All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Trump Rally or Bessent Put? Elon Back at Tesla, Google's Gemini Problem, China's Thorium Discovery
Episode Date: April 26, 2025(0:00) The Besties intro Andrew Ross Sorkin (2:04) Market bump: Trump rally or a Bessent put? (18:04) Are tariffs damaging the American "brand"? Apple's investment in India (38:18) Balance of power po...litics, Ukraine/Russia ceasefire negotiation halted over Crimea (50:00) Alphabet earnings: Massive resiliency, Google's Gemini Problem (1:05:40) Tesla jumps on Elon's return, pulling back from DOGE (1:18:35) Science Corner: China's Thorium Breakthrough Follow Andrew: https://x.com/andrewrsorkin Follow the besties:Â https://x.com/chamath https://x.com/Jason https://x.com/DavidSacks https://x.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://x.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theallinpod Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://x.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://x.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://www.google.com/finance/quote/.DJI:INDEXDJX?comparison=INDEXSP%3A.INX%2CINDEXNASDAQ%3A.IXIC&window=5D https://x.com/nic__carter/status/1909066161464959070 https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/16/business/china-rare-earths-us.html https://x.com/TheTranscript_/status/1915116330534998440 https://www.ft.com/content/c2be45b8-cfad-4cbb-9a1a-bfd0626be372 https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/22/world/europe/ukraine-cease-fire-talks.html https://www.forbes.com/sites/kenrapoza/2015/03/20/one-year-after-russia-annexed-crimea-locals-prefer-moscow-to-kiev https://x.com/EconomyApp/status/1915501252420784499 https://www.artificialintelligence-news.com/news/chinese-firms-cloud-loophole-access-us-ai-tech https://polymarket.com/event/how-much-spending-will-elon-and-doge-cut-in-2025 https://doge.gov/savings https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3300360/chinas-thorium-survey-finds-endless-energy-source-right-under-our-feet https://www.spglobal.com/commodityinsights/es/market-insights/latest-news/energy-transition/020123-china-to-maintain-renewables-growth-pace-in-2023-despite-uncertainty https://www.reuters.com/world/china/images-show-china-building-huge-fusion-research-facility-analysts-say-2025-01-28
Transcript
Discussion (0)
OK, welcome back to the All In podcast.
J Cal is not here this week.
He is off in Detroit at the Knicks game. Congrats to the Knicks.
Here's a photo of our boy, J Cal hanging out with who's at Ben Stiller.
Man, why haven't I been a Stiller?
That looks like a Chalamet right next to him.
Timothée Chalamet.
Is that Chalamet?
I can show. Chalamet. Chalamet.
Chalamet.
You know, Ben Stiller was once referred to as the Jewish Tom Cruise, but he has not held
up like Tom Cruise.
I got to say that.
He should have joined the Church of Scientology.
Keep it up.
You got to represent for us a little better. Sitting in this week is our boy Andrew Ross Sorkin, journalist, author, extraordinaire.
Andrew, welcome to the show.
Long time listener, first time caller.
Thank you for having me.
Andrew, I'm going to do just a couple of quick plugs,
and I'm going to give it over to the pro to do his work,
take us through the docket today.
I think this is going to be really fun.
The world's greatest moderator.
The world's greatest moderator is here today.
That's fighting words.
Shots fired.
We'll see.
Hold your tongue.
You can tell me when it's over.
Before we kick it off, I just want to give a quick plug.
The All In Summit, if you haven't seen the video, check it out on YouTube and Twitter.
Going into our fourth year, the 2024 recap will kind of give you a set of highlights
from last year.
It's September 7th through 9th in LA.
Trying to have the world's most important conversations. Andrew, I know it probably competes with one or two of your conferences,
but let me just tell you, this one's way better. We're going to be blowing it out this year
with parties, all in dot com slash summit to apply to join us at the summit this year.
Awesome. Andrew, thanks for being here. We're excited to have you.
Okay, boys, here we go.
I'm curious, I wanna get your take on all this stuff
because I'm fascinated by what's going on
in these markets this week.
Let's start on the markets because we got a rally.
The question I think behind the rally is,
is this a best input?
Is this a Jay Powell's in the job?
He's got to put on this thing.
I don't know what you think is going on.
We're up three to 7% for the week.
There's been a she loves me, she loves me not situation
with what Trump's been saying about China
and whether there's a deal or not a deal.
China's saying nobody's talking.
He says everybody's talking.
What do you guys think is really happening?
And then we got to get into Alphabet.
We got Tesla, got a lot of earnings here
that's also moving this around.
I think that the most important piece of financial logic that we have to break is this idea that
there is always a put. The put is this weird thing just for the folks that don't understand
it is that when the market goes down, somebody can belly ache and cry and somebody in the
government will say, okay, we'll buy your security's at your bad prices. So that's what the put is.
So typically what's happened is you can cry to the
White House and they'll call the Federal Reserve and they will buy it. That's the Fed put. And in
some very rare cases when things get really calamitous, like in 2008, Treasury will set up
a program and start to buy things. That's what was called TARP back in the GFC. So the question is, is there a put here? I mean, my honest answer
is no. And the simple reason is, if you look at where we are, the stock market's back to where we
were in like May or August of last year. And if you had said that we would have upended 50 years
of economic policy, and the markets would only be off 500 or 600 basis points, I would have been shocked. So
there's no reason for a put. Maybe the more interesting question is who's asking for the
put? The ones that have suffered from the volatility. And a lot of those are the active
market traders. So if you trace the feedback, who has been the most negative? Hackman's been
negative. Ken Griffin recently turned negative. And that probably comes from
the fact that they're not monetizing the vol the way that they used to monetize the vol,
more than the market has speared down to such a degree that the world is coming to an end,
because it is. Okay, Zach, can I build on that? So there was a tweet two weeks ago when all this started by Nick Carter that I retweeted
because I thought it was really interesting, which was if you think a market sell-off delegitimizes
Trump's presidency, you're going to give him unconditional credit when it rallies, right?
Because those are the rules now.
And that's exactly what's happened is that the market has rallied.
Like you said, it's up 7% this week, but the media
doesn't want to give Trump any credit for it. So it's kind of created this narrative
of a best in put. In other words, Besant is entirely responsible for it. Look, Scott is
a very smart man. He understands markets. He understands the bond markets, and he is
a reassuring voice to those markets. And I think he's doing a great job. But I think
part of what's going on with this best input narrative
is that no one ever wants to give Trump
or his administration as a whole credit.
So what they do on any particular week
is valorize a particular member of the administration
that they can then say,
well, this is the person who's really responsible for this,
not Trump, because they don't wanna give Trump that credit.
Next week, they'll be tearing Scott down
and there'll be some other
member of the administration.
They'll be trying to valorize to basically prevent the administration as
a whole from getting credit for doing something good.
So again, I think Scott's doing a great job.
I think he's doing a great job making these deals and he's saying a lot of
correct and reassuring things to the markets.
But I think if the media is going to tear Trump down every time the market goes down,
you have to give him credit when the market goes back up. And I think there's just a general
reluctance to do that. Where do you land, Dave? I think that there is, is he crazy enough to let
it all fall apart? Signal that kind of got wiped out this week. That's really what it was. It was the fact that everyone realized
that Bessant, Trump are not gonna let trade
come to a standstill.
They're not gonna let the whole global economy
grind to a halt, that they're gonna have to do something.
And I think that the read is that they're making
the indications that they're gonna get deals done,
which means that their intention is to make sure that the market doesn't tank.
And more importantly, that the economy doesn't tank.
But Dave, three weeks ago, roughly three weeks ago when we started talking about this, I
think I made the point, Chamath made the point, that part of the art of the deal here, so
to speak, is an opening salvo, which is bold and some people would say maybe it's too extreme,
but it's basically an opening bid
to shift the conversation completely.
And that would create tremendous leverage
to get deals done.
And isn't that exactly what's happened?
Isn't that the way it's played out?
I remember there was a guy from Harvard
who used to teach a class on negotiation.
He put out all these videos.
And what he always said is like, set your anchor point as far away as you possibly can if you want to get
maximal leverage in a negotiation. I don't know what's farther away than 145% tariff.
So it's clearly, you know, a point for, as Zach said, for negotiating to a deal that
seems like one that would have been impossible or implausible if you started from a 0% tariff
beginning point in negotiating. And there was some percentage of the market or some
probability that people were assigning to the fact that this administration could be
crazy enough to tank the global economy by leaving tariffs really high and letting this
kind of run. And I think that that's kind of being taken out of the market.
Right. But now that it's out of the market, that means that the leverage,
there's less leverage, there's less leverage in the conversation. And if the goal is to,
that's not true, that you're saying a critical thing and that is not true.
Well, hold on. If, if, if the goal is to effectively pressure China,
which I think is the ultimate goal, I think as the bond market has spoken,
and as Trump and the administration
has said, okay, we understand where the floor is here, what we got to do. I assume if you're
Mark Carney, if you're the EU, name your place, India, Japan, you say, I'll make a deal with
you. But if you thought I was giving you the world before, no, no, no, no, no. You need me
as much as I need you, and you seemingly need me even more now.
So the part where I agree with you is that last part. I think too many times you look at the
stock market and think that that's reflective of what's actually happening. And it's not.
The stock market, I think the best way to think about it is it's an estimation of what the future would look like at a rate of return.
You're superimposing a view on reality. So what is actual reality right now is if the United States was running negative $2 billion a day of trade deficits, right?
If our current account balance was minus 2 billion on March 31st,
the day before Liberation Day, the real question is what is that number mathematically after April
1st, right? Because you're ratching it up tariffs, okay? And you're implementing a scheme that should
take that negative 2 billion that's going out the door, out of America shores, it would have
flipped it positive. How positive?
We don't know, but I'm sure that the government knows and I'm sure the White House knows what
that number is. That's important fact number one. And then separately, the country that matters the
most on the other side of that, who was very positive, right? Let's say China was plus three or four billion a day. Where did they go to? And I
suspect that it's probably break even or possibly even negative. So if you think about what the new
reality is today, April 25, as we tape the show, we've gone from minus two to maybe plus one, and
China's gone from plus four billion a day to maybe zero or minus one. And I think that's what
instills the leverage that is required to get the deal done. Then we can all debate whether the
forward PE of the S&P should be 16 times or 22 times. I don't think that that matters,
but the actual cash flows have materially changed. By the way, I think long-term,
the America's got leverage here. Everybody wants to invest
is ultimately going to want to invest in America, including China. There's no question that we,
we have the advantage on a long term basis. The question is, do we have the patience?
Well, if you go from negative two to plus-
Given our democracy, given our bond market, given everything that goes on,
we're such an ADD society.
Okay, then you're, then I're, then what I would say, Andrew, I think that that's a very good point. What I
would say to that is, then we need to communicate better. It needs to be a single point that's
repeated by everybody in the cabinet. And what they should probably focus on is, hey, guys,
we just flipped cash flow. We went from negative cash flow to positive cash flow. Here are the actual numbers. And don't deviate from that. Because then I think Americans
would say, hey, this thing is working. Let's let it play out to your point.
Hey, Zach, here's my question for you. So we hear, you know, the president say he's talking
to President Xi, we hear Scott, that's and say that he's he talks with China or that their talks
are going to begin. And then you hear China say, no, no, no, we're not talking.
There's no talks happening.
We don't know what you're talking about.
Stop saying these things.
What are we all supposed to believe?
Well, look, first of all, I'm going to say that when I'm on this show and I'm not talking
about AI or crypto, I'm just a civilian, right?
So I'm not a spokesman for the administration on anything but the two issues that I work
on. So I don't want to come across as someone who has special knowledge because I'm just, I'm not
part of the trade conversation. So I can't answer your question directly. But what I would say is
that with respect to the China relationship, I think what's happened over the past few weeks has
been a very important stress test. And it's basically flagged some serious weaknesses or
dependencies that have evolved in this relationship over the past few decades.
You know, I flagged this in a previous episode that we did with Larry Summers, where I said that 25 years ago is a huge mistake to walk China into the WTO.
And I think that just to build on that thought, one of the problems with walking them into the WTO is that they got what's called developing nation status.
So you can either be a developing nation
or a developed nation in the framework of the WTO.
And maybe there was something legitimate to that in 1978,
when Deng Xiaoping began his reforms,
the average Chinese person was making $2 a day.
By the year 2000, it was much more questionable, and it certainly makes no sense
in the year 2025. Still to this day, China gets developing nation status. Now, what is the benefit
to China of that? Well, they have a whole different set of rules. They're allowed to have tariffs.
They're allowed to subsidize their industries. They have all sorts of different timetables for
doing things. They're allowed to do things that the US simply can't do now how have they leverage that.
They have identified strategically certain industries that are choke points in the global supply chain and they have taken them over and the best example of this is where are so there is some good stories in the New York Times about this over the past couple weeks which i think we're largely accurate.
China identified this is as a critical industry and. times about this over the past couple of weeks, which I think were largely accurate.
China identified this as a critical industry and the rare earths, the ore itself is distributed
all over the world.
I mean, China has some advantages there, but they're not huge.
It's the processing of the rare earths that's very expensive, very complicated, and they
decide to dominate that industry.
They're responsible today for over 90% of the processing of rare earths.
Then the next step in the supply chain is that those rare earths get cast into rare earth magnets,
which are a critical component in pretty much every electric motor.
So they're a critical component of the automotive industry, but not just cars,
lots of different products. I think China makes something like over 90% of the cast rare earth
magnets. Well, by the way, this issue still has not been resolved.
China has now cut off the United States.
And so as part of this trade negotiation, we're going to have to resolve that issue.
And I trust that it will be.
I mean, what you've heard from the president and the treasury sector over the past week
is that they've indicated a desire to engage in bilateral negotiations with China and to essentially
deescalate this trade war.
But I think it's been very useful, again, as a stress test to reveal our critical dependencies
on China that we've exposed.
We never should have let this happen.
Just from a national security standpoint, we worshiped at the altar of this free trade
god to the point where we became dependent on China for these critical components in our supply
chain. I think that was a catastrophic mistake and I think that it's exposed
these dependencies we've created on a nation that is not our ally and that we
can't count on them. It's a country of concern. So I ultimately think that we're
gonna need to learn
from this experience and very rapidly make
some major corrections here.
Andrew, let me just highlight what I think is one
oft not talked about point about the discussions
that are underway.
There's a lot of conversations about tariffs
and about trade deficits, but very little
about regulatory parity.
And I think that this is really critical
for these trade negotiations to actually resolve to a positive outcome for American businesses and
American enterprises, because there is not parity in how American businesses can do their work
overseas relative to how foreign companies can do work in the US. So if you're an Indian company
and you want to sell something in the US, you set up an LLC, you set up a bank account, you set up a store, take a lease and you sell your product.
There is not a lot of hoops and challenges to that business operating in the United States.
I'll tell you a story.
In 2005, 2006, Monsanto, which was a seed company that doesn't exist anymore, launched in India, cotton seed, seed for cotton farmers that basically had a trait in it that would
prevent worms from eating the cotton. And so Indian farmers were paying 450 rupees an acre
for cotton seed before. Monsanto basically put this cotton seed, the yields went through the roof,
the farmers made 5,000 rupees per acre of incremental profit and they charged 1500 or 1400 rupees per acre for the seed. So it was more expensive
seed but it had a 5,000 profit improvement and it took off, took the whole market. 90%
of farmers bought the seed, not because they had to, but because it was better. And what
ended up happening was the Indian government stepped in and said, you got to lower prices.
You got to go back to the price of 450 because that's what's fair for farmers and the farmers were like we were doing great
we don't need to have this kind of price control but the government put it price control in and
Ultimately sued the company went to court and stole their IP and they left the country and
This was a company that had invested, you know
Well over a billion dollars in developing and launching this product.
The same is true, by the way, in pharmaceutical companies,
in software companies, in hardware companies.
If you want to go do business in China today,
you have to set up a 51% JV,
where some local company owns 51% of your equity and your IP.
The stories around the world, I think,
start to paint the picture of why American businesses
find it so hard to develop
international markets and sell into those countries when in the US we make it so easy
for companies based in foreign countries to come and sell in America.
And that's a big part of where the trade imbalances arise from.
It's not just because Vietnamese people can't afford expensive American goods.
It's because it's so much more regulatorially difficult to do work in these countries.
They can come in and take your IP.
And so I think that this is like a really important part
of the trade discussions and negotiations
that a lot of people miss,
that American businesses will see massive revenue growth
and massive market adoption
if we can get regulatory parity
in some of these key trade deals.
Okay, let me ask you a different question.
Chamath raised the issue of Ken Griffin, who made some comments
this week about the brand that is America,
and effectively said there was sort of a sell America
situation going on.
And my question about the brand that is America
is whether you think after these tariffs, whatever deals get
done, that you can put the toothpaste back in the tube,
that you can get the trust back, that there's not gonna still
be some kind of toothpaste on the rim of the tube,
that you can't stick back, it gets all nasty and crusty,
right?
That to me is a fundamental question.
I wanna read to you what Ken had to say.
I think Ken was probably a bit of a reluctant Trump
for the second term, but nonetheless, he's
been outspoken on a couple of things.
He says, if you think of your behavior as a consumer, how many times do you buy a product
with a brand on it because you trust that brand?
In the financial markets, no brand compares to the brand of US treasuries, the strength
of the US dollar, the strength of credit worthiness of US treasuries.
No brand comes close.
We put that
brand at risk. What say you? Well, look, I think there's a fundamental question here about whether
you think there's a problem with the status quo or not. Ken Griffin is one of the biggest
winners in our economy under the current status quo, and I don't think he sees a big problem that
needs to get fixed. But I think like we just talked about,
I think there are some big problems. I mean, FreeBurg has laid out the way in which trade with
China is non-reciprocal. Like our companies cannot participate in their markets the same way that
they can participate in ours. But it's worse than that. Like I talked about, these WTO rules gave
China the opportunity to strategically annihilate our core industries that are critical
in the supply chain. And there's one other piece of this, which I think is really important,
which is the race to the bottom. I mean, if you're an American company and you are still
producing in America and your competitor is able to go to China and undercut you, obviously
you have to do the same thing because I mean, those are just the rules of the game.
And so we've had this race to the bottom where if you're an American company operating under
these rules, you have no choice but to export your manufacturing or supply chains.
So we've had these rules that again, under the status quo, I would say they're not free
trade, it's unfair trade, it has all these perverse consequences, it's bad for middle
America and this manufacturing belt of the country. And it's created massive strategic dependencies on an American adversary.
I'll say three things. Let me just say three things quickly. Number one, I think Ken is
massively long packs America. I mean, he's built a $42 billion empire. He owns a billion dollars of
American real estate. So I don't see him investing in Ecuador anytime soon,
relative to the opportunity set in the United States. And I think that's what speaks to the
second point, which is investing is always a relative exercise. On Wednesday, I had a
meeting with a Brazilian multi-deca-billionaire, very, very, very successful guy. And we were
talking about the tariffs and the investing posture. And he's like, there's still no other country other than America that I can really put
my money to work in that makes any sense. And I kind of pushed him, what about China? What about
India? And in all of these markets, there are, as Freeberg mentioned, vagaries in China, there's
different problems in India, there's different problems in these other markets, Europe is roughly uninvestable. So the more generalized answer is on a relative basis, the United States is still the shining
beacon on a hill. There is no investible alternative for scaled capital, except the US.
The last thing I want to say is just to build on what Sak said. Andrew, the thing that we keep
forgetting is when economic leverage spills over to political leverage, what happens to the United
States? And specifically what happened this week was on the rare earth side, not only did China
constrain rare earths into the supply chain, what they then did was tell South Korea what they could
do with the rare earths that they gave them.
And now all of a sudden you have this geopolitical spillover where it's not just a country
constraining supply, it's a country now dictating the political and trade practices of another
country. So let me ask you a question. How do you think America is in the best position to make its
own decisions? For example, let's say that there's a China-Taiwan
situation and we need to decide one way or the other. And I'm not saying which way is right or
wrong. But for the purposes of this, the thought exercise is China and Taiwan get into some spat,
we have to take a side. And China says, we're going to constrain all the pharmaceutical APIs
into the supply chain. We're going to constrain all the pharmaceutical APIs into the supply chain.
We're going to constrain all the battery cathode
into the supply chain.
And we're going to constrain all of the rare earths
to anyone who doesn't take our side.
Now, how is America in a position
to actually decide for ourselves what
is in our best interests if that's looming over us?
And I think that this is the big problem that this is exposed, this rush
to globalism, the race to the bottom, has actually created a level of dependence that doesn't allow
you to do what's in your best interest. So real quick, I agree with you in so many ways. I think
the question that I have is not in what the ultimate goal is It's how you get there and is there a way to do this with a velvet glove if you will and maybe there's no way
To do it in a better
No, but what is to say this isn't the velvet glove
This could be it's that the stock market is down six percent like it's not down 60 percent
But this is this what I think is so interesting Andrew is is the way that
Trump has already shifted the conversation because the truth of the matter is that before Liberation
Day on April 2nd just three weeks ago no one was talking about the unfair trade practices no one
was talking about the dependencies on rare earths no one was talking about the race to the bottom
and Trump has shifted the conversation 100% when Jared Kushner was on the show, he talked about how the Trumpian approach
is controversy elevates message.
And we said at the beginning that by having this liberation
day, by planting this flag in the ground,
Trump was creating leverage to then have these negotiations.
And he completely shifted the conversation.
Now, where I will agree with you is that the administration
has to stick the landing here, right?
Besant, and it's not just Besant, also Lutnik,
these are all smart, talented people.
They do have to then negotiate these deals
and we have to basically stick the landing.
But I think the fact that you're saying
that you don't disagree with where Trump is trying to get to,
but it's mostly just tactical,
is a huge shift in the conversation.
It may raise the issue the way you're describing,
but at some level,
it's also undermining a semblance of trust.
I just wanna relay two stories.
One is, I've been talking to a whole number
of multinational CEOs who do business in China.
I'm talking about the McDonald's of the world,
the Starbucks of the world, the Nikes of the world.
And so many of them now talk about
not just how consumers aren't going necessarily
in their stores the way they used to,
but really about the American dream, the American brand.
And they talk about the idea that, you know,
if you were a young kid and you got a job at Starbucks,
you used to go home to your family in China and say,
and your family go, wow, that's amazing.
They're not doing that right now.
So many of these companies are even trying to reestablish how they market
and advertise their companies almost as if they're a local business, not an
American brand, and I don't know what that ultimately means, but I also was
talking to a Chinese CEO who made a, I thought it just a fascinating comment to
me, which was, you know, we're cool with the US
being the leader. We were always cool with that. We're okay with that. I love it, but we're okay
with it. It gets a lot more complicated when you have to be the winner. And I think that's an
interesting sort of construct, this idea that we're first and we have to win. And I know we're
telling, it's, you know, Trump is telling, you know, citizens in the US that we're going to win,
but he's also telling the world that. And I think that's a-
I think that Chinese CEO should have written that memo to Xi Jinping and seeing if he agreed,
because I think he would say, no, we are the winner. Look, you got to remember in 2003,
three years after China was admitted to the WTO, Hu Jintao became premier. He had this incredible speech.
And in it, what he said is, there are these 10 boxes.
And I've written inside these 10 boxes,
all the critical industries that in 25 to 30 years from now
will dictate supremacy in the world.
We are going to create national champions, he said,
in those 10 areas.
And what's interesting about Xi, despite the ideological
differences to Hu, he followed through with it.
This is a group of people.
So we can say what the CEOs are going to say.
But at the end of the day, the CEO of China, Inc.
is one man.
And he and his C-suite have been pretty resolute, which is even when he inherited a political ideology
that he didn't completely agree with, he followed through with
it, which is these guys in these 10 areas now, own the critical
inputs that make the world go around. And I think it's pretty
reasonable to do a risk assessment to say, well, how do you stand up to that and
actually have your own point of view if you don't have your own method of having access to those
things? I think that is the most important question. Everything else about, you know,
brand and all of this other stuff, I think comes after this question. This is the critical question,
because if they can tell you what to think,
that is not winning.
Yeah, I would just add to that,
that you hear this criticism of Trump a lot,
which is that, okay, he's right on the issue
or his instincts are correct,
but there should be a nicer way of doing it.
And I guess I would give that story more credence
if the people making that criticism
had actually
been advocating for a change in the status quo prior to Trump.
They weren't.
I mean, we had this bipartisan globalist consensus that pretty much all trade practices with
China, no matter how unfair they got, was basically good for the United States.
No one was really doing anything about it until President Trump made it this issue and made the unfair trade practices
Conspicuous so if somebody else had been willing to take that on
Then I would maybe would give credence to this idea that there's some non Trumpian way of doing this
But I just don't think that's the way our political system works
I think that the way our political system works is that you have to completely shift the conversation
first to create a new consensus and then you work out the deals.
And that process can be a little bit disruptive.
Okay, one tiny follow-up.
So I don't know if you guys saw the news this morning,
a report out that Apple is gonna move its manufacturing
of iPhones that are exported to the US or imported here in the US,
but they're going to manufacture all that stuff in India, not in China anymore.
So they're going to move all the manufacturing to India.
See you in 2035.
They say they can do it supposedly in 18 months by the end of 26.
Bet.
You say no way. Bet. I think this is geopolitically smart.
Yeah, they should do it, but I'm just saying that's a, it's very smart. It's not going to get done in
18 months. I don't know how long it's going to take, but look, I think one of the big lessons
here over the past 25 years is that you have security first. Security has to be worked out first, then
you have trade. If you build your whole supply chain and all your trading relationships with
countries that are fundamentally adversarial to your interests, and we can get into that
part of the US-China relationship, but I think most people would say that we're in some version
of a new Cold War with China. Obviously, you're going to have to revise your trade relationships because, again, we can't be dependent on an adversary
for core components that then go into our military, for example. So security always
has to come first, then you work out trade. And I think that India is fundamentally extremely
aligned with us on security because they view their biggest potential
threat and adversaries being China.
That is basically the way that the US sees the world as well.
I do think that the US-India relationship is just very aligned.
I think therefore, the investments that get made and the trade relationships that get
forged will be very stable
over the next couple of decades.
Whereas, you know, if you make a big investment
in a country that could be your adversary,
you should expect that that relationship could get disrupted.
I don't think the Apple deal is from a standstill.
My understanding is Foxconn and others
have been working with Apple to actually
stand up manufacturing capacity in India for some time now. And I do believe that they probably have one or two model runs already active
in the country. So I don't think that this is necessarily from a standstill. Let's go
recruit the people, figure out the processes, find the builders, stand up the facilities
that there's probably a model system already running that's now about replication and scale up,
which is why they have confidence in the stated goal.
It's not often that Tim Cook will stand up and say,
I'm gonna do something in 18 months
and then be delayed by yours.
He's not Elon.
He's gonna come out, he's gonna be very clear.
He's always been very clear.
So, and my understanding is this has been thought about
for some time.
Andrew, I think you've been to a lot of conferences
where for three years now, you've been hearing people banging the table saying, get everything out of China as quickly
as you can. Tim Cook's heard that message. He's been thoughtful about it. He's been planning for
this day. I don't think he wanted to be declarative about this until the day came. Well, the day's
here. And how do we feel that it's gone to India? It's not coming to America. I think we knew it
wasn't coming to America. Well, India has one massive advantage over China, which is that it has one-fifth the
labor cost of China, which has one-fifth the labor cost of America. So India is a natural place
for a lot of this next generation labor to end up. Plus they have a very educated workforce,
plus they have a young workforce. In many ways, you could say that it's China circa 2003. I mean,
you have to remember, right? Like China, from 2006, I think, to like 2012, their GDP grew at
like 10% a year. I mean, can you imagine what that must have been like when a country that big is
growing that fast? So India is going to have that moment over the next 20 or 30 years. The only
reason I scoffed at what you said. Do you invest in India, would you?
I have a large rare earth mine in India.
Yeah, it's one of the largest supplies
of rare earths outside the United States.
We negotiated that deal with the PMO
and they gave us a great deal to compete with the Chinese.
Our specialty chemicals processing is on the ground there.
And then the idea is then to import
all of that specialty chemical into the United States and then do all the last mile.
I like the macro. There's something about China where there's a lot of accounting fraud still,
and you can't really trust a lot of the numbers. But if that all gets cleared up,
the macro is all right. It's exactly where it should be for-
You mean India?
India, yeah.
Yeah. I mean, I-
I just think the structure, the structural realities just make it a good place to invest.
I just think that India and the US are going to be very aligned for a long time.
Agreed.
Again, their main security threat is China, and our main security threat is China.
And this is not going to change for probably the entire 21st century.
A couple of weeks ago, Saxon and I sat down with the Indian ambassador, and that's just not going to change for probably the entire 21st century. A couple weeks ago, Sachs and I sat down with the Indian ambassador and it's very clear they're
fundamentally aligned with the United States. And I think exactly what Sachs said is true.
Everybody knows who needs to cooperate in order to have a reset of global trade policy and political
leverage. So I don't know. I'm pretty pro-India. It's a very difficult place to invest. I agree with you, Sorkin. I've never made money there. I tried my hand at tech investing. Over a decade,
I maybe have returned 50 cents on the dollar. Why? What went wrong? What's the macro reason?
The market was far too immature. My mental model was about how American success looked like. And
when I tried to impose that on the Indian market,
it all just blew up.
So a lot of the Indian entrepreneurs,
how they raised money was not from Indian VCs,
it was from American VCs.
And you can't tell an American VC an idea
that just makes no sense to you
because your frame of reference is the United States.
So what turned out to work was a couple of very large
bets that were copies of American businesses. So like the Indian Amazon worked, the Indian PayPal
kind of worked, the Indian DoorDash kind of work. But everything else didn't work. So then-
Why? Because is it the consumer markets not there or the capital markets aren't there?
No, because we have these mental biases that will never allow us to believe the way that
they would construct the business would work. So for example, they're like, hey, here's
a business where we're going to buy food from the local farmer, then we're going to put
it in a warehouse, then we're going to drive around on rickshaws and deliver it to people.
And you think, well, this business can never work. Well, actually, that business turned out to be a
ginormous success. Nobody in the United States would have ever
funded that. Now, what happened four years ago, though, was
after a bunch of meetings, I pivoted to these other areas.
Because when you talk to the Humbanis, and when you talk to
the Adanis, they're like, dude, stop beating your head against
this wall, like, build infrastructure. It just works. And it was true. They've been right.
Okay. One geopolitical question. How do you feel about India buying as much oil as they
do from Russia? And then we'll get into the whole Ukraine thing later.
Smart.
Smart.
Look, India is a country that has two great powers in its neighborhood, China and Russia.
It has a contested border with China.
They've had border skirmishes.
When you have a country that is much more powerful, that's actually a security threat
to you, you then seek good relations, even possibly an alliance with the other great
power in the neighborhood.
That has been India's philosophy.
They've had good relations with Russia for a long time,
even going back to the cold war.
That is what makes sense for their security standpoint. By the way,
the exact same thing is true of the United States.
We just haven't realized the strategic reality. China is the peer competitor.
I mean, Mircea made this point at our All In Summit.
China is the peer competitor.
It's the only country in the world
that is a peer of the United States. It's the only country that's really capable of threatening our
security. Russia is a distant number three in terms of the great power rankings. What you want
to do if you're in a sort of heads up competition where there's two superpowers is you want to make
an alliance with that number three. And what we've done is we've pushed.
Russia into the arms of china what we ought to have been doing is reverse kissinger we did this during the cold war by the way we had the Soviet Union and we had china.
And in that case the Soviet Union was a big threat to American security so what do we do we had Nixon and Kissinger go to China and make a deal with Mao.
China was just as communist as the Soviet Union.
Mao had blood on his hands to a degree that is much greater than someone like Putin has.
And yet we're willing to shake hands with him and make an alliance because that was real
politique. And I think in a similar way, this is what our strategy should have been with
Russia for the last two decades and instead
We've been foolishly pushing them into the arms of China. Well, so I can what's your read?
I mean, what's your opinion on the idea is a tie? Look India's India is a tough place to invest every everybody
I know who's been talking India for the last
I don't know 15 20 years has been talking it up as the next great utopia. And it may very well be, it probably will be,
it's just a question of when.
I think you have to, and you have to be specific
about the end market.
You know, like there are people
that have made a ton of money there,
but it's not the way classical Western economics
has played out by any means.
Andrew, I mean, what do you think about this sort of,
what I would call balance of powers logic 101?
I get the idea that you go to your, you know,
least, I don't know if they're your-
Your least bad.
Your enemies, your friend's friend.
Enemy's enemy is your friend.
No, the enemy's enemy is your friend or whatever it is.
Yeah, no, it is balance of power logic.
I get where you're going with this.
I just think that Russia, given all that they have done, it's hard to look at Russia and
China and maybe Russia on the margins on a relative basis in life is better than China
in certain ways, but in other ways it's not.
And so it's very complicated for me to look at it and go, okay, it's actually interesting. I mean,
I was going to use a real loaded word. Who's more evil, right? Is China more evil or is Russia more
evil? I mean, I think there'd be a big debate about that in the world. Well, I think it's
unnecessarily judgmental. Yeah. Right? I think it's dangerous to look at foreign policy from
a position of extreme
moralism because ultimately the purpose of our foreign policy is to ensure American security.
And we can't rectify every injustice in the world. And over the past 25 years,
we've become hyper interventionist, you know, in an attempt. So we've claimed to do that,
right? We keep saying that we've gotten involved in all these places because we want to promote our values and spread democracy.
And by the way, we did the opposite.
I mean, you look at the forever wars, the Middle East,
we had interventions and occupations in Iraq,
Afghanistan, Libya, Syria.
How did all those things work out?
They did not promote our values or spread democracy.
So my point is just,
I don't think we should look at foreign policy
from a position of extreme moralism.
I prefer to think of neither of those countries as quote unquote evil.
And I would refer to think of them as countries which have their own interests.
I think that with respect to China, the real issue is that it is a revisionist great power.
It has made clear that it wants to basically annex Taiwan.
It wants to turn the South China Sea into effectively a Chinese lake.
It does not respect international waters.
It has territorial disputes with Japan.
And if we don't play a role in containing China, then China will revise the balance of power in East Asia in a major way.
And I think that would have, I think, profound consequence
for the United States.
That may be, but I just don't think Russia.
I don't know if the Chinese are gonna throw you off a roof
one day and you won't even know it.
I mean, that's the difference.
And I don't know if that's a moral argument
or something else. I'm not worried about,
the United States is not gonna be thrown off a roof
by Russia, and that's the level at which we should
think about these things.
If you look at Russia's behavior,
Russia actually is not a revisionist
great power. What it wants is just security on its borders. The revisionist power actually in Europe
over the past 25 years was the United States because we pushed NATO right up to Russia's borders,
despite the promises that were made to Gorbachev in the 90s. So we're the ones who've revised the
balance of power in a way that was profoundly threatening to the Russians.
And I think it would be far better
from the American standpoint
to just work out a security architecture for Europe
with Russia that gives the Russians
the security they crave on the Western border
and gives Europe the security it craves.
And I think if we had had that mentality
as opposed to this highly moralistic mentality
where we basically wanna spread American style democracy everywhere.
You don't think that American style democracy though has helped the world in some way.
I'm not saying we did it right everywhere.
I believe-
I think we've lost a lot of wars that we should not have attempted.
If it could be done, you're right, but the problem is, Andrew, the failure rate is too
high.
Look at what happened in Afghanistan, in Syria, in Iraq. As we've gone in to make regime change,
we actually put those people in a worse condition
than they were before.
They don't end up with American democracy.
After a trillion dollars in Afghanistan,
the Taliban is back in charge doing awful, brutal things.
Right, two trillion.
And I would be a proponent of, and by the way,
this was also part of the promise of the open internet.
And I think from a fundamental point of view, by the way, this was also part of the promise of the open internet. And I think it's from a fundamental point of view,
the regulatory regime we had in the United States
with the internet was driven by this notion
that the freedom of information
would actually allow democratic proliferation.
We were talking about the Arab Spring,
as you'll recall, like that was gonna be this big moment.
But at the end of the day, it turned out
that didn't work either,
that there's something much more complex
in the history of a people in a geography,
the deep ties that those people have,
that this idea that turning on a screen
or showing up with a tank
is gonna flip the switch to democracy,
turns out not to be true.
And look, just to be clear, I mean,
I think my lucky star is that I'm an American
and we do have the type of government we have here.
And my parents immigrated to the United States in 1977
for political reasons
because we have
the type of government we have here.
So look, I'm a strong believer in American style democracy.
The problem is our efforts to promote it or impose that style of government through regime
change operations simply has not worked.
I mean, this is should be one of the big learnings of American foreign policy over the past 30
years.
All I'm suggesting is I think it's better to model it, right?
It's better to- Yeah. So how do you model it? I think you
model it by being the shining city on the hill, by setting a good example, by focusing on our own
country and making America the best it can be so that people all over the world look to us and say,
oh, we want to do that. And I actually think that what I'm describing is American soft power.
If you go back to the 1980s, we had that soft power. I mean, the people of places like in Russia,
they love buying American blue jeans and American music. And we had that soft power. We were
inspiring to the world, but it all changed. I'd say starting in the 90s, but then really in the
2000s, when we started going into these countries with our militaries and occupying all these
countries, we soured them on America. We made them hate
us. And this is the problem with this hyper interventionism is what we should be doing
is setting an example, not trying to occupy these countries.
Let me read something to you. This is this week. This is Trump condemning the strikes
going on in Kiev. This is I'm not happy with the Russian strikes in Kiev.
Not necessary.
Very bad timing.
Vladimir stop exclamation point.
5,000 soldiers a week are dying.
Let's get the peace deal done.
How is this deal going to get done?
I should also say the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, reportedly skipping a
meeting on a ceasefire talk on Wednesday after Ukraine refused to recognize Russia's annexation of Crimea.
Well, the reason why Rubio canceled that meeting is because the Americans put forward a peace
proposal and Zelensky dismissed it out of hand.
Before the Russians could do anything, Zelensky dismissed it.
And recognizing Russian ownership of
Crimea, if you will, should be the easiest point for Zelensky to concede. And he
dismissed it out of hand. Now, why do I say that? The Russians annexed Crimea in
2014. So this was not something that happened in 2022. It happened over 10
years ago. And if you look at what the people of Crimea want, and there's been a
lot of Western polling on this,
there's been man on the street interviews by NBC,
the people of Crimea by something like over 80%
say they wanna be part of Russia, they're ethnic Russians.
And I'd say the final point on this
is that Zelensky in Ukraine tried to get Crimea back
in the summer of 2023 with the summer counteroffensive.
Remember, the whole point of that summer counteroffensive
was to sever the land bridge to Crimea, destroy the Kirch Bridge,
isolate Crimea and essentially lay siege to it. This was the whole point of that. And they got
nowhere with that. They didn't even break through the first Suravikin line. So my point is that it's
militarily impossible to retake Crimea. The people of Crimea don't want Ukraine to retake it. They
want to be part of Russia.
And yet, Zelensky cannot give this up.
Okay, so how do we get to yes?
How do we get to yes?
This was supposed to be done on day one, and here we are.
The basic problem is that Zelensky doesn't want to make a deal.
I mean, he has rebuffed the Americans on Crimea,
which should be the easiest point to give on.
He's been completely unrealistic about their prospects on the battlefield.
He was insulting to the White House when he visited the White House in his t-shirt or whatever.
He was dressed inappropriately and then one of the more shag tests for America.
I think that meeting was well, I mean, he was insulting to the president and especially the
vice president. He murmured under his breath, a curse word to the vice president.
You remember that?
I mean, it was really quite something.
And remember, he's biting the hand that feeds them.
I mean, he has an obligation, I think,
to be respectful to his patrons
in a way that his patrons may not.
His patrons.
In a way that we may not to him.
And he has demonstrated, I think, that he's unrealistic in every possible way.
He's unrealistic about Ukrainian prospects on the battlefield, about retaking Crimea,
and about who the hand is that feeds him.
So my view on this is quite simple, which is if Zelensky won't see reality, let him
go find new patrons.
Let Stammer and McCrone support him.
They say they will. They say they have the ability to do this. But they canammer and McCrone support him. They say they will.
They say they have the ability to do this.
But they can't.
They can't enough.
Well, they appear to.
My point is, Zelensky has made his bed.
Let him sleep in it.
This is my point of view on it.
He refuses to listen to the Americans.
He refuses to recognize
that this administration even has leverage over him.
And you don't think that ultimately, if Putin takes Crimea, refuses to recognize that this administration even has leverage over him.
And you don't think that ultimately Putin
takes Crimea plus plus whatever that he's
going after Poland next or I mean,
that's the domino theory that becomes the complicated part.
No, I don't think so.
I don't think there's any evidence that he wants Poland.
I don't even think he wants the part of Ukraine
that is chock full of Ukrainian ultra-nationalists
because you would have a massive insurgency there. He doesn't want a Gaza type situation.
By the way, just another point on Crimea, where is the insurgency? If Crimea really wanted to go
with Ukraine as opposed to Russia, why has there been no uprising there over the past 10 years?
In any event, my point is there's no evidence that Putin wants Poland. Poland's part of NATO.
That would start World War III.
I think Putin has shown that he's a calm, rational decision maker, and I don't think
he wants World War III.
Now the Russians have said what their terms are.
They said it last year.
They basically in this root cause speech they gave in June of last year, and basically what
it comes down to is they want Istanbul plus. There was a deal to end this war in the first month, the Istanbul deal,
and it required Ukraine to basically sever its security relationship with the West and to recognize
that would not become part of NATO. And they had to give up Crimea, basically. That was the deal back
then. What Russia has
said is that's still the deal plus reality is on the ground. So in other words, the Russians have
lost, I don't know, 100,000 plus, hundreds of thousands of soldiers now taking this territory
in the East and obviously they're not going to give it up. So I think that the Ukrainians could
have had a better deal in the first month of the war. The Biden administration rejected that.
Now there's a different deal.
It's Istanbul plus. And I think that the American proposal is pretty close to
that. So I think this administration recognizes the wisdom and just reality of
that deal, but the Ukrainians aren't. So look, my view is simple.
If the Ukrainians are unwilling to take the deal that's on the table and they
want to find new backers with the Europeans
Let them but why should we continue to support this?
Okay, let's pivot. Let's talk markets and let's specifically start couple stocks because you disagree cuz I want to hear no
No, I I could but we're gonna we I think we're gonna run out of time. Okay, I
Want to talk alphabet. So
Everybody thought the blue-link economy was dead
I want to talk alphabet. So everybody thought the Blue Link economy was dead.
Open AI, perplexity, all of it was going to take the search market.
They come out with earnings.
Sundar does way better than everybody expected.
Revenue up $90.2 billion is up 12%.
Net income was up almost 50% year over year.
You got the cloud still ripping.
You got a big buyback program, you
start talking about Waymo on the call for the first time in a long time, if ever, stocks up
about 5% on the news. What do we think? What an incredible business. My gosh.
There's a lot of resiliency and alphabet that I don't think people have given the company credit
for. First of all, I'll just highlight with the dividends they're paying, plus the
share buyback, you're basically getting a four or 5% yield on the stock.
So the dividends are like 10 billion a year and they're announcing 70 billion
back on 2 trillion in market caps.
You're making 4% a year just by owning the stock and the dividends and the
buybacks.
Then if you look at the revenue,
it was 90 billion, 77 in services, 12 in cloud.
So the 90 billion, about half of it was ads on search.
And a lot of people have been talking about the decline
in search due to AI, that's the end of Alphabet.
Here you can kind of see the breakdown.
What this shows is that there's such significant growth, 9 billion in
YouTube, seven and a half billion in non Google ads, 10
billion in subscriptions with 270 million subscribers across
subscription businesses, 12 billion in cloud revenue, which
is growing 30% year over year. There's a lot of resiliency,
even if you take out search. And so the question is, what's the downside?
What's the upside?
Well, the downside is, what's the worst that could happen to search?
What they lose half of the market to chat GPT.
If they lost half the market to chat GPT and the rest of the business keeps growing the
way it is, you get back to parity pretty quick.
What's the upside?
Well, the upside is they're able to use AI to actually
reinvent search, retain the audience and create an entirely new search experience that's chat
based or has some chat integration into search. So it seems to me trading at 18 times free cash
flow, which is where this thing's at right now, plus the 4% yield on dividends and buybacks,
plus the kind of seemingly pretty significant gap
between the downside and the upside here.
It's just such a powerful business.
It just seems like it highlighted
that this is not a business that's in decline
and is about to die as everyone's been kind of proclaiming.
There's enough growth engines here
and there's enough resilience and the price is so good.
I feel quite good about the price.
I think there's $100 billion of hidden value
called Waymo in this business.
And the Waymo, 250,000 rides a week now growing like crazy. And they're only like four cities.
It's crazy. And I think the market's giving them zero for that right now. Zero.
I think the most interesting stat that I saw from the earnings result.
And they own 10% of SpaceX, by the way, which is crazy.
The most interesting stat in the earnings was that I think they said that they had 270
million total paid subscriptions across YouTube and Google One.
And my initial thought was, well, when are you just going to stick Gemini as the most
obvious interface in front of it?
I think that these companies now need to confront that this open AI behemoth is growing at a rate
that was probably a hindrance before and now is a real strategic risk. And so if you have 270
million paid subs, come on guys, stuff Gemini right in front of these guys. That was my first
takeaway. But again, they're doing it from a position of strength, but they need to get going because they're probably himmining and highing, and there's
probably all kinds of people, all kinds of cooks in that kitchen.
I've heard a lot of stories about this question.
I think Sundar, Larry, and Sergey just need to take the equity and the political capital
they have as the CEO and the two largest shareholders and just stuff the decision down people's
throats. So that's number one.
The other thing that I think about actually relates to what I spoke about last week about Nvidia.
So just to give you guys a little bit of a cleanup,
after we spoke about Nvidia,
the Nvidia team reached out to me and they were like,
hey, HMATH, here's a bunch of stuff that will help you
unpack what you spoke about in a little bit more detail. So let me tell you what Nvidia told me. And then I think it relates to GCP. So what they told me, when you look at the SEC filings for Nvidia, and you add up all the revenue, it says that about 47% of the revenue goes to China, Singapore,apore taiwan i think it was and what these guys educated me on is that they've been trying to refine how this is described.
What is not what it seems meaning they report revenue on what's called the billing.
Or the invoicing address. So meaning you are an entity, you'll buy a huge amount of
chips or compute power, and you issue the invoice out of Taiwan or Singapore or China. That's what
represents 47% of Nvidia's reported revenue. So it turns out that that's actually not where the silicon
gets shipped. So there's a Singaporean office that handles the invoicing. So
then I said, well, who are these companies that are using these places?
And it turns out that it's a bunch of major US companies, including US OEMs
and clouds, that use Singapore for invoicing their suppliers, but what industry sources have told us is that
all of these products are almost always shipped elsewhere, including US, Mexico, Taiwan, etc. all
over the place. So why is this interesting? There was a study by artificial analysis, Nick,
I will send you the link, but basically what it showed was that the clouds
Were not doing any real form of KYC on who is using their stuff
So now I think we get to this next place which is like I think the Google business is profoundly amazing
I think they need to do something with the subscriptions that they have and put Gemini right in front and really do a head-on attack against
chat GPT. Those are the pluses. The minuses or the risks that I think now will get uncovered
are the clouds doing enough to make sure that China and other folks aren't getting access
to compute that they should not get access to. And that could have
an impact on some of their revenue. So that's a GCP problem. I think it's an Azure problem. It's
an AWS problem. And that's going to need to get sorted out in the next couple of quarters,
because if Western governments basically say to the clouds, hey, you need to KYC your customers,
so that it's not somebody distilling the best of our models
into a place we don't agree with, I think there could be some blowback.
All these numbers obviously backward looking. Do we think, and I won't be talking too much
about tariffs, but do we think that the tariff story is going to impact a Google next quarter?
Do we think it's going to impact a meta next quarter. And to the extent that Google is saying, look,
we're going to keep our big infrastructure spend
$75 billion full steam ahead, which
is great for the ecosystem, great for Nvidia,
great for everybody in that world,
do we think that holds up if we think
there's a hiccup between now and whenever all this tower
stuff gets sorted if it does?
I think it's going to hold up.
I mean, look, I just think that this investment in CapEx
and the data center build outs is so strategic right now.
I think that the hyperscalers, it's
only good for their businesses, but I
think they see it as so strategic to their survival
that they just have to do it no matter what.
In other words, I think they're totally inelastic on this.
But let me just go back to Google.
Nick, can you throw up this chart?
I think the problem that Google has with respect to chat GPT is that Gemini is not getting the
usage and chat GPT is just growing like crazy. If you look at how these models perform according
to the benchmarks, Gemini is actually really good. I mean, Gemini has made substantial progress
catching up to chat GPT, but they have not caught up on the usage side.
Now to Chimash's point, you could just
make Gemini the default interface in Google search,
but that is true innovator's dilemma,
because if you do that,
you could be giving up more than half the search revenue.
So I do think Google is in a really tough spot,
and the longer they wait to make Gemini front and center,
the worse this usage problem gets.
I mean, what's basically happening right now is
users are learning a new habit.
I mean, they're learning to go to chat GPT
to get their questions answered
or just their searches answered in a completely
different way.
And let's be honest, they make using Gemini impossible.
And they can do just a much better job, at a minimum give the best leading edge Gemini impossible. And they can do just a much better job.
At a minimum, give the best leading edge Gemini model
to the 270 million people that are already paying you
for a subscription.
Just do that.
Do something so that you can start to blunt the growth
of OpenAI.
Otherwise you're gonna look back in four years
and regret himing and hawing today.
So Chamath, you're the CEO of Google. You've got a $200 billion run rate at search ad
business. What's the right kind of integration of Gemini such that you don't massively disrupt
the search ad business overnight? Or do you not care and you're just going to do it? I think
that's the conundrum they're dealing with. That's not a conundrum. If you don't understand how to
value a dollar
today versus a dollar tomorrow and a discount rate to disambiguate the emotionalness of that
decision, it's not a hard decision to make. I think the more difficult question is what does
the integration look like? And if you are already paying for a YouTube subscription or a Google One
subscription, what should your experience be? That's a key question. The second question is today, they're already inserting Gemini in all kinds of uncomfortable
ways. So for example, if you use Gmail or if you use Google Workspace, what happens today is all
these random Gemini pop-ups come up all over the place. That is an implementation that happened at
way too junior a level by people that have no product
taste. So if you just stop that, it's not hard. But right now you have a bunch of, you know,
honestly, people that don't have taste and are a little too junior, creating a very cluttered
experience. And if you use the products every day, it would be hard for you to disagree with me.
They have infinite capital and infinite access to talent.
Capital doesn't buy taste.
Right. So what do you think's wrong?
I agree that the Google interface trying to incorporate Gemini
into the 20 blue links or whatever is very kludgy.
But I don't know how you fix that without just getting rid of the blue links.
I mean, I guess you can do a hybrid experience,
but it doesn't compare to chat GPT, which is all in on the AI experience. So I think it's a real innovators dilemma for them. And look, the truth is the
market was killing them already because people thought that that first little AI summary thing
was actually going to kill the blue link economy, right? Like that was that was their worry. And so
it's this terror. I mean, I think it is a terrible conundrum. If you're Sundar, how do you do both
things at the same time? Chamath, I think you're right.
There's a design way to do it, but they're not doing it.
This comes down to taste.
And I think you can't have group think drive creativity and taste.
You either have it or you don't.
And you need to find the one or two people.
And then you need to use the strength of your leverage as a CEO and the ownership that Larry and Sergey have to impose
one person's taste on the decision. Otherwise, you're right, it will lose.
Well, Ramaphel, let me ask you a question. The Google homepage where they just have the search
bar and you can basically submit your search or I feel lucky or whatever,
would you replace that with that search bar with an AI chatbot? No, here's what I would do.
I would first go to the critical other points that are around that today do not cannibalize the blue links.
So the obvious insight should be if you look at the traffic patterns almost as a Sankey diagram, right?
Yeah, we just tab one up.
Show a Sankey. Okay.
There we go.
Who cares about revenue? What the real thing you should be looking
at here is where are the entry points into Google that then result in a clickable link? And what you
would have is a very different Sankey. And what it would show you is that there are certain places
that are highly de-optimized today for revenue generating events. They happen as a byproduct, but they don't happen as the use
case. So in that example, you would put Gmail as a critical place, the YouTube one, the Google one
subscription, and there's like five or six other places. That's where I would put Gemini as the
front door and start to habituate 300 to 500 million people a week in using that. I think then you can figure out over time how
much money you can make from all of that or how it directs derivative revenue and figure out what
to do with Google.com last. But my point is the experience in Gmail should be done today. The
experience in YouTube should be done today. The experience in Google One should be done today. The experience in YouTube should be done today. The experience in Google One should be done today. Would you okay, Nick, can you put up this? Here's their homepage, right? This is the
famous shot. I just checked in. This hasn't changed in 25 years or whatever. I would leave it alone
because I think it's too disruptive and it's too politically fraught. I mean, you could do some
A-B tests. What if they're replaced, I'm feeling lucky, which is kind of antiquated now with AI.
I mean, Gemini, basically,
I mean, you I would need to look at the Sankey to understand
how many people are actually generating monetizable events or
behavior from I'm feeling lucky in 2025. I'm not sure if the
novelty was in, you know,
no, it isn't the novelty. I think it's just there is like a
whimsical thing. I don't know if it drives revenue for them or
not. If it takes the user off site, I don't know if it drives revenue for them or not.
If it takes the user off site,
I don't see how it drives revenue for them.
Here's it.
I'll tell you a great Facebook story just to explain this
and why I get so animated about this.
I was telling this to my 80, 90 team yesterday
because we're dealing with this
one product implementation issue.
And engineers always end up fighting
about whether things should be opt in or opt out.
And it's almost like this religion where people feel like, oh, you cannot force people to do
something. You should always make things optional. And I remember at Facebook, we bought this little
company for a few million dollars that made contact importers, which essentially means if you're using any other email service
to sign up for Facebook, other than like Hotmail back in the early 2000s, we could import your
address book. Anyways, long story short, I remember getting into a huge fight about whether that thing
should be opt-in or opt-out. And I remember telling the guy, and I'm not going to say who it is,
because you guys all know him. And I was literally like, honestly, just shut up and enjoy the success that will come from keeping this as an opt out.
And it just reminds me that at some point, somebody needs to impose their will to make
very difficult product decisions. And if you leave it to a team, you'll end up with by the way,
go to Gmail today with 95 Gemini pop-ups. It's not what will
allow them to win with what they have, which is a better product, which I will agree it is a
meaningfully better model on multiple dimensions than anything else.
Right. Okay. I know Sacks has to go. Before you go, David, I just want to hit Tesla for half a
second. Tesla's out with earnings this week. Stock is up 8% on the back of that news, 23%
up in the last five days, in large part because Elon basically said, I'm getting out of Doge
and I'm going back into Tesla. So the question is, what can he actually do to fix Tesla at this
point? What does he have to do? And is he really out of Doge? No, I don't think he's out of Doge.
He didn't say he was out of Doge. It was just a matter of how much time he could allocate to each thing.
I mean, look, I saw this before when I was part of the Twitter transition is
that for the first three months or so, he was basically full time at Twitter HQ,
learning the business down to the database level.
I mean, every nook and cranny of that business he learned about.
Once he felt like he had a mental model
and he had the people in place that he trusted,
he could move to more of a maintenance mode.
And I think that's the only way he can manage five companies
is that he has these intense bursts
where he focuses on something,
gets the right people and structure in place,
feels like he understands it,
and then he can delegate more.
And I think that he has reached that point with Doge,
but he was also clear that he's
going to keep doing it because if he doesn't, there's going to be a huge backsliding where all
the corrupt interests will basically put back all this corrupt spending. He's going to stay involved,
but as an SGE, he's limited to 130 days a year anyway. It makes sense for him to now ration his
days a little more closely, but he's got the people in place.
Remember, Doge, it wasn't just him.
It was also the US Digital Service, which is basically the IT branch of the executive
branch which got put under Doge.
So my sense is that Doge is going to continue.
It's just that Elon is shifting to a mode where he can manage it one day a week or two
days a week as opposed to being there five days a week.
Steve Bannon says he wants the receipts. He says there are no receipts. We don't have the receipts.
He says we need itemized receipts to see what has actually happened. What do you think?
Why wouldn't we want to cut as much of this corruption as possible?
I think we have to. We have to. The question is should the public get to see exactly what's been cut and what hasn't?
Why wouldn't they, of course?
And what we really need is for Congress
to now embrace all of the corruption that Elon has found
and eliminate it from the budget.
Because at the end of the day, in order
to capture the savings here, we do
need those appropriations eliminated from the budget.
And my biggest concern is not something
that Doge is going to do or not.
It's not up to Doge to do that.
It's up to, frankly, these old bulls in Congress who control the appropriations process. Are they
going to basically backslide and just put the spending back in because it's easier to just
do that, to engage in this log rolling? Or do we take advantage of this, I think, incredible
sacrifice that Elon has made? I mean, look, this has cost him enormously.
One of the reasons why Tesla is down is because you've had crazy leftists engaging in terrorism,
firebombing Tesla dealerships.
In any event, he's made this enormous sacrifice in order to expose the corruption.
Look at what we've learned.
We've basically learned that this whole NGO thing is a giant scam where the people in
government give enormous
amounts of money to their friends, probably with the expectation that when they leave
government they're going to be next in line at the trough.
I think Elon's done an enormous service exposing this, but it's not entirely up to him.
In order for us to realize the benefit, we need Congress now to act on that.
I'm just afraid that's not gonna happen.
What kind of total number you think we get?
I always say a dollar saved is a dollar made
and we should say amen to that.
The question is, what do you think the total numbers
ultimately gonna be?
Well, he says they're at 160 billion right now.
I think that's, by the way, that's an annual number
as far as I understand it.
So, you know, what I always hear with spending is
they always multiply everything by 10
because they assume it's going to be 10 years.
If it is 160 billion a year, that would be 1.6 trillion over 10 years, probably more
because the spending always grows.
Look, that's 160 billion that we weren't planning on saving before Elon got involved in the
government.
If that's all it is, that would be great.
I think there could be more.
It really comes down to whether Doge continues to be supported by the political process.
Look, Elon can't force that.
Ultimately, it's up to legislators to take advantage of the work that he did.
Ultimately, it's up to the people to put pressure on those legislators to embrace what he did.
He's done an enormous amount, you know,
but there's an old saying that you can bring a horse to water,
but you can't make it drink.
If the entrenched political interests at the end of the day
are, you know, if they're not gonna embrace the savings
that Elon has found, you know,
I don't know what we can do about that.
Yeah, I mean, there's the administrative
and discretionary aspect, but you know, I've said for a while, it's going
to be necessary to have statutory resolve to actually fix the deficit problem in the
United States.
And that means getting Congress to act.
And Congress has not shown a willingness to act.
And every time I go to DC, I come back more disappointed.
I share the stories on the show.
And I talk about the fact that there are very few members of Congress that are saying up and saying, at the end of the day, the first thing we need to solve
is how do we reduce the deficit? Then we can address all of the policy issues that we want to
talk about. But if we don't solve the deficit problem, there is no policy. There is nothing
we're going to be able to do because the treasury rates are going to spike. There's going to be no
capital. There's going to be no funding. We're going to go through a debt death spiral.
So at the end of the day, we really
do need Congress to stand up and lead here.
It is not on one man's shoulders.
There is only so much Elon can do without statutory authority
from Congress.
And I think that's really important in this budget
reconciliation process.
And it's really important for the president
to also help lead Congress to where we need to go on this.
Members of Congress are elected
because they get stuff for their constituents.
The more they get, the more likely they are to get elected.
And next cycle,
they got to get their constituents more stuff.
So it creates an escalating spiral staircase.
It's a problem in how democracy operates.
It creates a tragedy of the commons.
There's a collective action problem,
because like you said,
each individual congressman or senator primarily
wants to get stuff for their district or their state
for their special interests.
And there's no one really looking out
for the public interest, the overall common good.
And these appropriators are basically
engaged in log rolling, where they're willing to give, you
know, their colleagues their pork if they get their pork. And
this is why we have a $2 trillion deficit. It's a really
hard thing to fix. I mean, it's really hard. This is the
problem. Eventually, you realize you realize you can vote
yourself all the money. And that's all I think you know,
this has been something that I remember Bush 41 in his state of the union called for a line item
veto. This was like 30 years ago and we still need that. You
know, because I do think that if the president had more
authority over this process, it'd be less of a tragedy of
the commons. In my naive youth, I was very against that and I
felt like it was giving too much power to the president. And I never really understood the wisdom of it
until we find ourselves at the end of the cycle,
which is where we are here.
That's, you know.
Yeah, and unfortunately, Congress will never,
I think, change its ways until they're forced to
by some sort of crisis,
which Freeberg, I think, is your point about.
Eventually we'll be in a debt crisis,
and then Congress will finally see the wisdom.
And they'll finally appreciate
what Elon did.
You know, there's all these entrenched political interests complaining about Elon.
I mean, again, he undertook an enormous sacrifice to try and fix our fiscal situation, which
is unsustainable before there's a crisis.
One day there'll be a crisis, everyone will see that he's right.
But to answer your question, Andrew, Nick, do you want to pull up this polymarket?
So this is the polymarket and how much spending will guys?
Yeah, we'll see you later.
It's like five seconds.
Love you.
Dave. That was great. Thank you.
Yeah. Thank you.
Polymarket showing an 84% chance of less than 50 billion being cut in 2025.
And only 10% chance.
Isn't the number on doge.gov right now like 160 or something?
That's what they're saying. They've cut in contracts. So that means the annualized
run rate of savings from cutting contracts. But what Polymarket's showing is what's the
actual savings in 2025 from Doge Action. Oh, because these are multi-year contracts.
Multi-year contracts. But then there's also reporting that like $92 billion of it, I think,
isn't actually itemized. So it's hard to understand what's actually on the list. That's right.
And they haven't done anything yet in defense, right? So that's a big honeypot, I guess,
if you want to use that word, potentially. Potentially. Do you think he's going to go
there? Well, I mean, there are people at DOD and at HHS, but I don't think we've had a readout
from any of those people yet, right?
I mean all of this other stuff has been-
Oh, HHS is huge.
If you look at their list on the Doge Tracker on the website, HHS is the number one department
of savings right now and they've got the contracts.
Yeah, defense is on there.
Okay, so they are a fine one.
Well, remember what they're doing is they're just cutting wasteful contracts.
So they're cutting stupid stuff that aren't necessary. all the discretionary stuff, all the bullshit that's not
used or not needed. No, no, no. But my point is like all of these things are still, these are not
line item appropriations, right? Cause you can't cut those. Well, here you can see the department
of the interior had a $3 billion contract for refugee resettlement with a company called
family endeavorsavors Inc.
And so they put that as the number one contract they cut
on the website, saves 2.9 billion total.
Treasury, they cut a deal with a company called
Centennial Technologies, which is an enterprise
software company, saves $1.9 billion.
What is Centennial Technologies?
My gosh.
I mean, that's the thing, you go into this stuff,
you can disappear. Who's equity in that?
Wow.
And these are all like small,
you can click on it, it shows you the contract.
Here it is.
No, I'm gonna go and try to find
the Centennial Technologies.
Who are these guys?
You're gonna invest?
Yeah.
Okay, should we talk,
you wanna still talk a little Tesla
or you think we should move to the science corner?
What I would say quickly on Teslas,
I would encourage all of you guys to try FSD.
It's really-
It's a new thing you've discovered?
This is the reason I bought my Tesla.
I've been using it for-
The quality of FSD is just so good.
Yeah, but you never turn it on.
You just set it in the pre thing.
No, I use it all the time.
It is just an incredible thing.
I think there was a rev of it
probably in the last month or two,
thing. I think there was a rev of it probably in the last month or two that I think took it from a 98 to 99.5 or something. There's just very few disengagements.
Okay. So are you a believer that Tesla is doing real robotaxis in two years?
Oh, yeah. Yeah. I mean, right now, my my car is effectively a robot taxi. The shittiest part
about my Tesla experience is I have to hold the freaking steering wheel and look ahead because
this camera is always looking at me. My wife, it's so funny, she'll come home and she'll be
like angry because she like got suspended because she was like looking away and looking on her phone
and they turn it off. They punish you. Tesla punishes you if you look away too often. They put you in timeout for like, I don't know how many days or whatever.
That's the worst part about the experience because it is so good. You're just like,
oh, can I just take my hands off the wheel and just do something else?
Well, there's a lot of videos getting posted on Twitter of FSD being on and then the car drives
into the sunlight and at a certain angle when
the sun hits the cameras, the car goes into an emergency disconnect on FSD. And I've had
that happen. So I know it's true. I know it's real. So it is a bit of a risk with the camera
only mode on how Tesla operates FSD if they can actually run a full, you know, never to
disengage robot taxi service like Waymo does.
Are you still pushing LIDAR on them? Is that what you're doing?
I don't, that's the word on Twitter, which is watch out,
because without LIDAR, you're going to have a lot of disengagement.
Elon...
Elon's never doing LIDAR.
Never doing LIDAR.
Here's an interesting factoid.
I've been working with somebody here on trying to figure out what does
next generation AI data centers look like,
and do you build like inference pops all over the country?
And I talked to some folks at Waymo, I talked to Takedra.
And what's interesting is the Waymo approach
is they don't need pops anywhere
because all of the models are on board.
So these things go fully autonomous units
out into the wild, they can make every decision themselves, they have the LIDAR and then they come back to the fleet and then they can resync the
models. Whereas everything else, particularly if you have human intervention, so all of the
food delivery folks that have central knocks of people that can engage and intervene,
they need all this real-time ability so that things are
multi-millisecond latency maximum. Awesome. Should we go to the Science Corner, my friend?
Yeah, if you're ready for it. I'm ready.
Today's Science Corner is on a discovery of a massive thorium reserve in China and
a disclosed molten salt reactor in China that's been running for some
time. By the way, let me do the tea for this. Freeberg, tell us about these thorium reactors.
I think the most important thing that everybody should know before I tee this up for Friedberg is that what he's going to talk about is a material called thorium, which doesn't split, it doesn't release energy,
unless it absorbs a neutron, and then it transmutes to uranium-233. And by this,
what I mean is this is a trans that everybody should be able to get behind over to you.
Hey, he got it. He got it.
Did you get it, Andrew?
I got it.
It's a beautiful thing.
I don't think we brought it up in Science Corner before,
but apparently there was a giant thorium deposit
discovered in Inner Mongolia that has enough thorium
to effectively power the entirety of China
for 60,000 years.
It was made by the Bayan-Obo mining complex. It's a million ton reserve in
Inner Mongolia. And so thorium is much more abundant in the
Earth's crust than uranium, which is what we've
historically used for fission reactors and what we use today
for all of the even new generation nuclear fission
reactors. And for a long time, folks have talked about
building a thorium reactor. There's a folks have talked about building a thorium reactor.
There's a lot of challenges with building a thorium reactor.
It's a new set of systems.
But if you build a molten salt thorium reactor, you can ultimately produce
energy in a way that doesn't actually have the risk of a meltdown.
It can passively shut itself down.
It's not high pressure, so it can't explode.
So it's technically a much, so it can't explode.
So it's technically a much safer, much more reliable way of producing power with a much
more abundant fuel source.
And people in the US have been talking about building these thorium molten salt reactors
for decades.
In fact, in 2009, the US Geological Survey in the United States went out and did a study
to identify how much thorium existed just in the continental
North American region. Turns out the US has about 64,000 tons, Canada has 172,000 tons of
thorium reserves, and China just discovered a million tons in this one region. But the amount
of thorium that we have in the United States is enough to power our country for centuries.
So in China, turns out they built a molten salt reactor.
This was another secret.
They've been operating it now for some time.
Last June, while the reactor was running,
they replaced the fuel.
So it basically showed continuous use of the reactor
without needing to do a shutdown and refueling cycle.
It's a two megawatt experimental unit, and they're actually building and planning
to take live at 10 megawatt unit by 2030.
So this was all shared at a private meeting.
It got out.
The discovery in Inner Mongolia was also kept confidential for, I think, nearly
two years, and then it got reported out.
And after it got reported out, it was confirmed ultimately in a government
meeting and that that's how we
know about it now. But I think this just is this another kind
of critical point about this. Once China gets this two and 10
megawatt system running, this allows for very small, very
modular nuclear reactors using a very abundant fuel stores that
can be quickly built, stood up and safely operated in a
distributed way.
You don't need to have one gigawatt,
which is a thousand megawatt station running centrally.
And then you've got to have a big, you know,
construction project invested into build
and operate this thing.
You can have many small reactors split around neighborhoods,
split around cities, and so on.
This is not built into China's energy projection.
So they actually have an electricity forecast
that over the next 15 years gets them from three terawatts
of electricity production to eight.
And that's through a combination of solar, hydroelectric,
and then the Gen 3 and Gen 4 traditional
uranium nuclear reactors that they're building out.
So if you add this in, it provides even more
or perhaps lower cost or more distributed
energy production
capacity than is even provided in the forecasts today. Again, this is, I think, one of the base
drivers that is part of the compounding effect of China's economic advantage for this century
is energy, energy production, the cost of building new energy production systems,
and the cost to operate those energy production systems.
Can I say something about the Hu Jintao conversation
about picking national champions and getting focused?
This was an area that China chose.
And now, you know, the US finds itself years behind
on a technology that we invented, right?
So this was research that happened
at Oak Ridge National Lab.
That's right.
We pioneered this decades ago and then we shelved
it. And then the person in China that led it gave credit to the United States and basically said,
Americans let the research wait for the right successor. We were that successor. That's what
he said in quotes. So here we are, we invent this cutting edge technology. It's a huge leap in innovation,
but they can get organized. We put a regulatory fence around it and we blocked it from getting
organized and they're like, you know what, we can, we can just do this and we'll figure this out.
Yeah. It's really, it's really unfortunate self goal here.
They have infinite thorium reserve. They don't need to refine it. One of the key advantages of thorium is you don't need to go through a refining process.
In uranium, you have a very expensive, very difficult kind of refinement process
where you end up, I think, getting less than 1% of that uranium that you pull out
can actually be used as fissile.
And you have to enrich down to the uranium to find the fissile material.
With thorium, 100% of it can be used as fuel.
So it's a very low cost, very easy kind of fuel source that can be very quickly kind
of put into production if we actually build out the supply chain and build out the energy
systems to utilize it.
So it's a real kind of reinvention of nuclear energy technology.
And this will take off.
I mean once this experimental reactor is working, they get the 10 megawatt reactor going, boom.
Imagine how much fundamental leaps in science that we have funded that are just basically
gathering dust or falling through the cracks that other countries are using right now and
probably a little bit snickering behind our backs about the fact that,
you know, we did all of this work and then they were able to take advantage of it.
Well, here I'll show you. Here's another, let me put this in the group chat real quick.
But how much of this stuff do we have this? I mean, what's our ability to actually do this?
We have invented it.
We invented it.
We invented it. We invented it. We invented it.
The big problem has been the regulatory fencing
we put around it, Andrew.
There's a bunch of administrivia.
There's forms.
Yeah.
There's pronouns.
There's all kinds of stuff.
And just speaking to this point, so we've talked in the past
about nuclear fusion.
So Andrew, I don't know how familiar you are,
but fusion is different than fission.
Fission is where you take a heavy element
like uranium or thorium and it breaks
and you release energy.
Fusion is where you take a light element
like hydrogen, you accelerate it,
you make it really dense and you jam the protons together.
And when you jam those protons together, they fuse.
So hydrogen turns into helium.
This is what goes on in the sun.
And energy is released in a different form
through accelerated neutrons. We capture that energy, we make electricity. And energy is released in a different form through accelerated neutrons.
We capture that energy.
We make electricity.
So fusion is this next-gen technology
where we could theoretically just use water from the ocean
to create all the electricity we need on planet Earth.
10 meter by 10 meter by 10 meter of water
makes all the power the entire planet uses every year.
That's what you could ultimately do with fusion technology.
So it turns out this is a satellite photo
that discovered a very large scale fusion research center
in Mianyang, China, which we did not know about,
that was just kind of stumbled upon.
It turns out it's the largest fusion reactor
experimental facility in the world now,
50% larger than the national ignition facility
run in the United States.
Not only is China getting this new energy infrastructure built with all of the stuff that was discovered last century,
but they are now getting ahead of us on the new discoveries to be made in the next gen of energy
systems, which is fusion, which at some point this century will work and we'll end up having
this ability to unlock effectively unlimited free energy. And these are compounding value craters.
China, ultimately, if they can make new energy systems cheaper
than the United States, scale them faster,
they will ultimately have much cheaper, much higher volumes
of electricity, which gives them the advantage
of manufacturing and production and transportation
and everything.
And that's where the economic advantage will ultimately
accrue to them.
So this is, I think, key to the strategic puzzle
on what's gonna happen in the great race
with China this century is the build out of electricity
and the cost of that build out.
So the regulatory constraints
need to be addressed first and foremost.
That's, in my opinion, the number one mission critical
strategic imperative for the United States right now.
Awesome.
Yeah.
That's just a red flag on China science corner for the day.
Thorium is real. Thorium manner. So how was it, Andrew?
How'd you like hanging out with the best?
I loved it.
You know, I'm still getting used to it.
I'm still getting used to the whole flow,
trying to figure out how you guys all roll, but it's good.
It's good.
Do the do the outro.
You got to do your out. You got to do the outro. Oh yeah. I got to do the outro? You guys. Come
on. It's your show. Do the outro. Coming at you. WKGB. What is the outro?
I've never done an outro. Yeah, you do the outro. On behalf of our crypto czar, David Sacks,
of our crypto czar, David Sachs, our prince of panic attacks and Sultan of Science, David Freiburg, our new bestie guestie, Andrew Ross Sorkin.
Thank you.
I am your chairman dictator, Jamath Pali-Hapatia. Thank you for listening to the All In Podcast.
We'll see you next time. Love you, guys. Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Thanks, guys. That was a lot of. Love you. Bye bye. Thanks guys.
That was a lot of fun.
Awesome. Queen of Kin Wives I'm going all in What your winners like?
What your winners like?
Besties are gone
This is my dog taking a notice in your driveway
Sex
Oh man
My habitat will meet me at Blitzen
We should all just get a room and just have one big huge orgy cause they're all just useless
It's like this sexual tension that they just need to release somehow.
Wet your feet.
Wet your feet.
Wet your feet.
Beak.
What?
We need to get merch.
The cheese are back.
I'm doing all in.
I'm doing all in.