Lex Fridman Podcast - #134 – Eric Weinstein: On the Nature of Good and Evil, Genius and Madness
Episode Date: October 30, 2020Eric Weinstein is a mathematical physicist, podcaster, and intellectual. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Grammarly: https://grammarly.com/lex to get 20% off premium - Sun B...asket: https://sunbasket.com/lex and use code LEX to get $35 off - SEMrush: https://www.semrush.com/partner/lex/ to get a free month of Guru - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod and use code LexPod to get 3 months free EPISODE LINKS: Eric's Twitter: https://twitter.com/EricRWeinstein Eric's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/ericweinsteinphd The Portal podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-portal/id1469999563 PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LexFridmanPage - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. 00:00 - Introduction 07:46 - Eddie Van Halen 15:26 - Leonard Cohen 23:22 - Battle between ego and humility 28:38 - Darkness and beauty 35:20 - Jimi Hendrix 38:08 - Good Will Hunting 42:16 - Revolutionary minds 53:49 - Next Elon Musk should come from MIT 58:14 - Love with save the world 1:03:30 - Are we headed toward a civil war? 1:15:04 - Joe Rogan 1:28:52 - Our political leaders 1:34:11 - Younger people should have more power 1:44:30 - The Portal 2:09:20 - Money 2:11:26 - Roger Penrose 2:19:06 - Jeffrey Epstein 2:37:44 - We need to get off this planet 2:40:41 - An update on Geometric Unity 2:46:33 - Gratitude
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with Eric Weinstein, the third time we've spoken on this podcast.
He is the wise turtle, master Uguay to my kung fu panda, one of my favorite people to talk to in this world.
A complicated and fascinating mind that I'm grateful to have the chance to accompany in exploring this world through conversation.
On this podcast and on his, the latter called the portal.
Quick mention of each sponsor followed by some thoughts related to the episode.
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I don't like looking at numbers, but somebody should, it helps you make good decisions.
And finally, ExpressVPN. The VPN I've used for many years to protect my privacy on the internet.
VPN, the VPN I've used for many years to protect my privacy on the internet. Please check out these sponsors in the description to get a discount and to support this podcast. As a side note, let me say
that wherever this life takes me, I'm drawn to the possibility of having many more conversations
with Eric through the years. I think we have just the right kind of contrasting worldviews and a
deep respect and appreciation of each other's life stories that creates for
this magical experience in the realm of conversation that feels like we're
always looking for something that we never quite find, but are always better for having tried.
I'm not sure how or why the universe is connected to Erick and me, but it did.
And I would be a fool not to trust this judgment.
And enjoy the journey.
If somehow you like this podcast, please subscribe on YouTube, review it with 5 stars and
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Lex Friedman.
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That's expressvpm.com slash lex pod. And now here's my conversation with Eric Weinstein. Who's the greatest musician of all time?
Would you say?
We were just off camera talking about A. Van Halen.
He had a portion of the past away.
Who's the greatest musician of all time?
Yeah.
Jonathan Richmond.
Who's that?
It's a weird question.
So I'm going to give you a weird answer.
It's not because of that.
Thank you.
OK.
Jonathan Richmond, the reason I'm picking to give you a weird answer. It's not because... Thank you. Okay.
Jonathan Richford, the reason I'm picking on him is that he had a quote.
He was the frontman of a group called the Modern Lovers.
And his quote was something like, we have to be prepared to play music when our instruments
are broken, the electricity is out, and it's raining, something like that.
And I thought that that quote was very interesting because what it said was you have to be able to strip this thing down farther and farther back to get to something that is
intrinsically musical. So we were having a conversation just now about virtuosity. We're talking about
Eddie Van Halen and his recent passing and that affected me emotionally. I don't know other
affected you. I was never a Van Halen the group van, but I revered Eddie Van Halen's
capacity for innovation. Just I saw him like Rodney Mull in the skateboard. I dreamed of having
the two of them on the same podcast just to talk about what it's like to totally discontinuously
innovate. And you posted a video of Spanish fly I think, and saying like I didn't know the guitar
can make those kinds of sounds.
Like, what is this voodoo magic?
Well, this is the thing, right?
The arpeggios that he did on a single string are so fast and the attacks from the hammer-ons,
when they go at light speed as he did, particularly, and the reason I chose that was,
is that I wanted to strip out the electronics because part
of the claim will be is that he's a rock musician and a lot of the innovations had to do
with things peculiar to sort of the electrified setup.
His use of the whammy bar, for example, or the Frankenstrat that he built from different
pieces.
All of those aspects, in my opinion, are just dwarfed by his innovation and his
musicianship. And that's why I chose Spanish fly because everyone, of course, will go to
something like a eruption or running with the devil, which is the first things that they
heard that let them know that there was a new force erupting out of Southern California
that was at Yvonne, right? I mean, I just, I'm in love with, I'm in love with the story of it. You're often so poetic about music. I could clearly touch
you as your soul on some kind of, on many levels. What is that? Is it deeper than just rocking out
with the, in your convertible Corvette 69? I imagine an air-acquired sign just driving down the California highlights, blasting some
kind of music.
Is it just like being able to be carefree for moments of time, or is there something
more fundamental that connects like the theory of everything in physics and life and all
that?
How often do you have the chance, for example, to hear mathematics performed
as you do in Bach? Something with that kind of precision and elegance that can't really be grasped
where to go back to Leonard Cohen's famous line, the Baffled King Composing.
That's such a good song. That's such a good song, but it's also like individual verses of that song are insanely important.
The the baffled king is
How we often make music we don't really understand what did we just do that broke that person's heart sitting on the couch
Right, and so the it's a very strange thing that you should be able to have. Think of it like a York computer.
You've got this weird open music port, you know, port 37.8, you know, like it's not even,
it's not even supposed to be there.
And suddenly somebody starts playing guitar and they're making you feel things or, you know,
like in particular, particular instruments, like the violin, uh, it's so difficult.
It's so unforgiving. And when it gives up its secrets, it just, you know, it, it's so difficult, it's so unforgiving,
and when it gives up its secrets, it just, you know,
it wraps its fingers around your heart and won't let go.
Sometimes I talk about head, heart, and loins.
When something can grab your head, heart, and your loins
at the same moment and integrate them.
There are very few opportunities to live like that,
and if you think about
Eddie Van Halen, as far as your head, the musical innovations and the fact that he was
drawing directly from the classical canon really speaks to the idea that maybe rock is
what somebody like Jimmy Hendrick saw it as being, you know, an infinitely extensible medium.
In terms of heart, I always notice the smile on his face.
It's painful to look at an Eddie Van Halen solo now.
Like sometimes you'll see the cigarette dripping off
the side of his mouth and you're like,
that's gonna fucking kill you.
And I'm not even worried about it for you.
I'm worried about it for me.
You're gonna rob, I don't even need to hear you play another note.
I just like knowing that you're in the world,
that there is somebody that everyone looks to,
but I've never heard a guitarist say,
eh, I don't know.
I think he was okay.
Like, I've never heard it.
You can hate him, but you still think he was a genius.
There are very few people like that in the world. And then
loins, those leaps, that guy was incredibly good looking. And you know, skin type pants,
super athleticism, he completely owned the sexuality of the stage, both being at the
completely dominant, you know, sort of mythical alpha male. I hate that expression, but there you are. But also this kind of little boy with this mischievous smirk and you know, the sense that it all came together.
How could you not eat that up? You could just imagine the millions of like young teenage boys
gorgeous like playing air guitar in their in their room. Just that yeah, basically dreaming of being that kind of god
the the most perfect example of what a human being can be. Yeah, as fast as I think it is and then you know
as in many of the cases with these bands
you get these multiple talents in the same outfit and I think that the original configuration with David Lee raw I mean David Lee Roth is such a hot mess at all times
I would love you to talk to David Lee like if they
That that dance would be just gorgeous. I don't know. He's can you handle it? Can you ride that probably not? Yeah probably not because I think
He's very I get the feeling that he's very smart and
very disregulated. And I don't know that I could bring him down to Earth for a moment.
Well, I can also get pretty disregulated. And so I don't know whether it could be magic,
it could be a shitshow. I don't know what you thought of his appearance on Rogan. That was an interesting one.
I loved it, but Joe and that and Joe does it sometimes. Sometimes he just sits back and listens.
And he just lets like the music play, which works really well.
I think you have a chance to kind of jump into the chaos.
And then you'll just start and the places you will go, you may not even
talk about music for hours. It might just go to this because he, I think, lives in Japan.
Like there's a weird, he's been in like EMT after he was a rock star. He chose to be
kind of like, I don't know. You know, it like there's depth to that man that that hasn't
been explored by him either. So like that'll be an exciting conversation.
Can we go back to Leonard Cohen? Yeah. Can we just... The things I feel when I listen to
Halleluia by Leonard Cohen are anything by him really, but that one... Do you really want to get it?
Let's go. What does that song mean to you? Is it love?
Oh boy.
Well, first of all, it's mystery.
It starts off about mystery.
So what are you doing?
You're doing this alternation between the two chords.
So three notes at the same time.
One is called the tonic, or you have the major and the relative minor and he's alternating
between them. There's only one note of difference between those two chords. One of them would be
feeling sad. One of them would be more joyous, typically described. And so by altering one note,
it's the minimal amount to take you back and forth between joy and happiness as that's encoded
in us.
So he starts off with that.
I heard there was a student, David played the Pleasel Lord, but you don't really care for
music, do you?
That's really interesting because he's using this technique called Bethos, right?
So the alternation between the sublime and kind of the guttural or ridiculous or the mundane,
right?
So he's like
But it's a bitterness to it, too. Is it just play? Well the way I hear it again, you know great song allows for different interpretations You happen to be asking me so I'm gonna impart some stuff that probably isn't in the song
But why it speaks to me that's what makes it great
The way I hear it is you doesn't believe the audience you don't really care for music do you then what are you doing listening to this?
You stupid idiots, you know first You don't really care for music, do you? Then what are you doing listening to this? You stupid idiots.
Of course you care for music.
You're too cool to care.
So I see through you and screw you.
That's like the kind, that's the energy I get.
Then he does this weird thing.
It goes like this is where he should put the description
of where he is in the chord progression,
which is the tonic, right?
It goes like this.
And then he hits the fourth and the fifth, which are the two other major elements, the subdominant and the
dominant in functional harmony. So he's describing the chord progression in real time in the lyrics.
And there's two ways this can come about in other songs. Like we had this example of
every time we say goodbye. Do you know the song?
Every time we say goodbye.
No, I think it was a cold porter, maybe,
or Gershwin, maybe porter, I don't know.
I cry a little, there is no love song finer,
but how strange the change from major to minor.
Right?
It's beautiful use.
Then there's times when it's duplicitous.
So for example, you'll have, I guess my favorite examples of this are Johnny Cash's Ring
of Fire. I fell into a burning ring of fire. Then what does he do with the lyrics in the
tune? I went down, down, down. He goes up. Yeah. Right. And so the idea is like, Oh,
okay, that was a head fake. Yeah. Right. And another one of these, you know, is Nina
Simone's feeling good. Oh, okay. So what do you get a bird's flying high? You know how I feel. Then sun up in the sky.
You know how I feel.
That woman's voice.
It's you don't.
You don't.
You don't.
You don't.
You don't.
You don't.
You don't.
You don't.
You don't.
You don't.
You don't.
You don't.
You don't.
You don't.
You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You don't. You're probably in some strip club with some glass of your money, you're drinking
lousy beer, some bad situation. Yeah. And she's feeling good. No, it's funerial. It's
oppressive, right? I never thought of that song that way. Wow. Well, you think of it as
joyous? Yeah. No, no, no. If you think about it, contrast it with Ray Charles, for example. You know, do you know Lonely Avenue?
Yeah.
Because, well, my room has got to window.
But the sun, shine, never comes through.
It's really depressed.
It's the same sort of vibe as Nina,
but she's claiming that she's in great shape.
So she's like a good case of the unreliable narrator.
Leonard Cohen, to me, is talking about the unreliable audience
that's too cool to be with the performer on stage.
There are things that go with the music,
like the cold porter stuff that go against
like the Johnny Cash.
I think these are the games that musicians play
that the rest of us only sort of notice subliminally.
Okay.
Fourth the fifth, then he,
when he, he should say something about the relative minor or the he's giving you the secret the baffled king
In other words, he doesn't know why it works did Paco Bell know why Paco Bell's cannon would work
It was a discovery. That's the whole thing like some music is discovered and some music is invented and
discovered and some music is invented. And he's talking about a musical discover.
He's talking about the Pythagorean power
of the wave equation and then superimposed,
like there's two genius intellectual concepts
behind music, one of which is the wave equation.
Usually we solve it for a one-dimensional medium
because we're talking about strings or air columns.
Occasionally, you're talking about things like handpans or steel drums or
metallophones or gamma lines, whatever. And those have a wave equation too that's much more chaotic. The other equation is this crazy thing that
2 to the 1912th is almost exactly equal to 3, which is what gave us even temperament. And so the tension between those two things is in fact
which is what gave us even temperament. And so the tension between those two things
is in fact, one of these most beautiful stories
inside of that system,
that formula of the Baffled King is a discovery.
It's not, he's not really composing it.
The reason he's Baffled,
it's an imagine that you took like a little brush
and you started brushing off a pyramid under the sands.
You might think that you created the pyramid by your brushing, and you started brushing off a pyramid under the sands.
You might think that you created the pyramid by your brushing, but in fact,
somebody else did it, that's why you're baffled, right?
That's beautifully put you right.
And as creating one of the greatest songs of all time,
and as he's doing it, he's baffled.
And he's mad.
He lenders within the song, and he lenders his baffled.
It's my content, but he knows enough to know that he's baffled, right?
And so the idea is that he is composing.
He has the audacity to compose as David.
He's echoing David at a minimum.
And then in a later song, which I really wish we would discuss, that's totally dystopic, and you will not like it at all, is the future, which contains this line that I think I
used in my episode with Roger Penrose on the portal.
No, the subplug.
The portal, the portal, the portal.
I'm the little Jew that wrote the Bible.
So there is this way in which Leonard Cohen, I think, is constantly coming to the idea
of being a biblical like scribe.
And I think this is one of the great things
that you see Dylan doing this with all along the watch tower.
You saw Warren Zevon, who we should talk much more about
doing this with a song called,
I was in the house when the house burned down.
Do you know this thing?
No, this is a bear sweetheart.
This is a great day. Warren Zevvan is one of the most important songwriters of our time.
And he's been largely forgotten by this generation. But Bob Dylan would sing one of his songs
and tribute. I've heard Bob Dylan, you know, very small number of songwriters really move him.
Woody got three Gordon Lightfoot and Warren Ziva.
By the way, Bob Dylan, if you're out there, appear on either one of our podcasts,
we need to get your voice into a new medium for a new group.
Definitely.
This is a time for Bob Dylan, my friend.
Honestly, you've been doing an amazing job in the space. One of the
reasons I'm super excited to do this podcast again is that I've learned some things about what I
don't do well. And I also have sort of struggled with the question, should I do those things better?
Because what if it's, you know, I always use the same example of the fitted sheet when you're trying
to put a queen size fitted sheet on a king size mattress, you're like, okay, I always use the same example of the fitted sheet when you're trying to put a queen-sized fitted sheet on a king-sized mattress
He's like, okay, I got that corner squared away. Then you get another corner that pops off and then you go back around
I wonder whether I can improve my style in the ways in which
You know, I think it was just a recognition of a difference. You do a better job of getting to the soul of a really top intellectual guest and
of getting to the soul of a really top intellectual guest and making them accessible and presenting them as themselves for a huge number of people. And I'd give my eye to to be able to do that.
Do you ever think about this, like, because I think about what is the greatest conversation I'll ever have?
You know, like in sense of the portal, not to reduce it to anything, but there will be
the greatest conversation.
You may have already had it, but it's very possible, if enough people like me can keep twisting
your arm to keep doing the portal, please, is there be an amazing conversation.
One of the questions that I ask myself is like,
who is the person that I'm especially equipped?
For some reason, I'm convinced I'm Putin.
There's something in my head that says,
I can do this man better than anyone else in this world.
I got this thought in my head about it.
I don't know why.
And I'm convinced.
But I think the universe works in that way. Like give it, it tells you, it's going to happen. The way I would say it is,
is that almost everybody who becomes a Supreme Court justice believes that a very early age
is going to become a Supreme Court justice. Many people believe it in early age that they can do it.
Don't get there. But of those who get there, almost all of them had this sort of, well, I call it pathological
self-confidence.
And I do think you have pathological self-confidence and you also have humility.
And most people would hear those as a contradiction.
I think that you would not be able to get away with what you do if you didn't have the
humility.
And so I think, you know, the great danger is that your equation
becomes unbalanced, that you either lose the humility or you lose the humility overwhelms
the ego and the drive. Because right now you've got a Mexican standoff in your mind and
the rest of us are just benefiting. That's beautifully put. My Mexican standoffs aren't
as stable as yours. It's all reservoir dogs all the time.
Yeah.
But actually, the person who that describes is Peter Teal.
Peter Teal thinks more people always say, like, what does Peter think about X,
Y and Z, P and Q?
It's like, well, do you want communist Peter?
Do you want hypercapitalist Peter?
And then oh, my God, right, on everything.
That's why he's successful is that he's got all these minds fighting each other.
And so when people say Peter is this or Peter is that, I just laugh because it,
like nobody who knows him would describe him as having thoughts at the level that people are claiming.
And I do think that, you know, in my case,
you know, there's also pathological epistemic humility.
Like just, I know how little, I know how little I can do
in one life. I know how many things I've screwed up.
I know how many things I've got wrong.
And on the other hand, I know that if not, you know,
it's like Hillel's questions, you know, if I'm not for myself
who will be for me, and if I'm only for myself, what am I,
if not now when? You know, at some'm not for myself, who will be for me? And if I'm only for myself, what am I, if not now when?
You know, at some level there's a question about
if I don't decide that someone is capable
and that that somebody is me.
And I, if I apply that to everyone else on the planet,
then nobody's gonna do anything.
And so I do think that one of the things
that people like you and I get is who
are you to say that? F that man. Just sign me up for some done in Groover. Yeah, but it's
multiple minds like you said. Like this morning, I was feeling so good and confident about I
couldn't think no wrong. And I remember last night clearly thinking that I'm the dumbest human who's ever lived and nothing I've ever said is worth anything.
What the fuck am I doing with my life? Why am I scared? I was terrified of this conversation. Who the hell am I?
This conversation?
Because I'm an idiot. And because, you know, I like it. but no, no, but this morning, I was the baddest motherfucker
who has ever walked this earth.
So I was, I was very conscious.
I think it was the coffee.
I'm not sure.
Maybe some sleep.
This sounds very Russian and it involves multiple beverages, some of them being alcoholic,
others containing caffeine.
There's, in fact, I can't share the story behind it, but there is a bottle of vodka in the fridge.
Okay.
So, I mean, I should have hit you for coffee because this is a morning show here.
So, I put out a call that we get a chance to have this conversation and people ask these wonderful
questions. A few people asked about depression and suicide. So, this is a Russian program, so we have to go there. I think about Leonard
Cohen, one of the things that always broke my heart and kind of suffocated the hope I
have for just, I don't know, for love in a person's life, is to hear how much
depression was a part of Lana Cohen's life and how much he suffered. I guess one way,
I'm not sure where we can go with this question, but do you think about the places that the mind can go, like these dark places. Yeah.
Is there something like where the only escape out is suicide, for example, that's the darkest
version of it?
That.
I really think suicide is a big place and suicidal ideation and self-harm, and we don't
talk a lot about it.
It's a similar problem to trying to talk about trans.
These are umbrella categories.
And if the commonality is that somebody harms themselves,
but we don't know whether that's coming because of a problem
in brain chemistry, because of an event in their life,
whether evolutionary programming for suicide is weirdly normal, whether or not it might
have a religious motivation.
There's too many different forms of self-harm.
It's something like the 10th largest killer, or thereabouts.
And I think that you can look at it from different angles. I'm old enough to have had Pete Seeger come to my college when I was at university and
to watch his good humor in the face of all adversity.
I think of Odetta.
I used to go to Odetta concerts.
I don't know if you know who she is.
Okay, this is going to be one of the better days of your life.
Check out Odetta when we're done with the interview.
She was a civil rights figure, but also just had a profound voice and great musicianship.
These people were in the struggles, right?
And they saw lots of bad things happen, and they kept their humor about them. And you know, the thing is that you can take on the velcimates, you know, the pain of the planet,
or you can try to do something else, which is to be a happy warrior, even if the odds are terrible
and the cost of failure is catastrophic.
So even once surrounded by darkness.
But the thing is with Leonard Cohen is he created such beautiful music.
And yet, it's like Anthony Bourdain the same.
And yet, they go to this dark place.
And it could be, it's easy to say it's just biochemistry.
There's a linkage between this highly generative creative
side. And in some cases, dark depression, in other cases not. So you can't say that it's tied,
the genius and madness are always co-traveling or the beauty and pain are one and the same.
and madness are always co-traveling or the beauty and pain are one and the same.
What you can say is that there's a cluster of people that tell you that for that cluster there is a relationship between the darkness and the beauty. And I do think that in part it's
squaring circles that can't be squared. You know, that, well, we're just talking before about
the inability to serve two
perfect systems, the perfect system of the wave equation and the
perfect system of even temperament. They're both perfect.
They're not compatible. And once you realize that there is
perfection and an inability to make contact with perfection,
with perfection. I think you know you recognize that there is no solution to this world.
Yeah. That's weird with the poets and musicians. You want to say this is a particular thing that you do, but then there's a Spanish fly by Van Halen. And then you realize, oh,
well, what do you get out of Spanish fly by Van Halen?
I think it's very singular because of the fact
that it's purely acoustic.
For some reason, I couldn't imagine
Van Halen separate from the band in front of thousands
of people just screaming and rocking out
with lights everywhere.
And Spanish fly made me think like,
you made me imagine him sitting on loan in a college in a room.
I think that's who he was. I really do.
I mean, I, I, it's, believe me, I get it.
He was a rock star, he was a rock god, god, god, god, god, god.
I'm almost positive that you can't get to where he got to without being a complete introvert.
He had like, it made me imagine that there's like some half naked supermodel walking around
hoping that they can, you know, do their thing together.
And he's completely disinterested.
He'd be with the guitar, right?
Yeah.
That because like, honestly, at some level, in one case, you know, maybe you're, maybe
you're conquesting, maybe you're, maybe you're conquesting,
maybe you're pursuing love and romance.
In the other case, you're, you're talking about a relationship to the, to the order,
the creator, the almighty, whatever it is, you want to call that substrate that is reality.
And, you know, do I believe that Eddie Van Halen and Jimmy Hendrix and Paganini and
Hi-Fitz jacked into theids jacked into the true essence of the
world. Yeah, they did. I don't think it's as good as differential geometry. I'm sorry. I do think
it's amazing for other reasons and thank God because it's very typical to communicate differential
geometry at scale. But the thing about eruption, for example, what level do you want to come into eruption?
Do you want just the sheer majesty and pageantry?
Do you want the theatrics?
Like you could put them on wires and set his pants on fire or whatever.
It'd be totally in keeping with it.
On the other hand, you want to talk something completely precise that shows off the virtuosity
of what's possible with a strat of the castor. Everything works.
Multi-axis, but there's a precision to it,
which is very different than Hendrix.
There's a messiness to Hendrix that to me,
some of you as OCD has always been strong.
How does it affect you?
I mean, let's have the Jimmy Hendrix conversation.
I don't know that we can do anything to it
that hasn't already been done to it.
Maybe that's not true.
Maybe the idea is that every generation has to have
its Hendrix conversation.
And this is a long form.
It's Jimmy Hendrix experience.
Yeah.
So funny.
I hear he's sold it from Joe Rogan.
Yeah.
There's so many details.
One, it hurt my soul on so many levels that you can put a thumb
over the guitar to play a note, to hold a note. And it doesn't because I wanted to be the Russian
virtue. So that sits with this classical guitar in a perfect form, plays really fast with the
fingers. And then you don't't want you want the thumb to be
perfectly relaxed and supporting that. That's the Russian conservatory student conservatory.
So yeah, then there's the Russian wild man, which one is that? Well, haven't there different Russian
archetypes, right? So the completely idiosyncratic Russian is very different in a weird way from the,
you know, I can do this backwards in any key in any sleep in my sleep and in any time signature that you you know just just snap your fingers
We've discussed my
piano tuner
In previous episodes. No, no, that was offline conversation. You told me the story
I should tell you this you should tell you should retell the story there There was Indarkest Manhattan. Yeah. With the world's shittiest, it wasn't even an
upright. It was a spin at piano. A friend had given it to me. The piano fell out of tune and I would
have to tune it. And the only tuner I knew was this Russian guy and I hated dealing with him.
If something about his attitude, he just really wrote me the wrong way.
So anyway, my wife says tune that thing.
So we get the piano tuner to come.
And he's tuning this piece, like,
are you sure you want to tune this piece of shit?
You know, okay, fine.
So he's like, okay, it's your money.
The phone rings, and I have the phone ringer set
and a landline to Paganini Caprice 24. And immediately as the phone ringer set on a landline to Paganini Caprice 24.
And immediately as the phone rings, he figures out what key the phone ringer is, and which is not
the key that like list composed the variations on Caprice 24. And he starts going into theme
and variations on Caprice 24. At some level, I've never heard before, just jaw dropping it.
And like the phone stops ringing and we have this awkward silence.
I said, I didn't know you were such a great piano player.
And then he says one of these things that in Russian accent, in English, hurts in a way
you can't imagine.
He said, no, you are the piano player.
I am merely the piano tuner.
I was just like, oh oh man through the heart.
You know, it's kind of reminiscent. I love to hear actually opinion. This is reminiscent of the Goodwill hunting story.
What do you think about that? That movie? That movie. It's about it.
It's MIT. It's... Yeah. I guess what I think of that film. I
think about
Matt Damon as a young guy, risking everything, giving
a Harvard, I think, you know, probably the most accomplished group of people in the world
are people who choose to give a Harvard voluntarily.
Right.
It's bigger than Harvard.
I think, you know, Ives was one of these people, Bill Gates, of course.
And then oddly, you know, Zuckerberg, what Zuckerberg, but then Steve Jobs gave up a read and read is like the weirdest, craziest college in the world.
People should pay much more attention to read.
And I'm sorry, it's going through a hard time at the moment.
But what it was before the current craziness is really an interesting story.
Irregardless, as we say, in the 617 area code, I think that a lot of my reaction is to
the real story of Matt Damon having this vision and being the young guy to pull it off.
And I also think about Robin Williams trying to explore heart through this lens of acting.
And, you know, as you and I, you've hung out with comedians, they know that they're
screwed up bunch of people.
They do.
They're proud about it.
They really are.
The idea that Robin Williams, who I saw many years ago when I was in L.A.
in the comedy clubs around here, he was a straight-up crazy,
dysregulated genius in tremendous pain and his desire to do it earnestly through acting,
rather than constantly by just sniping or being a clown or showing us how fast his mind worked relative to ours.
I was really moved by that. I thought that he brought some authenticity and took a huge risk for a comedian to be that real.
And again, like you said, it doesn't always have to be, but in that case, the madness and the genius were neighbors.
That one couldn't have been any other way. Yeah. No, because his mind, the thing about seeing him in a comedy club
was that he would react to random stimulus in the environment.
You know, it could be a Hechler. Sometimes you almost got the feeling that he wanted a Hechler because it was,
it gave him something to play against.
Right?
He was infinitely, instantly inventive.
But I actually, to me, the best Robin Williams has a gap closer and closer to the end of
his life because there was a sadness.
And he's almost fighting the sadness with this
improvisational like the weapons he has is this wit and humor and his dancing that he does with language
But and then sometimes when you just fall silent you can see the sadness and
And I don't know there's something so beautiful about that. It's like this bird with a broken wing. That's like trying to fly
You know, and it's getting older and older and I mean those he would have made a one hell of a podcast guess I'll tell you that that's a sad yeah I have some sadness that I really
do think the part of what we call podcasting is actually just getting to know a soul over and over again. Like, maybe the idea is that this is talking about depression and sadness and heavy feelings
is not an American specialty. Seeing that in context with the beauty of life is a Russian
specialty. It is very much...
It sounds like a diner menu.
What?
Yeah.
What a Russian specialty.
A big scoop of ice cream with tons of depression.
I do think that we're in a really terrifying and depressing time.
And I think that part of it is we don't know if something huge is about to get started.
And we don't even know what this is. I mean, we just sit here in this weird world that is
falling into some new state. And we're not even super curious as like, what the hell just
happened? Everybody's got an answer. And I'm positive that all of those answers are wrong.
Let's let's try to at least sneak up on the good answer.
So the central core of the answer is that the US seemed to be the greatest thing in the world
in large measure because we hadn't noticed that we were getting a benefit from having no plan,
not having to make a plan for low growth.
As long as we had growth, we were in great
shape. Let's imagine that there was a... You could run an experiment, you have a billion copies
of Earth and you start the initial conditions slightly different. On some giant number of
planets, a lot of the things that were discovered from the 1800s through the end of the 20th century
are discovered in a period of time because a lot of that just has to do with once you crack the
puzzle of getting better instruments, you can see more. And the more you can see, the more you can
make use of what you can see. And it turns out there was lots of stuff to do with germs or
electron orbitals or spectrum, electromagnetic spectrum. So we got to do all of those things.
And the US roughly corresponded for a good chunk of its history with this bananza.
And so of course we look like an amazing genius country. We have no plan.
Imagine that you could sell a car.
You don't have to put in seat belts.
You don't have to put in airbags.
You don't have to put in rear view mirrors or sensors or rear view mirror.
You could save a lot of money on a car by not putting in all of the stuff to keep things
from going wrong.
And I think that's what we had.
We had a machine that as long as growth was insanely
good, we plowed it back the riches and spoils and then treasure back into the system and made more
genius stuff. And we carried along a good chunk of humanity hundreds of millions of people.
We did not have a plan for what happens when the growth goes below the stall speed of our society.
How confidence should be that the growth is slowed in a way that is permanent rather than a kind of
slap in the face where it's not the right concept. Right concept is I try to use the same words
over and over again in case people see mold because then the perseveration actually gets somewhere.
So I use this analogy of the orchard because everyone talks about low hanging fruit.
They know the concept of low hanging fruit, but they don't think in terms of orchards.
So they say things like, you think we've picked all the low hanging fruit, but I believe
in the inventive vettiveness of the human mind.
It's like, okay, that doesn't even work as an analogy.
What if the idea is we only picked all the low hanging fruit here, and then we're having
the stupid argument about low hanging fruit, and we're not going and looking for new orchards.
We're not planting new orchards, we're not looking for forests, we're just sitting here arguing
about low hanging fruit.
So my claim is there's probably a lot more low hanging fruit and it's not here.
It's in other orchards. It's in other orchards. One of those turned out to be the digital orchard. The digital orchard has not been a stagnant
as lots of these other like the chemical orchard, you know, I have faith that there's a small percentage of the population, but not zero that's looking
for those other orchards.
Like I'm excited about one of those orchards, which is I believe there will be robots and
everybody's homes and that will unlock some totally new thing.
Totally new set of technologies, ideas, the way we live life, the productivity, everything, it'll change
everything.
So I'm excited about that orchard.
So I'm roaming that orchard and wondering how the hell you bring back the amt that finds
a new source of food.
I'm trying to find an apple I can bring back to the rest of the house.
Great.
So you're in an explorative. And you have faith that there's enough of those.
I don't think there are very many of us. I mean, I'm, I'm one of them.
Yeah. How many does it take? Takes one hand.
Takes one end. What are you talking about? How many, you know,
long as does it take to screw in a light bulb? Okay. Let's imagine
that we went, imagine some ant goes and finds a new source of food.
Right?
And then it comes back to the colony and it says, hey, I think I found a new source of
food.
And the initial reaction is, you're not authorized to find new food.
What?
Why would you try to go find new food?
We're going to remove you from Twitter.
Yeah. And by the way, I think the fact that you think you're allowed to go find new food? We're going to remove you from Twitter. Yeah.
And by the way, I think the fact that you think you're allowed to go find new shows how privileged
you are as an ant.
Get out of the colony.
Tell him, tell him.
Well, that's probably not a great model for finding new orchards.
And I think that what we find is that where there's a system that allows somebody to ascend
without a lot of gatekeeping. You can have that, but I saw this happen in hedge funds.
Hege funds for a while hoovered up a lot of talent
because they were places that had funding and had freedom.
And in general, really smart people want to be free
and they don't want to think a lot about how they're going
to feed themselves.
They want to get lost in their minds.
So you can either give them productive places to play, dangerous places to play.
They're either going to break into computers or find vaccines for you or build bombs or
build companies.
And we're not providing for the people who have to disrupt and have to
innovate and trying to channel that effort. We're so focused on this other thing, which is like
fairness and safety. And fairness and safety, by the way, are really important. I don't want to
denigrate them. But the singular focus on fairness and safety without it in the same breath being focused on growth and
discovery and creation
Is going to do must because what we're talking about is we're always talking about divvying up the pie that is as opposed to
The pie that will be imagined that you spent all your time trying to divvy up the 13th century pie and
You destroyed your ability to get to the
20th century. You'd be an idiot.
But one place I think I'd disagree with you is I don't think you need that many people
to empower the geniuses, the innovators, the people who refuse to spend most of their
days in meetings about fairness.
This is good. Let's have a disagreement.
I think podcasts and whatever you call that medium, about fairness. This is good. Let's have a disagreement.
I think podcasts and whatever you call that medium,
it's just one little example of a tool
that you can give power to make you and your podcast
can have the next Elon Musk and make him a star.
Now I see where you're going.
OK.
There has been a series of places for people to play
and be free.
And we've lost them successfully.
What's a good place you remember?
Because I disagree with you there too.
I think they're still there.
You can still play.
You interviewed Noam Chomsky.
Yes.
Okay. Noam Chomsky comes from an era.
Well, you can play.
Where you could play.
At MIT. At MIT. And you can't play. This is where can play where you could play at MIT and MIT.
And you can't play.
This is where I disagree with you.
We've already had this, but go check the clips channel for the Lex Friedman podcast.
I think I wasn't brave enough at that time, and I'm not really brave enough now.
Come on.
Because I don't want to.
It's a feeling and people are going to tear me apart.
Oh, what are you and you speak from emotion in facts?
The way the feeling that podcasts is, it's yours.
Yes.
Okay.
Tell the people who are currently editing your brain, because I saw that move right now.
Yeah.
The picture go find another podcast, right?
Let's get rid of some of your audience right now.
Yeah. Please go find another podcast if you're editing my brain. Nevertheless, all the
self-doubt, they're sitting in that brain. So I can't stand to watch this, but all right.
Yeah.
What is the self-doubt loop that you're in?
The thing is, when I walk the halls of MIT, there's bureaucracy, there's administrators
that never have done anything interesting in their entire lives, there's bureaucracy, there's administrators that never have done anything interesting in
their entire lives, there's meetings, there's all the usual crap, but there's in the eyes of
individuals. There's this glow of excitement that's nothing to do with career. I understand this
and that's it's still a playground. There's little little pockets of playgrounds from which genius can emerge still and
They're unaffected by diversity meetings or fairness meetings or or this is a lot of blood school. I love to hear that yeah, right?
You don't think so. I don't believe it
Because I've watched the change like I've watched people
We are all editing ourselves all the time. I remember my old mind, I liked it better.
All of this relentless focus on critical race theory, you know, critical theory, post-modernism,
fairness, social justice, it's making many of us into worse people.
You think that's that, do you think the Mad Damon's of, you know, the character is paying
attention to any of that? You think that has in the fact that you've seen you think the Mad Damon's, of, you know, the character is paying attention
to any of that?
You think that has an effect?
If you've seen what happened to Matt Damon himself,
Matt Damon has tried to say various things at various times
that seem to be relatively innocuous.
He can't, can't speak.
Okay, well let's, let's not mix up.
Matt Damon is just an actor.
That, well, I don't know.
He was just a Harvard student who came up
with his own genius screenplay, acted and made it happen. No, no, no, we're somewhere else.
You don't think you can build the rocket company. I might think that there are things that you can still do, but we're losing them. We lose them. We keep losing them. I would say the biggest problem here, let me just say like what I think the solution would be is to fire anybody who is doesn't like who's not faculty, especially they've lost the fire, the spark that gave them,
they've lost the memories of the playground.
And so the people that admire and love the playground,
like you could see it in their behavior,
should have way more power.
And so we should create a systems that give them power.
But you're very idealistic, yeah.
And you're very, you've got a huge heart.
It's a weird time because I don't want to dissuade you from believing beautiful things.
Because I see how potent you are.
You do all these things.
You do to guitar, podcast, and programming, computers, etc.
I don't think you're right.
I think we're in a really deeply screwed up place
where even the tiny number, let me give you an alternate version of the dystopia. I do
think that there are people who are capable and there's still places to play and cause
things to happen that progress the story forward. But if you look at the fire that some
of the people are in who fit that profile, like how
much crap has Elon Musk taken, quite considerable.
And not much admiration from the...
Craig Venter, Jim Watson.
These are very difficult people. Steve Jobs is a very difficult guy, you know?
It is a bit heartbreaking to me. I mean, everybody is different generations.
I just, my mind is a little focused on Elon Musk because he's the modern person.
Well, you know him. I mean, he's a person to you.
It hurts my heart to see how few faculty and people with Nobel prizes
and so on admire Elon, like how little prop, he gets, he gets a lot of fans from like
people who buy his products and you know young minds. Yeah. Just excited, but like why don't we as in teach why doesn't MIT say that we want to we
Somebody amongst us will be the next Elon Musk and we want to encourage them
Like say that say that in meetings say that like that success
Okay, I think for us as MIT and
They instead there's this jealousy. It's like, well, here's the great
here what Elon Musk tweeted. Did you, did you see like how responsible is what
he's doing? How, like, just saying all these things that are just dripping with
jealousy and basically, I want what he's got. That's the thing, right? And if, yeah,
here's the weird thing. R, rivalry has a different signature.
You see, when you know that you're never going to make it, that's the position you take.
What is it in Kung Fu Panda, which you've watched now?
Yes.
What does Tai Long say when he's looking for the dragon warrior and the furious five come to
defeat him on the bridge? One of them gives up Poe's name accidentally and Tai Long hears it.
Poe, so that is his name. Finally, a worthy opponent. Our battle will be legendary.
Right? He's excited.
Why is that?
Well, you learn about this in boxing.
Sometimes you'll see a division for an MMA,
which is lousy with talent.
You can't swing a cat without hitting an amazing, amazing athlete.
Sometimes you'll have a division,
which at that particular moment has one star
and no real competition in that weight class or something.
That person is in bad shape because you can't build a legend without
the other
When you think of Muhammad Ali, what are the names that you immediately think of?
And you have to phrase your
You have to think of the other
Listen, right? So, those opponents are in part what made Muhammad Ali, Muhammad Ali.
And that's why the Mayweather McGregor revelation, this guy has his opponents picture in his
house. How weird is that?
Well because without the opponent you may not be able to get there now. I am not a huge fan of
The wrong kinds of rivalries
You have examples in mind
Well, there are rivalries where people take each other's credit and screw each other over and then there are other rivalries like
the RNA tie club where these guys were so in love with what they were doing that they couldn't
wait to share everything. And like Nobel prizes were so abundant that you know most people got
Nobel prizes just for being a member of the RNA tie club and doing cool stuff. And yeah, that's the golden kind of sweet spot. Most of these people
can't do what Elon's doing because they can't break rules, they can't take the pressure.
I'll tell you what I really concerns me about your perspective. I think that there are a lot of
genius ideas inside of people who don't have the stomach for conflict and derision. I think a lot of those people are female. And I think that until we
come up with a world in which we can squat down the trolls, where we can
actually cause the trolls not to ruin everything. And I don't necessarily mean
by shutting them up, I don't necessarily mean by being brutal to them,
but somehow separating off people who are working
and people who are trolling.
I think that we're losing a huge amount of human genius,
in part, because women in particular are not necessarily
going to push an idea if it results in 10 years
of being derided.
Very few men are willing to do that either, but there are some of us who are so dumb that
we will pick headedly stick to an idea for 10 years even if the world collapses.
I don't think that there are as many women who are going to make that calculation even
if they know the idea is correct.
And one of the things that I believe technology
can help us fight the trolls of all definitions of troll.
I believe that a better Twitter can be built.
Interesting.
I do not.
I don't believe that a Twitter successor
can be built that solves most of the problems.
I think you can always improve what we have.
But I don't think that converges in something
that really works because I think ultimately the problem isn't Twitter the problem is us.
For example, I've recently made a very disturbing realization, which is academics and trolls have very many similar behaviors.
Absolutely.
It's largely a trolling community. I tend to believe that the trolls are not, it's like the Peter Tio, many mind idea, which
in all of the trolls, there's the possibility of goodness.
And all you have to do, not all you have to do, what you have to do is create technology that incentivizes them to embrace, to discover,
to embrace, to practice the better angels of their nature. And I believe that, like,
the people actually want to do that. The trolls is a short-term dopamine rush of childish toxicity that all of us want to overcome.
I believe that like deep within, we want to overcome that.
I try to keep myself from believing what you believe,
because you'll be disappointed if it's not just dangerous, because a lot of these people
are implacable foes, and there aren't many of them
but when you meet somebody's like yeah, I just like screwing people up. I'm here for the pain.
I just believe even in them. There's a good. It's a wonderful book that I'm gonna recommend to you
where I hope this comes from. Maybe I've got their source wrong, but in any event, it's a great book called
Maximum City about Bombay.
I believe the conceit is that the author leaves Bombay as a kid and comes back as an adult
and he realizes he has to rediscover the city because he can't live in the city he left.
So he gets in contact with all of the weird areas of the city and one of them is the Underworld.
He hangs out with the police, but in the Underworld he's talking to contract killers.
And he says, you know, it's really weird.
Everybody pleads for their life right before I kill them.
And they always say this thing about, I've got two kids at home.
He says, never say that to a contract killer because we have terrible relationships with our parents.
Doesn't endure us to you.
And I was thinking like, oh wow.
So there's a minus sign in front of that statement.
You're sitting there saying, you know,
I've got a three year old.
It's like, okay, well, I'm going to take this POS out
of that kid's life, maybe I'll have a chance.
You don't know how people are wired.
And as much as I hate to say it, there are people whose wiring is so disturbing and so different from yours, that you will never guess why you can't reach them or how much pleasure they may have
gotten because they may have gone over a point of no return. Nevertheless, you are just a smart guy who is using his intuition
to make a hypothesis. You do not know this for sure. No. And I am a, you know, whatever the hell I am,
that has a different hypothesis that even in the darkest human beings that seem to be only full of evil,
there's a good person there that could be discovered.
And one of the reasons I love doing your show
is that you have these beliefs, even as a Russian.
Now, the Russian special, as you know,
the Russian, there is a weirdness,
which is a total cynicism and total idealism locked together, right? That's very much part of the Russian, there is a weirdness, which is a total cynicism and total idealism locked together.
That's very much a part of the Russian character. The reason I was kept bothering you,
kept bothering you to have this conversation is I'm really worried about the next couple of months.
No kidding. And if there's anybody in this world that could help alleviate my worry by at least walking along with me through this worry of mine, it's you. some kind of division that explodes beyond just stuff on Twitter, but something that's really destructive to the fabric of our society.
Well, I believe we're in a revolution, as you know. I've called it the no-name revolution or n-squared revolution. I've been talking about it for years.
I don't think, I think waiting for this to be called a civil war is not smart.
Only history will call it such fine, but I think that the problem is is that you're encountering
things that you've never seen trying to fit them into things that you already know.
Right. And but history repeats itself. Yes. Ish. You don't see lessons from history in— I do. We see today. But I don't see
it repeating itself. The famous quote is that it rhymes. It rhymes. I mean, the thing I'm, I guess,
I'm speaking to is violence. And we're in there. The abstraction of violence. Imagine you were coding up violence as an abstract class. Okay?
Thank you for speaking to the audience. Trying to lose these people. Come with me. Go on.
No, no, no. I've dealt with your audience and your audience contains the smartest people
around. I guarantee you if I say some stuff, first of all, any wrong thing that I'll say,
they're in a detail, so that'll be a little bit of catnip
to bring in the smart people.
But they'll also digest it for each other.
It's one of the great lessons of long form podcasting.
If you don't waste all your time explaining things
that's the job of the audience to do amongst themselves,
they're happy doing the work and those who aren't,
they leave.
Isn't that great they'll leave? The people and those who aren't, they leave. Isn't that great?
They'll leave. The people who don't want to struggle will leave. You can get rid of them.
I think that the point is you would want to say violence is defined relative to a context.
So let's call it meta-violence so that we don't get into the problem. We already have a term
for physical violence, right? So we have meta-violence and physical violence. I would say that physical violence
is subclassed from meta-violence. Meta-violence is the disruption of a system. It's sort of,
you know, it's a, you know, if we, for example, if a cell dies, you can die through a
poptosis or necrosis. A poptosis is controlled, programmed cell death. Necrosis
is just like, okay, this didn't work. That was a violent disruption of the system. And this
meta-class is presumed in the documentation, is it all negative? No, what are you talking
about? So this is part of the problem in the madness of our age, right? Which is, if you open up a drawer in your cabinet, right, in your kitchen, and you see
knives, spoons, and forks, do you have a sense that the spoons are good utensils and
the knives or forks are bad utensils because they're mean?
I mean, like, if you start thinking in these terms,
that knife is there to do violence.
That's violence you want done.
Right, when I cut a mango,
I'm doing violence to the mango.
The mango expects that I will do violence to it
because otherwise I won't be able to get the meat
and it won't get its seed spread somewhere else. So in part, violence
is absolutely part of our story. So, okay, so there's this meta-violence class. Yeah, and what's,
so the meta-violence class is already, you know, it's a multiple inheritance pattern, whatever's
going on right now inherits from meta-violence. No, but there's certain subclasses that allow evil to emerge.
So what I'm specifically worried about is that the effect on your mind likes.
What's really going on?
Okay.
I worry that amidst the chaos of these protests or the chaos that could be created by the feeling
that the election does not represent the voice of the people, like saying that whoever gets
quote unquote wins the election according to some kind of reporting of the numbers that
come out that's not going to represent what people actually want, people actually want
to be the leader.
Like something in that narrative will create so much division that people will resort to
literal violence, like protest that really that the United States loses its United aspect.
And because of that, because of that chaos and tension, evil people, evil forces, that
my definition of evil is, you know, just cruel human beings, use that moment to attain
power, the kind of power that ultimately goes against the ideal
of the United States.
That could be Donald Trump, that could be another human being.
It doesn't really matter.
My worries that love doesn't win out in this.
The unity doesn't win out in this.
And I feel like you and I have responsibility.
No, small.
Yeah, I know.
And so how do we let love win in this moment of potential chaos?
You're going to have to become a fighter.
You're going to have to throw some serious punches if that's what you want.
You have to be Muhammad Ali here because the moment you start criticizing anything,
people you have to be a masterful communicator because that's why you're here.
Look, Lex, in part, your decency is allowing you to do things that you couldn't otherwise do.
I saw that you had Michael Malis on your podcast.
Yeah.
Now, Michael Malis is, I think of somebody who,
at his best is extremely shrewd and insightful, yes?
He's also got this trolling game,
which is quite open about, and you talk to him about him,
which I can't stand.
And this is the idea, oh, Grandpa doesn't get the internet.
Well, I'm grandpa, I don't get the internet,
I don't love the trolling.
Yeah.
There are trolls of the past who were incredibly good.
I don't see any of the modern trolls
as being that kind of genius level,
trolling the people who deserve it
in the way that they deserve it.
You know, right now what I see is that anything that stands up gets cut down.
Yeah. You know, it's like anything earnest.
You have to turn into cynicism and a meme.
And it's this idea that the people who believe that the world is chaos and has no point are constantly trying to let you know, don't try to use the internet for
meaning, for decency, for goodness, because we are going to find out that that's all
sanctimonious hypocrisy, and we will make you suffer.
So I do think that there's a lot of sanctimonious hypocrisy in the world, some of it mine, some
of it yours, but we all have it.
And the trolls somewhat remove that, but it's not a judicious
kind, constructive compassion, a caring version most of the time. And a lot of those trolls,
and I have this feeling about Michael Males, I don't know whether it's right, that there's
somebody who deeply cares and loves beneath it, and that that's motivating some of the
trolling behavior. And you and I don't seem to be doing that. I don't see you as almost ever trolling.
You and I, I'm very much against trolling.
I'm very much against trolling.
It doesn't mean that it's selective.
You know, I'm not even, it's not even true.
Like everything we say, we say, like I'm forward,
I'm against it.
This isn't my native language.
I speak nuance.
I don't speak this internet shit.
And the more I have to communicate through internet shit, right, I almost never take a
tweet seriously if it contains the letters LMAO, LOL, RTFL, you know, FOL.
There's an interesting effect where people say stuff and then finish with LOL.
You put it beautifully that it indicates to me that this is a person we've talked about
like why I wear the stupid suit.
Yeah.
This is anti, this is to fight the LOL at the end of sentences.
It's like stand up for the words you're saying.
Yeah.
Don't finish stuff with LOL, removing completely
the responsibility of the content of the sentence
that preceded it.
Yeah.
Also choosing the outfit that works both for men
and black and the blues brothers, not a terrible choice.
Okay, but getting back, look, Lex, we're not
in a position to do this.
You need to be seated in a different chair. Your chair is the wrong chair. You're in the wrong chair. It's been so long.
I want to talk about you and Joe Biden.
Joe Biden was a 29 year old guy with nothing particular going on so far as I can tell. Okay? I know people as impressive at age 29 as
Joe Biden, you know, 12 rows back, 3D, it doesn't matter. Huge number of people. None of
them, my age, can get to where he got to. Like we're all morons. Anytime somebody takes out, like if you found Eddie Van Halen in a guitar
shop, you'd be angry. What is this guy doing repairing guitars? Then somebody
will say, maybe he loves to repair guitars. Yeah, I mean, what is your piano, Russian piano,
tune, are doing? What is my Russian piano? That was the whole point of that story,
which is what is it that happened in that life
that converted somebody?
I find this, for example, with Russian doctors
who are technicians and offices now.
There's a huge amount of talent in the world
that's not sitting in its proper seat.
And quite honestly, I've gotten to the point where my feeling is we've got to take the seats.
Right, maybe we don't sit in them. Maybe the idea is that we take the seats and we put some smart Gen Z person in the seat and say, look, no chanting. I don't want to hear you say, no justice, no peace.
If there aren't verbs, if it rhymes, it's wrong.
Like I used to have this thing,
it rhymes, things that rhyme are more true.
But like in general, if something starts at one, two, three, four,
I don't want to hear what the rest of your sentence is.
Yeah.
But I feel like the responsibility that you carry, that I carry, this is where Joe Rogan
generally removes himself from being, I'm just a comedian, this idea of I'm just a comedian.
I'll do that.
But at this moment in history, like history literally can pivot on the words of a tattooed ripped 50-year-old comedian.
And I think the same is true with you.
Okay, well, I'm interested in I care.
Speaking of lyrics, there are many here among us who feel that life is but a joke.
That's not us.
The hour is getting late.
That's not us.
In the song, the joke or in the thief are on opposite sides of Jesus having this conversation
over Jesus.
You and I, we've been through that.
That's not our fate.
That's somebody else's fate to throw spitballs at the internet.
That's not your fate.
You're an earnest guy.
You're filled with love.
You're getting the most amazing podcast.
Yes.
You're rock and gas.
We're the internet.
This is the point of trying to make that you're saying, I'm just a grandpa.
I don't know the internet.
No, I'm telling you you're going to get bigger and then you're going to get cut down.
You're going to keep ascending for a while, Lex.
And then you're saying, and naturally, there's a problem. I'm telling you, I watch the same process.
People get up to a certain level.
And one of the things that's going on in my opinion
with Joe Rogan is that when Joe Rogan starts to talk
about his misgivings about Joe Biden, in a way that
you find it any bar in America, about cognitive decline,
in a 77-year-old who's about to be 78, I believe in November.
We have never had anything remotely as insane as a 78 year old person slated to win the
White House.
And you're saying when that idea is being communicated, is there something that's about the disc concept
you talk about the system that starts to...
Some bad thing happens to Joe or one of Joe's close associates.
The ability to destroy people who become inconvenient has been documented.
This is what we have done in the past.
Whether we are doing it now, we don't know because we are not doing this church committee
too.
In order to know whether or not you are currently
destroying American citizens as we did in the past,
and as we have documented, as we found out in 1976,
the federal government destroyed Americans
who had political beliefs that the government
didn't want to continue.
And I don't know whether you are grasping that. One interpretation of why John Stewart and why Joe Rogan
and why Bill Marr, all these people, to some extent hide behind it's a joke.
It's because they're trying to find a protected class. Is there some place I can stand and speak the truth which does not result in my being garbage collected.
Interesting. I guess you're right. My intuition is you can stand as you gain more power. You can stand.
There's a fight over Joe Rogan right now. I mean, I talked about it for a few years now.
People did not understand how big that program was.
People didn't understand long form podcasting.
I was derided by people who,
I think of as being very shrewd
for believing in these podcasts,
that's a major force.
And most of the people who derided me
have said, wow, did I not get things?
It's like if you're started to propose,
you know, you wanted to do the
sopranos in the era of 30-minute sitcoms. Like, you don't get it, man. The American people,
they're not interested in these long plot storylines. That's your weird thing. Nobody cares, dude.
Everybody just wants short, fast, memorable. And like, okay, so if you do that, you totally miss
the opportunity. And you know, the savvy people used to say, kid, let me And like, okay, so if you do that, you totally miss the opportunity.
And you know, the savvy people used to say, kid, let me tell you, nobody ever lost a dime
underestimating the intelligence of the American people. Well, that was totally wrong,
because they didn't calculate opportunity costs. I have been talking about the problem of Joe
for a long time. The problem is, is that when the system wakes up, they're going to want to control it.
And they've different, they come up with new different mechanisms of doing that. I guess
one interesting one is cancel culture. Well, look at the number of people around Joe who they've
come after since they've realized that Joe was really big. Joey Diaz, Brian Callan,
is Brian Callan, Chris D'Aliah. Now, I'm not saying that those are all related, but I do notice that there are at least correlations between when Joe says something, when something bad happens
in Joe's universe. It's easier for me to believe that that's happening
when it's happening around Joe himself.
Yeah.
But I'm worried about my friend.
And I don't necessarily want to push him
towards being more if he doesn't want it.
Because I don't think, I don't want to conscript people.
He's got a great life, he's got a great situation,
he's done a huge service.
Thank God. Do you know? Yeah. Like, how much do I owe Joe just for what he's done for you to say nothing of what he's done for me or for Brett or for Sam or any of these people?
And, you know, I'd like to think that we all try to give back. But I'm worried about Joe.
He's not worried.
back, but I'm worried about Joe. He's not worried. One of the inspiring things about Joe, yeah, is I mean, he's in this war alone. And the way he fights the war is by just enjoying life.
Well, that's his thing. It's all he stays close to things that he loves and being, you know,
the one of the things he's honest about his drug use. He loves to hunt. So he's just he does a certain
amount of like semi-vice signaling up front and then you just also know him. This is why every time
they try to take him down, you use the N word, you know, it's like unfortunately everybody knows
who Joe is and he yes he doesn't act as if he went to a fancy finishing school.
Right? That's not his energy. The fact that you've got some super smart guy who always
pretends to be a meathead, just like, you know, it's like, hey, I'm a comedian.
It's like all these defenses and disguises. Okay, you've got the super smart guy who he's
admitted to most of the things that, know, you can you can take him down
for him because everybody's been effectively in his den or his basement. Think about that
studio is his basement. People have hung out with Joe so many hours that you can't tell
them something about Joe or they're going to say, wow, I'm going to believe the New
York Times and not the hundreds of hours I've spent on the Joe Rogan experience.
But the cool thing is that this is what inspires me is that the way he's waging more against
the system is just by being a good person and talking enough hours in a week where that
message bleeds throughout the words in the gaps between.
And that's so inspiring to me that the good people can win by just being good.
And he's kind and he's tough.
And he also, he's no pushover.
No, I always worry a little bit when I sit down and I chair.
You still get scared that he'll call you on some kind of bullshit that you weren't even aware of.
No, the first time I was on the show, the energy wasn't great between us.
And it was in a sober October situation. So I think I hadn't understood that.
And maybe our ego's got a little bit off.
I don't know.
I mean, I was having fun, but maybe it was just two complicated life forms getting to know
each other.
The first one was probably, yeah, that made me a little nervous for the future.
But then, you know, Joe and I have become friends, although sometimes we have miscommunications
like on Yom Kupor.
I texted him and I said, Joe, you know, I want to apologize for ways I would let you
down as a friend that haven't been there for you and appreciate everything you've done
from me all this time.
Like, I get this text back like, what the fuck is your problem?
You're great, dude.
I don't know what bad place you're in, but cheer up.
It's like, Joe, you're too many Jews in your life to apologize for what they've done.
He was just like, dude, if you lost your mind, what the hell's gotten into you?
Yeah.
What do you think about the Spotify thing?
What about it?
Ask me a question.
He's now, as opposed to being just a comedian
with a podcast, he now is just a comedian
with a podcast who stepped like in the middle
of the center of cancel culture,
which is like, I know Spotify is in Sweden,
but they represent Silicon Valley.
They represent the very kind of structures. They contain and represent the kind of structures
that threaten to destroy the Elans of the world. And he just like stepped like with his
Alex Jones and his Joey Diaz just strolled right into the middle of it.
Yeah, I think it's awesome. I love it. But do you think he's strong enough to...
Well, I don't know. I mean, I don't even know the right way to ask this, but is he strong enough to persevere?
It's a bit interesting. It's like when a lion decides, wow, that honey badger looks tasty. I'm going to swallow it whole.
See what happens.
Because I talked to him offline.
He really seems to be willing to give away the 100 million,
which gives him so much power.
Oh, I don't...
It's a powerful thing to be able to say, I don't...
Yeah, the honey badger.
He just strolls in, but he's willing to walk away from anything in the...
Well, he's gonna walk out the other side of the line.
I don't think he's gonna go out the way he came in.
Yeah.
Well, you know what it is?
It's Tommy Lee Jones entering the bug.
This is like a giant alien.
He just walks into it.
He gets swallowed by the bug and he blasts out from the inside.
I have it as Tommy Lee Jones.
Yeah.
That's Joe Rogantia. Yeah.
Is that my feeling is that Spotify doesn't understand what they're messing with. I could be wrong.
But I'm not. No, you're right. I'm right.
Because Joe doesn't need anything, man. I mean, this is the weird thing about it. It's like,
I'm sure that he loves all his toys, whatever. blah blah blah. He's a rich guy. Yes, he's got FU money. He had FU money a long time ago. And you're not, you know, the other thing about it's a bit
weird being friends with a dude like that. It just is because like you call him up or
he'll call you up and he's like, what's going on in your life? I don't know. Kind of depressed,
trying to get some math done. What are you up? Oh? Dude, I can cheer you up. I just came off of a 29,000 person stadium
It's like oh cool. How'd you do that? Oh, I don't know. I just announced it on Instagram a few days ago and it filled up
just like oh
damn
Yeah, I mean that thing is like I love that guy. It's so powerful. Yeah, so there you go. I mean you could be that too
The instant we can be that too.
It's so takes an interest in politics and saving the world.
You might destroy all that.
It's going bye bye.
I promise.
I just disagree with you.
I mean, because you have to do it.
You've said this many times before.
I'll bet you.
I'll bet you a bottle of stolly that you can get,, you get Joe Rogan to get highly politically active
and call out the system for all the bullshit
that it is in a very pointed and determined fashion.
And he doesn't get destroyed, I'll give you the vodka.
The vodka?
Yeah.
That sounds like a pretty damn good deal.
So, but you've said this, I mean,
no living hero is my friend.
No living hero. I mean, no living hero is my friend. No living hero.
I just, no living heroes.
It's just difficult.
You just have to be good at it.
I mean, if you just say generic political things,
no, no, you're going to be taken down,
but it's more heroic.
I'm honest with it.
The more beautiful you are,
the more you will be made to suffer. If they cannot
get you on reputation, if Jesus himself came down, I don't know if I ever read, I probably
have never read to you the hit piece I did on Jesus. You don't know about this? I did not
know. I did hit pieces on all of the best people in the world. So whoever it was who cured
cancer, discovered new particles or whatever it is,
I did a hit piece against them to prove that I can do it to anybody around anything at any time.
Except Eddie Van Halen is what we're talking about. Well, Eddie Van Halen is now dead,
but if this was a situation, you know, hot for teacher, canceled. This respectful.
Absolutely.
Also, you know, packaging, uh, female objectification for young men, clearly
Eddie Van Halen is one of the worst people a lot.
But it was the skill.
The incredible inspiration that is just radiating from his music inspires so many
millions that they will fight those cancel pieces.
They will fight those.
This is your thing.
You have this idea that there's a war between good and evil and the good is already but
the side designated the winner.
It's not true, but you're believing that it's true.
So for making it, no?
You got to, it's motivating both of us.
Like I also believe that we're gonna win
because if I don't, then I can't get out of bed
and it's pretty heavy at the moment.
Do you think 2021 can make us feel good
about the trajectory of society?
So like, where we emerge from this year, feeling good.
Like, there's a smile and there are questions that has faced.
And the next time we talk, we'll be doing some kind of
duet and guitar and not having this worried look on our faces.
No.
Okay, but you've also promised you could go into some house
and this in a positive positive, it's okay. So, how do do you turn the know around what's the you turn from the know?
No, I until we get some actually decent people in the right chairs
Who are not constantly thinking about their next paycheck? I don't see a solution
Let me just say what the the prerequisites for a solution are and to let you know why I don't think it's coming
First of all both of these political parties the leadership of them is disgusting and has to go they're tearing us apart
They lack the will to be Americans. They don't understand the subtlety of the project
There's simply the people who figured out how to inhabit the seats,
and that is their great achievement. I believe that in order to solve this, you need people
who can integrate, who are not partisan at the level of the partisan warriors that we're
seeing, people who believe in dividing the pies of the future rather than the present pie
as our main task as Americans, because we are built around growth. I'm sorry to say it.
You need an ability to have subtle conversations and you need the ability to exclude.
And you know, at the moment, everyone knows inclusion is good, which it isn't.
It's like saying, well, water is good.
If I say water is good, everybody will agree with me.
It's not.
People drown.
People need to, you know, get dehydrated,
it can be life-saving or life-ending.
It isn't good or bad.
Inclusion is not good or bad.
Inclusion is just inclusion.
Exclusion is part of inclusion.
We've taught people that they can
reason through the world as sub- you know, conqueror spaniels. They just bark things at each other.
You know, I'm for safety. I'm for inclusion. I'm for growth. Oh really? Do you guys use verbs?
for growth. Oh really? Do you guys use verbs? Dependent clauses? Are there compound complex sentences? Where are we in this C of nonsense? You have to be able to build a place where you have smart,
talented people who represent a diverse group of correct opinions. You need to get rid of almost
all of the people who have opinions that are antithetical to what we're trying to accomplish.
You need to give them insulation, which we're terrified because we don't trust anybody.
So everything has to be transparent. If you're going to the bathroom, I want those walls to be plexiglass, so I can see what you're doing.
It's like, that's too much transparency. We have too much and not enough at the same time. And then, you know, in essence, you need to ensure that
people aren't worried about feeding their family every four seconds for being real. None of that
is happening. And our billionaires? Our billionaires are pathetic. What is the point of billionaires?
If you're not going to do billionaire type cool stuff like saying FU.
And I'm gonna throw, you know, $3 billion at the project of restoring the national conversation.
I don't grasp this.
What is the point of creating obscene wealth
if we don't have anyone smart enough
and caring enough to use it?
So I grew with that last part for sure.
I mean, slightly push back on the idea
that the leaders themselves are broken.
I feel like this goes to the Joe Rogan,
Joe Biden and Trump having a debate on that program.
I feel like Joe Biden has a lot of really interesting ideas that he's
almost forgot how to communicate. He's been fake for so long within his system. Hillary was fake
for too long. I'm sure she had real ideas at the beginning that she still was campaigning on
decades later. But like if the system, if the platforms empowered you to search, to be honest, to be real, to search for those ideas within yourself
like long form conversations do, then we, even the Donald Trump and Joe Biden leaders we have now
would would take this country to a better place that would unite people. So like, we can keep the
current Congress, we just need
to create better platforms. This is going to the intuition that there's good and Donald
Trump. There is depth and components. There is good intelligence. There is. And the
same with Joe Biden. There's good and Joe Biden. And it's just we're not incentivizing.
I mean, there's several things I think are broken. One of them is Twitter, the other is journalism.
It's just the platforms of us communicating with each other.
One of the reasons that I try to come up with unifying explanations is that, you know,
if you look at the number of wildfires in California, let's say that we've just seen,
if you treat them all as spontaneous, uncorrelated instances, it feels like, oh my God, it's just
whack them all.
Every time I send a fire truck here, there's a fire over there.
So you want to come up with something like a central theory, which is why do I suddenly
have a problem when I hadn't had a problem before?
So I look for these unifying explanations.
And I found one the other day that really speaks to me.
I mean, people are very frustrated because they've been trained to think about this incorrectly,
in my opinion. But here's the graph that you need to look at. On the x-axis is time by year.
And on the y-axis is something like average age of a human.
The title of the graph is any desirable situation involving institutions.
So that could be CEO, it could be tenured professor.
It could be who's getting grants. It could be the age at which people win Nobel prizes.
University presidents, all these things go up.
In other words, for a long period of time, the average age of the person in a desirable
situation has been increasing something like nine months for every 12.
Those graphs have to go down at some point. The specter of
continually putting, of having five people all born in the 1940s as the final
entrance in the presidential context. That makes no sense.
Think about how bizarre a thing that nobody is even really talking about.
The last five people were all ancient by presidential standards, not one, not two, but five.
We are talking about a contest between somebody who is the oldest of the baby boomers.
The very beginning of the baby boom, summer of 46th birthday, fighting somebody who is
in the silent generation.
The silent generation guy in a town hall in Florida gets this question from a Gen Z guy
saying, you know, what's going on with my future? Joe Biden has the audacity to say, I'm a transitional
president. You guys, the highly educated one, when has any
generation in history needed a transitional 78 year old
person to take office? It's bizarre. It's preposterous. That
graph is the graph we can't talk about. That graph is the graph
of our destruction. Because it has the, you can make a one line argument, which is sounds
like ageism, which isn't a very good argument. Now, but what it does is, is it, it muddles
the conversation. And you always have to ask yourself the question if this
Conversation becomes muddled who wins as a result of the modeling
What's a battle, but so let's just win it. Let's win the battle. You give for you running
For sure blah run. I was born Russia. Yeah, so
But we Russians can hack elections. We'll figure it out
Yeah, Ron. So, uh, but we Russians can hack elections, so we'll figure it out.
Uh, this is me officially announcing my run.
I was born in St. Petersburg, Florida.
Yeah.
Lex, what is it that you really want to ask?
I think I want to put the summer's responsibility on the portal, the portal, the portal, the
portal, that the portal gives power to the people in that graph,
like because you're putting quite brilliantly that the people that move the world,
their age has been going up and not move the world, but put in the position where they get the
chance to affect the world. These new platforms, I think Twitter falls in them,
give power to the younger people.
It doesn't have to be about Asian necessarily,
but the younger thinking people.
So that's a promising thing.
And you are like, you're like Gandalf.
You get to, you get to pick your photos,
or whatever, I'm not very good with the analogy,
but the whole point is
for you, like Gandalf, I don't know if it makes that much sense. Gandalf makes sense. I don't know if
people know how to fit me into this ecosystem. I think there's something in my presentation that
people find very confused. No, figure it out. I'm not, I disagree with you, but you need to look
at the mirror and think like, what, what is it? is it? Is it maybe you need a mustache?
I don't know.
But there's something about figuring out how to be a charismatic
communicator in this.
And that's the responsibility.
You said like finishing sentences with the L.O.L.
is painful for your soul.
That's just how somebody lets me know I don't have to take
their opinions seriously.
Yeah, it's still the language, the, the way that people are communicating and you're swimming that way if you have a big platform
I have a growing platform. It feels like this is the place to give power I agree
But we're gonna get swatted down. I just don't think so you're wrong. Why are you afraid of the big like this as I've studied it
Because I've studied Let me ask you a question
like I believe that every society is supposed to have a collection of what I call break
class in case of emergency people. Yeah. These are people who are universally loved and
trusted by your society. For example, David Attenborough,
the great British naturalist and presenter recently came on Instagram. He's worried about
the planet. And I said, you know, look, they're very few of these people left. Let's pay attention,
find out what he has to say. Maybe he's going to be an ass. Maybe he's going to be in it. Maybe
he's going to say wrong things. Don't know. Tell me about your top 10 universal American heroes.
This is not a rhetorical question.
No.
Give me five.
Everybody looks to that person and says,
yep, the best of us.
But not divisive.
Well, everybody's an interesting concept.
I mean, Elon Musk is very divisive, right?
But I'm talking about overwhelmingly,
people would follow that person,
if that person gave a rousing, intelligent speech
that said we must act now because we're in dire straits.
I think a lot of people fall in that category.
For me, it would be in the tech world,
in the engineering world. Elon Musk. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,att, yeah, so this goes to Joe Rogan.
First two did not really impress me
as being what I said, but okay.
Elon several years ago would have,
can you try to...
Joe Rogan, what do they fail?
What is, what is...
Lots of people treat Joe Rogan as if he's some sort of right-wing racist
because they've never watched his program.
They don't know who his friends, I don't know.
Oh, but when I thought you said everybody, I thought you meant a large enough, people where
huge change can happen, not actually literally everybody.
I mean people who've pulled off, like people who've pulled off something where
everybody is convinced that that person just deeply, I think I've told you the story before,
but the one time I've seen the power of a figure like this, I mean, very few times I've been in a large
crowd and I've seen people just moved where they would do almost anything good
bad and different because they were primed. One was a Rolling Stones concert. The
other one was Nelson Mandela coming to Boston and man you've never seen anything
like this. You check out the photos from the banks of
the Charles River when Nelson Mandela came. There are people that you need in your dark hours and
we can't agree on who they are and as soon as they emerge we tar them with shit. We get out the
shit, Brech. I just disagree with you. So I think, I think what do we disagree about it? Okay. I think it doesn't matter who it is. I think really good speeches are needed.
Right. I think a lot of you give them. I saw killer Mike try to give a good
speech. Yeah. He did. Well, in Atlanta, right? Yeah. He did. That was something.
Very impressed. Yeah. Even killer Mike immediately gets into this.
Yeah, even killer Mike immediately gets into this
sell out like
I yeah, but he he's he didn't take up the responsibility
I would say he didn't of
Of going bigger
So he was speaking to the community and he was doing on this particular moment. He's exceptional at it and
He was speaking to this particular moment. He didn't take it a step farther, which is like giving the same speech, but bigger than
race, bigger than this particular moment, but more about the American project.
You know the guy who landed the plane in the Hudson?
Yes.
Yeah, there you go.
That's a good example.
So that guy, until we screw him up, is the kind of thing that I'm talking about.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, Jocco, maybe that's another, Jocco is pretty good.
Jocco is pretty good.
Can't really tell us.
You're a Democrat as a Republican.
I don't know.
He's an American.
That's for damn sure.
Yeah.
And I think there's a lot of folks. And then you know, I think Jaco, there aren't. That's one of the reasons why
Jaco's so special. Yeah. Your podcast, the portal, is something in my literally universe,
is something a lot of people really love. And it moves them. They draw a lot of meaning
and it moves them, they draw a lot of meaning from it, and also especially in difficult times.
It gives them a comfort of through this kind of, it's not just nuance,
even when you're talking about chaos, there's love underneath all of it. And I think people draw a lot of meaning from it, which is why they are wondering why you haven't been doing that many podcasts,
or you haven't done it in maybe a month and a half or two months in this most difficult of times.
Is there a good reason?
Yeah, there are lots of good reasons.
So the first one is kind of weird, which is everybody assumes that everyone wants to be
famous.
And if you say, I don't want to be famous, it's like, oh, you're just saying that because
you want to be, everyone to think you're famous, you're not that famous. You know, okay. I don't love being as well known as I've become.
There's lots of things that are fun about it.
It's wonderful that you can go to I can go to any city in the world.
And our portal listeners there.
All I knew you to do is put out a tweet.
20 people show up for a drink and they're amazing people.
And they're almost I mean, you can see my live Q&A is on my Instagram page.
If you go to Eric R. Weinstein, I'd just pick somebody randomly.
And I was really worried about it at first.
And maybe I should be worried about it.
But in general, people all over the world are just so positive and so, you know, and
thoughtful and deep and never story.
Because they're self-selected, right?
Yeah, but I don't like the fame.
The thing was just described comes with the fame.
It's a beautiful thing.
You know, you're worried that it's getting it's ephemeral.
It'll, look, Lex, it'll turn on you in a heartbeat.
Yeah.
It'll turn on you in a heartbeat.
And the other problem is I don't, I don't like my audience being my audience.
I want to get closer to them.
I want to talk to them.
I want to find out what is this doing in your life.
My house fills up with art that people send me.
The latest thing is an effects pedal.
Call it something like, I don't know, it's a bow tie overdrive.
From a guy in Mexico.
Right?
Yeah.
You play it left you, by the way, in a tiny little tangent. Did you play electric? I have a strat in Mexico. Right? Yeah. You play it left you, by the way,
and then tiny little tangent.
Did you play electric?
I have a stratocaster,
but it doesn't have a strap,
and I don't know what to do with it,
and I have a bad am.
So you should hook me up with the...
We'll find it at home, maybe.
Okay.
You're starting to sense that this is too much.
No, I want to be here.
I want to do the work very simply. I don't have an ability to fully explain
myself. I don't want to claim that I don't love the fact that how much love do we get from these
programs? Like, generically, people are incredibly generous.
People have begged me to set up a Patreon account and I haven't been able to do it.
I should do it.
I've said to everybody, it's a business,
it's a business, it's a business.
But like, there's so used to being defrauded
when somebody starts thinking about monetary incentives.
My goal was to say, I'm gonna keep talking to you about,
you wonder why I started doing ads on my show,
was because I wanted people to think from the get-go,
this is a business, this is what I sound like when I'm selling.
But you know, like you see, I've lost weight.
A lot of that is due to athletic greens.
Athletic greens, you know.
Code, what's the, what's the, I don't know what my promo code is for athletic greens. Athletic greens. You know, code.
What's the list? I don't know what my promo code is for athletic greens.
Well, probably athletic greens.com slash portal,
but doesn't advertise.
But you know, Fitbit who doesn't advertise
has also been instrumental as well as a guy named Stephen Kates
who, you know, is a fan from the show,
found me on the street and just said,
I'm a trainer, I want to help train you. It's got me on a good path. So, you know, that's one paid advertiser and two people
that I'm calling out just because they're, you know, two outfits, Stephen Cates and Fitbit
that have changed my life. I wanted people to say, you know, you don't have to be afraid of advertising.
If I do it in this way, this is powering your show.
But the whole issue of money is weird
because people have these crazy feelings.
Oh, wow.
I knew he was a shill.
He's a grifter.
OK.
I didn't love that.
I didn't love the issues.
So I didn't set up a Patreon.
The security issues for talking and being me
are significant.
And I don't have the kind of money to hire around the clock.
I mean, I desperately want to get to a level of wealth where I don't have to think about money.
I don't think it's, you know, some people want money because they need it for status.
I think I can handle status if I want it doing this.
I don't want the status necessarily, and I don't want the status, but I don't want the
fame that goes with it.
I want the money.
I don't want to be seen as this is about money because it's about a substance.
All of those things.
That's part of, I haven trying, you know, all of those things. That's part of I Haven't solved these issues
I've been feeling bad because people say where's the portal word we're desperate?
These are difficult times we have an election coming up and it's just like
Do you think for a moment that I want to explain that I actually got really uncomfortable being as well known as I was and then
What is it that I want because I want to be better known and less well known at the same time the same time. There's nothing the audience can do. I don't want the audience to be the
audience. That doesn't make sense to people. I want it to be a business, but I don't think
people need to fear a business if the business is open about being a business. And then that's
all to the side. What you're seeing now in front of the election is an incredibly meta-violent period in our online existence.
And I believe that anybody who attempts to say these two parties are completely screwed
at the moment the leadership of these parties is unsolvable, unworkable.
Everyone hears that from inside the two-party system.
Oh, I get it. He's trying to subtract votes offparty system. Oh, I get it.
He's trying to subtract votes off of Biden.
Oh, I get it.
He's trying to scuttle Trump.
Oh, I get it.
This is a play for his show because he's trying to plug into discuss.
There's a Bill Hicks routine on marketing.
Have you ever seen this?
Brilliant.
I recommend it to everyone where he comes out on stage and he says, are there any people
in marketing and sales in the audience?
Woo, yeah.
Okay, great.
Can you do us all a favor and die?
And like everybody laughs.
He's like, no, I'm not laughing.
I'm seeing people serious.
So he talks about how marketing is horrible.
So you're like, where's this act going?
Then he gets to the point of it.
And it's like, oh, I know how you marketing people think.
Bill's going after that resentment dollar.
That's good dollar.
Let's get that resentment anti-marketing dollar.
Yeah.
It's like, no, that's not what I'm saying.
I really hate marketers.
Oh, that's good.
It's the authenticity dollar.
You can't escape this kind of negative marketing thought.
And I guess that gets to the issue that I don't want to be destroyed in advance
of this election. I don't think it's a good use of my relationship to my audience to
be broadcasting how completely ridiculous Donald Trump and Joe Biden are as candidates
for the president of the United States full stop. None of this makes any sense.
These moderators of these pseudo debates were in the wrong format with the wrong people.
No part of this makes a wit of sense.
Can I try to push back several claims?
One is I don't believe the systems as they stand now can destroy their
request on voice, the voice.
You're a child.
I'm sorry to say that.
Well, let me, well, it's also possible.
It's entirely possible that you're the child.
Because a child would say you would call other people a child.
Yeah, get in the first blow
Tell
Because the only power they have is to attack you psychologically. No, well
I believe that the army of people that love you. Yeah, it's much more powerful than
that love you. Yeah. It's much more powerful than mainstream media, than people that you might hear at say ridiculous things that you just said, which is try to reduce you like
the marketing. Yeah. Thinking, I just believe there's an army. Maybe there's a better
term of people that see you for who you are and are hungry. I'm not disputing those things.
And I'm saying, I would venture to say as your therapist that you're actually
the battle is all in your mind that you have found these demons in the system
that you have found these demons in the system
and they're just a tiny minority and it's all in your mind they cannot actually remove
they're not strong enough to remove the voice
of a requires time to silence the voice
I love this
This is some of the best fiction writing
I've ever heard. Let me tell you, I have
relatives who've known me my entire life where one article in the New York Times, they
will believe that over me. My contention is that there has no power except to affect
your psychology. You're not used to doing the broken thing, just laugh. Not hearing me.
Just laugh.
I am laughing.
I know.
But more.
No, I'm telling you something.
Yes.
Okay.
The way this works is through ruin.
Ruin can come to anyone.
There is no one who cannot be ruined.
Every single person is signed up right now to be ruined by the system.
Don't you understand that you have more power than the system?
The room you can ruin the system.
Your Twitter account, the podcast, I agree.
I'm telling you about the army.
I agree that my Twitter account, my pocket, but what we've seen, for example,
you saw what happened to Brett's articles of Unity project. Yes. Okay, what happened?
The on the Twitter site on the Twitter site. What happened?
What happened? Like she said the word say the word. It was blocked or removed from Twitter
suspends the sound suspended and
Okay, I have a direct I have a direct line to Jack. Yeah.
Okay, so I'm talking to the CEO who I am crazy enough
to still believe in.
Good, I do too.
I believe it.
Somehow, there's a very strange thing going on with Jack
Dorsey.
I cannot possibly reconcile the actions.
But the person, that is a next level mind in there.
I'm not, I don't know it well enough to say
that it's all next level.
I'm not claiming he doesn't have any blind spots
every smart person I know has blind spots.
I don't know what he's up against, blah, blah, blah.
There's no way that the Jack Dorsey that I've talked to
and the Jack Dorsey that interacted over articles of unity
can be the same person.
He is constrained by that company in some way that doesn't make sense to me. Either that or he's the most depletive person on earth and I'm not believing it. I just don't buy it.
Okay. Something horrible is happening.
My claim is I can remove you functionally from the chess board in a tiny number of moves.
No matter who you are, no matter how virtuous or how much of a bastard you've been your entire life,
it doesn't take more than three or four moves to basically neuter you as a force.
Yeah, and I disagree that if that's possible, that means I'm not very good at chess.
Like a unity 2020 was removed from Twitter
because it's not good enough.
Not within the system.
Like, the army of people that feel
the brilliance of the idea was too small.
Okay, but fear uncertainty in doubt
is the name of the game, the point of the realm.
Psychology though, it's not real power.
It just affects the mind. Okay, though, it's not real power. It just affects the mind.
Okay, I have a reading assignment for you. Because you're Russian, you'll really enjoy this.
As part of the great American tobacco settlement, the tobacco institute had to
discourage its archives, of all of its strategies, all of its skull degree, and put it on the web
for all time so that we can all understand how the tobacco companies got together and
destroyed people, right?
You see tobacco destroys people you can see you know, Scientology destroys people there are various vindictive
Organizations that will not tolerate
Reality and opposition to them. Let's take them down. Okay, that's what I'm trying to tell you is okay
No, so so why aren't you doing the podcast to return because that's one of the weapons because war
Well, first of all if you're at war and I don't want to discuss strategy on a podcast, right?
But that's your miss and what did one comery say about Rommel?
But wasn't his line that I read your book you beautiful bastard?
It's like why are you using the tactics that you already explained?
Okay, so one of the things I'm doing is I'm not having a strategic conversation with you and a hundred
several hundred thousand of our closest friends. I
Pulled back
Because this is not the battle that I know what I'm doing. I do not feel
Passionately enough about defeating Donald Trump to elect Joe Biden even if that's the way I'm gonna
Ultimately vote. Right?
I don't believe in the Biden Democratic Party.
I don't believe in the Trump Republican Party.
So yes, it's an incredibly consequential election.
But to me, it's like the crypts and the bloods and the Latin kings fighting over the
right to extort, you know, a business and the business trying to figure out who it wants
To to do the extorting. But don't you think listen?
There's very few people there as good with the English languages you don't don't you think it's possible to
draw a line that doesn't
that be to in between that finds how we
that in between that finds how we find our common humanity that ensures a better 2021 without having to say like Donald Trump is evil or Joe Biden is incompetent or any of that just
somehow drive beautiful scenes and get so much pain.
This election is chewing up the integrity of everyone who comments on it.
Lex, maybe they're not good enough.
They're not good enough.
No, but that, but the hope is do you believe in me?
Yes, you do.
Yes, listen to me very carefully.
My spider sense, my intuition that has allowed me to survive in the space.
I'm mouthing off since the 80s.
Tells me, this is a super dangerous time that has allowed me to survive in the space. I'm mouthing off since the 80s.
Tells me, this is a super dangerous time for smart people to be spending the dry powder
because the election doesn't make sense.
Doesn't mean that I don't have a sense
that one outcome would be better than the other probably,
but the variance on that.
I'm not even positive that I'm right.
better than the other probably, but the variance on that. I'm not even positive that I'm right. These two options are so completely inappropriate to the world of 2020. What we need
is so diametrically opposed to more boomers and more silent generation people trying to
sort out a highly technical world being mediated through social media. We need more
exclusion. We need more actual elites. The people we've called the elites are
not the elite. They need it to go. Yeah, we need excellence, competence. We need
people who can be trusted behind closed doors and we need to close the doors so
we can't see what those people are doing. Here's the thing, imagine that you had a
bunch of people who'd all seen action and combat, had all volunteered to be part of the armed
services, had all come from backgrounds where they didn't need to. So you were convinced that these
people had put their lives on their line for their country, not for a payday. Imagine you had
10 of these people with technical backgrounds.
Men, women, black, white, Muslim, Jew, doesn't matter. Right? I would trust those people
and I close the door. I don't want to know what they talked about. I don't want
transparency into all of their negotiations. I want to know that they're patriotic, that
they see something in the world bigger than themselves and their family fortunes. I want
to know that they're courageous. I want to know that they've got all of our well-being
and I'm willing to roll the dice and if they screw us over, I'd rather go down like
that.
Okay, so I disagree with you there because there's a difference between those and Jaco because
Because you're not speaking to people with credentials of no particular self-credential people
self-credential I view Jaco as self-credential but the biggest the powerful thing about Jaco is he's not only self-credential, but he's
Been real with people the the magical thing about Jacocco isn't his book, isn't his
life story. Is he's been talking on a podcast for a long, there's something real
that happens. Okay, so if you took Dan Crenshaw and Tulsi Gabbard and you took
Jocco Welling and maybe Jesse Ventura, right? You can take, I see where you're
going with this. What? You can take Bernie Sanders where you're going with this what you can take birdie sanders. Yeah, who's you know alone voice
You can take all of these people who've like really just risked
Like why do we trust why is Catherine Hepburn the best that Holly would ever produced?
Because she told Holly would to go fuck itself
Hard they gave her four Academy Awards.
And she said, love you, Sweeties.
I mean, use them as the door stops
for the bathrooms in my house.
See, that's skill.
That's just what you were talking about.
Yeah.
Be Catherine Hepburn.
Audrey Hepburn is pretty amazing,
but Catherine Hepburn is next level, right?
Well, you, I mean, that's what you're trying to say to me.
Yeah. Okay. I'm trying to say to me. Yeah.
Okay, I'm trying to figure it out, Lex.
Okay.
I don't have the answer yet.
What I do know is that this election is chewing people up.
And I mean two separate things.
One, that parties don't have enough integrity,
that if you comment either four or against,
there's a short sequence where you make a comment
that's nuanced, you get referenced to something, right?
Like, you know, take this thing about, you know, find people on both sides. That is non-resolved after
in years, whether the context should be reported or not. We are in some situation in which Democrats and
Republicans are primed to fight each other, the way introducing
two ants from two different ant colonies always produces a battle.
Okay.
I don't want to be in that fray because those people are going to kill each other mindlessly,
like robots.
And until the election is concluded, like, do I think this is dire?
Yes. Could it be make or break? Absolutely. I'm
not saying that. Do I know which way this goes? I can make an excellent argument that we need
to elect Joe Biden right now. We've got a situation which can only be cured by voting for Joe Biden.
I can make another argument that we have a situation that can only be cured by defeating Joe Biden
right now and all of the things that the modern democratic
party represents.
I don't have, you know, it's not the lady in the tiger.
We're choosing between the tiger and the tiger.
It's the Sumatra and tiger versus the Siberian tiger.
I'm trying to think, well, which tiger can I have a better chance against. The key problem for us politically
is that we have to divorce the concept of the center
and moderation from kleptocracy.
Every time we try to say something like,
we need more moderate solutions,
we need more pluralistic solutions,
people will say, wow, you just want to hand us
right back into the swamp, don't you?
Those swamp people, because the moderates hand us right back into the swamp, don't you? Those swamp people.
Because the moderates and the swamp people
are the same people.
So then we have these two crazy wings.
We can't have crazy right wing people.
I don't want any Tiki torch BS.
We can't have crazy left wing.
Don't attack my courthouse.
Really don't attack my courthouse.
And we can't have moderates. It's like, okay,
how do we install our children and rape pillage and get these speaking fees when we're out of office
and become cozy with the things when we're supposed to be regulating them and then become their
lobbyists immediately when we leave office. All of this stuff, we need an entirely different
system. And I can't talk about that
at the moment. When I talk, people say, Oh, wow, so you're going to sit this one out because
you're a pussy because you're a coward. Great to know Eric. We thought better of you. Bye.
Click. I don't know what to do. So are you thinking of what to do? Yeah. Oh, you better believe it.
Look, Brett, Brett had this idea of Unity 2020 2020 and I told him it was a wrong idea.
I didn't tell him that Unity 2024 was a wrong idea.
I didn't tell him that Unity 2028 is a wrong idea.
And if I were to make the case that he was right and I was wrong,
because he's now shuttered the thing, right?
I would say that the case to be made that he was correct was that by doing us in 2020,
we found out what we were up against. It's good to know that Twitter can turn this off at the drop
of a hat. Great to know. It's good to know as we learned that you cannot have meetings of
presidential candidates in a primary
that are not approved of by the party.
Right, like they've got this thing figured out so we don't have any way in.
And now Unity 2024 makes sense
because Unity 2020 was tried.
Okay, I don't know that we get to 2024
under all circumstances.
In some we do and some we don't.
There's a game theoretic thing that I'm not sure you're counting for, but you probably
are.
But let me just make an argument.
Is Jack Dorsey very likely listens to your podcast?
And this is the power of these words.
Something deep went wrong.
But we can change it with the power of words.
Something went wrong at Twitter.
They have so much division on their plate.
That's what I'm trying to say.
They've gotten, it's not wrong.
They just don't know.
They're understaffed.
They have, no, they have an insoluble problem.
Difficult to solve.
They have an insoluble problem.ficult to solve they have an insoluble problem. This is the argument I disagree because well, all right
I'd like to create a competitor. No, so then you know give it to me. Yeah, well create the competitor show me
Yeah, you actually have understood this because my guess is is that most of the things that you'll think about I mean
I can tell you things I've talked to Jack about which I know would make Twitter much better
however I mean, I can tell you things I've talked to Jack about, which I know would make Twitter much better. However, I think that this problem of instantaneous communication across the planet and you subtract
off all sorts of context and mutual self-knowledge, the problem is us.
It's not the platforms.
You're thinking about a technological solution, and I'm saying the problem is that we are
ultimately the product. you're thinking about a technological solution. And I'm saying, the problem is, is that we are ultimately
the product.
And I just disagree with that.
And there's a lot of, that's probably
could save that for tomorrow.
I look forward to spending summers in your villa
when you debut this product.
And I would love to angel invest in it.
By the way, in terms of money, I'll never have a villa.
Yeah.
No, I will always go away everything I own.
No, sorry.
Invest into things you, like you mentioned, awesome things.
Invest fine, but a little bit of a vancular advice.
Don't pledge to be the person who discorges themselves of security.
Money is freedom.
That's what it is.
It's a big, honking pile of freedom.
You can choose to use it as the freedom to imprison you.
You can use it as freedom to make yourself a prisoner of your money.
But generally speaking, Lex,
money is freedom.
And your voice is important.
At least retain the amount of money, security you need,
to follow Joe's advice.
What is the point of FU money if you don't say FU?
The number of people who have FU money, who don't say FU,
indicates the number of people who chose the freedom of their wealth to create a prison.
They built a prison with the freedom they had and they walked into it lock the door.
I think it's too difficult not to create the reason I want to give away the money is because I just know my own psychology and you create prisons.
Our human mind is creates those prisons.
you create prisons, our human mind is creates those prisons. The FU money is enough for basic shelter and basic food. That's the optimal FU. You don't have kids. This is a, okay, this
is the problem. This is why I'm sick. So this is me single legs speaking. Great. But future
legs. Future legs. I'm talking to future Lex single single present Lex please don't listen
Don't be an ass
You're gonna need some money and don't make these pledges to say on a podcast. I'm I'm say I want to save you from yourself
You need money to do many of the beautiful things that we're counting on you to do don't eff it up
things that we're counting on you to do. Don't eff it up.
Can I talk to you about Roger Penrose? Sure. You've talked to Roger on the portal,
but also in between the lines and offline, just everything you've said about
Roger Penrose, who for people who don't know, he just recently, a few days ago, won the 2020 shared the 2020 Nobel Prize for Physics. But it's
clear to me that he had like a deep personal impact on you, a connection with you in terms
of both your love of mathematics, just the way you see the world. Like this is the Ed
Van Halen conversation. This is clearly somebody who's profound in your world view.
Can you talk about Roger?
Can you talk about what it means that he won this highest of prizes?
Just in general, let's celebrate the man.
Yeah, okay.
So first of all, there are two other people who won this prize.
I'm sorry, I just didn't happen to know who they were before they won.
Roger is a very, it is not Roger in particular, but the class from which
Roger comes that is so important. So I would put Roger in the class of Feynman Einstein, Yang, put Witten in there.
I mean, Witten's a special case, but Witten is weirdly the reverse of the Roger Penrose
story, right?
Because Witten is the first physicist to win a mathematical field's medal, the highest
honor in mathematics.
Penrose is in some sense a mathematician who's now won the Nobel Prize,
so it's a perfect sort of a couplet. Rodgers class means everything to me. That's the
highest achievement of the human mind. I would probably throw Bach in with Feynman and Derock and Cuffer. I think that he was so inventive, it was very
frustrating to watch this career. It's a little bit frustrating to watch Feynman's career.
Feynman was so good and had he been born slightly different, and a slightly different time, I believe his claim on physics would be far greater.
I feel like Penrose in some sense
came up a very difficult path
because you see Einstein effectively solved
most of the most important problems
in general relativity right at the beginning.
As a result, the children of Einstein are impoverished because there wasn't as much to pick off of the trees and sell at the
market, whereas Bohr didn't and plonked and didn't do nearly as good of a job with quantum theory.
So there's lots to do in quantum theory. I think that Roger affected me personally
by a diagram that I saw in a paper of Herman Gluck at the University of Pennsylvania.
It was the first picture I'd ever seen of the hop vibration sketched.
And that, you know, weirdly, I brought that to the Rogan program in order to sort of convey
the wonder. It was recapitulating my own journey. I think I probably saw that at age 16 or something,
it just flipped my mind.
Roger is incredibly visual, he's incredibly geometric,
he's incredibly sui generous, he just does his own thing.
He's got lots of bets, none of them had really come through
the way you would hope. And I think they stretched
the rules to be blunt about it. To give them the prize. Yeah. I do.
You said this thing on Twitter, which is beautiful, that every once in a while comes a human being
that gives value to the prize versus the prize giving value to the human. Two different kinds
of prizes. The reason that we care about the Nobel Prize
isn't because of Alfred Nobel.
It's because it came along at the right time
to reward Einstein, Derock, Schrodinger, Feynman.
Most of the people who should have won, won,
most of the awards are not good in the sense that they don't really follow
The prizes used to rewrite history that's this problem
So it's you know you should have a love hate relationship with it because on the one hand
It does focus the world on what really matters and on the other hand
It distorts what really matters and both of those functions take place simultaneously. In this
case I think that they violated their own rules slightly so it wasn't really
clearly a case of a prediction and a discovery in the typical fashion but
they like we better give this award to somebody of that highest caliber to make sure that the prize is fully funded with prestige going forward.
That's sort of my weird speculative guess as to what happened.
And so Rogers getting on in years and the person should be alive.
So they, I think they bent the rules and I think they couldn't have bent it for a better person.
And I hope they will not bend the rules at a weakness but out of strength in future.
It would be great to get Madame Wu and Emmy Nurtre, a posthumous prize along with Doug
Prasher, George Sudarshan, and George Swig, as well as Ernst Stuckelberg Nobel Prizes.
There've been some terrible emissions
on the first two being females who revolutionized
our view of the world.
And I take a very dim view of people pushing for prizes,
for people from ethnic groups or genders or whatever
in order to make it plural and inclusive,
if it's not following the work, and I feel very clear that in a few cases, we know there
was a real problem with the Nobel Committee because we have stunning accomplishments.
And try to get through a day as a physicist without Nerdist theorem and try to imagine
the universe without Madame Wu's discovery that left and right don't appear to be symmetric.
I mean, these are terrible emissions and they're a huge blot on science for not being more inclusive when it matters.
Yeah, so just like you said, the Nobel Prize is plagued by emissions as much as...
I mean, distortions and dilutions. For example, D'Arac and Schrodinger were, I believe, given the prize in the same year, there's no reason that those two people needed to dilute each other.
The same thing with, you know, Dyson was an omission. Tomanaga probably got included in part because
we had an opportunity to show that something had happened on both sides of the Pacific after the war.
But I don't think we needed to dilute Weinberg or
Feynman or Schwinger. It just makes me somewhat sick. All of these people are such important
giants and it has to do with the field, I think, not wanting to create luminaries and superstars
who could have defended the field from budget cuts and worldly pressures.
So I think it's really important that we have absolute superstars because we produce superstars.
We acknowledge them, we don't dilute them, and that we bend the rules to make sure that the prize
stays funded with the prestige that comes from giving it to the Roger Penrose's
Albert Einstein's in Paul Derrocks of the Wall.
Can we talk a little bit about evil?
Sure.
I haven't actually talked to you about this topic, and it's been sitting on my mind mostly
because everybody at MIT is quiet about it, which is Jeffrey Epstein. I didn't get a chance to experience
what MIT was like at the time when Jeffrey Epstein was that I love, whether you think, maybe let
me ask the question this way, was it the man evil or was the system evil or is evil too
strong a word.
Because what I see is the presence of this particular human being
in the eyes of many destroyed the reputations of many really strong scientists. And also we can, the ability, like we can the institution of MIT by making everybody quiet,
like almost making them unable to say anything interesting or difficult.
Yeah.
And what is that?
And what am I supposed to, we don't know.
Why is everyone quiet about Jeffery?
We don't know.
We don't know.
We don't know.
Obviously I want to scream about it too, right?
And I probably have said too much about Jeffery Epstein.
Look, something horrible happened.
I don't know what it is,
but something horrible happened.
And, you know, at the one thing that, okay, let's just do this.
The first thing I need to do is I need to get rid of this woke crap about power
differentials, okay. In general, you can talk about
hypergamy and power differentials are Russell Conjigates of the same concept.
Just the way particular proportions and symmetries are mathematically provable to be attractive
in females to males, male attractiveness is largely determined by male competence and ability to amass power and success
and all these sorts of things.
The relationship between consenting adults
is quite frankly not something I want to sort out.
The relationship between the sexuality of adults
and minors and particularly, you know, there's the 17-18 issue. That's very
different than 12-13. We're talking about really sick depravity with respect to
what appears the Jeffrey Epstein was involved in at some level
I believe this story is super complicated in part because I think one thing which Jeffrey Epstein was doing was providing money
encouragement and
support
To scientists another thing he was doing I believe was giving tax advice
To very rich people. I believe another thing he was doing, I believe, was giving tax advice to very rich people.
I believe another thing he was doing was hooking very wealthy people up with young adult
females.
Another thing he was doing, I think, was doing stuff with children that will curl your toes. So there's an entire spectrum of different stuff.
And at the moment, nobody can pull apart or deflate anything because the woke thing comes over it
and says, you know, I think it's disgusting that a 43-year-old billionaire would be partying with a 23 year old.
Yeah.
Okay.
I don't want to adjudicate that.
I'm worried about 12 and 14 year olds that we're not talking about.
But I mostly...
I don't think MIT was deep into pedophilia.
My guess is that that did not happen.
I don't think that the scientists were the targets of the really sick
depraved stuff. It's my guess. My guess is that what you're looking at was a
government construct. It may have been our government, it may have been a joint
government project, maybe somebody else's government. I don't know. I believe
that in part we don't really understand Robert Maxwell.
Sorry, who's Robert Maxwell?
Gillian Maxwell's father was very active in scientific publishing.
I don't know where peer review came from.
I would love to run down the relationship between peer review and Robert Maxwell.
I would love to run down the missing fortune of Robert Maxwell and the mysterious fortune of Jeffrey Epstein because I don't think Jeffrey Epstein ever ran a hedge fund.
I don't think he was a money advisor the way people claimed.
So there's two things I want to talk about.
So one is the shallow conversations of woke identity politics that you're referring to seems to be removing everyone's ability.
No, everyone's willing to do this.
One of the things.
To talk about like, what the hell is this person and how is he allowed?
Most importantly, to how do we prevent it in the future.
And from the individual perspective, the question for me is the same question I ask about 1930s Nazi
Germany.
I've been reading way too much probably or not enough about that period currently is if
I was in Germany at that time, what is the heroic action to take when I think about MIT
with Jeffrey Epstein, what is the heroic action to take?
We're not talking about virtue signaling action.
I wouldn't know what I would like to know what you're up against,
like you're not hearing me.
The problem here is, what was Jeffrey Epstein?
Well, that question might be the heroic action to take.
That's all I'm trying to say.
I'm just trying to get my first question.
You have to map the silence with Jeffrey Epstein.
What you're describing is a map of the silence at MIT.
Yeah.
Well, is there a map of the silence in Washington state around Jeffrey Epstein, the Bay Area, New York City?
The amount of silence around Jeffrey Epstein should be telling you everything.
The number of dogs that don't bark is like nothing we've ever seen.
You're exactly correct, but I want to know what is it telling us?
Because what is telling me is not some kind of conspiracy, but more a disappointing weakness
in some kind of conspiracy.
Not some kind of conspiracy.
It's not some kind of conspiracy, but you've got to be kidding.
You're so afraid of saying the word conspiracy
that you don't think it's a conspiracy.
I personally, I just think it's people
who I thought were my heroes just being weak.
No, be a good cheer, sir.
A cheer?
Be of good cheer.
Of good cheer.
Yeah.
You think that there's a conspiracy?
I think there's a conspiracy.
I'd be a very impressive one.
That's the scale of it.
I tend to believe that large scale
can only be an emergent phenomena.
Really?
I find this so fascinating.
Yeah.
Because I always see you as like a logic.
Logic and love drive your soul. You're very logical, you're relentless. You've got a lot of love in your heart.
I believe that if you would review the video, where is it from? Dubai or Abu Dhabi of the mysterious hit on the hotel guest?
Have you ever seen this thing?
No.
It's the assassination in 2010, 10 years ago, of Mufmoud Al-Mabou, something like that,
in Dubai, where I believe 26 separate individuals
on multiple teams are shown converging,
coming in from all over the world on false passports,
pretending to be tennis players,
or business people, or vacationers.
And all of these teams have different functions.
And they murder this guy in his hotel room.
And the Dubai, I guess chief of police or security officer was so angered that he put together this amazing video that says
we can completely detail what you did.
We caught you on close circuit TV.
We don't know exactly who you are because your disguises and your files passports.
But yeah, 26 people converged to kill one.
No, I don't believe you. I don't believe after Coentel Pro, an Operation Paperclip, and Operation Mockingbird.
I don't know whether I should even bring up Rex 84 to not believe in conspiracies is an
idiocy.
So you have a sense that evil can be as competent or more competent.
First of all, when evil wants to operate at scale, it needs to make sure that people don't
try to figure out evil. When evil operates at scale, from first principles, you have to
realize that evil must not want to investigate investigated. That's correct.
The most efficient way to keep yourself
from being investigated, if you are an evil institutional player,
and needs to do this repeatedly, is to invest in a world
in which no one can afford to say the word conspiracy.
You will notice that there is a special radioactivity around
the word conspiracy.
We have provable conspiracies. We have provable conspiracies.
We have admitted to conspiracies.
You have been invited to conspiracy.
There is no shortage.
Conspiracies are everywhere.
Some of them are mundane.
Some of them are like price fixing cartels.
Or trade groups are generally speaking conspiracies.
So the first thing you have to realize is that all of us are under a
in a memetic complex where you can be taken off the chess board by saying conspiracy there. Good done. It's a one- it's like a one-line proof. We don't have to listen to the
X. He said he was a conspiracy theorist on this show. Okay. That is partially distorting our conversation. If you want to ask me about Jeffrey Epstein, you have to agree with me that that is a logical description of what you would have to have if you wanted to commit
conspiracies is that you have to make sure that people are dissuaded from investigating.
Yes. Okay. But it's a very, it's a fascinatingly difficult
idea then because the world with conspiracy theories and the world with all conspiracy theories
to the to the shallow glance looks the same.
Well my point there is responsible conspiracy theorizing where you look at the history of unearthed
conspiracies and just like you would with any other topic just think about how different the rules
in your mind are for conspiracy theorizing versus ex theorizing where ex can be anything. Right? It's like if I say
to you, I can say the statement that average weight is not the same between
widely separated populations. You'd say yeah, I'd say average height is not the same between widely separated populations.
You'd say, yeah, then I say, in fact, no continuous variable that shows variation should be expected
to be identical between widely separate. Of course, Eric, like IQ. Well, well, well, well, hold on.
So we have a violent reaction to specific topics. So the first thing I want to do
is just to notice that conspiracy has that built into everyone's mind. That's really important to
state. Yeah. That's, it's very interesting that and as a prerequisite, as you're saying, that would be the first step if you wanted to pull off a conspiracy in a competent way.
That's you would have to first convince the world of that.
I just watched the film 1971 about my favorite conspiracy of all time. I highly recommend it.
1971.
Well, the film is titled 1971, and it's about the Citizens Committee to investigate the FBI, which was run by a student
of Murray Gellman, a physicist, and broke into FBI offices in Pennsylvania to steal files,
which allowed freedom of information requests that discovered a huge conspiracy. It was a conspiracy
that unearthed a conspiracy inside the federal government, a double conspiracy story,
which launched multiple conspiracies. I think that the problem with modern Americans is that they
are so timid that they don't even learn about the history of conspiracies that we have absolutely
proven. So with that done, Jeff Epstein, in my opinion, represented somebody's construction.
I don't need that.
I kind of scary to think about.
Yeah.
Well, what part of the story isn't scary?
I, in part, did something which I imagine may get me destroyed because I was more worried
about being destroyed by somebody else.
I had a conversation with Around Jeff Epstein
Right, so I'm just trying to like get
Let it be known that I don't know anything more than I've already said
Now your friends at MIT
Their problem is is that Jeff Epstein showed up as the only person capable of continuing US scientific tradition.
You see, the US scientific tradition is a little bit like the Russian.
It's combative.
And we're a free society and we act like a free society.
We're a rich society and we research like we're a rich society.
That is historically and then came the 1970s.
And William Prox Meyer and the Golden Fleece Awards and the idea that we have to, we're
paying too much and these are welfare queens and lab coats and blah, blah, blah, blah.
We need more transparency, more oversight.
Everything went to hell.
And the national culture of US science was lost. The thing that produced
all this prosperity and security and power was lost. And then Jeff Epstein shows up. And a tiny
number of funders, maybe Fred Cavley, maybe Yuri Milner, maybe who else would be in this category? Peter Teal, to an extent,
Howard Hughes would be the largest of these things, which has different grant structures
than the NIH, gave people a modicum of risk-taking ability. Okay,, well when Jeff Epstein showed up,
everybody wanted to take risk in science.
And suddenly a charismatic billionaire says,
hey, I can make that work for you.
Here's $100,000.
Go research something crazy.
Well, that money was supposed to be provided
by the federal government under the terms
of the endless frontier compact between the federal government under the terms of the endless frontier
compact between the federal government and the universities.
And the federal government and the taxpayers welched.
Okay.
So that's one place to lay the blame for Jeff Epstein as it the failure of the federal
government to honor is to honor its commitment.
Yeah.
Right. So the universities became psychopathic.
It's not like everybody doesn't remember what we're supposed to be doing to be moral,
but the point was there wasn't enough money to be moral, so it was time to eye each other
as a source of protein, as I like to say.
And in that process, Jeffrey Epstein said, hey, come to my world, we can do it like we used to
do. So in part, my point is that almost none of your colleagues at MIT have that kind of religious
commitment to science that they're willing to go down with ship science. The Galileo Galilei thing became very important to science because occasionally you just have
to say, look, this isn't about me and you.
There isn't enough money in the world to buy the kind of legacy I want to leave to this
planet.
This is one of the great things about science, you know, potentially
it's worth dying for. Yeah, I'm glad you said it. Science is one of the things that is best,
that's worth dying for. I mean, I'm not eager to murder myself, but I've certainly risked my health,
I'm a martyr myself, but I've certainly risked my health, my fortune. You know, I've destroyed myself economically over science.
And my need to oppose these sons of bitches in chaired professorships who are destroying our system,
along with everyone else.
Let me bring in Graham Master in into this.
Uguai.
Uguai.
Master Uguai.
I think he's a Grand Master.
Oh, that would make him a chess playing turtle.
So I've read some Wikipedia.
Uh-oh.
So, as she foes a master,
there's apparently only one Grand Master.
That's Uguay.
Anyway, is the phrase grandmaster ever uttered
in the script?
I don't think so.
I don't think so.
But there's a story, oh, there's off script, Cannon.
I'm gonna call it a Glenn Burger right now
and find out if any of this is true.
All right, you're not supposed to call up
my journalistic integrity.
But master Uguai.
Master Uguai. He says a couple things I'd like to bring up with you. So one, as part of
a longer quote, recommends that you should find a battle worth fighting.
We've talked about several battles just now.
What is the battle worth fighting for for Airquistine in the next few months in the next year?
There's only one.
Oh, it's the Moses thing.
It's time to go.
It's time to leave. This place is over to get off the planet.
Yeah, I freak people out when I say that, but like, look at your world. You just got introduced
to the problem of a virus. Wait, wait till it's fusion devices. And you understand what it means to have
one interconnected planet with no uncorrelated experiments happening anywhere else, you know?
So do you see the foray, your work in physics
and maybe like the echoes of it in Ship Elon?
Everybody who has a possible plan
to avoid what is coming if we don't have one
should work on the plan that he she thinks best right?
So Elon wants to do rockets.
People misinterpret me.
I met Eric says I don't think that's a smart plan.
Regular Eric says all people who have hope should do that thing.
Yeah, at least it's Mars, man.
At least it's the moon and Mars and maybe Titan and whatever.
And I don't think it'll work.
And it doesn't make sense.
And it looks silly.
But that's exactly the kind of fight or it's fighting.
But it's the kind of, it's for the same reason that I went on Brett's Unity 2020 thing when I didn't think it out of hope and hell and people
You know, we're making fun of it. It's like we got to do things that make that make us feel dumb and silly and childish
That it possibly have a hope of working. Okay, so everybody should do something my version of this
I'm the most hopeful about because I wouldn't have chosen to do if I thought the Daniel Schmocken burgers wisdom project
was a better If I thought that Daniel Schmockenberger's wisdom project was a better hope, I'd do that.
It's more down to earth in a certain way.
I just think that it's more probable,
look, we got from a powered flight
with the Wright brothers and wind tunnels
to sending back images from the surface of Titan
and Huygens Cassini in less than a century.
Okay?
What we can do if we can change the laws of physics
is something we can't even conceive of.
It may be that it buys us nothing.
And at least we will know why we died on this planet.
As a small aside, I think this is not the right time to take the full
journey, but I feel like you'll guide me like Master Wei did and I'm the Kung Fu Panda at some point.
They only have one conversation. We're on our like, what didn't we didn't? Well, we're Jews and
they weren't. So we talked too much, but the guide doesn't have to be with words.
You don't think Poe was Jewish?
There's a debate about what to go back to.
Really like Poe.
Yeah, okay.
Is there that you would guide me through some more intuition about the source code of our universe.
Can you comment on where, since the last book,
where your thinking has been, has roamed around geometric community
around that work in physics?
In this fight?
Yeah, I'm trying to figure out when to release it and how.
I mean, I've released the video.
And the video, quite honestly,
I think it has a very bizarre reaction.
I think one of the things that I've learned from the video,
because the video is coming up on half a million views
on YouTube alone to say nothing of the audio.
But yeah, it produced a very strange reaction.
One of the things I don't think that
I properly understood is that most physicists don't talk in this geometric language. I thought
that more of the physics world probably had converted over into manifold bundles, differential
forms, connections, curvature tensors, et cetera.
And I saw a lot of the comments would say things like, I have a PhD in theoretical physics,
and I'm not even familiar with all of these concepts.
And I think that was probably a distortion coming from living in Cambridge, Massachusetts
for almost 20 years.
So what's the solution to that?
I mean, I translated it in a bit.
I can make this make as much sense as anybody needs to.
My problem is,
you know,
is my calculation is that as long as the boomers are still in charge,
the same people have these perverse incentives on them,
where they've invested in these programs that didn't work.
So they're extremely hostile and kind of difficult to deal with.
The fact that I'm not a physicist has its own set of issues, which is that effectively it's like the
Hermit Kingdom, they don't get any visitors, and they don't necessarily want somebody, you know,
rolling up and saying, I know how to do physics.
So I'm always very clear. I'm not a physicist. That said, if I wait too long, I don't know that
theoretical physics is really going to exist after the boomers because everyone in you, I think
you had Wolfram on your program. I don't remember whether he said this to you or Brian Keating,
but he said something like everybody got discouraged. It was too hard. you had Wolfram on your program. I don't remember where they said this to you were Brian Keating,
but he said something like everybody got discouraged. It was too hard. We can't do that, guys.
We cannot do that. There's something about the re-normalization revolution that
innovated the physics community because it taught them just because you can see in this
energy regime doesn't mean you can extrapolate somewhere else, unless you understand how coupling constants run and what kind of UV fix points exist, blah,
blah, blah, blah.
Somehow that discouraged people from guessing, from believing, everything became an effective
theory.
The beauty of the effective theory wasn't taken to be really the beauty of the universe,
just the beauty of an energy level.
I think the renormalization was one of the most, just the beauty of an energy level. So I think the re-normalization
was one of the most important revolutions that ever happened in science, and also its
interpretation by the physics community was catastrophic. Well, the story I'm telling myself is
that in part I'm waiting for them to get weaker, but on the other hand, I don't know that we have
any time left. And so... Are you also thinking about ways of, you know, the podcast medium is revolutionary
for public, for discourse, for what, I mean, I don't even know the right words for it.
Are you thinking of revolutionary ideas for re-energizing the physics community?
So basically for communicating, you know, I have a fantasy. Okay. My fantasy is that all
of these things are the same problem. And it goes back to this thing that I read about in
Feynman's books about Tartaglia. They asked him this question, like, what's the greatest
thing that ever happened in math? He says, Tartaglia is solution of the cubic. It's just
like the weirdest answer. So you're like, okay, I'll bite. Why is it Tartaglia is solution of the cubic. It's just like the weirdest answer.
So you're like, okay, I'll bite.
Why is it Tartaglia's solution of the cubic?
And he said, because it was the first time a modern person had done something profound
that the ancients had failed to do.
I was like, oh, I got it.
It's the thing that opens up new psychology that says, maybe things are possible again.
It's in your orchard.
New farmers, new people who can find fruit that they can pick.
Once you have one person do that, very often you get many, like one of the things that
we're talking about with Eddie Van Halen, the reason that he created a revolution in
somebody like Roy Buchanan did not is that
you could follow Eddie Van Halen.
You couldn't pioneer it.
And maybe you couldn't play as well and as cleanly and as fast and as inventively.
But you could follow.
Once you understand that there is a tapping principle, right, it was just the beginning
of something called percussive guitar.
My belief is that once we start innovating in the present, everything will come because
everything that round us is screwed up.
On that, let me with one last question, bring back Master Uguai, the probably the most famous
quote of his, right, with yesterday's history, tomorrow's a mystery, but today is a gift.
That is why it is called the present.
It's very beautiful, although I would have gone with quit,
don't quit noodles, don't noodles.
I feel like I feel like people need to know which
contacts to make sense.
It's your audience just to hell with context. Yep, they'll figure it out.
Well, let me ask, what are you grateful for today? What is your present? We've talked about a lot
of dark things, but what do you bring you joy to your heart that I can't believe I'm lucky enough to have this.
No, Nile ends up my wife, Pia, the fact that we've got our health, all the little things,
saying grace after meals. You're coming over for Friday night, Shabbat dinner,
so we'll say we'll bench together and say grace. It's important to just like this bottle
of water in front of me. I made a point of just thinking about how wonderful it is that there's a
quenching bottle that happens to be placed in front of me because somebody cares. Yeah, you know,
so that that small thing made a difference to me.
I still have strength for the fight so far.
I think that's something I'm grateful for. I can't believe that I'm not more beaten down after all of this nonsense.
I have the most interesting set of friends.
I really do.
I mean, I'm not that rich by monetary
standards, but if there were friend billionaires, Forbes would be all over my ass. I just can't
believe who I can talk to, you know, at the drop of a hat. And I'm really grateful.
I think this is the end of something profound.
And it's the beginning of whatever is next.
And whatever is next could be terminal,
whatever is next could be amazing,
whatever is next could be returned to the horrors of the early 20th
century that doesn't manage to go totally catastrophic, but you know takes hundreds of millions of lives in
the process. I'm grateful to having half of my life in the rearview mirror.
It maybe it took place in a bubble and maybe it was unsustainable but
It was nice to be able to move around the world without a mask
It was nice to be able to see a little bit of the world even if it was from a
A cot in a hostel in some country
To fall in love
Absolutely, I mean, there's a good life
Find the last Indian Jewish girl left of absolutely. I mean, she's a good life.
Find the last Indian Jewish girl left.
Who knew?
You're a lucky guy. Well, let me just say, actually, there's something I wanted to just say before you get to that. Yes,
I forgot to say something. Falling in love with an intellectual
collaborator is a special thing that not everybody gets a chance to do.
I think when I met Pia, I fell deeply in love with her, all her normal characteristics.
She and I had an antagonistic relationship around geometry and economics.
And then weirdly, just like in a buddy picture where in the first half of the film they
hate each other, the two fields were fighting with each other cats and dogs.
And finally, the sexual tension clearly was so thick you could cut it with a knife.
We came up with geometric marginalism, which is this other theory, not geometric unity,
which allowed me to inhabit space
with somebody who I already knew intimately and had fallen in love with
and to see the quality and beauty of their mind
and to play into dance.
It's sort of the intellectual version of the tango.
One of the most romantic periods of my life
that doesn't fall into most people's experience.
That was a chance to see something totally unexpected,
haven't really had it since
because she doesn't wanna revisit the material,
but something I'm super grateful for
that's very particular and unique.
But to flip the tables on you for hundreds of thousands,
I think millions of people,
I can speak me and them are really grateful one that you exist and
two, sorry,
for your podcast.
And I do hope your voice in some form continues to
reverberate, I think, in the at least in the 2021s and beyond, even if it takes a brief pause.
We're pausing at the moment.
We've recorded some for future episodes, and I'm recording for you.
I really appreciate that.
I mean, it's earnestness trades at a discount at the moment because it's easy to make fun of it.
One of the things I like best about you is that you and I are both fairly earnest.
We made we made joke and jab, but honestly, there's a project here in a world to win, as they say.
The thing that I want mine, your listeners to know is that I'm not stepping away from the podcast because I don't appreciate
the people really want more. It's not, you know, this is hugely financially costly to me.
I want to make sure you guys are getting the best that I can do and destroying myself right in
front of an election. I think Lex is incorrect.
I think that the forces that are trying to make sure
that there aren't any planes in the sky
that aren't either colored red or colored blue
is a big danger given how angry I am at the system.
And I don't want to be removed from the chess board
because if nobody's gonna talk about Jeff Epstein,
there need to be people.
If nobody's gonna talk about various things that we've talked about on these programs,
I want to make sure that I'm there.
Do I think that this is potentially an existential election?
Yes.
Do I?
My positive that I know that my way to bed is the right way out.
No, I'm not.
I don't know people.
I just don't know.
And where we are right now seems so dumb and so catastrophic in terms of how it is chewing up smart people.
That I decided, it's really not about cowardice
because it's hard for me to restrain myself.
I have so many reactions every day.
This is really about trying to plan for all of our futures
to make sure that I'm around.
I had a huge concern that what happened
to Brett's articles of unity was gonna happen to to Brett. It was going to happen to the YouTube channels.
I want to make sure that we don't have all of our eggs in one basket. So if something goes wrong
over there, so you know, that's the whole idea of the intellectual dark web, which is at some level
a loose confederation. It can become a strong confederation if somebody wants to back it and make it work.
It can dissolve so that there really isn't anything.
The thing is to be hard to kill because ultimately when the hit pieces come, they don't come
for what it is that they're angry at you about.
They come for where they can get you.
And so it's very important that right in front of an election, yeah, I think
the desire of the old system to defend itself through reputational destruction is one of the most
pernicious aspects of the new America. And we have to fight the ability to destroy reputations
as a means of institutions keeping individuals with podcasts and the ability to reach
millions like through sub-stack out of their domain. I don't surrender this domain to them. They
have plenty of weaponry with which to fight us. And I believe that they could remove you or me
in an instant. By the end of today, if they wanted us off the chess board, we would be off the
chess board. I know that's not your perspective. My goal is to stay here as long as possible to make sure that you have enough of a counterbalancing
set of ideas and to let and help other podcasts or start. And my hope is, is that that works,
but you know, long heroism, short martyrdom is a good motto for anyone and I try to
remember the short martyrdom part of that. First of all beautifully put second of all wait
to end the conversation and the disagreement which is how you hook them for the next conversation
to be continued. When Lex says Eric it's a huge honor. Thank you once again. Lex really appreciate
every time we get together. Thanks, buddy. Thanks for listening to this conversation with
Eric Weinstein and thank you to our sponsors, Grammarly, a service I use in my writing
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If you enjoy this thing, subscribe on YouTube, review it with 5 stars and not a podcast,
follow on Spotify, support it on Patreon, or connect with me on Twitter, at Lex Friedman.
And now let me leave you with some words from Leonard Cohen in the
song titled Hallelujah. Well, maybe there's a God above, but all I've ever learned from
love was how to shoot somebody who I'll drew you. And it's not a cry that you're here at
night. It's not somebody who's seen the light. It's a cold and it's a broken hallelujah.
Thank you.