All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Trump verdict, COVID Cover-up, Crypto Corner, Salesforce drops 20%, AI correction?
Episode Date: May 31, 2024(0:00) Bestie Intros: Jason's first show for his new production company (2:15) Why Sacks and Chamath are hosting a Trump fundraiser (18:40) House COVID investigation: findings, cover-up, what's next? ...(41:36) The Deep State Problem: unelected bureaucrats running three letter agencies for decades (53:04) Crypto Corner with Chamath (1:04:15) State of SaaS: Salesforce drops 20%, market teetering (1:20:10) Trump verdict: guilty on 34 counts of falsifying business records (1:37:36) Are we seeing an AI correction? Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://twitter.com/Jason https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://twitter.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@all_in_tok Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://oversight.house.gov/release/new-select-subcommittee-report-recommends-ecohealth-alliance-president-debarred-and-criminally-investigated-exposes-failures-in-nih-grant-procedures https://oversight.house.gov/release/hearing-wrap-up-nih-repeatedly-refutes-ecohealth-alliance-president-dr-peter-daszaks-testimony-tabak-testimony-reveals-federal-grant-procedures-in-need-of-serious-reform https://www.axios.com/2021/07/20/fauci-rand-paul-wuhan-institute https://oversight.house.gov/release/breaking-hhs-suspends-funding-and-proposes-formal-debarment-of-ecohealth-alliance-cites-evidence-from-covid-select-report https://oversight.house.gov/release/breaking-hhs-to-debar-dr-peter-daszak-president-of-ecohealth-alliance https://x.com/emilyakopp/status/1795482121739354552 https://x.com/R_H_Ebright/status/1795454118594568312 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jGxSlW0NrB4 https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/dual-use-research/feds-lift-gain-function-research-pause-offer-guidance https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/a-flu-virus-risk-worth-taking/2011/12/30/gIQAM9sNRP_story.html https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3484390 https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)30418-9/fulltext https://oversight.house.gov/release/new-covid-select-memo-details-allegations-of-wrongdoing-and-illegal-activity-by-dr-faucis-senior-scientific-advisor https://fiscaldata.treasury.gov/americas-finance-guide/national-deficit https://x.com/KatherineEban https://x.com/emilyakopp https://www.semafor.com/article/05/28/2024/a-dying-empire-led-by-bad-people-poll-finds-young-voters-despairing-over-us-politics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvQTXAgtA6s https://s23.q4cdn.com/574569502/files/doc_financials/2025/q1/CRM-Q1-FY25-Earnings-Press-Release-w-financials.pdf https://www.investors.com/news/economy/federal-reserve-core-pce-inflation-gdp-q1-jobless-claims-sp-500 https://www.nytimes.com/live/2024/05/30/nyregion/trump-trial-verdict https://www.google.com/finance/quote/DELL:NYSE https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-05-30/us-gdp-grew-at-softer-pace-as-spending-inflation-marked-down
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, everybody, as you know, there was a big verdict that came out today in the Trump trial
in New York City. However, it came right after we were taping. So enjoy this episode. And then at
the end, we'll go around the horn and get quick reaction from each of the besties on what they
think of the Trump guilty verdict in the New York hush money trial and a little update on the market close and tech stocks tanking and after hours trading stick
with us. Man, what a week I had. Oh, you have an intro. I smell
an intro. Tell us what kind of week you had. What kind of week
have you credible? You know, I got to, you know, I've always
been a fan of Howard Stern. And agent, Don Buchwald, called me.
He saw the show last week.
This is all true.
They said they want to start a production company, so I started a production company
and I've already got my first show.
I've signed my first show, The Pilot.
What is the show?
Well, here it is.
Let me show you.
Thanks for asking.
What you are witnessing is real.
The besties are not actors.
The cases are real.
Both parties have agreed to settle their disputes here, in our forum, J-Cal Production, The Rain Man's Court.
Yeah, it's lawfare.
On today's show, Shamak guilty of first degree unbuttoning?
Friedberg accused of plastic perjury?
Jason appealing his grifting conviction?
Throw in the book,
at Filonius Fauci.
Welcome to the stand,
Judge David Sacks.
Hot water burn baby.
Nice.
That's really good.
It's a first show from Jaycolle Productions.
If I'm the judge, then what does that make you?
Are you like the bailiff? Like what the bailiff? I'm kind of like the host's really good. It's a first show from Jake. I'm the judge. Then what does that make you?
Are you like the bailiff?
Like what?
Kind of like the host, you know, like, um,
he's the guy who does American Idol, right?
I see crest.
I'm like going to be the new Ryan Seacrest.
That's what they envisioned for me.
And that's my first spin-off show.
So here we go.
Let your winners ride.
Rain man, David.
So We'll let your winners ride. Rain Man, David Sack. I'm going all in.
And it said, we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it.
Love you best, I mean, Queen of Ken Wanda.
I'm going all in.
There's a lot of news.
My inbox is blowing up.
I went over to Threads to see what was going on over there and I got absolutely savage.
Threads is like all the hall monitors left one school.
Like if they took the four hall monitors
from every school in the country
and you put them all in one place, that's Threads.
What is Threads?
Threads is like Zuckerberg's Twitter revenge killer
that he created, but all the journalists
and woke folks went there.
And then all the conspiracy theories took over X
and Twitter and like freedom of speech in one place
and then the hall monitors in the other.
But my Lord, the inbound I'm getting, Sax,
on apparently you're having a party this Thursday
and a couple of people are coming, a soiree.
Well, it's my birthday party.
Yeah, okay, so there's a little soiree happening.
Sax, enlighten the audience.
What are you up to?
We're hosting an event for President Trump.
Pfft.
He's just frantic.
I'm sorry.
What did you say?
You just put all your water up.
What?
Yeah, we're hosting an event
for the once and future president.
45 is soon to be 47. Who's weak?
As I saw from your own polling data
that you tweeted this morning, Jason.
Oh God, it's so dark.
It's so dark.
I mean, the betting markets are just,
basically they seem to have already made their decision.
The betting markets, right?
And the betting markets, they're not always right,
but they were wrong actually about Hillary and Trump.
So who knows?
And polling historically has underestimated Trump's support because people have been reluctant
to say they're supporting him for some reason.
So yeah, things are looking very positive for Trump right now.
But in any event, we're hosting a fundraiser for him.
And he said that he wants to come on the All In Pod at some point, so we just need to schedule
that. And by the way, we did this for, let's not forget, we did this for RFK Jr.
He appeared on the pod.
We did a fundraiser for him.
We did it for Vake Ramaswamy.
Came on the pod.
We did a fundraiser for him.
We did it for Dean Phillips.
Yeah, that's right.
Chris Christie came on.
And Chris Christie came on, although I don't think we technically did a fundraiser, but
we would have.
And we've asked President Bideniser, but we would have.
And we've asked President Biden, and we have not heard back. And when we say we, let's parse that out.
So first of all, who's we? And Chamath, would you host a fundraiser for Biden as well as Trump?
Absolutely. Look, here's the thing. I am an apolitical person who has to make a difficult
decision every four years. And I think most of us are like that. I don't think it's so easy to wake up in the morning and say, Oh, I'm clearly
a Republican or I'm clearly a Democrat. There's parts of both sides that appeal to me. And so
you have to make these reasoned decisions. And then that gets even more complicated, right? So
the most important thing for me is get as many people on in a position to tell their version of the truth
so that you can see an unfiltered version of that truth
and decide for yourself.
So I was really blown away when I heard Dean Phillips
and Bobby, and I thought there's parts of both
of those platforms that I agree with,
there's parts that I disagree.
And the same thing happened when I sat down with Vivek. I thought that I wouldn't agree with much. I ended up agreeing
with a lot. There's a lot of stuff that Trump, in hindsight, again, as I've said before, that he did,
which was really helpful to America. And one big thing which had he done, frankly, sets up our
children, which is these hundred-year bonds and defraying the cost of all of this indebtedness far out into
the future. So there's many things and I think there's things that Biden has done that I think
will look back and say those were good things that he did. And then there are things in the future
or today that I think that we could disagree with as well. So the point is, I would like this place
to be a place where impartiality rules, where we can be on all sides of an issue and just
decide what makes the most sense after looking at the facts. And I would like, four years from now,
every major political candidate for president to look at All In as the first place. And I think
if we can earn that trust and have the integrity to allow all sides to tell a fair story, that is
going to be a really powerful thing and an artifact to leave behind for people.
Well, in fact, RFK believes that we shot him out of a cannon is I think what he said or
something and that we got the sort of canonsy going. Vivek, I think also kind of debuted
here in a major way. To be clear, All In isn't hosting the fundraiser sacks. You and Chamath
are. I'm not donating. I'm not going free bird you're
not donating. I don't know if you're going or not. They get
told me you're not going you're not donating or going. Got it.
Okay, you wave to Sam.
And so I don't know what
donated to local Canada as an individual choice that each
person's gonna have to decide if they want to do it.
Right as Americans, we can do that.
Yeah, if you're willing to open your pocketbook, which I know Jason's not something that you're inclined to do very often. I mean,
I'm not like big into politics and the idea of giving money to politicians to me,
not my thing. You know, I have, I'd rather invest in the next startup to be totally honest. If I'm
going to put 50 K towards something or God forbid 250 K for me, I'll put that in a startup. That's
what I like to do. But you know, everybody's different and
You know for the people who are asking me to not be friends with Sachs anymore
I'm gonna be friends with Sachs forever. We love each other besties and he can have a different opinion than me
I I'm getting totally absolutely crucified that I'm supporting Trump and how could I be friends with sex?
Go fuck yourself Sachs is my friend. We have a difference of opinion on some topics. Good for you.
That is the good thing. Learn something. Sorry. Good for you.
Sorry, I'll just say I've heard the same thing. And I told
friends and others that have reached out. Why are you
associating yourself with people that are doing a fundraiser for
Trump? And I said exactly because I think it's really
important that people can have different
political interests, different points of view, different beliefs, and still be
friends and still have a conversation.
If we can model that in any way, I think it moves the needle because this whole
thing where you only speak with only hang out with only talk to only have dinner
with people that you agree with, I think is exactly what got us in the mess that
we're in today.
People need to have a broader perspective.
So well said.
And I'll support you guys with whatever,
in terms of like being your friends,
I'm not gonna ever judge you guys
in terms of what you believe in or choose to do.
We've said this before, but you know,
in the end, what do you have?
You have your family, you have your children,
you have your friends, and hopefully you have work
that gives you some purpose. And in all of that, if there are random people that are judging you for one thing,
they'll eventually judge you for another thing. And that is not a path to any sort of contentment.
I've donated to Bobby Kennedy, I've donated to the Democrats massively, and I'll donate to
Donald Trump. And if there's an opportunity to talk to President Biden and really understand
where he's at, I donate to him as well. And so the point is that I would like to be an organizing
principle. And I would like to replace today the places that I don't trust to organize and give
unfiltered access to knowledge. And those things are the mainstream media.
And so I'm willing to put my resources behind being that organizing principle. And I think having
a broad cross-section of friends who have different political beliefs is actually a useful
thing for a lot of these candidates. Because as it turns out, most people are sort of in the middle.
And most people in any given election can be persuaded one way or the other. So the most
important thing that we can do is get all of them, give all of them an opportunity to really tell
an unfiltered version of their truth and then let the chips fall where they may. That is the right
thing to do for America. That's what democracy means. So this kind of like cajoling and bullying
in either side, I find really distasteful and I find very immature.
Yeah, it's not gonna work.
What's amazing is, I mean,
I really haven't gotten any blowback, you know?
There was a question about, people asked me,
have you gotten blowback from this thing?
And no, not really.
I mean, other than the reporter knocking on my door
and that kind of stuff, but people really-
Same.
It hasn't really created a blowback
and I think you guys are getting more blowback. And that's an indication of the cowardly response
to it, which is, it's like a cancellation tactic.
We're going to try and go behind your back
and ostracize you instead of even telling you
to your face what you think.
And I think the reason why they're doing that
is because quite frankly, there's
a lot of preference falsification going on
in Silicon Valley.
I know there's a lot of preference falsification going on in Silicon Valley.
I know there's a lot of people in Silicon Valley who a-
Well, we know because we know who's coming.
Yeah, you have the list of people who don't.
I mean, look, nobody is excited about Biden, okay?
Nobody's excited about Biden right now.
So the only question is, do they hold their nose
and vote for him or do they vote for Trump
or do they vote for Bobby Kennedy?
But there's a lot of people who I do think support Trump.
And look, we've AB tested this, right?
It'd be different if we didn't have four years of Biden and four years of Trump.
There's a lot of people who can look back and say that the AB test we ran indicates
Trump.
So I know there's going to be a lot of people who support Trump, but they don't want to admit it. And I think that this event is going to break the ice on that.
And maybe it'll create a preference cascade where all of a sudden it becomes acceptable
to acknowledge the truth, which is a lot of people support Trump. And it's not just this,
it's also Steve Schwartzman came out. I think Bill Ackman's on the edge of coming out for Trump.
So there's a lot of people who are now like flipping. And I think Bill Ackman's on the edge of coming out for Trump. So there's a lot of
people who are now like flipping and I think it could really start to cascade on itself.
I think the thing that hasn't happened yet is we haven't actually now started to talk about the
contours of a handful of policy things where there is some deep diversion now, where these candidates
are diverging from each other. And I think that that's going to be really
interesting to see how much people value that
differentiation. I'll give you an example, which is President
Trump in the last few weeks has become incredibly pro crypto.
Now, the contours of that, I think we need to define, right?
But the question is, is a pro crypto environment,
especially in a world where we think
that there's just going to be continued dollar debasement,
an important issue, an unimportant issue,
or a thing that is a small issue today,
but that will be critical for us
in 20 and 30 years to get right?
That's an example.
And there's a handful of these other things
that I think that now we have a chance to really double click on, where there really is some differentiation amongst the three presidential candidates. And I think that's healthy as well. And so it's important, again, get their specific thoughts on the record, so that we can really figure this out. And I think that over these next few months, I think it's going to be important to do that. So I hope President Biden
also comes on the pod, quite honestly, and allows us to ask him the hard questions.
And I hope Bobby comes back on actually, and I think Bobby will if we ask him just to tighten
up where he's at now, a few months before. Yeah, there's definitely a lot of great follow-up
questions. I would love to interview Trump. I'll ask him hard questions. I'll respect him as
President 45 and as a candidate. So for people who like, are like you have Trump derangement
syndrome, like, that's just like a childish thing to say, I disagree with this policies,
I'll ask him questions. Hey, why don't you support EVs? Like, that's a valid question to ask him. Why
is he anti EV? He said all these crazy things about EVs. And then apparently he's courting you
on privately. I don't know if that's true or not. But you know, there's hard questions and I'm sure he'll answer them. And he's more than capable
of doing it. I'm excited. I'm really excited for President Trump to come on the podcast.
And for me, I'll be totally honest. I think the Democrats have to wake up for a second and
just like take the temperature of the room, like read the room Democrats.
You have put up a candidate that nobody wants his policies on the border and some
other issues are not, you know, in sync with the majority of the
country. At some point, the Democrats just have to take a
deep look in the mirror. James Carvel is doing a bunch of more
doing and say we feel that a bad candidate who's too old and
people don't believe will stand up to scrutiny of like, say,
being on the all in pot for two hours or in the debates or with a hostile interviewer, any of those possibilities. And
so I think if that's the case, we really need to have the Democrats think deeply about maybe
fielding a different candidate. And I believe that's what's going to happen in the next
30 to 60 days. So I'm predicting there's going to be a switcheroo.
100%. I mean, if you just look at the polls,
it's 100% there'll be a switcheroo.
Who's the switcheroo?
I have no idea.
Could be Gavin, it could be anybody.
Anything's possible.
I think Trump's gonna demolish him in the debate.
I think he'll sink to 30% in the polls.
And then the Republicans are gonna find,
I'm sorry, the Democrats will find a way
to give him a graceful out,
and then they'll field somebody else.
When's the first debate? June 17th. Can I respond to that, I'm sorry, the Democrats will find a way to give him a graceful out and then they'll field somebody else. When's the first debate? June 17th. Can I respond to that? I saw
your tweet basically saying something very similar, that Democrats need to wake up and,
you know, recognize the situation they're in. I think this is a case of once you've made your
bed, you have to sleep in it. Look, the Democrats have set the table pursuing certain policies for the last three
and a half years. We've had an open border. We had so much spending that it fed into this
inflation with jacked up interest rates. We had Ukraine become the central obsession and
focus of our politics, which blew up in Biden's face with the whole summer counteroffensive.
I could go on. You have the hostility to crypto,
which they're now trying to desperately backpedal on,
but you had three years of Elizabeth Warren and Gensler
basically making crypto the enemy.
And now all of a sudden, we're at first and go,
we're at that like 10 yard line,
and you're all of a sudden saying,
well, just read the room and make all these changes.
You can't.
You know, I don't think people are gonna be fooled by that.
We've A-B tested this thing.
We've had three and a half years of Biden,
four years of Trump.
Who do you like better?
And we're, how many months are we from pulling the lever?
Five months?
Never too late.
I'm telling him to do it.
Don't take Sachs' advice.
He is a hardcore partisan who wants to win desperately.
Take J. Cal's advice.
Field another candidate.
The worst thing the Republicans could ever deal with is a great candidate who can speak
and who's nimble on their feet because I think people are looking for a choice that's not
these two individuals.
I'm not going to say I'm anti-Trump.
I'm not going to say I'm anti-Biden.
Why don't you support Bobby Kennedy then?
I don't think he's going to have the platform behind him to get enough votes. I think the Democrats need to
immediately this month in June, do the switcheroo. And if they
do, I think they went in the lens. They had their chance.
They had their chance. They could have gone for Bobby. They
drove Bobby out of the party. That's not the only thing. He
didn't start as an independent. He started as a Democrat.
A Kennedy Democrat. You had Dean Phillips.
Dean Phillips took the chance.
And of course he was pushed out, not at the party,
but basically ostracized.
They had their chance.
I think, you know, if I want to be a strategist,
this is just a conspiracy theory.
I don't want to go to like chinfoil hat corner.
I think the Democrats, as cynical as it sounds,
were waiting to see what happens with this Trump trials
conviction, what you call lawfare, what other people call fair use of the law.
And then they are going to see how he does in the debates.
That's why they moved the debate up in June.
And I think they know to pull the plug on this if it gets
too far gone and they have the ability to do that.
Cause all he's got to say is, you know what?
I'm feeling old and I want us to win and I'm going to slot
somebody else in.
But listen, let's go get to this huge job.
Let me translate what you just said, which is the Democrats hope to put Trump in jail using
lawfare. And when that fails, they realize that they're going to lose the election to him and
they've got a big problem. So they're going to try some desperate strategy to find a new candidate,
but it's way too late for that.
I think precisely.
Thank you for repeating back to me.
And I think the only disagreement we might have there is I would agree like there's law
for in two of the cases and I think two of the cases I think are, should be pursued. But you know,
we can, intelligent people, as we said at the start of this can agree to disagree about it.
And I think you should all take, if you're a listener to this podcast, you're smart. If you're
here, you're smart. You're not listening to two hour podcasts with us going this deep on
issues if you're not a brilliant, smart and attractive individual. So let's get to the docket.
Yes, that's right. Just say he heard brilliant and attractive and here.
All right, listen, I hate to go into another controversial topic, but the four of us were all on fire about this.
Apparently, the COVID-19 investigation
is leaning towards a massive cover-up.
There's a subcommittee going on right now.
The world's not paying attention to this,
but I think some savvy people are, especially over on X.
There's a lot of great journalists
who are doing incredible
investigative work. Let me just catch everybody up in the audience real quick here and get the
besties involved. Over the past year and a half, a House subcommittee has been focused on the origins
of COVID-19, and they've been investigating the NIH's ties with gain of function research in Wuhan.
The subcommittee was painted early on as like, this is angry Republicans. This is about mask mandates.
It was like highly politicized, but it's actually turned out to be very effective bipartisan
investigation.
We'll get on, we'll get in on that in a minute.
But so far, most of the investigation is focused on nailing down this timeline of communication
between NIH officials and an organization called EcoHealth Alliance.
This is a nonprofit that's focused on infectious disease research.
Now these committee videos are online, we'll play you on in a moment, but through funding
in the NIH, the EcoHealth organization was awarded research grants to various labs.
This included the Wuhan Institute of Virology, the infamous one.
EcoHealth violated terms of its grants
by failing to report that gain-of-function experiments
were being conducted in Wuhan.
Ecohealth was supposed to report any experiment
that exhibited characteristics
leading it to being 10 times more infectious.
But when that happened,
it failed to disclose this research to the NIH.
And on May 17th, a deputy director of the NIH
acknowledged that the agency funded gain
of function research in Wuhan via eco-health.
This is the key because Fauci initially denied this during his 2021 Senate hearing.
Fauci said, quote, I totally resent the lie you are now propagating in response to questions
from Rand Paul about the lab leak theory.
So Fauci either didn't know or relied under oath.
Let me pause there for a second. There's a lot more to the story, but when you hear this sort of set up, Friedberg, our Sultan of science in this initial setup, what rings concerning to you,
true to you, and then we'll go on and we play some clips of this testimony, which is pretty wild.
I don't think that pre the emergence of the pandemic,
that there was nefarious motives.
In other words, their funding of this was not done to create a pandemic.
It might have been a mistake in hindsight, but.
Yeah, for many years, particularly following the original SARS pandemic,
there was a lot of conversations around how do we get in front of the next pandemic?
How do we figure out what's coming? And how do we prepare for it? And there was a lot of research
that was launched to try and resolve that key question. This is like the movie 12 monkeys. You
guys ever see that movie? It's like, does the effort to try and stop the problem cause the problem?
I think that for my point of view, there's a very high probability that there was.
Some leak that meant that the work that was going on to try and get in front of
the next pandemic and understand what we could do to prepare ourselves and what
vaccines can be developed and so on actually led to the pandemic.
So then when that happens, how do you respond when you're sitting in that seat?
That's the key question that I think
this committee is uncovering.
Do you think there was a coverup, Freeberg?
What is your intuition on that?
Yeah, I think that these guys definitely didn't want,
I think what they were trying to do was prevent that
from being the focal point and protect their own asses
at the same time.
Do you think they should go to jail?
I don't know the extent of it yet.
It'd be good to get more information from this whole thing.
So let me queue up those next details.
I will say this guy that gave testimony last week
where he was like deliberately changing the names
of people in the email, Anderson,
and he put the dollar sign so that you couldn't find
that email when you did a FOIA search.
He knew what he was doing.
He knew.
I don't understand how you could say this wasn't nefarious.
This whole thing was nefarious from top to bottom.
Well, yeah, let me cue this up here, Saxon, then get your-
Why are you exonerating it?
Hold on, let me cue it up.
All right, so we started to see some consequences and accountability.
Last week, the US Department of Health cut all funding to EcoHealth in response to the
committee's investigation.
They disbarred its president, Peter Dasik.
Dasik, yeah.
Dasik.
And so we don't have direct evidence to
be clear that the pandemic was the result of a lab leak. And, you know, just even saying the lab
we would have gotten this. The Fearing Cleavage site makes it clear that this was a lab leak.
That's not a naturally occurring virus. The fear in Cleveland's sites were engineered.
Let's go to that in just one second. And thankfully, this
isn't going to get our YouTube channel shut down because we
have freedom of speech back a little bit. But this is where it
gets really interesting. emails were written as eco health with
a tilde, that's that little squiggly line, instead of an O.
And they would spell Anderson with a dollar. That's that little squiggly line instead of an O. And they would spell
Anderson with a dollar sign in the E. Christian Anderson in this example is a biologist who
was reportedly awarded nine million in grants from the NIH two months after publishing a
paper claiming COVID did not come from a lab. And so let's get to some of these clips. Here's
a clip of Fauci's former top advisor, David Moran's getting grilled
in the hearing. And I'll play two clips and then I'll give it to you.
David Moran On October 25th, 2021, another scientist wrote,
quote, David is concerned about the privacy of text and other messages from his cell phone to
you and me because he has been using a government phone. This came from Tony, end quote. Sir,
did you ever have any conversations with Dr. Fauci
regarding using personal phone or email to communicate with Dr. Dasik?
I don't remember it. It's possible. I probably wouldn't have remembered it, and I don't remember
it.
On January 18th, you testified that you did not have any conversations with Dr. Fauci
regarding eco-health. On October 25th, 2021, you wrote, quote,
Peter, from Tony's numerous recent comments to me,
they're trying to protect you, end quote.
You meaning eco-health and Dr. Dasik.
Dr. Baranz, did you ever have any conversations
with Dr. Fauci regarding eco-health?
Well, the ones you just mentioned,
I don't have any recollection of that. No recollection. No recollection.
No. All right. So we're on the no recollection train. And then
I'll give this final clip here. This is unbelievable, sacks.
Apparently, there's a foil later, lady, freedom of
information act lady, working at NIH to train and help and mentor
people on how to avoid having their
Communications. These are people who we work who work for us and she's the FOIA lady at NIH
Play the clip Nick and as you've said you previously testified that you did not delete any federal records
But on February 24th, 2021 you wrote quote
I learned from our FOIA lady here how to make
emails disappear after I'm FOIA'd, but before the search starts.
So I think we are all safe.
Plus I deleted most of those earlier emails after sending them to Gmail, end quote.
And the next day on February 25th, 2021, you wrote, quote, but I learned the tricks last
year from an old friend, Marge Moore, who heads our FOIA office and also hates FOIAs."
Yes or no? Is Marge Moore the FOIA lady you were referring to?
Yes, she was at the time. I believe she's retired since then.
Did the NIH FOIA office instruct you on how to delete emails or avoid FOIA?
No.
All right, Sax. There's your red meat, smoking guns everywhere. What do you think?
Please give me a couple of minutes to kind of lay out what happened here.
Okay.
So Fauci knew very early, as early as February 1st of 2020, that COVID came
from a lab leak, the scientists said.
So all they had to do was look in our microscope and see the furan cleavage
site, which is not naturally occurring.
It's something that was
added basically bioengineered to the virus in order to make it more transmissible in humans.
So they knew right away that this somehow came from a lab leak. And Fauci and Collins said in
emails that they were going to begin a brutal takedown in order to conceal this fundamental
truth of the lab leak from the public.
Now why would Fauci need to conceal this?
Because he had funded gain of function research programs via Peter Daszak and the EcoHealth
Alliance to conduct again gain of function research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
Moreover Fauci was personally responsible for reversing an Obama-era decision to prohibit
gain-of-function research because it was so risky.
Fauci wrote op-eds justifying gain-of-function research.
He wrote a paper in 2012, which was actually quite candid about the risks of gain-of-function.
He describes the kind of lab leak that could occur in the type of virus that could escape
from a lab because of gain of function, but then he says that it's a risk worth taking.
So this is somebody who funded the Wuhan lab, he funded gain of function research, he was
personally responsible for lifting the ban on gain of function research.
He had a lot of reasons to want to hide the fact that COVID was engineered in a lab and
was lab leak.
And so we know that even before this conspiracy to basically defraud the FOIA request, that
Fauci had done things like organize that letter to the Lancet, which smeared and demonized
scientists who were trying to tell the truth, saying that the so-called zoological theory was nonsense, this had to be from the lab. He was doing things
like this and now we have this added piece which is this longtime colleague
of Fauci and Collins at NIH, Dr. David Morenz, developed a strategy for evading
FOIA requests that would expose the truth. He did this by deleting government
emails, which is a crime, by using private email to conduct government business, which is also a crime. And then strategically
misspelling names and titles to frustrate the FOIA searches. And then the craziest part
is that morens foolishly detailed his schemes in emails that Fauci would have seen that
Fauci was on the distribution list stuff. So he has no plausible deniability.
It's literally like, they're like,
here's how we can avoid getting caught in an email.
You have to see the FOIA piece
within the overall picture here, which is,
Fauci from the get-go was lying about the origins of COVID
in order to cover up his role in funding
this type of research.
Yes.
And there was a comprehensive effort by people at NIH,
likely at Fauci's direction, to again, not just cover this up,
but to smear scientists who were telling us the truth.
Yes, they went on the offensive in addition to trying
to cover their assets.
Yeah, people like Jay Bhattacharya, who then got
banned on Twitter.
Got banned and banned on Twitter.
Censored and banned on social media.
By the way, who is a Stanford professor?
Was banned for speaking up.
Chamath, let's zoom out here and start
thinking strategy and theories of what's going on here.
I have my own, but I'm curious to hear you as far as we go
around the horn here.
What's your take on this?
I would like to make four points, I think,
that kind of summarize my view of this.
I think what happened here needs a really clear accounting,
because the implications are far greater than I
think people realize.
And I think why maybe the four of us
have always been tugging on this little thread
is because each of us instinctively understood that.
So the first is, if you just look
at the macroeconomic consequences
of what COVID did and our reaction,
we broke the seal of having absolutely no accountability
on massive spending, right?
So there are subsidies, there are kickbacks,
there are government programs that now number in the trillions of dollars a year, incremental to what we were going to spend if things were the status quo.
And the problem is that, and Freeberg has talked about this really eloquently in the past, it's creating a massive debt issue that us and our children and our grandchildren will have to deal with.
If we had responded to this pandemic differently, those issues would not have occurred.
If we had just kept the economy open, because we understood what
was going on, we would not have reacted the way that we did. And
we would not have nearly as much debt as we had. And we would not
have made it okay for politicians to spend trillions of
dollars. That is a direct consequence of our reaction
to COVID, not COVID itself. The second is we caused billions of people all around the
world to take immaturely tested drugs. They were called vaccines. We found out that they
were modestly effective at best. And then some of them were designed in some ways to
manipulate our DNA. And we just don't know what the long term impacts will be.
We see some small issues of myocarditis.
We see other issues of all-cause mortality.
But the point is we just don't know.
And that would not have happened had we not rushed to force people
to stand in the line and get a jab in order to get back to their normal life.
That was a direct consequence not of COVID, but of a reaction.
The third is what we're realizing right now is that we had this
power drunk apparatchik.
And this is similar to the quote that Mike Pompeo made when he took over the CIA.
What he found, and he said this after when he left, was there
were people on the top floor of the CIA building, the seventh floor of the
Pentagon, that fundamentally believed that it wasn't the Democrats nor the
Republicans that ran the country, but it was them. And I see a similar level of
arrogance here, which is this belief that they know better. And so what they did was they committed the
greatest sin, which is where the cover up is way greater than the
crime. And they created a setup where all of these things were
amplified by their prestige, their perceived scientific
knowledge. But what they were really doing was keeping
critical information to themselves, and then trying to their perceived scientific knowledge, but what they were really doing was keeping critical
information to themselves and then trying to cover it up, Jason. That is so unacceptable
when you think of the broad consequences of what happened. And that's what needs to get
documented. And I do think there needs to be some form of accountability for that.
I think it's well said. And, you know, just looking at it, I think we are now at the point
of this conversation and
investigation where you can say this is not a bipartisan citizen issue. And everybody knew,
like we had these conversations on this very podcast, the public knew something didn't seem
right about this. And if you just think about this from first principles of what occurred here,
just what occurred here? Trey Berg, we funded gain of research to create these super viruses that what I think other
people could just as equally call a bio weapon with the
Chinese. Now, we're supposed to be arch rivals here, we're like
these competitors. And then when it came out, and it leaked, and
of course, I don't think it was released on purpose. When it came out, the people who work
for us and we trust with our family safety, who funded this
in order to save their own reputations to cover their
asses, then lied about it. And then like as you said, sex,
perfectly, they went on the offensive. These people were not
elected by anybody. That's right. These people work for us.
And they failed us. This is a crime against humanity of the
greatest cause. People committed suicide, people died because
they had depression. Our kids lost two years of school. This
generation has lost their education. And now we have burdened them with billions,
hundreds of billions of dollars in debt from this this
is a trillions trillions, trillions, tens of
this is a failure of leadership, it is a crime. And when people
said prosecute Fauci, they were like, you're being hysterical.
This is ridiculous. These people need to be prosecuted.
If you hid this stuff from a FOIA request,
you need to go to jail.
There needs to be accountability here
for what they did to society, our children, and the future.
I am infuriated by this.
Imagine what happened in the situation room
or the equivalent.
Wherever the president of the United States,
all these world leaders
were coalescing to try to make decisions in that period, they all looked at this quote unquote
expert. They pointed at Fauci and said, lead us out. And so do we not think that at any point he
was thinking, how do I do this in a way where I have no fingerprints? Clearly the answer is,
in fact, he was leading from a position of how will I not have any fingerprints on this? And so do we, did we get the best advice on the margin? I think
it's pretty fair to say we could not have gotten it because he was too conflicted. He was figuring
out how to cover up what happened as opposed to just own it and then help the world get out of it.
Yeah. I mean, talk about like incinerating
your entire career and legacy,
but putting that aside, the morality of covering this up.
And so then you have to think, Tramont,
and this is why I was like, what is the strategy?
What goes through somebody's mind
when they decide to do a coverup at this level?
Is it just fear of getting caught
and their lives being in their mind ruined,
and they're gonna do this incredible cover up, I actually think that they thought this would become a globally
destabilizing moment between the United States and China. And that there could be revolutions.
Now I know that this is now sounding really conspiracy theory. But if you're sitting there
and you're like, what if the public finds that we created this, and their grandparents died from it, and
their kids didn't go to school because there'll be riots in the
street. But if enough time passes, maybe there's not riots
in the street. But you know what, this is something that is
just so abhorrent that I mean, people need to really be held
accountable. Freeburg your thoughts, what would you guys do
if you're sitting in a policy maker seat today
and you're being offered by scientists,
this ability to go and figure out
what the next big virus will be
and start to make plans for getting in front of it
by understanding the biology of these viruses,
by seeing where they're gonna evolve to,
and by trying to get in front of the next pandemic
so that we can protect the population.
Do you guys support that sort of research?
And what are the questions you ask?
So let's rewind 15 years,
pretend Fauci doesn't get to make those decisions.
You guys are the policymakers.
And folks say, SARS just happened.
We wanna do this research.
We wanna figure out how to get free birth.
What do you do and how do you answer that?
There's a really simple question.
If anybody who's watched any kind of science fiction
or knows the history of this kind of research,
which is don't do this in a population center
and how will you prevent it from breaking out?
Like literally that's job one.
If you're gonna, even if you're not going to,
like literally every science fiction film has this.
It's like put it on an island
and there's an island off Long Island
where they keep these things.
I forgot the name of it, is it Plum Island or something?
Well, look it up.
Yeah, and by the way, there are internal NIH emails
that suggest that COVID leaked from a level two facility.
They call it BSL2, which does not operate
with the top level biohazard safeguards.
So they knew the Wuhan lab was not at the level of safeguards that it should have been. But look, I would go
deeper and say that why would you do this kind of research at all? I mean you
are deliberately manipulating viruses in order to make them transmissible in
humans. This was a bat virus that was not transmissible to humans. It was
bioengineered. They had the Fearing Cleavage site
to allow it to gain access to human cells.
Yeah, so Sachs, I am gonna push back
because that is not conclusively true.
What you're saying is something
that some people have claimed,
but there are other scientists,
including papers published recently in the Lancet
and other pretty reputable medical journals
and research journals that indicate
that the evolution seen in the fear
and cleavage site can be traced back
to an evolutionary origin,
not necessarily to a human engineered origin.
So I wanna just make that clear that that is a possibility.
I'm not dismissing it,
but I'm not supporting the other side.
I'm saying we have work to do to figure this out
just to be clear.
It's a possibility that's so remote.
I mean, look, I heard Professor Jeffrey Sachs
talking about this in a recent interview and he went through the whole history. He said there's like 200
of these coronaviruses in this like class or category and there's not one furing, qubit
site among any of them. So can you say that there's not a one in a billion chance of it
happening naturally? I guess, but it's a very, very, very low probability event.
Let me punch up your question, Freberg, because if you don't have, your question is, what
should you do?
I want to ask you guys, what do you do?
So like, forget about, oh, there's bad guys, Fauci's a bad guy.
Like, what do you do to protect the world against the next pandemic?
Number one, you don't do this type of gain-of-function research.
Number two, if you are going to do it, you don't do it at a level two facility like the
Wuhan lab.
Number three, when the virus leaks from the lab, you don't basically lie about it and
conduct a coverage campaign that smears reputation of honest scientists.
Number four, when you're hauled into the Oval Office in response to this once in a century
pandemic, you don't pretend like you're America's doctor and you have all the answers.
And in fact, you're the guy who created this problem.
You own it.
There's an idea, you own it.
And you know what?
Like the question really embedded
in your question, Freeberg, I think is,
is there any argument to doing gain of function?
If so, how?
And then is there any reason to research, you know, the bat dung or whatever
material they get it from, you know, from those caves and take
it out of the caves? I could see the latter chamath of like, hey,
this existed nature, you studied on an island somewhere far away
from everybody with massive controls. The gain of function
seems like it literally feels like the speech from Jurassic
Park, like, I think it's not, why would you do this?
And Jurassic Park took place on an island for a reason.
There were many scientists who are opposed to gain function research.
They thought it was unduly risky and didn't have offsetting benefits.
And that is exactly why Obama banned it. Very good decision. To me,
this whole idea that we need to,
to amplify these viruses in order to find
out what would happen if this happened naturally is insane.
You didn't have this derangement until you created it.
Yes.
This is nutty.
This is nuts.
Go ahead, Trima.
There are examples we know.
I'll just point to two.
Let's just say the attempted overthrow of the Ukrainian
government in 2014.
You can go back to Iran Contra as yet another example.
And you can add gain of function research now, which is again, I'll just go back to when there are these lifelong bureaucrats
that believe they're above the law, that there's this
sensation that they can pull the levers of power silently behind
the scenes, because they know better.
And then what they're doing, as you guys said, is they are
controverting the desires of the people.
So whether you like President Obama or not, he's duly elected by the people
and when he says this isn't allowed, it shouldn't be allowed.
And when you instantiate chaos and wars
and all of this other stuff overthrows
in all of these other places
that then create all these long tail effects,
they're not done with really America's support.
They're done by a small group of people
who think they know better.
And I think that we've created that kind of a problem
that needs to get fixed.
And so I think that this has to be an example where you can
make them an example, because otherwise it
will keep happening.
And there are other parts of the American bureaucracy
where people are in charge of very critical and important
decisions.
And I suspect 99% of them are good, earnest, honest people
doing the right thing for America. But it's just the law of
large numbers. There will be one or two, and all it takes is one or two, who get drunk with that
power. And so unless that there's a check and balance on that dynamic, we'll have more issues
of this. And as the world gets more sophisticated, and we rely more on experts, I hate to say this,
guys, but you have to be more skeptical of experts. As much as
you think an expert is an expert, you have to fight the
tendency of saying I'm going to abdicate all of my intellect
onto you and you decide. Yeah. I think you have to find a way of
just gut checking and SAC said this critical thing. If I was
the President of the United States in a pandemic,
I didn't need the COVID to teach me this example. But if I'm trying to solve a very technical and hard engineering problem, what I always do is I bring a cross section of people in a room.
Typically, some of them have to have disagreeing opinions and I make them intellectually fight it
out. And my job is to observe. And in that I apply my judgment. I'm not nearly as smart as them,
I'm not nearly technically as trained as them, but that is a process that works. And I'm just
questioning, it couldn't have happened here because as Sac said, if you basically bury the
reputations of the folks that are pushing back, you could never bring them inside the room in the
oval and have a conversation with them and say,
hey, Jay Bhattacharya, give us the red team version
of what you think is happening.
Yeah.
And that is a real problem. Steel man the opposite side.
Let me build on a point Chamath made,
which is I think we have to ask the question,
what type of government do we really have?
You know, we call ourselves a democracy,
but are you a democracy when the elected leaders come
and go and the really powerful bureaucrats running the government, running these agencies,
stay for decades and decades and if the president disagrees with their policy, they can just
wait them out?
Fauci wanted to do gain-of-function research.
Maybe by the way, at the behest of DOD, we don't know, it could have been a bio weapon or bio defense program. There's a lot more to this that we
don't even know about yet. In any event, it's clear he was passionately committed to funding
gain-of-function research. He just waited for his opportunity and implemented it as well. Victoria
Newland in the State Department, passionately committed to basically bringing Ukraine into NATO
and using that to essentially provoke
a regime change operation in Russia.
Again, she just had to wait for her opportunity
to basically keep pushing these policies for decades.
These are the people who are really running
the American government.
How would you change it?
We have to turn these things over,
these organizations, or get rid of them?
We talk about term limits for politicians. Maybe we actually need term limits for the administrative
apparatchik that runs all these critical organizations.
Right. It's called the deep state, right? You ever hear the expression deep state? Sounds conspiratorial.
It's not. It's just the permanent bureaucracy. We elect a president, but how many people does the president actually appoint?
A couple hundred? You know, 99.9% of the people running the government
are there permanently.
Well, and then I'll just say here,
I want to give a shout out to the journalists, Catherine
Iban and Emily Kopp.
I know that people also have no faith in journalists.
These are two journalists I think
you could have tremendous faith in who
are going to win Pulitzers because they've
been doggedly pursuing this.
And you have to wonder why this is not the top story
on the news networks and why this isn't the head of,
you know, the New York Times or the Washington Post.
Like there needs to be much more coverage
of what's going on here.
I don't understand why this isn't what we're doing.
Yeah, because the Trump takes every headline.
I don't think it has anything to do with Trump.
I think it's got everything to do with the fact
that the New York Times was covering
for Fauci.
Fauci has been there for decades.
He is a major source for the New York Times, just like he was a major funder of grant programs.
So there's a lot of people who have developed a dependency on Fauci.
I mean, everyone-
For information, you think access journalism is what's going on here.
He gave them access-
There's no question that the New York Times
was covering for this.
The New York Times definitely promoted the idea
that anyone pushing the lab leak theory
was somehow a conspiracy theorist or a nut.
And you have to lay on top of all this,
it's a political environment, right?
They were pushing that whole crazy wet market theory.
Well, the wet market theory.
The pangolin.
The pangolin.
The pangolin, remember the pangolin? We needed Jon Stewart to dismantle the pang market theory. Well, the wet market theory. The pangolin. The pangolin, remember the pangolin?
We needed Jon Stewart to dismantle the pangolin theory.
In relation to that, these wet markets
have spread massive viruses and all kinds of things.
And they do need to be, there was a UN report on like,
hey, we have to upgrade these people.
That's why it was a great cover story.
We have to stop doing black markets.
That's why it was a great cover story.
I don't know that it was a great cover story. I think
it was a logical theory to pursue to the end point of eliminating it because they around
Wilhelm there are a lot of these wet markets. It is completely conceivable that a person
who was in that lab went to a wet market and it's spread via the wet market. This is why
we need a full investigation folks because all these theories could come together and there are more cards to turn over, which one of you alluded to, like,
who knows what the turn in the river are going to be here? Like, what did China know? What did our
government and China know? Maybe they are making bio weapons. Maybe they're doing even worse stuff
that we don't know about. Maybe there's all kinds of rogue programs that are being that are occurring
here. That's why we need to keep
digging and digging the American public must hold these people
accountable. And they need to tell us who else was involved.
Because if Fauci is involved, and this guy's involved, there's
other people, I want to hear from everybody.
There's many crazy parts of this. But I think maybe the
craziest part of the whole thing is that when the pandemic
happens, and the elected government of the whole thing is that when the pandemic happens and the
elected government of the United States, the president needs to pull in the resources to
manage a policy response. Who do they pull in? Fauci, the guy who created the problem.
It's kind of like when they have Newland be our chief diplomat in the state department,
she's fomented the coup in Kiev in 2014. It's again, these bureaucrats are doing the exact opposite of what they're
supposed to be doing. They're not protecting public health.
They have to take ownership of this and being honest, yes.
But I think to answer your question, what do we do about it? I think we just got to
clean out the stables here. Yeah.
I think we just got to disband some of these government departments. Why do we have so
many? This whole alphabet soup of three letter agencies. I think Vivek Gramaswamy had the
right idea. Let's just get rid of a bunch of these things. Zero base Gramaswamy had the right idea. Let's get rid of a bunch of
these things. Start with- Absolutely. Zero base budget, zero base budget, the whole government.
Start over. Yep. And just go right through each one. And you know what? It should be a bipartisan
issue, but there's so much money involved. And this is one of the challenges in the capitalist
system is there's so much money, there's so much grift to go around that when something like this
happens and there's an opportunity to, I don't know, make a vaccine and, you know, put a couple of
billion dollars into this light speed thing, which was a great
idea, seemingly, everybody lines up, okay, yeah, sure, we'll get
involved. We'll take some of that money. Yeah, buy a billion
shots from us.
President Trump is really onto this, because he's the one that
really coined the term the deep state and went after it. And if
you think about the other side, right, the people that are
there, it must be very discomforting to hear because a lot of those people are folks that
worked hard, tried to go to good schools, get educated, and join an infrastructure to move a
country forward because they believe in the country and the values of America.
It sounds like a noble mission, right?
But over long periods of time, most people come and go,
and then there's a small cohort of folks that sort of end up ossifying and running the top parts of
this permanent bureaucracy. And I think Sachs is right. They start to observe just the simple
principle that all these folks come and go, yet I'm still around. President comes, president goes.
Undersecretary
comes, undersecretary goes. The secretary of this comes, then they go. And so they start to believe
that they're really in charge. And that's where the deep state idea comes from.
Aaron Powell At least we're in a democracy where these
hearings are occurring. I just want to give kudos to, in addition to those two journalists,
to the people on this subcommittee who are doing it in a bipartisan way and they will be, and they're being relentless.
I think that's the honorable thing to do.
I encourage them and those investigative journalists to be relentless.
And kudos to Rand Paul too.
Remember when he was-
Rand Paul, yeah.
Profile and courage.
People were like, this guy's a loon.
No, Rand Paul had a role.
But to your point about what does this mean for our democracy? I wanted to bring up the Summephor article where they pulled young people and young voters, they despair over US politics. They describe the United States as a dying empire led by bad people. I mean, after what we've learned about COVID, and I would argue also the whole background to the Ukraine War. They're not wrong. Is this right?
Exactly.
They're not wrong.
Their intuition is right.
Yeah, from the mouths of babes.
I mean, if bad is, I mean, if they covered this up
in the way it's looking like,
I would call this behavior not bad,
I'd call it evil because it was premeditated.
And then look, the point is,
we're supposed to have this check and balance
from the media, but when the media is complicit
because they like to be in those halls of power, that's
where these feelings come from.
I think the latest stat that I saw is I think more than 52% of Americans now believe that
the mainstream media is untrustworthy.
And that's a really terrible place to be, which means you're basically-
Where do you get truth?
You're consuming something that's just fundamentally not true.
I mean, burn it down. I mean, that's the conclusion any logical person would come to is just burn it down. This makes no sense that they would try and cover this up. The right thing for a fact you to do is say, hey, listen, we didn't do gain a function. You know, under Obama, we did do it here. It's obviously been a mistake. We need to never do it again. And here's the roadmap to make sure that we protect people from the next one. Thank God this one didn't kill children the way it's killing
all people. And by the way, this is going to crack open. I encourage you all to be vocal about this
and to watch on Monday because Dr. Fauci is scheduled to appear in a hearing for the same
subcommittee. And that is going to be explosive. I live streamed on YouTube. We'll put the link in
the show notes. Since we're in the don't trust anybody
and have your own sovereignty
and we're in libertarian moment,
let's go to our crypto correspondent.
It's Crypto Corner.
With?
Chema.
So it's part of my production company.
I'm now doing Crypto Corner with Chema.
That'll be next week's call though.
I thought it would be good to talk about crypto for a couple of reasons. One
is because we just had the halving at the end of April.
When did that happen?
The halving is where just for folks that don't know, the way that bitcoins are created is by
solving these complex mathematical algorithms that take a lot of time and energy and money.
And when you solve it, you get rewarded
with some number of Bitcoin. And roughly every four years,
that reward gets cut in half.
It's called a halving.
And this week I saw somebody who reminded me all of this.
And I just wanna give this guy a proper shout out.
So his name is Wences Casares.
And Wences in Silicon Valley, I would say, really
was agent zero of Bitcoin. He was the one in 2010 that introduced it to me. I remember he reminded
me of the story. Actually, we were at Oren's Hummus and he's like, he's Argentinian. He's a
great, so I'm going to try to copy his accent. You have to buy the Bitcoin. So I heard the story. I
fell in love with it. I remember I called my family
office and like, buy me a million of these things. And he was like, or a million dollars worth.
And he was like, Are you crazy? And I was like, No, there's just a little appetizer. We'll get to the
main main course. Anyways, he has done a phenomenal job of understanding and proselytizing
Bitcoin. I want to thank him because he really put me onto this. But he mentioned something to me when I saw
him a couple days ago, which is you should really look at the pattern of Bitcoin after a halving.
And so I was really curious. And so I had a guy on my team, Quinton, put this together. So,
Nick, let me just, let's go to the first page. So why is this interesting? So here's a little
Bitcoin price analysis for you guys. So there's
been a couple of halving cycles that have happened. And I asked him to go back and look at the price
performance one month after a halving, three months, six months, nine months, 12 months,
and 18 months after a halving. And what you notice is that there are these moments initially
where essentially when you go through a Bitcoin halving,
people are sort of reassessing what's happening
and they're trying to figure it out.
That's sort of what I would say happens in the first month
and roughly what also happens in the first three months.
But then within six months to a year
and 18 months of these things,
there are these crazy price
appreciation cycles that happen. So that's what this page shows, which is, you know,
18 months after the first halving, the Bitcoin price returned 45x after the second halving,
it returned almost 28x. And after this third halving, it returned almost an 8X,
which is really incredible returns
in such a short period of time.
If you go to the next page.
And so if you graph that, this is what it starts to show,
which is what is this price performance
after each of these halving cycles.
Now, why is that interesting?
Well, it's interesting because on top of this halving,
which theoretically, if history is a guide, we should see some price appreciation.
Obviously, the other thing that's happened is we've
commercialized Bitcoin. And we talked about this sort of as my
big prediction for 2024, which is these ETFs are really going
to allow Bitcoin to cross the chasm and habits, sort of
central key moment, right?
And so if you apply the averages, and again, these are just averages, they're by no means
predictions.
Okay, so I just want to qualify that.
This is not financial advice.
It's not financial advice.
These are just, yeah, we took these and we applied it to the price of Bitcoin.
And if you go to the next page, you start to see what could happen
if you just take the average of the last few cycles,
so because the first cycle was so extreme,
and you start to apply-
Oh, so you're just doing cycle two and three here,
to be clear.
Just the averages of cycle two and three,
and what you start to see
is some really meaningful appreciation.
And when I talked to Wences about this,
how he explained it, which makes a lot of sense to me, is there are a lot of countries that will never look at Bitcoin credibly, even if they support it.
The US may be one of those.
But there is an increasing body of countries that will become dual currency.
And they will look at their local currency, and then they will look at Bitcoin.
And they will say both of these two things are needed.
One, when you're transacting on a daily basis
for random goods and services.
And two, when you need to buy a permanent asset
that needs to have residual value,
you'll use something like BTC.
And I think that's a very powerful concept.
And if you look at what this price chart could indicate is that if this thing starts to
get to these levels of appreciation, it is going to completely replace gold and start to become
something that has transactional utility for hard assets. And I think if you marry that with this
worry that some folks have about dollar debasement, you start
to see some really interesting opportunities.
So I just thought that this was an interesting thing that he, here's our disclaimer, interesting
thing that he put me on.
I thought I'd share that with you.
I'll publish this on Twitter, but that's your crypto corner for the year, folks.
I think it's really interesting how the crypto community is getting organized into basically
a lobby to advocate for its interest
because they've been so-
It's the biggest lobby in America.
Did you know that?
Yeah.
They've been so targeted over the last few years because Gensler and Warren have been
on a crusade to basically make crypto illegal or drive it offshore.
Well, every action has an equal and opposite reaction.
Now the crypto people have basically had a political awakening and realize
they have to get involved in the political system. Yeah, this is
a matter of defense, self defense. Shout out SPF. So
they're getting a pioneer.
Well, not like that. I mean, that guy was dropping money on
everybody. Yeah.
This Did you hear this rumor that he was doing that to
basically push for regulatory capture? Remember? Yeah. I
think it's a nuance point. Did you guys hear this rumor? Did
you guys hear this rumor that SPF was going to put a billion
dollars into the election and convince Tom Brady to run as a
Republican and give the bill? No, give the billion to Trump.
Oh, sorry, give the billion to Trump. He was going to give
Trump a billion to not run. Okay. And then get Tom Brady
run. I mean, this person had
delusions of gravity. He thought he was a Jedi knight. And he's like literally in jobless balance
right now. I don't know what this I mean, what a lunatic he was. I mean, talk about delusions of
grandeur sacks. This guy thought he would just drop a billion dollars and convince somebody not
to run for government. I think we're gonna I think we're gonna get a regulatory, you know,
back to the young people we talked about in the previous story. I think the reason they're
attracted to crypto is because it doesn't have government control. And since if you don't trust
the government, and you see the government over and over and over again, cover things up or
grift, or make decisions that are not in your generation's best interest, why wouldn't you opt
out of their financial system? And you know what, There's a lot of them and they have, and they're getting organized to your point,
Sachs. I think we're going to have a crypto framework and it's worth probably five points
in this election. What do you think Sachs? How many points is being the pro crypto candidate
worth in this election? One, two, three points of votes, four points. It's got to be some significant.
No, if young people show up, it'll be, it could be 500 basis points. I mean, young people do not show up to
vote because there isn't an issue that they care about.
Correct.
But there's 50 million Americans that own crypto, 50, five, zero.
Okay. So if 10% of them are like, let's say that's their single issue, that's 5 million votes.
No, no, no. There's a plausible case where 40
million of those folks show up because you're talking about a structural part of their wealth
creation, right? So for example, like, you know, Biden, President Biden talked about giving people
a head start by eliminating their debt. That's a narrow issue. And the reason it's a narrow issue,
there's just as many people that don't have debt and just as many people that paid off their debt, and it creates a lot of haves and have nots, right? And
there's all these rules around who will get the debt relief,
etc. You end up touching four or 5 million people maximum. But
if there are 50 million people who have now decided to have at
least a hedge against the establishment, and the
traditional financial system, and you are threatening to
take that wealth away. I could see how 80% of those folks show up to the ballot box and say,
all right, which one of you will just leave me alone? And if the answer is President Trump,
then they're all going to vote for President Trump.
I think this is such a great issue for political candidates to embrace,
and it's such a simple framework.
I've said it a dozen times, create a sophisticated investor test, let 1000 flowers bloom. People
can make whatever crypto projects they want, but to buy it, you just have to take a simple
test like a driver's license so that you don't risk your entire net worth or whatever. If
you do, you're an informed buyer of crypto, just make a sophisticated investor test and let's move on. Chamath, just since we're in crypto corner,
before we leave crypto corner, when is my ape going to be worth money again?
When will my ape go back? Never. Oh, so my apes not coming back. Okay. So I guess I shouldn't have
done that. All right. How's a sax coin doing? We had sax coin and we had went crazy, but that was a pump and dump scheme that we had
nothing to do with I will never sell you a coin until I do. I
just want to let everybody know that if you get a DM for me, I
am not selling j coin until you hear it first. I would literally
do an angel investing coin immediately if there was a
framework for it would be the greatest idea ever to have like a j coin and I could just like put it into startups and people could
Buy and sell it and be like this ongoing evergreen
Venture, where's my J Dow?
Love dow's and I love I love the idea of an angel investing coin, but man a startup coin would be brilliant
Yeah, the Jason coin is basically at zero. Man, it was worth.
The Sachs coin is down to eight grand.
Yeah.
$8,000.
To be clear, I didn't know anything to do
with Sachs coin either,
but I was more amused by it than anything else.
Yeah.
Well, my friend decided to tell everybody
he was going to buy some,
and then straight to the moon.
Zzzz.
It was pretty funny.
It's hilarious.
I have some, I've only only we've only bought crypto twice we have some Doge, which I
bought during like the our Doge phase a couple years ago. And then my wife, precedent we bought
Bitcoin, you know, at a very low price when everyone was talking around it around Thanksgiving.
price when everyone was talking around it around Thanksgiving. And my heart Bitcoin went phenomenal. And my Doge is at break even now. So I've spent two years just on the pendulum, but who knows,
maybe those should become a thing again. I love Doge.
All right, we have a bellwether of sorts here. Salesforce dropped more than 20% after reporting
earnings. We should talk about the state of SaaS software as a service if you're not in the industry.
Salesforce had its worst day in the markets in nearly 20 years on Thursday and that's when we
tape this. It lost about 40 billion dollars in market cap or as we say in the industry two
figmas. On Wednesday Salesforce missed Q1 revenue estimates for the first time since 2006. Revenue
was up 9.1 billion 11 percent year year over year, but about 40 million below Wall
Street expectations. So they're doing great, but Wall Street is concerned for a reason.
We'll get into what that is. Net income was 1.5 billion, seven acts year over year because
they've been doing a lot of cuts over there. Free cash flows, 6 billion, up 43%. Profits
are up huge because if you remember those activists, investors came in and had
Benioff really rethink the structure of the business and the footprint of the business.
But guidance for Q2 down, Salesforce projecting 7% growth relatively low for them.
Freeberg, you and I were talking about this.
Like, what are your thoughts here on what's happening in the markets?
And then we had the side discussion, which we didn't dock it, but I think it's worth
bringing up here in dovetailing, which is, it does seem like the consumer, which is an
enterprise story, but the economy is cooling off consumers, I think are running out of
money.
The YOLO economy is finally, I think, at its end.
What does this say to
you, free bird? Well, I think the key question to your point
is there a macro economic reason for a slowdown in their
business, they're forecasting for this next fiscal year,
revenue growth of only eight to 9%. And for this next quarter,
it's basically a flat revenue quarter relative to the past
quarter. So for this fiscal year, it's basically a flat revenue quarter relative to the past quarter.
So for this fiscal year, 38 billion of top line revenue, 9 billion of operating cashflow. And with the market cap coming down by 20%, the stock's at a $200 billion valuation. So it's
trading at, you know, call it roughly 20 times their operating cashflow forecast with sub 10%
revenue growth. And that's basically where
treasuries trade, right? Because treasury yields for 30 year treasury, you can get 4.7% today.
Yeah, so I say almost fine. You know, that's about 20 x, right? So that's about where the multiple
is on the Salesforce stock. So I think it really begs the question on, you know, is there a
macroeconomic force where the enterprise is spending less? Because of, you know, a revenue slowdown in the
economy, which we saw in the latest GDP report, that's number
one, that could be driving this and will affect ultimately the
multiple for all these enterprise SaaS companies. Or
number two, is there a shifting underway in the SaaS business
model, that the premium that SaaS companies were able to
charge and the pricing model on a per seat basis and the dollars that they're able to charge per employee or per user is so significant relative
to what that enterprise can build themselves now with the commoditization available to them under
this new era of AI and the ability to build tools internally or the ability for competitors to emerge
with significantly underpriced alternatives,
because they can use generative AI to make software that can compete.
And then there's this other question because Salesforce has been leaning in heavily on
the generative AI capabilities that they're offering their customers.
And it seems like the question is, are enterprises waiting to see the value of that generative
AI service
capability?
Is it worth paying for today?
Should I wait and see?
Or is it actually indicating that there's a big commoditization in generative AI underway?
Okay.
Meaning, why do I have to pay Salesforce a bunch of money when I can use some open source
third party tool or some more freely available tool?
So Chamath, Freeberg presented two options here.
One of them, macroeconomic slowdown.
The other one, hey, software,
you know, belt tightening is happening inside the enterprise and it's cheaper to make. So maybe we
have a deflationary kind of situation inside companies. I guess this is adjacent. That last
part of his theory is adjacent to the 80 90 mission you're on with your new startup. And maybe this,
is this an or or an end in your mind, Chamath? Is it both these things?
But sorry, before you answer, the third point I made
was that generative AI itself.
Generative AI might, yes, and the third point.
It may not be a product line.
It may not be enough to charge for,
given all the open source tools out.
Yes, and there's a big question mark
about the AI new software, will people pay for it?
So Chamath, take those three, what are your thoughts?
I think that if you look at what happened before,
we had a cycle where very large monolithic software
was replaced by these SaaS vendors
and Salesforce led that charge
and they led the, in many ways, the definition of the cloud.
So that was amazing.
That was this one big cycle.
And before that, those monolithic software vendors
were replacing like mainframes and very archaic stuff.
This is sort of this third disruptive cycle.
We're gonna go through a process of ripping and replacing
these legacy products.
And so, Gen.ai is just an enablement layer
that allows you to deliver functionality to
people.
And I think what you're going to find is that it allows you to deliver that functionality
much, much cheaper.
To your point, that's the whole point of 80-90.
We always joke, is Salesforce going to get 80-90?
Yeah, because you can deliver 80% of the features at a 90% discount pretty easily today.
And what you can't deliver today will get much, much easier
in a year and two years and three years,
for sure in 10 years.
So I think what the market is voting with their dollars
is that these large lumpy monolithic software companies
that need big 50, $100 million customers,
they're not gonna find them soon because those customers will realize that you could get, you know, what Friedberg said, what you
need for 10 million or 5 million or 1 million or 500,000 and in some cases free.
And so the cost structure of your organization makes no sense.
And so you're going to have to go through this very complicated
cycle of recycling, you know, the business model, which
unfortunately will mean tons of layoffs. And that's not a today
thing. But over these next five and 10 years, that's probably
what's going to happen. And it doesn't mean Salesforce is a bad
company. It's just that it is on the wrong side of the lifecycle.
And the odds are overwhelmingly such
that a bunch of small companies will flood this opportunity
and provides cheaper, smaller, more flexible capabilities.
Sacks, obviously, you made your bones in the SaaS business
over the last two decades, at least.
What are your thoughts here on the challenges?
I just interviewed Owen McCabe from Intercom.
And he says he thinks the seat model is going to change.
And obviously, if there's less people at companies,
there's less seats.
And that may be a headwind that you just can't win against.
So maybe a consumption model has to happen
or a different pricing model.
But what are your thoughts on what's happening at Salesforce?
And then open the aperture there and tell us
what you think is going to happen in terms of how
corporations either decide to make that, you know, and then open the aperture there and tell us what you think is gonna happen in terms of how corporations
either decide to make that build or buy decision.
Well, I think it's pretty amazing
that Salesforce lost something like 40 billion of market cap
because of a revenue miss of 40 million.
It's amazing how these relatively small
in percentage terms misses in revenue or earnings
drive such huge changes in market cap. It's quite a ripple, isn't it? Yeah. I mean, look,
my view is that I don't have a strong view about the stock, but my sense is
it's probably a buying opportunity. I mean, I think Salesforce is still a great
company. Mark Benioff is a great CEO. He's always positioned the company to
chase after whatever the current thing is. So obviously, he was one of the first to
realize that software was headed to the cloud, evangelized for the cloud. Then,
when the social networking revolution happened, he launched Chata, which was a competitor to
My Product Gammer back then, but he was ahead of the curve on social and the enterprise. Then it was Big Data and
they launched Einstein. Now they've got AI and they're going to be doing a bunch of different
things there. So my guess is he's going to figure out how to take advantage of this AI
trend for the company. They're not going to miss it. They're not going to get caught totally flat-footed.
So, Elock, I don't have a super strong point of view on it as an investment, but I still think it's a good company. What about the bigger picture? Open the aperture there with the SaaS versus end pricing and how many people will work at these companies and then if the per-seat model is the model and then people are going to have less humans working at companies and do more with less.
What does that mean for SaaS writ large?
I'm honestly not worried about the per seat model.
I mean, the point of a pricing plan should be
to align revenue expansion with ROI,
meaning the more value that a customer gets
from your product, the more they're willing to pay.
And you just need some proxy for measuring that.
Seats are a good proxy.
It's a good way to measure how much value
the customer is getting out of your product
because the more seats they're buying,
the more value they must be getting.
Yes, you could do it some other way.
You could basically meter data usage.
You could meter API usage, sure.
Those models will work for other kinds of companies,
but I don't think there's
going to be a huge disruption to the C model is my sense. Look, I think the bigger issue
here is that their forecast was soft, right? They are forecasting what? Sub 10% revenue
growth.
Yeah, they're going to...
And this is why the stock got punished. And I'm seeing that a bunch of SaaS companies are kind
of hurting today now in the wake of this. They're down like 5%, not 20%. So I wonder if what the
market is wondering is whether there's a more general slowdown that we're on the precipice of.
I don't think that that explains a 20% drop in a day. I think typically these public
market investors internalize a bunch of fears. And they don't
execute on those fears. And then when given an opportunity, they
just barf it all out because it's like now it's acceptable.
And so to your point, David, like it was such like a an
insignificant revenue miss so as to not even be important, quite
honestly. But the reason it's
down 20% is I think folks have internalized a different set of risks and then they've found
an escape hatch where they have plausible deniability for selling. That's just what
a lot of public market investors do. I don't think it's a coincidence that
we just had the GDP forecast revised down for the latest quarter. What was it? It's down to like
1.4%. 1 something, yeah. We talked about this last week because this number's fake.
The economy is looking pretty soft right now.
Which is, I guess, a good jumping off point,
which is what do we think is happening here with the economy
and then interest rates because the whole goal here was to get us under,
you know, get us close to 2%, get rid of the free handle at least
in terms of interest going up and maybe get the consumers to not be
spending so much money, which is crazy to think about, or maybe get more people laid off and have
the unemployment not so low. Remember when everyone was talking about soft landing?
Yeah. The reason why they were having that conversation is because the Fed jacked up
interest rates really suddenly from roughly zero to five, five and a half percent. And it worked that has an
impact on people's consumption because debt is much more expensive. So again, it's hard to buy a
house harder to buy a car, anything you need to finance gets much harder. It took a long time
for this to work its way through the economy. But I think we're finally seeing it now. I think we're,
I think that's exactly right. I think we're
here. When you see that three handle, like, does it go down?
You know, it's very interesting about the 2% target. I went down
the rabbit hole to try to figure out that 2% target. Like, I was
like, who came up with 2% as a number? Like, why isn't it three
or 2.5 or 1.5 or one? So guy in New Zealand who is, you know,
came up with what he thought was a good target 2% the world
adopted it. So
going back to our conversation about experts. Yeah, he just really admits it. He's just like,
I just thought 3% seemed like the right number wasn't too high, wasn't too low. And it's kind
of healthy to have things go up in price, because that means the economy is growing. It's just a
random target 2% was his gut. Incredible, right? Incredible. Yeah. I mean, if you look at this, we are at,
what is it? 3.6% annualized CPI inflation and 1.3% annualized GDP growth and a 4.7% 30 year treasury
yield. This is, I don't know what else is more definitional of stagflation. The economy is not growing prices
are going up and the cost of borrow has gone through the
roof.
Yeah, so it's got to give and then also if they keep raising
taxes, well, it's good, like their plans are then affluent
people are going to be trying to protect assets and was they I'm
just thinking like a politician like if a politician were to
raise dramatically,
but I'm not thinking anybody.
I don't want you to have Biden derangement syndrome here,
Sax, okay?
Let's not trigger it.
I don't think Trump's going to raise taxes,
but Biden will if he has the trifecta.
Absolutely, absolutely.
That's why I'll see you Thursday night
with my $50,000 check.
I can't wait to be there.
It's going to easily be paid for by my tax cut.
Just to jump back for a second on the Salesforce point. So, you know, Salesforce faces these
challenges, but it's still led by Mark Benioff. Absolutely. That dude's tremendous. And if
you look at the performance of the average public company, regardless of the sector that
that business operates in, that is run by a hired CEO versus run by a founder CEO. Yeah, the founder
public companies that have that have gone public achieved a $10
billion market cap, and are still founder run as the CEO
from there outperform nearly any index you look at. Okay, and
this is I think like a really key point you can probably put
together I think some people have done this,
put together a founder portfolio,
but I wouldn't count out Benioff
just because of some of the stuff that we've talked about.
Because founders can and will maneuver their way to success.
That is the hunger of the entrepreneur.
Let's do our draft.
The one founders you should not bet against.
Which founder would you least want to short,
Chamath, your first in the draft?
Who do you got?
Who would you not want to bet against?
Worst person to bet against.
Sorry, what do you mean?
Like founders?
Any entrepreneur in history.
We already know what happened
when people tried to short Elon.
They got incinerated.
Barbecue sauce, okay.
You picked Elon in the draft then?
That's number one.
Shematha, who you got?
Yeah, that's easy.
I would pick him too.
Okay, but we can't pick somebody else.
That's why it's a draft.
You already took Elon.
I gotta take the next person.
It could be anybody.
It doesn't have to be alive.
It doesn't have to be in position right now.
Who would I, sorry, what's that?
Who would you least likely to short?
An entrepreneur you least want to short?
Well, Larry Ellison.
Okay, Larry Ellison, yours hold on.
Now, Freiburg, you get to go in the draft.
What do you got?
I don't know the, I mean, all these founders,
I don't know how to pick one.
I mean, what do you have?
I'm gonna go with, I'm gonna go with Bill Gates.
What?
He's not always dogging you over anything. No, I said it could be any
period of time. Yeah. Now that you know the
stock performance, what are you talking about?
I just think even in the next
time you do it, your position
your position, you're
going to go out on a limb.
You're going to go on a limb and say
that when Bill Gates was doing his legendary
run, I wouldn't have shorted it.
Absolutely. I also wouldn't short Michael Jordan or LeBron James.
Steph Curry definitely wouldn't have been against him.
All right, everybody. Breaking news today in the law being fair. I'm sorry. Today in
lawfare, depending on your view, Trump was found guilty on all 34 felony charges.
You can choose your own framing here. Some say it's election interference. Some people are
referring to this as the hush money porn election interference. Some people are referring to this
as the hush money porn star case.
Other people are calling it the deep state lawfare case.
The jury deliberated for about a day and a half.
Trial lasted six weeks,
including testimony from 20 witnesses.
Key moments seems to have been Trump's CFO Weisselberg,
who's I think in jail right now for other charges,
outlining the terms
of the payments to Michael Cohen, the, uh, disgraced lying attorney who recorded Trump's
conversations.
And that's, I think all I can tell you about this, except for maybe the sentencing is,
uh, coming up.
It's going to be July 11th, which is but four days before
the RNC. Clearly a sad day for America. I'm not sure if anybody on the panel has any opinions on
the Trump verdict, but let's just randomly start with you, David. Any thoughts on Trump being
convicted of 34 felonies in this case? Well, first of all, in terms of understanding this case,
I think it's important to understand
that both Merrick Garland's DOJ and former Manhattan DA
Cyrus Vance, they looked at this case,
they looked at these charges, and they passed
on bringing this case.
Alvin Bragg, who's a Soros-funded DA,
he won a hotly contested race to succeed Vance
by pledging to get Trump.
And that's why he brought this case.
And in order to bring these charges, he had to use a creative legal formula that turned
a misdemeanor charge of falsifying business records, a charge that would have been passed
the statute of limitations, into a felony by claiming it was in the service of a second
crime, but he never named exactly
what that crime was or proved that it happened.
And I think it's safe to say that a case like this, which is novel and creative and torturous,
would never have been brought against anybody but Trump.
Now there's about five different grounds for appeal on this.
Number one, the judge is a Biden donor with a daughter who works for Biden. Number two, prejudicial and irrelevant evidence was admitted that should have been excluded,
including Stormy Daniels' testimony. Number three, Trump was not able to call his expert
in election law, former head of FEC, Bradley Smith. Number four, the prosecution never named
the second crime. And then number five, the judge let the jury pick from a range of options for what the second crime might be,
including tax crimes for which no evidence was presented
and federal election crimes
for which the court had no jurisdiction.
So my guess is that at the end of the day,
this case is gonna get tossed on appeal,
but that's probably gonna happen after the election,
after November 5th,
and Democrats now have what they wanted.
They wanted to get out of this case four words,
Donald Trump convicted felon.
And you're gonna be hearing that phrase,
convicted felon repeated ad nauseum from now
until November 5th, and I think that's the whole point
of this case.
Freeberg, your take.
No, I mean, it felt like this was always
a win-win trial for Trump.
If he gets.
Convicted then, you know, the conversation that we're hearing now, you know, this was an unfair conviction.
How could they do this?
This is lawfare.
And if he doesn't get convicted, they tried to burn them at the stake.
How could they try and do that?
Clearly he's innocent.
He was made innocent.
So, you know, it, it never really struck me as being a smart, I'm not a political guy, but the political calculus
just seemed off on this entirely. It certainly wasn't clear what they were trying to accomplish.
Either way, Trump looks good. And I think we saw tonight reports that his website for making
donations crashed. A lot of people started making public statements on Twitter that are not
typically Republican donors, that they're donating a lot of money to
Donald Trump coming out of this.
And so it is clearly infuriating a lot of people that as Sachs points out,
you know, something that some people are considering to be, you know, a bookkeeping
or accounting crime has turned into 34 felony convictions.
It feels unfair.
It feels like the wrong decision.
And it's going to infuriate people because people worry about the quality of the justice
system.
Anyone who's sitting in the middle as an independent or an undecided, I think it is much more likely
that they are going to have sympathy for Donald Trump coming out of this, not admonishment.
Shamath, your take. I think that if you went into this looking to confirm your hatred of President Trump,
you were the one that was given red meat. And I think that if you were undecided or
pro-President Trump, you probably found more reason to support him for all the reasons that Freebrick said. The thing that's unique about this specific
trial that I found rather interesting was the diversity of people who just couldn't understand
what this trial was about. Whether it was Bill Barr who worked for him but was not a huge fan of his nor was Trump or vice versa, right? To Alan Dershowitz, to
Cyrus Vance, you had Democrats and Republicans and independents, legal scholars, legal experts,
some who liked President Trump, some who did not, some who got along with him, some who did not,
some who fought with him, some who did not, some who got fired by him, some who did not.
And they were all categorically confused about what this whole thing was about.
I'm not legally well versed enough to understand what it was.
So as a layman, you then tend to go to this next obvious thing, which is you have to bucket
this decision as here are some experts and what they know is better than
what I know. And we talked about this earlier on the pod today when it came to Fauci and it turned
out to not be so true. Or you go to this other place where are there systems of government
that can be convoluted and turned in the favor of the majority who's in power against someone that they feel is a threat. And we've talked about that as well with respect to how some of these governmental institutions have targeted some of our friends.
So I think that we're in a very precarious moment where
the systems of governments in the United States are a little bit more fragile than they were the moment before.
Okay. If people were wondering what the case is actually about falsifying business records, the systems of governments in the United States are a little bit more fragile than they were the moment before.
Okay, if people were wondering what the case
is actually about falsifying business records,
this is a pretty serious crime in New York City.
Basically, when people don't keep correct records,
when they're committing crimes,
this is taken seriously in New York
because it is the financial capital of the world.
They've got a long history,
whether it's, you know, Bernie Madoff, Enron, et cetera, of pursuing these.
I don't know why this didn't get communicated well to the public, but there were obviously
tons of business records falsified here. And they basically admitted to it. Michael Cohen
had pleaded guilty to it already. And so it really feels like a misdemeanor.
And then to understand what happened after that, there is a law in New York, as Sachs
correctly pointed out, on top of the falsifying of business records, which New York takes
deadly seriously.
And they put this in every indictment when people do it because they want the accountants,
lawyers, CFOs to behave
themselves and not cheat the public.
The election interference also taken very seriously in New York. There's been tons of
cases. Again, typically minor things, but people who do things like try to stuff ballots,
et cetera. And so you put those two together. If you do falsifying, if you falsify business records and
you do it as part of a second crime, which he did, which he was convicted of, then you get these
penalties. So that is the explanation of the case. That was why he was found guilty. It's pretty
easy to figure this all out. If you don't know all this, it's because you didn't take the time to read
anything about the case in terms of the basic heuristics of it, which
I think is because people are burned out on this.
Trump has committed so many misdemeanors and crimes over time that we're kind of used to
it.
And, you know, my personal take on it, and I'll just leave it at this, is I think it's
going to be a speeding ticket.
I do think it's going to get overturned.
I think Trump has done this his whole career.
I lived in New York.
All these real estate guys were doing all these kind of
like little ticky tacky cheating things.
And I do think that this was politically motivated.
What was the second crime, J.K.L.,
if you understand the case well?
Election interference.
Election interference.
You're not allowed to interfere with elections.
So the theory here, which the, you know, the, the jury unanimously, I vote in front of over these six or seven weeks election interference was because Trump was in dire straights. He, after the Access Hollywood tape came out that weekend,
when he admitted to assaulting women,
the grab them by the blank came out.
His team in this case admitted,
including his assistant, Michael Cohen, Alan Weisselberg,
and of course the guy from the National Enquirer, Pecker,
all of them agreed, testified,
and just were completely honest that this payment
and the reason they bought these people off
was because they were scared
that it would reduce his chances of being elected.
They were in panic mode.
They all testified to that.
The jury found that they committed these crimes,
the falsifying of business records,
in order to save his election chances.
So that is the legal concept.
This legal concept was available to everybody
for the last, you know, since it's been filed
in the New York Times, anybody who doesn't read
these basic things and comments on this case
is just a partisan who doesn't want to accept the reality
that these are actual legal concepts
that are completely valid. Now, I do think despite all of that and me making it abundantly
clear to anybody that you don't want people falsifying business records, and you also
don't want anybody interfering in elections, I do think it was politically motivated. So
you've got to keep two things in your mind at the same time. It's politically motivated.
Trump commits crimes regularly, often,
but they tend to be ticky-tacky.
Then why do you think it's gonna reverse?
You just said it was gonna be reversed on appeal.
So if you're so confident it's a crime,
then why do you also say it's gonna get reversed?
Yeah, because I think, well, let me restate that.
I think he's gonna get a speeding ticket.
I don't think the case is gonna reverse.
I think there's gonna be some sort of a pardon.
Now, this is a state kind of situation,
so it wouldn't be Biden who would pardon it. It would be the governor. And
I think what's going to happen is somebody like Trump, Teflon Don, he's called that for a reason.
He gets away with it every time. He's rich. He's powerful. Like all rich and powerful people,
you have to really do something heinous to wind up in jail. So I think it's going to be a speeding
ticket. I do think the documents cases, that one is a pretty legitimate one with obstruction,
and I do think the election interference, those are the two he should be really worried
about because if he is found guilty on those, those are legit.
But I do think this country is going to need to come together.
I hate to be the bigger person here, but I do think the country needs to get together
and get us two new candidates, and we can't be having this lawfare and politically motivated lawsuits every time somebody loses or they're
afraid of losing an election. But let me ask you a question, Jason. You're a, you're a,
you're a famous successful person. And over the next 10 or 20 years, the odds are pretty
good. You'll be more famous than more successful. Say more Chema.
Do you feel, do you feel the less, the same or more?
Okay, you have to say less, same or more.
Okay.
If somebody in government doesn't like what you're up to, after today, are you less the
same or more in terms of the risk that the laws could be used to fight you?
I think we're kind of in the same area.
I think there's always been politically motivated
prosecutions that have occurred.
That's part of the flaw in our legal system.
And I do think appeals, pardons exist as the relief
valve for those things.
And I think for rich and powerful people
with great representation, they always get off
unless they've done something incredibly, incredibly heinous. And I don't think this is incredibly heinous. And so when
it's framed as simply, oh, it's a porn star, he banged a porn star, who cares? It was consensual
and she got a payoff or maybe she was extorting him even, you know, I don't know if those
details were ever determined, if you could frame it as extortion or not.
I think none of that matters. Like this falsifying business records thing is just
something they did. They should just own it. They should have just pled it out.
And it should have probably never been escalated to the next level with the election interference. I
thought that was a little bit of a stretch, but not that much of a stretch.
They got escalated because Alvin Brad got elected
to pursue this case.
And that's the only way you could get it
from a misdemeanor to a felon.
Yeah, exactly.
So I think that is part of the lead in the case.
I know you're really giddy about this, Jay,
how I can hear your voice.
No, I'm not.
But honestly, I wish-
Look, all you're doing is repeating your-
No, no, no, I'm gonna stop you right there.
Nope, sorry, Sax.
You don't get to say I'm giddy.
I'm not gonna tell you how you feel.
You don't get to tell me how I feel.
I actually am sad for America.
I'm sad for America that Trump and Biden are our choices.
Okay, great.
So speak for yourself, not for me.
Okay, great.
Well, maybe I'm just detecting enthusiasm in your voice.
I'm not quite sure what it is.
No enthusiasm, not at all.
You're presenting these documents on the screen
that are basically from Alvin Bragg's case.
That's all you're doing is repeating his theory of the case, which I must say is extremely
tortured and it's novel.
I don't think a case like this has ever been brought.
And if you are going to bring a case against a former president, it should be for something
more than tiki-taki type stuff.
Stuff that you yourself admit is politically motivated.
It's obvious.
Bragg was out to get Trump.
This is a campaign strategy.
You have to bend the law into a pretzel
to create the case that you're describing.
Listen, you know, I think Trump will continue to do these.
He's had these long before he was in public office.
He got tons of speeding tickets like this.
He'll get them after he's out of office. He's always committed crimes. He's always done these minor things.
What this reminds me of is, you remember Ken Starr and what they went after Bill Clinton for
with the whole Monica Lewinsky thing? Sure. And when that Starr report dropped, you know,
and then hundreds of pages of legalities and they described all the prurient behavior in, you know,
amazing amounts of detail. At the end of the day, the American people looked at it and decided that
maybe there's a tawdry element to this, but it's personal
behavior. And after some period of time, Clinton's popularity
rebounded and he actually gained seats in the midterms, because
the Republicans overplayed their hand. Yeah, totally. And I think
in a similar way, it's very clear to me. And in fact, you've
already said this is politically motivated. And I think in a similar way, it's very clear to me, and in fact, you've already said this is politically motivated.
And they basically have taken some sort of bookkeeping error that was a misdemeanor that
was passed the statute of limitations.
And they've combined it again with this very novel legal theory about somehow committing
fraud in the election, which by the way, was not actually proven in the case.
And as part of the jury instructions, again, the judge
allowed the jury to have a multiple choice on what the second crime was, which is what a lot
of legal experts think will become the basis for our appeal. So again, the whole case was tortured.
It was politically motivated. I would go so far as to say it's a sham. It's an outrage. And I think
people are reacting as though it's an outrage. again if you're gonna bring a case not just against
The former president but the current front-runner to be the next president. It better be something important
Not this ticky tacky thing that the way you describe it as being ticky tacky
Why even waste the public's time with this? Why even spend all the money pursuing this? I told you why. Donald Trump convicted felon. That's the reason why
the media wants that talking point. And by the way, if you want to make a switcheroo
and get a different candidate than Joe Biden, that's not going to happen now because Democrats
in the media think that this is their salvation. They know they're running. It's not gonna be the obstruction case and the January
six case that is those are legit cases, they should have just
gone after those because those are the ones that are completely
legit. But here we are the Democratic Party knows the
running a candidate who can't debate who can't put two
sentences together who can barely find his way off a stage
whose policies are coming home to roost the economy like we
talked on the show is slowing
down very rapidly. His foreign policy is a disaster. But they
think that somehow this is going to be his salvation is is being
able to say that Donald Trump is a felon. That's their plan.
Yep. And I think at the end of the day, this is probably not
going to work.
All right, they have folks there's your quick hot take around the horn with your bestie
on Trump being convicted by a jury in New York today.
It'll be sentenced on July 11th, and we'll see what happens there.
The market also, after we talked about Salesforce,
a bunch of the SaaS companies took a dive in the after hours.
Freeberg, any thoughts there as we quickly
are not not just SaaS, but also Dell. And in particular, Dell
reported their stock is down 20% after hours. So I do wonder if
there is a slow reckoning underway right now in
technology. That's as we talked about in the show, a function of
both kind of an economic slowdown, so enterprises making
fewer investments, but they've clearly called out
the increased cost associated with AI.
So they are spending quite a lot
and their cogs on AI systems is much higher.
And so they're showing a lot more cash burn.
And I think this is to Chamath's point,
Chamath's been talking for a while.
This is unsustainable guys,
I've been saying this now for a month,
so let's just be precise again.
You cannot spend this kind of money and show no incremental revenue potential. So while this is
incredible for Nvidia, the chicken is coming home to roost. Because if you do not start seeing
revenue flow to the bottom line of these companies that are spending $26 billion a quarter,
the market cap of Nvidia is not what the market cap of NVIDIA should
be.
And all of these other companies are going to get punished for spending this kind of
money.
Now, Dell is a unique example in the sense that I actually think it's a beneficiary of
spend.
And I think that it will build data centers and it will actually do well in the move to
AI because it's a very smartly positioned pick and shovels provider.
But the threshold question is where are all these newfangled things that we're
supposed to see that justifies a hundred billion dollars of chip spending here,
$200 billion of energy spend, a hundred billion dollars of all this other stuff.
Guys, this is, we're not spending $750 billion.
This is on the order of a national transfer payment.
We've seen nothing to show for it except that you can mimic somebody's voice
and you can make like a cat jump on another cat.
Making a developer 30 or 40% more efficient, that's actually legit. But I will say I did it.
That hasn't happened yet either.
No, that's totally not happening. No, no, that's happening in startups right now.
I'm seeing startups with four developers do what just a couple of years ago they would
need eight to do there.
And that's the premise of your 80-90 company, isn't it?
That developers can go faster with these tools?
Yes, but these are aspirational things.
When you take, for example, a 30,000-person company, it is not true that those engineers
now are now all of a sudden as productive as 130,000
employees. It's not even true that a thousand employee company is as productive as a 4,000
person company. And the reason is for one very specific thing. Even as all of these next
generation models get released, the practical threshold problem is when you introduce a
completely new way of doing
things into an existing workforce, what happens is people push back.
And even in the companies that I own where I could theoretically mandate,
you must use these tools because I am the owner of this company.
It doesn't happen.
And so I think what you're really seeing, Jason, is a few people embrace it.
Those people may be 50 to 100% more productive.
But when you blend that into the entire workforce, it's still a single digit percentage, which
means the overall activity is phenomenal. Yeah, I think that's a fair point because
you're forced to spend, again, $750 billion a year. It doesn't all hang together yet.
Yeah, I agree. There's going to be a bit of a gap there. And I am biased
because I see startups which are always looking for the most resourceful way to do things. And
you're talking about large enterprises, which are slow to adopt, right? So I think we're both
to be right here. Yeah. You get around the innovators, Joe, I'm not by saying, guys,
you need to be AI first from the outset, which a startup can do because they can,
they can recruit people that, for example, with 80-90, same thing.
You must use these tools. For example, we are not allowed to have any administrative staff.
Everything is done by an agent or workflow, but that's because we're a new company and we
can make those decisions. But somebody who is an established company, I suspect that these gains
are nominal at best, yet the spend is outrageous and it gets
in when it catches up with you when you report. I think the market is sort of like,
I think the first you know, the general statement might be made that perhaps the first AI mini bubble
is bursting a bit. And particularly with respect to the accelerated expectations that public market
investors had for public market technology stocks, that perhaps now is the time for a bit of a reckoning,
that perhaps this isn't going to happen at the same margin level or the pace that folks
had modeled. And this is going to cause a bit of a setback.
I think pace is a very good point you're making.
I also think that with the GDP slowdown that we've seen report that just came out this
week with a sub 2% US GDP growth,
we are seeing an economic slowdown underway. There is going to be reduced spending. There
is going to be reduced conversion of enterprise customers to buy anything. And so that is
going to dramatically affect the market. We're looking at 5% 30 year treasury rates, which
means that you are going to see multiple compression that's going to happen across the market for
tech stocks. So this could be the beginning of what I think might be a slow contraction.
One thing I just want to make sure I'm not a market.
One thing to me, I do have some information on the Dell stuff.
One thing to keep in mind is they had like a 30% run up or 20% run up at least since
Nvidia CEO praise them.
And like, I guess all these meme stock people has just jumped
in.
So I think it's just like a little tiki-taki correction back to the tiki-taki.
Saxony final thoughts here on AI before we all leave to go to our, you know, Trump celebrations
and or yeah.
Maybe the market doesn't like the US becoming a
banana republic. There it is folks. I can still be friends
with you guys. All right, everybody for who's you guys? Oh,
you guys. I was so into those guys. All right, for schmutz,
two missing buttons. We'd like to encourage everybody to enjoy their summer three buttons are coming on we have
I got my short
God that's so pasty white
I gotta get my sunglasses the over under on when schmutz goes for the third button is Jan is June 25th
So June 25th in the betting markets right now for the third button. Love you guys. We'll see you all
next time on the world's greatest podcast. Bye bye. and they've just gone crazy with it. Love you, S.K. The queen of Kenawa. I'm going all in.
What, what, what, your winner's right. What, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what Azure will meet me at put it in. We should all just get a room and just have one big huge orgy because they're all just like
this like sexual tension that they just need to release.
Okay. Last year at the all in summit, we had a wonderful talk by Jenny Just, and they have a very cool program called power poker. They're holding a 2024 summer bootcamp and tournament
for women only. So for the ladies out there, if you want to learn how to play poker, just
like the besties and Jenny Just, you can join this four week training class get unlimited playing time you play in a tournament
I'm going to come and play in one of the sessions but here's the great part we donated a ticket
because we think it's worth encouraging women to join the poker community and so there's a
$7,500 all in summit 2024 ticket at stake there's only 80 spots, go ahead and join at poker power.com slash summer dash
bootcamp poker power.com slash summer dash bootcamp. It's gonna fill up quick. I know a number
of the women who work at my venture firm launch have joined and they're looking forward to learning
poker again, 80 spots. I think they charge 100 bucks just to make sure you show up and there's
an all in summit ticket there for you. You can actually see the video of this podcast on YouTube, youtube.com slash at all in which search all
in podcast and hit the alert bell and you'll get updates when
we post and we're going to do a party in Vegas, my understanding
when we hit a million subscribers and look for that
as well. You can follow us on x x.com slash the all in pod.
Tick Tock is all underscore in
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substack at Chamath dot substack.com I do free bird can
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on the careers page at OhaloGenetics.com. Three, two, okay everybody follow Sachs at x.com slash David Sachs and check out Sachs's
Slack killer, glue at glue.ai. I'm Jason Calacanis. I am x.com slash Jason. And if you want to see
pictures of my bulldogs and the food I'm eating, go to instagram.com slash Jason in the first name
club. You can listen to
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We are hiring a researcher apply to be a researcher doing primary research and working with me and
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