All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E75: Fast shuts down, board culpability, Elon buys 9% of Twitter, deplatforming's evolution & more
Episode Date: April 9, 20220:00 Jason's big night out, bestie intros, All-In Summit update and more 8:01 Layoffs and shutdowns: Fast, Better.com, GoPuff; Chamath gives a macro- and micro- overview for startups 14:09 Preventing ...layoffs, culpability in Fast's shutdown, VC diligence strategy, VC/founder model 41:51 Elon buys a 9% stake in Twitter and joins the board: what does this mean for Twitter, free speech online, evolution of deplatforming 1:03:24 Food shortage update, ideal US objectives going forward Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://www.theinformation.com/articles/live-fast-die-young-behind-the-fall-of-a-one-click-wonder https://techcrunch.com/2022/04/08/better-com-cto-steps-down-agrees-to-voluntary-separation-in-wake-of-mass-layoffs https://techcrunch.com/2022/04/06/better-com-offering-employees-60-days-severance-losing-tens-of-millions-per-month-per-sources https://www.theinformation.com/articles/gopuff-plans-hundreds-of-layoffs-to-cut-40-million-in-costs https://articles.sequoiacap.com/rip-good-times https://sacks.substack.com/p/the-saas-board-meeting https://medium.com/craft-ventures/blitzfail-how-not-to-go-off-the-rails-24ccaf92c410 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-04-04/musk-takes-9-2-stake-in-twitter-after-questioning-platform https://twitter.com/paraga/status/1511320953598357505 https://twitter.com/jack/status/1511329369473564677 https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1507259709224632344 https://twitter.com/micsolana/status/1511360061670662149 https://twitter.com/micsolana/status/1511674851202945024 https://www.cnn.com/2022/04/06/tech/pinterest-climate-change-misinformation-policy/index.html https://gro-intelligence.com/insights/gro-predicts-us-corn-stocks-will-drop-sharply-in-2022-23 https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/the-state-department-failed-to-prevent-the-war-will-it-now-prevent-the-peace
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, everybody, welcome to another episode of the All in Podcast, your favorite podcast.
And a lot of, a lot of topics on the docket, including, well, we'll get to that in a minute.
Uh, tons of stuff to talk about, not just politics, but a lot of tech news.
You do sound really hungover today, J.K.L. You sound like an old man that's been smoking
cigarettes for three weeks.
You sound correct.
How big was your nightlife night admitted?
I didn't go that big.
A scale of one to Charlie Sheen was like a six.
There was like a Martin Sheen in his 30s.
What does that mean one to Charlie Sheen?
We had a couple of beverages.
I'm sorry, and a scale of one to Charlie Sheen,
I don't think I've ever been past the one in my life.
So what is a six?
A six is like, you know, Paris Hilton, you know,
in a Ray Day or like Lindsay Lohan
in Hollywood in the 90s. It's like, you know,
like a good time, but not crazy.
Didn't they have to go to rehab?
Exactly.
I'm super high-fuckabee.
Let me tell you something. Charlie she cannot be sick.
It's like, oh, it was just like Lindsey Lohan. Wait, Lindsey Lohan the one who went to rehab
like five times, like what are you talking about?
Yeah, that's a six.
That is good.
I don't want to know what 7 is.
Joining us, of course, the queen of Keny is here the thriller from Amila Valley
He puts the eye anxiety got his degree from his Google pedigree the Sultan of science David
Friedberg with us again. All right next up. Of course is our of ARR. He perfected the flywheel
with his boy Peter T L L P's don't be nervous because he's only investing in software as a service the world's biggest asshole
The Rayman himself
A tackle that might stick. I don't know
I feel like this might be heading towards like a high school talent show kind of
episode, but yeah, go ahead and finally the king of spacks himself the guru of growth
He puts the dick in dictator. He's going to upset her with his sweater.
From off, Polly, Opatia.
All right, boys.
I can't be certain, nobody, it's no, I can't keep this up every week.
Yes, yes, this become a very anticipated new feature of the show.
It is, it's a new feature.
We, you know, I forgot, we had like wet your your beak and you know, all this stuff and all these things.
It's like, we've come up with new things.
We've come up with new things.
All right, listen, just a quick programming update,
all in sum, it's sold out.
Basically, and it's gonna be a great show.
We got about a dozen speakers lined up,
all kinds of great folks.
And three great parties I wanna highlight.
Monday, Sunday night will be
the poker tournament. That's going to be our good fellows, Godfather, kind of theme,
dress to impress the family. Night number two, Monday night is going to be our Havana
White Party, where your best linens and whites. And then closing night party on Tuesday night
is going to be our Miami Vice Big 80s party. Neon and t-shirts under suits. It's going to be a hell of a party.
Two million, $999,700 people don't give a shit about what you're talking about right now.
There's like, maybe three hundred people that are going to go to this party that you're throwing.
No, there's going to be 700 tickets. I think there's going to be 700 tickets issued and there'll be
probably 400 people at the party. So they're going to be pretty good parties.
We're in the party business people at the party. So they'll be pretty good parties Uh-huh
We're in the party business here at the olympod. Well, I mean that
The world needs some good parties in my opinion. It's gonna be three back-to-back great parties
And the theme of the conference is the problem I most want to solve in the world or the problem
I most want to see solves in the world
So we're asking every speaker to think about that and we're gonna kind of talk about the world's biggest problems
And then who actually wants to solve them?
The world needs more parties.
Well, that's what I'm doing.
That's my, that's gonna be my 10 minute talk, right Ted Talk.
I've been watching the WeWork show.
Have you guys been watching it?
Fabulous.
A whole TV plus.
Yeah, it's cool.
Like elevating the world's car.
Jared Leto is so freaking good as that.
You're from the way.
Yeah, it's incredible.
He got to get an Emmy. He's like elevating the world's consciousness as the mission and then just throw parties is the way to do it
I feel like you're you really
You can't buy it like yeah, I it's aspiration you can
Know the world's consciousness with your with your summits. I told Bill
pocketing millions of dollars. It's not gonna make a profit
Whatever profit makes it's gonna go to
Jamat star chamber 50 person conference.
He's doing with the All in Brand.
So everybody gets to leverage the All in Brand.
First you did it, Sacks with your call in.
Now I'm doing it with the summit.
Chimatz gonna do it with his thing tankin'.
I'm not gonna do it.
Coming soon from Friedberg,
the All in unique special lose weight,
like your besties.
He's gonna, it's the All in Brand that allows you to lose weight in your best days. He's gonna, it's the all in brand
that allows you to lose weight in the following way.
He brings his best vegan chef to you.
Oh yeah.
He spins up some fucking 10-peck garbage.
10-peck and vegan shakes, your favorite, Tomat.
It's double fucking yuck, right?
Yes.
You don't need it after you hit it.
You're in a caloric deficit for the month
that that person refuses to leave your house. Boom! You lose everything soft. You lose weight. They're like, hey, what's up, Kenyra? You're like a caloric deficit for the month that that person refuses to leave your house.
Boom!
You lose everything so.
You lose weight.
They're like, hey, what's some quinoa?
You're like, no, and then you lose weight.
No, that's pretty good.
Give me my olive infused beef.
Please.
The olive infused beef.
No, sorry, not olive infused.
Olive fat.
These beef only ate olives, guys.
Right.
And then we murdered them and ate them.
You know what you're gonna say?
You're gonna have a great life.
You guys need to elevate your consciousness, okay?
And have a party, let's go.
We need to get some moreels and some chickens
and make some food for you.
Yes, today we have moreels.
Sean made moreels.
What, wait a second.
I'm sorry, I guess with moreels for you.
Mm-hmm.
So good.
So good.
The morel season has started. Everybody enjoy it. Lots-hmm. So good. So good. The moral season has started.
Everybody enjoy it.
Lots of different news this week.
You guys appeal to the common man.
The moral season has started.
Morales are that expensive.
Tempe is more expensive than Bill Clinton.
Absolutely.
And Morales.
100%.
That vegan bullshit is way more expensive than normal people should.
All right, listen, we have to elevate the world's consumption of steak and meats.
I think a good place to start is we've been talking about.
By the way, have you guys ever looked on the back of any carton of oat milk?
How much chemical nonsense is in that stuff?
Yeah, not really big.
Can I really be good for you?
No.
You know what I want?
Oh my God.
Give me.
Where's the oatmeal that's just oats and water?
Doesn't exist.
It doesn't exist.
It's like soy, lexathin, xantham gum.
Like is that stuff can't be good for you?
You know, sacks, drinks, and a 12 ounce glass
of milk with every dinner.
They just drinks it.
But with the almond milk, I'd like the whole foods.
Riddled with sugar and all this other nonsensical chemicals as well
man, I mean I mean people trash milk I get it but like and I see if you're lactose intolerant I understand you're in a pinch but
Like why go to an alternative milk that is just riddled with just all of this terrible terrible stuff
You know sacks used to love to eat breachies so much that whenever we'd have a party, somebody would
do whatever the brewocks with the real a brea.
He would literally eat an entire brea wheel on a sugar.
No, they would put the brown sugar on top.
They would belt it and sax.
Freebrook sax is eating an entire brick of brea in front of this.
Oh my God.
What was the origin of your brea obsession, sax?
Stanford.
That'd been a Stanford.
You just a brea, you got a damn of five. was the origin of your Briab session, Saks Stanford. I've been a Stanford.
You just for some point,
and the game of the guy that he's free.
The less guy I would think that would he be free.
What's the matter?
You just don't have, I mean,
what about cheddar,
a great American cheese?
No, you just prefer the French, huh?
Yeah, you know.
You still got that fetish for great or no?
You start the show, I gotta go.
Yeah, we got shit to do.
We got to go.
We got to go.
I got four a minute.
Sack, sacks is that fermented kombucha? Stop, stop. This is just plain iced tea.
Sometimes it's just good to be more sweet.
No more. No more. Oh, oh, you're back. I'm trying to catch up.
Trying to catch up. Okay, here we go. Listen, we've been talking a little bit about the contraction in tech, the growth stocks,
having their multiples lowered,
and we knew this was coming,
but it's been a horrible week for large companies
starting the layoffs.
We knew this was coming, we predicted it
probably six months ago.
Fast.com is a one-click checkout startup fast.co.
They announced they're shutting down on Tuesday this after the company grew to 450 employees and
Generated reported $600,000 in revenue. I think that their employees could have made more money if they did one door dash a day delivery
At its peak fast was burning 1010 million a month according to reports.
I think the information got most of this information while only generating about 50K a month
in revenue.
Their $102 million series B was led by Stripe in January of 2021.
Company raised $124 million in total.
Also better.com, which we talked about.
You remember, they had their horrific,
cringe-worthy founder lay off a bunch of employees
over Zoom, and they laid off 900 people December 1st,
3,000 people on March 8th, according to TechCrunch,
for the 5,000 remaining employees on April 5th,
better.com offered corporate and product design and engineering
employees the opportunity to voluntarily resign in exchange for 60 days paid severance and health insurance
coverage better CEOs Vishal Garg hopefully I'm probably not correct noted the uncertain mortgage market
conditions of the last couple of weeks have created an exceedingly challenging operating environment for many
companies in our industry and then going to go puff, which I had the founder on this week at startups and he's a pretty good, you know,
like pretty realistic about the margins in that business.
They're making a modest cut of 3% of their 15,000 staff seems like a reasonable thing to
do, given how the market has changed.
But again, their valuation was absurd. 1.5 billion
at 40, at a $40 billion valuation in December. Shemothi predicted a lot of this and that
people would have to sharpen their pencils. We had a discussion about this, you know,
the good times RIP. What's your take? Is this the beginning of the end, the middle, where
are we at in the cycle? And what's the reasonable thing for founders to do here?
I think so we probably should take the macro and then boil it down to the start up.
So at the macro level, I think that we're playing a very dangerous game of chicken with
the fed.
And you can kind of summarize it in the following way, which is that three or four months ago,
we only thought that there was going to be a handful of interest rate increases.
And increasingly, what has happened, the market has remained so resilient that the Fed
is sort of put out more and more data as the data has justified them being a lot more
aggressive.
And it kind of crescendoed this past week where they basically said, listen, we're going
to move by 50 basis point increments for the foreseeable two or three rate hikes and we're
going to start quantitative tightening.
What does that mean?
That means that instead of basically printing money and coming in and buying securities
from the market, right?
So what happens when they enter the market with money that they literally do print and buy your bonds, they're giving you cash and return. And typically
what that has led to is the inflation of all assets, right? Equity assets have gone up,
bond assets have gone up because there's just nothing else to buy. When quantitative tightening
happens, they reverse that. And what they're going to do is about $95 billion
a month of the opposite action, which means they're taking money out of the system, right?
Or in this case, what they're going to do is they're going to let a bunch of maturities
roll off and not, not renew them. Okay, so why is this important? Well, it's important
because, you know, we're still 4% from the highs. So we have 7% inflation, we have all
this crazy stuff happening, we have a war going on, we have massive price issues, we have
supply demand issues, and the market keeps shaking it off. So I think what the Fed's going
to do is get even more aggressive. You're going to probably see a lot of fifties, maybe
even a 75 point hike, you probably are going to see them,
you know, even ratchet up quantitative tightening until there is a bit of a bloodletting in the equity market.
They need to see that the markets crack.
And so they literally need to see what percentage draw down or just to go sideways.
What do they need to see in order to, or is it inflation coming down a couple of points?
Well, the problem that we suffer from
is that they're going to look at the highest level indexes.
They're not looking at single stocks.
And so when you and I think this market is down 4%,
we don't feel that because some of our companies are down 50 and 60%.
But that's because we're all focused on high-tech growth.
But they look at the broad indices,
and the broad indices have held up really well.
And mostly, it's because, you know, if you look inside the S&P 540% of every dollar is,
you know, Apple, Amazon, you know, Microsoft, etc.
Tesla.
So, we're in a situation where I think until the Fed see that there's a massive trading
of liquidity, which means like you see these indices crack big time, 35, 3600 in the S&P,
they're just going to keep ratcheting things up. As it comes all the way down to our companies in Silicon Valley and tech,
what that means is like you have to start planning for the
worst, and I think the worst means that there is an 18-month period where you cannot raise money
on your terms, you have to raise money on the market terms.
And so if you're not in a position to show good growth
over these next two years,
I would encourage you to just get your balance
sheet in order to wait it out.
SACS, nuclear winner is a possibility here.
Markets for startups raising money.
Again, a strontzang could be on the terms
of the capital allocators.
What's your advice to founders? What are you seeing in the boardzang could be on the terms of the capital allocators. What's your advice to founders?
What are you seeing in the boardrooms that you're on the board of?
And if you were running one of these high-growth companies for the past year, what are the
first two or three things you do?
I mean, the first thing you got to do is look at your burn multiple.
I mean, how much are you burning relative to how much incremental air are you generating?
You look at fast, they raise 120 million, what, like a year ago, that they're out of money
now.
So they burnt 10 million months, like you said.
Here's the crazy thing.
If they just slammed on the brakes three or four months ago, when we were talking on this
pod about the coming downturn, they could still have $30 million in the bank.
That's a lot of money.
The only reason it doesn't seem like a lot of money is because they've been burning
100 million over the past year.
But objectively, $30 million is a gross series B, which is actually a lot of money for a company that only
has a hundred thousand in revenue.
So they could have saved that company if they had slammed on the break three months ago
and rationalized the cost structure and they didn't.
They hit the wall at a hundred miles an hour.
Who's responsible when something like that happens, David?
Because we've all seen it.
What is the suspension of disbelief
that creates this kind of stupidity?
That's what it is.
I mean, you've got people who are kind of drinking
the cool aid and there's nobody advising them to stop
or if there is or not listening.
I mean, look, PayPal had this situation back in 2000,
the year 2000, right after the dot com crash.
We were burning $10 million a month like fast we had
no revenue and no business model okay we had said the service would be always free
We had four months basically of life and we pulled up on the throttle and what we did is we basically
introduced paid accounts we started charging transaction fees and we cut the we cut the cost
structure of the company and we made that last $40 million
last a lot longer than four months. It lasted until we could then do another fundraiser the
following year. We were able to then raise with good numbers, real revenue, a business
model, etc. That was because we were just paying attention to the changing environment, the world had changed from sort of the pre.com crash, you know, 1999, your business model didn't matter, your
margins didn't matter, revenue didn't matter, none of that stuff mattered, all that mattered
was growth, but by, you know, mid 2000, everything had changed.
So you have to be attuned to what the fundraising environment is looking like.
And if you're a high burn company right now,
that's not generating a lot of revenue to go along with it.
You better slam on the brakes
and rationalize your cost structure before it's too late.
David, tell me, like,
what do you think is going on in this board meeting?
I mean, like this is a group of incompetent incompetence.
I don't even know who's on the board
because Stripe led two rounds, I think.
And so, look, and you are part of it, David, that you, you, and listen, we all love Stripe.
It's a great company. It's, it's a legendary company. But one of the reasons we don't
like to have strategic says, maybe they're not thinking the same as a proper capital allocator
and for them, this is peanuts. Right. Exactly. No. Look, the reason why strategic investor,
sorry, guys, I think the reason why strategic investor invests is because it's
strategic for them. I mean, it was in Stripes interest to try and back a winner
in the whole e-commerce checkout line sort of payment space.
And so they did that. And I don't even know if they had a board seat.
And so no one was really, but I don't, I don't understand that strategic
decision because I suspect the rationale
somewhere internally in Stripe, which is pretty flawed is, hey, we can't do it ourselves
because if we did, we would be competing with our customers. But picking a winner and putting
$120 million dollars is tandem out to the same thing. So I don't understand.
I mean, it doesn't make any sense. Right. And Stripe raised money at a $9,500 billion
evaluation. So look, it all flows down from, you know, the
frothiness of the peak. No, I'm saying, I think I would have,
it would have been much more credible for Stripe to say, this is a
critical piece of the infrastructure and value chain in payments
that we want to own. So we're just going to go and put some of our
better engineers as like a, you know, site project and see if we can tack away at something that works. I mean,
I think a lot of people would have adopted it. But I guess there was a board.
To be clear, Stripe was on the board. Index was on the board.
Okay. That's interesting. I mean, those are some good investors. There's a couple of
people on the board. Index and who else? According to CrunchBase, Stripe was on the board,
a business development person from there. Index was on the board. And Dom, the board, index and who else? According to CrunchBase, Stripe was on the board, a business development person from there.
Index was on the board, and Dom, the founder,
and looks like Brian Sugar, who I know,
who's an angel investor and a founder.
But who knows if that's outdated information
in CrunchBase?
Do you guys remember when Philip Kaplan used to run a website
called Fucked Company?
Absolutely, yeah.
A friend of mine, yeah.
Do you want to tell the fuck company story, Jake Elf, for all the people that have no
idea on it?
Basically what happened was the dot com world was imploding.
All the employees didn't have a voice.
There was no social media at the time.
There was no blogs at the time.
The only thing you could really publish in the world was like a GeoCities page.
You could put up a homepage if you knew how to do HTML.
There's even pre-mi space.
And so a friend of mine fell Kaplan, who does a very successful comical digital kid now
started fuck company, and it was a message board. And what he basically let people do was
he would write three headlines, one sentence each, kind of like before Reddit existed,
where you just put a one line hit. And then there was comments underneath it, and they'd
say, this company, we just got an email, this company's laying off people. And he would
beat all the news stories to the layoffs because he would just
run with any email that came in. And then people would detail and savage the management of
those companies underneath it for malfeasance and explain exactly how ridiculous the spending
was in that era where people were burning money like drunk and sellers.
I think this time around, it's probably important for employees to understand a couple things.
One is, who doesn't know what they're doing?
Companies that are making layoffs, those are happening, they shouldn't get punished for that.
But you got to think like the fiduciaries that are ripping this money in,
do you really want to be the person that goes to work at a company that's backed by these folks in round two?
That's not a signal.
The opposite has always not a signal. Like the opposite is always
been a signal, right? Meaning when Mike Moritz makes an investment, we all pay attention
because we all think, wow, there's a picker, you know? And he did that with Stripe and
with so many other, you know, gray companies. And so the likelihood of an employee wanting
to work for a Mike Moritz back company or Mike Mor's governed company is very high, right?
Same thing with Gurley's, you know,
same thing with a lot of really, really good investors,
John Doerr, but the opposite should also be true then,
because if you really want to work for a Peter Teo
back company, you should probably not work
for one of these companies where these folks
who are just completely absent are also governing the board,
because that just means like nobody knows what's going on.
We haven't had proper governance for a long time in Silicon Valley, so I mean, I think
that's what we crashed.
We crashed and the dropout were in some ways about incompetent boards, both of those TV
shows.
No, I mean, I definitely see this, you know, I think you guys know the incentive for
a traditional venture capitalist that maybe isn't motivated by improving their craft,
but they're motivated, you know,
and incentivized primarily by making money
as to raise more capital and getting more deals.
And as you guys know, like every venture firm
has maybe one or two superstars,
and then they fill out the ranks
and hire a bunch of folks who are maybe not superstars
or they don't pay as much attention.
It used to be maybe a VC would sit on a handful of boards
and now it's like the board representative
for 12 companies and that's a,
you're not gonna be able to provide quality time
and service and support to the CEO and the company.
And more importantly, as you guys point out,
like not provide good governance,
and governance isn't just about,
are you signing the docuScience as they come in
to approve stuff?
But it's about actually critiquing the business strategy
with the CEO at the board discussion,
critiquing the spending, reviewing the financial plan,
making sure that everyone's aligned,
that this makes sense in this funding environment
to continue to do this work.
I don't see that a lot. I don't know about you guys but I see a lot of EC's either
handering to the CEO because we have founder culture, hysteria and Silicon Valley where it's true.
The best founders make the thousand x returns and that's it.
But that doesn't necessarily mean that the rest of the businesses
should be left to their own vices just because there are a few
ultra successful founders that there are a lot of businesses that actually need governance
in order to achieve outcomes. And I see that lacking heavily in Silicon Valley because the
VCs are more incentive I have to raise more money to make more investments and then pay less attention
and just go raise the next fund. Well, I think you said the key thing. There are really very few star pickers in our business.
It takes decades to really prove that out.
And those people, but those people that are real pickers,
I don't think put up a bullshit from any of them.
They're not just pickers.
So John Doerr was deeply involved in Google
in the early days.
Yeah, I'm simplifying our job.
But what I'm saying is our job, at the end of the day,
is we're picking. And then once you pick, you got to do the work.
If you pick poorly and you do the same amount of work, it doesn't matter.
Nobody's going to remember you.
Yeah, and what ends up happening is the VC flushes the deal because it's not going to be the hundred
bagger.
They don't pay as much attention.
They let the thing ride into the sunset.
And they're moving on to the next thing.
But there is still a duty and a responsibility, I think, to the shareholders and the employees of that company
to do what SACS mentioned,
which is, can you reduce burn under these circumstances
and can you actively engage as a board member
to encourage leadership to do that?
And that doesn't happen.
But you said that, keep thinking,
there are a few practitioners that really have the gravitas
to actually enforce those decisions.
So there's a reason why,
in during the great financial crisis,
there was only one organization that even had the courage. Forget whether it was right or
wrong at the time to even write the RIP good time stack, right? It was Sequoia. Nobody
else dared to even put that on the page, let alone give it to all of their companies knowing
that it would leak less they'd be wrong. And the reason Sequoia could do it is they're
looking at a four-year franchise and saying the integrity of our franchise is at stake.
We need to keep doing what we've done before.
And what it did, I think in that case, was pulled along a bunch of folks that were not
as good as the top few folks.
And it helped reorganize because if you see the three or four years after that GFC deck,
Sequoia flushed that whole business, right?
There's an entire turnover of that team.
And so I think what it speaks to is, and we talked about this in a few episodes ago,
if you're seeking out AUM,
you're gonna hire a very different kind of person
than if you're trying to help build companies.
And the difference is that when you're trying to raise AUM,
your customer is not the company.
Your customer is the LP.
And what the LP wants to do is be able to write
their investment memo and not get fired.
And the way that you do that is by pointing to the team and saying, well, this person worked
at this company, this person was a VP of that company.
And it seems credible.
But between, but being able to invest and being able to actually be a good operator is
so different.
Look, I'll also say one thing that's important, you know, I don't like this celebration or
sorry, the mockery and the entertainment that comes from failure. I thought fuck company,
like I was young when it was out and you know, I would read it and kind of giggle at the stupid
companies that got funding, you know, but to me it's not like the kind of thing that could kind of be funny or laughed at,
or even to mock failed companies.
I mean, it's cynical.
I think the capital that's available in the markets today
to support the building.
That wasn't that, that's not what fuck company was.
I don't think it was people taking pot shots
as much as it was people.
There was a lot of that.
Oh yeah, there was a lot of that.
And because, yeah, there was a thing.
Did you admit, but would you admit in fairness that there was a lot of people telling the truth? Oh yeah, yeah, totally. No, no, no, but a lot of that. Cause yeah, there was a thing. But would you admit in fairness
that there was a lot of people telling the truth?
Oh yeah, yeah, totally.
No, no, but a lot of it was like this mockery
like can you believe this shit even existed?
Yada Yada and the cynicism I think, you know,
kind of, you know, it stales out the opportunity
for capital to support, you know,
new ventures, new initiatives like this.
You know, I also think that these businesses that today
are looking to raise capital that are,
let's call them good businesses,
they have a good opportunity,
they're gonna be challenged in a marketplace
where everyone is cynical.
And I'll say, scarcity breeds success
when there wasn't a lot of venture money and there were only a you know kind of a few investments that could be made each year.
There was a decision making process that says you know look how valuable could this be versus this other opportunity that I could invest my capital into.
That says okay the best opportunity wins and gets picked and gets. In a world where everyone was raising a billion dollar second fund or a three billion dollar
fourth fund and you suddenly had an influx of a hundred billion dollars of venture money
in a year, it's a lot like what we saw in crypto markets, which is an extraordinary explosion
in highly speculative bubble assets.
And a lot of these businesses maybe shouldn't have existed in the first place.
Too much demand for the stock of private companies.
And all the hedge funds that came into it,
all the mutual funds that came in.
Not enough supply of great founders
and serious teams that are working hard on this.
I think with the case of fast,
I agree with your general sentiment about dunking.
In the case of fast, what you had was a founder
who was on Twitter every day,
tweeting about how great the
company wasn't giving startup advice while he was taking none of it and should not have been giving
any of it because they didn't even have product market fit. Let's and learn you know who you know
who should be criticized the next person that backs that guy. That's it. You know that guy is he's
got a very interesting history actually as well. I think if they don't need colleges. They didn't do any diligence on him.
Apparently he had two companies that were kind of major red flags.
And I think the diligence issue, SACS, is one, maybe you are having a similar experience
to me on the early stage.
We were seeing deals last year close in a week.
We normally have 30 days to vet a deal and maybe a week or two to get our diligence wrapped
up. Sometimes these things overlap
But it's what was it, you know historically a four to six-week process and then it went down to a four to six-day process and then people were meeting with you one day and saying they're closed the next
Where you did you feel like over the last couple years people were doing proper diligence or not and what impacted
Dilligence have on any of this you know
I certainly I can't speak to what our competitors were doing. I don't think our
diligence process changed much. We would just have a mentality of when there was a deal that was
urgent, we would drop everything and focus on that deal and get our work done. And it can be done
quickly, although it's easier for SaaS companies because the metrics that you're looking at are
sustained or diced it's just, it's an easier process.
What's the most important thing in diligence? In your mind, what is the like bullet that people can't,
the silver bullet, think people can't fake? Probably off-sheet customer references. So the first
thing we do is focus on the metrics, right? And the financials, the SaaS metrics, all that kind of
stuff. But then you want to talk to customers,
and you want to understand the value they're getting out of the product,
and ideally, they're off-sheet customers.
Explain what off-sheet means.
Actually, it just means that you frequently ask a founder
to give you customer references.
Those are on sheet references.
The off-sheet references are the ones that you find yourself
that they never gave you.
So the easiest off-sheet references to do
are when your own portfolio companies
are using some other like piece of software
and they tell you about it.
So you know, it's a totally non-conflicted situation.
So that's what you're looking for.
So one of your companies is using Stripe.
They tell you how great Stripe is.
They tell you what's good about it.
What's bad about it.
But references you're giving. So it's sort of like backdoor references.
If somebody tells you here's my references.
And you can do the same thing on founders too.
You can have on sheet and off sheet references for founders.
And you can do it for VCs.
Yeah, but look, I think it's probably a little bit unfair to blame the board of this company
too much because the reality is that VCs don't have the leverage or the power in this business.
I mean, it's found, this whole construction
of the industry is set up around founders.
And at the end of the day, it's up to the founder
to run the company and they get to do what they want.
Unless they do something criminal,
otherwise they're gonna be able to do whatever they want.
And, hold on, boards generally are very differential
to founders.
And if the founders not willing to listen to advice,
what are you going to do about that?
Well, no, this is, but this is the point you're making,
I think, is not right.
You think that if Peter Teal gave some advice to slow the company
down that this guy would have not taken it?
Of course he would have taken it.
I don't know. I don't know about that.
And we would have had to consider it.
If Mike Moritz actually said it, he would have had to consider it.
I think what you're actually speaking to is in the rush to
put so much money to work, we've elevated people who don't understand what the job is to
do the job. And if they're not credible, of course, they're going to be ignored. We
all have ignored stupid board members. You've done it too, David. But even, you know, let's
actually look at Yammer as an example. There were one or two of us that you would talk
to pretty consistently. You didn't talk to all of us that you would talk to pretty consistently.
You didn't talk to all of them.
I would always seek out advice.
Look, a great founder, a good founder always seeks out advice.
No question about it.
But look, this idea that it's governance versus advice.
I mean, the problem with it being governance is all the institutional incentives for VCs
are to be profound.
So no one wants to jam a founder by making them do something.
They don't want to do.
Well, I'm just saying, that's the way it is now.
No, to be clear, that became a competitive tactic that emerged as more venture capital
funds were raised, and more venture capital was raised from LPs.
Prior to that, there was a scarcity of venture capital, and VCs could have good governance
and not have to have this whole, profounder model that became the thing that founders fund and Andreessen and others kind of proclaimed as being core to their advantage
and the reason to pick them over some other VCUs going to meddle in your affairs.
And by the way, both are true.
There are most VCUs, as Vinod has said publicly, add negative value.
And I totally agree with him on this because many VCUs, particularly the ones who aren't
valuable and don't really have much to add,
try to add stuff, try to say stuff, and they just create negative value in the process.
But on the other hand, the whole pro-founder model led to the we work and ubers of the
world that, I think we all know.
That's right, there's a trade off.
I mean, look, I remember in the 1990s, the default was the founder-discour replaced, right?
Like, we're soon excuse the company's successful.
You hire a professional CEO.
That was just like rule of thought.
Schmidt, I mean, even the mighty Google did that.
Yeah, no, I mean, that was, by the way, was probably the point I was proud to make, which
was like so much of John Doors influence was in getting Larry and Sergey to take Eric
on a CEO.
And I really do think that that was like,
you know, a critical move that created probably
the most valuable company in history.
And, you know, it was an important,
imagine if you had one of these founders fund,
and by the way, you guys know I'm very close
to the guys that founders fund.
And, but imagine if you had a founders fund type approach
where you said, look, Larry and Sergey are the founders.
They know what they're doing.
Let them do it.
As opposed to the John Doer nuance of, let's make sure that we think about the development
of this company successfully over time.
And then convince Larry and Sergey through a bunch of meetings and riding bikes and whatever
else that it did with Eric, you know, to like, and then what about Jim Breyer?
Didn't he bring Cheryl over to Facebook?
I mean, like, there's a lot of these stories of the really,
you know, the VCs that really change the trajectory of the business through their work. Right. And, but look, all I'm saying is the good VCs can still have that influence,
but it's in the form of advice rather than governance.
Right. Look, we just don't call the shots.
You're right. You're right. It is, it is advice. But, for example, governance, as an example,
in every board that I take, the first thing that I say is, here's the template I want.
I'm not going to ask you a bunch of stuff, but I just want some transparent reporting.
And the first page is always, how much money at the beginning of the month, how much money
did you burn, how much equity did we give out, how much is left in the pool, simple,
basic checks and balances, right?
Where you're not asking all kinds of crazy questions,
you're just like, all right, how much money are we burning?
How much delusion did we take?
Now tell me what we've done.
And those are simple elements of governance.
We before you get into a bus setting.
What's the speed of the plan?
What's the elevation?
Where are we at?
What's the altitude?
And when you ask people for this today.
We have to do that too.
Yeah, I don't know what anyone that doesn't do that.
I'll be honest.
Anybody that doesn't do it, honestly, I don't know. I don't do it. I'll be honest like anybody that doesn't do it
honestly is being completely. I don't know anyone that doesn't do that. I mean, I'm talking about
I would love to see. I would love to see a fast board deck and to see if that first page is
that page. The first page. And by the way, you know where I learned that from from Sequoia and
Clienter Perkins because back in the day, what I saw from founders was, oh, this is the first thing I have to
report on. I was taught by founders when I was a, when I was a principal at Mayfield. They're
like, this is how you do the job. And I was like, great, thanks. I mean, I was, you know, sitting
beside these guys that were old hands and doing it. And that's how I learned this business through
that apprenticeship. But there was governance and advice.
And the governance is just about being transparent
about how much money are you burning.
And so you can't, you know, to David's point,
if you had just seen that data,
even if you take those board decks by the way,
because you have these information rights,
I don't know about you guys, but we do it.
We did it as well.
You take the board deck,
you circulate it to your other partners.
There's lots of times where I see board decks and companies
where one of my partners are on the board,
and I send them an email of like,
hey, here's some bullet points of things to think about
that I've seen before, et cetera, et cetera.
You don't think nobody at Stripeboard Index could have said,
you're burning $10 million a month, and there's no revenue.
So the point is that data is only $30 or $40 million
in the bank.
Give me a break, guys.
So this was a whole, a cataclysmic failure
at the advice level and at the governance level.
And all I'm saying is it's a good lesson for folks to learn.
Absolutely.
Yeah, so many point peels attention to the two articles
I wrote that I think relevant.
So first, we actually published an article
on the SAS board meeting deck
that we would like people to use.
And obviously they're free to
use or not to to Moss point right up at the top as a context setter we need to know what's your monthly
burn and how much money is in the bank and that and then we just divide those things to create
runway we don't like looking at projections for runway totally we just look at how much you burn
last month and how much money you got in the bank and like actually they were down to 30 or 40
million dollars burning 10 million a month somebody should have like thrown up a red flag and said and how much money you got in the bank. And like, as I, right? Exactly. And they were down to $30 or $40 million,
burning 10 million a month,
somebody should have, like, thrown up a red flag
and said, better save on the brakes right now
because you're gonna be out of business
in three or four months.
So, that's sort of piece number one.
The other piece was, an archive wrote
a couple of years ago called Blitzfail,
which is how not to go off the rails.
Because a lot, there's a lot of literature out there
about Blitz scaling. And a lot of literature out there about blitz scaling
and a lot of startups think they need to scale
as rapidly as humanly possible.
And I wrote this piece about how fast-growing companies
that raise lots of money and high valuations
basically go off the rails and they end up imploding.
And there's like 11 reasons why this happens,
I sort of categorize them.
One of the biggest ones is founder psychology.
You have a founder who believes that things are always gonna be up and to the right. reasons why this happens, I sort of categorize them. One of the biggest ones is founder psychology.
You have a founder who believes that things are always going to be up into the right.
It's funny, they're always described the same way, described as visionary, charismatic,
and the word crazy is often used, but it's crazy good.
And then when everything goes to shit, all of a sudden the word crazy means something
pejorative and bad. And the problem is that these characteristics
of being highly visionary and charismatic,
they also can be combined with an unwillingness
to listen to advice.
And so founders who have those qualities,
they can be a good thing,
but they have to seek out advice
from people who've had experience.
Otherwise they're gonna make a mistake and hit the wall.
Being delusional is what you need to start these companies.
I'm going to beat these incumbents.
I'm going to change the world.
A little bit of delusion is good, but not when you're looking at the runway.
That's when you need to be pragmatic.
I think there's a term of coachability.
How coachable is this person as a CEO as a leader?
And I do think that coachability goes hand in hand with intellectual curiosity.
I mean, if you look at the callisons, Patrick,
Procholison and how much
Brett he has and some of the topics he's interested in and the things he writes about, it indicates to me a high degree of intellectual curiosity
and people who are intellectually curious generally are very humble because they're constantly seeking things
they don't know, and they recognize
that they don't know a lot of things.
And in that same kind of mentality,
they are willing to recognize
that other individuals can have good points of view
that can inform their perspective,
and they're willing to change their perspective.
And I think that's a really key thing
that if you look across the range of successful
founder CEOs that scale to a hundred billion dollar plus valuations for their businesses,
that to me is one of the more common threads, is this kind of intellectual curiosity which
translates into a coachability, which translates into an adaptability and being willing to
take advice.
And so your board is a tool, not kind of a governance structure, sitting over you.
I think the less you are like that, the more you are likely to feel like your
board is a governance structure and umbrella sitting over you, telling you what you can't
do. I don't think that's what governance means, by the way.
Well, governance meant to look out for the shareholders. That's the job.
Right here. But act as a fiduciary doesn't mean to like tell the CEO what to do. This is my
point. No, that's right. Yeah, I'm just saying. I think he's right about, I think Freiburg's
right about how boards are often perceived by founders. I think there is an increasing,
let's call it a Hollywood director, a Hollywood author mentality towards VCs.
Jake Halemey, all in podcasts, right?
Well, it's basically, it's basically, look, there are certain incubators out there and accelerators
and whatever who teach these young founders that it's all about their vision and anyone
who stands in the way of it is basically interfering with them.
And they are the author, like a Hollywood director, and you got to stay away from those suits,
the studio guys, right?
Ever.
That's the mentality they're trying to, they're teaching them.
An adversarial mentality.
An adversarial mentality. And look, there are, to Chimau's point, there are plenty of VCs, you don't know what they're trying to, they're teaching them. An adversarial mentality. An adversarial mentality.
And look, there are, to Chimau's point, there are plenty of VCs who don't know what they're
doing.
They have no useful advice to offer.
But the better mentality to teach a founder would be like, look, the world is so complicated
and building a company is so complicated.
It's going to be 10 times more difficult if you don't seek out advice.
So go find board members who will let you ultimately do what you want,
but will still give you the advice
if something's going wrong.
And what was true at one point in time
when Paul Graham gave this advice
and he set up Y-combinator, you don't wanna say their name,
but it is Paul Graham had a terrible experience
in his company with venture capitalists.
So he set up that war time stance between founders
and the investment community and founders fund
became the antithesis of
the traditional venture funds and they were going to be founder focused.
But that advice then might have been true and now it's not.
Now we've sung the pendulum too far the other way.
We did two things because we saw this 10 years ago when I started seed investing and then
when I started building positions of over 5%, I just said to founders, if we own over
5 or 10%, we should have an option of a board seat and we'll do board seat, we'll do board training with you.
We'll just teach you, we'll take like here some decks that we've seen from other, you know,
here's some decks that are available and we'll show you what a board is like.
And then I would have three founders come, two would sit on one's board meeting and I
would do three back-to-back board meetings, bring your council, bring your founders and
sit in on the other two board meetings and we'll have a little so-cratic discussion about what was good about each board meeting.
We did board meeting training as a proxy for venture worthiness later on.
When those companies did go out to the adventure and they had an ESOP and they had board minute
meetings, they just looked more impressive to the venture community.
I know people say, don't do a board.
It's not cool.
It actually turns out doing a one hour board meeting, four times a year, six times a year,
even as a seed stage company.
It does differentiate you to the venture community.
I find.
All right, moving on to speaking of boards.
Elon bought a chunk of Twitter last week,
a 9% stake, and he's joining the board.
That makes him the largest individual,
or the largest shareholder, individual or institutional. He bought the shares in March Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal.
Tweeted I'm excited to share where appointing Elon Musk to our board.
And then Jack tweeted in support I'm really happy Elon is joining the Twitter board exclamation point just to give some level setting here in queue for of 2021 Twitter had 1 1.5 billion in revenue, up 22% year over
year. They've really been starting to ring the register over there. Daily active users
are solid, but modest, 217 million daily active users, 38 million of which in the US, 179
million are international. And there are stated goals for Q4 of next year, 2023.
So in a year and a half, they want to have $315 million.
And they want revenue in 2023 to hit $7.5 billion.
Again, they're on a $6 billion run rate.
So I guess that would be an increase of 25%.
Just general thoughts on, and Elon obviously has been making some Twitter suggestions for
the product.
Sacks you worked with Elon at PayPal, thoughts on what this does for.
That wasn't like you're laughing.
It's like such a funny transition.
Sacks you work with the Elon at PayPal.
Work for Elon.
I'm sure he's going to have some great product ideas, but what this is really about is free speech.
You know, right before Elon announces, he is doing polling, asking the Twitter user base whether Twitter
was succeeding or failing in his mission to be an open, town square, an open marketplace
of ideas, something like 70% said they were failing at it.
Elon, on many occasions, has spoken up for free speech.
He believes that Twitter's historic mission is as an open town square. And I think
he's going to bring that emphasis to the board. And it's a great thing. Now, I think the
person who had the best take on the reaction to this was Mike Solana. And he had a few funny
tweets about this. Who does he work for? Is he a Founders Fund guy?
I think, yeah, I think he works for Peter or Founders Fund. But he also writes a great
new substack newsletter, kind of like a blog post called Pirate Wires.
It's worth checking out.
It's he's a pretty,
in addition to being a pretty sharp analyst,
he actually says a lot of funny things too.
He's iconoclastic and yeah,
he'll swing the sword.
Yeah, so the way he put it is that, you know,
Elon joining the board has all the worst people on Twitter,
furious.
They think that this guy might actually say free speech and for authoritarians that is an existential threat and then he added
I don't get what the problem is guys if you want censorship you can just go build a new social media company and do censorship
There it's a free market there by turning on its head everything they've been saying which is you know when the people who the
authoritarian it's head, everything they've been saying, which is, you know, when the people who, the authoritarian, the authoritarian people who love censorship, whenever anyone complained
about censorship, they would always say, well, just go create your own social network, you
know, we're free to do whatever you are true, whatever.
Exactly. Well, this is, this is the free market acting in a way they don't like, which is
finally somebody who believes in free speech is willing to stand up by the largest stake
in Twitter, Join the board.
I mean, this is fabulous.
I think it's really fabulous.
I think it's pretty amazing.
Yeah, and the stock went up 30%.
What do you think, Shema?
I texted you guys in the group chat.
I think that if he is able to make free speech cool again,
he'll, he'll actually do more doing that than potentially through SpaceX and Tesla.
And that's already saying a lot.
Because free speech really is this fundamental principle of democracy and it's been decaying.
We don't know the implications of a large technology company keeping free speech as a principled
pillar of their reason to exist, right?
Because we have seen free speech kind of decay and we've seen sort of,
you know, random decision making that seems arbitrary by a lot of these technology companies and,
you know, the payments companies free broke was mentioning visa and mastercard earlier in the group chat.
But all of these things can change on a dime if Elon makes free speech cool again and figures
out a way to make that a principle that everybody can embrace. Because then if you really believe in
that, then you go to the next logical conclusion,
which is what David has said forever, which is the only solution to, you know, speech
you don't like is more speech.
And then that creates a surface area that I think you can technically maneuver around.
So meaning what are the real problems in all of this speech creates?
It creates a, you know, content moderation issue, right?
It creates a spam issue and it creates a sort of wisdom
of the crowd's ranking rating issue.
So misinformation comes to mind.
Yeah.
But that's a wisdom of the crowd's ranking rating issue
in my brother.
So I guess the point is that, you know,
if he can get the Twitter employee base fundamentally
on side of this idea of free speech as a principle,
that's, I think think is enormous because you know
that none of the other big tech companies
will ever even do that.
And the capital structures of those companies
will never allow a single strong voice
like his to enforce that idea.
So this is the only company where that could happen.
And I think, you know, we wanna see
what this how this plays out.
I think it's a really, really big deal.
All right, freeberg. Yeah, I'll tell you what I think we want to see what this plays out. I think it's a really, really big deal. All right, Freyberg.
Yeah, I'll tell you what I think changes.
Facebook, Twitter, even Google, all acquiesce
to significant external pressure over the years.
I've said this in the past, I believe the founders of those companies
are all philosophically, fundamentally, philosophically aligned
with the notion of free speech and
absolute freedom of information, you know, enabling truth finding over time. And the edge cases
of those platforms ultimately identify in uncover ways that they can be used against what,
you know, many would consider kind many would consider the betterment of society
and as a result, the act we have to external pressure that drives some of these censorship
decisions and drives some of these behavioral changes by management.
But I think that if you concentrate the ownership of those businesses and rather than have
a distributed shareholder base, meaning the public markets were the largest single shareholder in Twitter to date
has been jack Dorsey at 2.3%.
He actually serves the shareholders and the shareholders ultimately want to see the stock price go up
and they ultimately want to see the business make more money and as a result they don't have the same sort of
you know the stakeholders there have kind of a different set of alignments over time, you know, they're not necessarily the same long-term or focus meeting,
does the philosophy come before the money. And I think as you kind of concentrate ownership,
you have the opportunity and the option now to, you know, make those sorts of decisions that you
can't make when you're a broadly own stock. But Facebook and Google art concentrated.
Yeah, the direct software.
New class.
So what are you talking about?
The issue, Chamoff, is in those companies, they're scared to death that they'll lose their
employees and have chaos at work.
Government.
No, the issue is government.
It's both.
It's both.
It's both.
It's both.
It's pressure from above and below.
It's yeah, it's shareholders.
It's shareholders and government regulators, right?
And so in both cases, you have a way to the pressure and employees. It's yeah, it's shareholders, it's shareholders and government regulators, right? And so in both cases, you have a way to the pressure and employees.
It's a good point.
Yeah.
I understand, but I'm not sure how Twitter changes any of that.
It does.
I'll tell you why, because if we look what's happened is, sometime last year, I think it
happened around Chappelle, and I think it happened because of Coinbase, we saw a group
of folks say, you know what?
Enough's enough.
Yeah, we told you to bring your whole self to work. We told you we would do your laundry.
And then at some point Netflix was like, listen, you don't have to agree with every
comedian on our platform. There's a range of comedians. And if you disagree with this one,
you can do a walkout, you can protest, you can make your feelings hurt, or you can choose
to not work here. And then Daniel, kind of did the same thing. He said, listen, at Spotify,
we're going to put labels on it. If you don't like Joe Rogan, don't work here. And then Daniel, kind of did the same thing. He said, listen, at Spotify, we're going to put labels on it.
If you don't like Joe Rogan, don't work here.
And then, of course, we know Coinbase did it
and Toby from Shopify did it.
And I have Twitter doing it.
And when you apologize and you start listening
to this very vocal minority when they're upset
and they want to cancel people
or they want to de-platform people, what do they do?
They double down. You've shown that you're going to listen to them.
They're not doing it at Coinbase anymore. They're not going to do it at Spotify anymore.
They're not doing it at Netflix.
And Apple, act we yes, right?
They're like, we don't like, you know, Antonio's book, Chaos Monkeys.
And he said these three things in an award-winning book that we find or we're going to fire him.
I think at some point Apple's gonna have to say,
you know what, leave your feelings at work.
And this is a company.
I'll leave them at home, thank you.
This is why Elon is so dangerous to these people
is because he won't be pushed around.
The fact that matter is that this whole woke mob thing,
it's a paper tiger, they don't have the support
of most of the population.
It's a handful of very noisy voices on Twitter
and social media who insist on having a monopoly
on the right to shape all of our narratives.
And they want a monopoly on moral outrage.
They want a monopoly on moral outrage.
They want a monopoly.
But they also want a monopoly on the ability
to basically define what is acceptable
and what the narrative on any topic is going to be.
And all it takes is one strong person to stand up to the mob as we saw Brian Armstrong do at
Coinbase. And the mob dissipated. Brian had to suffer.
They got fired in a target. They found in a target. Exactly.
So Elon doing this is a really big deal because again, he cannot be pushed around
and he is showing leadership here.
And all it will take to end this woke censorship
is for other founders to stand tall the way that Elon has.
And let's go into the nuance.
I want to kill care what employees kind of gripe about.
I don't think he'll care what regulators gripe about
and I don't think he'll care what other shareholders gripe about, I don't think he'll care what regulators gripe about, and I don't
think he'll care what other shareholders gripe about.
He'll talk about the long-term opportunity, the philosophical alignment with mission, and
plow forward.
I think that that level of leadership is what separates some great businesses from others.
But this is a very...
I listen.
There were moments of de-platforming that were earned by people like Alex Jones who was saying that the
families of Sandy Hook were false flags
and their children weren't murdered.
There are, you know, Milo Unopolis and some of these
alt-right, Nazi-synpathizing people throwing up
swat stickers, you know, people promoting violence
or brigading on these services to attack people
and to dox people.
Those people, those were just cancellations,
de-platformings from YouTube.
In your opinion.
Well, I mean, anybody inciting violence,
I think we would all agree and be displatformed.
Jason, look at how it's evolved.
We start with isolated cases like in Alex Jones,
like a Milo, then nobody likes and nobody supports.
The next thing you know, the president of the United States
is being de-platformed, but again,
that's supposedly based on him
inciting a crowd.
Then what's happening today?
Now we have entire categories of opinion being banned.
It starts with COVID.
I agree.
I'm not exactly on my point.
Anyone who were dissenting,
there's invalid.
Anybody who has a dissenting opinion on COVID gets banned.
Now anybody who has a dissenting opinion on climate change
can be banned.
There's a story this week on CNN where Pinterest of all come, look, Pinterest is a
photocuring site. I don't know, no one's talking about climate change on Pinterest. And yet,
I was, but then I got you wrong. I mean, it just shows this censorship now is on autopilot. I mean,
even sites where the conversation is not taking place are banning
entire categories of thought and opinion because it disagrees with, you know, what the experts
say.
And Jake, how you could point out your Alex Jones case to make the case that the platforming
should be allowed. The problem is, as soon as you make that case, it's only a slight
degree.
It's a slight degree away from the next case,
and then a slight degree away from the next case,
and then fast forward three years,
and you're banning entire topics of conversation
that ultimately may end up being proven
to be a topic of conversation we should have had.
And if you look back, by the way,
great movie Woody Harrelson, the people of her slurry Flint,
Larry Flint was a pornography,
it was easy for everyone to chaff ties him
and for everyone to say, you know what?
Let's go ahead and de-platform this guy back then
and ban him and charge him by the government.
And at the end of the day,
he fought for his riots for free speech.
Now, all that being said,
Larry Flint was publishing using his own printers
and selling on the street in a very legally compliant way.
There is a difference in having someone else's platform be the mechanism that you use to
promote your voice.
If they choose like Pinterest and Twitter and YouTube and Facebook and Google to change
how their platform operates, I actually think that's a commercial decision made by a private
company.
They should have the right to do that, but they're going to lose users over time.
They're going to end up looking like idiots when they're wrong by banning certain topics
that we should be having conversations about over time.
And I do think that there are other mechanisms
for us to use the free and open internet.
This is why I think the free and open internet
is more important than anything
to have conversations using other platforms
and other meetings.
I mean, I mean, hold on, I just wanna respond
to David Sincigid, you know, counter my point.
I agree with you.
I think it went overboard.
And I think there are more reasonable solutions.
I think a time-based ban would have been better
for somebody like Trump,
and maybe waiting to see what happens
with the January 6th commission,
putting that aside.
I know it's very controversial.
You know, when you just look at what Spotify did to our podcast,
I don't know if you've looked at us and Spotify,
every other episode says COVID-19 information here.
I think this is one of the best things.
If people wanna talk about Ivermectin
and it's an open science and free,
but you know more about it than any of us,
and people wanna debate it, why not link them
to the most credible sources?
I think that's a great solution.
Have a question.
Yeah.
Is there an oat milk tag on Spotify?
Yes, because there's a list.
Oat milk, oat milk, oat milk.
Wait, when you listen to all in pod on Spotify, there's a tag that says there's COVID-19.
Yeah, get COVID-19 information here.
Yeah.
I've got to freeberg's argument about these companies should be free to do whatever they want.
So I know that freeberg, I don't want to make two points about this.
First of all, I know freeberg is sincere in genuine in that belief.
However, most of the people making that argument are completely disingenuous about it because
on the one hand, they say that these companies should be free to limit speech when they like
the outcome of that censorship.
But meanwhile, in Congress, they're pushing six bills forward to regulate these companies
as monopolies.
So they don't believe that they should be free to do whatever they want.
They believe that they're monopolies.
And indeed, many of them are monopolies.
And even the ones that aren't monopolies act the same as all the
ones, they act as a cartel to limit speech.
So that's point number one is that nobody believes this argument that these companies should
be free to do whatever they want.
The second point is that, listen, the founding document of our country, it's the Declaration
of Independence, it says that all of us have rights, they're inalienable. That means they cannot be taken away, okay? And in the first couple hundred
years of this country, it meant that those rights meant that the government couldn't take
away your right to free speech. But now today, where does speech occur? It occurs on these
giant social networks that are privately owned, they're owned by these large corporations.
And the fact of matter is, if they take away your right to free speech on these platforms,
if they censor you, if they take part from you, if they do not have a right to free speech
in this country, that right needs to be protected.
The founding fathers did not anticipate that four people would be mitigating the majority
of conversations online.
It's, you know, like if you're, if you're taking off, if you look what happened to Bilo and Alex Jones,
like they don't exist in the public sphere anymore, right?
Like they've been unpersoned.
When these big tech companies all get together
as a cartel to the preview of your free speech rights,
you have been deep person, you've been digitally deep person,
and they're not just doing it on speech,
they're also taking away your right
to engage in payments in transactions to earn a living.
And unless we stop this now, it'll
keep going. We have to address the giant elephant in the room, huge, which is Trump. I think a lot of
this, you know, he hit its pinnacle when people were saying the sitting president of the United
States could not be on Twitter. That was, I think we all agree, ridiculous and absurd that the president
who was duly elected couldn't have a Twitter account.
But then with the January 6th and the inciting of the violence and you know all the stuff that's coming out and obviously we'll see where that all winds up. I'm curious what everybody thinks here
about should Trump or is Trump being put back and reinstated on Facebook or Twitter?
And it's supposed to be a lifetime ban on Twitter, but if corporate governance changes and people lobby for that, do we think that there is any kind of situation where Trump has his Twitter handle or Facebook accounts
reinstated and should he have them reinstated?
I think Jason, what you suggested is probably the most reasonable thing, which was there is a time-based
penalty. We're getting through, we're probably what, a third or two-thirds of the way through
the January 6th stuff, so that's going to come and go.
And I think all roads will probably lead to a conclusion that after three years, it's
probably okay to let this guy back and be able to tweet.
I mean, it's not, this is not, you know, controversial stuff at this point.
You know that the current thing is moving on from Ukraine
when the topic all of a sudden is January 6th
all over again in Trump, which it is on MSNBC.
It's all January 6th all the time again.
So listen, I mean, this is not a justification
for the widespread censorship that we've seen.
Like I mentioned, we've gone so far beyond isolated cases.
Now it's entire categories of thought.
And this has to be stopped.
Well, what you're feeling on Trump should he be reinstated with you were running Twitter?
Would you have done a time based? You don't like Trump. Just don't follow him. I mean,
but, but frankly, it's, it's, um, listen, I don't miss the tweets at all. My thoughts
it. Yeah. I don't miss the tweets at all. I really don't. Um, they were damaging your
party. That's how you felt.
My thoughts have evolved. Before when he first got banned, I was really supportive of it.
And there was part of me, which was just afraid that he would get reelected, etc., etc.
Now come two years later and to see all of the stuff and the escalation of de-platforming,
I think the problem is exactly what you guys have just talked about, which
is the person that does it today points to the person that does it yesterday, who points
to the person that did it the day before as the justification. And so even though we don't
want to draw a straight line between an Alex Jones and a Trump and climate change, unfortunately
there is this line. And so in general now, a much more free speech because I think it's
much more fragile than I thought it was before. So your opinion has evolved and challenging people should respond to
new data. I appreciate that. And I was a person that, you know, as David said, was a little
disingenuous in the sense that I kind of was for free speech as long as it was stuff that I agreed
with. But two years later, a much more on David's original camp now, which is we just need to
establish this as a pillar of society and not deviate and find credible voices on both
sides.
And then algorithmically and through people power, meaning through crowd wisdom of the
crowd's type stuff, help people figure out what is truthful and how much truth there
is because that's a tractable problem.
But the minute you start canceling stuff today as I sit in 2022, what I would tell you is I think it's very, very bad because it's going in a really bad place.
Frabler, what are your thoughts on Trump specifically because it does seem like that's a part of the undercurrent here.
Of, you know, he's going to be coming back possibly, going to be running again, and January 6th is concerned.
He's got the truth social network, download the app.
Listen to what he's got to say.
It's rocking and rolling over there on the truth app.
I heard they took it down like it wasn't even working, right?
The new thing he built.
But what is that, what is that spec trading at?
Was it a 20 billion or something?
Still doing well.
But look, they had, you know, obviously a reaction, a market-driven
reaction to the fact that he was taking off Twitter.
And he said, I'm going to go make an alternative.
And that's, you know, certainly proving to be technically difficult.
But as we all know, it's not technically impossible.
He just got probably the wrong people working on it.
But if they wanted to have an alternative platform for hearing that voice, you know, have
at it. I don't know what else to say.
I mean, Twitter's decision. They're curating their audience. All these guys want to be free speech
advocates, but at the end of the day, they're all editorializing. And that's just the world we found
ourselves in. I hope Elon takes a slight jammer to that. Yeah. I mean, it's exactly what Shema said is
they're all they all believe in free speech and free markets when it produces the outcome they like.
But when the outcome is not what they like,
all of a sudden they're like,
whoa, whoa, whoa, these companies are monopolies.
Well, and here's another opportunity.
If you're not libertarian and believe in free speech
and constitution, you could buy shares,
you could lead a group, start a DAO, start a hedge fund,
whatever, build a block to buy a bunch of shares.
And then you can get a board seat on Twitter and you can have this debate on the board of
Twitter.
And it's absolutely right.
You are absolutely right.
And you can see, by the way, small hedge funds with small amounts of capital like engine
number one, they were able to go up against it, exon, and beat them.
So to your point Jason, for the people that actually want to censor more, if they can organize
the capital, they absolutely have the right to do that.
I think that if they're able to do it, they should win.
That's what Mark Salano was kind of getting at.
Look, if you don't like the free speech that's happening on Twitter, go create your own
social network, because that's what they were saying before.
But the shares didn't have influence.
That's how corporations work.
They share so the votes. Yeah.
Friedberg update us on, you know, the Ukraine is in month two now.
I'm sorry, Ukraine is in month two.
Sorry for putting the thumb before it.
It's a tough habit to break.
Friedberg tell us, you know, the second order,
third order effects of fertilizer and food at this point.
We've had this back and forth.
And now I think the world is starting to realize
Hey, Freeberg was right. These downstream effects are going to be
significant. I
SU a question about these which is can the world not mobilize if these are about 1% of the calories 20 or 30% of the
Calories to start a country could the world not mobilize to find other caloric sources?
Rice fish soybeans whatever or is our system so fragile that we can't in the country, could the world not mobilize to find other caloric sources, rice, fish,
soybeans, whatever, or is our system so fragile that we can't rally around sending food
to anywhere on the planet despite the fact that we can fly anywhere and go on vacation
for two weeks, anywhere on the planet?
No, the food system is complex and efficient, but it does not have strong redundancy or malleability.
So take, for example, how do you get flour?
You get flour in your food from a food company
that bought the flour from a miller.
There are mills around the world that process wheat into flour.
You can't take that same mill
and process corn into flour. You can't take that same mill and process corn into flour.
There's different technology, different equipment that's used, same with soybeans and so
on. So when you look at how the food supply chain is constructed, you know, there's a local
point of consumption, which is a store, then there's a food processor, and you work your
way kind of up the supply chain, and there's a certain input that's required to make the
output that people consume.
And so calories while they might be fungible, practically speaking, or fundamentally speaking,
they're not necessarily fungible, practically speaking on the ground when you actually try
and plug in, let's say soybeans into the milling supply chain to make the pasta or the
bread that everyone consumes in Tunisia, it's not going to work.
And the same is true with rice.
And then the more important dynamic force that's underway is that these markets for food and commodities globally
are not controlled by government.
They're controlled by private businesses.
And there is a market for these products.
And so what happens is as the food supply chain threat hit, countries
like China and others started to stockpile, they started to buy lots and lots of supply, drive
up their stocks and their reserves, you know, for fear of the famine that's about to hit us
in about nine months. And when they did that, there was now less food available to Tunisia,
and to Eritrea, and to Egypt, and so on. And so we're starting to see the effects of that dislocation,
driving dynamic market forces,
where certain buyers stock up,
and then the folks that can't afford to step in,
not being able to acquire product and being left.
So not only do we have a local production differential
that makes it hard to have all calories be fungible,
we're also seeing this dynamic where there's a bifurcation,
where the halves have more, and the halves not have less. And that's going to really make this
famine kind of hit home in a really, really sad way in the month to come. We're already
seeing, as I mentioned two weeks ago, yeah, as I mentioned a few weeks ago, the fertilizer
problem driving acreage down. So the USDA farmer port comes out, they survey farmers and
figure out how much they're going to plant every year. And they just downgraded the number
of corn acres. They're going to get planted this year, which is happening starting this
month from 93 million acres to 89 million. That doesn't sound like a lot, but 4 million
acres. 4 million acres coming out of production of corn in the US is an incredible amount of
calories that are not going to be planted to corn. And so that has all these downstream effects.
And again, this crop doesn't come to harvest
until September or October,
then it's going to get processed and it turns into food.
So by the time the effects of this decision-making
hit the marketplace,
the availability of calories and the stockpiling that's going on,
it's like, boom, some countries are going to be,
they're going to have a limited budget,
they're only going to be able to access so much food, and they can't access any. And other countries are going to be, you know, they're going to have a limited budget. They're only going to be able to access so much food and they can't access any.
And other countries are going to be fine. The United States is going to be fine.
Western Europe will be fine. China will be fine. Sri Lanka is going to be a mess.
Northern and Eastern Africa is going to be a mess. I mean, there's like places around the world
that we are going to have to scramble. I don't have a real easy answer. There's no simple plug and
play here. It's going to be a really complex set of problems that are going to have to scramble. I don't have a real easy answer. There's no simple plug and play here.
It's going to be a really complex set of problems
that are going to need to be solved.
Well, Sri Lanka does grow a lot of its own food,
so they may be okay because they don't have lots of food.
They're on the emplorers, right?
I mean, they're pretty big net importer.
So they make a lot of food,
but they rely on imports a lot for calories there.
So yeah, I mean, that's the case with a lot of places.
Around the world, a lot of people think,
oh, we have farmers, but most countries, you know, particularly
the developing world are net importers.
They rely on third party supplies of food.
Sure, but a lot of what you're talking about though are not their process foods that
come into the country.
Sax, anything to add here?
Well, I mean, I think that the Ukraine war is kind of entering a chronic phase. I mean, the sort of entering a new phase, the first phase, you'd have to say that Ukrainians won.
You know, Russia wanted to topple Zelensky's regime, maybe take Keefe.
They obviously failed in that.
Now we're in this phase where the fighting is over in the Donbass.
It's basically the civil war has been going on there since 2014.
And really that's what it's now about.
Zelensky has acknowledged that Ukraine will not be part of NATO.
So that issue is kind of off the table.
And so what they're really fighting over now is the status of these disputed territories
in eastern Ukraine.
And I think it's going to go on for a long time.
That's what General Milley testified.
It could go on for years.
I think it's going to become a sort of permanent feature in the background of Biden's presidency.
I think the good news is that hopefully the war three aspect is off the table.
It seems like the calls for us to impose a no fly zone or to put boots on the ground,
which you were hearing a lot of a few weeks ago. It seems like that's off the table. So now it's just going to be a
protracted, I think, civil war going on in the Donbass with between Ukraine and Russia and their proxies,
which would mean, it's sad, I'm not if I'm wrong, that Putin will be hobbled forever. They're not going to be a world power.
And his power is going to deprecate because he's going to be busy fighting this non-winnable war
for some period of time, which is in a way saying Biden did it perfectly and checkmated him.
Saying that's going to be your assessment.
If this actually does go down this way, that there's like a civil war going on and and
and Putin is crippled, that would be checkmate or no.
I think I think that clearly the the state department strategy here is to make Putin bleed
in eastern Ukraine and to retract this thing and make it go on as long as possible. I think
that's a risky strategy because this thing could always spin out of control. It's risky but could
it be effective?
Is there a chance it could be effective?
Well, I mean, if the goal is to bleed Putin,
yes, it could be effective bleeding Putin, however,
I don't know that that needed to be
the key geostrategic objective of the United States right now.
I don't know. I don't know, because
like China is our main threat.
China is a peer competitor to the United States.
Russia is not.
Our economy is 15 times bigger than Russia's.
China's economy is about the same size as ours.
That is a real threat.
So, you know, there are cost to us as well.
They're clearly cost a potent of this,
but there are huge cost to us as well.
Freeberg described the risk to supply chain.
We've had to now spend a lot more money
building up the defense in Europe.
We're going to be pinned down in Europe. We should really be moving some of those resources
from Europe to East Asia. I mean, that's really where the pivot to Asia is what we thought we
supposed to be doing until quite recently. Now we're going to be bogged down there.
And there's still risk of inflation and recession in the US. And I think if we are
in a recession later this year, I think a lot of people in the US will be asking, what was
this all for? And if you go read my article that just came out yesterday with those based on my
speech, um, is published in the American conservative, look, this war was easily avoidable. I mean,
the State Department could have avoided this war very easily. Well, I thought you're, I listened
to your speech. I thought your points that you were very clear on,
hey, Putin started this, he is the aggressor.
It's his responsibility.
But, you know, we do need to think about our foreign policy
as a country and regime change is probably not
a winning strategy for us.
Well, though, in this case, it might,
it seems like it's a possibility now.
So who knows?
I don't think we're having a regime change.
But if we do, there's no reason to believe that we're going to get something much better. In every case't think we're having a regime change, but if we do, there's no reason to believe
that we're going to get something much better.
In every case, when we push for a regime change, we've actually gotten the same or worse.
So yeah, I don't think that should be our objective.
You know, look, I think we have a bunch of bad options now that the war's already started.
The best option would have been to avoid this war in the first place.
And if this thing drags on for years and the US economy tips into recession, people will
look back and say, why didn't Joe Biden State Department in the year 2021 do a much more
effective job preventing this war?
Let me ask this follow-up question as we wrap here.
Chimoff, I've been thinking about what should a strategic objective be for America?
And the number one strategic objective I could think of was, or one of the top ones would
be to build a strong relationship with India, which obviously has an adversarial relationship
with China already on the border of Pakistan and then obviously has relations with Russia.
What would be on the top of each of your lists,
Sax and Chimoff, Chimoff, you know, first,
on priority here if we're thinking fresh,
looking at the world with China in retreat,
sort of just engaging from the West,
with Russia on their heels,
what could the United States and the West do
as a preemptive measure to really solidify democracy and, you know,
the world order, a peaceful world order.
I'll answer it slightly differently, which is we need to put ourselves in a position to not be
dependent on any country, because then we can actually dictate what we think the right approach
and solution is from first principles and have the courage to stick it through to get to the other
side of it. So there are really two things we need to do. The first, which we've kind of perverted
unnecessarily is energy independence. And we've allowed too many people to conflate and
muddy the water on what energy independence means. Nobody was ever advocating for coal,
but the amount of coal that we could have burned as a bridge fuel to LNG, which could have been a bridge fuel to things like nuclear and wind and solar, that path was
pretty clear, but we got in our own way.
We have to get out of our own way.
So energy independence, I think, beyond anything else, strategic, probably in order of magnet,
it is this most important thing. And then, secondarily, there are certain areas for the future of those future economies,
where we need to have complete capability and know how, and the most important ones there
are the specialty chemicals that we need, specialty chemicals, that we need to basically
support climate change writ large to support battery production writ large. And then semiconductors get those two things completely under US control
on top of energy independence. And honestly, we would be a dominant world power for the next
200 years on our terms. So the road to resiliency, SACs, you're now the secretary of state,
what are your key priorities?
The U.S. Grand Strategy has always been to prevent the rise of a pure competitor who can dominate
their region and then challenge us for global hegemony.
There's only one country in the world that can do that right now to us, which is China.
So the pivot to Asia, as Obama said, was fundamentally correct that we have not followed through
and executed it.
And now, our attention is distracted and bogged down
by what's happening in Europe.
I would seek a negotiated settlement to this war.
Now that the Zelensky government has survived,
Putin has been unable to take Western Ukraine.
And furthermore, that Zelensky has given up
being part of NATO.
The only thing left is this fight in the Donbass.
There's an agreement already on the table called the Minsk Accords that can allow the
settle that.
Meanwhile, pivot to Asia.
Wrap it up.
Meanwhile, pivot to Asia create a strong alliance of countries in East Asia who are threatened
by China.
We already are friends with many of them.
You've got Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, you've got Vietnam, create a balancing alliance
of those countries to prevent China from rising to the point where it can threaten us for
global Germany.
That should be our main priority geopolitically.
Great.
All right.
There you have it, folks, for the Rain Man David Sachs, the dictator, Chimoff, Polly Hoppatea,
and the Sultan of Science, David Freibur,
I'm your boy, J. Cal,
and we will see you all in Miami,
May 15th, 16th, and 17th.
Love you boys.
Bye-bye, love you besties.
Bye-bye, bye-bye.
We're like your winners, right?
Rainman David Sack
We open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it.
I'm going to the swine.
What are your winners ride?
Besties are gone.
Go through the map.
That's my dog, take it out, listen to your driveway.
Sit down.
Oh man, my ham is actually a meaty ass place.
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug or two
because they're all just like this sexual tension
but we just need to release that house.
What, your beef?
What, your beer of beef?
Beef, what?
We need to get merch.
I'm doing all this!
I'm doing all this!