All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E5: WHO's incompetence, kicking off Cold War II, China's grand plan, 100X'ing America's efficiency
Episode Date: July 11, 2020Follow the crew: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://bio.fm/the...allinpod
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, everybody, welcome to the all in podcast. This is our fifth episode. As you know, we regularly publish this podcast. Well, every
two to four weeks, something like that. And just to give you a little idea of how well this is going, the podcast
peak that number 10 tech podcast, even though we never publish it. And we're only four episodes.
So tell your friends about the podcast. So we can be number one and just dunk on traditional media
which is full of people who have us as the guests.
Jason number 10 on what Apple?
Apple technology podcast, we literally race,
I mean it went from like, we debuted in the 20s,
then the teens and then boom, we hit number 10.
And I was talking to somebody in media
who has us on as guests and I was like, listen,
I formed a super team and we're now getting more traffic.
I'm sorry, who are you talking to?
Just like a mirror where you were just looking at yourself?
I mean, you are so fucking arrogant
after that shitty video.
What video are you referring to?
What video?
Oh my God, you want me to say it to all the listeners.
You want me to say it?
Hold on a second. Let me just come to the house.
Somebody made a cut of the billion times Jason mentioned he was an early investor in Uber.
All right. Take it easy.
A virgin galactic slash slack investor.
I don't I don't say anything.
I know they put it.
Companies like attention.
Put it on the chiro and the lower third every time you're on.
So yeah, be so you ever better.
My problem is I have too many unicorns to mention,
just one.
Right, so they just go with one dimension.
They just go with PayPal and no Peter Tiel.
David, David, I have a question.
Why is there a picture of two pregnant men behind you?
I'm zoomed in.
We now have the technology for men to be impregnated.
This is a recent picture of Jason, I don't look off course.
I'm not sure who's more out of shape.
People can do it.
As I go in the first hole,
you look like you're about to collapse.
I think I'll go.
Yeah.
It's a hundred and six degrees.
Put your hands under his shoulders and hold them up.
It's a hundred and six degrees at 80% humidity.
And I kid you not.
This is the, this was the second and third time
I played golf.
This was the third time.
And I'm gonna just ask D-Frame,
David Friedberg is here.
Of course, he's our science friend, buddy.
And Chimoff Polyhapiti is here.
How many holes, I want one of you to set the over under
on how many holes we completed each day?
The maximum number of holes
We completed four okay, Shema said a lot of four and you're taking the over it was sacks five five
And there was there's a there's a red door every five holes
So that may have had something to do with it. I took nine because I figured Jason was on his rush to the hot dog stand.
Well, that's where the red doors were the hot dogs are.
Yeah, you know what I said? I said these two these two dorks with ADHD can barely make it an hour
doing anything. And so if you think an average round takes four hours then basically you know you
get through four holes in about an hour and then you want to give up. We got to the fifth hole. I am addicted to golf now. I don't know if you guys know this. You can gamble on golf.
Jason, I the biggest match I ever played was a
$500,000 million dollar NASA. I don't know what a NASA is. I lost one and a half bets. I lost
750K. What is a NASA is. I lost one and a half bets. I lost 750K.
What is a NASA type bet?
NASA is basically a gambling bet on a per-hole basis.
Got it.
We had just a ton of fun, and it was great
because this was the first time I've ever...
It's the single best aspect of golf, in my opinion.
If you gamble, it makes that game
one of the most incredible games
because people with mental fortitude
who cannot play at all can show up and literally make hundreds
thousands or millions of dollars. Yeah, we were playing for hundreds of
dollars per whole. So let's just leave it at that. In fact, we play a hundred
dollars whole. So it was it was just for fun. But man, I don't know about you
guys. Do we have some if we know if we know somebody who's got a
membership in
one of these places, I'd love to go back out again, but it was great fun.
And it was fun.
Come to Shadow Creek. Come to Shadow Creek in Vegas. We can play. It's probably the best gambling
golf course in the world in my life.
Okay. I'm in. So let's get to business for those of you who are tuning in for the first
time. Chamoth Polly, Haapatia is my co-host here on the podcast.
We've been friends since we both did a very brief tour at AOL.
He then went to work for Mayfield,
which is a venture firm you might not have heard of.
He stayed there for about 27 weeks before going to work
for Mark Zuckerberg.
He secured the bag, then started his own venture firm.
It grew way too big and he kind of got bored having to manage 100 people.
So now he's running his home office venture firm and doing two deals a year.
The one you've certainly heard of is Virgin Galactic where he's taking people to space
and he did a SPAC for that IPO B and IPO C are lined up
from what I understand. I'll correct me if I am wrong. And he'll be spacking two more
companies once a year. I guess will be the pace. Is that correct? Chimoff.
Among other things, but yeah. Yeah. And then David Sacks has now become and David
Freberg have become regulars. We've decided we're going to stick with this for some as it goes because we're getting a really nice passing of the ball around topics.
And David Sacks went to Stanford with folks you know like Keith Roboi, Peter Tiel during
an era where they were a bunch of huge nerds who created a way to transfer money on palm pilots
called PayPal.
It didn't work until they decided to move it to email.
I'm not sure who's idea,
who gets credit for moving it to email, Saks?
Saks.
Who decided like, hey, I don't know,
Saks of silence is his way of saying me.
Because it was an abject failure when you tried to send money between palm pilots, Who decided like hey, I don't know, silence is his way of saying me
Because it was an object failure when you tried to send money between pompa let's Peter Teal's original idea But then somebody woke up and said well, why don't we just do this over email?
What he hasn't said let me tell you the names that PayPal he has not said yet
Musk teal
Hoffman levchin silence radio silence so far David Sacks
Jeremy stop them in
Chad Hurley from YouTube Jerry stopman for the help anyway. He was part of that cohort
Then he made a movie called thank you for smoking which was Jason rightman's first film Jason rightman
Then went on to great success that film actually made money
Sacks was so absolutely depressed by how long it took to make one film and how painful it was.
He then decided to go create a billion dollar company and under three years called Yammer,
which Chimoth made a ton of money on and he tackles about regularly.
And then David Freiburg is with us.
He is just the smartest kid at the table, but somehow figures out how to lose tons of money
to us in poker.
He created Climate.com and sold it to Monsanto.
He created MetroMile and he created Itza,
which fell horribly.
But that just goes to show you nobody ever remembers what Itza is,
but they do remember his giant multi-billion dollar companies.
He now is running his own startup studio,
which is making
incredible, the interesting companies.
Can I talk about the one that's related to beverages or not?
Not yet.
Okay.
Anyway, there's a company related to beverages that is so game-changing.
I just said no.
You can't say it.
He showed it to us under friend D.A.
I just said, can I talk about the beverage company?
Yes or no?
I'm trying to give the guy a goddamn plug here.
Anyway, I'm teasing you.
I'm teasing you.
You can't do a plug.
I'm not doing a plug, but I'm teasing it.
And I think he's literally sitting on
what could wind up being the greatest
most successful company of the entire group.
Stop period.
Okay, let's jump in.
I want to talk about David Usold climate to Monsanto for a billion dollars
back in the day when it was shocking to people,
that amount of money still is,
but you were one of the first sort of quote unquote unicorns.
And then you, we're right in the front seat of Monsanto,
probably could have been CEO if you wanted.
I want you to talk to me about what is going on
with Bayer,
Monsanto, Roundup, and I want to use that as a jumping off point to talk about the World
Health Organization.
So, Roundup is a molecule known as glyphosate, and it's been used as an herbicide for decades.
And for decades, it was very well studied. The U.S. EPA and the FDA and the global health organizations have studied it carefully
because of its incredible use.
It is a biodegraded, the core molecule glyphosate biodegrades in a couple of days.
And it is a very effective herbicide.
So when farmers grow stuff, they don't want weeds growing in the field and round up was
a pretty effective way at getting rid of weeds so you could get more crop per acre or more
yield per acre.
A long time, people thought that round up, like many of the traditional persistent chemical
herbicides was carcinogenic and people were concerned about that.
And as a result, there was a lot of studying done.
In fact, before I sold my company to Monsanto, I spent a lot of time researching round up
and glitzing to make sure that it was safe,
that I wasn't selling my company
to what everyone was saying was the devil at the time.
And from a scientific basis,
I felt pretty comfortable about the data,
the studies, the research that had been done.
When I was at Monsanto, there was a bit of a political event
that took place at the World Health Organization. The World Health Organization runs a group called IARC. It's a Cancer Research Institute.
That's part of the WHO. And there was a gentleman who was politically trying to get himself on that
council to make the case that Glyphosate was Carcinogenic. And years later, a Reuters reporter identified
how he was able to get this council to disregard
a number of scientific findings and studies, including the US EPA and other very wide, broad
ranging studies by international organizations, and showing that Roundup or Glacier State
was non-Carsonogenic.
But the political process by which he was able to get on the council, get that data excluded
from a study, and then get IRC to declare round up or
glyphosate a possible carcinogen or probable carcinogen, then triggered a bunch of tort
lawyers in the United States to start suing Monsanto and now Bayer, because Bayer bought
Monsanto a number of years ago for causing cancer.
And the data is absent, but the way the US court system works is if you have some probable
definition and you can get a jury to say yes, and the probable cause was there's a probable
carcinogen label applied to it by IARC.
And this Reuters reporter years ago did a great job highlighting how this whole thing was
kind of politically motivated and the data and the science from a broad range of scientists,
including the AAAS, a lot of scientific membership organizations,
very definitively and clearly show that glyphosate is non-carcinogenic.
But it was super troubling and frustrating.
Now, look, this doesn't bother me personally anymore.
I have no interest whatsoever.
But it turns out that these lawsuits are now going to cost Monsanto and now Bayer, which
bought Monsanto, somewhere between 1010 and $15 billion to settle this.
This is all a function of some political hacking that took place at the WHO.
For a long time, I've had a bit of a concern about how the WHO operates and the process
by which they do scientific assessment and validation.
A lot of this has obviously become much more apparent
with the coronavirus crisis and their response
with respect to masks and treatment and so on.
So that's a little bit of the background
I think you're referring to HMath.
And so, good at your math if you want to.
No, I mean like to me, I think that this is such an interesting
thing.
I wanted to use it as a ZonRab to the WHO largely
because it's like the ineptitude keeps
compounding in that organization.
I just read that we still don't have a definitive posture on masks from the WHO and that they
are finally seeding ground to the idea that the coronavirus could partially be spread
in air. I mean, this is so bizarre because it's the middle of July.
There are three million cases and half a million people who have died and we are still there.
And so, you know, when I saw that Trump pulled out of the WHO, you know, in this weird way,
the way he did it was kind of cartoonish and stupid and, you know, kind of an insulin
child. the way he did it was kind of cartoonish and stupid and you know kind of an insulin child, but the reason he did it was actually pretty reasonable because
this organization is not a scientific or health body, it's an academic body.
And you know you can see this in universities where all of a sudden things
tilt away from facts and it tilts towards you know all kinds of very very very
small points of sort of like political capital that people fight over.
And so these politicized organizations are incredible.
And to the point at which we saw this past week, the report that well over 250 of their own scientists who they rely on said, hey, it's very clear that this is an airborne phenomenon, aerosol,
tiny micro particles of aerosol, when people talk, when they sing, when they cough, when
they sneeze, all this obvious stuff, floats in the air. And if you have a closed air conditioned,
you know, location, like say a church in the south or a hotel or a casino, it's not a good idea to be in there. And it's especially not a
bad, it's especially bad idea to take your mask off. So now the WHO is over two and Trump, as you
said, in his just horrifically comical way, can explain as we're very clearly explaining that this
is a political organization that is funded by a
duopoly of superpowers that have many issues which we're going to get into today. And we
don't have to say who the duopoly is.
Sax, when you look at this being our token conservative here and you see the Trump win, how
frustrating is it for you that Trump's delivery and his persona when he is right
and a person can't be wrong all the time, I'm positive of that, you have to deal with
the fact that he doesn't such a stupid, in a way that you don't actually get credit
for the win.
Well, you know, Trump is often the bull in the China shop and, you know, kind of disrupts
the status quo by throwing a grenade into it.
But frequently, there are good reasons why the status quo needs to be disrupted.
The New York Times laid out the case in a new story on who the one that reported the
science is complaining that you were talking about.
It was just a straight new story, but it almost came across as an expose,
because whose incompetence was laid out so starkly.
The fact that they were slow on mass and opposed them,
and I think kind of lied about them.
And then to be downplaying the airborne nature of the virus in favor of maintaining this
narrative that it's spread through touching surfaces or fomites, which I think people are
realizing now is much, much less likely.
And so, yeah, you do kind of have to wonder who side is who on.
And the New York Times article kind of suggests why they do this which is
when they issue a declaration they have to think about the ramifications and all of their
member countries and so what ends up happening is they sort of start with the policy implication
or political result that they are thinking about and they kind of reverse engineer the science. And, you know, the article talks about how, you know, if who were to come out and sort
of be very clear about airborne transmission, that could affect spending or, you know,
political budgets in all of these different countries.
And so they've been reluctant to do that.
So yeah, it's a organization that's sort of political first and then reverse engineers
the science to fit that.
And you know what this reminds me of? It's like when you have giant investors on the board of a company, the management team comes out and now they've got to present like a pivot or an acquisition or whatever it is.
And they're thinking, well, okay, we've got this funding source.
We've got this funding source. These people own 26% of who?
This person owns 22%.
We've now got to present it to them.
And what are the downstream ramifications?
Luckily, there is an alignment in a single company.
The alignment is we all want the company share price to go up.
But here in the world, it is not equally aligned.
What is in China's best interest, what's in the EU's best interest, and what's in America's best interest
might be radically different,
and they are literally funding them, correct, from off?
Well, there's a thing called sayers law,
which many of us kind of have seen play out,
which is that the saying is something like academic politics
are so vicious because the stakes are so small.
And in this interesting way, the WHO has lost the script
because they fight over politics,
who gets to say what, who's being positioned,
and they lose sight of the real downstream,
in my opinion, the downstream implications
of the things that they have,
because if they actually just thought from first principles
and tried to be a truly independent body that said, we are going to take the capital we're given from the countries
that are supporting us and actually do the best and actually publish like what is the best
thing to do.
For example, in the case of coronavirus and be definitive and iterate, we'd be in a much
better place. But a lot of what is allowed the posture around coronavirus
to transition from a health issue to a political issue,
in many ways has been because organizations like the WHO
and the CDC are political bodies and they're academic bodies.
And so the incentives of the players within these organizations
are not to necessarily
project the right public health positioning. They are at some level to think about their own
career trajectory and the political machinations that happen within the organization that are
blind to normal citizens like us that just consume the output. And so when you see something
like an inability to give a definitive ruling on things like
masks or other things, you just kind of scratch your head and wonder, is it that they're
dumb?
And the answer is no, it's not that they're dumb.
They're just motivated by very different things than public health all the time.
Which might be including keeping their jobs.
The fact that we had David Friedberg on this podcast and then sacks, you know, chiming
in after it, surely after just definitively saying first principles, why wouldn't you
wear a mask? What is the possible downside? And Friedberg saying, hey, I'm getting some
testing equipment. We should just be doing mass testing. Friedberg, when you look at this
and how when we started the podcast, I think in March or April, we
were very clear as people not in the, with the exception of yourself, not in the healthcare
space in any way.
Why can't they, what would be a better structure for the who?
Or is there a better structure than just a bunch of, you know, randos like us on a podcast,
very easily seeing through first principles that a 79 cent mask is a no-brainer,
that getting testing, mass testing,
and recording it every day, and doing sampling,
what is the better solution here for governance
or for dealing with these type of, you know,
really large problems?
And ones that kind of have a clock,
that's the other thing about this problem is
this problem came with a countdown clock. You had to make a really fast decision
in order to protect yourself and we made a really drawn out decision now we're paying the price.
I mean, I think under the circumstances you outline, you know, you need leadership, right? So
you need probably a country or some entity to step forward
and lead with respect to being proactive and aggressive with action. Because any multinational
oversight body or political body is going to be kind of molassesed out. It's going to be
stalled out with the processes and the competing interests as you guys have highlighted.
So the libertarian argument would be let the free market drive outcomes and some folks
will succeed and some folks will fail.
If we want all of humanity to succeed, then the likely scenario is what we've seen with
with world wars and such, which is you need leadership.
You need one organization or one entity or one national body to step forward and say,
this is what we're doing.
And we're going to lead.
And the world was absent leadership over the last six months.
Historically, the US has filled that void, but that certainly wasn't the case
this year.
And so, you know, it seems to me like you're not going to find a political
governing system, multinational governing system that's going to be successful
in solving these kind of existential global problems overnight. You really need someone to step forward. And the US is kind of leaving a bridge of a
gap. This might be a good segue because the question next is who's going to fill that gap going
forward? Yeah, so let's make that segue. When you look at the duopoly that currently is,
I would say on par now, I don't think we can say we're the superpower anymore, and that
China is an up and coming superpower.
It's pretty clear, they are an equal superpower.
I don't know if anybody here disagrees with that right now, but if we have an edge, it's
a very minor one at this point.
How do we look at health problems within a authoritarian country where individuals do
not vote?
And there is a God King who has recently said,
I will be the God King for the rest of my life for sure. How do we manage this relationship with China,
Friedberg? Then we can pass it over to you. From a healthcare perspective? Let's start there, for sure,
and then whatever other major issue you would like to then segue into
climate change comes to mind, trade comes to mind, human rights comes to mind.
I would imagine the biggest argument that your geopolitical commentators would make who
are probably more experienced and experts in this than any of us would probably relate to
the degree of influence. The question of who has the most influence globally
may be the way that you define who has the most power globally.
And so in the current circumstance, you
can look at trade balance between China and other nations.
You can look at trade balance between the US and other nations.
And you can look at the balance sheet, the assets, and the debt owed. And you're right. I mean, a lot of people are making the case that we're kind of reaching a point of parity through some metric,
some set of equations here. And at this point, there's going to be a jockeying for leadership globally in terms of influence.
And so that will have ramifications with respect to things that are global in nature, like global pandemics.
And I think this is a really kind of key flash point moment for us,
because we are facing that, we did face that circumstance this year, and obviously we took
the wrong end of the deal. We failed most. I mean, we all concur on that. China is just like an
extremely good example of focusing on strategy while the rest of us focused on that. We did we did worst. China is just like an extremely good example of
focusing on strategy while the rest of us focused on tactics. You know, the last 20 years
have been punctuated by the United States spending literally. Trillions of dollars on endless wars
and unnecessary military infrastructure and all kinds of wasted pork barrel spending and programs that just have resulted in zero
ROI for the United States and its taxpayers and citizens.
And instead, what are China do?
They basically went around the world and they used the equivalent amount of dollars and
they said, every war that the United States fights is a war that we can essentially be
silent on.
Let them do that dirty work and what we will do instead is we will go and basically buy
and own large swaths of Southeast Asia, large swaths of Africa, which is the emerging
labor pools that will drive GDP forward for us.
What they've essentially created is not necessarily a voting block, but a productivity block. And that's what's so interesting and also really important to understand,
which is that China is fighting not an ideological war.
They're fighting an economic war.
And it is one where they are buying member states to join them with their capital.
And so we've kind of like not seen
it, and it's unfortunately happened right under our nose. So now what we need to do is we
need to sort of wake up to this reality and have a very aggressive point of view around
what, you know, matters. And so by the way, this is also why, and I'll hand the mic to
David after this, but this is also why I think like we have completely wasted
so much time focusing on all these other countries
that just don't matter anymore.
And I don't say that emotionally,
I just say it practically, like every single minute
we spend on Russia is just a wasted time.
This is a country that just won't fundamentally matter
in the world over the next 15 to 20 years.
Large swats of Europe, you know, they're ideologically aligned, but they just don't matter.
The United States has to develop a really specific strategic viewpoint on the fact that
it is us versus China, whether we like it or not.
And it starts in things like public policy, but it stretches to everything,
including capitalism, technology, intellectual property, healthcare, and this war will not be
fought on the ground with guns. It'll be fought with computers and it'll be fought with money.
Yeah, and I think we need to realize that. Loans and joint ventures, sacks, what are your thoughts here on this coming cold war?
We beat the Russians in the last cold war.
And to Chimaltz Point,
the only thing they have really going for them
is they're incredibly sinister, KGB style,
information warfare,
and the decreasing value of their oil and irrelevance, which is why
they have to do things like mess with us on social media. I mean, literally, I feel like it's like the
last couple of dying techniques they've got in their playbook from the 80s as the KGB. And they
got a KGB agent running the country. When we look at China, how do you frame our relationship
with them and what would be the best practice for the next 10 years midterm?
Well, I think what you've seen just really in the last couple of weeks is a critical
mass of scholarship and punditry declaring that we are in a new Cold War with China.
And I think, you know, of all the momentous news events that have happened this year,
from COVID to the riots and protests, I think that the most newsworthy and historically
important event will be the beginning of this and the recognition that we are now
in Cold War 2.
So TikTok.
So TikTok is part of it.
I mean, COVID.
It's paradoxical about a dance app is literally the tip of the screen.
No, I mean, I think TikTok is sort of at the fringes.
I think the Cold War 2, today, its point, started when the United States basically embargoed
Huawei from getting access to 5G technology.
And I know that sounds like a very thin thread that most people don't understand and we
can unpack it in a second.
But in my opinion, that at the beginning of this year was when I started to pay attention
and try to understand this issue more because it seemed like, wow, that's a shot across
the bow and declaring China as the clear, sort of the clear and present danger for American sovereignty
and the NBA and tiktok being cultural ramifications of that in which are different
tiktok is irrelevant who cares well it's is is it relevant tax
well what tiktok and while i have in common is that the
the sort of uh... proxy battles of Cold War II will be fought between these sort
of client corporations. Whereas, you know, Cold War I, you have sort of these proxy, these
sort of client states fighting these proxy wars. Cold War II, you have more of these
like client corporations fighting these proxy wars. So, you know, it's, that's the sense in which I think they're related.
The, what TikTok shows is a company that's desperately trying to maneuver
so they don't become one of the first economic casualties of Cold War II.
They appointed America as CEO.
They've pulled out of Hong Kong,
so they're not subject to those regulations.
And they're desperately maneuvering
so they don't get banned in the United States.
They want to preserve their market access.
But I think there's a very good chance
that they will get shut down in the United States.
They've been shut down in India,
and today is July the 10th,
and right before we went on,
the breaking news was that Amazon basically asked
all their employees to delete TikTok
because of a security threat.
So it's happening.
I think that TikTok, unless they basically have bite dance
sell under 20 or 30% of the company
and get it into the hands of Americans, it will get banned.
And I think that there will be a massive destruction
and enterprise value.
But can I tell you why TikTok doesn't matter?
Or doesn't matter as much.
I think David, you're right, that it's sort of like collateral
damage.
It almost is like, it'll exist, but whatever.
The Huawei thing, in my opinion, is so important
because it shines a light on two things.
The first is that what happened essentially
is the United States told TSMC, you cannot basically
give Huawei access to the 5G chipsets and the 5G technology
that they would use to essentially kind of like implement
their spyware and then sell it into Western nations effectively.
And so then what it does is it puts China in the posture of having to figure out how
do they get access to this stuff.
And the most obvious answer is to invade Taiwan and take over TSMC.
And why would they do that?
Well obviously that has huge geopolitical ramifications, but they could only do that again
going back to the first comment is because they've already bought so many nation states into
their productivity block that it's still on a balance a worthwhile trade.
And it allows them to solve their version of Taiwanese sovereignty completely and definitively
and basically say, look, we've now solved Hong Kong.
You know, Macau has already solved.
And now we're going to solve Taiwan and put the whole thing to bed.
And now we have access to this critical technology that we need.
So that's why I think sort of like what happens with Huawei,
sort of what happens with TSMC, what happens on 5G is so important.
Because if you're going to forest China,
to basically have to buy Western technology in order to get access to a critical piece
of internet infrastructure,
they're gonna be put to a very, very difficult test
about what they have to do,
and then they will have to be much more transparent
on the global stage about what their ambitions really are,
and how far they're willing to go.
And I think that's a lot more important
than a bunch of kids dancing to short videos.
Well, and just to add to that point,
I think Jamoth is right that these sort of chips,
the 5G chips and these other chips,
are the new oil in terms of their geopolitical significance.
Obviously, all of our technology or iPhones are advanced
of a weaponry.
It's all based on these chips,
and 70% of them are fabricated in Taiwan.
And I think, you know, one of the huge blind spots
of American trade policy over the last 30 years
is kind of not to notice that this key technology, that's
really the substrate for all of our technology for our economy, has now been moved and manufactured
in Taiwan, whose sovereignty China does not recognize and is constantly threatening with the risk of being annexed.
So, we have a tremendous vulnerability there.
And at the same, we finally, after about 40 or 50 years
of declaring that we'd be energy independent,
we've achieved that, but now we have this new dependency
on these chips that...
And far more far and manufacturing.
Right.
I mean, and we, and we, and we, and it seems like now manufacturing,
we're starting to realize, hey, Elon was right.
We need to be able to build our own factories.
And guess what?
American spirit, American ingenuity, American focus, American capitalism.
We can do it.
We have the wherewithal to do it.
There's no reason we cannot make these ships here. Sorry, I don't buy it that we're we're gonna be this dependent forever. We just need to have the will and
the
Leadership to say we're gonna do this whether it costs us an extra 50 cents per chip and well the fact the fabrication of these chips is
Incredibly complicated. I mean they're
They're they're basically...
So let's buy the companies.
They're microscopic.
And it takes years.
And like several years to set up the,
the facility to do this kind of...
Why don't we buy those companies now?
Why don't we just take to Chamot's point,
which was very clear, which is,
hey, this is an economic, this is a ledger,
this is a check writing exercise to win this war.
Why don't we take out our checkbook and buy 50% of these companies now
and put them on the NASDAQ if they're not already there?
It requires real leadership. At the end of the day,
it needs to be led by the United States government.
The reality is that lithography has gotten so advanced.
I mean, like, look, I have, you know,
companies that are, you know,
taping out chips at like seven nanometer.
And I don't, I don't have supplier diversity.
I don't know, I can't basically choose, you know,
nine folks to bid it out against of which, you know,
five are domestically in the United States.
There are two, right?
And so, you know, you kind of just deal with the complexity or the lack of diversity that we have.
And Jason, your point is exactly right, which is the first and most important decision
here is one that's philosophical, which is again saying that era of efficiency at the
sake of all else is over.
And we are now moving to an era of resilience, which inherently is more inefficient.
But in that inefficiency, we will rebuild American prosperity because it rebuilds American
industry and it rebuilds American jobs. There's another example that I want to build on David's point,
which is, let's all believe in a test that we all care about climate change for a second and we all want the world to be electrified
okay well electricity and electrification requires two very very basic inputs okay one is a
battery and the second is an electric motor right makes sense so far yeah well inside an electric motor, right? Makes sense so far. Yeah. Well, inside an electric motor, there is one critical thing that you need to make it work,
which is a permanent magnet.
The permanent magnet spins around, and that's how an electric motor works.
Okay.
Why is that important?
As it turns out, that permanent magnets need special characteristics that are only provided by a handful of very,
very specific rare earth materials that we need to mine out of the ground and refine.
Those materials actually exist in many places, including the United States.
Yeah, we stopped mining for them. But right now, China controls 80% of the supply of rare earths.
They can choose how they price it.
They can differentiately price to their own companies, which means that the battery and
engine manufacturers inside of China can now lead on electrification, which means China
can actually lead on climate change before the United States can.
Unless we have leadership that says, at a governmental level on down, we are going to make this a priority,
we're going to fund it, we're going to make sure that there are onshore mines, we're going to make
sure that those mines are clean, we're going to build a supply chain domestically, and we're going
to subsidize. This is what governments do best. It's not act, it's just incentivize on things like
climate. So I don't know, Friedberg has spent a lot of time on climate change, so he has a
PS, probably a lot of ideas on this, but whenever you look at any of these things, health,
climate, food, it all comes down to the United States versus China, strategy versus tactics.
Friedberg. I'm not sure, I'm not sure. I think that the Chinese action is as
deterministic as we think it is or as we kind of frame it where it's China's
got this grand plan.
They're going to beat the US and they're going to control things and make decisions that
hurt us.
I think a lot of this is China, if you think about it, less about black and white, there's
a continuum.
And the continuum is one of influence and one of creating an environment whereby these
things can happen.
So China, for example, made capital readily available for the agriculture industry to be
able to buy assets.
And so the companies inside of China, which aren't controlled, the Chinese government isn't
telling them what to do.
The Chinese government has set a policy that enables them to increase
their prosperity and as a result increase the prosperity of the Chinese people.
You know, when I was at Monsanto, we bid for the largest ag chemicals company in the world
based out of Switzerland. It's called Sengenta. And we bid like $44 billion to buy this company.
And the largest chemical company in China called ChemChina bid $47 billion and acquired the business
and they now own the largest ad chemical company in the world.
China also bought Smithfields and they put a bunch of people
in Canada.
Hey, Freibern, how much of that money did you think came
from the CCP?
And what involved did you think the CCP had
in putting their thumb on the scale
of making sure that transaction went that direction?
Look, I mean, ultimately, wherever the capital comes from, it's no less equivalent than what you
would see in the United States where treasuries fund the central bank, which funds banks, which fund
lending to corporations, which ultimately make- But do you think the leadership said, hey, we're
winning this at all costs? So here's what happened in 2007
There was a CCP internal doctrine that was published and it's now reasonably well known and there was a speech that was given
That started this aggressive action in agriculture and as a result Chinese citizens started moving to Canada and buying farmland in Canada
They started moving to Australia buying farmland in China. They started building these facilities in Argentina and Brazil and Africa
buying foreign land in China, they started building these facilities in Argentina and Brazil and Africa.
And the Chinese government set out a strategic objective and provided the capital and enabled
industry and people to go after pursuing these interests.
But the CCP didn't say here's the roadmap.
It's not like here's the specific plan for what we need to do.
They had a general high level kind of point of view that I think drove all that action
and all of that behavior.
And so, I would say it's not as perhaps coercive as we might think it is in terms of the
CCP wanting to target and attack you.
That's they're trying to increase their influence around the world.
They're trying to increase their own security and increase their own prosperity.
And at some point, there's only so many resources globally.
There's only so much land, so much magnets that, you know, they, and
they're winning in the markets. And, you know, we're kind of crossing that threshold now
where they're actually like a competitor.
You know, the only difference between this is, and I couldn't.
My point is I just don't want to frame it as like, I just think it's a, it's a, it's
a misstatement to frame it as China has this grand plan to come after the US and they're
evil and that's what they're doing. mean, you know, they're completely wrong
David respectfully in that I believe this is an ideological war and if you
You can't diminish what's happening in Hollywood, TikTok
and the NBA and other sports
Where China is explicitly saying if you put a villain in our in a movie if you put a villain in a movie,
if you talk about Tibet in a movie,
we are going to not play that movie.
And we're gonna start funding your movies.
And so they are absolutely using the vector of culture
and Chimata, I think you're also wrong here,
where you're saying, oh, TikTok's not important.
TikTok is something that a generation of kids
absolutely are in love with.
And those kids are like, hey, boomers, stay out of our platform.
And so, and the ideological issue here, free bird, which I think that you're underplaying
is they want to win and they want to spread their ideology, which is the ideology of authoritarianism.
They are not going to win Africa and then suddenly
say, you know what, would be great for Africa if we made the entire continent democracies.
Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole
world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole world? Tell me, what is the purpose of this whole whole this grandiose planning and they do the political
theater of having the thousands of people in the Chinese assembly hall once a year and
G. Jean Pink talks, that they haven't developed a multifaceted, multi-layered plan that they're
executing.
In part, I think this is why G. Jean Pink essentially wants to be this ruler for life inside of
China because I think they have
a 20 or 30 year plan and I do think it is to disrupt the United States.
And I don't think that they believe though, which is the smart thing that there's one silver bullet,
I just think that they're going to take a thousand shots on goal, whether it's, you know,
monopolizing the rare earths or, you know, figuring out how to basically put spying software
in the hands of millions of Americans.
That's where I think TikTok is actually really important.
It's essentially a vehicle to spy and backdoor into Americans.
Or whether it's introducing a digital yuan so that we can try to disrupt the use of the
US dollar as a reserve currency of the world, they probably have a list of 1,000 tactics
and they're
going to go and execute them.
And I don't begrudge them that.
I just think it's well-organized machine.
I just think we now need to counterpunch.
SACs?
Yeah, I mean, so China is on a mission of national greatness.
I think the immediate goal is to assert its segemony over Asia and to kick the U.S. out of that
region, but I think ultimately now they see in their sights potentially being the number one country
in the entire world because of the chaos that COVID has brought over here.
And in fairness, David, the incompetence of Trump thus far i mean like you know it's it's not fair to
think that
the chinese polyburel versus trump in his cabinet or an equal match forget
their political persuasion i mean they clearly seem in bolden and you know
just in the last few weeks and and months we've seen the ending of the two
systems in
hong kong which was a fifty-year commitment
they made in uh... i think nineteen eight four uh... so they abrogated on that
what a sex commitment that yeah you happen to do that
three or four months before
trump is looking like he's not going to be an office so talking about to
my point shots on goal
this may be their only shot to do this
well there's a lot of the work of one yet and just that they go after tywan in
the next hundred i think they have a window?
Well, I think we have to be extremely clear that Taiwan is a red line for us and that
we're committed to the security of Taiwan.
Because if we show any hesitation or weakness there, they will seize on that.
Would Trump do that?
Would Trump put his foot down because he did nothing when it came to supporting...
Well, I think we need to extract away from any given president of the United States because they
change every four or eight years.
And I think we need to have a bigger discussion, which is like I said, over the next 40 to
50 years, are we comfortable with duopoly power structure in the world, which is the United
States and China, because that's effectively what we are today?
Or are we the shining city on a hill once again?
And if so, what are
we willing to do to make sure that that's the case? And I think that's independent of
your political persuasion and your party.
Right.
Right. Well, the good news here is that both Trump and Biden are basically racing to sort
of position themselves as the more hawkish candidate on China, which is to say that this
recognition of Cold War II is now,
I think, bipartisan, which if you want to sustain a policy in this country over say 40 years,
like we did in containing the Soviet Union, you have to have bipartisan support for that.
And so it does seem like, finally, as a country, I think we are kind of getting our act together
on China.
I mean, obviously, there will be disagreements within that larger context, but it seems like now people are
waking up to the threat that China represents to America being the number one country in
the world.
And I think...
Yeah, by the way, I agree with, I agree with SAC Zach. I mean, I think that's exactly what's happening and what will happen here
And and it'll certainly it'll be a big health decline
I'll just highlight and I'll ask the question of Chimoff
You know per his point earlier. Let me ask you guys. How many factories do you think exist in China?
Take a guess 11 million two point eight million now. How many do you think exist in China? Take a guess. 11 million.
2.8 million.
Now how many do you think exist in the United States?
150,000.
Close, that's 250,000.
And China has about 83 million factory workers and we have about 12.
So, you know, Chimak, if we do end up in Cold War II, where, you know, we escalate
the tension and escalate the divide.
How do we end up,
having avoiding $2,000 or $3,000 iPhones,
how do we get all the televisions we want for 500 bucks?
How do we do that?
Given that to catch up with this production capacity
we'll end up costing many tens of trillions of dollars
of invested capital, the China's invested over decades.
Well, this is such a brilliant,
this is a fabulous question.
And I think I don't have the answer,
but here's the way that I think about the solution.
You know, the thing that we had before was in my way,
in many ways like this kind of like perverted sense
of globalism, and I think that we,
you know, we thought that globalism equals utopia.
And that's not true.
It's actually more like a chessboard, which means you have, you know, two different sets
of colored pieces competing against each other.
And each piece on the board in many ways is a country.
So, you know, we can look at that as a geographic skew and say, like, we need to really consolidate,
you know, North, Central, and South America,
as a block, as a productivity block.
And so, David, that's where we need to have
more trade within those areas
so that we can actually build up production capacity
in places that can absorb and produce low-cost labor
or low-cost items to compete with the China block.
That may be a solution.
I mean, that is an incredible point,
Chimath, which is why the rhetoric with Mexico,
which would love to have a deep relationship with us,
is so dumb.
So dumb.
We're talking about factories.
They would love for us to put more factories on there.
And whatever country's,
forget, let's work our way down the peninsula.
Yeah, go down the peninsula.
Go to Honduras, go to El Salvador,
go to Guatemala, where the people are going.
You're a worldwide paradise.
They walk.
Yeah, our screaming for work, which is why they're trying to enter the United States.
The best way to not build a wall, take all that money and fuel it into production and
manufacturing and warehouse capacity in those places in which they're leaving in the first
place.
And if we thought it like China, we would go ahead, do that freeberg, sorry.
No, you can't successfully sustain a cold war with China
without global partnership.
And I think, you know, this notion of nationalism
and isolationism in the United States will not work in a world
where we are also trying to compete globally with China
and are raising the stakes in a global cold war. also trying to compete globally with China and are raising
the stakes in a global cold war. You can't have it both ways. So, you know, either the current
administration policy needs to change. I'd love to hear a saxophone of you on this, or
we need to have a change in administration and actually re-engage on a global basis with
partner states? Well, okay, so I think the point about,
well, I think what some people on the right would say is that
being able to buy cheap goods at Target is not worth the
hollowing out of the American industrial base that happened over the past 30 years,
and that was a catastrophic mistake.
And, you know, this is what got Trump reelected, was
shattering that blue wall in those rust belt states.
So I think we can kind of look back on that and wonder
whether that trade off was really worth it.
But moving forward, I think the balance
is going to be to realize that trade does create wealth.
All wealth, in fact, comes comes from trade whether at the level of
individuals or nations. If it weren't for trade, all of us would be subsistence farmers
or something like that. But we also have to realize that trade creates interdependence
because I stop making certain things in order to buy them from you. And so in order to engage
in trade, we have to trust each other. I have to trust that you one day won't decide that your ability to manufacture antibiotics
is strategic and you might deprive me of them in order to facilitate some geopolitical
interest.
And so I think what we're waking up to with production of pharmaceuticals or N95 masks, PPE, and now chips is that we've had this
real blind spot with respect to trade. We've basically off-shored so many of the elements
are necessary for our national survival. And I think those elements have to be brought
back so that America is safe and independent. But with respect to, you know, so many other things,
I think it's fine for us to get them through trade, whether, you know, it could be a barrel or toys
or so many other goods that, you know, we do want cheap goods. I want to do a, I want to do a mental
exercise. We all for our living try to come up with 100x, 1000x solutions, whether we're creating
the companies or betting on the companies. What everybody to just think for a second of the United States has a startup company
and a 10X-100X idea for how we can not only maintain our position, but maybe become the
shining hill where we actually lead the world towards democracy, towards human rights, I'm gonna start with one
that I just happen to hit me while you all were talking,
which is why I love doing this podcast
because I get such inspiration listening to you guys,
you know, pass the ball around.
We haven't added a state to the United States
in a pretty damn long time.
What if we said to Puerto Rico,
what if we said to the Dominican Republic,
what if we said to Puerto Rico, what if we said to the Dominican Republic, what if we
said to Honduras, I mean, and I don't want to make this into a exercise in colonialism.
But if we said, you know what, Puerto Rico, how do you feel about being the 51st state?
Because we're already 80% of the way there.
And what if we said the United States is going to, and this is just a crazy 100x idea, we're
going to start taking countries that maybe love crazy 100x idea. We're gonna start taking countries
that maybe love democracy,
that would love to be part of the United States,
and having a bridge towards becoming part of this block,
whether it's how Puerto Rico is.
Jason, the United States can barely function as it is.
I understand.
That's why I'm giving you the freedom to say,
this is a 100x exercise as a startup,
because if we put out crazy ideas like this maybe we can pull people towards thinking like the chess board of how to play
3d chess or how to win the chess board not just move the pawns back and forth.
Well, I think the first thing America has to do is decide whether it's still things that
national greatness is important and whether it wants to compete to
To be the leading power in the world because right now it seems like
We're hopelessly divided and our guns are literally drawn on each other
and
You know you've got this
All-out assault going on on capitalism you have sort of cancel culture and
America just seems hopelessly divided.
And I don't know if Americans still think it's important to be the number one power in the world.
All right, so what's your thought experiment on how to make Americans realize this is important?
Or if anybody else wants to jump in here with a 10x idea for America, good.
I have an overlaying theory that I, this is sort of kind of me spitballing so bear
with me, but let's do it.
You know, there's a, there's this concept called the overton window, right, which is sort
of like the, the minimally viable acceptable surface area of dialogue, at which case it
starts to sort of, you know, get extreme.
I, my, I would theorize, I would tell you that the overton window is the smallest it's
ever been.
And there's basically nothing that you can talk about that is relatively benign without
it being politicized.
And there's no gradation anymore.
It's a very binary thing.
You're either in the Overton window, which, for example, would be like, you know, vegetables
matter or looking both ways across the street matters.
And outside the Overton window, honesty is Black Lives Matter as an example.
And it gets politicized on both sides.
Masks, if a balaclava when you're skiing because your face is cold is inside the Overton
window, that same balaclava when you go to the drugstore so that you can actually either
prevent disease one way or the other is outside the overton window.
You know, making sure that police, you know,
are there to protect you in a time of need
is now outside the overton window
because it's framed in a lens of police brutality.
So the overton window has shrunk.
So we have very little surface area
where we can actually all agree without getting into
a fight.
Ideological.
Or trying to cancel each other.
I totally agree with that.
I mean, we have this sort of epidemic of cancel culture going on.
And I guess Jason, you recently experienced this.
Oh my lord.
I mean, for the love of God, what happened Jason?
Tell us what happened.
Listen, I look at Twitter as a place to have vibrant discussions.
And, you know, 10 years ago, it was kind of where the over chin window was most open.
You could have a discussion about anything.
And we had a discussion about, you know, my feeling that as a former journalist, and we're
doing random acts of journalism here, that I just thought the New York Times was just way
too biased and that they picked aside in order for their business
to survive.
And I actually believe that, I believe they picked aside of Trump,
I'm sorry, the side of anti-Trump in order to get subscriptions
because their advertising business has been demolished
by the duopoly of Facebook and Google.
This led to the circling of the wagons of the journalists, which I was
part of, but listen, it's pretty easy to hate me. I understand that. I'm allowed mouth.
And so now I'm getting piled on by the journal and and you were an early investor and Hoover.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Don't forget that.
I don't know.
Don't forget that.
The third or fourth, I don't know. They tell me the third or fourth. Anyway. So there's a journalist at said publication,
I'm not gonna say her name
because I don't want any harassment of anybody.
Nobody does.
Who said people are stupid for going back to work.
And they're idiots.
And I said, you know, this is a very convenient thing
for a journalist who works behind a keyboard
who makes $100, dollars a year to say because those people are literally not going to be
able to feed their kids if they don't go back to work. And this led to her saying I
was harassing and stalking her. Then I was in Clubhouse, the new social network
where you talk, and the same journalist was in the audience. And I said to the
people who were talking, just be aware there same journalist was in the audience. And I said to the people who were talking,
just be aware, there is a journalist in the audience
because even though this is a private beta,
this could wind up being in the New York Times,
which it did, not that discussion,
but another one that was covertly taped.
And I don't know if it was covertly taped by a journalist
or not, but it did wind up in the press.
Anyway, this whole thing turns into a giant fight.
Clubhouse sounds like some dark SNM sex club in Berlin.
No, no, that's a dent.
Here's what I think is most entertaining.
That's Clubhouse, HOA US, Clubhouse.
Yeah, let me, what I think is most entertaining about this
is that the New York Times journalist was in this vicious
battle with biology who's a Silicon Valley founder and personality and they were arguing and then
Jason somehow comes running over and starts involving himself in this feud and it's like
and it's like biology gets fouled but Jason takes the flop you know all of a sudden, and all of a sudden Jason's talking about,
you know, how he's getting docs.
Biology is the guy who is like called out
in the New York Times,
but somehow Jason,
the...
The police...
Yeah.
But anyway, so here's what's happened.
I'm only telling the story.
I'm not trying to get victim points.
Give a fuck about that.
It's July 4th.
I put the kids down for the nap. Stakes are going on the
grill. It's a fucking great day. And then I'm on the Peloton trying to be just a little
less fat so I can be less fat than sacks so that the photo that we're sacks is using.
I just come out 5% less fat than sacks. And I look and I had posted a picture of the tree line outside my house to the beautiful blue sky on July 4th
and I said listen everybody take a break from Twitter go spend time with your family, which is what I was about to do. A
37 year old private equity douche from
Boston
Does a reverse image search on the tree line?
Finds a bigger picture of the trees. Finds a picture of my pool based on that bigger picture in Google reverse image search on the tree line finds a bigger picture of the trees finds a picture of my pool based on that bigger picture in Google
reverse image search and only so the tools and then docks is me which basically means releasing your address. He releases my address in my thread where
Okay, because, so I DM him and he's using his real name and he's got a LinkedIn profile.
And I said, do you realize how dangerous this is?
He goes, well, your stalking said journalists.
I said, I am not stalking the journalist.
Well, she said you're stalking her.
So if you apologize to her and you take down the mean stuff
you said about her, I'll take down your home address
and I said, hey, dipshit.
This is the legal number one.
And number two, you're gonna lose your Twitter account. And then the legal number one and number two, you're going to lose your Twitter account.
And then I said number three, where connected your boss, because you're using your public
name, your boss is connected to 14 people of which like half are very close friends of
mine. And I'm calling your boss and I have all the screenshots of you doxing me. What do
you think is going to happen on Monday? And I just have a phone number in this. Hold on.
Hold on. Wait. Good. No, I'm going to finish this right. Okay. Sorry. Good. Let me just
finish this story. I tell the guy, here's my phone number. He calls me. I said, Hey, I know
that you're a kid. I know that you did something rash, but this is actually there, you know,
a kind of a dangerous thing because, you know, there's a mental illness in whatever. 0.1% of the population. There's millions of people in now involved in this discussion
It could be a security concern for me. I'm not gonna post your address. Please don't post mine. Delete the tweet
He was I refused to delete the tweet to you whatever and I said, okay, well, I'm gonna call your boss on Monday
We know these people in common. She's going to fire you and you're gonna lose your job.
Now I know you're only 23 or 24 and this doesn't matter to you.
And he goes, I said, how old are you?
He said 37.
I said, you're 37 years old.
So you married?
You say, yeah, I married.
I got a six year old.
I said, now you want me to make you lose your job
because you're so mad at me over nothing.
I said, I don't want to call your boss on Monday
and tell them what you did,
because it will certainly result in you being fired.
And he goes, oh, I said,
you might wanna go talk to your spouse
about what you did and maybe get her perspective.
He writes me an apology letter,
we deleted it's all water under the bridge.
But I've been trying to tell people,
you have to be very careful when this gets too personal,
because there are your dog whistling to crazy people who then might do something crazy. Anyway, end of story.
I backed off the whole discussion because I just don't want to finish my second book and I want
to do podcasts with guys like you and have a great time with my life and not be involved with a
bunch of idiots. End of story. So I want to go back to this over to window concept for a second.
So again, just my idea.
So you take the word matters.
The word matters is in the over to window.
Nobody can argue that the word matters is offensive.
If you prepend that word with vegetables,
it stays in the over to window.
If you put looking both ways before you cross a street,
Matt is still there.
We're in the over-to window.
If you say black lives as a term,
just without the word matters,
that's probably in the over-to window.
Sure, you put black lives matters,
it's out the over-to window.
And both sides politicize.
I think the left politicizes with this cancel culture
and basically like an extreme form of political correctness. And then the right
politicizes by, you know, in their way, a vein of hypersensitivity and then a doubling
down on this notion of an attacking of individual freedoms and free speech. And in all of that,
both of these two groups miss the fact that they're both sort of the same and they're
wronged in the same way, but they're both sort of the same and they're wronged in the same way
But they're both not listening in the same way, right?
So if I had to put something in the over-tune window that would address the US China cold-wirt thing. Here's what I would say
We all need energy. We all need food and we all need technology, right?
We need to sort of warm our houses. We need to feed our bellies and we need to be able to be productive in some way so that we can make money.
And I think that everybody in the United States can agree that on these three dimensions,
there are some really simple things that we could do that basically double down on U.S. sovereignty,
and allow us to basically be more on the offensive.
So I'll give you a couple of ideas.
On the energy side is we need to continue to support energy independence.
And that will require subsidies.
And the reason why that's important in my opinion is that then what happens is it hastens and accelerates Russia and the
Middle East not becoming relevant anymore because they are forced to monetize their oil
sooner. The Middle East probably disintegrates into 30 countries. The Middle East was just
a kind of a random exercise of, you know, basically Americans in Europeans after the war,
divvying up a bunch of things.
It has no sensitivity to culture or language or anything.
So that probably, you know, goes to in a very different direction.
And Russia itself, and Russia becomes less important because they just have to
monetize, otherwise they will lose their only source of revenue.
So that's one thing on energy that I think we could do that I think is
relatively politically acceptable and inside the overton window. Second is on food, which is that we have
to double down on creating a completely independent food supply inside the United States.
And there are ways again where if we don't need to be building tanks and having $90 trillion programs for aircraft carriers anymore.
We could pour that money into US farms and give people
like Friedberg a lot more money to go and actually make sure
the United States has food security.
That in any situation and scenario, we can feed
the 330 odd million people inside of our borders.
And then the third thing is on technology,
which is there are a critical bunch of inputs,
whether it's 5G chips, rare earth materials,
or minerals, things like cobalt and lithium,
which we need for batteries for climate change,
that we can go and basically co-opt,
because those things are concentrated in countries like Chile,
in places like Africa, So, that's my Jason back to your thing. These aren't sexy ideas, but they would work. And I think they would work by both Republicans and Democrats
and it's non-controversial.
I'll even punch up the food part.
There's no reason why, you know, the same way we made water.
I think that's why we made water.
And I think that's why we made water.
And I think that's why we made water.
And I think that's why we made water.
And I think that's why we made water.
And I think that's why we made water.. I'll even punch up the food part.
There's no reason why the same way we made water
and public schools, kind of a given in the United States.
Nobody really has to worry about getting water.
Nobody has to worry about getting a basic education
learning to read, let's say it's not perfect, obviously.
Why not make healthy produce in some amount of healthy food
so affordable in the United States?
That it's essentially free, right?
And then you think about food security,
like how are we still discussing food security
with the amount of money and prosperity we have in this country?
Make it free, we've almost made energy free.
We have energy independence.
I'll say
I'm in a patent project to make energy and food as free or diminimous as water would be just an amazing thing for us to rally around because then people can work on the next thing in
their life. Their careers, their family, their pursuits. Freeberg, what do you think of the
over-tune window and would you add something to it that we can all agree on that we could work
on together and maybe unify the country as opposed to pulling guns
on each other in the parking lots because of the color of our skin?
I'm reminded of a great moment in history when Will Smith and his friends blew up the
UFO that came to attack Earth.
Nothing brings us together like a common enemy. So it could be that the unification is going to be
in part driven by this Cold War II and creating a common enemy in China. It's going to work for both
the right and the left and create a lot of opportunity of Chimauk highlights and manufacturing
and food production. There's a lot of tools available to us. I think we could all sit here and
speculate and I could pitch and plug all the companies I'm involved in.
I think we're gonna play a role.
But I do think it's that moment where we are gonna coalesce
around a common enemy.
And...
Well, I'd be good if you actually shared one or two
of those projects you're working on if you can.
I actually would think...
Well, I think you hear what you're working on.
I've shared this before, but I do think
Biomanufacturing, which is the technology whereby we I mean, I think you hear what you're working on. I've shared this before, but I do think
bio-manufacturing, which is the technology whereby we
engineer the DNA of microbes, and those microbes
then make molecules for us in a big fermentation tank
in the same way that we make beer or wine.
Bio-manufacturing can be used to make flavors and fragrances,
and now we're making materials like silks and plastics,
plastic equivalents, and more interestingly,
proteins for human consumption to replace animal proteins.
And the cost of production and the cost of energy
associated with making these materials,
these molecules, these proteins through biomangufacturing
is literally several orders of magnitude less
than the traditional technique, which is just insane.
If you think about it in a first principle basis of growing fucking corn, feeding it to a cow,
letting the cow grow up, feeding it hundreds of gallons of water, killing it, chopping it up,
transporting it to a restaurant. I mean, the amount of energy that goes into making a pound of ground beef is insane.
And the greenhouse gas emissions and so on. So I do believe that there is a big wave
of biomanufacturing as an industry
that is coming on the US-thusentiary.
And it will hopefully by the end of the century
be the primary way that we're kind of producing
a lot of the molecules that we consume
and that we use for clothing and materials.
So then that does what to factories,
because you did explain earlier the number of factories.
If we can bio produce, not only our steaks,
not only our corn.
So that also mean we could bio manufacture,
steel, plastics, cars.
Not so much steel,
but alternatives to leather,
alternatives to cloth,
alternatives to,
so close,
to clothes, food.
So imagine instead of a traditional factory,
think about a factory historically being purpose-built.
So you build all these components to make one thing.
So you spend all this money making a giant machine that you put stuff in on one end
and the same thing comes out over and over the other end.
And that's classic industrial revolution 1.0 and 20th century industrial revolution output.
In this century, we are going to build these giant printers.
They're not going to be single-form machines that make one thing over and over.
They're going to be systems that are giant fermentation tanks.
And in those fermentation tanks, it's like you program them with software.
And the software in this case is genetic software.
You edit the genome of these organisms.
They take stuff on the input and they make on the output a bunch of different stuff.
A replicator like in Star Trek.
And if there was seasonality and people needed something
over the summer for July 4th versus what they need in Christmas or in the winter and
ski season, the same factory makes that thing.
We're 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 years from this having an impact on the economy.
Yes, and we're seeing it now.
I mean, look, the number of artificial animal protein companies and the funding that they're getting
is, I think, highlighting investor interest and appetite
and backing the capex needed to get this
to become a reality right now.
Perfect day, just raised $300 million this week.
Impossible foods raised $400 million
from the Cotari Investment Authority.
Obviously, beyond meat is where they're at.
I mean, these companies are using these techniques
of genetic engineering to make microbes
that make the proteins and the flavorings
that are in 50.
They're placed in stuff.
We put 500 million into the PPP program.
If we put 500 billion, I'm sorry, 500 billion,
put 500 billion into this, how much would it accelerate it?
Pretty substantially.
And I think it goes from food to pharma to materials. And that's probably, you know, where you would see the impact.
But again, one system can make different materials, can make different.
So we could be independent of other countries for food to Chimaltz point and also
pharma, which we are way to depend and correct on China.
Yeah, we're definitely in that exporter. By the way, our largest export partner is China.
So most of our soybeans in the United States that we produce,
and soybeans are grown on 160 million acres in the US,
and it rotates half and half each year with corn,
but about 2 thirds of our soybeans
historically get exported to China.
So we are already food secure from a net resource perspective.
It's just the rest of the infrastructure
in terms of turning that stuff into meat
and other stuff is where we're,
we probably have to build up a little bit of infrastructure.
So, I'll swing the ball over to you
when you hear the Overton window ideas,
when you hear about this biochemistry,
slurry tank revolution that Freiburg's working on,
how does that change or evolve your view of our relationship with China
and the political mess we're in right now in 2020?
Yeah, well I think Cold War 2 does provide a lens to rethink and re-evaluate a lot of these domestic
political fights. And so for example, are the big technology companies, Google, Facebook, and so on?
Are they these even monopolies that need to be broken up?
Or are they the crown jewels of the American economy that need to be protected from Chinese
espionage?
Is the free enterprise system this horribly oppressive racist thing, or is it actually the engine of prosperity that's built this
country? Is freedom of speech an outdated principle, or is it something that should be canceled,
or is it something we want to fight for? And I think that when you start thinking about
these issues, through the lens of Cold War II,
it provides an opportunity to kind of reevaluate them and think about what's really important.
And hopefully it can provide a little bit of a unifying force in America, not because
we want China to be an enemy, but just because we want to maintain a sense of national
greatness. And it's not something we just want to give a sense of national greatness. And I, you know, it's not something we want
to just want to give up on.
I have a question for Friedberg. Are our schools going to be back in the fall? Because I cannot
deal with my kids being at home.
Yeah, I think it's going to be a mixed bag. It seems like, I mean, if you follow this,
this is a political decision, right? It's not a scientific decision. And so there are different politics around nationally
that are affecting this.
And there are some schools that seem like they've got processes
and methods of being comfortable.
Some of them who are just throwing everything out the window
and say, I don't give a shit, the kids got to go back to school.
And some of them who are being very conservative
and saying, you know, we're not ready for that.
We can't take the risk.
So you'll definitely see a mixed bag.
I don't know where you're living, Chimath.
I don't know what's gonna happen per se,
but it's definitely a local policy.
Is it safe, Friedberg?
Is it safe to send our kids back to a 10 person pod
in a school in California?
I mean, that's like asking,
is it safe to cross a train track?
You know, you can look left, you can look right.
But yeah, you're,, you're a busy train intersection
during rush hour, right? It's hard to say what level of safe is safe. We know that kids are
less susceptible to any sort of health risk themselves from the virus, and it looks like there's
a lot of studies showing that they're likely less, the virus is less transmissible through kids, especially
kids under the age of 14.
And so it seems like there's some theories that say that look, these ACE2 receptors,
whereby the virus enters the cells, really start to present when you turn 10 years old
at a greater rate, and it scales up to 14, and above 14 you're kind of an adult from an
ACE2 receptor point of view.
And then there is the severity of the infection
as we all know is really more of a significant issue
for much elderly people.
So when you take those factors into account,
the virus is likely less transmissible amongst children.
Therefore, a bunch of kids get together,
they're not gonna transmit it to each other.
And it's likely gonna be less severe
even if there is an infection for kids.
The risk is just about, are the teachers comfortable and what happens when they go home?
And there have been a number of letters that you guys have probably seen, op-eds and what
not written in papers by teachers saying, I'm nervous to go back to school.
I don't want to teach this fall.
I don't want to take the risk for my health.
I take care of my mom or my dad or have you.
And so there's a lot of competing interest here.
So let's go around the horn of who's
sending their kids back to school.
I'll start.
I posted on calacannas.com yesterday
that we've decided as a family that we're
starting a micro school.
We put out a call for a teacher and just looking
at teacher salaries.
They don't get paid particularly well in our society,
as we all know, they're underpaid. So we think we can come over the top and provide a better financial arrangement for a teacher
and then have one to five students and we're going to just create a micro school. That's our
that's our current plan. Our kids did go to camp this summer in a small 10 person or last pod
and we felt that was safe, everybody was tested
and it was outdoors, but for me being indoors at a school
with 300 pods of 10.
And I think the best teachers are not going to show up
and my kids don't learn over Zoom,
I don't know about your kids, but it's not working.
So we're starting a, we're gonna roll our own school
and hopefully find one or two families who want to chop up the cost with us
Or we'll we'll just pick up the tab and invite one or two families if they don't have the means to do it
But we're gonna we're gonna go solo for 2021
Freeberg, Tremoth, what do you think in a minute? We're because we're only seven eight weeks out from this right we're less than two months
I really think like
Look not everybody Jason is gonna be in a position to hire teachers in fact most everybody won't be agree
Yeah, I think it's I want to send my children back to school. I
I refuse to
Create some alternative reality for them
I
Think it's really important that they are with their friends. I think that we're not
really thinking strongly enough about the social implications for, you know, children, let's just say, like, you know, you take an eight-year-old or a nine-year-old
or a ten-year-old and you deprive them of their friends for a year, I mean, that's an enormous
part of their life where they've been-
It's like a prison sentence, yeah.
They've been socially isolated, you know? I just think it's a really bad outcome.
So I think that obviously from a public health perspective, we want to keep our teachers safe.
I just think that it's so important that we realize that we are going to impact an entire
generation of kids. I think that if you're 18 or 19 and have had, you know, 18 or 19 years of normal
teenage them, you know, and growing up that it's okay if you miss a year or you have to, you know,
do your first year of college remotely. Like, it sucks, but you can deal. But I really worry about
these kids in primary school and middle school. It's really unfair. Yeah, I mean, our plan was to try to get to four or five students, small bubble and then
have outdoor.
The problem is then the northeast.
I just think it, I just think it, I've gone to school.
It's your inside with a heating system with a closed ventilation system that was built
in 1920.
And I think it avoids the real key thing, which is like, I don't think you go to school
to learn as much as you go to school to learn. As much as you go to school to
socialize, I mean, you learn as a byproduct because everybody socializes, not everybody learns.
Right? Agreed. And so it's an enormously important formative experience for a child to be around 15 or
20 of their other kids, then to be in the playground,
to deal with all the adversity that comes with normal life of a kid.
That's the biggest thing that I think we're depriving them of, and I understand that
there's an important reason to hold these kids back, but I just want to appreciate that
behaviorally and psychologically, this is not going to be for free.
and psychologically, this is not going to be for free.
Free, uh, um, SACS. What it was the latest thinking.
I, I, I guess I agree with both Shmoth and Freeberg on this
that the, there are huge benefits to going back
and the risk to kids are low in terms of getting it
and also they're less viral if they do.
But Israel's sort of a strong recent counter example where they recently opened schools and now all of a sudden and they've got a spike so
You know we're gonna send our kids back, but I
Expect it to be a little bit of a shit show. I think that the schools were reopened and
They'll do all this planning. There'll be all these like pods and half days and smaller groups and that kind of thing
And then somebody's gonna. They'll be like one case, either a kid or, you know, one family.
And then all of a sudden they're gonna shut down again.
And I guess, I, you know, they're spending all this time planning, but I wonder if they're
really gonna have contingency plans for what happens when there's a case or-
That's exactly what I think's happening.
Yeah, I think they'll just shut down.
It's just, it's too scary for a child to die
or a teacher to die and people,
the overreaction to it will be to shut everything down, right?
And then we're gonna be back to our kids.
When we sent our kids to camp for the three weeks they went,
man, it was just, they were different kids, right?
And such a month's point,
they're little social animals.
They need to roll around like little baby
tigers and and play and if they don't have that it if it dramatically affects
behavior and we saw it in only three months i mean twelve months it's these kids
are going to go mental
yeah i think that basically where the country is at is that we're
an undeclared sweeten you know we've've basically, the viruses become endemic.
It's everywhere.
We've basically given up on trying to contain or stop it.
Now we're just on this path to herd immunity.
Basically what Sweden did, except we haven't declared that's what our plan is.
It's haphazard.
It seems like we're by default, it's haphazard. But it seems like kind of where by default,
it's headed for herd immunity.
Freeberg, as we wrap up here,
and I got one final question I want to do after this,
and then we'll wrap.
Freeberg, what's your thoughts, kids and schools?
I know you have kids, I'm not sure the ages
if they're like, would be going back to,
I think they're a little bit on the younger side.
So if you did have eight, nine, ten, 12 year olds,
send it them back to school, nine, 10, 12 year olds,
send it in back to school, starting your own,
what are your thoughts?
Yeah, I mean, I would probably be a little ridiculous
and send them a test in every other day at home.
And you know, you can get this vector Dickinson testing
system now for 250 bucks.
It's a handheld device.
And these test strips cost 20 bucks.
Say the name of it again.
The vector Dickinson.
It's a company that's a V. B, B, B, B. Wait, wait, are they available? device and these test strips cost 20 bucks. Say the name of it again. The vector Dickinson.
It's the vector with a V.
B, B, B, B.
Where are we?
Is that all right?
Are they available?
Yeah, you can buy them through medical retailers.
And yeah, the handheld device that they use in hospitals
and stuff today, it's 250 bucks.
And there's a little test kit that you buy.
It'll probably cost 20 to 30 bucks.
It'll be available next month per test,
or 15 to 20 bucks, and it takes five minutes
to get a result.
And so, you literally could do it in the school yard
before they go into the building.
Yeah, so you could test, I would test my kids every day
if I had, you know, my kids are,
or my one kid's in preschool, the other ones too.
But you had to do a little pin prick on their finger, right?
No, no, you could just do a little swap of the nose.
So, you had kind of, yeah, and you can't even... right? No, no, you can just do a little swab in the nose. Oh, okay.
You can kind of, yeah, and you can't even...
Deep nose swab or, you know, halfway.
There's data that shows now that you can actually do
a throat swab and, you know, get a pretty good reading
at it.
So, you know, whatever the protocol is, it's probably
be pretty non-invasive and you can get a result.
Now, that's expensive for most people.
You know, that's...
Not expensive for a school.
Not expensive for a school, that's right.
And so I think that company will do well
with that testing system they've launched
because it actually tests not for the RNA,
but for the protein that you eat.
Is this a public company?
Yeah, and the stock's done well.
And this test does really well
because it tests for the protein, not the RNA.
So it's actually a much easier test scientifically
to do, you're not trying to pick up specific nucleotides,
nucleic acids, you're trying to pick up a protein.
And so it's, yeah, it's pretty effective.
All right.
If the election was held today,
we always like to talk about this a bit.
They want us to know when we talk about it.
We talked about Oprah last time.
That was our sleeper candidate.
I'm changing.
I'm changing.
Tammy Duckworth. Tammy Duckworth is was our sleeper candidate changing. I'm changing. Are you Tammy Duckworth?
Tammy Duckworth is now my sleeper vice presidential. I'm with it. I'm with the Chimoff on that absolutely 100 now
Who's gonna win if the election was held today?
Sacks I'll let you go first since it's the most heartbreaking for you
Bydon strategy is working.
His strategy is basically to say nothing to be tied in his basement.
And, um, and, uh, but it's working because even though he's a cipher, I think people,
uh, he's, he's basically a protest vote against Trump and, uh, Trump, you know, is, uh, you
know, seen his very divisive and inflammatory.
And I think the American people at this point
just wanna push a button and make it stop.
And right now Biden seems like the make it stop button.
Yeah, okay.
And should Biden, I'll add to the question,
there will be a two-blend on this double question,
who wins today and should Biden debate Trump,
or is it better for him to just stop out of the debates and not risk it.
But by and strategy, well, I think by and strategy right now is working. I don't know why he would
change it. I mean, so he should not. There's three debates on the books he agreed to.
Should he do the three debates? Yes or no? If you were advising him.
So I think he probably will not be able to duck that these debates forever.
I think, I mean, it seems unlikely that, you know, if you were advising him, would you
tell him to do it or not?
I would, I would tell him his strategy is working, which is to say nothing and.
So don't go to the debates.
If you can get away with it, I'm not sure he'll be able to get away with it.
So I think eventually people, eventually the American American political turn its attention to the election.
Part of the reason why his strategy is working is because Trump is running such a bad campaign.
In fact, it feels like Trump has even really started to campaign.
There's no logic to it for sure.
It's normally what the incumbent does,
especially when they've got a lot of money,
is they use the summer to define the opponent.
They start running a lot of ads seeking to define their opponent.
And, you know, where are those ads?
Where is that attempt to define Biden?
I mean, I think it's hard because, you know, it's hard to define Biden as a radical who represents
these woke mobs.
Biden doesn't even know how to say the word woke correctly.
I think he's called him woke.
So that's actually the fault.
I was woke late.
It's not by my four year old.
Do we need it or diaper change?
Right.
But the fact that Biden is so clueless and seems like so out of touch actually helps him
because I mean, the way for Trump to win the election, okay, let's put that way, is
to make the alternative to Trump the destruction of Mount Rushmore, right?
I mean, if Trump can somehow convince the American public that the election of Joe
Biden means the ripping down of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln and and Mount Rushmore
and the destruction of capitalism, that is the way for him to win.
But he has to actually listen.
Well, he has to actually be able to, to tag Biden with that.
Why did Peter T. Why did Peter T.
El Drop Trump?
He's, you've got a 30 year relationship with Peter T.
You'd talk to him on the regular.
Why did T. El Drop him?
I don't know that he has.
I think you have to get him on the show to talk.
All right.
There you go.
Good deflection.
Best DC.
Who wins?
And should he do those three debates, Biden?
Yeah, I think you can't get away from them.
I wouldn't make it a big issue because the debates are going to be kind of this random,
crappy kind of experience.
You know, I don't even know whether they'll be in the same place.
I think they should try to make sure that they're not in the same place so that it's done
almost over zoom
like you can you can cripple the effort the the usefulness of these debates in many ways.
There really isn't much that can happen in the debates.
The reality is that people aren't voting for Biden. They are voting against Donald Trump.
Any chance, Trump wins. And they are voting against the sheer incompetence of him and his family.
And, you know, it's going to be very difficult for him to overturn it.
There is one thin path for him to win, which is to absolutely shower America with money
close to the election day.
So if there is a multi, multi trillion dollar stimulus bill
that passes and it literally puts money
into the hands of working Americans,
especially in the swing states, it could work.
Now, the one thing I'll tell you is if you look
at the exit polls in Georgia, it's scary
because there were 230,000, I think, more Democrats out of the exit polls in
the Georgia primary than there were Republican.
Now just hold the phone here for a second because under no calculus on electoral college,
did we ever have to think that there was probably, realistically, any chance that a Democrat
wins Georgia?
And I think what this speaks to is a changing demographic
longitudinally. And this is not a racial thing, meaning this is an age thing
where these young people are very different politically. And so if you think that
there is an even remote chance that Donald Trump loses Georgia,
don't even worry about Minnesota and Pennsylvania
and Florida, because he would have already lost those
in order to lose Georgia.
Also, this pandemic and work from home
is gonna result in people if it is sustained work from home.
We have scarred the American economy, guys.
And we don't need to do the extent of the injury,
because you know, you know, the extent
of the injury, when you get, you know, step out of the chair, that first moment, the
caskets take it off and you put a little pressure on the leg to see how bad it is. And we
don't know how bad it is except we know that it's pretty bad. So, you know, I think that
all roads kind of look like Biden. I think the very narrow path that Donald Trump has is, you know, a multi-multi-trillion-dollar
stimulus bill directly into the hands of Americans.
Freerberg, is he going to win?
Yes or no?
Should he do the debates?
Yes or no?
Yeah, if the vote were to happen today, he would win.
Joe Biden would win.
I think he's actually more likely to win based on news that just hit the wire, which we haven't talked about today,
which is it looks like Facebook is gonna ban
all political ads this year.
What?
Yeah, and so they do that.
Wow.
Obviously that face book in a fight for survival right now.
That ad camp, amazing how a bunch of advertisers
taking a one month pause,
all of a sudden bring Zuckerberg to the table.
Amazing how my well--time short thesis tweet
Playing oh yum yum. So I think that works that obviously works to Biden's favor
All right
That's the case and then my point on the debate if I were Biden what I would do right now is I would go on Twitter
And I would say release your tax returns and I'll debate you and I would repeat that tweet twice a day
turns in all debate you and I would repeat that tweet twice a day.
Love it. Love it.
Freeberg gets the dunk 360 dunk.
That's a done.
That's a done.
This card will done freebergers over freeberg.
Winds the debate.
This show is sponsored by nobody.
However, I'm going to ask my best DC.
If somebody were to make a $25,000 donation to charity, would you allow me to read
an ad for 30 seconds
during the pod at some point?
No, but I'll match it to wherever you wanna go.
No fucking ads ever.
I love you guys.
I miss you.
I love you, bestie.
I love you, I love you, I love you,
I love you, I love you, I love you,
I love you, I love you, I love you, I love you.
I'm a great playing golf.
Let's go off, let's fucking golf, man.
I'm losing my mind.
We'll see you little, let's do a little small little NASA boys a little 10,000, you know,
let's go. Let's go. Let's go. See you next time.
I'm on the all in podcast. Tell your friends to tune in if they want to listen to something intelligent. Bye. Bye.