Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 702: Matt Kibbe on CrossFit, Cryptocurrency, Freedom & MORE
Episode Date: February 8, 2018In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin speak with Matt Kibbe. Matt is the President and Chief Community Organizer of Free the People, a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting libertarian ideals. T...he conversation moves from CrossFit, the gig economy, the wage gap, cryptocurrency, freedom & more. You have been forewarned, this is NOT a fitness episode! Agree or disagree, you will find Matt well spoken and thoughtful. You can find him and his videos on Facebook @freethepeople Episode Show Notes: Public choice problem. Matt talks about his relationship with Greg Glassman, the co-creator of CrossFit, possible certification and fight against big sugar. (4:47) People should be free to live their lives how they want, as long as they don’t steal. What is the definition of libertarianism? (7:58) You should be skeptical of all big corporations/The sharing economy. Why competition is necessary. (10:12) Regulations are almost all written for people with self-interest. They example of Uber and the guys discuss in detail. (16:30) Socialism vs. Capitalism. Matt explains the difference and why millennials see socialism in a new light. (18:50) If you laid the people down who died from socialism, they would wrap around the world two times. How we have the best of intentions, but need to understand that people make their own decisions. (21:55) You don’t need an insurance plan; you need to plan for the future. Healthcare should be based on choice, not something that is forced on you. Matt speaks on this topic and why our healthcare system is flawed. (31:10) Trump has punctured the romance around the Presidency. What is his opinion on Trump so far? (35:54) Freedom of speech/Fake news. Matt explains why we should embrace beautiful chaos. (40:15) Block chain is one of the most important things in technology that we are just starting to see why that matters so much. Matt gives is opinion on cryptocurrency and bitcoin. (44:07) People inherently want to be free. How social media can create massive hysteria and its effect on countries like Iran. (47:45) Taking from have-nots and giving to haves. Wealth-distribution and equality discussion. (51:39) It’s wrong to lump people into categories. Guys go into deep discussion on the gender pay gap and Matt tells a personal story about his wife. (58:00) Free the People. Turning young people onto liberty. Matt talks about his organization and some of the challenges that have come with it. (1:02:07) Better to go on the enemy’s show. Matt talks about his TV appearances and how tone of voice matters. (1:07:10) The different flavors of people’s politics. Why Matt is optimistic of today’s liberty. (1:11:09) People should have more than two choices. Matt explains the political parties and how 3rd parties are being shut out. (1:17:18) What sources of information does a Matt recommend person go to? (1:19:40) Links/Products Mentioned: New Regulations for Uber, Lyft Drivers Don't Include Fingerprinting Socialism, Capitalism Seen in New Light by Younger Americans Learn Liberty SOUND MONEY IS FREEDOM IN VENEZUELA Socialism's death count The GOP Tax Bill Repeals Obamacare's Individual Mandate. Here's What That Means for You Free Speech Is Dying on the College Campus. How We Can Revive It Blockchain - what it is and why it's important THE THINK IT’S CAPITALISM; IT’S ACTUALLY BULL What Washington Can Learn From the Iran Protests Pareto distribution Home - Foundation for Economic Education Cato Institute | Individual Liberty, Free Markets, and Peace Power of the Market - The Pencil – YouTube Featured Guest/People Mentioned: Matt Kibbe (@mkibbe) Twitter Matt Kibbe - Home | Facebook Free The People Greg Glassman (@CrossFitCEO) Twitter Friedrich Hayek Ayn Rand Walter Cronkite Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) Twitter Barack Obama (@BarackObama) Twitter Bill Maher (@billmaher) Twitter Chris Matthews (@HardballChris) Twitter Ron Paul (@RonPaul) Twitter Justin Amash (@justinamash) Twitter Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) Twitter Gov. Gary Johnson (@GovGaryJohnson) Twitter Glenn Jacobs (@GlennJacobsTN) Twitter Would you like to be coached by Sal, Adam & Justin? You can get 30 days of virtual coaching from them for FREE at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Get our newest program, MAPS Prime Pro, which shows you how to self assess and correct muscle recruitment patterns that cause pain and impede performance and gains. Get it at www.mindpumpmedia.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. 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Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mite, op, mite, op with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
What is this?
It seems like the most libertarians that we keep meaning are buff.
Is there a correlation between political views and muscle?
Actually, you know, it's funny.
They did do some studies on that.
I don't know how accurate they are, but here's what I do think.
So Matt, Matt Kibbie, I've seen him many times on interviews and stuff
talking about libertarian ideas or although,
aka classical liberal ideas, free markets, free choice,
do what you want, just as long as you don't hurt anybody, free choice, you know, do what you want,
just as long as you don't hurt anybody, don't steal from anybody, that kind of stuff.
I've been hearing them, you know, talk about these things for a while, and I've also been
in fitness for a while, and I noticed that people in the fitness community are greater percentage
of them versus the regular popularist tends to subscribe to a lot of these ideas, and I was
talking to Matt off-air, you know, what he to Matt off air, what he sees in that, because as the audience
will hear in this episode, Matt is good friends
of great glassmen from CrossFit.
And that's not because they do CrossFit together,
it's because of this other stuff that we're talking about.
And he said, he noticed the same thing.
And I said, do you think it's because people
who are into working out and the nutrition,
they take that philosophy
of personal responsibility, like,
I'm gonna take care of myself, I don't want anybody
also take care of it.
I was just like, yeah, that's what it makes, too.
That's what it makes sense.
I was trying to figure out what was it about him
that I really liked?
And I think what I put together,
and as I'm sitting there listening to him,
he's kinda got this like, very even kill monotone voice
that you guys are gonna hear in this episode.
He's very chill.
Right, but I think what that is is is i think he does that intentionally
and is trained himself to do that in a very emotionally charged
field you know i'm saying like i think most people he deals with like you see him
on hardball you seem on bill mar you seem on some of these these channels
that
the guys that are the host are just
ruffland very very flamboyant, right?
Or just loud and inflammatory.
It's on the delivery, right?
Like, so I remember him kind of like talking about that
on some level, it's just like,
if he were to be like super emotional,
like have some kind of like energy behind
when he's delivering like whatever stance he was taking,
like it's gonna go like somebody's gonna tune out, like real fast, like it's gonna go, like somebody's gonna tune out,
like real fast, or somebody's gonna like,
yeah, yeah, like subscribe to that,
like, and it's gonna be very polarizing.
So to kind of, you know, keep it a moderate kind of energy
behind it, I think is a smart strategy.
Yeah, so this episode is not really a fitness episode.
Although we did, we got into CrossFit right out of the gate.
We did, we talked about these friends with Glassman, right?
And he talked about how Glassman is trying to fight against this push to regulate, you
know, for training sort of things.
And big sugar is influence on government, you know, recommendations for health and nutrition
like the food pyramid and that kind of stuff.
But we talked about all kinds of different things.
We talked about some controversial topics like the gender pyramid and that kind of stuff. But we talked about all kinds of different things. We talked about some controversial topics
like the gender pay gap.
We talked about Liberty as a philosophy.
We talked about free markets.
Got an Ecrypto currency.
We talked about cryptocurrency.
So it's a little bit of a,
you know, not necessarily a fitness based podcast
that we just recorded, but a very interesting one.
And this is a gentleman that I've been reading his articles and stuff for a little while.
I'm very happy to have him on the show.
I think you'll enjoy some of it if you're not.
If you're here just for health and fitness, obviously this is not an episode for you.
We do not dive deep into health and fitness whatsoever in this podcast.
We've had so many people that love the conversations that we have outside
of just fitness. And I think that was what drove us in this direction that, hey, you know
what, we've had such great feedback when we kind of go off topic of fitness and we have
these conversations where we have healthy debates about these topics. So, you know, we wanted
to reach out to some of the professionals in these areas and have a show. It's just a nice change.
I mean, we're our shows about like seeking truth
in all things.
And so I think that, you know,
this is kind of just one small step
to try and understand, you know,
the political climate and where we are today.
So.
Absolutely.
So without any further ado,
you can hear us talking to Matt Kibby.
You can find him on Facebook.
He has a nonprofit organization called Free the People.
So I suggest you go take a look at that.
They've got some great videos and information.
And really it's just.
Spell Matt Kibby too.
It's MAT-M-A-T-T.
Last name Kibby K-I-B-B-E.
So that's it.
Here we are talking to Matt.
Enjoy.
My wife says I have a great face for radio.
That's what all our girls tell us.
I don't know.
I don't know, man.
The constant joke that keeps giving, right?
The facial hair is like amazing.
Yeah.
You used to be clean shaving back in the day.
Yeah, right.
Now you've got the whole timing stash.
I don't know you were sleeved out, man.
I had no idea you had tattoos.
Yeah, yeah
There's there's a story behind everyone and I'm I'm now trying to figure out what to do with this arm
So you have no idea cuz I'll see you in interviews and stuff and usually you know dress so professional like this guy
Yeah, that's awesome. So you were asking us about so your friends with great glassman and the crossfit
You know that whole crossfit and you were asking us our opinions on it, you know, from a fitness standpoint, from a market standpoint
What they're doing I think is pretty awesome. I know right now if I'm not mistaken
He great glassman in Crossfit is trying to fight the this movement to
regulate
certifications, right personal trainer certifications. So what was this a deal with that?
Well, you know, this is a this is a classic fight that anybody that wants to start a business deals with.
I mean, if you braid hair now, we're having a fight about people whether or not they need
a thousand hours of training to blow dry hair, this is a real thing. And certification is really
an attempt by certain incumbent businesses to stop the crossfit and
other trainers that have a different philosophy. The philosophy that says, I don't need a bunch
of equipment in my gym. I'm going to teach people based on my experiences and what I do.
And Greg's fighting against that because his model and other companies and non-
companies that are doing fitness now, they realized that a lot of what we were
taught as kids about fitness and about diet and about health is just wrong. So
this is a classic in economics you call it a classic public choice problem where
where incumbent businesses collude
with local government, state governments.
The first place was in DC, where they passed some of these certification laws, of course,
because it's crony capitalism, personified.
And Greg fights against that, and he argues that the fight is really not just about incumbent gym companies, but what he calls
Big Sugar.
And the science of Big Sugar and the way that soda companies have infiltrated government
perceptions on diets and what is it called?
The food pyramid.
Yeah, the food pyramid.
Yeah, it's awful.
Yeah, it's all bullshit, right? But
Greg's been willing to take it on and his business is growing. So yeah, the man's coming after him.
How did you first meet him? How did you guys get connected? Through libertarian circles. He spoke
years ago in an event that I was at and he's quoting my favorite economist, Fred Rekia, and this guy is an interesting guy,
but he also just hates the corruption
that comes from top-down government,
so I just love the attitude.
So can we, let's give a,
because we have a lot of listeners
who may not be familiar with the concept
or the philosophy of, you know, liberty,
and you said libertarian, what does that mean?
What is the philosophy behind that?
Yeah, and you know, you don't want to get too caught up
in labels because I know people
that would call themselves classical liberals,
liberal use to mean what we now sort of call libertarian,
but libertarians made upward
because liberals started to mean something else.
I have constitutional conservative friends who believe that too, but me as a libertarian,
I believe that people should be free to pursue their dreams and live their lives.
However they want, as long as they don't hurt people or take their stuff, and it's that
simple.
And from that, we have a general skepticism of government getting involved in too many
things.
Because government is legal, concentrated monopoly on power and power corrupts people.
And I like to see democratized power and I love to see decentralized power.
And I'm generally skeptical that that governments can solve all of the problems that they claim
they want to solve for two reasons. One is because power corrupts
and you get all these perversions
and companies want to game the system
and government employees want to game the system,
but the other is more fundamental.
Knowledge doesn't come from the top down.
Knowledge is something that we all have a little bit of
and by working through the process of figuring stuff out,
that's where we learn things.
And this idea that anybody, a central planner,
a president, a congressman, a bureaucrat at the FDA,
that they would know everything they needed to know
to redesign some aspect of a market,
some aspect of your life, that's insane.
And it doesn't make any sense, and we all see that every day, that none of us know everything.
And sometimes the best way to solve a problem is to get together with your friends and people
that know things different than you and just say, what are we going to do?
Let's try something.
This might fail, this might not.
To me, that's the ethos of libertarianism, and it's not so much anti-government, but it's pro-cooperation.
It's really enjoying the beautiful chaos of people figuring stuff out and pursuing happiness and living their lives.
And in that sense, I think it's where most, certainly most Americans live.
Now, Matt, were you always a libertarian or did this evolve in life?
I mean, did you grow born and raise this way?
It's funny.
I, when I was 13 years old, I bought an album by a band called Rush.
Oh, God.
My favorite.
And somebody libertarians will tell the story.
And it's called 2112, a great album, badass album.
And it's dedicated to the genius of Iron Rand.
And she, of course, is a novelist, but at 13 years old, I'm like, who's this dude,
Iron Rand?
He had no idea.
But I eventually stumbled across one of her novels, one called Anthem.
And I just consumed one of her novels, one called Anthem, and I just consumed
all of her stuff, and she introduced me to other libertarian thinkers.
So I was ruined at 13, I had no hope.
Yeah, now this is, it's interesting when we talk about this, because when I first talk
to, especially young people about the philosophies or the concept of liberty. I find that I connect with them faster,
or initially when I talk about the moral reasoning behind it.
Like if I say to somebody, you own your body,
you own your mind, you own what you own, your property,
and nobody should ever have the right to force you
to do anything
to yourself or for anyone else,
and nobody should ever have the right to take your stuff.
And when I say it like that, everybody agrees,
or at least the young people say,
well, yeah, that makes lots of sense.
I like that.
But then when we go on the practical level,
you talked about cooperation.
I think it's important people understand
that cooperation is voluntary.
It's not-
It has to be. It's not forced. It has to be.
It's not forced.
And that's a tough one for people understand, especially when we talk about things on
a grand scale.
Like if we say, you talked about power and how power corrupts, people might hear that
and say, well, what about if a corporation gets big and powerful?
Why isn't that a problem?
Why is it just government that's a problem?
Well, I think you should be skeptical
of all concentrated power.
You should be skeptical of big corporations too.
But a lot of times you will see that the corporations
that do things that we generally are turned off by,
that's usually in collusion with government.
A lot of the reasons why big corporations
are big is that they've been able to game the system and the rules so that the small
upstarts can't get into business. And we're talking about certification and all that stuff.
It's a classic example, but that happens all the time. If you can't afford to hire a guy
to be your man in Washington, then you're disadvantaged in the business
world.
And it's a classic, it's always the case that the small businesses that make up the heart
of the American economy, they're always getting screwed by big corporations and collusion
with big government.
But yeah, I like democratized power.
I think we should keep it as dispersed as possible.
And sometimes libertarians confuse corporate America with free market capitalism.
Those are two different things.
Corporate America quite often is built on relationships in DC instead of of what
they do for their customers.
It free market capitalism is all about serving customers and creating things that customers didn't even
know they need, like Steve Jobs did. We love entrepreneurship and entrepreneurship is always
breaking down the system and reinventing it. Governments don't like that.
Yeah, many times what happens is you'll have an emerging market and it's very free because
it's emerging.
You can't regulate what doesn't exist.
Then it grows and then the big players in that market now see that more competitions coming
in.
They want a limit competition and those are the ones that come together to create the regulations
like you talked about hair braading or blow drying hair,
you need to have so many hours.
That regulation didn't exist when that was first coming out.
It happened later on when you've got these big players like, no, no, no, no, we want, we
don't want anybody being able to come in and compete with us because if I'm a business,
I know more competition for all intents and purposes is bad.
If I'm the only, you know, if it's just me
and another guy who have a gym in a big city,
I'm gonna be able to get more business
than if there's me and 15 other competitors.
We're watching this happen right now with Uber.
I mean, you see this with,
what are some companies that you know
that you see that are big disruptors?
Well, the entire sharing economy is a classic example
of what we're talking about.
It's Uber and Lyft and the ride sharing, it's Airbnb, but everything is being Uberized today. And in every single
case, and think about what Uber does, it cuts out the middleman. It breaks up the monopoly
of taxi cabs in New York where you can't get a freaking cab. And it allows people to be their own bosses.
This is everything that we should agree with
left, right, and center,
but in comments have come in and tried to break up
that model because it's destroying a cash cow,
which was the old taxi monopolies.
Same thing with hotels and Airbnb,
but from a libertarian perspective,
all of that stuff is a brutally efficient allocation
of scarce resources.
You're gonna empty seat in your car, in your driving,
and you can fill that and make money for yourself,
and also maybe put a few less cars on the road,
but it's also what the left calls the sharing economy.
We're actually working together in cooperation
and there's benefits in the environment,
there's benefits to people that are trying
to earn a little extra cash to pay for college,
whatever it is, it's more freedom
and that's a good thing, but man,
that the insiders are trying to take it down.
Now why we hear people say things like Uber is not regulated like tax, it's not going
to be a safe or the drivers aren't going to be taking care of as much, they don't have
benefits and stuff like that.
Let's talk about that for a second.
Is that true or is that just?
Well, it's true in the sense that there are more regulations on cabs,
but it's it's making the assumption that that somehow regulations
that govern cabs were written in public interest.
When in fact regulations are almost always written by people with self-interest.
We're all self-interested, right?
And it doesn't change when you become
a government agent. It doesn't change if you're lobbying the government to write regulations in a certain
way. And, you know, we used to call them cartels, but the old taxi regulation system was a cartel
that drove up prices and made it difficult to get a cab, it made it difficult to get a cab medallion, it made it difficult for young immigrants coming into this country that are looking for an
entry-level job to get a job. And we want to break that all down. So I think this assumption that
more regulation is in the public interest is a fundamental myth of, about, quote unquote, good government. No, it's not.
Yeah. And the other thing too is it's assuming if there isn't government regulation, that's
assuming there is no regulation. I think there's, that's a massive mistake because Uber is
very regulated. It's just regulated by the consumers. You know, every time you get in a car
and Uber and you leave, you rate it and they rate you.
And in fact, that's superior regulation because it's real time.
So a cab can be terrible, a lot more times before he gets found out than, let's say, an Uber
where right away I can look at the last rating and be like, oh, this guy got a one, I think
I'm going to pick somebody else.
And that's why the quality, I don't know anybody that prefers taking a cab over an Uber.
You know, we've all experienced both,
and Uber is just better.
It's more efficient.
It's not only more efficient, it's better service.
I get in the car, like I get in the water,
and he's got candy in the back,
and hey, do you wanna plug in your phone?
Cab's never done that, you know,
never done that for me before.
So it's superior.
And here's the thing I wanna kind of bring up with you, Matt,
is, you know, we have so many clear historical examples of
Freedom versus non-freedom and objectively speaking speaking freedom is
Superior and there's no there's no debating this we saw the fall of the Soviet Union
We see what socialism does in countries like Venezuela and yet I just saw a poll done
countries like Venezuela. And yet, I just saw a poll done not that long ago
that showed that college students
had a more favorable view of socialism
than they did of capitalism.
Why?
Like, what is going on here?
Yeah, I've seen all of this polling
and on one level, it sort of freaks you out.
It's a little scary.
Yeah, like what the hell's going on here?
We're teaching these kids.
But I think part of it is definitional
because I dug the, and the reason foundation
has done a lot of pulling on millennials
and their attitudes about capitalism and socialism
and it's worth checking out.
And they asked these, these saying,
same young people that were saying socialism
better than capitalism.
Do you believe that the government should own the means of production, which is the technical definition
of socialism?
And they're like, hell no, that's a stupid idea.
So I think part of it is, if, you know, when they hear the word capitalism, they hear
cronism, and they grew up under big bank bailouts, and they grew up watching corporations
collude with government.
So from their point of view, they don't understand what we say when we use that word. And I'm not even
a big fan of that word for that reason. It has so much baggage. When they hear the word socialism,
they don't think about the Soviet Union. Bernie Sanders very adamantly said, I'm not talking
about the Soviet Union. I'm talking about Scandinavia.
When you ask them what socialism means to them, it means people working together from
the bottom up to solve problems.
And I'm like, that's not socialism, that's liberty.
That's where the good stuff comes from.
But whenever you give the government that much power, it's kind of shocking how quickly Venezuela went from the most
wealthy country in Latin America just a few years ago to a place where people are dying
in the streets because they can't get food, they can't get medicine, and Nicholas Maduro
is using that monopolized power, socialist power, to crush any dissent.
He doesn't care how many people die
because he's about power.
That's socialism in practice,
but I think a lot of young people
are looking for that cooperative bottom-up community
where they can work together to help their neighbors
and to make sure that they live in a good community, that never works
if you're socializing power.
Yeah, it's funny when Venezuela started going in that direction, you had some politicians
and celebrities praising them.
Bernie Sanders, one of them, oh, Venezuela is doing great things.
They're trying to help the people and this is going to be awesome. And now they're silent. You don't hear anything coming to their mouth
about what's going on over there. What are some of the fundamental, besides evil people
with power, what are some of the fundamental reasons why socialism just doesn't work?
Well, the problem, whenever you centralize anything, you choose a winner and reject other ways of doing things.
And I think that the two mythologies of any form of authoritarianism,
and we could talk about fascism, we could talk about corporatism,
socialism, communism, whatever label you want to give those isms,
there's two assumptions that always apply.
One is that we're going to find somebody
that's good enough to wield all that power. They're not going to abuse it. They're going
to do the right thing with that. The other thing that they assume is that that person
whoever it is is actually smart enough to redesign civil society from the top down. He's smart
enough to redesign the economy. He's smart enough to redesign the economy.
He's smart enough to replace social institutions like churches
and community centers with one top down system.
This is precisely what Mao Zedong tried to do in Communist China.
Which resulted in how many tens of millions of...
It was the worst slaughter of humanity.
I think in the history of civilization, he killed 45 million people in just a couple of years.
It's breathtaking.
You take the Soviet Union and Mao's China for instance, and you think about the body count.
I was trying to think of a way to illustrate,
just tell how shocking this number is.
You're talking about 100 million people.
If you wrapped the globe, head to toe,
the corpses who died under socialism,
you could almost wrap around the globe four times.
That's how many people, just these two experiments
in socialism happened. And
part of it was abuse of power, but it was really more of that arrogance that I'm going to
redesign how it is that people feed themselves and how it is that they produce for the community.
Mal decided that farmers should produce steel. And this was his grand plan to beat the United States
in our economy.
And as it turns out, everybody starved
because you can't.
You can't, it has to be bottom up
and it has to be people figuring out
how to solve these problems for themselves.
So it's, you know, this isn't just socialism, by the way.
You know, fascism and other brands of authoritarianism.
To varying degrees, they want to plan things from the top down.
It's in the name of American greatness.
It's in the name of equality.
Whatever it is that buzzword is, the opposite's true.
It just doesn't work out the way they say.
I think people need to understand that whatever your intentions are,
understand that no one's smart enough to do this for us, we got to figure it out for ourselves.
Yeah, to go deeper on that, my a couple areas of learning for me that really helped me understand
this was, I loved watching, you know, I did read Hayek and Mises and I loved watching videos with
Milton Friedman and Learn Liberty has great videos and they had this great
video explaining prices and why prices exist and what they actually reflect and
Through watching that I was able to understand that prices really are
They tell you so much about something that you don't you don't realize you just see a price of something you think
Oh, this cost five dollars, but what that's telling you is telling you how much about something that you don't realize. You just see a price of something you think, oh, this costs $5. But what that's telling you is, it's telling you how much of that there's available, what
the demand is.
It's helping allocate resources to make that particular product.
It's telling all the producers of all the products that lead to making that product.
It's the most accurate way of communicating to individuals to allocate resources and to improve efficiency.
And you know, what I learned from all that was that wealth wasn't money.
Money is just represents wealth.
Well, wealth is really more efficiency.
And it's impossible.
It is impossible for one man or a group of men or women to figure out the most efficient
way to do everything all the time,
even if they were to do surveys,
those surveys aren't in real time.
And if they were, you know, people buy things differently
than what they say they're gonna do.
Like, when you, those prices tell you so much about things
that it makes things so much more efficient.
I mean, at the Soviet Union,
would have fields of wheat that would go rotten
because of the inefficiencies in trying to plan where
Things go and what to do so even though you may have great intentions
You end up starving a lot of people because it turns out figuring out how to
You know manage a in a nation is
It's impossible to do without letting the people do it kind of themselves and And the other side of that is, if you're this leader with this grand vision, not everybody's
going to agree with you.
What do you do with that?
You know, what do you do when you tell everybody they have to do something?
What would Mao do to the farmers who said, I don't want to make steel?
He killed them.
And that's what are your other options?
You either force them out or you, or they move in.
And it kind of highlights this underlying, you know, it's almost like humans need this
underlying philosophy.
And if they follow the wrong philosophy, we're capable of doing some incredibly terrible
things.
And socialism is just this, it's just this wrong, it's this wrong philosophy.
And it tends to promote these type of behaviors where
You know if people don't agree with me because I think I'm so right we need to force them to agree with me
Why is it stayed around for so long then what is it about it? That's a great question
Why why why are people drawn to it still? I think I mean this I ask this question every day because it's precisely
What I'm trying to to hack the answer on this
because it so obviously has failed again and again and again and you can cite the body count.
But I think part of it is, if we believe in liberty, one of the failures has been ours.
And I was turned on to these ideas by Ein Rand. And she talks about selfishness
as a virtue. And sometimes we fall into this caricature that because you believe in Liberty,
you don't give a damn about anybody else. And it's all about you and all that stuff. And
we sound that way when we talk about the efficiency of markets and all that stuff. But that's
not really what Liberty is all about. Liberty's about, yes, it's about pursuing your own dreams and choosing happiness as you
see fit, but it's also that responsibility that we have.
If you see a problem in your community, who's going to step up?
Do you want to outsource that to a politician and let them solve that problem?
People love to use that excuse.
Like, oh, my taxes are so high, the government's got it covered.
But that should be our responsibility.
And government corrupts that sense of community that we all have.
Is it what we're lazy then?
Is that what it is?
Is it what we're lazy?
That's just easier.
Let them handle it.
I don't want to deal with it.
Are we scared?
I think it's just easier to let them handle it. I don't want to deal with it, are we scared? I think it's all the above,
and I also think that if you grew up
with the government providing healthcare,
you can't conceive of a world where healthcare
will be provided, and by the way,
it'll be cheaper and more available
if we let markets take care of those things.
So, and politicians for all of their weaknesses,
they can always make an empty promise
and it sounds so compelling.
I'm going to give you free healthcare.
And we're going to say in response,
well, that's not gonna work
and I'll tell you all the reasons is not gonna work.
And we can't make a promise,
but we can promise that together we can solve this problem.
What's the main fear people have towards libertarian ideas?
It mainly like anarchism or something they feel like it's too chaotic, like the ideas?
Yeah, there's always qualifiers.
Well, I believe in freedom, but maybe not when it comes to speech, because people can say
really hateful things, and we shouldn't allow for that. Or I believe in freedom, but everybody should have
access to, everyone should have health insurance. And there's always a qualifier, but we need to do a
better job explaining how it is that free speech is a good thing.
How it is that markets and patients and doctors working together and making choices
is going to create a better healthcare system for everyone.
And it's difficult because sometimes you can't point to a real life example
because the government has monopolized the provision of something.
But then you have ubers and things like that where you say,
see prices went down, more people have jobs and it's more efficient and everybody wins.
That we have to find those examples.
I think, I mean, is it Amazon? Didn't Amazon partner with
Berkshire and another investment group to create like a healthcare system
with their own for Amazon?
It's kind of like a free market approach
to providing healthcare for their employees.
Why is healthcare so expensive then?
If I know people are thinking this,
well ours is more free market.
Why is healthcare so terrible than an American or an expensive?
Well of course, our system has never been free market.
It's what we call a third-party payment system, right?
You have since the Great Depression,
the government decided that there would be
a preferential tax treatment to company-provided
healthcare plans.
So right now, for most people,
you get your health insurance through your company.
And that means that you want to pay as little as possible Now for most people, you get your health insurance through your company.
And that means that you want to pay as little as possible and you want to use as much
as possible.
And somebody at an insurance company or your personal office is making decisions about
what you can and can't have, there's no market there.
And there's all sorts of regulations and corruptions in that.
And that's why ObamaCare, the first thing ObamaCare tried to do,
was force young healthy people to buy this gold-plated insurance plan that they absolutely don't need.
And by the way, they couldn't afford it either. It was called the individual mandate.
And the idea was that you were going to subsidize the use of healthcare for other people by forcing
people to buy something they didn't need. Now, that's the individual mandate part at least has
recently been repealed, but it makes no sense to do things that way. People need to make those
decisions for themselves and young people in particular. they need to buy some very affordable catastrophic healthcare plan
that says you're on your own unless you come down with some awful form of cancer or something that's
going to be a catastrophic event in your life. And at that point, let's say it kicks in at $5,000
out of pocket, you're covered. But everything else, you don't need an insurance plan.
You need to be able to save for the future so that you can take care of yourself.
It's got to be based on choice.
It can't be based on someone else deciding for you what you need to do with your life. And if you look at the sectors in the economy that go nuts,
like insane inflation, healthcare, education,
or always at the top, like the skyrocketing,
those happen to be two of the most regulated government
involved industries in the United States and the world.
Yeah, for markets to work well, you have to allow the signals to be accurate in the market.
And what regulations can do and what government can do is they can skew this signal so terribly
that the market then reads that signal and responds accordingly. So an example is education.
If the government comes out and says, Hey, higher education is, it's imperative,
it's super important, people need to have it,
it's great, which is all, can be true.
But because we say that, now what we're gonna do
is we're gonna make these laws that say,
you have to give loans to this many people for school
and we have to make it super easy to get money
and we have to guarantee this money.
What ends up happening is you get lots of money
that goes a lot of people, the risk isn't calculated properly
because that's a signal, that's a market signal.
And so now you've got all these people with all this money
who are going to do a higher education
and the cost that means the cost of education now inflates
because the market is reading that there's all this available
money, it's no different than what happened to the housing crisis
where banks were giving out loans partially
because they had to and partially because they knew
that there was no risk.
Like, well shit, you're giving me five grand to go gamble
in Vegas and if I lose it all, I'm gonna get another five grand.
Well, what am I gonna do?
I'm gonna gamble every last penny of that.
And so it inflates the price of everything so much, and our answer is throw more money at it, give people more money.
Whereas if it were more accurate, you wouldn't be able to get a massive student loan for a
liberal arts degree or something else like that, where you're probably not gonna end up
earning it back. And less money means the market has to compete better. There's going to be
more opportunities and options, but people don't see that what they see is less money,
therefore less people are going to get the education. Especially today, which is crazy
to me when we have access to so much free information online, it's crazy to me that we even
continue to make that case. But the more we're involved, the more we skew the market,
and the more we blame capitalism versus what the real problem is,
which is, you know, are intruded into the market.
Let's talk about some current events.
We have a president who's in office now
who is extremely polarizing.
And I know people who are...
I don't think I know anybody on the left who likes him.
I know some libertarians like some stuff about him.
What are your views on Trump and what do you do?
I know he's cut a tremendous amount of regulations.
I believe he's cut more regulations in the years and it's been an office than Reagan did
in the last eight years or whatever in his total years.
Is that, I mean, what do you think of Trump so far?
Well, just to come clean, I supported Rand Paul in the presidential
primary and the Republican Party, and when Rand pulled out of the race, I actually switched
and supported Gary Johnson. And I was doing political work for super PACs for both of those
guys. So I was not a Trump guy by any means. And I'll say this first, I think one of the things that Trump
has done that is probably a long-term service is he's punctured this mythology of a romance
with the presidency and this idea that if we just elect the right guy and he's a good family
guy and he really cares about me, that's all I need to do.
I need to elect the right guy and give him the power
and let it all go forward.
There's nothing romantic about the Trump president.
He's kind of a shister and he says what people want to hear.
And then he'll say the opposite tomorrow.
But let's be honest, haven't politicians always been doing this to us?
Yeah, and the extreme version of it.
Yeah, and didn't Barack Obama do the same thing, but man, he was so good that it...
He sounded good.
Yeah, it didn't sound like BS when Obama was doing it, but when Trump does it,
you're like, okay, that guy's BS-ing me, but let's be honest. All politicians do that. So I think there's an upside to
sort of the hysteria that he's created on the left because I hope. And you're seeing
this sometimes at least, they've rediscovered the Bill of Rights and they've rediscovered
the separation of powers between the executive branch and the legislative branch. And when Obama was crossing those lines,
they didn't seem to care that much.
And I think there's hypocrisy on both sides on this,
by the way, like when a Democrat's in power,
the Republicans are all about the Constitution
and they love the Fourth Amendment.
And state power and all that.
And now they're a little less concerned
when Trump does those things.
So I think we should be skeptical of whoever's in office.
And I would judge Trump the same way as Judge Obama.
Like I worked with Barack Obama in the Justice Department on criminal justice reform.
I think we're putting too many young nonviolent kids in jail
and I was willing to work with
those guys on that.
Even though I'd been a pretty harsh critic of a lot of Obama's economic policies, my attitude
to Trump is the same way.
If you cry wolf every time Trump tweets something stupid, I don't think we're going to get a chance
to mobilize people when he does something substantially wrong. And I think the left, I've worked with a lot of progressive friends on issues that we
have in common.
And I tell them every time, like, you can't freak out every time Trump tweets, because when
he does something that we need to join arms and fight him against, everyone stopped listening
at that point.
That's a good point.
It's an extremely good point.
I mean, I'm not, there's some things Trump's done
that I like, some things that a lot of things he's done.
I don't like.
I didn't vote for him, I'm not a supporter,
but they are making it hard.
They, I constantly have to defend him,
which I don't like.
Yeah.
Like, please don't make me have to defend. Yeah, don't make me have to defend him, which I don't like. Yeah. Like, please don't make me have to defend.
So you should be kidding, Uncle.
Yeah, don't make me have to defend him all the time
because you're attacking him on stupid shit,
like attack him on the real stuff,
not on the fact that he hurt your feelings.
And really, there's this, I mean,
what do you think, you talked about free speech earlier.
And I don't, I mean, I love learning about history and I love you know
reading about you know American history and it just it seems like speech is
under attack today in a different and scary way much more different scary
way than it ever was I mean college campuses like you know Berkeley these to
fight for their ability to say whatever they wanted and And now, if you are a conservative or...
We're in a red hat. Yeah, or you're worrying about, you know, make America a great hat,
or you're a white, straight, you know, Christian male. Like, they need to silence you and
shut you up. Like, what's going on here with that? It's, I mean, it's so bizarre in campus that
this whole notion of safe spaces is, is anithetical to everything that I think America stands for,
because being uncomfortable and failure
and risk and all that stuff,
and being willing to let somebody
that you fundamentally disagree with speak in public,
those are all core American values
that have somehow magically, just in the last couple of years,
it seems like these values have disappeared with young people.
So you have that going on, and I'm hoping that that's a cancer that's on college campuses.
And I think the college campus model is probably dying out anyway because of the cost structure
we were just talking about.
It doesn't make any sense to spend 100 grand for a degree in European media studies and
then go work at Starbucks.
Or even business, which is a great degree to have because now you're just with the other
millions of people in the state of the country.
Right.
Well, let's be honest, it'd be better to like, if you really want a job training, go get
a job.
Don't go get an MBA that teaches you the theory about how to create wealth, go try to
create wealth.
But there's, I think, and that's probably part of why this speech is so under fire on college campuses because it's so weird inside there.
But the countervailing force, of course, is social media and the democratization of knowledge
and we mentioned Hayek earlier and he talked about the price system as a communications network.
I would love to see him opine on Facebook and social media
and the way it breaks up the Marxist Professor Cartel,
the way it breaks up the mainstream media cartel.
And I love more speech.
I even love fake news because there is a kind of balance
to fake news.
Some blogger in their basement is calling out New York Times when they do fake news.
And you know, we're so worried that that that blogger in that basement is not
qualified to be a news guy like, come on.
This let it let it all work itself out.
And they'll be more accountability when when there are only three TV networks
and Walter Cronkite,
you guys aren't old enough, but he used to tell us that's the way it is.
Mm-hmm.
You get to know that that's the way how I feel.
Yeah.
Yeah, you get like 20 minutes.
That was his sign off, right?
Every night, right?
You get 20 minutes of news every night and it was curated by someone from the top down
and Walter Cronkite said, that's the way it is.
Well, you didn't have a chance to like, tweet back.
No, that's not it it is. Well, you didn't have a chance to like, tweet back. That's not it.
Bullshit.
Yeah.
So I think we should embrace like, I call it beautiful chaos.
Campuses are these safe places, but in the real world, there's plenty of speech and the
more the better, even if it upsets you, even if Donald Trump's tweet upsets you, it's
better to have those arguments in public and work it out.
I feel like he was a wrench, you know what I mean?
I feel like it was just, he was a response to that particular movement
where people were kind of sick of it and so like,
well, let's, I feel like we always kind of do that.
You'll far left, far right, far left,
far right, I feel like we've just ping pong,
yeah, back and forth all the time.
You know, Sal brought up, we're talking about economics, the banking system.
You're a person that would love to ask your opinion if you have one on what's going on
with cryptocurrencies.
What's your thought on that?
Yeah, first of all, Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are all built on something called blockchain. And blockchain, I think, is one of the most important
revolutions in technology that we're only starting to see
why that matters so much, because it basically allows for people to
securely contract with each other anonymously.
Instantly, too.
Instantly, without some third-party enforcement mechanism.
So without courts, without governments, without contracts,
and that is so radical that I think people
haven't even quite appreciated what that means.
Cryptocurrencies, the big problem with them right now
is that the government's lashing back,
and Bitcoin has taken a beating,
and I think it has more to do with the fact
that governments are threatening to regulate it,
governments like South Korea is apparently threatened
to ban Bitcoin.
By the way, Bitcoin is a lifeline in Venezuela.
If you want to earn a living or you want to trade goods
because their currency is
Crap, so you can't you can't get food imported and they can't produce food inside
But you can use things like Bitcoin to
Trade with the outside world in a way that that is profoundly liberating
So I I think it's really important, but government has a monopoly on money
It's gonna be really interesting to see how this shakes out over the next five days.
And they want to shut it down, but I'll tell you my little, my little nonprofit for the people,
we've gone through two vendors so far to be able to accept Bitcoin as an actual
organization. And I just got noticed from the second vendor
that we use that they're not going to do it anymore,
because the regulation is too much.
So they're starting to bleed this very robust platform
with nitpicking regulations.
And it's because they don't like the competition.
Like, imagine if you can trade without using US dollars,
it means that the Fed can't manipulate the price of that money,
they can't manipulate the price of credit,
they can't bail out Wall Street,
they can't fund the kind of debt
that our current government is funding.
We're now like a $20 trillion.
You're stripping them with the most power
they potentially probably have.
That is, that's all the power. So they're going to try to stop it. But this is the
beautiful clash of our lifetime, the liberating forces of technology versus attempts by incumbents,
including governments, to shut that down. You read the protests in Iran. I just did a piece about this.
The government in Iran, it's called them Islamofashes,
whatever you want to call them.
They're just authoritarians.
They essentially shut down the internet.
So there's always a work around.
And they shut down what's app,
and then they use virtual private networks instead.
And it's like whack-a-mold,
they're trying to stop people from being more free,
and it's very difficult in the internet age to do that.
Yeah, it's like once the toothpaste is out of the tube.
Yeah, good luck.
So what's going on over there then,
and around with this revolution?
I've seen pictures of girls, you know, taking off their huge jobs and you know, what's happening over there?
Why is there why is this even happening?
I think it's because of technology. There's there's always been I think people inherently
want to be free and people inherently push against authoritarianism and all of its flavors
but back when the government
controlled the flow of information, it was very difficult.
Of course, people still wanted to be free.
And you could look at Gandhi or Martin Luther King
or Solidarity in Poland.
There's always the pushback of people
against authoritarianism.
But now, with social media, that stuff catches fire.
And you can create massive movements overnight when the government has overstepped its bounds.
The response by the Iranian government is typical of authoritarianism.
It's been brutal.
And not only are they shutting down technology, but they're killing people.
That's what they do. But I think it's very difficult to keep a lid on freedom
in our current age. And I'm hoping that our government doesn't get to involved because
I think that would be a mistake. I think that would actually undermine the people that
are really looking for freedom in that country.
Yeah, I think if we stepped in, what might end up happening is they might end up creating
a kind of a common enemy like, you know, the US is why we're doing this and then everybody's
against us and it's no longer about them and then which which has happened.
But that happens all the time. We bombed the shit out of some country and then say,
no, we're helping, really. Yeah, it's true.
Wonder why that doesn't work.
Yeah, I can't imagine.
Yeah.
So is it, you know, we're talking about how people
inherently don't like authoritarians,
but then it seems like as society's prosper,
as free society's prosper,
then is it because people are spoiled
and then they start to want to go in the opposite direction?
I know we've become less free.
We used to be one of the top five free, you know,
countries in freedom, was it the heritage in next,
I think, and now we're like 15th or something like that.
You see this in Europe as well.
Why is that?
Why do we tend to try to go backwards?
Because we just get spoiled,
and now all of a sudden we believe in the unicorn of government.
Well, we're spoiled, but we take certain things for granted.
We take for granted the tremendous prosperity that we have and all of the choices and luxuries
that we have that are unimaginable in Venezuela today.
And so you find it does, it is a bit of a pendulum thing where people get so used to freedom that they forget where
the stuff comes from.
They don't know that it's because of freedom they just assume it's there.
Because when I was born, there was a whole foods on every corner.
I can get my latte exactly the way I want it.
That's my baseline understanding of what civil society is.
There isn't that stuff in Venezuela.
You're picking through garbage.
And so you see the countervailing thirst for liberty quite often comes in authoritarian
countries where they've seen what governments all about.
I have friends in Lithuania who were there when the Soviet Union would gun their parents
down in the streets.
They have no illusions about what big governments all about.
We don't really see that as much in this country.
We see it sometimes with militarized police and the way that they handle crowds and stuff
like that.
And hopefully that's a teachable moment for people.
But generally speaking, we don't see the government hurting people.
Now what about the arguments on inequalities?
I hear this all the time from the, you know, kind of the far left, which we'll call them,
I don't know, socialistic Democrats or whatever you want to call them.
They will talk about income inequality
and how a few people at the top have all the money
and most people have less.
Like, what do we do about that?
You know, I think we were talking about education
and housing earlier,
and one of the ironies of government policies
that says everyone should own a home,
everyone should have a college education.
These are things that Barack Obama declared.
Most people don't own homes,
and most people don't go to college,
which means that they are subsidizing the people
that are now getting government loans to do these things.
Think about it. It's a taking from have-nots and giving it to have that usually is how redistribution of wealth works.
It's not about taking from billionaires. There's billionaires in Venezuela today.
There's billionaires in every country, and they have the lawyers and the goons
and whatever it takes to protect that money
and they have accountants and they have ability
to protect their wealth.
The real problem when you get into wealth redistribution
is growing that 20-year-old kid
that wants that first opportunity.
That you always create that barrier and you
do it through taxes, you do it through regulation, you do it through the minimum wage, you do
it through forced unionism.
All of these things are, you know, that's the platform of, we need to make things more
equal, but that's not what happens. The opposite happens. And the only
way to make things more equal is to allow people to be free to contract, free to take
a job, free to do job training, free to take an internship where they're not going to
pay you anything because they're going to teach you something that's invaluable. And we
prevent all of these things in the name of equality. And I also think there's this common misconception
that the economy is a fixed pie in which if I get more of that pie,
that means everybody else gets less.
But in reality, the pie grows as market economies grow.
And then the other thing that I think is important for people to understand is if you have two people, one man has $100,000, another man has $1,000 and they both invest
their money equally and they both grow their money at 10%. The guy with $100,000 has now
increased his wealth the same percentage wise but he's got way more money because 10%
of 100 grand is a lot more than 10% of a thousand and money allows you to do that. There's also something I learned recently. It's called a Pareto distribution.
I don't know if you're familiar with this, but you see Pareto distributions in all creative
markets, anything involving creativity. So like you'll notice that a very small percentage
of scientists create most of the scientific literature, a very small percentage of scientists create most of the scientific
literature.
A very small percentage of painters create most of the valuable art, a very small percentage
of musicians create the music that we all like, and a very small percentage of, you know,
hardworking, conscientious, you know, intelligent individuals create the products that we
want to buy.
And that's a natural distribution that happens regardless,
even if you try to force equality through socialism,
I mean, in the, in the disparity in a country like North Korea,
as massive as well.
I mean, you've got, it's supposed to be everybody's equal,
but you've definitely got the haves and the have-nots.
It's just, it's done through political power.
For me personally, I don't mind if someone has way more
so long as it's the result of the fact that they're doing,
that they have, they're more intelligent,
they work harder and they're creating shit that people like.
That's when I have no problem with that,
and that's when I have no problem with that distribution,
but people tend to not see that,
and they see that there's halves and have
knots, and it doesn't seem fair.
How do you feel about that?
Is that natural?
Is it natural that people are just going to be that way?
I don't think anybody's equal anyway, no matter what.
People are never going to be equal in outcome, and the goal of a decent government is to
create an equality of opportunity.
You know what?
Barriers to entry for someone that's trying to do better for themselves and their family.
I just had a conversation with an Uber driver.
He's an immigrant from Ethiopia, and he was marveling at how easy it was to get something here, to get a job, to get an opportunity,
to even to participate in the military.
He was the first thing he did as he came over
and he signed up.
And we take all that for granted, but a quality of outcomes,
you could argue, save for the political class in North Korea.
Things are incredibly equal in North Korea because everybody's starving.
Everybody's starving in such horrific ways that they've completely dehumanized and beaten
the life out of the population.
The alternative is to have growth and opportunity, And yes, some people are going to get extremely wealthy if people are free to produce.
But everybody has that opportunity and people don't starve in our country.
And again, we take that as just the given.
Nobody should starve in this country. And I think we also take for granted
that people have different value systems.
You know, I know a lot of people look at a CEO
of a large company and think, oh, that lucky guy
and or girl and they don't, you know,
they have all this money, but they don't realize
that that person works a hundred hours a week.
That's what he sacrificed to get there.
Yeah, it's just, you's just stress out of their mind.
There's a reason why his job or her job pays so much money.
And people on an individual basis have different values.
And then you can break people up into categories,
like one of the biggest arguments that I've heard
through in politics today is this idea of this gender pay gap.
Let's talk about that for a second.
What is the gender pay gap about and is it because people are sexist against women?
You know, there's been a lot of studies and they're conflicting studies, but the gender
pay gap is this theory that women don't make the same amount of money for the same equal
work that men do. And it fails to look at the life cycle of a career and the fact that women sometimes make
different choices.
Sometimes they want to take off 10, 15 years to have a family.
Sometimes they want flexibility in their job schedule.
And sometimes men want the same choices, but on average,
men are guys that go into the workforce and work their way up through a career and they don't
take that time off. So I think it's wrong to lump people into categories. It's not men versus women.
into categories, right? It's not men versus women. It's everybody in the workforce making different choices for themselves. About like, you know, most people don't want to work a hundred hours a week.
But if you want to run a successful company, you work all the time. That's just the way it is.
You don't have weekends, you don't have anything. Other people don't want to work more than 20 hours
a week, and maybe their family situation allows that opportunity for them.
I think it's a mistake for us, you know, the planners from the top deciding what's acceptable
for people.
Like, we should do that.
But, you know, the war against women was a narrative that the Democrats had had ready
and they've used that card for for most
of my life actually and they were going to use it long before Donald Trump came along and he
just happened to be a perfect target.
Particularly right target.
So just the right things.
Yeah.
Yeah, the thing though, the what I like to present to people when they bring that up to me is
I look at things from an economic point of view and I think, okay, I know that the number one motivator or goal of a business
is to create a profit, right?
Which that's fine, it should be, and they should have to do that through serving the consumer.
But if a company knew that it could save a full one-fourth of its cost in paying employees simply by just hiring women, that's
all you would see right now. There would only women would be employed by a lot of companies
because they pay women one-fourth less than they pay men, but yet you don't see that.
And that's because that's not, it doesn't exist. The reality is generally people tend to
have,
men and women have different values and things
that they value, but on an individual basis,
if you compare individual to individual,
exactly the same outcome, you'll see that there isn't one
because the market really favors your productivity.
That's like number one.
Like everything else is, come second, third, fourth, and all,
but it's really about your productivity.
And it's too bad that politics has pushed so many narratives forward and really confused
people so we don't really know, you know, really, you know, what to believe.
So...
Yeah, my wife was here and she's a career girl.
She's always wanted to work and that's been very highly valued in her life. Her version of feminism says that we should all be treated the same in the workforce.
And today, feminism sometimes means the opposite where you want special treatment
because of your sex.
And if she was here, she'd tell you that really screws women over.
If you start creating all of these special carve outs and treatment for women, we're
not going to get hired for the same opportunities.
And that's just the perverse incentives that government creates.
And it sounds good, it's well-intentioned, but it hurts women.
It doesn't hurt men, it hurts women.
It does.
Let's talk about your, you were talking about your nonprofit organization, would you mind
telling your audience a little bit about what that is and what it does and what you do?
Sure, our group is called Free the People and we specifically set out a couple years ago to use technology
and video and social media to turn young people on to liberty.
And that's, it gets right at this conversation we're having about why or so many people
romance by the ideas of socialism.
I don't think that that millennials are inclined towards socialism at all.
They don't like authority, they don't like top down, they don't want someone else controlling
their lives.
But we need to translate economics and political theory into powerful storytelling.
And that's what we're trying to do.
Mostly short videos, but young people also consume
a lot of documentary style things on YouTube.
They listen to podcasts.
They just don't go to Walter Cronkite.
They don't actually go to the Marxist professor.
They don't go to
government. So how do we make it more accessible for people to do that? And we drive a lot of
traffic, and we drive a lot of eyeballs. And we partner with conservatives. I have a partnership
with a conservative organization. I have a partnership with with the number of progressive
organizations. And that's because I think liberty is kind of in the middle today like we're not
We're not ideologues in the sense that that we're gonna choose one tribe and just hate the other tribe
We're trying to promote these values that I think are common to all human beings
Which is pretty challenging when you look at like you
Advertising that's out there when we talk about economics and then when you look at like political views I mean those and we talk about economics, and then when you look at political views,
those two areas are probably some of the most manipulated areas
that we deal with.
That's got to be such a challenge
with the message that you guys have.
It's all, I have a burning hatred for clickbait,
which is really designed to just get you hating on people
that you're preconceived to not like anyway.
So it used to be scary pictures of Barack Obama, and now it's scary pictures of Donald Trump.
But click like on that and you've educated nobody about anything, and you've only deeper
embedded that sort of tribal animosity that we feel right now.
And I don't think that's not who we are as people.
And this is a
downside of technology. But the upside would be, let's seek out some common
values. Let's have a civil conversation. Let's let's let's talk about things
that we're not supposed to talk about, but let's let's do it in a in a
decent way. Talk about some of the challenges that you've dealt with in
with that because that's something that you know a little bit of our history.
Like we were three guys that been in fitness for between 15 to 20 years and we're trying to
disrupt the fitness industry, calling out a lot of the bullshit that's out there because
our entire career has been spent watching these companies market to insecurities, just like
what you're saying right now with clip-bait. So here we are now and we've grown to be a pretty
large company and trying to scale this business
without using tactics like that is extremely difficult.
So what are some of the things you guys have come to find out
or what you're learning about this whole YouTube world
and social media world and then trying to navigate through it
while also promoting a good message
without using the same bullshit tactics.
Yeah, yeah.
So I think there's a huge market opportunity
for people that don't do clickbait.
And it's a grossly underserved market. And you have to have enough faith in people that
if you give them different ideas and you try to talk to them as thoughtful people, they're
going to take that extra time to find you out.
And clickbait's always gonna be there,
but the alternative is most of America.
Most of America is more thoughtful than the clickbaits.
And when you read the troll comments
on a Facebook post, that is not representative
of the people that you want to talk to.
So I think the other thing that we've been very aggressive about is experimentation and failure.
And we throw almost anything against the wall.
And we do heavy stuff on economics and we do corny stuff on just having fun and everything
in between. Like we'll do devastating videos about the worst that humans can do against each other
under socialism and then we'll make fun of John Bolton's mustache.
And that's the whole gamut of things, but it's all designed to engage people and you
drop some Easter eggs in there where people see that and they want to learn more. And you have to have the meat to back up the engaging
social videos and make it so that anybody can self-educate on the things that
you're trying to talk about. It feels to me a lot like the longer form
content would do well with you guys. So like YouTube videos and also podcasts versus like
hardball or one of the can you describe like your experience with those types of shows where they
don't really allow you to even express your ideas in full. Yeah, so I used to do a hardball a lot
with with Chris Matthews. I saw that I was cringing and there's one episode in particular that I remember because my
My earphone was screwed up. So whenever I spoke there was this echo that that echoed like three times
So it was impossible to talk back to him
but when Chris Matthew starts yelling at you, you just shut up and let him let him go and normally
And the reason I would do it so much is he would actually let you make your points.
Bill Mar is the same way.
I've been on Bill Mar a bunch of times.
And as long as you can make your point, I think it's actually better to go on quote,
the enemy show.
I agree.
Yeah.
And, you know, I've never been like assaulted for being this crazy libertarian.
People will come up in the airport once in a while and say something like, I saw you on
Bill Mar and I disagree with everything you said.
And I'm like, oh, here it comes.
And but they usually go on and say, but I appreciate the way that you explained your ideas and
you really made me think about some things.
So I think tone, like when you're attacking the health industrial complex, tone
probably matters and making sure that we should have that righteous indignation and rage against
the machine about all the things that the establishment is doing wrong, but let's be conscious
of a tone that actually makes people want to listen to what you have to say.
You have a very positive,
I feel like a positive outlook on how things are
or where they're moving forward,
which is very different from the,
I guess the mood that you get from any other,
I don't know, political commentator, pundit,
or whatever, where it's like doom and gloom.
And it's funny listening to you, you know,
you do make a lot of fantastic points.
Like when I think about the poll that I told you about
with college students and socialism, in the same,
I mean, in the same sense, or the same sentence,
like millennials are more entrepreneurial
than previous generations.
They actually value entrepreneurship.
And I know I see we have some that work for us.
And they're way more entrepreneur-minded
than previous generations.
Like I talk to kids now and you ask them,
what do you want to do when you grow up?
And I'm getting things like,
oh, I want to have a YouTube channel
or I want to start a business on the internet.
And it wasn't like that a couple generations ago.
So I'm wondering if we just, because the loud, the extremes tend to be the loudest, that
maybe we have this distorted view of what's really going on.
I think so.
And I think language is so important.
I have this, I mentioned I have this working relationship with some progressive friends.
And the first time I joined them in a closed-door meeting,
I realized that even though they were speaking perfect English, I really didn't understand
what they were saying because their language was so tribal and they have certain ways of
saying things. And I ended up telling them, as I'm trying to understand where you guys are
coming from, but I don't even understand what you're talking about. And then I went back
to one of my libertarian hangouts
and I realized, we do the same damn thing. Good awareness there.
Yeah, we got all this secret handshake stuff that we do. And so listening to trying to figure out
what people are actually trying to say, like when young people say that they're interested in socialism,
it's not enough. I mean, that pull itself is kind of click baity,
right?
And it would be more interesting to actually have a follow-up conversation with people that
are intrigued by socialism, say, what are you looking for?
What do you think that you're trying to accomplish with that word?
And you'll quite often find that they mean something fundamentally different than you
may.
It's a great point, I even think of it that way.
When I look forward, I see things being more and more free, but not necessarily because
the ideas of freedom are more popular more so because I think technology is just kind of
forcing it that way.
I don't think government knows what to do
with these emerging markets
because they don't know what to regulate
because they just don't know.
Like Uber, there's no way Uber would have existed
had government officials known what it was gonna be.
Well, we've seen this in the marijuana industry too,
not that long ago.
I mean, I was a part of that whole movement
here in the Bay Area and I really believe
what took so long is just government trying to figure out
how they're gonna get get their hands in.
Of course.
Of course.
It's like, why did it take this long?
Well, let's allow some clubs so we can track stats and numbers and see exactly what it's
producing.
And then we'll figure out how we're going to get our hands.
We'll require some patents.
Yeah.
And then they make more, and then they have enough money to lobby and compete with the alcohol
system.
And the irony, the irony, if somebody who really understands economics realized, too,
we're not even solving the black market problem because then they put so
many taxes involved in it. It drives the medical marijuana industry, the price is
up, so there still is a black market that exists. So how shitty is that that we've
now have all these cannabis clubs and we're doing such a great thing, but yet
we're still not getting rid of the black market because of all this fucking
taxation that's gone inside of it. It's unreal to me. Well, that was a dirty deal that we did with government and
incumbents, particularly pharmaceutical companies, alcohol companies. Those are the primary
opponents in the state of Utah where they're trying to legalize medical cannabis on the
ballot. But we made this deal.
You can tax the shit out of it
if you blood it be legal.
You have to shake hands with them.
Yeah, it's bullshit.
Yeah, and we'll work through that.
I think we did need to get to market and show that,
children are not going to be dying in the streets
because we legalize adult use of cannabis
in Colorado and Washington and now in California.
I mean, I think it goes back to that problem
like people need to see how the market's going to function.
And it's going to be fine and the demagoguery
is going to go away once people see that it's okay.
But yes, they're gonna push a lot of people
into the black market because they're gonna try
to text the shit out of it.
And that's gonna have to work itself out. But, you know, the Uber and Lyft and the democratization of knowledge, it all looks
kind of chaotic right now. And think about, like, you know, we got Donald Trump, we have Bernie Sanders,
we have all of these political movements all over the world that
seem to be vacillating from extreme left to extreme right.
And you could look at that and say, wow, this is all fucked up.
Or you could say, wow, more people are in franchise now.
And the two party duopoly that used to give us two flavors of the same damn thing is
being broken up.
And you're seeing
that, yeah, there's democratic socialists and there is substantial minority in this country.
There's libertarians, there's conservatives, there's all these different flavors of
people's politics.
And I think that is generally a good thing.
We're seeing more people with more voices.
It's happening in the marketplace.
It's happening in politics.
And this is why I'm optimistic about the long run of liberty, because I think we have a
pretty cool set of ideas that are consistent with how people actually live and strive and
achieve.
And we just need to connect with a much bigger audience than we have in the past.
It seems that way.
We have politicians now who actually call themselves
libertarian, Rand Paul's one of them.
He's got a decent amount of Paul in power,
just in a mash is another gentleman
that I like to follow quite a bit.
But you didn't have anybody before.
Ron Paul was the only one before,
and everybody, you know,
they didn't really pay much attention to him,
called him crazy, you know, crazy or whatever.
He's actually my, that's the first guy that I saw.
I watched his videos at first,
like, man, how many years ago,
and that was my kind of introduction into that, so.
Yeah, Ron Paul used to be the only
Liberty Republican out there,
and now I could, I could rattle off
a couple more Thomas Massey and Kentucky is
pretty awesome. And they're interesting because they're viewed as Tea Party Republicans.
And I was part of the Tea Party movement. Which originally started off very...
It was a very liberty thing. And then it got hijacked.
It got hijacked. And by the way, politics corrupts everything. So it of course, it would corrupt a social movement as well.
But Justin Amash is a ardent defender of free speech and privacy and all the things we've
been talking about today.
But and by the way, probably one of the highest-profile Republican critics of Donald Trump, but he was elected by the Tea Party against the Republican establishment in his district.
And they actually ran a candidate against him with the most horrible attack ads, and they've tried to unseat him, but he's untouchable because politics has been democratized.
He raises money outside of the party system.
He organizes his voters outside of the party system.
He uses things like Facebook to communicate every vote he takes.
He will give you full explanation.
Which is great.
Like that's precisely who we want to run for office.
But his party boss has hate him But his party boss has hate him.
His party boss has hate him.
And sometimes he works with Democrats
on issues of common interest.
As Thomas Massey said once,
see someone asked him,
why do you work with so many Democrats?
And he said, well, Matt, you're confusing me for a partisan.
I'm an ideologue.
I believe certain things.
And if I can find someone else that believes I was saying,
I'm going to work with them.
And I don't care which party they belong to.
Excellent.
Are you like a big L-libitarian or small?
Like, are you a big party libertarian?
There's actual political party libertarian.
Yeah, I'm a small L-libitarian.
And I-
There's a difference.
Yeah, there is a difference.
And political parties are vehicles
to try to accomplish some short-term goal.
And they can be empty vessels.
Like the Republican Party can be free trade one year
and anti-trade the next year,
same with the Democratic Party.
The first real involvement I had with the big L
libertarian party was in this last cycle
because I liked Gary Johnson compared to the other two choices we had on the ballot.
They are struggling with the growing pains of what it would take to be a major party.
And some of that's internal, like they're constantly having fights about who's pure enough
and excommunicating anybody that's not pure enough.
Yeah, didn't they say just recently
that Ron Paul and Judge Napolotano
can't even speak it there?
Yeah, I mean, someone in the LP said that
and they were debating back and forth,
but those are the kinds of little fights
that small parties have.
The bigger problem is that the two party do happily, the Republicans and the Democrats,
colluded to keep Gary Johnson off the stage during the presidential debates, and based
on the standards that Ross Perot used to get on the presidential stage, Gary should have
been up there, but they changed the rules because they're a cartel and they can change the rules.
And they don't like competition.
So a lot of the problems with third parties, not just the libertarian party, is that the
two parties don't want them.
Green party has the same problem.
But you're seeing all of these dynamics that I described with was Justin Amash beating
the party bosses.
You're seeing the ability of third parties
to use social media to grow their ideas.
I think, personally, I think people should have more
than two choices in politics.
They're gonna have to go that route,
or else the rock is gonna be our next president.
I mean, I feel like if they don't get on
fucking board with Facebook and start figuring this game out,
or destined for a celebrity to be our next fucking
president. I don't, yeah.
I mean, that's, I'm predicting him right now.
Unless somebody else finally gets together. She has a
run. Yeah, Oprah or the rock between those two. I'm leanin
rock. So for someone who's just wants to start learning more
about some of these ideas, what's what are good resources
replaces? You think they should start looking?
So a couple of places, I mean, go check out our videos. You find us on Facebook, free
the people, find us on YouTube, wait, and we publish all our videos there. We're primarily
using Facebook just because that's where we've invested over the years. I like the foundation
for economic education, and it's a crowdsourced platform for articles
and stories about Liberty.
There's a lot of great stuff on there.
I've always loved Reason Magazine,
John Stossel's doing some stuff with them right now.
And if you want to dig deeper,
go look at the curriculum that say
the Cato Institute might propose.
But I just don't, I don't think you should start
with a thousand-page book that I tried to slog through.
Start with a video, start with a story.
There's a guy named Glenn Jacobs,
who is Cain from WWE.
Oh yeah.
And he's a libertarian.
Yeah.
Number 10. Number 10. Yeah, of course, I didn't know that. And we did,
we did, I did an interview with him. He is the most
articulate explainer of the super intelligent of the
difference between socialism and capitalism. So, so check that out.
I mean, maybe a fun interview then. Maybe we should find them.
Yeah, for sure. Yeah, I liked it. The video I send people,
there's one video I send everybody when we start talking about
these things.
And it's Milton Friedman, the pencil.
He's describing it.
It's a three minute video you can find on YouTube.
And it's a very basic, but very powerful illustration of-
As far as economics.
Just the power of markets and how they are drivers for peace.
And not what people tend to think
when they think chronic capitalism,
so my favorite thing to share.
Anyway, thanks for coming on, man.
That's been fun.
Absolutely, Blas, I'm glad that you're really the first person
that we're bringing on the show that we're introducing,
like this is one of my passions in particular,
is are the philosophies and ideals of liberty
and free markets, and you're the first person we brought on
to talk about this with our audience, so thanks.
Yeah.
Thank you.
We'll see how the comments turn to you.
We'll see how those will let you know that.
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