All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E4: Politicizing the pandemic, Police reform, Biden's ideal VP, Twitter vs. Facebook on free speech & more with David Sacks & David Friedberg
Episode Date: June 20, 2020Follow @chamath: https://twitter.com/chamath Follow @jason: https://twitter.com/Jason https://linktr.ee/calacanis 0:01 Jason checks in on Chamath, Sacks & Friedberg, opening up their social circles, o...utdoor activities & more 9:31 Issues with politicizing matters of public health, deaths decreasing while new cases spike, masks, lockdowns & more 20:56 Viral videos, doxxing bad behavior & cancel culture 25:39 Reforming law enforcement, separating police from the military, changing police incentives 36:42 Are public unions too powerful? How a lack of leadership has led us here 41:49 Facebook vs. Twitter on free speech, Zuckerberg's relationship with Peter Thiel, valuing comfort over freedom of expression 59:24 John Bolton's book controversy 1:03:14 Movements in the COVID vaccine space 1:07:38 Trump vs. Biden: Who has the upper hand? 1:14:24 Who should Biden pick as VP?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, everybody, welcome back to the all-in podcast.
We're here with Jamoth Polyhopatia, David Friedberg and David Sacks.
Our usual, usual for some as we chop up the business news and what's going on.
And just as a point of order, the frequency of the show is, well, don't ask as we feel
like it.
As we feel like it, correct?
So do not ask me to
advertise on the podcast because Tremoth banned advertising and do not ask me
when the next one is the next one is when Tremoth decides he wants to go on a
rant. But how are you holding up best DC? Best DC's doing pretty well. Yeah. And the
family everything.
Have you come out of quarantine in any way?
That's the first question I have for people is,
has your behavior changed now as we go into,
I think what most people are calling phase two?
Any change in what you're doing in the risk
you're willing to take?
Chimoff.
It's a really good question.
I've kind of ventured out a little bit,
but I just kind of put on a mask.
The only place I don't wear a mask is when I walk around my house
just because it's, you know, I live in the suburbs,
and so there's just so much space between people
that you don't really run into anybody.
But if I have to go to Walgreens or CVS or whatever, I always bring a mask and gloves.
So I've ventured out a little bit, but nothing meaningful to be quite honest.
And SACS, you're still out of the country and an undisclosed location.
How are you feeling about what risks you're willing to take? You know, small groups of people,
are you going out to a restaurant, are you seeing other people? How do you look at the risk you're
willing to take personally? I've adjusted my risk profile, I think, quite a bit. So, I mean,
the learning over the past few months was just that
relatively that the fatality rate for say relatively healthy people under 50 without risk factors is
you know 50 times lower than
Say, you know someone under over 60 or someone who has risk factors and so
I'm not being reckless, but I'm willing to kind of reengage in social behavior among groups of friends. And on the theory that all my friends have been locked down,
I was in total lockdown for two months,
serve my friends.
And so, you know.
I have several questions.
The first is, I mean, how old are you?
You look like 90 roughly. How old are you exactly? So how did the, how old are you? You look like 90.
Roughly, how old are you exactly?
So how did the risk factors apply to you?
Second, you have friends.
So both of these things.
Well, we know there's three on this call.
So, Zach, see who I love you.
I miss you.
Yeah, no, I mean, you raise a good point.
I mean, my physical age might be 90,
but my lungs are only 48 years old.
And so, hopefully my lungs are only 48 years old.
So hopefully my lungs are qualifying that under 50 category.
So I've been playing golf with friends.
I've kind of widened the circle of people I'm willing to let into my quarantine basically. So...
By a dozen, by a hundred, how would you do that?
By about, I've actually let in, not all at once, but at different times, probably about
20 people.
Got it.
So you feel comfortable, and those people, you do ask them, have you quarantined, have
you been wearing masks, have you been tested, or you're just like, you kind of, I mean, I generally know that people have... I mean, now this may change over the next few months,
but everyone's been kind of under shelter in place. And so if you were going to start to socializing
with your friends, this would be the safest time to do it because everybody has been sort of
locked down to some degree and most places have been closed. And so if your friends haven't gotten it,
they're probably pretty safe.
All right, spring over to you, Dave Friedberg.
Tell me what you think of Saks's position.
Obviously, Chimaltz still in quarantine,
venturing off to the store once in a while.
Saks opening up to 20 people or whatever,
and small groups playing golf outdoors
But I'm assuming he's not having like an indoor party for 50 obviously
How would you look at the risk he's taking and what risk are you taking freed bird personally in your life?
I'm not too dissimilar. I've got about eight buddies coming over to the pool this afternoon
We're gonna do kind of like a father's day hang session
but we're going to be outside and I've done a
lot of hiking without masks and going outside without masks. I'm not really too
concerned about outdoor behavior. There was a good analysis done that showed in
tracing cases where they actually found the origin of where transmission
occurred. 97% occurred indoors.
So generally speaking, like outdoor activity to me
is like pretty reasonable to do.
So I'm pretty free with like doing stuff outside,
meeting friends outside, hanging out by the pool,
and I've had a bunch of people come by and hang out.
And then indoor stuff, I try and avoid.
So if I'm gonna go into a supermarket,
I'll wear a grocery store, I'll wear a mask,
and I'll be in there as short a time period as I need to be.
And I'm certainly not going into restaurants and stuff like that.
But you would sit outdoor, is that a restaurant I would assume?
If the tables were six feet apart, would you
go to a restaurant and sit in a restaurant?
Yeah, I'm not rushing to do that.
Just yet, there's just something a little bit weird about the way
some of those are configured.
But generally, yes, outdoor seems fine.
But the way they set it up, it's almost like you're exposing yourself to a bunch of people around you because
they're pretty confined spaces, that they're setting up each table to that. And that, but yeah,
sunlight and wind effectively will, you know, break apart the protein that is the virus and you will
not have this kind of infectious viral particle. And so that's a pretty, you know, well understood
thing at this point. And, you know, but it's not spoken about as much by public health officials
because they don't want to kind of mitigate the concern and they don't want people to start
taking off masks and, you know, taking on very risky behavior. But, yeah, generally speaking,
I think, kind of like outdoor behavior pretty pretty safe and non-transmissible
I the risky stuff I'm doing is you know, we had a
You know just having like folks come back to the house and that's where I kind of still try and grow up a line
Which is having people in the house and you don't know where they've been and so that's a little bit concerning
inside the house the
like concerning. Inside the house, the Spital particles with COVID-19, if they did, would be lingering.
That is what I'm sorry to be graphic, but that is the concern.
Correct, Freeberg?
Is that when you're outdoors, the Spital would blow away.
The particles are in the state.
It really does have happened.
So the liquid that holds the protein, because the protein needs to be in a liquid to
Kind of maintain its integrity when that evaporates and it'll evaporate from wind or from sun
And that protein will degrade it becomes kind of a non-infectious particle at that point
And so when you're inside and you don't have those mechanisms that particle can just float around in the air
And that's how it gets spread and that's why in the tracing work that was done
It shows like 97% of cases happen in an indoor environment just like this and I don't believe in the six foot thing
I think it's bullshit like if you're six foot away from someone in a room
People are coughing and that room gets filled with those particles over a one hour period
It doesn't matter if you're fucking six feet away or 20 feet away, that stuff's in the air.
So this whole notion about like, hey, distance yourself in a restaurant in indoor space,
it's like, no, that's actually not going to necessarily solve a problem.
Maybe if someone immediately sneaks, you'll avoid it.
But I mean, certainly, sats is advocacy for masks.
Hey, Freiburgers, are you, is that an aura ring you're wearing?
Yeah.
Have you tried it?
Yeah, I actually just bought it a few weeks ago and
I've been using it to monitor my sleep, but there was an article that said that, you know,
I think that all the NBA players are going to be given these aura rings as well because
it can apparently detect coronavirus three days ahead of other ways because it can see
a change in your basal sort of body temperature. Yeah, so UCSF ran this data with them and they developed this algorithm that they think
is pretty predictive.
So we'll see if it works in production, but yeah, that's the theory.
Well, there's also this connected thermometer that, if you use it, I've got the name of
it, it sends all the data to a central repository and they've been able to predict it as well.
And this just, when we look at how the government, I think it's called rect attempt.
Rect attempt?
It has to go in your rectum.
And just, whatever's going on in your rectum, it goes right to the government.
Now, and but this is an interesting thing when you think about low cost ways to deal
with this, the amount of money we poured into the system, Chimoff, is so great that if we just sent
every single person in America, an aura ring, or one of these thermometers and said, just
take your temperature all the day, we would know where the outbreaks were.
And that would be a lot less expensive than a lot of the stimulus we're doing to try to cure what's going on
Do you agree that we should maybe include that in some sort of?
Approach look, I think that I think the basic issue is that
Something really odd has happened in the United States and we were talking about this in our group chat
Which is that we have managed to find a way to politicize absolutely everything and
You know something's for example like universal basic income or what is our national policy
towards China.
Those are political issues.
But things of public health, when they get sort of distorted and view through a political
lens or just idiotic, we view masks as a political statement. We would view these aura rings as, you know, people being afraid
that the government was going to track them.
So we'll find every good, we'll find a lot of excuses in order
to blow up any good idea at this point because we can politicize anything
and we do it better than any other country in the world.
You know, it's an interesting point you make there and I'm going to go to you in a second
sax.
If you pull up my computer for a second, Nick, one thing I cannot understand when I watch
the media or I watch this discussion and we haven't seen Dr. Fauci in about 60 days.
I don't know where they buried him, but he's been put in a bunker somewhere.
But the number of deaths in the United States continues to go down.
Massively, now I know New York was a big outbreak and that contributes to it, but at the same time,
if you look and you compare deaths to new cases, the new cases has increased in some regions
and testing us going way up. So in trying to interpret this data, I don't understand why there's not somebody saying, listen, here's the good news. That's our going way down. Testing is going
way up. And here's what we should take from that. SACs, I think you and I might be slightly
different sides of the aisle when it comes to politics. How do you look at this in terms of leadership
at a federal level and then the media
and how, to your max point, we politicize this?
Yeah, well, I agree that things get overly politicized
and mass is a really good example.
It's just a really common sense, easy solution.
I wrote a blog that
we covered on this pod two and a half months ago saying that I thought mass should be,
public mass wearing should be policy, you know, should be the law. Little did I know
that I was taking a left wing position.
Yeah, oops. Did you lose any friends over that? Right, right. I know.
People still talking to you. I know you guys have me on the show as the the token right winger. But actually, I just appeared CNN just asked me to be on the
show today to explain why mass should be policy. So I just thought that was a common sense
thing. You know, I'm normally very receptive to libertarian arguments, but you know, like
we talked about the boundaries of libertarianism are, you know, you only have the
freedom to wave your arms until your fist hits my nose.
And something similar is true about when your infectious particles hit my nose.
There are reasonable boundaries to freedom there in the interest of other people's health.
And you know, that blog, a lot of public pronouncements
about COVID have not aged very well.
Over the last couple of months, I think that blog actually
is aged pretty well by comparison.
And because you just look at all the countries
that have been successful at fighting COVID,
I mean, Japan has 135 million people.
It's an old population and they've had under 1000 deaths. South Korea,
51 million people under 300 deaths. You take a Western European nation like Czech Republic,
they had a huge COVID outbreak, spiked just like the rest of Europe. They went all in on mass
wearing and they've completely controlled the virus. It's knocked out. And so it's really crazy to me that we just can't get on the same page as a country about
something as obvious and easy as mass wearing.
And it's because we, we, the, the, the, the, the left wants to get Trump out of office
so badly.
And they're so triggered by him and they hate him so much, whether that's valid or not, believe aside, that they want to, and then he
wants to say no mask, I don't understand his motivation.
What do you think Trump is thinking and who's advising him that he should be anti-mask?
I think somehow it's for the right, it's become an act of defiance.
And I understand that to some degree because I do think that the lockdowns went on too
long.
I think with 2020 hindsight, we would say that the lockdowns weren't necessary if we
had just gone all in on a mass policy.
That's what they did in Japan.
Right.
And so, you know, the problem with kind of the politicians in charge is that, you know,
well, backing up a second, I think the right policies to end lockdowns but wear a mass,
and the problem with the politicians is half of them didn't want to end lockdowns, and the other
half didn't want to wear a mass. And that's kind of the weird way in which has become this
political football. So Trump was trying to do this as an act of defiance. What was the left trying to accomplish, do you think? What would be your cynical or charitable approach to what
their reaction to this and locking down so severely? Well, I just, I think that what was the purpose
of lockdowns? I think it was the, I think the initial reaction was it was based on what happened
in Italy, right? And so in Italy, you kind of had this worst case scenario
where the hospital system got overwhelmed,
tremendous fatality rate from the virus.
And then we started to see the same thing happening in New York.
And I think, you know,
blocking down briefly in New York
to get a handle on the situation, I think was justified.
I don't think, again, with 2020 hindsight
that we needed to do it anywhere else in the country,
if we had instead just worn masks.
Do you think the left though perpetrated
a perpetual lockdown?
This is the most cynical view that I've heard,
and I don't think you hear this often,
and that's part of why we do this podcast
is to sort of explore these kind of takes
that you hear on the inside, but not maybe on CNN.
The cynical interpretation was they wanted to keep lockdown to crash the economy, to make
Trump look bad, to get him out of the office.
Do you think there's anything valid to that argument?
Um, I, you know, I don't know.
I, yeah, I mean, I I mean, it's certainly possible. I think that it's possible, though, that the left just kind of underweights the economic
damage of lockdowns.
I heard a lot of arguments about from the left that if you wanted to end lockdowns,
then you care more about money than lives.
And you can't put a price on a life, which is literally what we do all the time.
Like insurance, healthcare, we put a price on life.
Freeberg, freeberg.
But I was never in favor of doing nothing.
I mean, I was tweeting weeks ago
that we should end lockdowns but wear a mask.
And so my argument would be, look at Japan,
you do more for lives and the economy
by having a mass policy instead of lockdowns.
Freeberg, what's your take on sacks' take?
No, run or disagree. I'm not a great expert on the politics and I can comment on policy,
I think, in terms of what I think is reasonable and not. I certainly thought that the lockdowns were unreasonable
in the extent, but then the problem was they weren't followed so they were all for waste.
So the worst of all outcomes.
Yeah, but there wasn't all huge, until they actually went into effect, there wasn't
a huge amount of debate about this. It was just like, oh shit, we better all go into
lockdown. What happens, this is almost like the human conscious and unconscious mind, like, you know,
the conscious mind rationalizes what the unconscious already decided to do.
So everyone freaked out, everyone had a great deal of fear.
We shut everything down.
And then the left and the right had their own rationalization after the fact about, you
know, what that meant, was it good, was it bad, did we overreact, did we underreact, should
we have done more?
And so I feel like the narrative is told
a little bit too late here, where we all kind of like
have these commentaries about left and right politics
after the fact, and I don't think it's really meaningful
to be honest, it's just almost like,
let's fill in the what happened story
with our own point of view based on our tribe
or whatever we sit in.
So, Tremoth, how do we get out of this now? Because the deaths are going down. No, we're out. We're out. We're out. We're out.
The the genie is out of the bottle. Look, the reality is there is not a single country government
that can tolerate future lockdowns because I think the populations will revolt.
And so we're going to have to deal with cases as they crop up and we're going to have to deal with cases as they crop up, and
we're going to have to deal with infection rates popping up. And, you know, we'll have
to deal with this bursty economic landscape. Today, Apple just announced her closing
a bunch of stores in a few in a few states. They'll, I'm sure they'll reopen them in a few
weeks. But we're going to be in this sort of start and stop mode now for the foreseeable
future. But it's just not possible to ask people not to go back into any form of quarantine
or shelter in place. I just don't think they'll do it.
Right. And people, people only do lockdowns until there's some activity that they want
to engage in that they think is essential, right? And so you saw with the protests,
if you believe that the civil rights protestor is essential, you believe that you're out of lockdown.
And you know, and if you want to go to a Trump rally, you believe that's essential and you're out of
lockdown. And so, you know, so everybody, you know, you have the case in Texas of the woman who
wanted to open her haircuts salon. And so, you know, you were never going to get good compliance with a lockdown plan.
In addition to the damage and destruction it caused, it was never very effective because
people weren't willing to do it.
And I think the big public policy mistake here was the politicians squandering their credibility
on lockdowns that were never very feasible.
Instead of just going all in on mass and it would have been a lot cheaper.
By the way, the other thing is we need to push mass wearing back into a public health
debate and news some yesterday Gavin Newsom, the governor of California basically said
masks are not mandatory in California.
The thing is you have to add fines
if you don't wear them where you know people can be cited and fined. And then the other thing
and David you said this earlier is you have to be criminally culpable at some level if you go out
of your way to not wear a mask and infect somebody. And there is a bunch of, you know, case law on how this can be true.
And so I think that, you know, we need to, we need to solve these things because you
need to have good hygiene around mask wearing and what the consequences are if you
choose to not wear one.
Well, you know, a schmatt, that's interesting.
You bring that up.
There was a, there have been cases of people purposely infecting people with the HIV
virus and going to jail for it
and being liable for it.
So there is, I think, and I'm, you know,
what's the difference?
What's the difference?
It's coughing in somebody's face
versus having sex with them when you know you're infected.
What is the difference?
Well, I don't know if you saw this viral video
of the Karen, which is like so many
Karen's these days.
So many carons.
And Anne Caron just like got upset
that somebody was calling her after
not wearing a mask in a cafe
and she literally coughed on the person.
And did you see that video?
How is the person not in jail?
I mean, it's I think that was in New York, right?
I think it was New York and the woman
didn't know she was being filmed, but oh my Lord.
I mean, the great thing about the internet right now
is like if anybody basically transgresses,
they are identified in about a nanosecond.
And I mean, I saw that because on the Saturday morning, she coughed on this person who was
complaining about her not wearing a mask.
And within 15 minutes, they had her LinkedIn.
They had contacted Wild Medical Center where she worked,
and then Wild put out a press release basically saying
we had fired her for being a dummy
well before the mask thing.
And so the whole thing now just gets so adjudicated
and resolved so quickly, it's incredible.
We've basically moved to Judge Dredd now.
It's like the social media is the judge,
the jury, and the cops in this entire equation.
The one that I love, actually,
that really, actually, frankly,
I looked forward to was the cyclist in Maryland.
I mean, you cannot go after kids touching another person's
child and women in attacking them for putting up go after kids touching another person's child
and women and attacking them for putting up
Black Lives Matter posters and then to attack these.
But then again, it was the sub-community on Reddit
and it was amazing.
It was the actual like Maryland sub-reddit.
Who knows what's going on in the Maryland subreddit on Reddit?
What could they be talking about?
But they identified this guy and he was fired,
he was arrested and it all happened within, you know,
probably 36 hours.
But you guys know in that story,
there was another guy who was identified first
and he was police officer.
And people went after him and he basically had a life ruined
within those first 24 hours and he wasn't the. Yeah, yeah, he wasn't the guy. The way they got him was the
Stravya dad, right? Like he had they found a guy on Stravya who had done the
brava. Strava.
Yeah, the guy was using stevia the app that for the bike people and they monetize that app through
subscriptions. Correct. the app that's for the bike people. And they monetize that app through subscriptions, correct?
Don't make fun of my dyslexia, Shemaab. You're bullying me on my own podcast.
You say monetize on CNBC in front of millions of people.
It's unbelievable.
We tried to teach you how to pronounce that word for 15 years.
I know, but I stay on purpose now and I lean into it now.
Monies.
Yeah, that's slightly pornographic or something.
Yeah, he also-
He also boosters that.
I'm gonna go home and most, most of it later.
Okay, go back to your stevia story.
What is it?
Wait, so what happened is this guy got in trouble,
and this is my point about the problem with the group
think hive mind approach to these issues is you can end up not-
when you don't follow a predefined due process and you let
the mob kind of rule over these moments, bad shit can happen too. And so what happened to the cop?
The cop, everyone started chasing him down and his whole life got ruined. Everyone was like
death threats and fucking with him and all this sort of stuff. Now calling his employer, calling
people who know. But they found his phone number, they found his address,
and the work I turned upside down.
Yeah, but basically, like the fact that they found out
that it was someone else doesn't resolve the fact
that there are now hundreds of people after this guy,
and they don't pay attention that it wasn't him.
And due process has a role in a civilized society
where you can actually create structure
and resolve these things in a proper way
as opposed to letting mob mentality kind of rule. I mean, otherwise, you know, this stuff can get pretty ugly pretty fast as we saw.
As this being just a really, you know, pretty lightweight example. But I'm not sure I'm a huge advocate of this, like,
chase the guy down and then punish him at once and cancel the cancel culture is a little bit ugly right now,
because you don't have all the facts and you miss stuff in a lot of these cases. Yeah, there is definitely, it's great that you can find criminals so quickly and I'm curious
what people think and obviously you just don't want to misturget somebody. So if you do
find somebody who's targeted, like give the information to the authorities, but you may
not want to dox them immediately and try to ruin their lives before you actually know
what's going on. A lot of companies now Microsoft IBM and others Amazon
I think are
Saying we don't want to we're gonna take a pause on facial recognition. I'm curious
What your each of your thoughts are on law enforcement and we'll get into the law enforcement discussion and race relations here in this country
And what we went through
We look we have been we have been
We've been arming our police force
Mistakingly like our military and we've been doing it for you know decades now and it makes no sense
There is this crazy tweet. I saw it today. maybe we can find AOC tweeted out,
where she found this announcement
from some like Longtail Police Department somewhere,
who basically got a free armor truck carrier
and they're driving it around town
or whatever pulling it out of the garage.
It looks like downtown Baghdad.
And you're like, I mean, they're in like Fargo, North Dakota,
wherever they are.
I mean, like, it's just so, it makes no sense.
I don't think, I don't think any of us thought
that we wanted to apportion our tax dollars
to build a second shadow army.
I think we all want an army, an navy, an Marines,
and an Air Force.
We want, you know, aircraft carriers and F-16s and tanks and machine guns
and all that stuff, but we want them with our military. And then we want cops, I think, to be
extremely well-trained. I mean, half the time, you know, cops are, you know, you ask them to be
mental health counselors, other times you're asking them to be, you know, CPR givers, other times
you're asking them to be criminal apprehenders. The givers, other times you're asking them to be criminal app or henders.
The job is too complicated. They clearly can't do it. They're poorly trained and then you arm them on top of all of that
and you have the shit show that we have today. Yeah, it's not like there's an IED waiting somewhere for them to drive over
where they need metal plating on the bottom of the vehicle. That's not what they're dealing with every day. At a minimum, let's like, look, I'm a huge fan of ending qualified immunity. I think that doesn't
make any sense. I think we have to stop arming our police like their military. Don't train them
like the military, train them like a different kind of service. And we may need to go back to first
principles to figure out how to actually train them properly, to spot abuse, to deal with mental health,
and just to be a little bit more patient
and understanding an empathetic versus trigger happy.
Can I ask you a question on that?
So a lot of the actions that police take
when it comes to lethal action
is defended by the notion that my life was under threat
as a cop.
And that sources from the fact that we have a second amendment in this country where a lot of people are,
you know, gun carriers and are allowed to have arms.
So, our police force has had to respond with the fact that there are a lot of guns in this country
with defensive principles and defensive mechanisms to defend themselves against a loss of life due to a gun.
And that makes the United States really unique in terms of the circumstance and defensive mechanisms to defend themselves against a loss of life due to a gun.
And that makes the United States really unique in terms of the circumstance versus if you
look at the United Kingdom where they don't have a second amendment right to bear arms,
the police aren't armed, and the police behavior is significantly different.
You can look at this in any country where there isn't a right to bear arms.
Do we not have a fundamental problem in this country that stems from the fact that the
police feel or can justify that they're always under threat of loss of life due to arms being
out in a couple of ways?
Yeah, the contract, I think is a fabulous question.
The contract example, I would say is if you look at Switzerland where the per capita gun
ownership is really high, Canada where per capita gun ownership is really high, what I would
tell you is there's a different kind of psychological training that police people go through before
they're put on the streets
And that is fundamentally different here the job as is defined to then here is different than it is in Canada or Switzerland
where you know gun ownership levels are quite robust and I think it all comes down to incentives and the reality is is that there is a to your point David
This amplification of this idea that everybody is armed,
which I think is fundamentally mostly not true
in the day to day course of like living one's life.
But I think police people tend to be very amplified
around that threat.
And as a result, the unions have basically written contracts
that protect their use of force.
The law is written in a way that protects their use of force and so all of it
comes from to your point a defensive posture of fear. But if you actually try to
train these people differently, I think you'd have a different outcome because
what I can tell you is the police in Canada do behave differently. They don't
reach for their gun every second. It's an interest. I think there's a very interesting example. And I know we
don't want to like just take one anecdotal incident and then you know make a big sweeping generalization
with it. But if you look at the gentleman in Atlanta who was shot in the back twice, Rashid
Brooks, Rashard Brooks. Rashard Brooks.
This example to me is so illustrative of the problem.
They spent 40 minutes talking with this individual
who was absolutely not a threat.
They had frisked him.
They knew he was not armed.
He was intoxicated.
He's in a drive-thru. Of all the ways you could have dealt with this situation
And I come from a family of police officers and I can tell you a lot of stories about cops letting people go
Obviously white people with warnings in this situation letting him sleep it off taking his keys
Letting him run away. You know who it is. You have his driver's license,
you have his car, you have his keys, let him run away. Under what circumstances would you feel
justified shooting a person when there were so many other options and it comes exactly, I believe,
Chamoff from two things you pointed out. One, they're in a very defensive position into the training.
They're trained to use lethal force and if you're in a situation where you feel threatened,
you just shoot.
That's it.
And if you shoot, you shoot to the center of the body to kill the person.
And in their training, they're not trained to think, how do I disarm the situation, defuse
the situation, and what are the other options?
This person is obviously not a threat, and you knew the taser was fired twice.
I'm not saying the person should have resisted arrest.
I'm not saying the person shouldn't have aimed the taser at the person.
But they should be trained to protect life and diffuse situations at all costs.
Jason, like think about the incentives.
They should have been trained maybe to just walk into the Wendy's by the sky coffee
and then drive him to the motel that he said that he was staying at.
Yes. Or they should have been trained to just write a ticket and say, listen, here's a,
here's a citation for being drunk because you did technically kind of drive in now. I'm
going to leave it alone. They could have done many things that they chose not to do because the
incentive was to project power in that situation versus project any kind of empathy and compassion.
Right.
And the selection of people who go into the police department, and I come from a family
of police officers and firefighters, brother, uncle, cousin, grandfather, up and down the
line, Irish cops and firefighters, big tradition to my family.
And I can tell you that there is a contingent
of people who go into the police,
who are power tripping, or maybe didn't get wherever,
else they wanted to be in life,
and the job of seeing people,
and dealing with the bad stuff that you pointed out,
you know, people in domestic violence situations,
people who are mentally ill, homeless, addiction problems.
All of that then trains these people to see the worst in humanity, and then they just look
at their job as just this dystopian, horrible experience.
And they are in that defensive posture, whereas we need to train people, and I made this
tweet, where we should have a new class of police officer that is more like a Jedi knight.
They get paid twice as much, they have master's degree in social work or psychology, and
when that call comes in for an emotionally disturbed person, a person who's intoxicated
or on drugs, a domestic violence situation, you don't want to send the average B cop to
that, you want wanna send the Jedi.
No, but Jason, make it even easier.
Like when you go in and get a 911 call,
and it's, you know, there could be,
it's somebody who's in sort of like mental distress
or you're gonna do a mental health check,
why don't you send a really well-trained social worker?
Absolutely.
And the reason is,
why don't we have a whole, you know,
a whole force of social workers that we pay $100,000 a year?
Absolutely.
And this, that's what these police officers are made.
And there is an argument to not have them armed.
There's an argument for them to be armed,
but maybe they're so enlightened and trained so well.
I think the training in the United States
is in the low hundreds of hours.
In other countries, it's thousands of hours. I mean, if a person has a gun, I think police
should not get their gun until they've completed maybe two or three thousand hours on the job. In
other words, they get to the second or third year. So the first year where you're a probi, why even
have a gun? Why not just have them doing things without a gun? And then when you get that gun,
maybe you need to have the equivalent of a master's degree.
You know, maybe you need to have a level of training
and we need to go to first principles
like you're saying, Shamaath,
and rethink this whole thing.
In any startup or any problem solving,
you would look at the, show me the thousand calls,
how did they break down what were the outcomes?
And if you look at the outcomes of dealing
with mentally ill people or people who are addiction
or domestic disputes,
the outcomes are things that police are not trained for.
That's got to be a very high percentage of these situations, let alone the no-knock war
in which makes absolutely no sense.
I mean, I think there's just a lot of, look, there's a lot of change coming.
I think that there's a lot of legislation, a foot at every sort of level of government.
And I think the good news is that it's going to be hard for people to sit on their hands
on this.
I don't think it's going to be universally across the country, but I do think that people
will then, again, self-select and want to live in places where, you know, sort of like the
laws match their ideals.
And this is going to be an area of tremendous reform and change. You know, what's interesting
about all of this is like, if you actually go back to the Republican ideology, it's interesting
to me why Republicans aren't the first ones to try to embrace rewriting, you know, the union
contracts and actually decreasing unionized power.
Because that sort of like has generally been a tent hole
theme of Republican ideology.
But then as it gets applied to cops,
I think they kind of just abdicate responsibility.
So there's a lot of reasons where you could have
bipartisan agreement on a bunch of these things.
But again, I think we're, we kind of like get cut up
and we refuse to see the forest from the trees
and want to fix these things, but
I suspect that a lot of these changes will happen just because they're so bloody obvious and
Depending on your ideology you can frame the same reason for completely different motives and get to the same answer
Nobody nobody wants this
Sacks what do you think about the union issue?
As our token right-winger I think yeah Nobody wants this. Sacks, what do you think about the union issue
as our token right-winger?
I think, yeah, I think the police unions have too much power.
All the public employee unions do.
I think, just like the teachers unions
have thwarted school choice and education reform,
I think we're seeing the police unions thwart
a lot of sensible reforms around the use of force.
Our friend Bill Gurley's been tweeting a lot of great research
that around police departments that are unionized, there's a lot more complaints against them.
There's a lot more examples of the use of force and unwarranted use of force.
And so clearly there's a connection here between
warranted use of force. And so clearly there's a connection here between
police unions and the thwarting of common sense reforms. And I saw someone
someone tweeted this idea that you know the reason why I know it's taking on the police unions is because Republicans see the word police and Democrats see the word union. And they're both
fans of those things. And so who's who's going to take them on? Yeah, I mean, and teachers unions is the same thing. And the political system, the political
power of the unions is so entrenched that in order to get in office, for in most cases,
you're going to need to have the support of those unions. And if you don't, they're going
to tell people explicitly not to vote for you.
Yeah, I mean, well, well, look, I mean, you look at the cities that have had the biggest problems
here. I mean, starting with Minneapolis, and these are Democrat controlled cities. These
are not, you know, Republican controlled cities. And the politicians are very much, you know,
incahutes with the big union, the unions there, including the police, the teach unions,
all that. And so, you know, both parties need to be open to reform.
To your point, David, there's a story that came out last, or last couple of days about
the DA in Atlanta who pressed charges against the two officers.
But the narrative was about how the DA is being investigated for getting 140K and kickbacks
from a nonprofit tied to something.
And then he was claiming that his main opponent, who's right, because these district attorneys
are politically elected officials, right, where she had basically done a side deal with the
police to not go after use of force in return for their endorsement.
And what a horribly messy, complicated, gross situation, irrespective of whoever turns
out to be right there.
So to your point, they become so entrenched and it's just so low level that then what should
be obvious justice basically just gets thrown away for what's expedient and convenient.
Yeah. Well, this is another example where like with the mass, I felt like there were,
I wasn't violating conservative principles, I thought there really was a conservative principle.
I think with this example of the overuse of force by police, you go back to what Lord Acton said,
which is power crops and absolute power crops absolutely.
If there's no one standing up to the police unions politically,
they have absolute power and that's gonna lead to corruption.
So I do think like Republicans should be looking into this.
Now, I think part of the reason why Republicans
wanted to defend the police is because we've also had
these examples of looting and writing and lawlessness, you know, after the civil rights protests.
And I think that, again, we're kind of dividing up into sides. And there's too much justification
of bad behavior on both sides because of what the other side is doing. You know, and I heard people on the left justifying the, the
looting and riding on the grounds that, you know, it was a
legitimate expression of, you know, of opposition, it was a
legitimate protest, it was a legitimate expression of
opposition to, to the police violence. And I think that, that
is wrong. And I think it's wrong for people on the right to
defend this police,
the success of use of force by police on the grounds that somehow it's justified because
we need to control the lawlessness and the rioting.
And I think both are wrong.
And we lack a federal leadership to not make this overly political. But when Trump then tear gases with the military
protesters to go do a photo opportunity, you know, it's sending the message that he
want, and he wants to be the law and order president. Now you're just charging things
up instead of just going on TV and just saying something to bring people back to the concept
that we're all Americans, we're all in this together and we
rise and fall together.
It's such an easy statement.
Listen, the protesters have valid concerns.
We need to work on this issue.
And yes, if you see people doing any vandalism, we have to stop them.
Please make sure that doesn't happen because it works against the very valid criticism and
protest that are going on that need to go
on.
And the fact that the president can't say that is crazy.
Well, what do you guys think about what he has been saying and how Twitter and Facebook
have basically taken different sides of freeberg?
Go ahead.
What Trump's been saying?
Yeah.
Should Twitter be censoring him, slash putting warnings on his posts when he's saying crazy stuff?
I don't think so.
Yeah. Look, I mean, it's such a slippery slope and there's too much room for interpretation. be censoring him slash putting the warnings on his posts when he's saying crazy stuff. I don't think so.
Yeah, look, I mean, it's such a slippery slope and there's too much room for interpretation.
I'm just saying the obvious.
But if you're a platform, you're a platform, you let the things get built on top of you.
Sure, you can have some rules around what can be built.
But as soon as you start saying what is true and what is not true and you become
the arbiter of truth, you're no longer an agnostic platform. And I think that, you know, that
is a big, dangerous risk to take, because as you guys know, something maybe, and I think we saw
this with the, what's that Twitter account, zero hedge? It was definitely a hedge. They got
banned. And then they came back because it turns out
what they said wasn't necessarily as untrue
with Twitter at first thought that they were saying was untrue.
So it was a great example of how a point of interpretation
can very quickly reverse course
and you can look extremely biased
in making that decision at that time.
Well, and the YouTube, and Susan Wo me, and wujiki took the, wujiki took the position at YouTube
that we're going to allow people to talk about coronavirus if what they're saying is in sync with
the World Health Organization. Yeah, and by the way, the World Health Organization,
I've had an issue with since well before COVID, uh, just from another life, they, uh, uh,
uh, I won't get into it, but they've said some stuff publicly
that was just flat out fucking wrong scientifically and invalid and it was politicized.
We got to the root of the political driver behind it.
I've long held disbelief in the World Health Organization as a trusted source of scientific
fact.
To Sachs's previous point, you want to be able to check power.
And if the World Health Organization is this incredibly powerful organization who got
it wrong with masks and didn't even, you know, like, David Saks is getting it right.
Some venture capitalist in the Bay Area gets it right about mask and the World Health Organization
gets it wrong.
Well, he's in Mexico, but yeah.
I mean, in a, I'm in a, I'm in a, I'm in a closed location.
In a closed location.
Exactly.
But okay, SACs should they, should they be putting labels and warnings on politicians
when they say things that are consensus wrong?
Yeah, I mean, call me old fashioned, but I'm very much in favor of free speech.
And I'm against censorship. And you know,
fact checking your politicians you don't like is a is basically bias. It's soft censorship.
I mean, they're being very selective in who they decide to fact check. And you know, there's no
good way to do it, right? I mean, there is no truth API that they can just plug in to to fact
check people.
The way that you deal with bad speech is more speech. I think it's a line from Justice Brandeis.
That is the way, historically, that we have in this country that we've dealt with speech by people we don't like, which is you have more speech. And I don't think censorship or warnings
is the right way to go.
Tremoff, what do you think having worked at Facebook?
Look, I think it exposes a couple of things.
One is that the Twitter product is still relatively brittle.
I mean, like at least Facebook has a whole suite of emoticons to say something is a
crock of shit.
You know, and it makes you feel bad or, you know, it makes you feel angry or thumbs down
or whatever.
And so, Twitter's reactionary feedback mechanism to its algorithms is very brittle. And so, if you were going to try to algorithmically tune down the distribution of, you know,
a Trump tweet, you know, you could see where you could balance thumbs up or hearts in this case
with other ways of signaling that this is either wrong or hate-filled or, you know,
instigating. And I think like a little bit more self-policing is probably the only scalable
solution. All of that said, here's what I will say. I think basically that Facebook is becoming
middle America and Twitter is becoming sort of the coasts. And Facebook is basically a product of middle America
plus kind of like countries outside the United States
and Twitter's about rich coastal kind of people.
And you can see that the way that the content ebbs and flows
and the kind of content problems,
like just for as an example,
what is Twitter's latest content problem?
It was that Donald Trump tweeted a video from CNN
that was doctored, and it only showed a clip of a black toddler
running away from a white toddler, and the caption was,
the chirons had something about racism.
It turned out to not be wrong, blah, blah, blah.
What is Facebook's issue two days ago?
It was that the Google Lou movement, which is a bunch of people who believe in the militia
and an impending civil war, principally use Facebook and Facebook groups to organize, and
they found out that they were distributing and driving viewers and usage and content.
So it just kind of tells you, and if you you break down the issues and you know, there's
a couple of people who tweet out the most popular tweets on Twitter versus the most popular
content on Facebook, what you see is a left and right distribution.
And so I think that the audiences are segregating themselves into using products that basically
feed them what they want to hear.
Well, let me ask you last question about the leadership, you work directly with Zuckerberg
for many years, and we all know Jack from Twitter from various projects.
What is Zuckerberg's politics?
Is he a secret Trump supporter?
Is he a Peter Tiel who's on the board, and you're good friends
with Peter Tiel and worked with Peter Tiel Sacks?
I'm curious what you think goes on inside the brain of Mark Zuckerberg in terms of making
these decisions.
Is he scared that Facebook has become dependent on the right?
And is that, Tremoth?
That it is a right thing?
And is he right or left?
What is his politics?
I don't think that's the right framing.
I think that if you're running a big network like this,
you have to remember, you're one of the five or six
most valuable companies in the world.
You yourself have 50, 60, 70 billion dollars.
Basically, the world is your oyster.
And what you've seen over the last five or six
years is that there is an increasing regulatory headwind. And if you basically play the game
theory out, you know, these companies are going to get regulated and they're going to get over
tax and they're going to get kind of slowed down at a minimum and broken up at the maximum.
And so if you're running one of these companies, I think the only thing you can do is hold on.
And so if you're going to hold on, there's no point in making any of these changes because it minimizes the amount of cash you can make and the amount
of support you'll have. So you might as well pick a side effectively by doing nothing and
waiting. And I think that's large. You would all these guys have decided to do. They've
essentially said, we're not going to take a side here.
Well, no, Twitter has taken a side.
Twitter has.
Because they're small enough.
They can survive.
They're not going to get broken up.
But if you're one of the top four or five, look at the position they've taken.
The position they've taken is we have no position.
That's Facebook's position.
We have no position.
We're not going to police ads.
No, hold on. It's also Google's.
It's also Microsoft. It's also Apple's. And it's also Amazon's. And in fairness, the
Facebook all big five tech companies have said our position is no position. And the reason is because
that's the only thing they can do to keep that market cap and to hold on to the economic
vibrancy of their businesses for longer. Saks, why did Twitter and Jack actually take a position?
Because this cannot happen if Jack is not 100% supportive of it.
He is the driver of it and the person who okays it.
And then what do you think Zuckerberg, Timothy and I want to answer this, but I want you
to try to answer it.
What is Zuckerberg's relationship with Peter Tiel and his thinking on a political basis
in your mind without giving up your relationship with Peter, but what is his politics and what is
their relationship?
Well, I don't know exactly what sex politics are and or not even exactly.
I have no idea what his politics are and not remotely.
And I do remember the time when Peter supported Trump during the election and the rest of the
board wanted to run him off the board.
So clearly, it's not like I highly doubt Facebook is a bastion of right-wing thinking.
But why would Zuckerberg keep him on the board then in defiance of everybody else who hates him?
Maybe he simply believes that supporting the Republican candidate in a presidential election
does not grounds for removal from a board. Maybe he simply is not that intolerant.
I think I mean I'm going gonna actually go on a limb here
and defend Zuckerberg a little bit,
which is my impression of what Zuckerberg's trying to do
is simply maintain Facebook as a speech platform.
And, you know, if you're gonna be a speech platform,
you're gonna be caught in the crosshairs
of all these very controversial debates.
And, you know, people are publish things out of the people hate.
In fact, even that the majority hates.
But isn't that the type of speech that the ACLU historically defended?
It feels to me like there's been a rise mainly on the left in terms of intolerance for
speech.
They don't like that they consider to be insufficiently what.
Yeah, you saw that with the New York Times newsroom,
I think you tweeted a tweet storm from an opinion writer there.
It was around the Tom Cotton editorial, which, you know,
it's not like I agreed with it,
but they kind of had a,
they basically fired the opinion page editor
because they realized they published.
And by the way, sorry, just to build on your point, the title, which wasn't even written
by Tom Kotten, was, I would say, an order of magnitude worse than the article, if you
read the whole article.
Right.
But the title was really offensive.
Wasn't even written by them.
It was written, I think, by the editor that got fired.
But the article itself was kind of bad, but not nearly as bad as the title,
which he did.
Freeberg, 20 years ago, when we were all, as Jen Actress coming up, we were taught to
defend freedom of speech.
This is a core tenant of a vibrant democracy and that you need to be able to read unpopular
opinions.
In fact, the KKK needs to be able to march down main street and we need to protect that
ugly speech in order for everybody else to have it.
And here we have an editorial, which obviously none of us agree with, is this an existential
threat to America that we are now going to say freedom of speech is not a core tenant
of the American experiment.
I'm just looking for the term that was used by what's the other um New York Times opinion writer. I forgot her name, Sachs, maybe you'll help me, but she talks about like a comfort culture
or so basically we used to pride ourselves on a culture that enabled freedom of speech and
and and that was um that was cherished and heralded and um that was cherished and heralded.
And what is cherished and heralded now is a culture that protects people from hearing offensive and scary things
that they don't want to hear.
And that shift, you know, those of us who are Gen X, which I think I am on the morning 1980,
into the millennial Gen Z,
and beyond kind of generation has occurred.
And it is fundamentally changing the nature
of how we find truth and how we find
coalesce around decisions as a society.
And we're excluding the things that are offensive.
And it's a little bit scary to think about
from my point of view that, you know, we can't
explore all options, we can't hear all dissenting points of view.
This is certainly a very deep argument about how our society and our democracy operates,
but it is happening.
And so the point was, like, we are starting to shift towards valuing comfort over freedom
of expression.
And that's just kind of the big change that's occurring.
And look, we do live in a democracy.
So the votes are going to be what ultimately decides,
what happens here, votes in terms of who's using Facebook
versus Twitter, and votes in terms of who's voting
for what presidential candidate and what governor and what mayor.
And so we'll see.
It's a sea change in how our Mr. Margaret the operates. Yeah, I think it's a sea change going back very far because the whole principle of the Enlightenment going back hundreds of years was stated by Voltaire,
which is that I may disagree with what you have to say, but I'll defend to the death, you're right to say it.
Who today is willing to do that?
I mean, that was the idea that led to political liberalization in the West.
It's really a unique feature of Western democracies and liberalism.
You go anywhere else in the world.
I guarantee you people aren't defending to the death.
You're right to say things they disagree with. I don't think they're, you know, I don't think she's been paying or a lot of me are
Putin is defending. You're right to hear things that they don't want you to.
So, you know, this is a very foundational part of
American and, you know, Western
political liberalism and it's being challenged now.
And I think we should have more self-confidence in our ideas
to worry so much about Donald Trump's tweets,
which are our federal and be forgotten very soon,
that we're willing to throw out freedom of speech.
Well, yeah, I mean, this is a thing I don't understand
about labeling his tweets.
He is, you know, I mean, this is a thing I don't understand about labeling his tweets is you know
I mean, is anybody not think that this guy is hopped up on Adderall or a complete moron like or any of those things like
We all know he's an idiot who just tweets 50 times a day and he's a scared
You know that he's not gonna win his you know reelection and that he's a real he's a little reality star
So who do you mean by when when you say we we all because it's a different we
that i think you're saying that i think other people would be saying yeah i i
we represent right i mean i that's i think the generational divide here is
i don't know if it's generational i think there's a lot of dimensions across which
these differences of perspective occur and i've said this for amongst our group for a long time
but there's a huge difference between a rural population urban population in the united states
uh... in terms of what their priorities are
and i think that difference in priorities
is unconscious and that's where things really resonate the trump says and that
really uh... move the needle for a lot of folks
uh... the priority of civil rights is not a it might be in an urban center
is not a priority in a rural center
and in a in a rural population there's a different priority, no matter what how he says it,
the things he's saying are different than what I'm hearing from the urban population,
which is where the media comes from and so on and so forth.
And so Trump resonates with me.
I don't care if he sounds a little bit wacky.
I need wacky because it needs to be different than standard.
And there's just, there's a lot of divides here and a lot of dimensions across the region.
I think that we absolutely should not throw the baby out with the bath water.
We should never attack this very basic principle of free speech because we will never forgive
ourselves if we do. But then this is why I think we come back to, we should be a little bit more resilient
to build products and services that allow a little bit more texture in the discussion so that you actually can have free speech flourished more
in a more transparent way.
So David, to your point, how do you drown out hate speech?
It's more speech.
Well, these products don't necessarily even enable that.
And so I do think that we have this sort of an issue
where the products and services that billions of people use
to consume their information and construct a world view today,
they neither will allow things to be flagged nor will they increment the feature surface area so that you can actually have. So then that's why I think people then get into this place where
everybody feels cornered and nobody likes what's happening. And so I think that's kind of what we're in.
I think that if we had a little bit more ingenuity and thinking by the folks at Twitter and Facebook,
it would go a long, long way.
Yeah, I do think there's something.
I mean, the conundrum of Twitter is simultaneously, it's the main way I get my news information,
but I also see it as a huge source of group
think and kind of mob mentality.
And so you know, the more time you spend on Twitter, I mean, I see a lot of people saying
the more unhappy they are.
And so you do wonder whether it's making you more informed or whether it's just making
you buy into some sort of mass psychosis.
Well, it could be both, but you could becoming more informed. And you could be going into a psychosis, but we have a lot of friends who are high profile, who like
their behavior on Twitter is a is a separate thing than who they actually are, right? Like
they just lose their shit on Twitter. And, you know, the, the, the, it is really a very
strange place to be sure. Can we talk, by the way. Can we just talk about this Bolton book?
I mean, what the fuck?
I mean, he did ask Eugene Peng to help him win the election
and he bartered by soybeans to help me win the election.
I mean, this is insane.
I think we need to, first of all, you always got to look at the source here.
So I don't know how to say.
A commentator who's as far as you could go, who was picked by Trump himself.
Well, he was a very weird choice for Trump because one of the main reasons why Trump won
their public nomination is he promised no more bushes meaning an end to these crazy
Neocon wars of intervention and this guy boltin like he's right out of that playbook
Yeah, he's he's the like hawk of hawks. There's not a war. He doesn't want to get us into he wanted to get us into our war with Iran
And never made any sense for trump to hire him in the first place. So do you know why he hired him?
Estated in the first place. But do you know why he hired him? I stated in the book.
I've heard the explanation that he liked.
I think he said something like when he sends Bolton into a room.
He likes, he thinks the strength is his negotiating position because the other side thinks
that there were about, US is about to invade or something when Bolton comes into the room.
And it's also Trump was like, I love hearing you talk.
It's just like Fox News.
Like that's the quote is so he literally picks people
based I mean and he picked a
Ludlow right for his you know
He picks them based on being TV personalities. I just think this Bolton guy is um
Like you know, this is crazy War Hawk who also is this kind of like a weasel and
I don't know how he creates a five hundred and seven page book out of
spending seventeen months in the white house i guess he's just writing down every uh
i'm surprised it's not five thousand that should be a that should be like
tokens law of the written trilogy i'm gonna put this other
if he can produce the note that Pompeo gave him that said
trump is so foolish of shit, that
thing at auction, I'm telling you now, what do you each bid for it?
What do you need?
$500,000 at least $500,000.
If that note actually exists and he has it, it's not, I mean, it's, it's, but I just
think to me, first of all, it's a little ludicrous that this guy, he is a bit of a weasel
because like, where were you during the impeachment? A, he made an economic calculation that his book was more important in the future of the country.
So, first of all, you know, kind of go fuck yourself with that. But the other thing though is that, you know, beyond his
sort of like character flaws, it's just the story after story after story. It's just kind of from the
bizarre to the absurd. Like Finland's a part of Russia. England doesn't have nuclear
weapons. Please buy soy beans. You are part of the, you are part of the nuclear powers.
UK really. The United Kingdom has nukes. Wow. What if India gets it? Yeah, but every, every
one of these insider tell all books always makes the,
you know, always makes the present look bad. I mean, it's not a hard task.
Was there anything though that was surprising to anyone? The Xi Jinping is a blockbuster. The Xi Jinping did catch me off guard that he was that brazen
and kind of sad. But that's the surprise you. I mean, like the fact that it was said,
but like the motivation, the intention, the model of all the time, like, no, to your point, my expectations are so low.
It's like teaching a kid to poop in the toilet for the first time.
You know, as long as it doesn't poop on the floor, even if he does it in his diaper,
you know, everything looks like success as long as there is just not raw feces on my
hardwood. If he sat on the potty, it's success.
It's success, even if the pants weren't pulled down.
If he poops his pants on the body, tell me about,
tell me about, I just want to switch topics, tell me about vaccines because it seems
to me that there's like a growing cohort of people and I'm not going to put
Moderna in this camp, but like maybe they did.
That we're very opportunistically out there generating a ton of PR.
But what if you had to pick a time and a time frame and then a manufacturing time frame,
can you just tell me what's the order?
What's the order?
So we can bet a line on it.
So there's going to, I think there's going to be a stage release of vaccines that will probably believe
it or not start in Q4 this year. And there's been production ramp up going on in parallel
to testing. So, you know, to get these vaccines produced, whether you're talking about the
mRNA vaccine or you're talking about the viral vaccine like they did in China, which they actually
do have in production.
There's a bunch of different challenges with scaling up and ramping production.
And then, you know, what's called
downstream processing and filtering
and then packaging and all this stuff.
Anyway, it's a big fucking exercise.
So what's gone on is there's been a parallel effort
to actually scale up production of these things
before we've actually completed the testing event
to make sure that they're safe and efficacious.
And as a result, and some of this came out of that
first or second stimulus bill,
some of it came from private funding
and then other governments are just straight up paying for it.
And so there are a number of facilities
that are actually ramping production right now.
If the vaccines ultimately don't pass must
or just gonna be a writeoff of a couple billion dollars.
So theoretically, we could have doses that are available for
distribution to help care workers and front-line people in Q4
this year is what I would kind of set the over under at.
What do you think these vaccines are like flu vaccines,
which is like 50-60% effective at best?
Yeah, I don't really know the answer to that. I would say that these things are probably pretty effective
I would say the flu vaccine is just a high rate of mutation and also a low rate of utilization and a high rate of infection
So we're gonna have a low rate of infection probably a more moderate rate of mutation as a result
And so we we should be more in control if we get something that works with the current strains.
And the way that this SARS-CoV-2,
most of the vaccines are built,
the seven, I think, major targets around the spike protein
and different epitopes across the spike protein.
And so, you know, if you see a great degree of mutation
across that protein, it's likely going to be less infected,
infected, and less effective as a virus, and so it'll go away.
And so I think that we've got a really good shot here at...
What are the odds that somebody politicizes the vaccine and America doesn't get it?
America doesn't get it?
Oh, politicized.
We don't have 100% yet.
Yeah, I mean, look, we've at size fucking measles 30% of people
Kids now aren't getting vaccinated for measles, which is crazy and others measles outbreak happening in the US, which is just
You know mind boggling so that's just happening in Marin where you are
Easy that's it's with the place with the highest percentage of graduate degrees in the country
Yeah, no, but I mean it mean, it's an inevitability that gets
politicized. But David, like, how does how does the
distribution of these vaccines work? Meaning like, let's just
let's just say that it's like, Sonofi, for example, because I
saw that the French government made a large investment and
the Germans did as well, to essentially like, onshore, a
bunch of their, you know, companies who had promising vaccine candidates.
And so if you assume that there's a distribution of these vaccines, let's just say the most
efficacious ones in China, are they just going to dole this out to whoever's willing to
buy it, or they're going to decide on a political basis how to basically give these.
And then when they come to the United States, how do we know that it comes to Texas before
it comes to Wyoming versus California versus New York?
So I think the ones that are getting federal support, which all of them are pretty much
at this point, are going to be federally mandated in terms of distribution, and there's
probably some commercial agreement that none of us have seen in terms of what that looks
like.
So Trump will send up to the swing states where he's behind.
Is what you're saying?
Well, I think it'll probably be delegated
down to helping him in service.
What are the chances that there's a Trump logo
on the side of the.
Is your Trump vaccine?
There's a Trump vaccine to save your life.
Okay, there's a good point for us to kind of wrap around the horn.
Tremoth and I think a lot of people were convinced
that Trump was gonna sell into office.
Now, everything is showing.
Fox News poll, CNBC polls, survey monkey polls, that Trump is very far behind, especially
in the swing states.
What are the chances?
Trump wins the election.
Sacks.
I think he's, well, I think COVID's really heard him because the sort of feather on his cap
the thing he had really had going for him was the economy.
That's been hurt, but it's coming back.
The situation could look very different
six months from now.
Right now it looks pretty bleak
because I do think that his reaction to the crisis
was seen as a very inflammatory.
But I think six months from now
could be a very different story.
Five months. So you don't think he's gonna win right now, but he think six months from now could be a very different story, five months. So you don't think he's going to win
right now. But the election today, if the election were today, he
would lose. But, you know, the economy, we're seeing a V shape
recovery, which I think is surprising all of us. And if that holds
up, and we get past the civil unrest that we've had. And, you know, he saw
spings so inflammatory on those issues. I think that, you know, the situation could
look very different in five months. You got to remember the other thing, which is Biden at some point
is going to have to enter to some presidential debates. And, you know,
it's unknown if he's going to be there is what you're saying cognitively. Yeah, I mean, that's
the unpopular talk about, but you actually think there's unknown if he's gonna be there is what you're saying cognitively. Yeah, I mean, that's the point. It's unpopular to talk about,
but you actually think there's a cognitive issue,
yes or no?
Probably, yeah.
Probably, yeah.
It's uncomfortable to say for some reason.
Yeah.
But it's, I mean, at a minimum,
look, there's a problem with the way he speaks.
I don't know if there's a,
which is indicative of a problem with the way he thinks,
but, you know, like when,
if they're on stage
for two hours in a debate,
I think we're gonna find out really quick.
And I think those debates are pretty unavoidable.
I don't think Biden's gonna have figured out a way
to get out of it.
So, you know, I think a lot of people think
that he can just be propped up by his staff
and they can, to some extent, but I think at some point,
we're gonna have to take a look at Joe Biden
Trimoff Trump wins Trump loses
Right now I think it's sort of 75 25 he loses, okay, I think that's gonna get closer to
55 45 as the date comes close I
Think it actually comes down to two issues.
Number one is who does Biden pick as a running mate?
And Kenny lock up the swing states
with that running mate.
And number two, which I think is probably gonna play
an enormous role if the community organizing
that saw the Black Lives Matter movement get to this next level is
avoiding and preventing voter suppression.
LeBron, I think, is about to start an enormous campaign with a lot of very well-heeled, well-known celebrities to get out the vote.
But if there's a concerted effort to prevent voter suppression and get young people
and people of color to the polls,
it's a Biden landslide.
Now we've gone from a Trump landslide,
just six months ago in all of our minds
to a Biden landslide,
Freiburg, where are you at?
I still think crumbs gonna win.
I'd say 70% chance, Chrome wins.
And I'll tell you why.
I think there's still, there's not going to be structural improvement between now and
November for the majority of people that voted for Trump in the last election.
There are going to be a large number of people in blue collar and rural areas that remain
challenged with their life and feel like they're missing out.
And this may even be true in inner city districts, but the big flip vote in the rural and
blue collar areas is going to say, I still need change, I need things fixed.
And Trump is the agent of change.
Biden, he has always been the agent of change
And I'll tell you the other thing he's also a master of is laying blame and so Trump is incredible at pointing a finger at some third party and saying
That's the enemy. I'm the guy who's gonna go to feed him for year
And I think that's what won in the election last time and I think it could win him
It may be election again this time no matter what shit happens between now and November
He will find a way to make the story
about how some third party or some process
or some deep state is still responsible for that outcome
that's keeping you down, Mr. Blue-Color Factory worker.
And I will be the person to vanquish that problem.
Biden is the old state, he's the old guard,
he's the guy from before.
And we haven't changed anything in the last four years where people feel happy and secure about their lives i think
the sacks's point if the economy was even stronger it may hurt trumps chances sure it's a lot of
folks might say great trumps responsible let's give them a thumbs up but the more people are feeling
pain the more they're looking for an agent of change and i think strump against biden is still
going to be that agent makes me the deciding either tie or swing vote. I believe Biden wins. I believe Trump is absolutely
lost his ability to win this because he made two critical errors to SACS's very astute point. He
just complete Blunder on wearing masks and leadership during COVID and complete Blunder in terms of dealing with the social unrest,
which he could have acted as a reconciliation agent.
And he's his own worst enemy
and couldn't do those two very simple things.
I think Biden wins big if he takes the following strategy,
which I will call the Avenger strategy,
which is it's not just about him.
He gets an incredible running mate to Tremont's point, but not only that,
he pre-announces his cabinet of vendor style and they start hosting ala
Cuomo in New York, Daily Briefings, where they talk about what the country needs to do with a brain
trust in a round table, with five or six people pre-selected. So you're not voting for Biden who might have cognitive issues and sex is correct.
He could fumble under Trump's greatest strength, which is demolishing people in debates, which
we ourselves all watched.
We watched Hillary get absolutely beat up in those debates.
And that was our, I remember those nights,
when we were watching at your house, Chimath,
and our eyes opened right up like holy cow.
Hillary's in trouble here.
He's just really good at this type of maniac boxing
that he does with little Mark Rubio
and everybody else in Ireland.
But if he picks the right VP candidate,
and I wanna know, as we close here,
who is the VP candidate
that you think he should pick?
Amy Klobuchar just bowed out and said, a woman is not enough.
You need to have a black woman.
So, Chimath, who is the ideal running mate?
Sax, who scares you the most since the GOP is going to lose this time around?
Who's the scariest for you.
And Freiberg, who do you think you should pick?
Give it some thought or do you not have a consensus choice?
I'll leave my statement to the end.
Okay, sassy poop.
You know, don't send back this and pick somebody you want him to pick because it helps him
lose.
Well, I don't know the back banter Democrat politicians well enough to say exactly.
I don't know the the back banter democrat politicians well enough to say exactly. I don't have a pick
I would just say I would really like for him to pick a great crisis manager
An operator somebody who's been there somebody who's been tested in a crisis because there's a very high chance
That this VP pick will become the president given Biden's age and everything going on in the world
And we've just seen crisis after crisis this year. I think there's gonna be more shoes to drop and this person that we don't even know yet
Could very easy be the president of the United States in the next two years
So I just hope he picks someone who is good at handling a crisis. Okay, so that would mean Oprah perhaps
God you just pick my fire
Is that really your picture? Yeah, yeah, Oprah Winfrey.
I mean, she would be, she would be incredible.
Oh my God, she's a wild car.
She's a wild car.
Oh, she's incredible.
Oprah Winfrey, for the win.
I mean, if you're gonna pick somebody, Biden Winfrey,
it's gotta ring a slam dunk.
It's a slam dunk, I'm sorry. It's a slam dunk. It's a slam dunk, I'm sorry.
It's a slam dunk.
It's a slam dunk.
Better than Michelle Obama.
Slam dunk, I'm gonna email Blinken and Evan Ryan right now.
Oprah Winfrey, okay?
Freeberg, you have a better candidate?
Who's your choice for free?
I don't have a choice.
I mean, I'm not gonna make it a choice here,
but I think the challenge he's gonna face
is finding a black woman who can appeal to the blue collar and rural vote in these areas where he needs to kind of win some
Win some folks over and so he's gonna end up in these urban districts like the Atlanta mayor or like Kamala Harris
And they're they're not gonna they're not gonna bring that vote
So he isn't a little bit of a pickle here, because Amy Klobuchar helped him bridge the world divide.
But he's got a, I think it's gonna be
a bit of a search here to find something
that I don't know where you're going with Oprah.
Because it just becomes, she is such a reconciler.
Now it doesn't fit the execution in a crisis
To sacks his desire and I she's built a bigger business in Trump
I mean, what do you know is what is about to get to is I think she's so successful and she's such a great leader and so charismatic
she would bring in
better
Operators than Trump and Pence ever could I mean look at the shit show of
People who came in and out of the cabinet.
It was one goofball and then competent asshole after another.
Sorry to get a little frisky here at the end, but I feel like we're at the poker game.
Trump's cabinet was in an embarrassment almost universally, correct?
Sax?
Well, look, I hear here's the problem with Oprah or if you want, you know, any other Hollywood
celebrity, a George Clooney or what have you, they're just, they're not used to getting
beat up the way that politicians in our country get beat up.
You know, they're used to having people catering to them, they're used to having the star trailer
and the star treatment.
And you know, they tend to have a glass jaw on politics because they've just never
been put in an environment where they're just constantly assaulted. Trump, I mean, was a celebrity, but he was used to, he kind of grew
up in that whole New York tabloid environment and was used to punching and counterpunk.
He embraced it, in fact, he was his own fake PR person. He was trailing the post.
Yeah, it's, you know, it's at all to say about, you know, wrestling with a pig, you know,
everyone gets dirty, but the pig likes it. I mean, Trump is kind of like the pig who likes it.
Mostly celebrities don't like having to get beat up.
They're used to being very popular.
And that's why they tend to be, I think,
tough picks politically, is they tend to have a glass of all.
All right.
On that, Biden Winfrey.
Biden Winfrey.
Biden Winfrey.
I love you guys.
Let's play poker outside.
We'll see you all next time on the All In podcast.
Bye-bye.
have a glass jar. Alright on that.
Bye. Win free.
Bye.
I love you guys.
Love you. Let's play poker outside.
We'll see you all next time on the All In podcast. Bye. Bye.