All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Hot Swap growing, donors revolt, President Kamala? SCOTUS breakdown: Immunity, Chevron, Censorship
Episode Date: July 4, 2024(0:00) Bestie Intros! (5:51) Democrats and their donors are falling out; President Biden to resign? Will VP Harris be the nominee? (26:22) Cognitive decline coverup, Bestie strategy for Dems (34:38) S...COTUS clarifies social media moderation (47:06) SCOTUS overturns Chevron, limiting the power of federal agencies (1:00:03) SCOTUS to hear case on restricting online porn in Texas (1:05:27) SCOTUS rules in favor of President Trump in immunity case Join/host a meetup: https://app.getriver.io/all-in Apply for All-In Summit: https://summit.allinpodcast.co Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://twitter.com/Jason https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://twitter.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@all_in_tok Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod 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.predictit.org/markets/detail/7057/Who-will-win-the-2024-Democratic-presidential-nomination https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/03/us/politics/biden-withdraw-election-debate.html https://polymarket.com/event/will-biden-drop-out-of-presidential-race?tid=1720024531014 https://www.newsweek.com/putin-houthis-cruise-missiles-russia-yemen-1919434 https://www.ft.com/content/d431b97f-7431-4066-bd80-9dab3b215fea https://www.axios.com/2024/06/30/top-aides-shielded-biden-white-house-debate https://www.foxnews.com/media/stephanopoulos-snaps-nikki-haley-saying-biden-wont-finish-term-excuse-me-how-do-you-know https://x.com/TheKevinDalton/status/1806669560852218045 https://x.com/0rf/status/1807620571934478683 https://www.cbsnews.com/news/supreme-court-social-media-laws-florida-texas https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/23pdf/22-277_d18f.pdf https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/supreme-court/supreme-court-justice-voting-decisions-2024-rcna151268 https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/23pdf/22-451_7m58.pdf https://www.scotusblog.com/2024/06/supreme-court-strikes-down-chevron-curtailing-power-of-federal-agencies https://www.reuters.com/legal/us-supreme-court-hear-challenge-texas-age-verification-online-porn-2024-07-02 https://x.com/noalpha_allbeta/status/1808265251202167183 https://x.com/ewarren/status/1808241509738631388 https://www.axios.com/2019/06/01/supreme-court-justices-ideology https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/06/02/supreme-court-justice-math-00152188 https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/23pdf/23-939_e2pg.pdf https://www.scotusblog.com/2024/07/justices-rule-trump-has-some-immunity-from-prosecution https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/qanon-shaman-sentenced-3-years-role-capitol-riot-rcna5825 https://x.com/unusual_whales/status/1808558981457326368
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, everybody, welcome back. It's hot swap summer here
at the all in podcast episode 186 of the world's number one
podcast, calling in from the home office in Italy, Chamath
Palihapitiya. How are you doing, sir?
Great. How are you? You look so relaxed. Look at you. Look at
you. Look at you. But it's only been two days that I'm working. I mean, I'm not that
relaxed yet. But this place does put you in the right mood. I
gotta say.
All right, sax. I'm sure that it's been an uneventful week for
you. How are you doing in the great state of California from
our headquarters at the all in tower in San Francisco? How's
the all in tower doing?
Why are you doxing me? What's going on here?
Because you live in San Francisco. Everybody knows
that. All you have to do is look for the protests. Follow the
protest and you'll find sags. Also with us, of course, from
the Ohio headquarters.
Is that back draft?
The house is on fire.
The house is on fire. But how's your referring to
Which house?
Which house? America? Democrats? Or Biden's?
There's a political party. I mean, you can interpret it as you wish.
Oh, okay.
Your butt is your butt on fire? Did you have some bad Indian food?
Did you hit the taco truck?
There's a heat wave in the West right now.
He stopped at the taco truck.
The West is on fire.
The West is on fire. Okay West is on fire. Okay.
Okay.
Dr. Doom, if you want to come to the all in summit now in year three, we've got a ton
of programming updates, but the tickets are going to sell out.
We just released another hundred tickets.
I'm sorry.
You have a fly like attacking your head right now.
You look like Mike Pence.
Jesus.
Is it a Mike Pence moment?
That's a Mike Pence fly. It's a Mike Pence. Jesus, is it a Mike Pence moment? It's a Mike Pence fly.
It's a Mike Pence fly.
Yeah, it is a Pence moment.
Or it could be like a Biden moment circling the dead.
That's too dark.
That's pretty dark.
It's pretty dark.
Okay, three, two.
Let your winners ride.
Rain Man, David Satterson.
And instead we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it.
Love you best. Queen of Ken Watt. For folks who are interested in meeting the other Luna chicks who listened to this pod, if you have no money and no budget, you can come to one of the 50 meetups that are currently happening around the
world next week on Thursday, July 11, go to all in podcast.co
slash meetups all in podcast.co slash meetups you can host or
you can join them. It's for $0.0. Now, if you're doing well,
you got a little extra chatter and you want to get together at
the all in summit that's in
September, we held back 400 tickets according to free Berg
who is running the summit now. He's released 100 this week. So
get your applications in. And if you are trying to score a
ticket or speaking gay gig, just don't email me email free Berg.
Free Berg, any updates on the content people want to know
what's on the on the dock?
We're definitely going to be talking about the changing landscape of American politics. So we are going to have some
representation there. To have that conversation, we're going
to be talking about the future of media, we're going to be
doing some really cool technology deep dives in areas
like robotics, age reversal, evitals, and talking a lot about
AI meets enterprise software.
So we have a number of, you know, the leading enterprise software CEOs joining
us for conversations on that front.
So it's shaping up to be really amazing programming.
Like Jason said, we're, we held back 400 tickets from the initial batch and we're
going to release 100 this week.
So put an application in, we're trying to be selective. And it's going to be
amazing. The parties are going to be awesome. All right, really excited how it's coming together.
You're doing some bird of a feather dinners. I understand this year some new concept. Can you
explain that to me? The first night of the summit, we're we've rented out a bunch of great restaurants
around town in LA. And we're putting people together for dinner at all these different
restaurants. And then the parties are nights two and three, which are going to be, you
know, beautiful.
Everybody's going to be great.
Everybody comes to the parties, but that first night everyone comes to the dinners, everything.
Yeah, it's going to be great.
So we're trying to create more space for people to meet each other.
I know that's been a big thing in the past in the meetups and at the summit is people
love meeting other folks in the community.
So yeah, smaller groups.
So the dinners will be 200 people or something like that. You can expect a hundred depending on the location. Yeah. Yeah. And then
the bigger parties will be everybody, 1800 people. So where do people apply for this?
It's at summit.allinpodcast.co. Okay. There you go folks. And you can come to the free events.
We can come there. All right. Just usually we, when we do the doc and I pursue a mullet doc and
I do the business first and the party in the back but man we got to start with Washington. I've never supported the mullet
strategy. I know that I know that you've been anti-mullet from the beginning you want this to
be a political show. No no no no I never said that to be a political show. Exactly I always said we
start with the biggest most topical issues first and it could be business or it could be politics.
Correct. You were discriminating against the politics.
You were insisting that it be a business issue,
even if the business issue wasn't relevant,
topical or interesting.
Here we go.
No, I was not.
I think you're talking about Friedberg.
Friedberg was the one.
That's true.
It mostly came from Friedberg.
Who was right?
Who brought the ratings of this pod to a whole new level?
Yeah, Friedberg.
Who brought the Magaloonitics?
Who built this thing? Who built this? Me. Vlad, for you. Who brought the Maga lunatics? Who built this thing?
Me.
Who built this?
Me.
Wad from Robin Hood.
He's the guy who did it.
Vlad from Robin Hood.
Shout out to Vlad.
S.B.F. did it.
By the way, I mean, the ratings of this pod
hit some sort of new stratospheric level.
Not just with President Trump interview, but last week.
Whatever.
I mean, the point is, last week was, I think,
the most.
Crazy week in the history of politics and it's only going to get crazier so let's start off with hot swap summer you're here first or maybe not hot summer continues you know previously historically if you want to understand who's winning an election you look at the polls.
Not perfect obviously some of these polls still call in lights yada yada.
polls. Not perfect, obviously, some of these polls still call landlides, yada, yada. But then people built models, obviously,
538, all this kind of stuff. But it seems that this year and this
election cycle, people are really focused on prediction
markets, aka betting markets, and that we're looking at them in
real time. And obviously, people have skin in the game. So you
can I'm interested in the panels take on the sharps on these platforms. And if you
think that they're more accurate than, say, some of these polls
or the aggregators of polls, but Kamala Harris is now the
favorite to be the Democratic nominee, according to one of
them. So just let that soak in. In the last 24 hours, VP Harris
has chances of being the Democratic nominee have gone from 18% to 50%.
At the same time, President Biden has dropped from 66% to 28%.
There are a bunch of long shots, moonshots in there.
Newsom, Michelle Obama, Gretchen Whitmer, all in the 8 to 12%, but they were low single digits prior to last week's debate. As can see in the chart Biden Harris were about even this morning on the taping of this is Wednesday July 3rd.
But the New York Times reported that Biden told an ally he's considering dropping out so we should note the White House White House spokesman said is absolutely false, but this is the money chart from I think Polly market.
And we keep updating this document in real time while we're taping chances of
biting dropping out are now at 77%.
That's up from 60% this morning.
40% of the debate after we record the show we have to do before we publish a whole well
I don't think he's gonna do that because he is scheduled to do a sit-down interview with George Stephanopoulos
I think they're recording it on Friday, right?
He's gonna do an interview with Stephanopoulos on Friday and then Stephanopoulos is showing it in two parts on Saturday and Sunday
So it's gonna be edited. So we don't know what they're gonna edit in or edit out
At this point though, the media isn't such a reading frenzy that I don't think that ABC is gonna cover for Biden
So I suspect it'll probably be a pretty fair representation of the actual recorded interview in any event
That's coming out this weekend.
I think the Biden presidency basically hinges on this interview.
If Biden can show that he's sharp and he's responsive and not senile
and presumably he's going to sit down and do this at the best hours of the day.
Right. They can't make that excuse anymore.
So is that before nap time or after nap time? Right. Exactly.
So I'm sure he can do this at a time
when he has the good stuff.
I think if he knocks out of the park,
maybe he can quell all of the speculation.
But if not, if it goes poorly, then I think he's done.
So this is the last chance again.
It's like, this is like the third last chance.
Yeah, because think about it.
I mean, the accusation is that he's senile.
That's not a hard thing to disprove. If you're not
actually senile, right, just need to go in there. Right. It's
a pretty low bar, right? Not now. Yeah. So he just needs to go
in there and pass the ball for whatever it is an hour. And he's
not gonna be fed a hard, hardball question, probably
gonna be pretty softball questions. He just has to prove
that he's not senile. If he can do that, it'll calm things down.
I was generally does a good job. He's not a sycophant. I think he considers himself
a legit journalist and will will actually well this is some fastballs I think. Well,
this is a Bernstein moment. I mean, like if if Stephanopoulos wants to go into the Hall
of Fame, this is his opportunity. If he absolutely,
if he throws the high heater to Biden, and basically is the one
that delivers the coup de gras, then his name will be in history
alongside Biden for that reason.
Think about it. That's the correct analogy. If you're the
if you're the Democratic Party leaders and you are evaluating who to choose to replace
Biden, the first thing you do is you have to double down on Biden.
Because if you were neutral to negative on Biden or passive, it's immediately interpreted
as he's being swapped out and then you don't have time to pick the right candidate.
In order to have the time to pick the right candidate, you have to first double down on
Biden, be really declarative that he's our candidate, put him on media, put him on talk
shows while you were figuring out who's going to replace him and what the strategy is to
get that person to win.
So there's a chance that what's actually going on is a little bit more of a structured strategy
around, find the right candidate, set up the right program to get them elected, figure out how we're going to move the $120 million that we raised from
Biden over to whoever this new candidate is.
You can't.
You can only move it to Harris.
You cannot move it.
You cannot move the entirety of that budget to anybody else.
You've got to put together a real plan.
You can't just do the hot swap.
You've got to have a plan for the hot swap, which means in the meantime, you've got to
buy time. And the best way to buy time is throw Biden forward and be like,
Hey, look, this guy's gonna go to the media. He's still our guy.
You're correct that they're buying time, obviously, while they try to figure this out. And
the powers that be, which powers that be the Biden camp, which is not the political machine,
it's his literal family hunter, gel, etc. What they're actually doing, and this will be
the next no Strakhanis prediction that will come true is
they're going to do. I didn't have time to get like a whole
all I heard was like my anus. It's n is not and us. So no
Strakhanis prediction coming in here. Here's what will happen.
They are going to do all caps locks, alert must credit no strickhans. They're going to do a
democratic primary speed run. Here's what's going to happen. They're going to do five debates in 10
weeks. And then whoever wins wins Kamala, he's going to resign Kamala becomes president. Kamala gets to run doesn't she run she gets to speed run like everybody else.
Dean Phillips gets to come in everybody speed runs it.
They take over the media.
The media will go crazy over the summer massive ratings.
Boom.
And we have a winner come in and they demolish Trump.
That's not gonna happen.
You said he's not gonna get hop swapped as well.
No, Strakens is off the rails.
You said he wouldn't get hot swaps.
So you have no credit.
Well, it hasn't happened yet.
If you run a debate, it shows, it shows weakness.
You said DeSantis was gonna win.
The party needs to select a leader
and they need to say this is our candidate.
Because if they do this, it's too diffuse.
It weakens whoever ends up winning.
It strengthens the party. Because whoever ends up winning. It's winning is it
strengthens the party. It strengthens the party to say,
listen, he decided to resign. We wanted to do the most
democratic thing possible. What's the most democratic
impossible. We put all our candidates out there and you the
people choose to tell him I'm right.
I think this is one of the dumbest predictions you've made.
And you've made you made some real doozies in your day.
The hot swaps gonna happen though.
You didn't call it.
The problem with your hot swap theory has always been
that not only would Biden step down,
but that magically they would choose the best candidate.
We would get a Jeff Bezos, we get a Jamie Dimon.
That somehow we would get someone who represented
all of Trump's policies without being Trump. But you would get some magical moderate to emerge the Democratic Party. That's not gonna happen. Okay?
Okay. Thanks to your incessant demands for the hot swap.
You and many others and this feeding frenzy.
So I caused it? I love it.
Yeah, you in part along with many others have caused this feeding frenzy.
We are gonna get President Kamala Harris. She's the only alternative.
You can see this in the prediction markets. Just a few days ago, it was sort of evenly
divided between there was her, there was Gavin Newsom, there was Gretchen Whitmer. Now it's
just her. Why does that happen? Because they realize they can't sidestep Kamala Harris
without offending a major constituency in the Democratic Party. Equally important, maybe
even more important, they would lose roughly a billion dollars of contributions to the Biden Harris campaign if neither Biden
nor Harris is running at the top of the ticket.
They'd have to refund all of that money back to the donors who contributed it.
There's no way they're going to start over from zero in terms of fundraising.
So they've realized that if Joe steps aside, there is only one
feasible candidate for them, which is Kamala Harris.
Let me ask you a question. If Jamie Dimon declared that he's going to, he would be happy
to take on the candidacy for the Democratic Party. He would call his friend, Warren Buffett.
He would call his friend, Jeff Bezos. He would call up his own personal banker and say, we've got half a billion, let's go.
And let's have a run at this.
There are certain folks that are outside of the typical political spectrum that might
actually have a shot at doing the extraordinary here and stepping up and doing exactly what
Trump and others that support Trump don't want to see happen, which is a candidate that can actually challenge Trump
on the merits of their experience, on their values,
on their capabilities as leaders, as executives,
and on their past performance.
And I think that someone like that
might be the strategist's kind of move to say,
this is the one thing we can do that can defeat Trump, because we all know from the polling that
Harris doesn't stand a shot.
We tried that four years ago, and you're missing the history,
which is Mike Bloomberg tried that exact same thing. And there
was one word that was set to Mike Billionaire and his
candidates imploded. And it was the word billionaire. So the
idea that you're going to get some other billionaire that all
of a sudden is less hated. I mean, Mike Bloomberg has done
some so much good, quite honestly.
And so if he can't kind of escape the scarlet letter
of the B word, I don't know how anybody else is going to do it.
But here's why.
Bloomberg ran against other Democrats.
This is a person that is running against another billionaire,
which is Trump.
And so if you have two people who are now on equal footing,
and it is the Trump
Person get
Let him cook that's That you're operating you're operating under the charming delusion that the Democratic Party cares about democracy
This is basically a party that's run by political insiders that hates billionaires and people like this
that's run by political insiders that hates billionaires and people like this.
People like Warren Buffett and Jamie Dimon,
they pay the Democrats protection money, okay?
That's how Democrats see them.
We're gonna go shake them down to get money from them.
They're not gonna hand over the reins of the party
to some outsider like that.
But let me ask you a question.
The Republicans did?
This is where Trump came in.
Yes, but Trump ran in the primary.
He rewrote the rules of the party by running.
You're right.
No, he shut, no, hold on.
He ran and shattered the party,
the established power structure.
Remember, it was the Bush family's party
when Trump first ran.
Jeb was supposed to be the nominee, right?
He was supposed to inherit the mantle from W,
the way that W inherited from his father.
And Trump came in there and appealed directly to Republican primary voters
and called the forever wars a mistake and said he was going to build the wall
and said, he's going to reset things with China issues that were latent in the
Republican party. And he took over the Republican party, the way you're supposed
to through democracy, through voting.
That opportunity has gone here because the Democratic primaries
happened last year and the Biden team ensured that he would basically win the primary scandal.
So they control all the delegates.
Remember that.
Totally.
They control the delegates.
They're not going to release them to a Jamie Dimon or some other billionaire who wants
to shake up the party.
Let me ask you a question.
So if they end up facing the terminal nature of this, which is if we don't put someone
in that can win, we are not going to win.
Yeah.
It is over.
Why do you think that Kamala can't win?
That's their thinking right now is that she stands a better shot than Biden.
Let's assume that they take a read of the polls.
They take a read of the nation.
They actually do a real look at the circumstances on the ground, which
is that she is not going to win. If they looked at that and they said, you know what, we need to win
and some sense comes into the head of the leaders of the Democratic Party and they say, who can win?
And a person like Jamie Dimon polls that he can win. There is a chance, I think, that maybe they
say, this is how we're going to get back to the White House They're never gonna hand the reins of the party to a total outside
the Democratic Party is the ultimate insider party and
They are gonna pick an insights insiders picking insiders
And I think they've realized over the past week in particular that they cannot
sidestep around Kamala Harris both because it would be a slap in the face to her constituency and the money issue
So it's Kamala or a bust for them.
It's either Kamala or Biden.
I think it's a really good point.
What we'll see is just how rational
the Democratic Party leadership is.
Are they going to continue to play
based on insider first principles,
or will they actually take a first principles point of view
on how do we win the election?
And I think it will be very revealing about how the leaders of the Democratic Party think
based on the decision they make and their donors. Well, I don't know if that's true
because I actually think that there's a donors are fleeing the ship, right? Yeah, there's
a rift between the donor class and the Democratic Party leadership. Correct. And I think the
donor class doesn't want to lose. And by the way, sacks, what you're saying is probably
right, but I think it could actually end up being a signal
that there might be a change in who the donors
end up supporting the next go-around
to realize a leadership change in the Democratic party.
Look, what the prediction markets are showing
is that it's not gonna be a free-fall.
It's either gonna be Harris or Biden.
I mean, that's what the prediction markets are showing.
And I think that's fundamentally right.
But look, I think there's real danger here
to the country in this,
because what a lot of people are saying,
and I guess it makes sense,
is that if Biden's not fit to run again,
how is he fit to serve out the rest of his term
as president?
He's not fit to serve out his term.
He's got to resign.
Okay, so if he resigns,
and that's probably the thing that helps Harris the most,
right, because now she gets sworn in as commander in chief,
she's the president of the United States.
First female president, yeah, it's a big deal.
It's a major glow up for her,
and it imbues her with all of this gravitas and credibility
that she's now the president of the United States.
They can send her to G7 meetings
and deal with other world leaders.
They've got four months to basically take this candidate who everyone thought wasn't
ready.
Remember, a year ago during the primaries when Biden ran again, one of the reasons why
is because everyone said that Kamala's not ready.
Every interview she does is basically a cackle or word salad.
In any event, no one thought she was ready. Now they have like basically made her seem much more significant by giving her the presidency.
But my point is this, we're in the middle of a war.
We're in the middle of a war with Russia.
Just a week or two ago.
We are?
We're in the war or we're providing weapons?
Both. A week or two ago, American cluster bombs were used to kill Russian civilians
sunbathing on the beach in Crimea. Okay, our weapons are targeting, killing Russian civilians.
The Russians in response to that said, we are no longer in a state of peace with the
United States. They did not say we're in a state of war, but they say we're no longer in a state of peace. And the Russians have indicated
that they may escalate horizontally by giving advanced weapons to our enemies. For example,
they've talked about giving cruise missiles to the hoodies. Okay? So all of this is happening
right now in real time on the world stage. And you're going to remove Biden, who look,
I don't like Biden's policies.
And I don't think he's compos mentis for more than a few hours a day.
But I would still rather have Biden as commander in chief for the next six months than take
the risk of putting Harrison there, who's inexperienced, who's a lightweight, and who
might want to prove how tough she is.
Let's get Chamath in for the final word here.
Chamath, your
thoughts on what's going to happen? Make your prediction
between now and September? What do you think's the mid game here
before we get to the end game?
I honestly don't know. But I think that we're in a
precarious place where things are going to get worse. Biden
actually approved private contractors now going
into Ukraine and starting to fight Americans will be on the
battlefield as of I think this was just a few days ago. If you
remember the movie wag the dog, I think that it starts to create
all these weird scenarios where people will want to create major
distractions to try to keep the
evidence and the attention away from this core issue that after the debate, everybody is focused
on. I think the reality is that if you were accused, if any of you were accused of being
mentally incapacitated, what you would probably do is go on every single talk show, go on every
single new show, go on every single podcast, press conference, you
would just do so much public facing work so as to completely
dispel this idea so that you could firmly say it was a cold.
Although now this week, it's jet lag, it was, it was jet lag,
the time of day, whatever it was, you'd be able to just
completely take the wind out of the sails. I think we're still
getting only a controlled dribble of information and
access to the President of the United States. So he's going to
be on Stephanopoulos, he's going to show up for a NATO meeting.
And so you're only seeing drips and drabs of somebody who now a
lot of people think is not in a position,
not just to run but let alone run the country. You said last week, Democratic Party will have
a meaningful reset. Still, still thinking that, Shimon? The issue that the Democrats will have to
face is the person that they probably want to run is someone different than Kamala Harris.
And the problem that they're going to have to confront is there's a part of it which is fundraising. And I do think that
David's right, there was an article in the FT where one of
the op ed writers said they're in this sort of identity politics
trap in sorts because they will have to run her no matter what.
And even if somebody did show up with the financial wherewithal,
and I think Freebrook actually brings up a really interesting
thought experiment. If there
was somebody that could take the democratic mantle who could completely self fund their campaign,
but he happened to be just a white man, what would the democrats do relative to Kamala Harris? And I
think that they would be in knots around what to do because of the identity politics issue.
I think they have made it an important issue, this idea of
inclusiveness as they've defined it. Got it. So it sets
up for I think a very complicated summer. Yeah. The
other thing you have to keep in mind is how the electoral
college works and how the ballot system works is that you don't
have infinite time, you have to get all of this wrapped up and
cinched up by the middle of August at the latest. And so we're very much on
like a four or six week shot clock. And I don't think the Democrats are doing what they need to do
in order to completely take the wind out of the sails of this narrative that Biden is not prepared
or capable. And the only way that you can do that is by having him appear 24 by 7 in real time in
front of hundreds of millions of people as often as possible.
And they're just not so since they're not doing it, they have ample time to do it.
He's yeah, he's he's obviously and by the way, the other the other problem that it creates
is that you're starting to see some of these fissures inside of the team.
There was a really charged article from Axios that dropped, which basically said that there are
three people that have cordoned off access to the president, it
named, yeah, that was Joe Biden and Thomas Heaney and some other
person. And my initial thought when I read this was other than
Joe Biden, who's a recognizable person, I had no idea who these
other two people were. And I thought that's really precise
for somebody like that, who has inside access to all of these sort of insiders
to put that article up. So I think you're starting to see the sort of leaks in the fissures.
Pete Yeah.
Jared And then that's sort of this next phase that will make things a little bit ugly and
contorted as well.
Jared Let me ask one question here, because we got to move on to the Supreme Court stuff.
Sachs, two poor question. One, is there a chance that he has had a diagnosis already, and they're covering
that up? And two, if they covered up something like that?
What is the ramification of it? Because it's clear to
everybody. He's in cognitive decline. It's clear. It's been a
couple of years of cognitive decline.
No, no, that was asked of KJP in a press conference yesterday.
She was very explicit. No. And the reason no, that she doesn't know she doesn't know.
No, no, no. The answer was much more explicit. Has he been diagnosed? And she said no. And the
reason she said no is because that is very credible for her to say because he hasn't taken the test.
Okay, so that's your theory. Look, it was obvious now for months, if not years, that there's been a huge cover up of
his cognitive decline.
And the media has participated in this.
Anyone who raised that question was treated as being a partisan or a liar.
And just for a good example of this, I know you described George Stephanopoulos as a straight
shooter, but when Nikki Haley was on his show a few months ago, and I'm not a fan of Nikki
Haley at all, but she started making this point and I'm not a fan of Nikki Haley at all,
but she started making this point.
And Stephanopoulos basically wouldn't let her finish.
I mean, basically shouted her down.
So the media was actively suppressing the story.
You take Morning Joe, a Scarsborough.
He was saying that this version of Biden
is the best he's ever been.
And we've been hearing all of that kind of stuff for months.
They were describing true videos
showing Biden being out of it.
They were describing those as being fakes, clean fakes.
They invented this new term for perfectly real videos that basically would reflect his
condition.
So the media has been engaged in a gigantic coverup of this.
And as a result, the country is in really bad shape because we have to go through the
next six months either with a senile president
who has limited cognition or we could end up with a new president who was untested,
inexperienced and based on every interview she's given in the last four years, it appears
to be completely clueless at a moment in time where I think we have the most dangerous foreign
policy situation since the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Okay, so you think it's going to be...
Hold on, this is a really horrible situation and hold on, it's the media bears a lot of
responsibility and what should have happened, okay, what should have happened is we should
have had a robust Democratic primary a year ago.
Sure.
Based on concerns about Biden's cognitive abilities reported by an honest media. We never had that.
Yeah. So, uh,
did you guys see this clip? By the way, there was a clip on Twitter where somebody put together a
clip on X six minutes of a hundred sort of spokespeople and proxies. And they all had the same
thing to say about president Biden, which is he is sharp as a tack sharp as a tack, which end of the tack the
round part. What was so funny to me is I thought to myself, if I
asked 100 people on the street, what do you think of Elon Musk,
you'd have 100 different statements, there'd be a general
theme. But you would not have even 50 people repeat the exact
same points, obviously. And so you have this funny situation where 100 different people were basically saying the exact same words. They're talking points, obviously. And so you have this funny situation
where 100 different people were basically saying
the exact same talking point.
So it's not even a point of view,
it was just something that they were told
to say by somebody else.
And that is your point.
Both sides.
And that is the real issue,
which is that you don't really have an honest media here.
And so there is no check and balance on power right now.
Imagine if this feeding frenzy happened a year ago.
Well, the contrast and compare I want to make is everybody has a point of view about Donald
Trump.
And I was thinking about this.
The reason why everybody has a point of view about Donald Trump is everything that has
happened in his life is completely transparently documented.
There really is nothing hidden at this point.
And so you have a point of view, because you've been given all of
the stuff, right, and there's endless amounts of new stuff that come out about the old stuff.
And so you know, and that's what's so interesting, you have the ability to come to your own decision,
and it's not packaged through these filters. Yet with President Biden, I think it's so constrained
and controlled. And I think you
have to understand and appreciate that cognitive decline, let's assume that he isn't for the sake
of the United States. But if he is in it, it only gets worse from here. And it compounds and
compounds and compounds. That is what happens. And so not only do you have to wonder what the next
five months are like, what does it look like in 18 and 24 and 36 months? That is a really
important issue here.
Clearly, Biden can't serve a second term. But the question is
what what do we do now? And I gotta say, it's amazing to me
that the Democrats are not considering the one option that
is kind of obvious, which is you let the man run the most
dignified campaign he can.
He's the candidate you chose and...
Oh, Satire Sachs is back. Here he is.
No, this is not...
Satire Sachs.
It's not Satire. This is not Satire Sachs. The real problem here is the Democrats refuse to lose.
They want to cling to power however they can. They refuse to let democracy just work.
Democracy working would be to do the speed run.
I have a question. What would you do with the money? Would you just not spend it then and just save it? Well, this is
really interesting. So there is an analog. Okay. In 1996, Bob Dole was the Republican candidate
for president. And quite frankly, he was too old. He was seen as a relic.
Clinton was fairly popular. And it was pretty obvious that he was just a loser and he was
going to lose the Republicans engage in shenanigans to try and fix the situation? No. They just accepted
the inevitable that Dole was going to lose and what they did is they pulled financing from his
campaign, at least in the final month, and they redistributed it to House and Senate candidates
and actually they did better in the House and Senate. They held on to the House and Senate.
I think they lost a few seats,
but way less than they were expecting to.
And they kind of ran on a campaign that,
you know, you can't trust slick Willy.
So keep us on, split the ticket,
and keep us on as a check against him.
And it actually worked fairly well.
It was the best the Republicans could do.
But frankly, they let Bob Dole run a dignified campaign.
My advice to the Democrats would be,
don't have Biden resign, doing a shakeup right now.
Yeah, you have the Democrats, listen to Sachs.
There's your political counsel.
If you're a Democratic politician, listen to Sachs.
You do a shakeup right now,
when you put an untested, unexperienced,
clueless president in there who's gonna wanna
show how tough she is and bring in her own team
in the middle of this dangerous situation.
Let Biden run a dignified campaign and lose.
My advice to the Democrats is to embrace an outsider.
Give the people what they want.
Freedom of choice, freedom to elect a leader
and bring someone in that falls outside of the traditional
political spectrum that does not want to hold public office
because it's not their career.
They can bring money to the table.
They can bring credibility to the table
and they can win votes
and compete effectively against Trump.
If your goal is to retain the White House,
Kamala, give us two names.
Give us two names.
Jamie Diamond, Jamie Diamond, Bob Iger.
Give us a second name.
Bob Iger, yeah, it's a great one.
Jamie Diamond and Bob Iger. You us a second name. Bob Iger, yeah, it's a great one. Jamie Diamond and Bob Iger.
It's called wish casting. You're doing wish casting.
Sax, I'm not speaking about realism. I'm speaking about what it would take to win.
Yes. If they actually want to have a shot at winning. Someone that could win a popular vote,
someone that could actually win votes away from Trump, because you can't introduce someone like
Whitmer or Moore this late in the season when no one in the United States knows who the heck this person is.
Yeah.
When you have someone with credibility, with economic and business success, with executive
authority, with capital and connections into the Democratic Party, but isn't part of the
political machine that you and many others in the Democratic Party are now starting to
hate.
Let's go.
You have an opportunity to actually win.
Yes.
And if they were smart and they got their together,
they would say, you know what?
It's time for a change.
Just like the Republicans had to do
when Trump stepped into the party.
Bingo, use the Republican playbook.
Brilliant, Freeberg, brilliant.
Okay, well you guys better have a magic lamp
with a genie in it because that's the only way
this is gonna happen.
Well, listen, it's...
I'm just trying to keep the show fresh.
Okay, let's go.
Okay, here we go.
Next topic, here we go. Freeberg. Okay, okay. Here we go. Next topic.
Here we go.
Freeberg gets the final word. Here we go. I'm giving freeburg the final
route. He had the best take I'm giving freeburg the final word.
You're pulling your McNeil Lara.
Absolutely. Yeah. Okay. Here we go. There were seven rulings in a
bunch of SCOTUS activity over the last week. But these are really
important, consequential decisions, we are going to talk about three of
them. And I'm going to try to get through these quickly. Obviously, you could talk about these for
hours and people will be you know, doing case studies on them for a long time. But let me try
to do this quickly. So we can get everybody's take on them. The first one I want to talk about is net
choice. This is the content moderation cases that you may have heard of. There were two very controversial laws passed in Florida and Texas in 2021. In the wake of January
6, the Florida law if you weren't aware of it, and I don't suspect most people are, would cover
platforms with over 100 million monthly active users or 100 million in annual revenue. In other
words, they're targeting X YouTube, Facebook, meta, those kind of sites. And they would require those platforms to notify users if their posts are removed or
altered. And the platforms would have to make general disclosures about their operations and
policies and the Texas law was very similar platforms over 50 million monthly active users,
and it would require them to notify users whose posts were removed and provide an explanation of why all that kind of stuff. Both of these laws were challenged in court in 2021. Just to give you an
idea like why I think the conservatives were upset about this. Obviously, Trump being suspended
indefinitely on Twitter, Facebook and other platforms or the labeling of content like we've
seen on our own channel and YouTube. NetChoice is a tech industry group includes Facebook and other platforms or the labeling of content like we've seen on our own channel and YouTube. NetChoice is a tech industry group includes Facebook and YouTube and the
parent companies of those. And they sued to block these two laws. Justice Kagan, a liberal
wrote the unanimous decision, obviously no dissensions here. And the majority held the
editorial judgment and the curation of other people's speech is a unique expressive product
of its own, which entitles it to First Amendment protection. So just to give you an example, if you wanted to
create a social network, we can't be anonymous like LinkedIn, you can do that if you want to
do something like Twitter acts and have anonymous accounts, you can do that as well. If you want to
create a social network with adult content, you can do it. Or like Zuck is doing on threats,
interestingly, they are downplaying political content, obviously, other platforms amplify political
content. So let me add so the end of all this in terms of how
the court handled it is they offered some guidance and sent
the cases back to the lower courts to clarify a bunch of
stuff. Just to keep this brief, Chamath, what are your thoughts
on this? Obviously, some of the ideas here, like letting
users know why they were banned or why content was taken down, I think the overwhelming majority
of users would like to have that. But is this the government's role?
I'm not enough of a legal scholar to know the details of this case, except to say that
when the entire court goes in one direction, it's probably
because this never should have been brought to the court in the
first place. And they're giving a very clear message. It wasn't
even ideologically strained to figure out what the right answer
should be. So,
Sax, obviously, your chosen party was the one who brought
this you have concerns about the platforms doing this. But you
have equal concerns about the government, then I guess, being the ones who have to enforce these? Is this a good ruling?
Pete Well, I think that with respect to the Texas and Florida laws, I think their heart was in the
right place. They were motivated by the right things, which was to reduce censorship on the
social media platforms, specifically censorship of conservatives, which is to say they're citizens. But those laws probably were overly broad and they infringed on the free speech
of corporations. Because I guess corporations get free speech too. And basically what the
ruling says is that content moderation receives the same First Amendment protections as any
other kind of speech. So the decisions of what content
you're going to keep up or take down on your own property is itself a speech decision and the
government has to respect that. So that's what the ruling here was saying. I think it's not a bad
decision. I wish the Supreme Court, however, had coupled this with a better decision in the Missouri
versus Biden case, which they basically said
that the plaintiffs lack standing to pursue.
So they didn't necessarily give a dispositive ruling
in that case, but they threw it out.
And basically what that case was about
was the Biden administration was engaged in attempts
to influence or pressure social media companies
to take down speech as a practice
known as jawboning.
And I wish they had coupled this decision with a better decision in Missouri versus
Biden saying the government's not allowed to coerce social networks to take down speech
either.
And they refuse to do that.
So I wouldn't say these are like the greatest set of decisions with regard to free speech that
the court's ever done. I hope that they will come back in the future once they find a plaintiff with
the right standing to address that issue. Yeah, that's a key issue. Freeburg, your thoughts?
Yeah, so I've said for a long time, we've obviously had conversations about Twitter and shadow
banning and some of the other activities on what are typically called social media platforms. At the end of the day, these are all, as I've shared
in the past, my belief is they're all content companies. They have a choice as executives
and editors of those companies to decide how to editorialize the content on their platforms.
They can choose to create content with writers that they pay on staff, like a newspaper might.
They can choose to create content with actors that they pay on staff, like a newspaper might. They can choose to create content with actors and directors
that they pay to create novel video series for them,
like HBO might.
Or they can choose to make content creation available
to third parties that don't get paid, like users.
And at the end of the day, what they choose to do
with that content and how they choose to display that content
is up to them as an editorial platform that is ultimately creating content for other consumers. I don't view that user-generated
content platforms are a right of the consumers to have access to share their thoughts. They have
the internet to do that and they have many other places that they can go to to create blogs,
to create websites, to do whatever else they want to do to express themselves, but to have
a technological platform that lets them submit content that then the editors
get to decide how and where they show that content, I think they should understand because
it's in the terms and conditions when you sign up.
So I don't believe in social media platforms as utilities.
And I don't think that the government should have any role in deciding what is or isn't
on those platforms.
This goes both ways.
I think that the company should decide
what kind of platforms they want to have,
whether they want to have free speech that
allows inappropriate content or content that
might be offensive, or whether they
want to have a highly moderated platform to make it more
broadly available or appealing to users.
It's entirely up to them.
And I really do appreciate the ruling
because I think that the government should have less
of a role in intervening and deciding how media companies
create content and how they editorialize that content.
Yeah, so I think that's well said.
And I was in the same sort of camp as you, Freberg,
which is like a battle of snowflakes here.
Like the liberals obviously were canceling people
on these platforms.
And now like the bag of folks want to come in
and have the government regulate it.
If you want to compete here,
just create a new product or service in the market. You're on the board
of rumble sacks, like they're doing really well. And if you squeeze too tight and your
platform doesn't work, it's the marketplace should, you know, figure out who the winners
are. And you know, it's it's not a situation where you want the government getting in there
because then they're going to go to a newspaper. And there's so much precedent here. I, you know, I actually read some of the, of these
rulings, which is really interesting. They're written phenomenally. I will put in the show
notes the actual links to the PDFs of these decisions. They're well worth reading. And in
this case, they brought up a bunch of the previous long, most fascinating, like people wanted to force a newspaper to allow you know,
one candidate to reply and give him space. They're like, No, you can't do that. It's their
newspaper, they decide what they publish. Another person wanted to have a corporate newsletter be
forced to give information about the other sides, you just don't get to do that. I'll just say one
more thing. What else is striking is just how insular and protectionist Texas and Florida are being.
And it's not just with this law, it's also with the lab-grown meat or cultivated meat
laws that they've passed.
And other states are passing similar laws, which is limiting innovation in the state
and limiting freedom to operate in the state in order to protect interests of individuals
and corporations that already exist within that state.
So it's really important to note, this isn't a good or a bad thing, but those states are operating in a way, the lawmakers of those states
are operating in a way that's trying to protect the interests of the individuals and businesses in the
state over the freedoms that might and the liberties that might otherwise be available.
And I think we often talk about these states being more free, but these laws and the cultivated meat
ban laws, in my opinion, indicate that these states are actually on the contrary,
they're much more kind of protectionist.
Where's your take on that, Sax?
To Freeberg's point, I mean, I think this, this ruling might have been necessary from
a constitutional standpoint, because corporations do have free speech rights.
But again, I would say that I think that the laws of Texas and Florida are coming from
a good place, which is they were trying to protect the rights of their citizens to engage in free speech. I think it's just unfortunate that in this case, it's a zero
sum game. And as a result, those laws were were invalidated. I think that makes sense,
but I still think we have a problem.
I agree with you. The platforms have too much power. What is your proposed solution? You
obviously don't want to have the government in there like running a newsroom or running
Twitter X because you yourself are saying, Hey, the government's too involved in X and
these platforms and doing this jawboning.
So obviously having them more involved is bad, right?
You're against them being involved.
Yeah.
I think it's really tricky to figure out how to solve this.
Got it.
I think for one thing, you don't want the government jawboning these sites to take down
content.
That clearly should be a free speech violation. I'm
disappointed the court didn't get to that.
I think we're totally missing the bigger picture. There's like
a lot of fear mongering that I think has happened with
respect to the Supreme Court. And that it's all of a sudden
become some super ideological, super rigid, super activist
place. And I think it's in fact,
much of the opposite, and the data supports that. And so I
think it's important for people to know that what's actually
happening is that many of these decisions are very much split
along non ideological lines. And I think that that's an important
thing. So I just like I'm pulling this up. And I just want to
read some of these things to you. US versus Rahimi, which is a federal law that
prohibits people subjected to domestic violence, restraining
orders from having a firearm. That was an eight to one
decision where all but Thomas supported that makes a lot of
sense, you would think. racial gerrymandering that was more
ideological, where was the conservative block versus Sotomayor, Brown and Kagan.
Trump v Anderson, which is Trump getting back on the Colorado ballot, 9-0.
FDA versus the Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, which was access to the abortion pill, 9-0, maintaining access. Moil versus us, which is whether Idaho's strict abortion law
conflicts with the federal law, non ideological, where it was
Gorsuch, Alito Thomas, and Katanji Brown Jackson who
dissented. So it goes on and on. And I think what's so
interesting about all of this is that I had thought that this was
not like what it was, what I thought what had happened is Trump
struck the Supreme Court.
All of a sudden, we are ripping all these laws
apart, this longstanding sort of doctrine of what has passed.
But yet, I think what's actually happening
is people are pretty thoughtfully pushing
the responsibility to the states.
And I think that the court's decisions are relatively unpredictable in the sense that
it's not just a conservative block versus a liberal block. I
think that's the real story. And when you unpack a bunch of these
decisions in that context, that's what's so interesting to
me is like these are pretty nuanced decisions that get at
the heart of a lot of key important issues happening
across non ideological lines. Jan six one Katanji Brown
Jackson was the Biden appointee that basically supported this
thing that may throw out 200 plus convictions for Jan six and
Amy Coneybert was on the other side. This is an unpredictable
Supreme Court. I think they think for themselves they seem
to be independent. And I think they're coming to their own
conclusions. That's the only thing to take away from the
distribution of the votes that should make people feel a little bit better. So I think this next ruling is the
most important one. And I think will be the most important one that we've seen with this new court
that has three of the nine justices placed by Trump to your point, Chamath. And this one is
seismic, the looper versus Raymundo decision overturned Chevron.
Okay, so this one takes a little explaining the court overruled a landmark 1984
decision in the Chevron case from 40 years ago. For context, the original
ruling created the Chevron doctrine, where the government and federal courts
generally defer to the stances of federal agencies unless Congress has written
specific laws on an issue.
The 1984 ruling upheld the EPA's interpretation of the Clean Air Act. It's very influential. This
has been cited by federal courts over 18,000 times in 40 years. It was overruled in another six to
three decision where the justices voted along party lines from up. Basically, this shifts power
back to federal judges and courts instead of administrative agency staff by experts, academics, all that kind of stuff. In the majority opinion,
Roberts conservative obviously, said the chevron doctrine violates the Administrative Procedures
Act of Federal Law that directs the courts to review actions taken by federal agencies. He also
pointed out that the courts are regularly expected to deal with technical questions. So this should
not be considered beyond their ability to scope. Kagan, a liberal wrote a critical
dissent. She said the agency staff with scientists and
experts are more likely to have the expertise to make these
decisions rather than the judges. She also pointed out
that the system had been functioning for 40 years. And
this ruling will create a massive quote jolt to the legal
system. Chamath get in there. Do you remember when President
Biden tried to pass the budget two years ago, and he was one vote short,
and Joe Manchin ended up putting it over the top,
but he negotiated what was a redo of a bunch of regulation.
And he was promised that there would be
this regulatory overhaul that happened,
and that was sort of
why he had decided to vote for that budget bill, it ended up not happening. So the reason why I think he had saw that and he
discussed this is that there are so many businesses that now
suffer from the regulations of these agencies, because when the
agency enacted that regulation, it was just a different time and
place. And there
was no clean way to go back to an independent body and say, I understand what your intention was in
1985, when you wrote that regulation. But in 2024, things have changed. Can we reconsider?
And basically, what the courts have done now will allow companies who believe that regulations are either
overwrought or misguided for today's market landscape, bring
it to an independent judiciary and have them decide. And I
think that that's a very reasonable check and balance.
And I think that's, that makes a lot of sense. Folks can pass
laws. And if folks believe that those laws do you undo harm, now you have a mechanism to go and actually explain your case
to somebody independent who can then make a judgment. I think that that's a good check
and bounce. Freberg, I know this was the one you most wanted to talk about. What's your take on
this end of the age of experts and throwing things back to the
court, what will be the practical ramifications of
this, how much experience you guys have had dealing with
federal regulators, you have a lot more than I think, yeah,
and I've worked in a lot across a number of federal agencies in
businesses I've been involved in. And I can tell you it is, as
I'm sure you would expect,
there's a lot of bureaucratic morass in these agencies.
And if you think about it,
it's because the agencies are effectively
under the Chevron Doctrine, vested unlimited authority
to create rules and regulations
that they then determine are meant to represent the laws
that were passed by Congress.
But more often than not, those rules and regulations
begin to bleed outside of the lines of the intention
of the laws when they were passed.
And this is because those agencies,
by creating new rules and regulations,
this isn't some like, you know,
I have a subversive reason for doing this, but these agencies
have an incentive for creating more rules and regulations because they then get to go
back to Congress and ask for more budget and hire more people and grow the importance and
the scale of their agency.
This is the natural kind of organic growth that arises in any living system and any organization of individuals is also a living system and
Has the same incentive it wants to have more resources. It wants to get bigger
It wants to do more stuff. It wants to be more important and the chevron doctrine has allowed agencies to operate
Independent and outside of the lines that were defined in the laws that were passed that that vested them this authority, that then they can go and say, I want more budget, I want to get
bigger. And I'm optimistic that this ruling will limit the agency's authorities and limit
their ability to create more bureaucratic overhead, more headcount, more individuals
that need to now go and administer the rules and regulations that they themselves create.
And so I'm actually very optimistic and hopeful about this change. Now, the downside, the negative
to this, is that there are a number of really important regulatory roles that agencies have
come to play that never got passed as bills, like environmental protection rules. And there's a
negative consequence that will arise to some degree, with
respect to health of the environment, health of people,
etc. But I think net net, Congress needs to do its job,
it needs to go back to session, and it needs to sit down and
needs to pass laws that really clearly define what is and what
isn't going to be legal going forward. And then the agencies
operate strictly within those bounds.
So to recap, it could get a little messy, but it's a better, healthier system because this system
has become super bloated over 40 years. That was my take on it as well. Sax, what's your take on
this? This feels like a huge win to me. What do you think? Oh, I agree with that. And I agree with
what Freeberg said. Look, when this decision, the Chevron decision, came down in 1984 at the height of the Reagan Revolution,
conservatives actually liked it.
They praised it because we were coming off a period
of an activist court, the Warren Court,
and they thought that shifting power from the courts
to the agencies would actually be a good move.
Well, it turns out it completely backfired.
Chevron, when it came out, was not a widely
noticed decision. Since then, it's been cited 18,000 times by federal courts. It's turned
out to be enormously important and influential. The reason for all those citations is it's
the courts deferring to the rulemaking of an agency. What Chevron basically says is,
as long as the agency's interpretation is reasonable, or
you could say not unreasonable, then the agency can basically promulgate the rule.
And what this has led to is an orgy of rulemaking by all these federal agencies.
And so most of our laws now effectively are being made by unelected bureaucrats who are
part of this three-letter alphabet super government agencies.
It's not the Congress, it's not the court, it's not the president. It's this fourth branch
of government that's not in the Constitution, which is the administrative state. And so
the administrative state has become incredibly powerful as a result of Chevron doctrine.
And now I think by reversing it, you actually give a chance for the restoration of democracy.
Basically the agencies are not
empowered to essentially make whatever rules they want as long as they superficially appear
reasonable. They actually have to show that their rules are within a statute that they were directed
by Congress to effectively engage in the rulemaking. So this is a step in the right direction for sure.
But again, the real problem here is reigning in this unelected administrative state
Yeah, to mop any final thoughts here as we move on to the next one
Seems like the Supreme Court is doing a great job
I agree all nine of them. I mean, they really they really seem to be doing a tremendous job. I
Give them a lot of credit. I feel like I've become a conservative. Maybe I'm a conservative now, sex, I don't
know, I may have to sit down and confess to you. Because I read
a number of these decisions. And I was like, I agree, I agree.
And this is supposed to be a conservative court. So I'm not
sure. Well, it's actually it's not it's not an originalist
court. It's not a conservative court. This is what I'm saying,
like, these are words that are planted by people that want you
to believe their version of the lie.
Great point.
Yeah.
So there are a lot of originalists on the court and what the originalist doctrine says
and Sachs you can correct me is I read the constitution with faith and fidelity and I
just see what it's what it says, not I interpret it, not I fill in the words.
I just what it says is what we're allowed.
And I think that there's some, there's a really
good version of America in that view of the world.
Yeah, I mean, I would say it's not even necessarily an
originalist or conservative court. It's a 333 court,
meaning there's three conservatives, there's three
liberals, and there's three justice in the middle, you have
this middle block led by the Chief Justice Roberts with
Kavanaugh and Barrett, and then you got the conservatives with Gorsuch and Thomas and Alito.
Sometimes the middle block goes with the liberal, sometimes it goes with the conservatives.
Again, it's more of like a triangle.
As we know, the triangle is the best shape for equipoise because it creates balance.
I think what we have right now is a balanced court.
I think on the whole, they've done a good job.
And I think it's kind of sad that in reaction to some of these decisions, you've got powerful
lawmakers like Elizabeth Warren who are explicitly calling for packing the court.
They're actually saying, you know, put a bunch of justice on here to ruin this equipoise that
we have.
I think it's really sad.
I think that the court right now is one of the last highly functional institutions in American public life and for
Elected leaders to be calling for its destruction is just sad
Well, I you know, I think what here and here's an image from Axios showing, you know six Republican
Nominated and three Democrat nominated I think to give the counter argument, you know Roe v Wade
Being overturned with something the
majority of the country didn't want. These three people were added for that explicit
purpose by Trump. People have trauma pain over that reasonably, I think. And then the
truth is though, if they are, you know, just one standard deviation here, as you can see
in this Axios chart, which is based on some data.
I don't I don't trust this. This chart is worthless, Jason. I think well, let me explain to you.
No, no, look at the actual you don't even know what it is. Yeah, if you look at it,
my point is this is meaningless. A child could have drawn this. It means nothing. No, no, a child
didn't draw it. This was how do you know? I'm reading that's reading the source of the reading the source of the data.
This is based on something called the Martin Quinn score and
analysis by political scientist Andrew Martin Kevin Quinn, known
as the Martin Quinn score places judges on an idea lecture,
ideological spectrum, a lower score indicates a more liberal
justice, or a high score indicates a more conservative
justice. And then they went through all of their decisions.
So you're saying a subjective classifier, a subjective classifier is created by these two
random people. And you're now regurgitating the score like it means something.
No, I think it's an interesting way. It's an interesting chart to discuss to understand
a little bit of their meanings. What I would encourage anybody to do
is to look at the actual substance of the decisions and the votes and
what you will see is that people are not as easily predictable as
that chart would show. And I think that's what's important.
Okay. I think that chart supports exactly what you just
said, Sax, right? Yeah.
I mean, not exactly. I mean, again, I view it as a 333
court. A lot of other people have written about that. And
they've got their own diagrams and charts to show that. Look, I
think it's a court, like I said, in equipoise, I don't think it's
partisan. I think it's it's being reasonably fair. I don't
agree with every single ruling. Like I said, I would have liked
to have seen a different result in Biden v Missouri. However, I think on the whole, they're doing a good job.
And it really should be a scandal that you've got powerful lawmakers explicitly calling
for the court to be passed.
I mean, that would be a disaster, right?
Because you have nine justices, which is a good number.
You try to increase that to 13.
Then the next time the Republicans have control, they're going to increase it to 15 or 21 or
whatever. And pretty soon we're going to have 100 justices on the court, you'll ruin it.
You know, really, nine justices should be a constitutional requirement, we should just
fix it at nine and not mess with that. So it's just scandalous to me that you've got
politicians who are reacting to reasonable decisions by saying that we need to pack the
court.
Okay, quick hit here. This is an important story for you Chamath.
SCOTUS also agreed to hear a case on the limits
of online porn in its next term, which starts in October.
The law in question was passed.
Will it, will it impact incognito mode?
Cause if it is that.
Just.
You're in trouble.
The lawyer is just, I think there's a really good
Italy or you
Could you imagine if they banned
incognito mode?
I think you might want to do a deep
dive into how incognito incognito
mode is you may want to get a VPN.
I'm pretty sure Texas is going to
ban incognito mode.
Exactly.
Texas and Florida.
I think a couple of these sites because of the threat of you know, this these
laws of age gating, they've just decided to wholesale leave certain states by IP
address. Therefore, the sale of VPNs in Texas went up because when you went to
certain porn sites, I said, hey, because of Texas is proposing these laws, we're
not going to allow you to visit this website,
Nick, do the NBC thing, the more you know, the more you know.
Okay, Scottish agreed to hear a case on the limits of online
porn in its next term, which starts in October, the long
question was passed by Texas legislature in 2023 requires
porn sites to verify the age of their users and restrict access
for minors. It seems reasonable. Fifth Circuit Court in New Orleans upheld the law
sending it to the Supreme Court if upheld users would have to submit personal info that
verifies their over 18 to watch porn. The law is opposed by the ACLU and the Free Speech
Coalition, which is a trade group representing adult entertainers and companies, they argue
it places an undue burden on adults wishing to access constantly protected free expression.
Oh, speaking of porn and its related businesses, the Rick's Cabaret recession index is back
on. Did you guys see this? It was published on Twitter. So Rick's Cabaret is a collection
of public strip clubs.
And then includes sports.
And what's interesting about the Rick's Cabaret stock price is that it has presaged the last two recessions when whenever the stock dives, people people have said it actually predicts an upcoming recession and the stock just, you know, puked up like 25 or 30% in the last week. There it is. So people do not have the cheddar to go to
the cabaret and go splashy cash. It's called it's called Rick's
cabaret but the strip club index says recession is on the
off and I prefer cabarets. It's more charming. Alright, so
surprise you're not discussing the immunity case.
That's the one that all the pundits have been hyperventilating about.
Oh, we'll get to it.
I made it last.
I'll counter the Rick's Cabaret recession indicator as valid anymore based on the theory
of our good friend on the group chat, who I think has done a very good job highlighting
that the strip club industry has been decimated by OnlyFans.
As a result, Rick's cabaret is more likely down
because of OnlyFans and the lack of,
shall we say, employee base available
to work in these establishments
because they make more money working online at OnlyFans now.
That was a theory posited by one of our good friends.
But you gotta think that that showed up in the data
at least a year or two years ago, no?
Because how long has OnlyFans been around?
A long time, I'm guessing.
Well, but I think it peaked during COVID
because you couldn't go to a cabaret
if you wanted to take in a cabaret show
and have a bottle of champagne at a cabaret show,
you couldn't do it.
So the thesis of our friend is the
thesis of our friend, like entertainers. Yeah, only fans
took all the entertainers out of the strip club industry because they make more money online cabaret cabaret and the cabaret
industry. I'm sorry, please edit that Nick. And as a result, the
quality of the product at the cabaret business has declined.
And as a result, revenue has declined, it took a little bit
of time to earn that in. So the virtual cabaret business has declined. And as a result, revenue has declined, and it took a little bit of time
to earn that in. So the virtual cabaret industry, that's our
friend's theory, we give them a big shout out, we will. Yeah.
Shout out to call it the beep theory. Yeah, the beep theory.
So the the elite cabaret artists can make more money on only
fans, they'll go there. And then that leaves the less refined
artists.
Why it's so good.
I'm trying to navigate this and not get labeled.
Sax, where are you on this? What's your opinion?
So anyway, so far 16 red states have passed or agreed to pass each game.
Jaykal's got the Dunder Mifflin index of whatever.
Sorry, I couldn't hear you guys start laughing too quickly. Say it again.
Cut out.
You had the Dunder Mifflin score of XYZ red.
Dunder Mifflin.
So, quick Jaykal, check the Dr. Mifflin score.
What does it say?
I don't understand the Dr. Mifflin score.
Oh, is that from the office?
Oh my god, J. Cal, what is wrong with you?
I never got into it.
I've probably watched it like four times.
That's the paper company where they work. Yeah.
Yeah. Apparently we've had a huge victory for Trump in the immunity case. Trump sued in this
case based on special counsel Jack Smith's prosecution of Trump for alleged attempts to
overturn the 2020 election and his role in January six. If you don't remember that case,
since there's so many cases against Trump,
this was based on Trump pressuring Mike Pence to not certify the election.
His phone call to get the 11,780
votes that were missing in Georgia or Giuliani
and the whack pack trying to fake electorates to overturn the election.
Trump argued that he should be immune from prosecution
for acts committed while he was president. Sigotis ruled six three along party lines that former presidents can't face prosecution
for actions that related to core powers of their office. And official official official,
core powers of their office and that all official acts receive at least the broad presumption
of immunity.
Here's the quote, under our constitutional structure of separated powers, the nature
of presidential power entitles a former president to absolute immunity for criminal prosecution
for actions within his conclusive and preclusive constitutional authority.
And he is entitled to at least presumptive immunity from prosecution for all his official acts.
There is no immunity for unofficial acts that would be outside the duty of the president's.
Chief Justice Roberts emphasized that decision that the decision doesn't necessarily mean presidents are above the law. In her dissenting opinion, Justice Sotomayor
wrote that under the new rule in criminal law can't be applied to
presidents even if they misuse their office for personal gain. She
wrote that if the president orders the Navy SEAL Team six to
assassinate a political rival, he is now insulated from criminal
prosecution. Another quote, the president is now a king above the
law. She closed with this line, with fear for our democracy, I dissent. Notably, this breaks the
tradition of closing with a respectfully dissent. So Trump's
attempts to overturn the election results case now hinges
on whether Trump's conduct was private, or related to his
official duty. For example, the lower courts now have to
determine when Trump pressured Pence to not certify the
election, if that was an official
business of being president or not, or when he called Georgia
and said, Hey, can you find me 11,000 votes? Was that official
duty? Or was it outside his duty? President Trump has
already cited the immunity ruling and requesting New York
judge throw out his conviction in the hush money case.
Sentencing for that was pushed back from July 11
to September because of this ruling sacks. There's your wrong. Well, Jacob, what do you think?
This is I'm really curious. I mean, I read the the I'm halfway through the the original PDF.
And I do think the president needs immunity, obviously, for conducting business.
And then I do think if they step outside the lines, they should not have immunity.
And then the devil will be in the details here.
And that's what courts and juries exist to do.
So when he told Mike Pence to not certify the election, he's obviously not doing that as part of his duty as president when he called Georgia to
get the 11,000 votes. He was not doing that. That's why he had outside counsel there. That's why he
hired Giuliani and the WACPAC. What do you think? What do you think of Sotomayor's hypothetical of
using SEAL Team Six to kill a political rival? Why that was that's you think that he would be
immune from process? Anybody would be immune from prosecution for that?
No, that seemed a little bit hysterical. And actually, that came up in the discussions. I actually listened to the audio
version of this when they were doing the the q&a basically. And
I think you listened to it too free break when I talked about
it. So yeah, I think the devil will be in the details here and
how they execute it. Obviously, you need to have immunity if you're going to, I don't know, take actions, you know, to assassinate Osama bin Laden, right,
or whatever it is. But you know, it's it is a bit concerning this concept of being able to
shield the president when he asks, I don't know, the attorney general to do something illegal.
So these are the details that are going to need to be worked out here. And obviously, it's a split decision. So the
Supreme Court themselves can't agree on this.
I think that there's just so much we don't know about what it
takes to be the President of the United States. The example that
I gave you guys in the group chat is like, look at the whole
Iran-Contra affair. How complicated was that? Can any of
us really understand what all of the interplay was when Ronald
Reagan decides to work around a
weapons embargo, sell weapons to Iran, take money, funnel it and
fund the sand and east does in the middle of all of that, there
was a huge cocaine trade that was kind of enabled or
supported. I mean, who how do we know? I think there's just a
lot of latitude that you give to the one person that you elect to
be president. And so maybe it's just a good reminder for all of
us that we are electing one person, we cannot be electing
five or six people, we're not electing a shadow cabinet, we're
electing one person. And this is just a reminder of how much
power that one person has.
Saksha, you have thoughts?
I think this was an easy decision. All the majority do is
codify explicitly what has long been presumed that presidents
enjoy broad immunity for official acts that they
undertake in the exercise of their constitutional authority
and the duties of their office. It was established decades ago
that presidents enjoy broad immunity from civil lawsuits.
So it's already been the case that presidents can't be sued civilly.
Well, criminal liability is even harder to prove.
So if you have the broad immunity from civil, you should have broad immunity from criminal
as well.
And the Supreme Court, I think, had never ruled on criminal immunity because they never
had to. No former
president's ever been subjected to the type of lawfare that's
been deployed against Trump, who also happens to be the political
opponent of the current president. So I think it's a
shame that the Supreme Court has had to rule on this. Did they
get every detail right? I don't know. I don't know what it means
for the future. However, I know the reason they're doing it,
which is we've had this unprecedented lawfare against Trump. And that's why they've
been forced to do this. So ultimately, I think this is the right decision. No, it does not
authorize drone strikes against the president's political enemies. That's insane. It does
not make the president above the law or a king. And I think that Roberts in his ruling
said that the key things.
He said that the dissent's position in the end boils down to ignoring the Constitution's
separation of powers and the court's precedent and instead fear mongers on the basis of extreme
hypotheticals.
And then he says that the dissents overlook the more likely prospect of an executive branch that cannibalizes itself
with each successive president free to prosecute his predecessors yet unable to boldly and fearlessly
carry out his duties for fear that he may be next. I think that's really the key line here is that
you're posing all these insane hypotheticals instead of recognizing the practical reality
that if you don't give presidents immunity,
then the next president is going to prosecute the old president.
And future presidents will be hamstrung in doing this very
important job that's already difficult enough. So I think
that this was just a necessary decision. There was no way
around it. And the president already has civil immunity, you
got to give him criminal immunity to
Friberg your thoughts I guess the the steel man on the other side would be
you know Trump doing things like calling Georgia and asking to find votes or
pressuring the president the vice president to
Overturn the election results after 60 failed legal cases, you know is what's concerning the other side
So do you have a take on it? I think that the distinction between acting in their executive capacity as president of the United States versus their personal capacity as an individual candidate or an individual
that could benefit through some other means is a really good distinction.
I think how the courts ultimately adjudicate that distinction is what's still ahead.
But I do think that the clarity of that distinction is critical.
It seems like the right thing, how this is going to play out with respect to election interference.
Does interfering in the election constitute one's role as an executive
overseeing the federal election process?
Or does it constitute one's personal benefits
that may arise if one is individually elected
is the key determinant that the lower court
will likely have to make?
Maybe that gets kicked back up again in the future
if there's a disagreement over the decision
that the court does make with regards to that distinction. Where do you stand on that? Sachs, who in previous episodes
has said you didn't believe in this election interference, and
you thought Trump lost. Have you changed your position on that?
Or are you still in that position?
That's totally irrelevant to the course decision.
Let me ask you a follow up to that then. So in the case of do
you think Trump was acting officially when he asked Georgia
to find the votes when he asked Pence to overturn the election?
Or do you think he was acting in his duty?
I think that what you just described there
is what's known as a question of fact in the legal system.
There are questions of law and questions of fact.
And what the Supreme Court has done is given us a doctrine.
They've answered the question of law.
They've basically given us a three-part test.
They said that when the president acts
within his exclusive constitutional authority, he gets broad immunity. When he does an official
duty, but that's not in that category, he gets presumptive immunity, meaning that the
prosecutor can still go after him. They just have to rebut the presumption. And when he
engages in a personal act, there's no immunity. So look, what has to happen now is if Jack
Smith wants to continue this prosecution of
Trump, he's going to have to make the argument that Trump's acts were either personal or
were part of his duties, but he's going to rebut the presumption.
So that is now the question of fact that Jack Smith would have to litigate.
And I'm not going to litigate it here.
I don't know the answer to that.
But again, I would separate questions of law and questions of fact, what the Supreme Court has done, I think, you know, we think there was election interference.
So yeah, we called Georgia to make sure that those 11,000 votes were there. And hey, you know,
we thought this was not a fair election. So I was acting in my duty. And when I told pens to
not certify the election, I could see them making that argument. What do you think?
I don't know the specifics of these cases. but I think it's going to force a prosecutor
to have a really strong point of view and have evidence and then go after somebody.
But again, I think you're focusing too much on Trump.
Robert said in the decision, you have to look past the exigencies of the current moment.
This is a set of rules that's about past presidents and future presidents.
This is a set of rules that's about past presidents and future presidents, this is for forever. And so that's the most
important thing here, which is there's a set of rules that I
think we can all agree on, because the man that we all
elect, dutifully elect, is the most powerful person in the
world, we knew it before, we know it now. So even more
important that we make sure we're picking one person and that person is capable of doing the job.
You may not agree, but they need to be competent and capable of doing the job.
Yeah. Well, they definitely have to be competent. And this case was brought by Trump over this specific issue.
So I think that's what we look at this specific judgment here.
That's what they're going to have to determine in the coming months or years with this case is was he acting in his duty or was he not? That's going
to be a really interesting case. I think that between this ruling and another case called
Fisher versus US, which is the January 6 obstruction case where the Supreme Court in the 63 majority
found that Sarbanes-Oxley was being misused to create a new crime called obstructing an
official proceeding. When you combine that judgment with this judgment, I think Jack
Smith should just resign. It's pretty clear that the Supreme Court has kicked the legs out from
under his case. By the way, Katanji Jackson supported that decision. That's right. So again,
not a hyper ideological, not a hyper partisan court.
They just ruled that Sarbanes-Oxley had nothing to do with what happened on January 6th and it was
being misused by a creative prosecutor. And I told you when these Jack Smith cases first came,
I said it's not the job of prosecutor to be creative. Their job is to narrowly interpret
the law and to enforce the law. And you combine these rulings together and you can see that Jack Smith
has now even more uphill battle. It's time for him to resign
stop.
That's 200 convictions. It's not just one.
That's right. That's right.
200 of them.
Small percentage of the overall convictions though.
They took hundreds of people who did not engage in any violence
on January 6. Many of them just wandered
through an open door in the Capitol and they were prosecuted to the hilt.
They were sent to jail for that because this DOJ wanted to send a statement.
They wanted to use them as a political talking point and that's a shame.
I think hundreds of people were horribly mistreated by the judicial system as part of a political prosecution.
Now, there are some people...
Except for the ones who beat police and brought long guns.
No problem putting those people in jail.
No problem.
Anyone who used violence, go directly to jail.
Do not pass go.
But some of these people just took a tour through the Capitol.
All those people got suspended sentences and trespassing.
Some of them went to jail.
The ones who went to jail... Jacob Chansley spent three years in jail.
Yeah, the ones who went to jail were the ones who beat cops or otherwise brought...
No, not Jacob Chansley.
That poor man, just because he wore the Viking.
Remember the guy with the Viking hat?
Oh yeah, so they also went to jail with a...
The QAnon shaman.
If you did damage, if you vandalized.
Yeah, that was the other reason people went to jail.
I saw a video of him getting a guided tour through the Capitol.
I mean, if you vandalized a Capitol building, I guess you have to do something.
What did he do? He moved a dais around?
No, I think they like shattered the windows and you know,
He did it. I never saw any video of him doing that.
Anyway, they picked on him because he was an easy target because he looked like a
weirdo and he had the Viking horns and he has,
he has a history of mental problems. And
so they put that man in jail for years. Yeah, I'm not concerned about him. I'm concerned
the ones who brought all the long guns to the hotels around the Capitol to have backup
firepower but you know, hey, everybody's got a different opinion on this. We all in podcasts,
you can have those concerns. I don't think unless you put it in some people in jail. Yeah, I think you, you can have those concerns. I don't think it lets you put it on some people in jail.
Yeah.
I think that you can hold both of those ideas.
I don't think anybody in a sense should go to jail.
And I don't think the oath keeper should have brought guns to the Capitol.
Okay.
They didn't, they bumped to Virginia.
Just to be clear.
Yeah.
They brought them to the hotels around them.
Huge large caches in Virginia.
Correct.
Yeah.
In Virginia.
Yeah.
They drove to the Capitol on January 6th.
Anyway, I'm not defending them. Anyway, I'm not defending them. And brought their guns to the hotel.
I'm not defending them.
You defending them?
No, I'm not defending them.
I'm just clarifying that there are no guns at the Capitol
because that's a lie.
But I don't think innocent people who just
wandered through the Capitol should go to jail.
And that clearly happened.
We agree.
We agree that you should not go to jail.
You should get trespassing tickets.
OK.
This is episode 186 of the world's number one podcast. Did Biden
resign while we're shaping?
Biden just went on a campaign call and he said, let me say this as clearly as I possibly
can simply and straightforward as I can. I am running. No one's pushing me out. I'm not
leaving. I'm in this race to the end and we're going to win.
Whoa.
I think it's more likely than not that they're not going to replace Biden because the only
feasible alternative is Harris and should be worse.
And I think it's more dangerous for the country, frankly.
I'd rather to see Biden finish out his term than put someone new in experience.
Even if he had to venture out.
It's two bad choices, J. Cal.
And I don't agree with Biden's policies, but there's continuity there. Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, the world's greatest moderator of the number one podcast in the world. We'll see you next time. Bye bye. Selfie boys. Bye bye. I'm going all in What, what, what your winners want? What, what, what your winners want?
Besties are gone
Go 13
That's my dog taking an English in your driveway
Sex
Oh man
My amitabhash will meet me at blitz
We should all just get a room and just have one big huge orgy
Cause they're all just used to this
It's like this sexual tension that they just need to release somehow
What What your the beat Georgie because they're all just like this like sexual tension but they just need to release them out