All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E94: NFT volume plummets, California's overreach, FBI meddling, climate change & national security
Episode Date: September 1, 2022(0:00) Bestie intros + Burning Man debate (4:16) NFT trading volume plummets (10:20) California's new fast food wages bill, government creating bad incentives, how the free market response will furthe...r the labor issue (40:15) Zuckerberg on Rogan, FBI interference with the Hunter Biden laptop story (52:00) Balancing fighting climate change without harming the economy or national security, EU energy policy failure (1:06:04) Besties reflect on Mikhail Gorbachev's passing 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://cointelegraph.com/news/looks-bare-opensea-turns-into-nft-ghost-town-after-volume-plunges-99-in-90-days https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XlXSGqvP-A8 https://thefederalist.com/2022/08/30/zuckerbergs-admission-of-fbi-meddling-in-2020-election-is-even-bigger-than-it-seems/ https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/23/us/california-nuclear-power-diablo.html https://www.wsj.com/articles/california-fast-food-wages-would-be-set-by-government-under-bill-passed-by-state-senate-11661811509
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, everybody, welcome to episode 94 of All In.
This is a summer unprepared episode.
There's not much news.
We're going to wing it with me again in his golfing cap.
The rainman himself, David Sacks.
You do okay, buddy?
There is this good.
Yeah.
All right.
I'm kind of annoyed that we're taping on a Wednesday.
You know, this is a slow news week.
It's a slow news week. Well, that's not why we're taping on a Wednesday is because know, this is a slow news week. It's a slow news week.
Well, that's not why we're taping on a Wednesday
because you have to wanna go to Burning Man.
Why, what I remember?
Listen, everybody has to get their burn off.
Sax, have you ever been to Burning Man?
Yeah, I've been before.
Do you like it?
Sax, was that Burning Man really?
He was there on three-cent Thursday.
I've been a couple of times.
I think it's a cool experience doing,
worth doing, you know, one or twice in your life.
It's not something I want to do every year, but I know a lot of people do like doing it every year.
They're like really into it.
I'm not really into it that way, but I think it was a worthwhile experience to go at least once.
Timoff, do you have you been?
Uh, no.
Freeberg, have you been?
I've not been, no.
I have no desire, no.
I don't like driving in the car for a long period of time.
Well, by the way, I'll tell you why I don't
really have a huge desire to go.
I don't really have a huge desire at this point in my life
to want to do a ton of drugs.
That's not just about that.
Really?
No, really, seriously.
What it's really about is art.
Are we joking right now? It's, if you like art, you know, like music, it's not what it's really about. Are we joking right now?
If you like art, you know, like music, it's amazing.
It's amazing.
I really like art.
I think I actually collect phenomenal art.
In fact, I like to go to like freeze the Biennale.
It would blow your mind.
You don't see our museums.
No, no, no.
You have no idea the scale of the art there is tremendous.
It is extraordinary.
And if you're into music, can we just, can we just call it what it is? It started out as a festival that did celebrate art
and creativity. Yeah. And over time became mass market. And in order to become mass market,
there is still an element of that. But it's a huge party. And I think people should just be more
honest that it's super fun. You can really rage for a weekend or for an entire week and people should enjoy
themselves.
But let's not like have to put all these labels about how like intellectually superior
it is and how you feel like bullsh**.
I don't think it's a bunch of people doing drugs.
It's okay.
It's kind of going to drugs.
The thing that's interesting about it is, it's really about community.
A large number of people get together, they build camps.
To do drugs?
No.
In a community.
No, you've never been. You would, literally, that's not the vibe there.
The vibe is really dancing and creativity and art and community.
But anyway.
So it's like a rave.
It's, why are everybody's on drugs?
Yeah.
I mean, sure.
I mean, with neon, with a lot of neon.
With a lot of neon.
No, it's, it's, it's much, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, It might be those experiences are the best when you're sober best best. You have to understand the great going to EDC sober
I've never been to EDC, but this there's a great filter here, which is
You've got a drive six seven hours into the desert and you have to survive you have to bring everything with you and bring everything out
You know, whatever it is a bathroom water food and it is harsh
I mean, it's a hundred plus degrees in the day and it's 40 degrees that night. It's not easy to survive.
It's hard.
It used to be that way.
When I went, huh, when I went,
I went with a bunch of guys who had the whole thing
like wired in and they had like these yurt
and it was like a whole community
and they had like running water and a kitchen
and it was basically glamping.
It was glamping.
There are people,
is that hard to survive?
No, no, there are, I mean, it's hard to do,
there are people who glamp.
It is hard to do that because you have to,
you're supposed to go,
You have to go with people,
you have to go with people who know what they're doing
and are highly organized.
So, they take months to set that up.
So, yes, they spent the whole year
whatever setting it up and it was really elaborate.
And then there was an article like in the New York Times
basically saying that, you know,
that they were ruining
Burning Man because they were making it too nice.
That was part of the...
That's what I went to the too nice experience.
So they wrote that about you.
Yeah, basically.
You ruined Burning Man.
Great.
Thanks for ruining Burning Man. I don't know if you've been following the NFT story.
We'll cue that up as our next story.
Open C, the marketplace, the eBay of NFTs, if you will. The volume has dropped
99% since May 1st peak of $406 million in a single day.
On August 28th, volume dropped to around $5 million, down 99% according to decentralized app
tracker, DAP radar. On a monthly basis, OpenC's volume has dropped 90%
according to Dune Analytics.
The floor price of a board ape has now dropped by 53%.
If you remember, OpenC raised 300 million
at a $13.3 billion valuation
December 2021 in a round led by Coto and paradigm. To put that in
perspective, that was nine whole months ago. My how the world has changed.
Fripper, what's your take on NFTs and this whole boondoggle? I don't know how to
how we look back on it. Yeah, I don't know. I mean, we've had a lot of bubbles as a
species. This is just another one. I thought we were going to stop doing stock market crashing stories.
Well, this is a different market.
What do you think?
Did you invest in any of these entities?
Where the age of month of this story, which is
fill in the blank asset class crashed?
Yeah.
The question I have here, Saks,
is do you think that this is the end of the category, though?
Do you think that it's like category ending and do you think there was ever anything interesting
here?
Because you took, you heard a lot of bitches like I did for how NFTs were going to change
everything.
You know what, I'll say something.
Because I liken this to the point, just to tie it back to what we just talked about.
At the end of the day, I think I've said this in the past, but with differentiates humans from all other species
on Earth is our ability to communicate and tell stories.
A story is like a narrative about something that doesn't exist, and by telling that narrative
you can create collective belief in something, and then that collective belief drives behavioral
change and action in the world.
Everything from religion to government to money to art is all kind of driven all markets are driven by this notion of narrative and collective belief that arises from that narrative. So when you go to an art dealer and you have a sit down with an art dealer, you might appreciate the art. But then the narrative begins. And the narrative is this artist to this and they came from this and the artist that looks like this created at 6.8 million and this artist is only trading for 3.2 million
and the whole narrative takes you away into, okay, I should pay 3.2 million for this piece
of art and ultimately it will be worth more.
And that's the fundamental premise of markets.
Is you're buying it to something not necessarily always and this is such a minority now it's
scary.
You used to be that you don't want a piece of a business or a productive asset, you pull
cash out of it.
Hopefully you get more cash out than you put in when you buy it.
Nowadays markets allow you to trade.
Therefore the majority of market-based decisions are driven by, if I buy something for X,
I'm going to be able to sell it to someone else for Y.
And so the narrative is driven around, I'm paying this, someone else will pay why down the road, I'll make money from that. And this has been repeated
a thousand times over. It's been repeated in the ICO tokens. It's been repeated in the
Tulip bubble. It's been repeated in every art market and subsidiary of every art market
since the dawn of time, since the dawn of markets. And I think the NFTs are really just one
more kind of example where this beautiful narrative
has formed the digitization of art, but it is no different than any other form of assets
that we tell ourselves a story around.
And we convince ourselves that I'm paying something today and someone else will pay something
more for me tomorrow.
And I will also say that in the last year with the liquidity that we saw the last two
years, it leached into the stock market where there's supposed to be more rational behavior that ultimately the
cash flows of an asset you're buying should generate more for you than the money you're
spending to buy that asset.
And ultimately, you can maybe trade out of it early, but still so much of it became about
well, the stock is going up.
Therefore if I spend X and want to also spend Y and I'll make money on the stock with
no underlying assertion of what's the productivity of that business, what's the return
on cash going to be based on the cash flows coming out of that business over time, or any
of the fundamentals around it.
And so so much of our discussion and distortion has really been driven by this narrative fueling.
And I think the NFTs are an example, but there are many others.
And we're going to see many more as long as humans have the ability
to communicate with each other.
Any, you have any take on it, Tramoff?
I think Freeberg's mostly right.
Like, I do think that there is this thing.
The Burning Man Kachela example
is the best way to describe this.
A lot of these things are the same.
But when a few people approach something early,
they're too insecure to admit that it's the same
as something else.
And so they spend a lot of time trying to tell you
a narrative about why it's totally different.
The Buffett example would be the quote,
when somebody tells you that this time is different,
it's probably not that different.
Or the other quote that's while worn in history is like,
you know, things don't necessarily
repeat in history, but they rhyme.
All of this is trying to say that other than like fundamental leaps of science, there's
not a lot of stuff that's new in the world.
You know, we are repeating things over and over.
And one of the things we repeat is the social capital that you get from having certain
choices and then getting other people to
validate those choices because you want to feel like you're, you know, worthwhile.
And this happened in NFTs and I'm sure in the first phase of different movements in art,
that also happened. It's probably happened in a bunch of other markets as well. So these things are more similar than they are different.
Kachala and Burning Man, the same.
NFTs and part of the art market, the same.
Everybody that runs to you with why it's so different, how would you just have a grain
of salt and say, you don't need to be different.
Just enjoy it because you think it's cool.
All right, we can go either to this California fast food wages story or we can go to Goldman
Sacks workers are quitting on mass because
Goldman Sachs is saying you got to come back to the office five days a week. Where do you want to go, boys?
I
Think the California thing is really interesting just the the three things that California did in the last week
I don't know if you guys saw but number one is they
Basically said that you know you have they're to ban ICE combustion engines, I think, by
2035.
So you have to be battery EV.
And the new sales, you can still have a new sales, sorry, yeah, new sales, which is
the first in the country to do it.
And just to go back to a second California is the largest auto market in the United States.
And effectively, you know, Trump and California got into a huge spat because California had
certain emission standards that were tougher than the rest of the United States.
And, you know, the federal government tried to sue California and back and forth all of
this rigour morale.
So California's always sort of led on climate.
That was one thing.
Then the second thing is they said, we're going to create, you know, a state-sponsored organization
to set the minimum wage rates
for fast-food workers, pause what we think about that.
And then the third thing is that this Congresswoman, I think, or this assembly person, Buffy
Wicks, passed the law through the Senate and through the House that essentially holds
social media companies liable for the mental well-being and the mental health
of kids. And depending on where you're lying on all these issues, it's like an interesting
kind of lens in which where like California is really become extremely, extremely
legislatively active and basically imposing their will on free markets in the economy.
There.
Yeah, and for people who don't know the FESF food issue was they want to move to a more
European style where instead of unions debating with individual corporations, McDonald's,
Burger King, whoever, what they're going to pay their employees or employees having
that discussion one-on-one, they want the state, some state
authority to pick the amount per hour, fast food, companies pay, and then I guess disintermediate
the unions. It's kind of confusing, but interestingly, our friend, rena gonzalez if you remember she's the one who told elan to you know
f off
uh...
and was a former uh... democratic legislator uh...
uh... she introduced the bill when she was in the assembly and so
it's kind of a weird
approach
uh... i'm not sure why the government is not it's not
it's not disarm eating the unions she
leuagan's all is
flat sure i guess now she's the former democratic legislature who But it's not disarming the unions. She, Lorraine Gonzalez, Fletcher, I guess, now.
She's the former Democratic legislature who drove Elon out of the state.
Remember when she said, you know, F.E.
Lawn?
And now, our bond is.
And she works.
And now our bond is.
And now our bond is.
Message received.
Yes, and he left.
Great, great move for the state.
So she is now running one of the biggest unions.
And what she said is that this bill will move California closer to the labor model used in
Europe where unions are still negotiating for wages and work conditions, but in an entire
sector with some sort of government board rather than company by company.
So in other words, it's too slow to unionize company by company.
They would just want to unionize entire sectors of the economy.
Now, the thing that's really crazy about this
minimum wage proposal is that, like you said, Jason,
it isn't just that they set a minimum wage,
they created a 10 person panel.
So there's a new government agency
that's gonna regulate fast food, the fast food industry.
You know they're not gonna stop a minimum wage, it's gonna be work conditions. So now you're turning fast food, the fast food industry, you know they're not going to stop them in a way, it's going to be work conditions. So now you're turning fast food restaurants into a highly regulated
part of the economy. And the weird thing is it's not even just all fast food, it's basically chains
that have more than 100 fast food restaurants nationally. So in other words, if you're a
local operator of two McDonald's, you'd be subject to this
10-person board, but if you own 20 restaurants that aren't part of a national chain in California,
then you're not.
And so the weird thing is that some workers in the fast food industry could get this new minimum wage of $22,
whereas other workers who work for, you know, they're not part of a major chain, would get the statewide minimum wage of $22, whereas other workers who work for,
you know, they're not part of a major chain,
would get the statewide minimum wage of 15.
So it's kind of unfair in that some parts
of the restaurant industry are being regulated
and others aren't.
Is there any justification here that you can think of
to not let the free market do its thing, Friedberg?
Well, if you represent the workers,
you're saying, hey, pay them $22, and you can.
And here's what that points out.
It actually points out that there's probably
a pretty big business flaw in a business
that's so reliant on commodity labor.
And that business, in and of itself,
is not as valuable as you might have thought it was before.
Think about it this way.
There's a company called McDonald's and then there's another company called McDonald's
labor.
And what happened before is McDonald's employed people to do work at McDonald's.
And maybe what happens in the future is all those people are looking left and looking
right and they're like, you know what?
McDonald's has nothing without us.
We are the business. We deserve the value. So in terms of how much of the value of
the business flows to the shareholders of McDonald's versus the employees at work at McDonald's,
the employees at work at McDonald's are saying, let's go do a startup. And our startup
is called union. And our business that's called union is now going to provide a bunch of
services to McDonald's. And those services, we're going to start to value capture what they're doing.
And it indicates that maybe there's something inherently disadvantaged in that model.
And it could be that the argument could be made to that business in the early 20th century.
In the late 19th century, yeah, the 19th century, early 20th century, and beyond,
that you could build a good advantage business because there was such an eager, hungry workforce,
people looking for work. People would come and work for nickel and hour or whatever.
And so you as a business owner could make a lot of money doing that. You could sell a product
for a dollar, pay people five cents to make it for you. But nowadays those people are looking left,
they're looking right, and they're like, wait a second, we are the business. Or we're 90% of the value of this business.
And so, a couple of things will happen.
Number one is the inherent business model of a company that's so dependent on commodity service
is going to be flawed and challenged in the 21st century.
And fast food reference aren't going to be as valuable.
Businesses that rely on commodity service are not going to be as valuable.
Number two, businesses are going to automate.
So new businesses will emerge that actually do the fast food
work or do the car building work or do the dock loading
and unloading work that are automated
and they'll have an inherent advantage in the economy
and they'll win.
And I think number three is that in the near term,
consumers will suffer because prices will go up
because someone has to pay for the incremental cost
of running this unionized business,
and that will ultimately be the customer of that business.
I'll say the fourth point is,
I am concerned about this sort of behavior
in regulated spaces where the government has actually control
over the market itself.
So this is a good example of this is the,
you know, we had our friend Ryan from Flexboard on
a few times, but you can't just start up a shipping company
and have a dock.
The docks are run by the cities and they're run by the state.
So those docks, access to those docks, access to that market is regulated by the government.
Then what happens is the union, the labor company, can actually have regulatory capture through
the government of a segment of the economy.
That's where things start to get dangerous. Look, I'm all four unions if they want to show that a business is reliant on a commodity
labor force and commodity service and they all band together and start a startup.
I mean, that's what we do. We all start a company and go and compete.
But the issue is then when the government creates regulatory capture over a segment of the economy
and make it difficult for the free market to ultimately do its job of either automating or
creating a newly-advanced business model or all those things that allow us to progress.
Automating is coming. A couple of us made a bet on a crazy idea of automated robotic coffee
called CafeX. I'm not to talk around book here and the company really struggled during the pandemic,
but they have two units at SFO, which are doing $73,000 in two units last month.
And I'm like, wow, the company figured it out,
and there's another company doing franchise.
This is the sad thing that California doesn't realize.
It's like, I think that the folks writing these laws
have just an extremely poor understanding
of economics and capitalism,
because the first thing that it does effectively,
and everybody can understand this,
is it caps the profitability of a company, right?
Because it effectively says,
if you look at an industry that is over-earning,
then this council will essentially see money
that should be reappropriated to employees.
Now, that idea is not necessarily a bad thing.
For example, you see that all the time in technology, right?
If you look at the EBITDA margins of like big tech and how they've changed, they've actually
eroded over time as the companies have had to generate more revenue because employees
demand more and more of those gains.
That's an implicit part of how the free market economy works in technology.
So, you know, if you don't feel like you're getting paid well at, you know,
Google, you go to meta and you get paid more and vice versa.
So, there's a natural effect of people being able to do that in certain markets.
But when you impose a margin and essentially say, you can only make 10% because the rest of
these profits I'm giving to these folks because I've imputed
their new wage to be something that's much greater
than what they were paying before.
The unfortunate thing is what Friedberg said,
which is that you will rebuild that business
without those people.
Because it is the rational thing to do.
And so unfortunately, what you'll do is you'll take
a bunch of people that should be in the economy
Right think about like new immigrants or young people that are first getting on their feet. They'll take these jobs
You know, I mean I've worked a bunch. Yeah, I worked a burga king when I was 14. That's how I got my first
You those jobs won't be there to be had and that has
Ripple effects as these folks get older or try to get more ingrained in the economy.
And this is what I wish California would understand is that these things aren't free.
And even though they seem like you're coming to someone's rescue,
there's all kinds of unintended consequences and very obvious consequences that you're ignoring
by not really understanding how the economy works.
I'll just say, like, look, these people, I'm sorry, SAC, but I mean, you know, the people that are elected
are elected by the people to represent the people. They're not elected to govern over the long-term
plan necessarily for the state. And while you think that those two may be the same, the near-term
incentive and the near-term motivation of someone who's voting is,
I want to get a benefit for myself sooner rather than later. Not necessarily, I want to make
an investment for 30 or 40 years down the road. And if you're an individual that's struggling in
some way, you're going to prioritize the former over the ladder. And you're going to elect someone
who's going to go put in place public policy that's going to benefit you. So I don't necessarily raise my hand and say, I blame the people that have been elected.
I raise my hand and I say, look, this is the natural evolution of what happens in a democracy where there
is a struggling class and there were where there is some sort of viewed disparity or considered
disparity that this is what's going to happen in a democracy under this condition.
Is that you're going to elect individuals who are going to go and govern and they're going to make
decisions and they're going to benefit those individuals that got them elected over the short term
and there may be some real long-term damage that results.
Sex is a part of this problem is that people are now looking to the government to solve their
problems in life versus maybe looking internally to solve their problems and you
know negotiate better salaries and mental health.
I think you have to give people a little bit more credit.
Nobody was asking for them to step in like this.
Look, this is as much for the politicians as it is for any of the workers.
What's happening right now?
The National Restaurant Association and all these restaurant lobbying groups are flooding,
the state, the legislators, the governor with lobbying money
because they want to get this bill modified, tempered or thrown out.
And so this is basically a racket.
Like look, as a public policy matter, it makes zero sense for the same worker, if they go
work at, say, jiffy lub or something outside the restaurant industry, they get the California
minimum wage of $15.
If they go to a mom and pop restaurant, get the California minimum wage of $15. If they go to a mom and pop restaurant,
they get the minimum wage of $15.
But if they go to McDonald's,
they now get a new minimum wage,
specifically for chain restaurants of $22.
That simply makes no sense.
There's no polypolicy rationale.
But the real question you have to ask,
and Trump is kind of getting at this
is why shouldn't it be $50?
Why shouldn't it be $100?
Well, the reason is because if you raise a minimum wage
too much, then these employers have a huge incentive
to replace that labor with automation.
And so the unintended consequence that Tomat
is talking about is that these big chain restaurants
are gonna rely even more heavily on automation now.
And they're gonna basically employ less of this labor
where the price has been artificially erased for that subsector of the economy from $15 to $22
for reasons that no one can really explain. So again, this is not for the benefit of workers,
it's for the benefit of the politicians. Look what's happening right now. There's all these
articles talking about the lobbyists coming in. They're going to Gavin Newsom begging him to be
their savior right now. And this is the game the california democratic party plays it's a one-party
state where they were basically business loves Gavin Newsom because he's a protector he's a
protection end of the extortion racket Lorraine against all is gets this bill passed which is basically
incredibly damaging to these chain restaurants and they have to go running to Gavin Newsom and beg him to either veto it or modify it,
temper the bill so it's not as destructive to their business.
He's a protection in the extortion racket but it's the same racket.
This is a one party state and what they're doing with chain restaurants they would do with every sector of the economy,
if they could, is just a matter of time.
And what is the purpose of the California government?
Like are there things they could be focusing's just a matter of time. And what is the purpose of the California government?
Are there things they could be focusing on other than this?
Maybe the free market settles this issue,
and they could focus on the rules.
To extract benefits from the private sector,
from basically the wealth producing part of the economy,
and to line their pockets, and the pockets of their supporters.
You know that the typical government worker in California
makes 53% more than a private sector counterpart.
And if you factor in all the pensions that I've been promised,
it's 100% more, okay?
So basically, there's a huge wealth transfer
that's taking place where the,
where basically the legislatures, the party,
they are transferring wealth from the private sector
to their supporters, their backers.
And Fribert, you talk about democracy.
Listen, I mean, California is a one-party state.
And ballot harvesting is legal here.
I'm not saying the votes are fake or anything like that, but there's a giant party machinery
and apparatus that literally just goes door to door and collects the ballots from their
supporters.
They literally know who their supporters are on a door by door household by household level
it is gone to the point now where the party machine is so powerful
they can pretty much run anybody for any post and get them elected
it's very hard for an outsider candidate that's the last it does feel like
you're getting tired of it here no but guys that's exactly how it works i mean like if
you look at
gavin newson's run to the governorship, he paid his dues, he did the right jobs, he waited
in line, he didn't, you know, rock the boat, independent of any of the things he did right
or wrong, and he had some pretty big moral transgressions. It didn't matter because it is about
paying your dues and waiting in line because there aren't any meaningful challenges here.
Done.
In LA right now, there's a mayoral race going on.
And the two, there's a runoff between Rick Caruso and Karen Bass.
Karen Bass is basically a product of the political machine.
She's basically worked her way up in the Democratic Party forever, sort of an inspiring candidate.
She's just basically a puppet of the machine.
Caruso is actually, he's a real estate developer who's built some of the most landmark spots
in LA, like the Grove, like the Pacific Palaces development.
He's made incredible, he's created incredible amenities for the LA area.
He's also been on a bunch of civic boards. You know, I had lunch with him
at the Grove and people were coming up to him. He's like a celebrity there taking photos with him.
He's the best possible candidate that you could have in a place like LA. He actually understands
business. I think he would restore law and order. I mean, all this kind of stuff, right? He's
spoken out about the homeless problem being out of control. And on election night, he had the most votes, but five days later, when they counted all
the, the basically the collected ballots through ballot harvesting, Karen Bass was up by like
five points. That is the power of the ballot harvesting. And I still hope that he wins.
But the party machine is so powerful, they can basically get almost anyone elected in
the state.
Can't the bad heart of the party know how to play the way?
It's gonna take a change at it.
What's that?
Just Dell's advocate here.
The bad heart of the thing can work both ways.
Like you could go collect Republican votes.
No, but you have to have the party infrastructure
to literally go to the door.
Okay, so the Republican has
and the Republican's having built that state.
Okay, let's think about it this way, okay?
So, you know, like your phone,
there's a platform and there's an app.
Think about the party as the platform
and the candidate as the app, okay?
The platform can drive a ton of traffic to whatever app they want.
A guy like Caruso doesn't have the party behind him.
So he has to build his own operating system.
He can use the media.
Right.
Exactly.
So he has to build his own platform.
Then he has to build his own candidacy.
So when you think about the amount of money that's required to do something like that, about
how hard it is to do it, it's very, very hard.
So he spent something like $100 million of his own money.
Hopefully he wins.
But if he doesn't, all the infrastructure, all the platform that he created just goes away.
And then the next candidate has to start from scratch.
This is why outsiders.
Why is the GOP investing in California?
They just don't think they have any shot.
Because it seems like the Democrats are investing heavily
in trying to flip, you know.
Look, there's a two to one party affiliation.
There's a two to one party affiliation in California
towards Democrats.
So look, I mean, the Republican party here is a mess
and that's part of the problem.
If the Republican party in California needs to move to the center, it's a plus 30 blue
state.
Unless they're willing to do that, they're not going to make progress.
But that could take generations to fix.
And with Roe v. Wade and that kind of stuff, it's going to be really hard to.
Look, there are pro-choice Republicans in California.
But all Newsom has to do is point to what's happening in Texas and all
of a sudden people kind of refer to their tribal political affiliations.
I'll make one more simple point.
The average voter in California probably knows more people that work at McDonald's than
are shareholders of McDonald's.
And I think in any time that there's policy that gets voted or gets suggested or ultimately
gets pathed, there's a side that benefits and there's a side that doesn't.
And if you know more people that benefit on one side than are hurt, you're probably going
to be supportive of that policy.
And I think that's probably a pretty simple rubric for thinking about how these things
over time evolve.
But do anything that's true now?
Why is that only true for California?
I mean, like in Florida.
I think the worst person in Florida knows more people who work in McDonald's and share
a hold of some McDonald's.
And they're not engaged in a systematic takeover of the private sector.
Yeah, philosophically, they believe in independence and businesses not being interfered by the government,
right?
That's a core tenet of the Republican Party.
Also, the sad reality is that within a few years,
unfortunately, you'll know a lot fewer people
that work in McDonald's because the number of jobs
for humans will be dramatically lower.
They got rid of the cashiers.
That's gone already.
Or what people will be more acutely aware of
in a number of years is how expensive McDonald's has gotten.
Because if the price don't, that won't be.
Because again, McDonald's has a very simple, not even the market.
McDonald's is not stupid.
They understand how to use Excel.
And so they'll think, well, I can amortize a robot versus actually jacking up prices
because what McDonald's understands is the sensitivity of pricing to demand for their
product. Yeah, that's right.
I mean, they are the most intelligent about how they price.
Everything at the sort of the lower end
where you're capturing, you know, nickels and dimes,
they are the most sophisticated
and understanding supply demand and the curves.
And so to think that they're not going to just invest
heavily now at the corporate level,
the next franchisee of McDonald's will still pay a million dollars for franchise fee, but we'll be given a
bevy of robots that they run for McDonald's and they'll have to hire half or a third less.
That's the real shame of this, which is the number of people that should actually be
gainfully employed in the economy will then shrink again. But in this case, it was because
legislators just completely don't understand
how incentives work and how the economy works. And people are not clued into exactly how
well narrow AI machine learning is doing right now. By the way, I'll say like, Jen, it's
really moving quickly. One general way to think about this is technology is introduced
and the technology creator captures roughly a third to a half
of the value increment because of the delivery of that technology, the productivity increment.
So let's say that it costs $15 an hour to employ a McDonald's labor today.
And let's say that you can build technology that the Amortized Robotic Cost is $10 an
hour.
There will be a technology company that will make 250 an hour off of that.
So net net, what ends up happening is productivity has to be gained and prices will reduce.
And so there are moments like this where there could be an acceleration of technology
and also an opportunity for new industries to emerge.
And when that happens, new jobs emerge too.
So it's, you know, maybe, look, I mean, at the end of the day, it seems blood-eye fish, but, you know, there's going to be a market opportunity that will arise.
I think we need to, like, just step back and ask, what is the type of economy that
California is creating here with this fast food law, with these other laws we're
talking about? This is a state in which you have a disappearing middle class. The
middle class has been moving out of the state by the hundreds of thousands.
In fact, last year, we had for the first time
net migration out of the state.
This has basically become a state
where the only middle class are basically the government workers
who, like we talked about, are making twice as much
as their private sector counterparts.
It's a state where you have the very rich and very poor
and the only middle class are government workers.
That is what we're creating.
The rich and the state have done really well over the last few decades of why because
of globalization.
So you take the two big industries in the state, tech and Hollywood entertainment.
They have benefited enormously through globalization because now you can sell software or you can
sell movie, music or music.
Exactly.
So now these industries have become massive global exports.
If you're in those industries in California, you've done really well because now your market
is the whole world.
The super rich have done really well.
That's funded the state.
That's allowed the state.
It's almost like a resource curse to have all of these bad policies that really hurt small business owners.
They've been moving out of the state.
And so again, you've got the very rich and very poor.
This is not an economic model for the entire nation.
This is what Gavin Newsom says he wants to take to all of America.
This is not a model for all of America.
In order for democracy to function, we need a thriving middle class.
And this is not a recipe for delivering a thriving middle class to America.
And I just want to show you guys a quick video, which is played for five seconds here.
We had invested in this company and got sold.
I'm not going to even say the name of it.
But if you watch this quick robot, this is a computer vision company out of Boston.
And like they are doing high-speed
picking of tomatoes and berries. Like, this is a two-year-old video when we invested in
one up getting bought by another company and they're doing vertical farming. But, and there's
companies doing this now for franchise. It's over. Like, we are within, you know, I think
five, ten years of a lot of these jobs.
I'm trying tens of millions of manual labor jobs being gone
and we're gonna look at this moment in time
where we try to squeeze an extra 10 or 20% out
of these, you know, employers.
And then you're gonna see these employers say,
you know what?
24-hour day robot.
Yeah, it's a little bit upfront cost.
I'll put it on at least and they're just going to move
to these robots.
It's really very close to being game over for manual labor.
And you can see it also with Cybertruck and, you know,
what are you lawns doing with AI?
And these things are getting so close.
And it's been, I don't know, when did you invest
in your first robotics or AI company, Sachs or Trimath?
Do you remember the first robotic or AI company, Sachs or Trima, do you remember the first
robotic or AI company you invested in and how long it was?
2014, it's a company called Relativity Space, which is 3D printing rockets and engines.
And basically they're able to use machines to learn how to actually fix the morphology
of all the materials
that they use to print better and cheaper and more useful rocketry.
That's an example, but then that led me down the garden path.
I was just going to say something more generic instead of talking our book, which is, I
think people misunderstand that Moore's law has actually not ended. And this is something that a friend
of mine, Adam DiAngelo, characterized to me, beautiful human being, you know, together.
He was a CTO Facebook when I worked there. So we, this is, you know, we've known each other
for 15, 16 years and now he's a CEO and founder of Cora. But the way that he described it to me,
which is so true, the minute he said it,
I was like, my gosh, it's like,
Moore's law never ended, it just shifted to GPUs.
Because the inherent lack of parallelization
that CPUs have, you solve the GPUs.
And so that's why the surface area of compute
of innovation has actually shifted Jason to what you're
saying, which is all of these new kinds of machine-learned models, because you can just
now brute force and create such a tonnage of compute capabilities and resources to solve
these problems that weren't possible before.
So, you see this thing, fun things like Wally or Dally, sorry, and more sophisticated things
like GPT-3, but he's right, which is that we are at a point now where all kinds of expert
systems, which is sort of like V1 simple forms of AI, are going to be completely next level.
Well, you think about the data sets adding to that.
And so when governments don't understand this
and they try to, you know, step in,
they're going to be shocked at how much faster
they're pulling forward the actual future.
They actually are trying to prevent.
Yeah.
The data sets is the other issue for Eberg.
You look at, you know, the data sets that are available
to train, so you have the GPUs still escalating massively
in the amount of compute power can do. You have cloud computing at the same time. And then you have the GPUs still escalating massively
in the amount of compute power can do. You have cloud computing at the same time,
and then you have these data sets.
One of the most interesting things about, you know,
Dolly and a lot of these is the corpus of data
they're able to absorb.
And a second factor issue that is starting to come up
is who owns the derivative work in copyright.
So if you train your data set on a bunch of images and those images are owned by Disney or whoever, you know, photographer, Getty, and then the AI makes you a new photo.
So here's another example of this. Here's another example of this in a law that just passed. So in the IRA, the inflation reduction act, you know, we granted CMS in Medicare, the ability to negotiate drug prices.
We actually also capped the total prescription costs that any American can pay at $2,000.
Now, it turns out that overwhelmingly most Americans will never spend $2,000 a year on prescription
medications.
But there will be a few, and they bump up against drugs that cost millions of dollars.
So there was a drug for SMA that's like 2.4 million.
And beta thalacemia of like 2.8 million.
And we will all bear the cost of that.
Now if CMS and Medicare go and really crunch those costs, what is pharma going to do?
Well, pharma is going to do what is the obvious thing, which is like, if you're going to
cap what I can make, I have to completely change my R&D model, and they're just going to
use alpha-fold.
You know, and what it's really going to do is potentially put a bunch of research scientists
Had to work and those are folks that should probably in the you know for our general future be gainfully employed
But the nature of their job is going to change completely because the economic capitalist incentive of
Big pharma is going to move towards technology which is you know an alpha-fold and their protein library is the equivalent of AI and automation for McDonald's.
So, this is where, again, governments have to be super careful
that they understand what's actually happening
because they're creating incentives,
I think, that they don't completely understand.
All right, we can go to raw meat for sacks,
Zuckerberg's admission of FBI meddling, truth social.
Well, after you guys disputed me and like,
how dare you imply that J.A.G. or Hoover
and Jim Comey's FBI is politicized.
Remember you guys were debating and so on.
No, I said, who did you talk?
That was about the investigation.
I didn't get that.
But some of you were saying, I can't believe, SACC.
You're part of the 35% of Americans
who don't believe fully in the rectitude
and integrity of the FBI.
I don't know if this is FBI's.
I don't know if this is FBI's.
No, it comes as bombshell.
I mean, you gotta admit, this was a bombshell.
What was a bombshell?
Okay.
Okay, okay.
Okay, so Joe Rogan had Zuck on and he asked him about
this very specific thing.
Remember the New York Post story on Hunter Biden's laptop
in like the week or two before the election was censored, right?
And there's a very controversial thing
because the FBI was dealing with known Russian interference
and hacks and all this stuff,
part of which Trump was like asking people to hack other candidates.
Okay, you're not even setting the stuff correctly.
Well, okay, I'm gonna keep going.
And then so this is what Zuckerberg said.
Hey, look, let's, let's act moderate this segment.
Well, I mean, I'm just going to read the Federalist,
which is, you know, a separate wing, but he says,
I'll just read you what Zuck said, because that's, says it all.
He says, hey, look, if the FBI, which I still view
as a legitimate institution in this country, I'm
according from the Federalist, which is quoting him from
Gerogon, it's a very professional law enforcement.
They come to us and tell us we need to be on guard about something. I want to take it seriously. So
when the New York Post broke the Hunter Biden laptop story on October 14, 2020 Facebook treated the story as potentially misinformation, important misinformation for five to seven days while the tech giant's team
could determine whether it was false or not during that time. This is federal speaking. Decre, it's to just your Facebook decreased distribution of the story by making the
story rank lower in the news feed. And this is his quote Zuckerberg's, you
could still share it, you could still consume it. Zuckerberg explained, but
quote, fewer people saw it than would have otherwise. And while he would not
quantify the impact, the Facebook founder said the
decreased distribution was, quote unquote, meaningful. And a follow up, Rogan asked, if the
FBI had specifically said, quote, to be on guard about that story, meaning the laptop story
after originally remodeling, no, Zuckerberg, correct, I'm says, I don't remember if it was
that specifically, but it was basically the pattern. So basically, I guess you would agree, SACS, Zuck didn't know exactly what to do here with
this information.
And if it was real or not, which turned out to be very real.
And it probably could have swayed the election.
I mean, I do think if people thought there was a connection between Hunter Biden, maybe
it could have, I don't know if we want people being hacked to do that
So what's your take on it? Sachs you you're just hacking in general and in this specific thing
What should the FBI do if these kind of hacks are getting released of people's families?
Okay, so here's the complicated issue right there's many vectors. Yeah
What Zuck basically says the FBI came to to them and encouraged them to suppress the story or to suppress a story
That they describe that would be just like this, okay? FBI came to them and encouraged them to suppress the story or to suppress a story that they
described that would be just like this.
So now look, a lot of conservatives are dragging Zuckerberg and Facebook for doing the FBI's
bidding.
But I think a lot of people, I think most people in Zuckerberg's position would have believed
the FBI.
When the FBI comes to you and says, you're about to be targeted by Russian information,
you need to do something about it. You would have listened to the FBI. He believed the FBI comes to you and says, you're about to be targeted by Russian information, you need to do something about it.
You would have listened to the FBI.
He believed the FBI.
My point is, so I don't blame Facebook too much for that.
I think it's understandable that he would have believed them.
The issue here is the politicization of the FBI.
Look, let's back up.
What was happening?
So, the New York Post gets this story about the leak contents of Hunter Biden's hard drive. In response to that, you had 50 former security state officials, many of whom were Democratic
partisans like Clapper, like Brennan, they signed a letter saying that this story has
all the hallmarks of Russian disinformation.
Now the truth is they had not inspected the hard drive.
They simply said, this is the hallmarks of it.
And as a result of that, we thought that
the social networks and so forth censored the story.
Okay, now it turns out that the FBI, by the way,
the FBI had the hard drive.
They had the hard drive for over a year.
It was in the administration.
And a gaming show of the hard drive with the actual hard drive.
They had the actual hard drive.
The leak of the story was likely prompted
because the FBI didn't appear to be doing anything
with the hard drive.
So somebody leaked the story to Rudy Giuliani
and then he leaked it so forth in New York Post.
But the point is that the FBI had the hard drive.
So they knew it was authentic.
Okay, so they knew that this hallmarked
of Russian information was not the truth. Because again, they had the authenticated hard drive. So they knew it was authentic. Okay. So they knew that this hallmark subrussian disformation was not the truth. Because again, they had the authenticated hard drive
in their possession. And yet they still went to Zuckerberg and basically played into this narrative,
this phony narrative that, you know, Democratic partisans like Clapper and Lightbrennen had created.
It was meaningful, by the way, about what was on the laptop
in your mind.
Do you think it's relevant?
And do you think we want people's laptops being hacked
like this, where in people's political families?
Yeah, I don't think the laptop was hacked.
I mean, there's a weird convoluted story
about the laptop and it up.
But look, the point is that the people's personal pictures
and stuff like that be released.
I never liked the part where they were showing 100 Biden's drug use or the other personal
stuff.
I thought that was scarulous.
And I didn't like it and I didn't think that was particularly germane.
So I think it was an invasion of his privacy.
However, there were materials on there related to his business feelings in Ukraine.
And I don't say
see how you can say those weren't relevant to you.
I think they're highly relevant to you.
He's being investigated for them too now.
A lot of this has to do with timing too.
It's like, how do you deal with something like this seven days before an election when you
know the Russians are hacking it, if it has been or not?
It's a really difficult situation for everybody, I think.
So look, my point is this, that I can agree with you about the personal stuff about
Hunter Biden shouldn't have come out, but with respect to the Ukraine stuff, that was
legitimate, it was fair game, and most importantly, I don't know whether it was one of the election,
not probably not, probably by itself, it's not, but the real point here is that the FBI
went to Facebook to censor a story that they must have known was true because they had
the laptop in their possession.
They should not be intervening in elections that way.
That is the bombshell here.
That's unbelievable.
I think they didn't know the provenance of this, but I guess we'll find out.
Where are you landing?
We're here to know the provenance of a hard drive that's in their possession.
You have an NFT.
Exactly.
How are you?
You brought us a circle to NFT. Exactly. How are you? I think you're...
You brought us a circle to math.
Exactly.
Audience wants to know, but...
The audience really wants to know where...
You were going to reserve judgment on the Mar-a-Lago search.
Where do you and-or Republicans come out on all this now when you see...
Like, he did in fact have a ton of really sensitive stuff.
Like, it's not...
Well, a defined ton.
And of defined ton of really sensitive stuff. Yeah, I mean, listen It's not. And of, define time of really sensitive stuff.
Yeah, I mean,
I've listened to anybody who wouldn't give it back.
Like, what's your,
what are your independent pages of documents mark classified?
If you were to go to the 30,000 boxes
of documents that Obama took,
are you telling me you really couldn't find
through independent pages that have classified
markings on them?
Well, the fact that he wouldn't give it back
to the estimate,
by the way,
I never disputed it.
Hold on a second,
I never disputed that they would find documents with classified
markings in Trump's basement. I still think that the approach was heavy handed. And we don't
know enough because we don't know what those documents are. Every document they stick
in front of the president or not every but many of them are more classified. But okay,
so let me ask you this. Aside from these, like, kind of details, what is Trump's deal
that he just wouldn't give them back to you? What do you think his motivation was? I mean, I have my
own theory, which he likes memorabilia. He's always liked to show off. I think that's it. I think
you got it. I mean, honestly, if I to guess what this whole thing was about, it's probably that
the archivist at the National Archives wants the original copy of those letters with little rocket
man, and he doesn't want to give them up. Right. And you're so excited. I literally think that's what this is about. I think it's about
something as silly as that. Memorable. Memorability. I think it's about memorabilia. I do not think
these documents pose a threat to not just security. Why would crunches give it all back? It's so dumb.
But why would the FBI feel the need to do a raid? Well, because they put so much
flash in for a second. We were just discussed this whole second. When we first discussed this issue,
we were told it was nuclear it was nuclear secrets could be yeah
No, they've backed off that completely it was not in the affidavit
It's not about nuclear that was something they leaked to get them through a tough press cycle
So but look my point about all this stuff just to wrap it up so people are clear was never to defend Trump first
Hey my real concern is the politicization of the FBI our law enforcement agency should not be
weaponized by either party to pursue the point. We just saw with the Zuckerberg thing what business
did the FBI have going to Zuckerberg to get them to censor a New York Post story that turned out
to be completely true. Hold on a second that is election interference they should not be doing that.
Yeah that is a tough job if they don't know if it's been stolen or not. Yeah,
it's a tough job. By the way, the government of the United States has no business censoring
a free press. That is a violation of the First Amendment. When the government instructs a private
company to censor a press story that the government itself does not have the
authority to censor that is a violation of the first amendment we thought remember when
jack dorsi said that he regretted the censorship that twitter did and he came out with that
apology we thought it was just twitter's decision now we find out from zuck that he was
leaned on by the fb i and i think that these big tech companies like Twitter, like Facebook, they're
going to have to have a new policy, which is when the government says we want you to censor
something, their response needs to be, show us a court order.
They do not just censor now, based on the say so, of some operative field government.
I would agree with you on that.
I think it was a bad decision, obviously.
The one big tech company that really nailed this, I think, was Apple.
Very early on, they drew a really hard line in the sand with the sand, Bernadino Shooter,
because they said, if we allow the FBI to get into this person's phone, even though what
he did was completely heinous, we are going to create a backdoor that will become an exploit
for everybody and we are drawing the line on privacy and security. Now different set of issues, but it just goes to show you.
There have been a few examples where some of these companies have drawn a hard line and then in that example and I think Jason you mentioned this, with, they were able to stand up to the pressure.
So I think there are some examples, Sacks, where you can see no.
I mean, the idea that Twitter would block a New York post URL, it's like, such a jump
ball.
If it was the sex material, I could understand them saying, you can't hack it.
That's against our terms of service, and we agree on that, Sacks.
But in this case like I don't know
Let's go to something more interesting. Well, he wave I think in the drow today. I know this is interesting to sacks
But I think it's interesting to everybody else new audience. He waves in droughts or
Use flash. It's hot in summer
Yeah, I think this might have to do with global warming and be a little unique
I'm kidding. I'm kidding. I know Before all the ESG people get into sex,
and say, you don't put your globe on.
You're not even global warming to be kicked.
I just think that it's a death of a grown up.
There's a big story.
OK, we'll get to that end.
That's a great job of dying as a big story too.
Let's give free Berk his science quinter,
and then we'll come back around.
I give you your raw meat.
What's your point of view on climate change,
the impact it will have on the planet
and whether like urgent action is needed?
Listen, I'm not an expert in that area.
I'm not gonna pretend to be.
I do think that we can't save the planet
by destroying the economy.
And it seems to me that too many
of the save the planet people like wanna take reckless extreme actions that would wreck our economy. And it seems to me that too many of the safety planet people like want to take
reckless extreme actions that would wreck our economy. You just saw actually Elon just gave a
talk this and made news this past week from Norway where he said that we still need oil and gas.
He's the leading innovator in basically moving to solar and renewable. And he said,
listen, unfortunately, we got to rely on oil and gas because it's too
important for civilization.
If we cut the stuff off too quickly, we end civilization.
Yeah.
And I think it's a long-term problem, but I think we need to have long-term solutions.
You believe in global warming, just full stop.
The planet is warming.
You agree with the size of it?
It's not just about warming.
Just to use a different term,
that there are more frequent extreme events
that can severely hurt people,
hurt the economy, hurt the food supply,
hurt the energy supply,
all the things that,
I think we're like,
all the way on the bottom of Maslow's hierarchy.
These are the things that are most critical
that they're starting to get disrupted in a pretty severe way. or like all the way on the bottom of Maslow's hierarchy. Like these are the things that are most critical
that they're starting to get disrupted
in a pretty severe way.
You know, I think that's the big question.
So sex, I think it's becoming,
and this is where the transition starts to happen,
that a lot of people kind of say,
hey over the long run, the temperature is gonna go up
by one degree Celsius, over a century, you know, who cares?
But there are other- The problem is Celsius over a century. You know, who cares? But there are kind of problems.
The problem is this, is that, you know,
and by the way, I don't just agree with you.
Whatever somebody like me points out
how insane some of these policies are.
The topic is shift to two.
Are you a denier of some science or other?
No. No.
Listen, my point is not about the science.
My point is look at the collapse of the Sri Lankan economy
because they implemented these ESG rules on fertilizer.
Look at what's happening to the Dutch farmers
who are being put out of work because of ESG rules.
California, California today,
Governor Newsom today said,
please don't use your electric power
to charge your electric cars.
A week after they said gas cars are now
gonna be banned in the state.
And so there's a gritty,
there's a deep irony underway today in California because
and Fox News is obviously latched onto this story
that has to do with the grid, though.
I mean, I look, I've read the message.
Whenever politicians invoke some crisis
as the reason for some political response,
I'm not talking about the political response.
I've learned to distrust it.
That's the point.
I guess I'm talking, you know what's happening?
And Europe right now is, obviously, gas is through the roof because of the Ukraine war.
The price has basically gone through the roof.
And so because of that, they're not able to produce fertilizer.
And one of the byproducts of the production fertilizer is CO2, which
gets added to the production of beer to make it fizzy. Well, guess what? The Germans are
not only about to run out of gas, they're about to run out of beer. You think they're going
to keep supporting the Ukraine war when they find out that there's no beer for October
fest? Forget about not being able to eat their homes. They can't drink beer in October.
This is the West Coast.
We need to sit down.
We need to sit down.
We need to sit.
Just taking a beat for a minute.
Taking off the table, the political response, are you as an individual concerned about the
impact of a changing climate on people and on the
economy. Are you interested as an investor in the private market solutions to resolve
some of those things that are obviously going to become market-driven problems? Take the
government out of the equation. I think there may be a long-term problem
here. I'm not sure how long it takes. I definitely think, I'm skeptical of this claim
that the world's gonna end in the next 10 years
because, frankly, we've been hearing that since the 1990s.
I mean.
1988, there's a great headline article
by the way, in New York Times,
where it was like scientists in 1988 said that all the oceans,
all the ice caps will melt, the oceans will flood the land
by the year 2000.
So there is a credibility challenge associated with predicting, you know, kind of long-term
outcomes like this that continues to kind of foment, unfortunately, right?
Yeah, all my beachfront property would be underwater right now,
if all that came true.
No, I'm just kidding. But no, but look, it hasn't escaped my attention that many of the
political leaders who are claiming that we're facing imminent threat
of being under water in 10 years,
own beachfront property,
and fly on private jets.
So obviously, you know,
I'm not saying this isn't a long-term problem,
but I do think they try to create an imminent crisis
so they can shove through a bunch of bad policies
that are very destructive to the environment.
Freeberg, they're not, not to the economy.
Would you define what's happening with temperature and extreme weather as a crisis or not?
Yeah, I mean, there's a critical impact in and will continue to be a critical impact in the food
supply chain in the quarters and years, because of what we're seeing.
So severe drought and heat wave in China right now.
And by the way, food is not the only one.
There's also the manufacturing supply chain.
So in the province of Shishuan, in China, they actually lost power because so much of
the power is driven by hydroelectric plants.
So streams and water flow has slowed down and stopped.
As a result, there's less power.
As a result, the factories are being shut down.
As a result, key components for manufacturing in the computing industry and mechanical
goods are not being produced at the rate that they were being produced before.
That has a ripple effect in the supply chain, similar to what we saw in COVID.
And then in the food supply chain,
we're seeing a drought and a heat wave,
right now, we're coming out of it in the Midwest
in the United States where we grow corn and soybeans
throughout Europe and also in China.
And in China, they had 70 days in a row
of record-setting temperatures.
70 days in a row.
70 days in a row.
Every day was a record.
No water, high temperatures.
They're just starting to assess the crop damage.
It looks pretty severe.
There was massive crop damage in the Midwest
in the corn belt this year.
And then obviously European farmers are having issues.
And combine that with the geopolitical issues
of the Ukraine crisis and the natural gas pricing being so high,
one third of a fertilizer of ammonia plants
have been shut down in Europe.
And they think that ammonia and fertilizer production
may drop by as much as one half in Europe
because of the crisis.
So energy prices are so high, you can't make fertilizer.
So that energy's being also redirected
into other industry and support homes.
So you believe in the crisis?
So I guess the direction.
Yeah, people are turning on their ACs in California this week.
You know, you see that Governor Newsom just said,
our grid in California cannot support
excess electricity consumption.
Therefore, one of the biggest variables is electric cars.
He's saying, don't plug in your electric cars this week.
And that's because of record high temperatures
that are about to take California in two days.
So look, everyone says, hey, these are kind of anecdotal stories.
But no, it's a trick.
It's a trick.
No, statistically,
the frequency of extreme things happening
is continuing to climb.
And then the impact is in the food supply chain,
the energy supply chain,
and the manufacturing supply chain,
and there are follow-on effects.
Now, I'm optimistic that private market solutions
will resolve these issues.
That was my next question. Can we solve this or not? Yeah, of course. I mean, look, we've had crises
since the dawn of humanity. I mean, we were a starving, you know, pretty...
I don't think we need a crisis to solve some of these problems. These are pretty economically obvious.
Yeah, and that's my point. The private market will resolve because people want to have electricity.
They want to have food, they want to have...
Not one, but need.
And so the market will pay for those things, and therefore producers and technologists
will resolve the solutions to make that happen.
So we just have to have problems suffering and see it first, Han Shema.
The market to kick in.
Our friend in the group chat that shall not be named posted this meme, you guys saw it,
which said like an autistic school girl takes, what was it?
I have it here.
Quit school.
The dominoes.
The dominoes.
You can show the dominoes, but basically it said an autistic Swedish girl decides to
skip school is the little domino, and seven dominoes later, later this huge domino it says the collapse of Europe's energy grid.
And without commenting on the language used in the meme for a second, what is the point?
The point is these conversations can so quickly go off the rails and are not about national security and economics and quickly become about moral virtue signaling that you miss the point. The point in the United States just to be very blunt is that the cost
of electricity has gone up by 46% in the last decade. It will go up by another 40%
through 2030. So between 2010 and 2030, the cost of electricity for every single American
will have effectively doubled, even though the ability to generate, particularly from
wind and solar, have been reduced by 90%. Now, why is that? Well, it turns out that if
you look inside the P&Ls of these utilities, it actually gives you the answer. So over the next 10 years,
we have to spend, as a nation, just on upgrading power lines, $2 trillion. This is all,
this is all like crazy, crazy op-ex, right? CapEx improvements for sunk cost investments. Our power line infrastructure in America is 20 plus years old
30 years old
our
generation infrastructures pretty poor
We have all of these failures. We don't have enough peakers. We don't have ability to store energy when we need it
So if you add this all up, I do think that there's a huge economic incentive to solve it and there are practical ways to solve it. And that's what we have to stay focused on. Because if we allow the
moral virtue signaling to get in the way, we're going to make some really stupid decisions.
We're going to try to turn off nuclear. Another thing that Elon said, you know, we're
not going to green light, shale and nat gas. We don't have time for this. If you actually
believe this is a cataclysmic issue, you need to
basically be okay with hydrocarbons because it is the only credible bridge fuel we have to keep
the world working properly because otherwise what David said is right, we are going to economically
destroy parts of the world by trying to raise towards this net zero goal. By the way, guys, I just want to take the, you know, rip the bandaid off net zero by 2050, 20, 26. It is not possible. There is zero credible
plans that the world has to do it. So we have to take small incremental steps and many of them.
Yeah. This is how we should stay focused on that. Yeah. The interesting thing. And you cannot
let people guilt trip you because this is when
you make these stupid mistakes like the entire continent of Europe made, which is now going to
cripple, here's the economies of that entire continent unnecessarily. Here's the good news. All
this virtue signaling and people wanting to be green and for whatever reason, all of that now economics and geopolitical
is forcing people to rethink nuclear,
the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant,
which is the last one in California that's operational.
It's being voted on today as we're taping this
and it's expected that they're gonna keep it online.
The governor with the great hair wants to keep it going.
And the fascinating part about this is how,
which way does he have?
Exactly.
And so now the awareness is so high about power
and us losing it and asking people to turn off
their echinitis, turn it, don't plug in your cars.
But people don't understand how nuclear energy
even works and they like get rid of it.
They went to a No Nukes concert in 1978
and they haven't changed their position since.
But this is interesting.
The Skygene Nelson, who's been a champion of this stuff, he said, I thought our chances
were zero of keeping this thing open.
And he said what's, you know, and he said, he told this conference of attendees, this
nuclear conference, that the effort to maintain it, he said, what's happened since, you know,
the last six months has been like a snowball
that everybody has changed their position just in the last year on shutting these things down. And we saw, obviously, Germany is rethinking the three remaining of their six that they were
going to turn off. They're putting back on. And I think we're going to see Newground broken.
And Japan came out just in the last week and said they're going to build more nuclear power
and nuclear power plants. Now think about that.
That's awesome. That's unbelievable. They had Fukushima. The Germans shut off their nuclear because of Fukushima.
But guys, the Japanese are saying we're building more. Fukushima, guys, Fukushima didn't happen by accident.
There was a like an incredible tsunami, which was triggered by the first earthquake.
You're talking about these extremely long tail events.
Yes, the retaining walls could have been built better,
but these are things we find, we iterate and we solve.
It was not the reason to shut down
an entire mechanism of energy generation.
Stupid mistakes where they put it just too low
in the wrong place, if they just put it up,
they held a couple of miles to be fine.
But also if you look inside of what happened,
there was enormous pressure inside of these companies
to basically take actual direct blame and responsibility.
I get all of that, but these organizations were shamed
into turning these things off.
That is not the way to make good smart decisions.
Okay, so Gorbachev, the last ruler of the USSR,
passed away this week, exactly.
Yeah, I mean, I think this was a real milestone.
You go back to the 1980s and Ronald Reagan,
the who had spent his entire career being a cold warrior,
saw the opportunity to basically do business
with Gorbachev.
Margaret Thatcher had told him that this man
we can do business with, Gorbachev had come to power in 1985.
He had initiated reforms of the Soviet system.
He was a communist to be sure,
but he introduced political reforms
called Glossnos and economic reforms called Paris-Droitga.
And Reagan's easy opportunity to go meet with him and they signed arms control treaty
after arms control treaty and ended the threat of mutually assured destruction that the
world had been living with since the beginning of the Cold War.
You got to remember that the Cold War began shortly after World War II and we had this
doctrine of mutually assured destruction or mad.
And the whole world was living under the shadow
of nuclear annihilation.
This was showed repeatedly when I was a kid.
There was a TV movie called The Day After.
The Day After.
It was serious.
It was serious.
It was really serious.
It was real serious.
The terrorized us out.
America when we were all gonna die.
Did you ever have nuclear bomb drills
we had to get under your desk?
Yeah, we had to.
Yeah, so if you're like our age, you remember this,
that movie, by the way, that was a TV event movie
that was one of the most widely watched movies.
But there were others, Jim Cameron used this concept
in the Terminator movies.
It was something that people were really afraid of.
And Reagan seized the opportunity, and the Terminator movies, you know, it was something that people were really afraid of.
And Reagan seized the opportunity.
He thought, fundamentally, that nuclear deterrence was a moral that, yet better to have deterrence
than a nuclear war, but that he, if he could, he would seize the opportunity to negotiate
the end of the Cold War.
And by the way, there were hardliners in his administration who did not want him to negotiate
with Gorbachev, but they ended up doing a series of meetings culminated in 1986 at the Reich of Exummit,
and they signed deals to remove these INF system deals.
Now, and that ended the Cold War, and then basically what happened is in 1989, the Berlin Wall came down.
Gorbachev allowed the
Warsaw Pack Countries to leave, and then in 1991, the Soviet Union collapsed. So, you
know, he gets a lot of credit for being willing to reform that system. Now, the sad thing
is, if we were fast forward 30 years later, where are we today? We're back in a new cold
war with Russia. I mean, that we've been spending a good part of this year talking about the threat of a
nuclear use.
And this was a problem that we thought was solved 30 years ago.
And now we're back with it today.
And you've got to ask, have the successors of Reagan and George Herbert Walker Bush, the people who inherited our
foreign policy over the last 30 years, have they done as good a job as Reagan did? Reagan
ended the Cold War. We are back in a new Cold War. Why? What is the reason for this? There's
been a series of stupid policies that now have put the risk of nuclear war back
on the table.
My interesting Gorbachev is slightly different.
He is an incredibly important character, or the second half of the 20th century, undeniable.
One the Nobel Prize, as you said, David, kind of ended the Cold War. But the most important thing in my opinion was
the precursor to Prairie Strika and why he did it.
And as you said, this is a fairly art and communist
although he had really interesting views
like he ran a very kind of like open kind of polybureo
where folks could debate and he promoted
a lot of young people from within, all of these
interesting things.
But the most important thing, and he's written about this a lot, is the reason that he embarked
on Perestroika was because USSR at the time had an incredibly poor work ethic, terrible
productivity, and horrible quality goods.
And I think that there's something to be learned by that. Because at the tail end of communism, essentially where you had central planning, central
imposed economic principles, what happened? People did not feel that they had any
ownership in the outcome. No agency. No agency whatsoever. And I think that there's a
really important lesson to observe there, which is that if governments get too actively involved,
this doesn't just happen in Russia, it happens everywhere. It's happening in California. We just talked about it. It's happening where we live right now.
And if you look at then what happened afterwards, it became the aristocracy that basically ruled the USSR before.
the aristocracy that basically ruled the USSR before, and then fighting against all these folks that wanted reforms, and that created the schism which then perverted capitalism
for seven or eight years through Yeltsin until Putin got there.
And that's what created the oligarch class and really exacerbated a bunch of wealth capture
by a handful of folks that may or may not have deserved it, and I'm not going to judge that.
But I just think it's really important to understand that he was forced to embark on
this because of all of the state central planning policies.
And so it's just an important lesson for Americans in democracy, which is, you want more government.
You might get more government guys. You're exactly right.
The Soviet Union, their economy used to run
on what they called five-year plans.
It was incredibly centralized.
It was all run by the government.
And this was communism.
And the 20th century, the second half especially,
was a giant battle of systems, not just of countries,
not just the Western block led by the US, the free world versus the Union
and the Warsaw Pact, it was also a battle of philosophies
and systems, it was the philosophy of state control
versus freedom and a free economy.
And freedom won, the free economy won in that battle.
And the crazy thing is 30 years later,
we're talking about socialism being a viable doctrine.
You have politicians basically saying that they are socialist, but 30 years ago you would
have been like that was a bit of an unelectable.
And the point is example after example, empirical evidence well documented of just how it doesn't
work.
And I guess that thing is, you know, we all say like, you just have to learn it for yourself.
You know, like, you'll tell your kids to do it.
To not do something, add in,
they gotta touch the stuff.
They gotta touch the stuff themselves and get burned.
We're about to go do that in California.
Can you imagine if like, people who wanna be socialists here
and who are binders, if they had to be in a food line
or have rations?
Literally, Russia had food lines and they were rationing food in the 1980s.
Like, that's how it just went to the gun.
A large driver of Gorbachev basically negotiating these peace settlements with Reagan and
this nuclear demilitarization was in part because he knew he couldn't fight.
Right?
It was this re-illusionment.
That's the central high system.
We're collapsing. Yeah, they could not keep up. Reagan began an arms build up and there
was an arms race and they were losing. They were losing.
They were losing. And this is and this is why like people should not misunderstand what
Gorbachev was. He was not necessarily some democratic freedom fighter. He was a person
who was observing the on the ground conditions
of a socialist system decay their ability to compete. And so he had to capitulate before
it was forced upon him. Right.
He would have come.
Right. This is why I don't think he deserves as much credit as as Ronald Reagan is because
at the end of the day, Gorbachev would have kept communism going if he could have.
If he could have.
If he could have.
He wanted to stay together. I mean, he's right but his but it but i think to his credit when
the things start to collapse he didn't get the size of violence and repression
to try and hold it together so you know he was a he was a reformer he was a
liberalizer and a pragmatist maybe and a pragmatist and use violence but
and ultimately he was a partner for ron ragan remember ron ragan began this
gigantic arms build up he was to
now says a cowboy who get a small or three but when he had the chance to
negotiate a deal with garbage off he took it and they basically got arms
control and it was because ragan was able to sit on top of an extremely
productive capital system that allowed him to make those investments that
made that capitulation
basically a fecacomplete.
And I think that that's another thing for a lot of us to understand, which is free market
capitalism, removing these degrees of decision making, give us degrees of freedom.
And I've said this before on the last part, the great thing about the IRA and what Chuck
Schumer did is actually will be written in 10 or 15 years from now, because
when we get to energy independence, when every home is resilient, the national security
calculus in America changes wholeheartedly overnight.
I mean, think about it.
We were in a relationship years ago.
Right.
Biden canceled it.
Okay, well, listen.
No, it's true.
If you're willing to use natural gas and fracking America, is we're the richest energy
countries in the world?
We produce a lot of oil too.
I mean, listen, it will change everything if we can really go all in on all of the categories.
Nuclear, it's just the fault of you and the renewables.
If you let the capital markets do and the free markets do what they're meant to do, they
will empower the government to do great things for all of you.
All citizens.
Yes, I agree with that 100%.
And the reason we want to stop it is because we have a couple of examples of extreme
wealth.
And I think that's something we have to think about is like, are the extreme, is the extreme
wealth created for a certain class enough to stop the prosperity trade that we actually
have in America?
Listen, Jason, the politicians in the California think they can run fast food businesses better
than the people who own those restaurants.
Yeah, these people have never worked today in their lives.
No, we have, they can work.
The great thing is we have a running AB test, which will show whether this state central
planning can work or not.
And again, if we refuse to want to listen to the examples of Russia
or all of these other countries that have tried this, then so be it.
We will know in the next three to five years that these policies actually don't work
and actually that it actually accelerates the exact hellscape that they think they're trying to avoid.
But not only to my point about foreign policy,
not only are we forgetting the lessons of this cold war,
the economic lessons, that a free enterprise system
generates more wealth and prosperity
and more national greatness, more ability to fund
a defense budget, create a better economy.
Not only does it do all those things,
we've forgotten that, but also we have abrogated it. We have ended every single defense control and arms
control treaty with the Russians that Reagan and Gorbachev signed. Why? Why do we do that?
Now our nuclear missiles are pointing at each other again. And you know what? Russia's
a much poorer country in the US. We're actually 15 times richer than them.
During the Cold War, at their peak,
we were only three times richer than them.
But we're 15 times richer,
but they still got over 6,000 nukes.
Why do we get rid of all those arms control treaties?
Why have we basically-
We're dealing with a few of them.
Yeah, we talked, we'd said it before.
Like you're dealing with a pragmatist and Putin's
a KGBA.
Maybe you feel like Putin is someone we can deal with now,
but he was someone we could have dealt with
10 years ago, 20 years ago.
We missed the opportunity to deal with him, Jason.
If he was a rational actor,
if he was a rational actor, we would be able to deal with him.
I think the only way he's actually gonna be,
the only way we'll be able to deal with him
is if he doesn't have the oil market he has, he just has too much power from that oil.
And over time, that's the solution.
We have to be energy independent.
I think Europe is learning that.
And Harvard was a communist.
He was an heir to Stalin, and yet Reagan could still do business with him and sign an
arms control treaty so that we could end the risk of mutually assured destruction.
We took advantage of that. You don't have to believe that Putin is a good guy in order for us to avoid getting back
into a cold war, which is the situation we find ourselves in now.
How does it benefit us to have Russian nukes once again pointed at our heads?
Yeah, I mean, the reason why we alienated him, Jason, has nothing to
do with him being a madman or whatever, it is because we brought NATO, which he views
as a hostile military alliance right up to his border.
And by the way, listen to this video from Gorbachev.
Gorbachev was asked about NATO expansion in front of the U.S. Congress.
He was giving a talk to them and they asked him, Gorbachev, what do you think about NATO?
And what did he say? He said that you cannot humiliate a country this
way and expect there to be no consequences. Gorbachev was against NATO expansion. When
when basically George Herbert Walker Bush and the Secretary of State James Baker went
to Gorbachev to argue on behalf of German reunification, this is basically a 1990. Baker
made the promise to Gorbachev, not one inch eastward.
Gorbachev said, yes, okay, they can reunify, but we do not want NATO moving up to our border.
Baker made that promise. We have brought NATO up to their border. That is why Putin regards us with hostility.
Yeah, and I think you're up to regard him with host hostility and they're scared of him because he keeps invading countries. So yeah, there's takes two to tango, but hey, this has been episode 94.
It does, it does take two to tango, but you have to ask, has the US foreign policy over the
last 30 years that's gotten us in a new Cold War with Russia? Has that been a successful part
foreign policy? They have undermined all the good work that Ronald Reagan and Gorbachev did
together to end the Cold War.
We are back in a new Cold War.
You need to find a new Reagan.
You just need to find a new Reagan.
Putin has some blame, but it's not a US State Department.
So does the US State Department.
And Europe.
Europe has a big part of the blame too here because he's their neighbor.
For the Sultan of science, the Rain Man and Reagan Library Chairman.
Are you the chairman of the Reagan Library?
Let me ask you this. When you were a kid, did you have a Reagan poster in your room? Have you ever
owned a Reagan poster? I've definitely owned a picture of Reagan and...
Have you ever had a Reagan poster or a picture in your dorm at Stanford? Yes or no?
Reagan poster or a picture in your dorm at Stanford. Yes or no?
Listen, Ronald Reagan. That's he. Yes.
Almost second. Ronald Reagan won the Cold War without firing a shot. He gave us the greatest economy the US has ever had. He ended the inflation and stagflation in the 1970s.
And again, he avoided getting us into any of these major wars. Tell me the politician who
you can have lunch with anybody. Who's the politician who you're a
veer who has a track record like that?
Um, yeah, I mean, I guess one would say Bill Clinton,
you know, would be the closest, you know,
great president of our lifetimes, right?
You would agree with that.
I think it was a good, good president.
Not special.
Number two, Gohan Reagan in our
lifetime.
But remember, he benefited from the economy
that Reagan created.
Whatever reason you would agree with me, Clinton is right behind Reagan.
Reagan and Clinton, since like 1950 something, easily top two.
Yeah, easily, easily.
He's hard for a sex to say that.
Why is it not worth it?
He's very good.
Listen, I mean,
But head and shoulders, I think, like for practically what they don't
We get at their point of time.
Amazing.
All right, listen,
Sacks, I know you love Reagan
Nixon Reagan and Bill Clinton won on each side of you for next week. Will you do that for us? I gotta go guys
I gotta go to all right. Love you sacks. You put on the next time by love you too. Happy birthday to you. Thanks bro. We're like your winners ride. Rainman David Sack.
We open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with her.
I'm going to be a queen of kinwa.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
What?
What are winners ride?
Besties are gone.
I'm going through.
That's my dog taking it away.
She's your driveway.
She's six.
We're at a dog. What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What? What?? What? What?? What? It's really sad out there you