegged to the US dollar.
And you know, it was like, you know, 5.8 Remimbe to the US dollar.
And all of a sudden, they basically said, well, look, we have this hapless economy.
We have to do something about it.
And we have this enormous bulge of young people.
And so they did this brilliant thing.
And China said, you know, we're going to basically devalue our currency.
And they're going to basically make it essentially float.
And instantly you re-rated the currency by 40%.
And over time, it re-rated by almost 60%.
And what it did was all of a sudden,
it unleashed, as you said, all of these subsidies
into the United States.
Why?
Because now Chinese goods became 30% cheaper, right?
And then the Thai goods became 30% cheaper.
Indonesian goods became 80% cheaper. Indonesian goods became 80% cheaper.
Vietnamese goods became 50% cheaper. That's that's that entire contagion in eastern Asia
that we went through in the late 90s. So it's like China deep values their currency.
All of a sudden you have all these young people in China who can make things for 30% cheaper.
You're able to flood the American market with goods. We were like, wow, this is incredible.
My jeans that cost $10 now cost $7.
I'm just using it as a representative example.
I'm just gonna buy more jeans.
And so you're consuming, consuming, consuming.
All of a sudden, Bush comes along and says,
well, you know, this seems to be working out well.
I wanna go to war with Iraq.
I need to basically get China to vote
yes, and the security council. Okay, what's it going to take? China's like admit me to the
WTO because even during all of this, they were still not part of the WTO. And to David's point,
and that's when the nuclear bomb went off in 2004, you know, the minute that they were involved
and they could actually have, you know, bilateral trade relationships and normalize trade relationships.
Then all of a sudden, the next wave happens because instead of just buying cheap Chinese jeans,
every American company was like, wait a minute, I can drive up earnings by just exporting this
factory to China writ large. And the Chinese had all this capital that they had built up all these
US dollars to then support it and subsidize it.
Well, it's a prisoner's dilemma, right?
Tremoff, because if you don't do it as an American company and you don't move your manufacturing
there and everybody else does your shareholders, your shareholders will to capitate your stock price,
you know, as a CEO, you get fired. And so, so then that's that's when David that what you said
happened. That's when you hollow out from 2014 to 2016.
You hollow out the middle class you hollowed out the inside the rust belt and then basically you
deindustrialize the west. You saw the rise of populism. You saw the rise of opioids as essentially
a coping mechanism for people's inability to even work hard to type into the first thing to have
purpose. Trauma. Americans are wired to work hard. And so the first thing to have purpose, Jamuff.
Americans are wired to work hard.
And so they need to self-medicate if you can't let them work hard.
They turn to fentanyl and Lopioise to do it, and then all of a sudden
Donald Trump gets elected in 2016.
So what if we... A man without hope is a man without fear.
You know, you give people no job and no purpose in the morning.
What happens? And the Democratic Party is turned to socialism.
I think that's like part of it as well.
So this is really interesting,
because we're talking about second,
the set, I think everybody who was doing this
was considering the second order problems.
And what we're experiencing now is the third order problem,
which is things that people couldn't predict,
like we now have a communist country
that is not changing its human rights record
and is not changing its behavior, record and is not changing its behavior and
might even be getting worse.
And we've enabled China, but Jason, China will actually self-regulate.
I actually think now the China issue is a little overblown the way we take it, meaning
I think China's central planners are frankly just much, much smarter than ours, right? They just are.
They have.
They have central planning.
They have better tools.
They don't have the same amount of commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism.
They don't have the same commonism. They don't have the same commonism. They don't have the same commonism. They't outrun though. It cannot outrun demographics. And the most important takeaway that I learned over the
last few weeks when I was studying this problem, because I've been thinking a lot just currently
like, okay, inflation, what's the 10 year view? What's just going to happen? Like, what's
my macro view of the world? And I saw the most interesting stat, which is the median
age in China. And the median age in South Asia stat, which is the median age in China and the median age in
South Asia is greater now than the median age in America. So it's in the mid-40s versus the mid-30s.
And that's an enormously important thing because now you have an aging population in China. You've
had this one child policy that's really has worked against them for a very long time. So they have
they have an under-representation of these young people.
And so you're flexing now, managing a demographic shift where folks are older, they're not going
to work in a factory.
They're not making goods the same way they used to.
Economic growth is tapering.
And so that whole China situation, in fact, demographically, is going to solve itself.
But the implications for America are not good,
meaning I think inflation goes up, commodity prices go up, prices of everything go up,
but it allows us to actually reestablish and rejuvenate the industrialized
rust belt of America. We just have to spend the money. And this is where I think like when you
look at Biden's plan, this is where I wonder like
didn't anybody do this simple macroeconomic, you know, trace route to actually come up with
this because it's pretty obvious what to do.
And then you wonder, which is why I mean have literally a trillion dollars allocated to
reestablishing entire supply chains across critical industries that we want to own.
Which I think, Friedberg, you brought up what, 15 episodes ago, this is an incredible
opportunity for us to bring manufacturing here and bring the next generation.
And re-invent manufacturing.
I still think bio-manufacturing represents this complete, great domain where the United
States could build and lead.
I'll just give you some statistics. Globally, there's about 25 million leaders
of fermentation capacity or bio-manufacturing capacity.
Of that, about 20 million is used to make beer and wine
and pharmaceutical drugs today in an enclosed system.
Five million is available for rent,
and of that, four million is already rented out.
So there's only a million leaders of capacity
really available for rent.
There's a hundred synthetic biology companies that are looking to produce fermentation-based products
from materials for clothing to food to animal protein to new drugs and they can't get the capacity
to make this stuff. And every one of them is scrambling around Silicon Valley looking to raise
hundreds of millions of dollars of venture funding to go build friggin manufacturing capacity
for bi-manufacturing.
This is where the United States can lead, because we can make every material, every drug,
and every consumable that the entire world would use using biomanufacturing, and just to
be clear by manufacturing.
By manufacturing.
By manufacturing, go.
So, you edit the DNA of an organism, and it can be programmed to make a molecule for
you.
And so, we can use large fermenter tanks to make this stuff.
I did the math recently, and you would need about 10 to 50 billion
liters of capacity to make all the animal protein for the entire world.
And using 45,000 liter tanks, which are three meters wide each,
it would take about 30 to 40 square miles of fermentation tanks
to make all the protein for the whole world.
We could build that in the United States for about three to four, for about three to
four hundred billion dollars, and we could build it in a couple of years.
I mean, that is like a moonshot.
You could also make materials for clothing.
You could make, you could make bio-fascals.
You could make bio-fascals.
Put it there.
And, and this is like this, and today the science exists is like, go back to like the internet
era. We now have this ability to program organisms
to make stuff for us.
This did not exist 10 years ago, 15 years ago, 20 years ago,
today is the moment it exists.
So if we don't capitalize on this huge budget
to build infrastructure to go after this massive opportunity
to make everything that the world consumes,
we're gonna miss out and free markets will compete us away.
This is the one time that big check can be written and that big check can enable this new
industry.
And instead of making cars and making all the stuff that maybe we don't need to be making
it.
You really think that all this trillions of infrastructure spending is going to what
you just described?
That's my point.
No, that's my point.
No, that's my point.
No, that's my point.
And I think that's what I mean is we're missing this opportunity.
We're rebranding the same old social programs as infrastructure because the politicians know
that's where the last category is spending
that's still popular.
I mean, it's not gonna go to the right things.
It does.
It does those labels, those labels pull well.
When you say jobs, like for example,
one of the things I learned, which is insane,
is that for whatever reason,
people think fixing climate change is a net negative
because it will restrict one's
way of life and destroy jobs.
Whereas in fact, it's the exact opposite.
It should actually allow you to do more, live healthier, and there should be an entire renaissance
of industries and jobs.
And so it goes back to the disinformation, just makes a rational conversation almost impossible.
It's free of politics. We just shift to Caitlin Jenner real quick before you wrap, because we're almost
at a time.
Caitlin Jenner is officially running for governor, and I guess people are making light of it,
but you actually wrote a considered post on it, so unpack it for us.
Yeah, I was defending Caitlin Jenner.
I mean, look, I mean, what Caitlin Jenner came out and said is that Gavin Newsom's DA's, Chase
a Boudin and George Gasko and L.A. are presiding, I'm putting words in her mouth, presiding over
a crime wave, and she was calling him out on that.
What you then immediately saw was all of Gavin's people come out and criticize her for being
stupid because supposedly she didn't know that DA's were locally elected.
Well, I think a couple of points.
They're first of all, why hasn't Gavin Newsom come out and distance himself from Chase
of Boudin and George Gaskone and what they're doing in those cities?
He hasn't done that because he's been co-zing up to their side, the sort of progressive, extreme
radical, de-carceration wing of the party.
And the reason we know that is because he recently had
a job to fill, the Attorney General's spot in California.
He could have chosen anybody for that job,
and he chose an East Bay Assemblyman named Rob Bonta for it,
who is an ally of Chesa Boudin and Gascon and this progressive
DA alliance.
And so, yeah, it's true that Newsom didn't appoint these DAs, but he's appointing their
allies to post their even more important, the attorney general of all of California.
And so I think it was a very legitimate issue for Caitlin Jenner to come out and call out
Gavin Newsom on. And I think she's onto something here, which Caitlin Jenner to come out and call out Gavin Newsomon.
And I think she's on to something here, which is there's a lot of issues in California.
There's a lot of things that are wrong from homelessness to unemployment and these crazy
COVID restrictions.
But the number one issue I think has to be crime.
We are seeing an explosion of crime in our seats in our streets.
We all know there are large parts of LA and San Francisco
that we do not feel comfortable walking around in anymore.
Oh my God, you'd be crazy to walk down the street
with the child.
The livable area where you feel safe living
or opening a business or walking around
has drastically shrunk in the last few years.
And if you do not feel safe in your city,
nothing else politically matters.
The government's first responsibility is to protect
its people.
And I think if Caitlin Jenner can keep speaking out
on issues like this, I think maybe she has a shot.
Yeah, I think that she's got a credible shot.
If she has a reasonably economic policy behind it
and this school voucher thing on education,
those are the things that'll carry California voters
because I do think, and by the way,
here's where I think we should take some credit.
The best thing about this podcast
other than the fact that we used ourselves to keep us sane.
It's made it fashionable to think independently again.
And eventually what becomes fashionable becomes the rigor. Fashionable, fashionable, to think independently again.
And eventually what becomes fashionable becomes deri-gur. And what that means is I think that there will be more
and more people that will think for themselves.
And if she has reasonable policies and a platform
that's understandable, she can win.
And that's an incredible testament, I think,
to people making their own decisions.
And being able to have a reasonable conversation with people with different opinions, I think
is the other takeaway from the podcast that people always give me that feedback when they
see me on the street or whatever and talk to me about it. And as a point, going to Austin,
they are now dealing with 10 city problems like LA and the same problems
that they're dealing with in San Francisco.
So I went for a walk around the lake a couple of times.
It was great.
And you know, there were a lot of tents.
And they're literally taking the most beautiful lake in the entire beautiful part of the city.
And it's becoming camp central.
They're basically ruining it for the actual citizens
who are not homeless.
Austin lifted the tent ban they had in Texas.
Now Texas is voting now.
The entire conversation when I was in Austin,
all conversations did not go to NFTs,
crypto, the board or anything.
It went to tent city.
And people in Austin who are very liberal
were saying, I'm voting to ban tent city. And people in Austin who are very liberal were saying, I'm voting to ban tent city.
I'm voting against this insanity
because we don't want to become San Francisco,
we don't want to become LA.
So these are liberal people.
And the concept that a city would allow people to camp
in the center of the city and ruin it for everybody else is insane.
Portland's version of hamster dam is still up and running. It's been a year. I mean, if people want to camp,
we have campgrounds for that. Send the campers to the campgrounds.
Can I tell you the secret origin story of Miami and why Miami is now a tech hub? It's because of this issue.
It's because a tech entrepreneur got punched in the face by a homeless person in San Francisco.
I don't know if he had wanted me to tell this story.
I'll find out afterwards and you can be proud of his name.
But basically, who is a prolific tech founder,
he's got, I don't know if he had wanted me to tell this story,
but he was out, just walked.
Would you do two beeps?
It's fine.
Would you do two beeps?
Anyway, he was out walking around San Francisco
and a crazy homeless person.
Just walked up and punched him in the face for no reason.
And this is something this homeless person's done many times.
The cops were there, it just kind of shrugged.
Didn't want to prosecute it, didn't want to write up a ticket.
He's like, no, I really want to press charges.
So the cops are like, okay, fine.
So then, he presses charges, nothing happens.
The DA office basically keeps giving him the run around until he basically says, okay, fine. So then, you know, he presses charges, nothing happens. The DA office basically keeps, you know,
giving him the run around until he basically says,
fine, forget it.
He drops charges, he just moves.
He just votes with his feet.
So he moves to Miami.
He was the first one from that sort of,
like, the sort of the core, like, Silicon Valley
plugged in ecosystem to move out to Miami.
He says he did the seed round.
Then he talked to Keith Ravoy, and he's the one who convinced Keith Ravoy to move to Miami.
So Keith Ravoy then did the series A.
So it was the seed investor of Miami, and he got Ravoy to do the series A, and then
Ravoy, he's very prominent and loud on social media.
He's been evangelizing the whole thing, and then he got Deleon and Founder's Fund
and their whole noise machine to move
their circus to Miami.
And now look at it, look at it.
Do do do do do do do.
But it's this I'm here.
Now, it took, they've got a mayor of Miami,
Francis Swarris, who actually said,
we want tech here, right?
You know, and they don't have a homeless problem. The city has a lot of cops, it's well managed.
So look, he's got the right environment
and most of all, the city of Miami is welcoming
to the tech use ecosystem where San Francisco,
the politicians seem to can't wait to get rid of it.
But it's all comes back to this homeless issue.
I think if it's ungunned,
punched in the face by the homeless person, I think this all would have played out very different.
It's very, very true. Let's wrap on a quick fang. You must have seen every single major
tech company had a massive blowout quarter. And when I say massive, I mean, unbelievable.
And the five tech companies now collectively this year will make more than
1.2 trillion dollars trillion with a T of revenue. If those five companies were a country,
it would be the 14th largest country in the world.
Wow.
We're not talking market cap here folks. We're talking cash in the bank account.
Just revenue. No, no, just revenue.
Revenue.
We're not talking profits, but it's just which I think is a good proxy for GDP.
And so the point is, if these companies were countries, collectively, Fang would be a
top 15 country.
And so I guess really what we've learned is what we've known, which is, okay, these
are monopolies.
They have pricing power.
Unfortunately, Facebook had to actually even disclose
that inventory only grew by 12%,
but prices grew by 35%.
Google basically showed the same thing.
And if you go back to the pillar of antitrust law,
which is that 1970 odd Supreme Court case,
it defined what's called the Consumer Welfare Test.
So the FTC and DOJ, they're relatively toothless
in the face of companies cutting prices,
but they can really act when companies raise prices.
And here's where their definition of a monopoly,
which is brittle, it doesn't account
for 2021 tech companies does come into play
because now you can see that they're winding up their pricing power if they can raise prices.
Number one, the second thing that I'll say is the Apple Facebook thing is a very important
canary in the coal mine as well because it's not as if the five of them can actually work
together.
There's infighting, right?
And so it's game of drones. Well, with this new update to iOS, you know, what those
dialogues will essentially do, in my opinion, if I had to guess, is
limit inventory. Right. So Facebook and Google will have fewer ads
that they can actually run in a targeted way. And so the only way that
they can keep then growing revenue with fewer impressions
is by raising prices even more. And then the last thing I'll say is, you know, this complicated
dynamic between Apple, Facebook and Google is that Google still pays Apple almost $70 or
$80 billion dollars for search, whereas Facebook pays them nothing. So if you put all these things
in a box, I think you're going to see the beginning of the end. This is where now you can see the end game come into focus, which is. Red wedding? Well, you don't need
necessarily new laws in section 230, although we'll have that. You now see Fang M moving into the
line of sight of the traditional antitrust framework, because now they can use very traditional,
you know, any competitive pricing law to go after these guys. I am going to strongly disagree with Chimoff.
Okay.
I've not disagreed with Chimoff this strongly since we've done the podcast.
The reason I strongly disagree is because this is not inventory that is being sold at a
fixed price where the price is set by the company.
Facebook and Google, in particular, run an auction model.
They are a marketplace business.
They have advertisers who show up and they bid on ads,
which is the inventory that they're able to get
based on the data that they're able to match
to that particular ad slot.
If the advertisers can get more value by bidding a higher price
because of the data that they're getting
that shows that this customer is more likely
to click on the ad and ultimately buy something, they will bid more for the ads.
What has been such an incredible juggernaut of a business for both Google and then Facebook,
which was effectively a mimic of Google's system, was this auction model.
And the innovation has been in getting more data as you track consumers around the internet.
And secondly, is in the smart ad targeting,
which is where the algorithm figures out which ad
to show the consumer based on whether that consumer
is likely to click on the ad or not.
And the more consumers click on the ads,
the more advertisers are willing to pay for an impression
because that ad is now gonna convert
to more revenue for them.
That is why this is not a monopolistic approach.
Can I say something? It is an auction approach. And I think, and it's why they've won in the past
over this argument, but yeah, go ahead. I could go ahead. At Facebook, my team was the one that built it.
So I oversaw those guys back in 2008 and 2009 when we did the first version of it.
Obviously, it's gotten much more sophisticated and you're right. It's a big reaction. And
literally, my mandate to the team was,
I don't want your innovations, copy Google.
And give me a version of what Google looks like
and where it implemented.
There's a problem.
It's not exclusively that.
Ads are not sold entirely based on that system.
Ads are sold direct via a team.
So for example, when Budweiser writes a $100 million checker,
Procter and Gamble, they're not necessarily stepping
in the auction the same way as a small and medium sized business.
And if you look at how Facebook and Google have already
entered their policy, they've only highlighted those people
because David, to those people, you're absolutely right.
There's a very legitimate market clearing price argument
for them, but there are entire class of advertisers
that come in
over the top. You're seeing brand advertisers. Yeah, that get structured deals, that get structured
APIs, they get structured access and Facebook is and Google is setting price and Microsoft is setting
price. And so this is where that's the entry point because at the end of the day, an impression
to David Friedberg, whether it's seen by the local taco shop or Procter and Gamble,
some of it will be a vick reaction,
some of it will be structured in inventory.
It's a convoluted mess of the two.
You can't tease it out.
You're right, at the end,
at the end, it's about getting CPM higher, right?
It's about cost per thousand impressions,
but I think this is a good conversation
for that for the episode 31.
So I would love to talk about some of my early days at Google and how we made some of those
decisions because I think it's instrumental to how this is designed to be ultimately
a system of commerce efficiency that's really important, not just a system of selling
ads, but let's talk about it later.
Okay, as we wrap, most impressive observation from these quarterly reports that just came out for me, Amazon's
ad business, 24 billion growing at 77% year over year.
On top of their Amazon web services business, it'll be bigger than AWS in three years
at this rate.
What's everyone else's, what's everyone else's, not to me was like, whoa. What was the most impressive thing
for the rest of you guys on all the other things?
There's a lot of impressive things here.
I have a second, but go ahead.
It was unbelievably impressive,
but we have four enormous monopolies on our hands
and if I was a betting man, end of decade,
these four monopolies will not exist.
I might have that bet.
Oh, broken up.
Yeah. By the end, by the end bet. Oh, broken up. Yeah.
By the end, by the end of this decade, so 2030.
Okay.
Long bet.
I'm willing to bet you dollars to donuts.
That what?
They face breakup?
I'll bet a couple donuts.
You bet a couple dollars.
Okay.
And we'll give the donuts to Saks.
I'm off donuts.
Saks, what was your take away?
Well, I mean, I would up level it slightly.
In antitrust, there's historically two schools.
There's the Bork School and the Brandeis School.
Bork was narrowly focused just on consumer harm and would be closer to the freeberg position.
The Brandeis School is more about concentrations of power and would be more concerned about
not letting people get too powerful in this American democracy.
And I think the interesting thing is now that there's folks on the right who definitely
are buying into the Brandeis school because of the restrictions on free speech and access
to the marketplace of ideas that companies like Amazon, actually all of them, Amazon,
Google, Apple, Facebook have all imposed, they're limiting people's access
to the marketplace of ideas.
So I think now it's really interesting.
You're seeing a combination of both the right and the left
get together saying these companies are too big,
they're too powerful.
I think the Republicans are saying,
we'll let you keep the money,
we're not gonna take your wealth.
The Democrats are saying,
we're gonna take your power and your wealth.
The Republicans are just saying, we to level your power a little bit, but I think
these forces are going to come together and I agree with Jamath.
I don't know exactly when, but I think these companies are going to get broken up and
knocked down because they are too powerful.
It's a good counter-argument, SAC.
The other, that more important point of view of power versus, you
know, economic harm to consumers is an important one.
Clearly, there's no accounting for that quantitatively, and politics will drive it.
But I think, like, it's just incredible.
I mean, if you guys think about it as a consumer, I mean, how incredible are the products that
Alphabet, Amazon, and Apple have made?
I mean, free, and all free.
Does so exist, like, yeah, both of them.
I mean, even the iPhone, like ordering stuff on Amazon,
every day I'm amazed and marvel at the world we live in,
at the shit that we can do with the click of a button.
I mean, it is such an incredible world we live in
because of these businesses.
So as much as we can harm them for all the wealth
and the monopoly.
Here's the problem.
Here's the problem is that Apple and Google in particular
have a monopoly on the applications that can exist on these
Incredible phones. Yes, and if you can't get access to the app store you
You can't exist in the app is frankly you can't even have a business in the modern world if these guys cut you off
And so we already saw a congressional hearing very recently in which
Spotify and some other apps were testifying against Google and Apple because of the tax.
Because yes, because these platforms were discriminating against those applications in
order to benefit themselves.
And I think that in particular has to be looked at and I think eventually stopped.
Two things, two things Apple just got sued by the EU today.
So they got slapped with
anti trust for their app store so that's going to sort itself out as well so you have all this as
Jason said Game of Thrones I wanted to read to you guys something Justin just put it in the chat
this is something I said to Brad Gerstner in 2019 when we were he was interviewing me for something
and I think it's it's even more true today than it was in 2019.
I said the following.
I said, my perspective on Facebook is the reason why the market
gives it a small multiple.
Because by the way, you hear this all the time,
like, my gosh, these companies are so cheap.
Why are they so cheap?
I said, the reason why the market gives it such a small multiple
is because they don't believe the market.
The market doesn't believe that their earnings potential is durable because the market is
sure that in the next 10 or so years governments will start to act because they care about
their own self preservation.
So if you get very reductionist at the end of the day, that's what governments care about.
And so they're going to legislate to protect their monopoly,
which is the ability to have power.
All right, there it is folks.
A shout out from Chimoff to Chimoff in 2019.
Ha ha ha ha ha.
Shout out, I like to give a shout out to myself.
It's all like Jason.
No Jason, I would like to do this.
Don't hurt your arm patting yourself on the back.
It's all like you. You gotta stretch that out when you're functional stretching on Sundays.
I get my functional stretch on love you, Basties.
When are you guys coming back, please, can we play poker?
Now that we're all vaccinated, please.
I might have to go to New York next week to just round out my three.
Can we book the Miami trip, Chimoff?
Let's go out there.
No, we're doing a lot of show.
Big news is coming, everybody.
We are going to be putting up a voting mechanism.
You're going to be able to vote with your dollar
with a tiny donation to see all in live,
which ever city gets the most donations.
No, I'm not just going to buy a view.
All right, fine, we're going to Miami.
But where are we going to donate the money to?
Have we decided that?
Or, I mean, I think it should be something
A relationship like poker and the winner or you know do a single
And the winner gets to decide the charity their choice. I like that. I like that. That could be fun
I mean, I think something that we've all agreed on can we just decide to sell tickets in Miami and New York and be done with the show
Miami Miami. I know I think Miami and New York we just do a one two. I mean, it's a quick jump.
Jamak, you decide the date.
Well, the rest of us will make a work.
These guys are all over.
And if May, we're gonna pick a date,
we're gonna go to Miami.
We're gonna do the first taped live all in.
And we're gonna sell tickets for like,
five or 10 bucks.
Yum.
All the proceeds go to charity.
It's gotta be more like 50 or 25 because of the venue.
Cause we have to, the venue's gotta get their big.
But anyway, love you besties. Love you guys. Love you freeburg. Love you. You're a big ass. Love you. Love you. Love you. Love you. Love you.
Sacks. Love you. Sacks. Love you.
See you all next time on the All in Pogas. Bye. Bye. We'll let your winners ride. Brain man David's act.
I'm going on with it.
And it said we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it.
Love you West, I squee-up, you know what?
I'm going on with it.
What, what, your winners ride?
I'm going on with it.
Besties are gone.
Go through it.
That's my dog kicking it taking a wish to drive away.
Sit next.
Get it on.
Oh man, I'm the cashier when we eat the apple.
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug or two because they're all good.
It's like this like sexual tension that we just need to release our house.
What, your beef?
What, your beer of beef?
Beef, beef, what?
We need to get my besties already. I'm going, go, what? You're a B. B, B, what? That's good for you. We need to get merch.
Cheese aren't there.
I'm doing all it.
I'm doing all it.