Dear Hank & John - 282: The Silly Brothers
Episode Date: March 22, 2021Who writes author bios in the back of books? Why do things burn up when entering the atmosphere but not exiting it? Would you stay in a space hotel? Where does stimulus money come from? Can humans red...uce carbon emission as much as we need to? Can you make a cake? How do you get sauces delivered? Hank Green and John Green have answers!If you're in need of dubious advice, email us at hankandjohn@gmail.com.Join us for monthly livestreams and an exclusive weekly podcast at patreon.com/dearhankandjohn.Follow us on Twitter! twitter.com/dearhankandjohn
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Dear Hank and John.
Of course I prefer to think of it dear John and Hank.
It's a podcast where two brothers answer your questions, give you the advice and bring
you all the weeks news from both Mars and AFC Wimbledon.
John.
Yeah.
I had a joke about the vaccines, but I decided not to tell it because I was afraid not everyone
will get it.
That's pretty good.
That's pretty, the way you told the joke,
betrayed a certain level of frustration and fatigue.
You didn't bring the full, hammy, Hank Green,
get the crowd riled up, kind of vibe that you usually bring,
but to be fair, that's not where we are right now.
No, Hank and I are both in a different place.
It's been a weird place of frustration and exhaustion.
If I sound a little weird,
it's because my computer just stopped working
and so I'm recording on my handheld recorder.
And I can't see the questions
and I had to remember that joke, which I had written,
but I had forgotten.
And so it was lucky that it started out.
I was going to tell a joke.
Yeah, that was good.
Yeah.
I'm going to have to ask all the questions, because Hank's computer doesn't work.
And if I sound like a person who hasn't slept in 10 days, that's because I haven't,
because I'm trying to finish this book,
which by the way now has a cover.
Oh, that's something I always like to announce to the podcast
because people love a cover reveal on a podcast.
That's the best place to reveal a cover.
That's how they tell you to do it.
I find it very fascinating.
I cover reviews are very cool to me.
Yeah, but sometimes the publisher, people,
they'll be like,
we're gonna do the cover reveal on this news site.
And I'm like, correct.
Are we still in a world where we have relationships?
Yeah, no, my cover is being launched tomorrow afternoon
on a online news site.
Oh, my computer turned back on, John, that's great news.
That is good news. Oh, that's what that noise is. Array, hooray. Yeah, I guess you will get to answer some That's great news. That is good news.
Oh, that's what that noise is.
Array, hooray.
I guess you will get to answer some of the questions.
Maybe, we'll see.
I love the cover. It was designed by Grace Haunt.
You can find it via, well, just Google the Anthropocene
Reviewed Book Cover and you can see it.
It's so beautiful.
I actually hank if your computer restarted,
let me send it to you so you can see it.
Well, I mean, it is still working on something.
It decided that it needed to do a major update
without my permission.
And now a progress bar has appeared
and the amount of the progress bar
that is indicating progress has occurred
is so small that I'm not sure it exists.
You know what will never be finished?
Progress.
Speaking of progress bars, progress will never be finished.
I'm also pretty sure that my book will never be finished.
It's been a long haul.
I've been writing this book for three years
and it's coming out in three months and somehow I'm still writing it.
The area of the progress bar that is full is getting bigger,
but so is the bar.
Like I feel that way about so many.
Yeah, that's basically summarizes human progress
over the last five thousand years.
Oh, it's now like about a pinky fingernails width.
So it is moving.
That's great.
Moving extremely sporadically and with no
actual indication of what is occurring.
There's a great video if you wanna search for
why don't progress bars load normally.
I think Tom Scott did and it helps me understand
these moments that I'm in the middle of right now.
John, I'm getting my vaccine.
By the time this podcast is out,
I will have got my first dose of the Moderna vaccine.
I'm very excited.
Congratulations. I'm very excited. Congratulations.
I'm excited for you.
Oh, about 44 minutes remaining, it tells me.
All right, I'll ask all the questions.
I am a professional human.
I have to do things.
For some reason, even though I've known what the cover looks like
for like three weeks, I still wanna show it to you.
Like, I have an urgent need to show it to you.
So I'm gonna FaceTime you real quick. Okay, let have an urgent need to show it to you. So I'm going to FaceTime you real quick.
Okay, let's FaceTime.
Hey, there he is.
Hello.
There he is.
Yeah.
For some reason, my headphones don't work, but here's the cover.
Ready?
Yeah.
Woo!
That's not what I was expecting at all.
Isn't it cool?
I also can only see half of it because you're a terrible camera operator.
Sorry.
There we go.
I really like it a lot.
Yeah. We actually have a question that I really like it a lot. Yeah.
We actually have a question that I remember reading
on a document I can no longer answer.
And that question was about, what was it John?
The question that was about publishing,
who writes the author bio?
I like that one.
Do that one.
Oh, okay.
This will be fun.
You just tell me which questions to read
based on your memory
of what the questions were, and we'll do our best from there. This first question comes
from Emma with two M's who asks, dear John and Hank, who writes author bios in the back of books?
Do authors write their own smoke? I don't know why I said smoke, it's because that's what's
happening inside of my head. Books and bios, Emma. I thought that someone else would do it.
And then they were like, what's your bio?
And I was like, I don't know.
Like there are people who have whole biographers.
You get someone to do it.
I want a biographer, but they're only gonna write 150 words.
Can we do that?
And no, you can't.
So, yeah, I wrote my author bio
and it definitely got feedback, it got edited.
Because authors almost always do write their author bio
as there's some classic author bios.
If you ever go to like a publishing party
and you get a few drinks into longstanding publishing people,
they'll tell you stories of like the bios
that authors have submitted that are just epic.
Like, I won't name any names
for my all-time favorite author, bio,
is iconic American novelist,
lives on several islands.
That's the whole bio.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
There's that thing that happened
where it would be like,
lives in Berkeley, California with his wife,
dog and cat, and you're like, oh boy.
Yes.
Oh gosh, because like somebody at some point
was like put their kids in there by now.
Right.
And they're like, well, I'm gonna put my cat in.
And I totally, it's like do that.
I'm not ragging on it.
It's like the back of a car.
You know how like people have like,
this is what our family looks like.
There's two adults and two children.
And then eventually somebody developed, like,
oh, I could have like two adults and two children
and a couple corgis.
Yep, but people do that for their author bios
as well as for their rear windows
and their automobiles.
I think I wrote the author bio
for looking for Alaska,
but I don't think I have written an author bios since then. Because I can't, I can't. When I am asked for an author bio for looking for Alaska, but I don't think I have written an author bio since then,
because I can't, I can't, I can't.
When I am asked for an author bio,
I always just, like I wanna say, like,
like I wanna tell the truth about what is important to me
about myself, which is that I wanna look,
I don't even know what mine is, I'm so curious.
I sponsor AFC Wimbledon, I am a father and I am married to Sarah. You're a screen.
Those are the things that I want you to know about my me. Like, if you ask me to tell
you something about me, it's like, well, I, the most important thing is that I'm a parent
and a spouse. And then the second most important thing is that I sponsor a third tier English
football team. And the drop off from there is so huge. Yeah, right?
Like maybe the third most important thing about me
is that I'm a writer and YouTuber,
but the distance between sponsoring Amcety Wimbledon
and being a writer and a YouTuber is so huge
in terms of the actual formation of my identity
that I don't even think I would mention it in my author bio.
I would be like, how did this book even, I don't know.
I don't even like talking, I don't wanna talk about it anymore.
I don't like talking about author buys.
Well now I've read mine and I'm horrified
that I wrote this because it's, well, this is the thing.
I feel like you're supposed to be like establishing your credentials
as a person who's capable of writing a book.
Yeah. That's not what mine does at all.
Oh, really?
It's establishing my credentials as like a person who runs a company.
Oh.
And there's lots of stuff about Complexly in YouTube.
And there's also like about a third of it is taken up with a plug for Partners in Health.
Well, that's actually quite good.
I remember there was a long time where my author bio the last sent in something.
Oh, we're back. We're on again
That was a very loud noise
Is your computer run by like a semi truck like
John there's another progress bar and his one fingernail wide again, okay
Oh god, I hope it starts. I just got this computer like two months ago
I'm very concerned about this computer
I'm gonna tell you the truth. I don't feel great
But but now we've got a ticking clock in our podcast, which is key to a successful part, right?
Right, right. So now now we've got the listeners hook. They've got to find out what's gonna happen
With semi truck of a computer that you're driving. Well the progress bar filled all the way up and now the screen is black
Oh my god, it keeps terrifying.
I hate that.
That seems like really bad news.
What is that noise?
It's like the bellowing of...
The fact that it's starting up over and over again,
it's almost never a good sign.
It's like the bellowing of a tugboat.
It is wild.
Ugh.
Ugh.
Ugh.
Ugh. Oh. Ugh. Argh. Oh.
God, did I get some kind of malware or something?
What happened?
It seems like you have a...
So let's stop.
It's at 44 minutes.
It's not been 44 minutes.
So maybe 44 minutes is like the amount of time it's going to take.
Yeah, maybe it just has to restart nine times.
Maybe that's part of the process.
It's like a cat.
Okay, John, can you ask the one about
why things don't burn up when they're leaving our atmosphere,
but they do when they're coming into our atmosphere?
Yes, this next question comes from Lane who writes,
dear John and Hank, why do things burn up in the atmosphere
when coming down, but not when going up,
staying in my comma lane?
I'm also gonna stay in my lane here, Hank,
and tell you the truth, which is that I have no idea.
Well, when we're shooting stuff through the atmosphere,
we don't get it so hot that it will burn up very intentionally.
Now, there are also maybe some physics things here
that when you're coming from a vacuum to an atmosphere,
which when you're going very fast, it's basically like a wall
that you have to blast through.
That also is a factor, but you can get things moving fast enough
that they will heat up.
Like a rail gun in atmosphere, you can like watch videos
of rail guns shooting these like giant projectiles.
And they are not made of anything flammable.
They're just like a giant, lump of metal,
but they will create fireballs behind them
because they are in the same way
that a piece of space junk or asteroid will,
if it's coming into our atmosphere.
Jenna, in general, we actually have to launch rockets
more slowly than we would otherwise
because of the atmosphere.
Because if we didn't have an atmosphere,
we could launch rockets faster and we would.
Yeah, but on the other hand,
the pressure that the atmosphere exerts on the rocket.
On the other hand, just interrupt you real quick.
Yeah, if we didn't have an atmosphere,
we wouldn't be shooting off any rockets
because we wouldn't be here.
Right, right, well, but like if we were shooting off rockets
from the surface of Mars, it would be it's easier
It's even it's easier because there's less gravity. It's also easier because there's less atmosphere
But my favorite example of a thing that probably burned up in the atmosphere is
They were doing a nuclear test and the gas from the nuclear test got shunted incorrectly or the test went a little bit wrong
It's not what you want to have with the nuclear test and and there was a manhole cover that covered up, like, was underground test.
Should have explained that.
Underground test, there was a manhole cover on top, the gas got shunted wrong, and it went
and it hit the manhole cover, that manhole cover well beyond.
We're not sure how fast it went, but it definitely went well beyond the escape velocity
of Earth.
And as it went through the atmosphere, it either burned up and became dust or is now
in the solar system somewhere. But either way, it definitely created a big fiery streak
as it shot out of our atmosphere. Now, when you say we did this, do you mean America?
I do, John, the United States of America.
Darn.
I was hoping that you met like we humans.
We humans were always doing wild,
underground nuclear tests.
But no, it's not we humans.
It's we Americans.
Oh, God.
Shooting manholes into space with our Pacific Island
nuclear tests.
This was actually on the, on the US mainland.
Um, I am even better.
That my progress is still opening up and it is not rebooted again, but I do, I, I,
I'm going to let you pick one, John.
Okay. Great.
Let's stick with space as a theme.
Hank, this next question comes from Maggie who reads, dear, John and Hank, I saw a CNN
story this morning about a
space hotel officially opening in 2027. Oh, this is insanely cool.
However, as a longtime listener, I am well aware of your
conversations about when humans will be on Mars. I was just
wondering if this changes your feelings also, would you go not a
Maddie Maggie? Now in our day, Hank, you had to define that you were not a Maggy, but a Maddie.
But things have changed.
Life changes.
Life moves fast if you don't watch.
Now you got to define yourself as not a Maggy when you're a Mad, I can't even do it.
And you got to define yourself as not a Maddie when you're a Maggy.
Hank, number one, does this change anything about humans going to Mars?
I don't think it does. Number two, would you go to the space hotel?
That's a hard no for me.
Yeah. It's probably a no for me as well.
So I liked it. Sometimes I'm watching a TikTok and I think to myself,
if that person did that 10,000 times, would they still be alive?
And I'm like, no, probably not. So that's a thing to not do.
If there's anything that if you did it 10,000 times
and you'd be dead, don't do that thing.
And I think, at least in the beginning,
getting on a giant rocket and going up to a space hotel
is a thing that one out of every 10,000 times you do it,
you might not come back.
And maybe I'm wrong, maybe the odds will be better than that.
But I don't know that they are. And maybe I'm wrong, maybe the odds will be better than that, but I don't know that they are.
And so I'm gonna stay right here.
No, there's no way the odds are gonna be better than that.
The odds are gonna be way worse than that.
I love my town, I love my wife, I love my son.
I wanna be there for them, for as long as I can be.
I wanna die on earth if it all possible.
Well, look, if I'm 250 years old
and I make it to Mars, okay, sure, I'll die wherever.
But I wanna die of old.
I wanna die old.
I wanna die old as well,
but I just wanna be very clear about one thing.
I do not wanna die at the age of 250.
No, I mean, only if it's a really enjoyable 250. I mean, only if it's a really enjoyable 250.
I mean, I'm pretty sore from working out yesterday and I'm 43.
So if I multiply this times five, I don't know.
Maybe.
I haven't consulted with my 230 year old self to find out if he's excited about the prospect
of being 250.
Yeah, it's not worth asking, this is the thing.
It's not worth asking yourself now
because I know how I felt about things when I was 20
and that I was an idiot.
And I'm gonna feel the same way about me now at some point.
Oh yeah, I hope so.
I mean, in my case, that that that that roll over
is every three to five years where I look back
and I'm like, ooh.
John, do you want to update on the computer situation? Well, I have already, I feel like I have an update because I haven't heard the sound of the tugboat
in like 10 minutes.
Yeah.
It is now, it has gone from a progress bar to a little very small, spinny wheel.
Oh, so.
Oh, no.
That's, that's, that's something that has occurred.
It is a difference. So I feel like a difference.
I want to tell you I want to I want to tell you that it's good news. I want to.
It's to I have a login. Oh, I can type in my password. Wow.
I thought a spinny wheel is doomed for sure, but that just goes to show you that there's my world view where every new development is a sign of catastrophe is not necessarily the best way to look at the
world all the time.
It even opened up the questions.
The questions are in front of me.
Wow.
It remembered everything.
Oh, hope really is the thing with feathers that purchase in the soul and sings the tune
without the words it never stops at all.
Please don't sue me, Emily Dickinson's estate.
I know that it's not in the public domain.
Which is ridiculous.
Don't include that, tuna.
Yeah, I mean, actually do include.
Yeah, yeah, take that, Emily Dickinson.
Yeah, it's a state.
How could somebody, I don't, we don't, we don't,
we obviously don't need to get into it, Hank,
but like, Emily Dickinson has been dead for 150 years.
With all due respect to her descendants of whom there are none.
Oh wow.
There is no need for her work to be protected by copyright.
She has been dead.
Here's how long she's been dead Hank.
Uh huh.
You know, McDonald's. I do. I love it
You know Wendy's I love I'm also a big fan. You know Burger King
Less a little less honestly. Yeah
Wendy's McDonald's and Burger King combined have not been around as long as Emily Dickinson has been dead
How is that possible? There's none the public domain. She's a very dead person.
Nobody, nobody needs her work to not be in the public domain except for the nameless university
that owns and controls her work and profits from it in a tremendous way, despite the fact that
they are themselves a ridiculously elite institution. It's's Harvard, as for how he's talking about,
by the way, everywhere.
Well, no need to name names.
But as for how her work is not in the public domain,
it's because a lot of it wasn't published,
at least wasn't published well.
I wasn't published the way she wrote it
with all of her cool lashes and everything
until after 1925.
It's like when my drug company is like,
we're gonna stop making that one
and we're gonna make a new one.
Yeah.
That's got .2 extra milligrams.
You won't put it in.
And it's like, but it's a whole new drug
and now you can make a generic out of it.
Nope, you sure can't.
We're not in that the prilisec business anymore.
We're in the nexium business
until we can't be in the nexium business
and then we're gonna be in a new business.
Yeah.
Anyway, there is a purpose to intellectual property, but the purpose of intellectual property
is not to enrich the world's richest university via the work of a poet who has been dead for 150
years. What is our next question? John, let's stay deep. This question comes from Iris and you
did not highlight it. And so you may not want me to ask it. That's fine. But dear Hank and John,
I've just read the news
that the $1.9 trillion stimulus package
is on its way to President Biden to be signed into law.
Where is all of this money coming from?
And if you can just create this money,
why didn't you do that sooner?
Do they have that kind of money sitting around?
Or they just print more?
If so, isn't that like maybe bad for the economy
or inflation or other economic things
that I don't understand? Not the flower or the thing in your eyes, iris.
That this is, to what extent John, am I correct in saying
that we are living in the middle of a pretty big economic
experiment?
Well, we are living in the middle of a really big
economic experiment in the form of capital,
something like that. Right, I guess we sort of,
that's very, very big. Yeah.
And we've only been involved in it in this way for like about 90 years.
Right.
And in some ways, you can say that this capitalism is only like 60 or 50 years old.
Right.
Different people argue different times for when this kind of monetary policy became prominent. The previous way of doing monetary policy was very bad.
Okay.
Can you tell me about it?
Yeah, but I can't tell you about it without infuriating some percentage of our audience.
So just...
It might not do it.
But the previous way was having the amount of money that a country could use backed by some kind
of commodity usually gold. And that led to a level of inflexibility of monetary policy that this
is going to make some people mad, but it's true, contributed to slash made much worse, the great depression.
Right.
So now we have a different way of having monetary policy where basically money, well, it's
very important to understand that money is made up and that money is something that we
believe in together, but we believe in lots of things together, like limited liability
corporations and intellectual property and nation states and human rights and lots of other things.
So the fact that it's made up is not in and of itself an issue as long as we all believe
in it.
The United States has never defaulted on its debt, which means that lots of people believe
that the United States will always pay back its debt because it always has.
That is contributed or is one of the reasons
why debt is very, very inexpensive for the United States. So like we can borrow and people
ask like, well, where do we borrow the money from? The answer is a little complicated.
We mostly borrow it from ourselves. Right. To some extent, we borrow it from our current
selves. To some extent, we borrowed from our future selves. But anyway, because people
have a lot of faith that the US will pay back its debt, it's very, very inexpensive for the US to borrow money. Like right now, I think that it costs the federal
government 2% annual interest rate to borrow, say, a billion dollars. Well, the economy is going
to grow by more than 2% a year. So some people would argue that actually, like, that's free money,
or more than free. Other people would argue, hey,'s free money or more than free.
Other people would argue, hey, you can't have 10% of the US's GDP in the form of an aid
package without a strategy for paying for it.
I don't know which of those people is right.
I actually think there are pretty solid arguments on both sides.
What I do know is that we were in a big mess.
And I think the people who say we know the long-term consequences of this, both the people
who say it's going to be a big problem and the people who say it's going to be no problem.
I think they're both, they have a level of certainty that I don't think is justified
by the data.
But some people will eventually prove to be right. And inevitably those people will be lifted up as profits
who understood the secret meaning of the universe
when I would argue that to some extent they got lucky.
Oh yeah.
And you know, the wild thing is also that like how what we think
is going to happen really deeply impacts what happens.
Yes.
So if we think there's going to be a bunch of inflation,
then there will be a bunch of inflation.
There may be, there may be some inflation anyway,
but yes, it's very true that what we,
like when we, if we start believing
that the United States might not pay back its debt,
that would be catastrophic.
Right.
Like it would be so catastrophic that I don't want to say it
on a podcast that not that many people listen to.
Like it's that big that many people listen to.
It's that big of a fear for me. We really can't default on our debt. I sort of imagine this through the lens of, so if debt is very cheap, then you can create
it and you can create value with the money. Yeah. Then that's worthwhile. What I'm concerned about
is that we don't end up creating value with the money because the money mostly goes to people who
just put it in their stock savings or bank accounts or creating any building something,
doing something, spending it so that other people will be building or manufacturing things
and then it'll just sort of sit there.
And at that point, then the entire economy is just kind of a bunch of people putting money
in the stock market so that other people can eventually take it out and have more money
than they used to, which doesn't really seem like an economy.
Yeah, this stimulus bill definitely has more actual stimulus in the sense of stimulating
economic activity and consumer spending and stuff than the last stimulus bill did.
Or what I think how much is still to be determined.
Right. Yeah, I mean, it is an interesting moment to be around in and we will see.
John, this next question comes from Indy,
who asks, Steerhank and John,
I was reading about land restoration practices
to better capture carbon dioxide emissions
and I was wondering, is it actually likely
that humans will reduce our carbon dioxide emissions
enough to make a difference in time
or should we be relying on or investing in carbon sinks
like forests and grasslands to pick up a lot of the slack
that we will not achieve ourselves.
I guess I want to know if I should be paying more attention to land restoration work
than fixating on carbon neutral plants, not a rock indie.
Huh.
Gosh, we need to do both.
We, there is not a tool in the climate change toolkit that we are not going to have to
utilize.
Okay, but that said, it's really important that we're not gonna plant trees our way out
of climate change.
Oh, yeah.
We are not.
Carbon capture and storage, whether it's natural
through methods that people will use
to do a good job of,
because one of the things you have to remember,
there's always been trees.
And trees, they tie up the carbon dioxide,
but not forever.
Not many things do tie up the carbon dioxide, but not forever.
Not many things do tie up the carbon dioxide forever, or else there wouldn't have been any
more in the atmosphere.
So like, mostly it's a cycle, and the carbon dioxide comes back out eventually.
Now, there are things you can do to make it not come out, and we will do those things.
But it's going to basically require, we will not do those things unless we create a system
that rewards people for doing them,
which we don't have yet.
And that can actually lift people out of poverty for doing them,
or help people create businesses that do them.
And there will also be carbon capture and storage
that is more industrial scale.
Like, how do you actually turn carbon dioxide
into something that might be useful, like drywall?
But that's gonna be the last 10%.
The main thing we need to do is make steel production as close as possible to carbon
neutral as we can. Make power production as close to carbon neutral as we can, make concrete
as close to carbon neutral as we can, which is basically impossible. So that's why we need
things that we're going to need some carbon capture and storage to hit neutral. Because
if you want to keep using concrete, it requires the release of carbon dioxide.
It's not like moving it around is the problem,
the actual chemical reaction that produces concrete,
which is a really wonderful material
that I don't see us finding a way out of using, really.
For not in the next two.
10 years.
Yeah, not in the next 100 years.
I don't know.
There might be better materials that will someday pop up,
but it's a tarred...
Yeah, we need a lot of concrete. It's a, it's a very difficult thing to
shift, because we know how to build buildings away and figuring out a new way to build buildings
is really dangerous. And you have to be really careful about it, because people live inside
them. So yeah. And it's not just that. It's also that we're not only thinking about the
richest countries in the world, like in middle-income countries, low-income countries, the need to produce
concrete is really profound. So it's important to emphasize that the first 90% is from reducing
the carbon emissions associated with power production, steel production, that kind of thing.
Transportation. And also agriculture. The last 10% is figuring out carbon storage.
Yeah, some kind. Solutions. This is another thing that our economic system is not great at. The last 10% is figuring out carbon storage solutions.
This is another thing that our economic system is not great at.
Our economic systems are not really good at understanding
long-term value, especially like 100 year long-term value.
I don't know how to make them good at it.
I think there are a lot of people with a lot of good ideas,
but I don't really know how to solve that problem. I don't know how to solve that problem.
I don't know how to solve that incentive's problem, except with government regulation and
international regulation.
It has to be regulation.
There will be a technology component and a regulation component.
In Europe, already, they have systems that are like, you have to pay money to release carbon
dioxide.
Yeah.
And so if you release less, you pay less.
Yeah. And also, if you're in an industry where you're already producing And so if you release less, you pay less. Yeah.
And also if you're in an industry where you're already producing it, if you can reduce it,
then you can actually get money from your competitors who will have to basically pay you
because you did it and they didn't.
Right.
So that it creates good economic systems.
Like we almost had a carbon trading system in like 2009.
We almost did.
And yeah, and you're a has one. I think it's
easy to say that like Europe is doing everything better than the US because like it's it's easy to
rag on us. Like we do some things better, they do some things better and but like we need to look
at the systems that are working and use them because we, you know, when it comes to carbon dioxide,
there's no reason to not release it into the atmosphere unless you create regulation to prevent it
from happening. Like if you do not put a cost on that thing, we'll just keep doing it. Why wouldn't we?
Yeah, you either put a cost on it or you have a tyrannical government that says no more carbon.
And I prefer to put a high cost on it. Yeah. Yeah.
This has gotten a little heavy and I want to emphasize that we're going to be okay.
I think people feel like civilization is collapsing, Hank. I think some people do too, and I definitely don't.
I don't say.
I don't.
Yeah, I don't think it's worth, I might be wrong.
I've been wrong before.
I'm like, I'm often wrong, but I really don't think that we are on the edge of a dramatic decline in the human population
or like the level of complexity and human systems.
I don't think any of that is in the near future.
I do think we need to take active steps to prevent it, but I think we can take those
steps.
I really do believe in our ability to do this. Yeah, and I also, what I really deeply believe,
and we need to internalize this and get used to it,
is that every disaster is a primarily a justice problem.
Yes.
And the climate disaster will absolutely be a justice problem.
And of course, like everyone will be negatively impacted
by it, and just like this disaster that we are currently in the middle of,
everyone is impacted by it.
But it is clear that the way that those impacts are distributed is unjust.
Yeah, I think all the time about partners in health's mission statement
of being a social justice organization that
enacts that justice through offering a preferential healthcare option for the poor.
Yeah. Because the maternal mortality crisis in the world, the child mortality crisis in the world,
these are our social justice problems out their core. They are not caused by anything other than
human choice. Like there was a time when a huge percentage
of children died before the age of five
because we didn't know how to prevent that.
But that was many decades ago.
And so now it is primarily an issue of justice and equity.
And the same is true for climate change,
same is true for COVID, same is true for climate change, same is true for COVID,
same is true for our economic systems.
Like all of these things are expressions
of either moving toward a more just and equitable world
or moving away from one.
John, Willow has a question that's gonna seem really,
if this is your first episode of the podcast,
ill, inaccurate. Okay. Willow asks, dear Hank and John, my daughter Willow,
oh, this, I mean, maybe, I don't know, maybe they're both named Willow. I'm not, I don't know.
This question is full of surprises already. I love that we've taken a real hard turn. Uh-huh.
And I don't know where we're going because I've definitely never been on this road before.
Okay. But here we are. Willow has a daughter named Willow who has a problem. and I don't know where we're going because I've definitely never been on this road before.
But here we are.
Willow has a daughter named Willow who has a problem.
No, no, not even.
Oh, okay.
Willow and Willow listen to us every night.
Hello, Willow.
When it's bedtime.
Great.
So I'm sorry if this has been a harsh one.
Geez.
And she calls you to the silly brothers.
Well, not so much for the last five minutes,
Willow. Do you know how to make cake? She wants to ask. Please also let us know what are your favorite
cakes? Sincerely, Willow. Willow. I mean, the all indicators point to both of them are named Willow.
Willow, what is our, what is this podcast? What are we doing to your brother?
It's the silly cake brothers.
The silly brothers just try to be the serious brothers and it's uncomfortable.
I agree Willow, let's go back to, we're the silly brothers.
John, what kind of, do you know how to make a cake, John?
Oh yeah, I do.
Not to brag.
I know how to make a cake in that there's a box at the store.
No, no, no, I can make a cake from scratch.
Oh wow, wow, wow.
I can make a cake from the box and it's good.
The thing is like box cake is pretty good, Willow,
but I can also make a cake from scratch, if called upon.
Now I can't make like a, you know, official wedding cake.
I wouldn't make it as a cake decorator.
Let's put it that way, Willow,
but I can make a cake that's delicious.
I can make a good solid chocolate or vanilla I can make a good, solid, chocolate, or vanilla cake.
I can't make like a fancy, I can't make a cake, you know?
Yeah.
I just know that good at chopping carrots,
to be honest with you, Willow,
but I can make a standard cake, yes.
Okay.
Can you make a cake, Hank?
I can make a cake from a box.
And I've never needed to nor been especially interested
in trying to figure out how to make it a different way.
Why?
Why?
They know what they're doing.
It's the same ingredient.
They're a little bit better.
I mean, it's like a little bit better if you make it.
I mean, if you're a really good cake maker
and you make it, it's way better.
Yeah, sure.
And if you're me and you make it,
it's a little bit better.
But I wouldn't
win great British Bake Off. Willow, let's put it that way. Like maybe last year for Sarah's
birthday, Alice and I baked a cake and then I decorated it and Sarah came home that afternoon
and she saw the cake and she was like, oh, it's so sweet. The Alice decorated the cake and I was like, no, no.
It was me.
I wrote Happy Birthday, mom, and that shaky jittery cake handwriting.
Not even the oldest child she thought.
No, no, no.
I had to Google how to write Happy Birthday in cursive.
Why wouldn't you? Who knows how to do happy birthday and cursive. What? Why wouldn't you?
Who knows how to do this anymore?
I was like looking at the Google image
of how to write happy birthday and cursive
and it was like I was trying to like,
I don't know, write in German or something.
I was like, okay, and then there's a curve there
and that's a straight line, whatever.
Okay, that works, sure. What's your curve there, and that's a straight line. All right, whatever. Okay, that works.
Sure.
What's your favorite cake, John?
Carrot cake by a country mile.
What's yours?
Oh my God, I can't believe you are such a serial water-eating monster.
I love carrot cake.
It's not like having water in your cereal.
Well, a lot of people like carrot cake.
By the way, Willow, if you haven't tried water in your lucky charms, check it out.
It's incredible.
Um, I mean, a chocolate cake with chocolate icing
or possibly mint icing or like, not like mint icing,
but like the stuff that's on the inside of a peppermint patty,
like that stuff, it's not, it's not like denser than icing
is what I want.
I want to have a lot of mint flavor and I want it to be really
chocolatey. But also it's like a hot chocolate cake like when
you go into the inside of it at the chilies and it's got a bunch
of hot chocolate sauce in there. One of those, we don't have
chilies in this town. So I don't know if that's real.
I apologize for not being adequately sophisticated in my cake choice.
I didn't, I didn't realize that you were going to have such a high quality cake in mind
as the Chili's molten chocolate lava cake.
They're really good. They are good.
I'm not, I, I'm not saying anything bad about Chili's chocolate cakes.
It's, it's, they're incredibly good.
I'm not saying that they're not good.
But in fact, I'm reminded that today's podcast
is brought to you by Chili's.
Chili's it may or may not still exist.
Chili's, I think at least in some point
wanted their baby back.
Oh yeah, it was a huge restaurant when we were kids.
It was very, very fancy when we were growing up.
Like our parents would take us to Chili's
on very special occasions.
And I don't know if it's, I,
Hank, I haven't been outside in like,
like on a car trip in nine months.
I have no idea what's out there.
What is it like out there?
Oh my God, John, this podcast is also brought to you
by the progress bar, the progress bar.
It is going at its own pace.
Thank you very much. Podcasts also of course brought to you by the progress bar, the progress bar. It is going at its own pace. Thank you very much.
Podcasts also, of course, brought to you by Harvard University, Harvard University,
in desperate need of your donations, which are astonishingly tax deductible.
Oh my god, and this podcast is also brought to you by the Anthropocene Reviewed book.
The Anthropocene Reviewed book does a cover now. You can go look at it. It's very pretty,
and it's also got a lot of words inside of it
that John's been working very hard on,
and you can pre-order it wherever books are sold.
Yeah, including some words by Emily Dickinson
that I had to pay a pretty penny for.
Wow, Harvard, geez.
John, when you have a question,
before we get to this from Mars and A.C. One,
and this one is for me,
when you order Arby's on DoorDash, how do you get sauces?
So I disagree with your premise.
I believe that's what the Zen Masters would call a question wrongly put.
But then the answer is that I would, I would go ahead and use my own barbecue sauce is the answer. I would, I have not to brag better barbecue sauce in the home than Arby's can offer
me. But they got the horsey sauce, John.
The horsey sauce is good, but again, you can make your own horsey sauce.
I don't want to make my own horsey sauce. I'm very busy. Speaking of struggles,
let's move on to the news from Mars and AFC Wimbledon. I'll go first. Oh, yeah, yeah. AFC Wimbledon have sunk, sunk, sunk to the to last place, last place
in the league one table with a stirring goal difference of negative 24 for the season.
There's 13 games remaining. So the weird thing is that even though we're in last place, I still
kind of like our chances because there's two things going on right now. One is that we've
got this new manager, Mark Robinson, who I love and everybody loves. And he's just a
straight shooter. He's playing the kids. He's doing everything he can to figure out a way
for us to stay up. And then the other thing is that we have two games in hand.
So we've played two fewer games than almost all of the teams around us.
Okay. So that's good.
Maybe, maybe if we win and tie those two games, then maybe we wouldn't be
so much in the relegation zone anymore.
It's incredibly crowded.
It's not just that you're in the relegation zone. It It's incredibly crowded. Just that you're in the relegation zone.
Is that you are last? Yeah. We're last. We're also the only team in like the bottom half of the table
that hasn't won a game in our last five games. So it's not a great situation. Yeah. On the other hand, we are only one good run of results away from hope.
Right. I'm living in a found a way not to get relegated for so long that I just, I kind
of believe we're going to find a way, but I will confess that the way is not clear at
the moment. Is there, is there advantages to being in the up,
in the up, in the league that you're in
for as long as you've been in it?
Oh, you mean like,
might more money here or something?
I don't know.
No, not really.
I mean, maybe modest financial advantages.
But so like,
no, it's just,
what extent would it just be better for you
to be relegated so you could win more games
and people would like go to the games more and be more excited
No, I don't I really don't want to get relegated because it's so hard to get back up
I just also aFC Wimbledon has never been relegated since the
Resurrection in 2002. I'm quite proud of that record. I
Don't know. I think the thing is I think if we could survive this year, we could
have a really good season next year because we'll hopefully have fans in the stadium at last,
which means our match day revenues will be much higher, our budget will be higher. There's
real hope on the horizon, but we've got to find a way to survive this season.
Yeah. Well, John, in Mars news, have you ever wondered what a laser sounds like when
it's being fired on the surface of Mars? I did until I heard it. Oh, well, okay. I'll play it for
you right now anyway. I'm too much of a Mars fan. You can't break news to me anymore.
So that's what it sounds like, John. So there is a laser on the surface of Mars. The nice thing about this laser is nuclear powered laser is that it can shoot rocks and vaporize them, not the whole rock, but
like some of the surface of the rock from 20 feet away it can do this. So it's like,
wow. I can't quite reach that rock or I don't want to go over there. I'm busy. It can still
zap a rock from 20 feet away. And that sends up some rock dust, and then
the supercam can study it and figure out its chemical composition.
And also, by the noise that it makes when the laser hits it, you can sort of test a little
bit, you can know a little bit about how hard the rock is, which also tells you something
about what it's made out of.
So the supercam also is this like the the thing that has all these tools on it.
The Supercam also puts some of its other equipment to work,
including its ramen spectrometer,
which tells us the different chemical bonds in Iraq.
And that is the first time ramen spectroscopy has been used on a place that is not Earth.
Wow. I like to think of it as like this super cam
has a kind of sniffer.
Yeah.
And it just like kind of all these tools together
amount to a sort of like sniffing out of the Martian geosphere.
Yeah, it's not a geosphere.
It's a marzo fear.
Oh, the super cam.
So cool.
I'm happy.
So cool. NASA's so cool.
NASA, by the way, has done a great job of naming things
lately, the super cam, the Octavia Butler landing site,
perseverance.
I feel like the people who are doing the naming
should get some big credit.
What a joy to think that perseverance is there on Mars
with its super cam.
Yay.
Great branding.
John, thank you for making a podcast with me.
We are now off to record our Patreon only podcast.
This week in stuff, I'm sorry for the low quality
of my audio this week if you could tell that at all,
but at least my computer is turning on now.
A full hour and 10 minutes later.
This podcast is edited by Joseph Tune of
Metage. It's produced by Rosie on a Halcero Haas and Sheridan Gibson. Our
communications coordinator is Julia Bloom, our editorial assistant. It's the
Boogie Truck of Arti. The music you're hearing now and at the beginning of
podcast is by the Great Gunnarola and as they say in our hometown, don't forget to
be awesome.
you