Moonshots with Peter Diamandis - EP #6 Abuses of the American Regulatory State w/ Balaji Srinivasan
Episode Date: October 13, 2022In this episode, Balaji and Peter discuss the future of humanity, how to create positive change, and the Network State. You will learn about: How technology can change the world Will living ...longer benefit humanity? Abuses of the American regulatory state AI Translation will either unite or divide us What are the first Network States forming? Balaji Srinivasan is an entrepreneur and co-founder of Counsyl. He is the former CTO of Coinbase and has released an online book detailing the theory of The Network State. Read Balaji’s The Network State Real-time feedback on how diet impacts your health with Levels. Consider a journey to optimize your mind and body with Life Force. Listen to more episodes from Moonshots & Mindsets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Getting that degree of moral alignment of even a thousand like really, really intense,
zealous activists, then the market will exist because the policies, the laws are moved out of the way. And so you've cleared the underbrush and it's now feasible to build.
And a massive transform to purpose is what you're telling the
world. It's like, this is who I am. This is what I'm going to do. This is the dent I'm going to
make in the universe. Apology, good morning, buddy. Good morning. Good to see you. Yeah,
it was fun hanging out with you in New York. Yeah,'m getting a chance to connect and talk about all kinds of fun things.
But, you know, just noted, Doug, you've erased the magic whiteboard behind you. When's the last
time that was blank? Just a few days ago, actually. You know, I tried to just keep myself
sharp, you know, do some equations. I can't think without a whiteboard. It's like I need to get up there and diagram and write it out.
It's just a large buffer.
And it's just bigger than a piece of paper.
And something about the manual act of writing things out.
Because we grew up in the offline world before the online world and have some of that DNA in us still.
It's good that they still teach kids writing with their hands and whatever.
I can't wait till I get into the VR world
where I can just sort of like throw things up against the wall virtually
and see back what I was looking at even a year ago or 10 years ago.
Right, the gesture stuff.
You do need the haptic feedback of some kind,
but you could imagine holding like an Apple pencil or something like that.
I'm just not sure it would feel the same without a surface to push against, but there's probably something that could be done on that. I think so. So I'm curious, what's your mornings
look like? Because it's nighttime here in Santa Monica. It's morning over there where you are.
How do you start your day? What do you do? How do I start my day? Um, my ideal day is, uh, which is,
which is an ideal, not always achieved, but the ideal day is, uh, I actually try to wake up
without an alarm. Um, and I try not to schedule too many things super early in the morning. Um,
and I try to work out if I can first thing, you know, usually that's a goal a hundred percent of the time and it's not achieved, but try to work out first thing can first thing. Usually that's a goal 100% of the time, and it's not achieved,
but I try to work out first thing, and then I start the day
and try to have as many huge blocks of time as possible that are unscheduled.
And if I do meetings, I have them all on the same day.
Like, for example, Thursdays are meeting day,
or Mondays and Thursdays are meeting day,
and then nothing on the other days. And so this way, either I've got a back-to-back-to-back-to-back meeting
day with lots of phone calls and stuff can be very efficient. And then I take the to-dos and
then I execute on them the other days, or I can just allocate as I see fit on that day. And there's
a huge difference between like an entire day versus a six hour block of time versus a one hour block of time in terms of getting ready for deep work you know yeah i i get it it's that precious time
you know for me it's getting up in the morning and looking at what are the single most important
things i have to do during the day sort of making that top three lists like if i achieve these three
things i'm super happy the day it's prioritizing because ultimately everything gets in the way
and you reach the end of the day and like shit i missed these things yeah that's right and i think
actually i what i do is i have this uh little app that um you can change your wallpaper background
on your phone it's almost like a mantra i'll try to reduce the top one or top three things that i
want to get done into just three words and i just like mutter them to myself i see them subconsciously every time I pick up the phone. It just reminds me, oh yeah,
did I act on that thing today? You know, it's like when I was at Coinbase, it was like
assets earn USDC, something like that, like in, you know, Q3 or whatever. Right. And so just like,
remember those three things and something like along those lines. Yeah, no, it's great. It's how you start your day, like when the morning, when the day is so true in life.
And for me, it's get a great night's sleep.
Do you intermittent fast?
Do you eat in the morning?
Well, so what I've actually found really works well
when I can stick to it is OMAD,
like the one meal a day.
If you basically set that time, for example,
one meal a day from 12 to 1 p.m., okay? And that's it. And the rest of the day, you just drink water,
coffee, whatever, okay? If you can stick to that, there's two things that happen. First is,
I mean, like that meal tastes so good, okay? Number one. And number two is you just spend a lot less time eating and you um you have
all you have more energy at other times and so on the tricky where it gets tricky is if you have to
do social dinners um then it's like sort of a rude to not eat and b um it's like in dungeon dragons
you know you roll a saving throw do you you know what that is? Yep. Yeah.
So if you're in front of the food for two hours and you haven't eaten in whatever day or something like that, you're like, okay.
It's hard.
Yeah.
It's something where the constant temptation can overwhelm one's willpower at a certain point, right?
At that point, the only trick you can do is tell the entire table that you're not going to eat.
So that you've got social pressure to fulfill entire table that you're not going to eat so that you've
got social pressure to fulfill in fact your obligation not to eat yeah but it's also kind
of odd right like depending on what culture you know if you're if you're meeting with strangers
or what have you it's often rude or your mom or whatever yeah exactly that's right that's right
so so it's something where you know that's actually the thing that can sort of break the
omad diet is the social eating um it's kind of thing that can sort of break the OMAD diet is the social eating.
It's the kind of thing that you could have in one of my one commandment societies, like you'd have the OMAD one commandment, and that actually would have the social pressure the opposite way.
Sort of like how pre-COVID, the social pressure was, if it's important, it has to be in person, right?
And then when that flipped, finally, for the very, that was not a technological flip, that was a cultural flip. When that flipped to the very highest level society, so now you
could do large deals remote, you could do, there's no limits on remote, right? No cultural limits on
remote. That was actually the key bottleneck on remote was that. And I think what's going to
happen eventually is a lot of that moves into VR or the metaverse and so on.
You could actually, in a sense, have...
I know there's going to be people who listen to that like, oh, that sucks or whatever.
I'm not saying you can't have a physical event if you don't want to have a physical event.
But many kinds of events will be more visually interesting in the metaverse.
People won't feel like they need to look at their phones because it's just more interesting.
There's more fireworks, more stuff happening pizzazz etc you know i remember years ago i was uh you know we
have this x prize event every year global visioneering where we come up and look at our
next prizes and like about six seven years ago uh one of the prizes i put forward for was have
a virtual experience an event that is measurably better than being
there in person so that you much rather willing go there, right? The information that you have,
the experience that you have and so forth. So I wish we had had that XPRIZE. It would have
given birth to Zoom even earlier or some variations of it. But how far are we in your
mind? I mean, because I'm going to have a lot more information about you. Sure.
You know, pupillary dilation and where you're looking, intonation and all of that, as well
as being able to have my AI visualize everything you're speaking about in the moment you're
saying it.
So how do I think about that?
So the, you know, I've mentioned this before, but I think the augmented reality glasses
are one of the most, there's a few different convergence devices that I think are coming. You know, one of them is,
you know, the metaverse, another is the digital passport, the third are AR glasses, and those
are all kind of related, right? Metaverse is perhaps like super obvious at this point to us,
you know, it's video games, plus social networks, plus workplace chat apps like Slack plus crypto, I think.
I think that's an obvious component of an open metaverse.
Yes, plus transfer of value, people, places, and things.
Yes, that's right.
So that's like one piece of it.
The second piece is the AR glasses, which are the hardware enablement of it.
It's sort of like how people talked about mobile prior to the iPhone, but it wasn't really,
it wasn't, you know, Jack Dorsey was familiar with the 140 character thing for Twitter was,
I believe, based on certain SMS message lengths when Twitter got set up in 2005, a few years
before the iPhone.
So Jack Dorsey was on top of mobile before mobile was a thing.
Yeah, I mean, in AR glasses, the application, the business opportunity, right?
So I talk about the fact that we have millions
and millions of dollars that have dematerialized
into your cell phone, right?
That have digitized and gone away
and they're demonetized and dematerialized
in your cell phone.
And the question is,
when's your cell phone gonna dematerialize?
And it's gonna dematerialize into your AR glasses, right?
Along with lots of
other things. Have you seen this? Basically, this is one of my favorite images, which is like all
the devices that went into your smartphone here. This is the 20 years later, all these things fit
in your pocket image. Yeah, yeah. It's this one. It's a, yeah, showing a camcorder, a boombox, headphones, a walkie talkie, a cell phone, CD player, music recorder, VCR, you know, a bunch of tapes, a bunch of VHS tapes, you know, like, speakers, all these things just got put into that one convergence
device, right? And actually, you know, people in the 90s thought that convergence device was going
to be your television, because that was the obvious thing with a screen that people were
constantly looking at. And so people thought it was going to be the TV, that was everything,
but the TV is a little too far. And you have the gorilla arms thing when you're interacting with
it, and so on. So this is, you know, you take a bunch of different kinds of apps, which are now fairly mature, right, the social networks and the video games and so on. So this is, you know, you take a bunch of different kinds of apps, which are now
fairly mature, right? The social networks and the video games and so on. And actually, you know,
an interesting point, people talk about remote work a lot, but you know, what the complement
to remote work is, is remote life. Okay. And a non-obvious point perhaps, or maybe obvious
in retrospect is while social networks and video games were not built consciously for remote
socializing, they give that implicitly. Yeah, they do. And it's the tools to enable
us to be working 24-7 any place on the planet at a level of productivity and quality. I'm about to go on a three-week trip. I'm going to Florence, Geneva, Spain,
Riyadh, and back. And I'm going to take my mics, my cameras, my lights, and I'll be on.
The only challenge is the time zone challenge, which is when you get to the Middle East,
if you live in California, everybody's waking up at midnight and you can work 24-7 and having a
fantastic productivity for about two days. Then you drop down exhausted.
Right, right, right, right, right. No, it's funny. I mean, it's basically,
it's something where, you know, one thing I've talked about is in the remote economy,
there are only three locations in the same office, in the same time zone and around the world.
Right. I love that. Hey, thanks for listening to Moonshots and Mindsets. I want to take a second
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All right, let's get back to the conversation in the episode. You know, it's interesting. I've
hired so many people in over the last two years, and I don't actually know where some of them live.
Right. And don't care where they live. Right. You know, it's amazing. One of the things that's
interesting is we began to onshore our production lines, our capacity for manufacturing, and we've
offshored our key talent in extraordinary balance. Yes. And I think the thing about it is, you know,
I'm not the first person to make this observation, but historically, latitude was how the world was
organized, you know, like, because the same latitude meant the same crops
and, you know, like similar climatic conditions, you know, you're warm, whereas you go up,
you're cold, you go down, you're equatorial, right? And now it's longitude. Longitude is
organizing principle where in a sense, you know, I put, here's this tweet, right? Like
the Nordic States and Cape Town are 10,000 kilometers apart, but in basically the same time zone, plus minus an hour or so, right?
Yes.
So it's actually now longitude is a more important organizing principle in some ways for the
world than latitude, which is this huge, huge civilizational difference.
We've just begun to do this gigantic global repricing of real estate.
The other thing is, obviously, Starlink opens up the map.
And so all kinds of places that were in the middle of nowhere, historically, you located cities near
ports, you located them near mines. More recently, you've had them near universities where the
knowledge economy is. But now the knowledge economy is on the internet. And in theory,
you could take some totally godforsaken backwater and build it into something burning man
shows that that is possible right now and can we extend that to building man i think we can
and uh i like that building man yeah the other thing that what used to be an organizing principle
was language and of course we've got you know translation capabilities today that are even
breaking that down so yeah so i mean this is an interesting question because, you know, something I've thought
about it are, you know, sometimes the effects of technology are surprising.
You know, Tila had this line that AI is centralized and crypto is decentralized.
And someone said, well, actually, recently, crypto is becoming centralized with stable
coin control and things like that and the CBDC and digital yuan. And it it's ai that's gotten decentralized with stable diffusion which is funny right i think
there's actually uh and then i think you can have a third point on that triangle by the way which is
social so ai crypto and social and it's almost like trite to talk about that okay but why why
those three technologies in particular because um as opposed to electric cars or rocket ships,
those three technologies are ways to coordinate human beings, right?
Social and crypto are ways to coordinate them.
Obviously, it's either upvotes or cryptocurrency.
It's like democracy or capitalism.
And then AI is a way to replace a human being with a brain, right? So those are three things that are essentially techno-political technologies
as opposed to, let's say, an electric car or a rocket ship,
which is not interacting with the human per se. Coming back up, basically, the
question of what is the impact of AI and machine translation, you and I have seen demos for a while
that show somebody speaking in English, and then it's speaking in Chinese in their own voice,
like recognizably in the voice, but with a perfect Chinese accent, right? That's been around for
some time as demos.
And I think it's probably not too far, given the ridiculous pace of, you know,
AI progress with the transformers and so on,
that you'll be able to speak in your voice into the phone,
and it'll speak out in your voice in Chinese or Korean or what have you.
I don't think that's too many years away.
Google Trans is already close to that, right?
And once that happens,
the obvious prediction would be,
well, the language spheres of the world collapse into one thing, okay?
And so let me take the obvious prediction,
then let me do the non-obvious prediction.
The obvious prediction is right now,
there's basically two intranets.
There's English intranet and the Chinese intranet.
And all the other intranets are actually interesting because they're much less surveilled than those two big ones.
Interesting.
So you start to get little fiefdoms of privacy, potentially.
That's right.
Right.
And so, like, you know, this is a non-obvious point, perhaps.
But basically what I've realized, you know, for example, there is this really popular Indian app called ShareChat.
Have you ever heard of it?
I have not.
Okay.
So ShareChat's big thing is no English.
Okay.
So one thing, you know, many people know this, but, you know, I'll just say it.
Like India is like it's best thought of as being like Europe.
You know, just like the Spaniards and the Finns are both in Europe, but very different, right? Different cultures and languages and so on.
India is like this, it's like a continent with a billion people. And, you know, South Indians and
North Indians, like they speak different languages, you know, they're now part of one, you know,
giant civilizational state. But they do have different languages and what have you, just like,
you know, Finnish and Spanish or whatever are different, right?
And so ShareChat has, you know, Hindi, Marathi, Bengali, Gujarati, Punjabi, Malayalam, right?
It does have the language itself here written in English. And there's like some, you know, onboarding that's in English, right?
But it's a non-English social media app, right?
And that means it has sort of shelter from the global internet, okay?
And you just have different kinds of things. It's like way more positive in some ways, for example,
right? And it's just something which is intentionally illegible to the world at large,
right? And one thought I've had, and here's my other kind of tweet on,
I'll just put this kind of relevant here.
English and Chinese are perhaps the most monitored languages.
Platform operators in the US and China speak these languages,
so it's easier for them to act as digital thought police.
But other language spheres may have greater practical freedom, right?
And so this is the machine translation point that you were just making.
On the one hand, machine translation could,
in a positive way, unite the world.
In a negative way,
make every conversation legible to surveillance, okay?
On the other hand,
if we think about the revival of Hebrew, right?
Maybe that's what happens.
And we actually get much more share chat like stuff because
if you can translate into a language you can translate out of a language into a private
language so i'm going to come back here in a little bit when we talk about uh innovation talk
about life off this planet and such but i want to take the conversation someplace different sure
it's an area that we have a passion about.
And a lot of people listening, I think, have a passion about, which is health, tech, and
longevity.
Yes.
It's something that you and I go back, people may not know your background in this area.
In fact, you and I both got a phone call from, I don't know if it was Elon or Peter Thiel.
Yeah.
Elon was calling me with Peter Thiel in line saying,
do you want to be the head of NASA?
And I was like, I'd rather put a gun to my head to do that.
Are you willing to say what he was calling you
to ask you to be the head of?
Yeah, I mean, it's been reported, but basically FDA.
And the thing about that is,
I could have been number two at FDA for sure, I think.
That was potentially on the table.
But I ultimately decided to not do that and remain in crypto.
And actually, before, that was obviously a good decision.
But at the time, my reasoning, I've got my little notes file or whatever on this.
Or my notes file, my little pen and paper notes um
and my reasoning then i think is stronger now which is it was easier to start bitcoin than
to reform the fed i think it's going to be so let's let's dive into that right because
the reality is i want to talk about the fact that the united states is 42nd in the world in
uh in longevity which is insane.
Right.
And it's declining.
Do you see that?
You see the stats?
And declining.
Over the last two years, it's been declining.
Yeah.
So the question is, why in the world, with the amount of wealth and technology, is it
in such a state of disrepair?
And what can we do about this, right?
The level of bureaucracy in the FDA is one thing, but putting aside, well, let's dive into the
regulatory process right now, because you and I have talked about this. We've talked about this
before, that the government values lives lost from action more than lives lost from inaction, right?
If you approve a drug and people die, you're in trouble.
If you don't approve a drug and people die, you know, you're being safe.
Right.
How do you possibly counter that?
Is there a solution for that?
So first thing I was just going to say is like, that, that kind of one liner was, it's easier to, it was easier to found Bitcoin than to reform,
than to reform the Fed. And I think it's literally easier to start a new country than to reform the
FDA and the US medical system. As insane as that sounds. Okay. I believe it. Right. Okay. And it's
also, I think, easier to start a new city than to reform San Francisco.
Why is this the case?
So you said something which was interesting, which you said, you know, despite all this wealth, you know, et cetera, there isn't this innovation.
I would argue, potentially, it is because of all that wealth that there isn't the innovation.
That is to say, if you, you know the u.s and the west to some extent have
civilizational diabetes then what does that mean so for example if you have obviously too little
food that's bad you die right ah got it if you have too much food you get fat and you get diabetes
and you know you you have too much sugar and it's just too rich a life and that's actually also bad
right and so there's lots of things that are sort of at that optimal level you know and so yes if You have too much sugar and it's just too rich a life. And that's actually also bad, right?
And so there's lots of things that are sort of at that optimal level.
And so, yes, of course, if you are raised in the woods and you're pre-industrial civilization and so on, you need a little bit more wealth, flush toilets and indoor heating and stuff
like that to develop.
But if you have too much, well, then you're playing to not lose. You're not playing to
win. You're risk averse rather than risk seeking. It is not rational to push the envelope. Even,
for example, some of the terminology we have, the developed world and the developing world.
Developed indicates it's an endpoint. We're done, right? Do you know what I'm saying?
Right? We're done, right? And you know what I'm saying? Right.
We're done. Right. And, and you know, the finished world and the,
and the approaching world or something. And, and alternative frame,
what happens then is people take so much for granted that now it actually starts collapsing. You know, we, we have,
if you were to graph the cost of infrastructure, for example, in the U S
for example,
San Francisco has paid $300 million
for a bus lane and taken like almost 20 years to build it.
They held a ceremony for opening a public bathroom
with two stalls,
with literally guys with cameras being like,
whoa, public, okay.
Apology, I want to see inside your brain
as the neurons connect from the FDA to toilet stalls.
Yes, okay, I'll come back, I'll come back. I'll bring it all together. I want to see inside your brain as the neurons connect from the FDA to toilet stalls. Yes.
Okay.
I'll come back.
I'll come back.
I'll bring it all together.
Yeah.
So the thing is that all of these costs have been imposed.
And, you know, that's very physical and tangible.
That's the reason I point to that is you can see that the government has become insanely inefficient on the physical infrastructure, like a bathroom.
I mean, the same U.S. government that built the interstate highway system and put a man on the moon is holding a press conference, like a bathroom. I mean, the same, the quote, the same US government that built interstate highway system
and put a man on the moon
is holding a press conference for opening a bathroom, right?
But it's not the same.
It's kind of crazy, right?
It's not the same government.
It's a government which has legitimacy and continuity,
but radically diminished capacity
in the sense of state capacity, right?
We are identifying it as the same thing,
but it's like saying that Rome is the same as the Roman empire because it has
the same name. It is basically something which, yes,
there is a line that connects it. There's also a lot of lines that broke,
right? There's, it is something that's inherited the name.
It's like the fifth or the 10th generation inheritor of a factory as opposed to
the founder of the factory, right?
Yes.
And so once you have that framework.
And by the way, we see this in multi-generational wealth, right?
The creator of the family creates the wealth and drives the value.
The second generation is trying to preserve it.
The third generation is losing it.
That's right.
And I actually, you know, I don't have an answer as to what to do with, you know, giant amounts of wealth and, you know, beyond one person.
Because I, you know, I don't think that just giving it to the state and having it thrown into the same wood chipper as everything else is necessarily the best thing.
And I want to come back to philanthropy as a standalone.
I want to come back to the notion of FDA.
Yeah, let's talk about FDA and biomedicine.
Yeah.
So basically, you talked about how that stuff is invisible, right?
And that's like Bastiat seen and unseen, right?
You know that illusion?
It's like when a window is broken, everybody sees the glassmaker and all the economic activity that's coming to repair the window.
But what is not seen is the capital or what the shopkeeper would have done with that capital if they didn't have to
repair the window, right? So it's a broken windows fallacy. Okay. And that's the same thing that
happens with the FDA, which as you've said, if there's a thalidomide, if there's a Vioxx,
if there's one of these situations, elixir of sulfanilamide was one of the earlier things.
That has- Congressional investigation, yes.
Exactly. That's right. So fundamentally, yes. Exactly, that's right.
So, you know, fundamentally, there's a couple of points.
First is you can make the emotional case
for what is being held back, how?
By, for example, talking about drug lag.
You know, if you've got a drug that was approved
and then after its approval,
you see a quantifiable reduction in morbidity and mortality,
but it took 10 years to approve.
Therefore, that morbidity and mortality excess during those 10 years is on the head of FDA.
Yes.
And then you could go and interview those people and you could ask them,
what did your husband, what did your child die from? They died from this disease. Did you know
that drug was approved five years later, could have saved them? That's actually something where
you can actually have the human story around it, right?
You could quantify the cost in human lives and such.
That's right.
And one way that happened was in 1991 with ACT UP.
Are you familiar with ACT UP?
I'm not.
So in 1991, people who had AIDS were protesting the FDA and because they had a lethal, it was very, the entire course, obviously, of the disease was, you know, incredibly rapid, right, at that time.
And, you know, there were folks like this, if I die of AIDS, forget burial, just drop my body on the steps of the FDA.
Okay.
Love that.
All right.
Okay. Love that. All right. And because essentially these people that now the impact of drug lag was not some abstract thing. It was not some slow degenerative thing. It was a very fast
decline in an otherwise healthy person. And they weren't even being allowed to test these
experimental drugs, right? So they had the moral authority on their side. They went there,
they protested, and this resulted in certain reforms to FDA where it started actually losing some power. And so it had to get some of these things through.
Let me throw out this idea. We've talked about it a little bit, but I want to
get your review on it. If you look at an accredited investor in a regulation de-offering,
if anybody started a private company and you're trying to raise money, you need to have accredited investors.
These are people who can have a net worth
of over a million dollars
or making a quarter million dollars a year.
And they're allowed to invest in risky things.
But if you take a company public,
you go through enough lawyers and enough process
that grandmothers and kids can invest in a public company.
And so I've wondered always, why isn't there an accredited patient program where I'm a patient,
I've got a fatal disease, I want to go and try this crazy-ass treatment, and it's my life,
and you can't tell me I can't try it. And as long as I have a review of my next of kin or my
physician or I'm of sound mind, I should be allowed to try it.
Right. A freedom to try anything.
Right to try. Yep.
Right to try.
Yes. So my body, my choice, right to try.
I do believe in this. In fact, there are laws called, quote, right to try laws that allow people to try drugs.
Because, look, if you can literally jump off a a bridge if you can go bungee jumping and
skydiving if you can go and fight in a war right if you can you know take you know like i mean the
u.s is building statues to breaking bad you know you're familiar with that there's like i've heard
yes yeah so you're literally statues to fictional drug dealers who are selling drugs that you know
yeah it's a movie or whatever but they're definitely injurious to you. And so like society is in a sense celebrating them. They're like,
well, you know, people are going to do it anyway. Let's hand out the syringes or whatever in San
Francisco. Yet you can't be, you're prevented from taking a life affirming drug and enhancing
drugs, something that can cure you or what have you. Right. So this is this totally backwards
kind of thing.
One thing I wanted to say, by the way, you asked why not. And I argue there's actually kind of two levels to engage on. And the level that actually technologists do not reflexively
engage on but need to train themselves to engage on is to start with a moral argument, right?
Why? Because what will happen is if you talk about FDA or something like that,
immediately you're going to be hit with a barrage of oh thalidomide oh you know you know if they're if they really know the history elixir of
sulfanilamide oh Vioxx oh my God all these scandals Etc Etc and so then you have to hit back with um
with act up with Banting and best with uh you know the uh the fact that FDA approved the body
scanners all these things where they've either let bad things through or stop good things from getting through. Okay. Once you've done that, now it's
sort of like air superiority. If they can just win on the air game and just say, this is bad,
what you're trying to say, boom, they just blow up all your stuff over here and people just quail.
Right. If you have your own airplanes and you can hit moral for moral argument,
now it goes to the rational argument,
right? Now it's basically something where they don't have air superiority anymore. They can't
just knock you out of the battlefield with what you're saying is bad, you evil tech bro, whatever,
right? Instead, now you've got a moral counter argument, where it simply can't be answered in
terms of people yelling at each other. Now you have to go and look at the numbers. Okay, so start
with the moral with the good bad. Now we go to rational. What is rational? Rational is think of FDA and every regulator
as essentially a binary classifier. It's got a type one and type two error rate. Okay. It's got
both false positives and it's got false negatives and true positives and true negatives. Okay.
And now you can actually start to assess any regulator as literally a binary classifier.
It takes in a bunch of signals, okay,
on drug and device approvals,
and it outputs a zero or one, or more sophisticated,
it might be like zero or one under some conditions
or for some people, right?
But once you can think of it like this,
this entire structure of, you know,
NDAs, like new drug applications.
INDs, right?
INDs, right.
Yeah.
Like that entire structure of uh of things
um is uh is something which is basically input to a binary classifier right and um essentially
this is something where um it's it's useful to think of it this way because now you can throw
math at it right now you can benchmark it now you can make the invisible visible because you're assuming a rationality
that does not necessarily exist but it is a future well that's possible right in a in a
network state in a in you know as we're going to have the chance to redesign governance in the
future that's right that's right. That's right.
Go ahead.
Yeah, and you'll talk about that.
But before we do, before we do,
I want to take our conversation to a topic we talked about in New York, which is longevity.
Yes.
So how long do you hope to live?
Well, I'm not sure this particular vessel will make it,
but I hope we can extend it for future generations.
As long as possible, I'll put it like that.
All right.
I'm already graying a little bit, or maybe a lot.
That's fine.
And you know that that can be reversed.
Yes.
But without a target, you'll miss it every time.
So if I were to say to you right now uh you know given what you know
can ask how old are you now yeah i'm 42 you're 42 so you're still young i'm 61 how old you look
great you thank you i feel good if i shave i look much younger so anyway all right well that's a
that's a regeneration technique i just go shave tomorrow morning yes uh but what's your give me
a target like if if you could snap your fingers
and actually hit it, what would you, what do you think is a under over on your age?
Sorry to talk about morbid things. No, no, no, no. It's a good question.
You need a huge, potentially a huge supply chain. Maybe there's a miracle drug or something like
that that'll just do it. There's a whole cocktail that i'm not looking for an analysis i'm looking for a number a number i mean i i i would live to as long as i
could live for uh i understand yeah i i don't know what do i personally think i guess i'm
i set my expectations low i guess you know in the sense of um i think i will live a normal
lifespan what do you consider a normal lifespan?
I don't know, 75 or 80, but...
Dude, we have to talk.
Yeah, but all the upside that comes from that
is a positive surprise, right?
Okay.
And so the reason I set my expectations low is,
for example, do we talk about genomic reincarnation uh no but i can i
can hypothesize okay so this is something i think of as more feasible than cryonics okay and um the
reason i use the term reincarnation rather than resurrection will be clear okay are you signed up
for cryonics by the way uh no but but i will do this okay so let me explain what this is so basically
the short the short concept is sequence your dna um and everything else you can have that on disc
and if you have high enough karma your society revives you at some point in the future once or
not revised reincarnates you once eukaryotic chromosome synthesis is possible okay that's
the short version.
Let me explain it a little bit longer.
Basically, as you're probably aware, you know, the, you can divide into bacteria, archaea
and eukaryote.
That's the three kingdoms of life, right?
Yes.
And for bacteria, we've been able to actually have a genome on disc that you can effectively
print out bacterial chromosome synthesis is feasible.
Ventner et al
did this you know a long time ago like it's actually it's actually possible to do that
it's like about a megabase of sequence or their prokaryotic life right yeah and and those are
those are very simple chromosomes often just like a loop or a ring or something like i don't have a
lot of structure relatively to to eukaryotes uh eukaryotic chromosome synthesis is getting better
and better and it's much more complicated
to synthesize you know human chromosomes but it is it is gradually improving if you spot me that
one sci-fi technology okay which is that we can eventually do eukaryotic chromosome synthesis
and by the way george church very much wants to do that okay yeah sure so which is great um
you know i follow this i look at this every year or they're about to see where it's getting to.
If you spot that sci-fi technology, then eventually if you have the DNA of Einstein or someone
like that on disk, you could print out young Einstein.
Okay.
You could basically, of course, you'd have to figure out the details of getting that
chromosome into an embryo and, you know, all that type of stuff.
That's non-trivial.
I grant all of that.
Okay.
Nevertheless, there is potentially a path there that I think is more realistic.
It's funny to put it that way.
Let's say, I think it's cryonics.
The hard part is.
But you skipped an entire part of this, which is how do you keep yourself alive longer right
i know i just go to what i think is what i think is feasible well you didn't ask me what my life
expectancy expectation is okay okay go ahead sorry sorry i should i should have asked you that go
ahead what's your life okay so it's like the only that's the only you know sort of uh uh polite
yes response is a conversation okay great so I have to tell you a story.
So I'm in medical school.
I was doing a joint MD-PhD program in aerospace engineering and medicine.
And I'm watching this television show on long-lived sea life.
And it's, you know, bowhead whales can live 200 years and Greenland sharks can live 400 or 500 years.
And sea turtles potentially could live longer.
And I'm like, if they can live that long, why can't I?
Right.
They've got some anti-cancer stuff going on.
Well, yeah, but it's all software.
So I said, it's either a software problem or hardware problem.
Fair?
Okay.
And we're going to be able to get the tools to improve the software.
What do you mean by software in that sense?
You mean like basically we can dose it with drugs versus changing the hardware i mean i mean add the genes required for
increased uh you know uh cancer detection or repair systems um and it's it's basically
alter your actively alter your genetic code while you're alive right or replace the organs crisper crisper
crisper shows that this is potentially that this is possible um i think uh sickle cell was actually
yeah so sickle cell anemia beta thalassemia a whole range of diseases right there's going to
be a point i think it's in the next 10 years that every genetic disease if it's got enough funding
behind it can be in fact cured i think i think it's possible here next 10 years that every genetic disease, if it's got enough funding behind it, can be, in fact, cured.
I think it's possible.
Here's the article, like sickle cell patient treated with CRISPR gene editing still thriving.
So in a live patient, and it looks like the modification is actually taking place.
But the thing is, with sickle cell, because you can treat it by modifying the cells in the bone marrow, those can basically be uptaken through the entire body.
Sure.
But there's a lot of other diseases in liver diseases.
We're curing cancer.
We're curing different forms of congenital blindness.
different forms of congenital blindness.
We're able to use adeno-associated viruses to target specific cell types in liver, in skin, in bone marrow, whatever it might be.
But I'm still going back to my prediction of my own life expectancy.
So I set my life expectancy at a ridiculous number when I was in medical school 40 years
ago.
No, it was something much more reasonable, like 500 years.
But the challenge, the challenge is that if you can live, you know, my,
my hypothesis, uh, biology is if you can, if, so let's back up a second.
Okay. That say that's ridiculous. Fine. Coming back to 200 years, 150 years.
Okay. We know people can make it to 120 years, right? There's a,
there's reasonable, uh,
validated individuals who have lived super centenarians,
one 12, one 15, one 20. Yep. So we know we can get there. And so, okay,
let's set a target of 120. I'm 60. That's 60 years from now.
I'm 61 59 years from now in 59 years, the amount of progress we're going to be seeing is unfathomable in the form of AI and quantum computing and genomics and understanding.
So it's not that I have to make those changes today.
I need to live long enough to build the next bridge to live longer and so forth.
I completely get the argument.
It's basically the argument of eventually there'll be a Moore's law for longevity.
And if you can just survive long enough to get there, you get the sky hooks and you you know you get the boosting
and so on and so forth so 75 80 for yourself well the reason is because uh you know i'm i i am i
think myself as a pragmatic ideologue right where um or a pessimist as the case may be i'm not a
pessimist actually i would not consider myself an optimist either.
I'm, you know, actually, Ilan had this thing where he's like, you know, he's determined rather than pessimistic or optimistic.
I am about technological, like I will set, you know, a North Star kind of goal there.
I'm just as ambitious, I think, as you in the sense of I do think this can be done.
Whether it can be done within my lifetime, I don't know. Whether it'll be done soon enough for me, I don't know. We'll push really hard to
get there. I think the pragmatic ideologue is basically the concept of setting that North Star
and that destination. And then you have a winding path there. You have to accumulate the capital
and figure out the bugs and recruit the team and do a
thousand pragmatic things to reach that destination.
And that balance of things, most people are very pragmatic, are not ideologues.
And most ideologues are not very pragmatic, right?
Or realize that the biggest business opportunity on the planet is, in fact, is adding healthy
years in a person's life.
And then realize that ultimately
billions of dollars are flowing into this marketplace and the more credible the conversation
becomes the more capital is coming in the more people are investing and it's a self-fulfilling
prophecy in that regard yeah yes yeah but the question is so the the key thing is more credible
right and i i look i love the concept of the bold declaration and so on I'm going to
live till x number of years and so more power to that what I found that moves the needle for people
so to speak is um the visuals right uh you know we were showing this you know when you and I were
talking in New York right um the what I the quote holy phenotypes right yes um so let me actually put a few of those on
screen uh here's one this is not exactly longevity but it is an amazing visual right so that guy
before and after you know longevity like his you know his hair is now ungraying and then if you
scroll down there's another guy with the same thing. And this was a chemotherapy for cancer treatment?
Yeah, it was a side effect of a treatment for lung cancer.
And the thing about this is, this is a non-trite point.
It'll sound like a trite point, but I think it's not.
Which is, longevity, crypto is actually very similar to longevity in that they both reject fundamental premises of the establishment while also bearing some similarities.
For example, with crypto, the similarities to the existing finance system is you have the bar charts and you have obviously market depth.
And a lot of this kind of stuff looks like traditional finance.
That's a surface resemblance.
obviously market depth, and a lot of this kind of stuff looks like traditional finance, right?
That's a surface resemblance. But the substrate, the underlying difference in premises is that the establishment, for example, will say, yeah, hyperinflation is bad, but deflation is also bad.
Therefore, mild inflation is good, right? A little inflation is good. Whereas crypto will say,
or Satoshi said, hyperinflation is bad, mild inflation is also bad and deflation is good because it reflects genuine reduction in prices over
time.
Okay.
And that's a fundamental premise difference.
And there's other premise differences.
It's like you should have control over your own data and you should have sovereignty over
your own currency.
I see this.
I was going to I was gonna ask you
why there's such a correlation between longevity and the crypto space, because I'm seeing,
you know, your Brian Armstrong is committed, you know, a huge amount to the space. And there's
a lot of the crypto billionaires, disproportionate from traditional Wall Street, wealthy individuals
have been investing in this in this space and i think
i think you know hal finney who's if not satoshi is one of the best certainly an influence on
satoshi uh was also was was then called an extropian you know who was into this type of
stuff longevity and transhumanism and and whatnot in the 90s you call up you call optimal uh i call
it optimalism right because optimism transhumanism now more recently has acquired negative connotations.
I agree with you, by the way.
Yeah.
But optimalism, I think, is something which is not optimism, but optimal, right?
It doesn't say push things to their extreme necessarily.
It says push things to their optimum, right?
It's got kind of a positive connotation.
So one of the things that gives me hope here,
and it's something I've mentioned before in our conversation is, you know,
we've got the same exact genes when we're born,
when we're 20, when we're 50, when we're 60,
when we're 80, when we're 100,
hopefully when we're 120.
And the question is, why does your body look different?
Why does your hair get white?
Why do you get flabby?
And it's not the genes you have.
Your genetics are not, it's not the genes you have your genetics uh are not
it's your it's your transcriptome it's which genes are on which genes are off and the question is
do you always have do you always have inside of yourself that youthful state and so the work that
david sinclair and george church and a few others have been doing has been able to demonstrate that
in a number of systems and we were talking about our age reversal XPRIZE.
And I still believe that there's a there there.
Yeah.
Oh, I mean, if you took, here's the thing.
If you took everything that Sinclair is doing, all the studies and so on, and you just had a lab.
So first of all, the first thing you need is the ultimate longevity predictor or biomarker
or whatever, right?
Sure.
And maybe that literally could be imaging, and here's why, is the most obvious thing
you can do with machine learning with faces is you can try and predict age.
And that's actually pretty good.
There's good algorithms out there because you've got lots of training data.
You've got literally billions of photos of people where you know exactly their birth
date and their age.
You have a smaller data set, but still extant of folks who have passed away.
And if you take past photos of them, you can actually predict their life expectancy from
their face.
Interesting.
So is anybody doing that right now?
I want to actually fund a study like that if no one's doing that.
I would love to do that with you.
Okay, great.
Because I think that's really great.
I know, do you know Alex Zavrancov from yeah so i think alex has done some work in that area but i think
it's a really important element for sure so so let's because basically there obviously are
millions of photos of people who have unfortunately passed away right you have that's very that's an
incredibly solid data set for machine learning purposes, because you've got an incredibly quantifiable endpoint, right? It's a current date.
It's a no bullshit situation.
No bullshit situation, right?
Yeah, pull out the plastic surgery, pull out the Cardassians and you're fine.
Yeah, right, exactly. But even that is kind of interesting, because given a large enough data
set, you could quantify how much younger that actually made you look if it did, right? And of course, if you're given a large enough data set, you could use for different
ethnicities. A big part of this will frankly just be assembling that data set. And so that's like
the hard part, I think more than running the algorithm, right? Okay. Let's say you can do that.
Now you could hold up your phone and it could tell you number of years to live. Okay. That's depressing. But, but, but here's the good part. Now you can
do Delta Delta T where every single potential intervention from metformin to whatever, right?
Will if, you know, the reason that, um, you know, the picture of Dorian Gray,
you're familiar with that book. Yeah. So it's like, you know, the portrait on the wall ages
where, you know, this is something where people's eyes, you know, when people say, oh, you look healthy, you look unhealthy.
There's a zillion things that are happening behind the scenes in somebody's appearance.
Our brains have been trained over millennia to understand that.
That's right.
And when someone loses weight or gets fit, they're like, wow, you look younger and so on.
There's probably something real that's happening epigenetically or whatever, right?
something real that's happening epigenetically or whatever right and uh so i think that um something basically imagine a magic mirror on the wall okay and it was an ai mirror and you know you
have to figure out the data privacy stuff maybe there's a local server or what have you okay
and it will literally tell you um all kinds of stuff on your health just by imaging for example
do you see that thing that's almost 10 years old where they could predict pulse from your uh from a video from from uh capillary flush on
your face and yeah exactly so pulse detection sure this is like 10 years ago they're doing
pulse detection from like you know head motion or from like the uh like the slight flush in your
face right and um this is something where you know I think where you can get with medical imaging from like the amazing high def cameras we've got and all the ML we've got things so far beyond where people think.
Right.
So one of the reasons you don't have that is FDA has been holding that back.
All kinds of medical imaging stuff.
For example, here's a rare story on this.
So essentially, like, why can't you just hold up your phone and like image some mole or something
like that and immediately have a million examples from around the world that can benchmark that was
cancerous that was non-cancerous that should be totally free that should be totally available
answer is fda right and more generally the medical establishment right because for the longest time
ai was able to read an ekg better than the cardiologist better than most there'll always be
some guy who's like the expert expert expert yeah but they'll say it's not better than the best and
that's why they'll block it and and the association of cardiologists or the association of dermatologists
or whatever don't want to lose their job all of a sudden they're being replaced by an algorithm
i don't want this wait wait wait i've got a solution to that. I've got a solution. Go for it. So I actually do think a non-obvious factor that's going to change all of this is India.
Okay. Why? Because India is coming online. India has-
In a huge way.
In a huge, huge, huge way. It is maybe the single most obviously underpriced thing,
in my view, on this decade.
I want to talk about India, but I don't want to grab it all.
Let me say this.
Let me say this.
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Let me say this. Let me say this. okay more if you include south asian yeah it's amazing it's amazing right okay and that's just
like so now because of that um indians also have done a lot in software number three in tech
unicorns and uh so it's totally and crucially domestically they've got a generic drug industry
um where they don't actually abide by this artificial scarcity of ip they can crank out
generic drugs and that's like a huge thing. They've got great chemists, right? And then finally, telemedicine has now finally been
quasi-legalized in the US. There are various things that work.
And you've got folks like Mukesh Ambani, who's investing heavily into the entire medical area.
I mean, massive amount of capital is going in.
That's right. So you put all that together, and you've got an aging population in the US,
and you've got price pressure and whatnot. I think it's quite possible you start seeing telemedicine come in from India, right?
Oh, for sure.
And maybe there's an Indian American doctor over here who's routing it.
Okay.
And so they're like signing off within the system.
You have that like legal kind of thing.
And they're the ones who maybe they send it to an Indian service that has different regulations.
And that allows you to actually just automatically read this because that disruptive technology is something where this huge i mean one of the reasons you know the ama
and others they didn't want that many so-called fmgs foreign medical graduates to enter the u.s
because it did bring price pressure down right now suddenly all those guys are online all of them are
ambitious and they're seeking you know like so so there is something here where there's a giant
force there's software there's a next step there's a next step here which is you know, like, so there is something here where there's a giant force. There's software that can bridge.
There's a next step here, which is, you know, in the interim, before we have AI, we have
the crowd, right?
And Indian physicians and nurses and software engineers are the crowd.
Eventually, though, I mean, AI, even today, right now, AI is likely better as a diagnostician
than most physicians.
And in the very near future, you provide an AI, the data, the imagery, the information.
I mean, I found this out.
Take a guess.
It's more reliable.
It's cheaper.
But the average physician hasn't read any of the articles published that day, let alone,
right?
So do you take a guess how many scientific publications are, don't Google, are published per day?
Oh, it's easily 1,000.
It's more than that.
It's like a few million articles a year.
It's probably about 3,000, 4,000, right?
Okay, good guess.
Yes, it's 4,900.
It's 1.8 million articles per year in 28,000 journals.
And so it's like, how many has your physician read that morning?
So it's like insane, right? And it might have been the breakthrough that morning that's gonna diagnose
you or treat you but i want to go someplace else i want to let's assume for a second that we are
going to be able to extend the healthy human lifespan yep uh harvard oxford london school
of business did a study uh about a year ago that said for every additional year you add
uh 38 trillion dollars to global gdp
oh wow amazing that's pretty good so that's a great that's a great stat that's i wouldn't i
wouldn't have just it's just good to have a number there i mean like i don't know what the exact
number is but it's that's it's additional it's additional productivity right at the top of your
game why do people retire they retire because you're tired or you're in pain yeah you know
and if you feel great if you have the aesthetics the energy the you know the volition you're tired or you're in pain. Yeah. You know, and if you feel great, if you have the aesthetics, the energy, the, you know,
the volition, you're going to go and keep going because you've got all the contacts,
you're making the most dent in the universe that you can.
So $38 trillion.
And here's my question, implications.
So I have a conversation with Elon not too long ago, and we're talking about longevity
because that's what I'm focused on.
That's what my investments.
He goes, I don't think people should live that long.
I'm like, what?
He goes, yeah, I think people need to die
to make room for new ideas to come in.
I understand this argument.
I don't, I understand it, but I don't buy it.
Well, so here's how I think you can square that circle.
Essentially what he's referring to
is the whole concept of, you know, science advances
one funeral at a time.
Yes.
If you've heard that.
And it may well have been that.
Yeah.
And I actually do understand where that comes from.
If you think about the gerontocracy in the U.S. and how you have, have you seen the graph
of like the average age of, you know, legislators?
Right.
Yeah.
And so essentially, you know, the argument has been, oh, they're old, they don't
get it, and so on and so forth. Well, two things. First is, if the life extension, or more generally,
health extension, health span, a lot of people imagine somebody who's superannuated just living
longer and longer. Really what you want is to be. Let's define, and we're not talking about living
in a wheelchair slobbering. We're talking's right so you're that's right you feel good you're thinking well you're moving well
your cognition is you're 25 you're 25 or whatever for a long long period of time you heal better
or even 55 or 60 for a long long time fine right exactly you're you're mobile you're independent
you're all the stuff right okay so So if you have expanded health span,
well, first of all, you won't be necessarily as set in your ways. You have more of the plasticity
of youth or number one, but I think the more fundamental thing is the frontier. Okay. If you
can reopen the frontier. Okay. And you know, I've thought about this a lot. I've written about this
in the book. You know, there's four possible places. There's a frontier,, the internet. And by the way, when Balaji is speaking about the book,
he's talking about the network state. Yeah. So the networkstate.com, exactly, right?
The frontier, reopening the frontier is this crucial, crucial thing. In a sense, you can talk
about the land, the internet, the sea, and space, right? And how advanced are these respective
things? So the land, you have 8 are these respective things so the land you have
eight billion people the internet now you have four billion people on the oceans here's an
interesting stat do you know how many people are like at any one time on the high seas huh i'll
take a guess five million it's sub that it's like if you include all the cruise ships and stuff
together it's like at least the status i was like about a million right so all all the ships all the
cargo ships and so on is about a million on the seas at any one time and then how many people are in
space international space station is like 10 right max max right and i think who knows what that is
now with russia and the u.s fighting you know like whatever right so of those frontiers right space
is the one that everybody talks about the final frontier and that's important but it's the least mature of these right conversely the land is so mature that it's
difficult to build on it directly and so the big part of where i talk about in the book is
using the internet frontier to open the others up right and the frontier how does that relate to
this well if you have in the event you could do space travel
or if you could even start new societies on earth or on the sea using the internet now the fact that
some gerontocracy controls an older thing doesn't matter because you can go and start a new one
right yes this is what this was always the case on the the meritocracy always mattered most on the
frontier right if if i needed to get my horse shooed i didn't care how old or if the
person was a woman or black or white or gray it was i needed my horse done right yes exactly
that's right and i think you know like uh at its best silicon valley is or what silk valley was
and what i think technology is now because i don't think tech is i you know i don't think
silicon valley is a metonym for technology anymore. It's not focused in one spot.
It's intrinsically global.
You have, you know, Indians and Chinese people
and, you know, Eastern Europeans and Brazilians
all working together on something, right?
And, you know, like something like Calendly,
it's a Nigerian founder that everybody in tech uses, right?
So that's actually not in a kumbaya,
we are the world kind of thing,
but that is like the potential of capital
and software and tech to put people together.
It's meritocracy.
The best idea comes forward
independent of where it came from.
I don't know who founded this.
I just know it works really well.
That's right.
That's right.
And this is something,
well, so coming back,
basically that frontier is,
I think the answer to the uh you know science
advances one funeral at a time science also advances one frontier at a time it was the new
world right it was um you know obviously space and so on well the american west in was a incredible
uh frontier for railroads and steam engines for everything. Yeah. Yes.
We're not steam engines, but railroads and other things.
Yes.
So my question is, is extreme longevity good or bad for humanity?
I think it's on balance good.
I think that basically, for example, we're not going to be able to easily colonize other planets and terraform them on the time scales there without, you know, probably changing
our biological
substrate right like many of those you know you could imagine something where the to humans the
highly inhospitable atmosphere of some other planet wouldn't work but to i don't know a human
who can metabolize sulfur and breathe sulfur you know, maybe it's totally fine. Yay. You know, have a great
time. Go ahead. No, I agreed. I mean, I think at the end of the day, uh, we're heading towards
a world of increasing abundance where AI robotics capability, you're going to help us meet our needs
and how we live our lives is going to be an adventure in cyberspace. It's going to be
entertainment. It's going to be exploration. It's not going to be slaving to get food, water,
shelter, healthcare. So I don't know about you, but I think it's becoming more exciting
and I want to see as much of the future as I can.
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, in a sense, it's interesting, because what happens next,
right? That's something, you know, someone's like, you know, I wish, you know, you're,
you know, my grandfather or great grandfather was around to see this, you know, like, wow,
how things would have worked out,
you know, how insane that is, right? The other, by the way, the other sort of practical immortality
thing that I think is working today, I mentioned genomic resurrection. The other one is actually,
and this has been depicted in a dystopian way in Her or Black Mirror, but I think AI immortality
is now feasible in the sense of if you took all of your audio and video recordings over your life,
right? That is something where you could have a, maybe it's on GPT-3, maybe it's GPT-7 or something
like that. You could have something that could speak in your voice that could basically be what
you would say. Spin up a version of yourself. So I did this. I built, I trained up a neural net based on all my blogs, all my books.
It's a engine called Futurescope, and it searches the world's news for-
Things you like.
For things I would like.
So in particular, there are two versions of it, futureloop.com and longevityinsider.org.
There are two versions of it, futureloop.com and longevityinsider.org.
Longevityinsider.org has got all my blogs and books in longevity.
Futureloop.com is everything I've written about AI, robotics, 3D printing, synthetic biology, AR, VR, and blockchain.
And it searches looking for positive-minded, non-dystopian, convergent technologies on
these things based
upon what I look. And it generates the top 10 articles. If I could search all the world's news
and journals every year, every day, it finds those articles for me and delivers them to me.
So there's a little mini Peter, I call it virtual Peter, searching the world for this information
and delivering it to me. But at the end, can I upload my brain and have some ai on the cloud say hey
peter it's peter i'm here you can kill yourself now you know oh boy i don't i don't think i want
to do that well yeah i mean the thing is there are many possible futures on this kind of thing
and um you know one thing that people always get back to is, is it does it have to be your own consciousness or can be a clone of you in some way or what have you.
Right. But, you know, to bring it back to the brass tacks stuff right on longevity, I think people are unaware of just how much progress.
That's why I showed that like, you know, anti-greying photo. Right. Or the super soldier serum photo.
I think people are unaware of how feasible it might be to do this in our own bodies.
And actually, just like the longevity biomarker thing, where you kind of take an image of
someone's face, and you predict how many years they have to live, right? I think having something,
which was just a clip show of 100 videos or or graphs. Ideally it's, it's videos or images
because a graph, you know, it's more abstract, right. But that actually shows an animal that
looks younger, right. That shows an experiment where hair pigmentation has been reversed.
Muscle has come back, you know, people look younger. I think a collection like that would
do more than a thousand papers for suspending disbelief. This is actually possible.
That's, I think, useful.
Another important thing to kind of poke at.
I agree.
I call this a longevity mindset.
And the question is, can I train?
So our brains are neural nets and we train them by giving them example after example after example.
And can I create a longevity mindset for myself by showing myself? That's why i built longevityinsider.org to give me those examples every day to see that this is
coming so i believe that it's coming and i therefore take better care of myself and invest in those
areas um yeah i i think i think we're going to see more and more evidence all the time and and uh
you know you and i talked about this $100 million longevity age reversal XPRIZE,
which I'm excited to talk to you more about a different time.
Hey, everybody.
I hope you're enjoying this episode.
Let's tell you about something I've been doing for years.
Every quarter or so, having a phlebotomist come to my home to draw bloods,
to understand what's going on inside my body. And it was a challenge to get
all the right blood draws and all the right tests done. So I ended up co-founding a company that
sends a phlebotomist to my home to measure 40 different biomarkers every quarter, put them up
on a dashboard so I can see what's in range, what's out of range, and then get the right supplements,
medicines, peptides, hormones to optimize my health.
It's something that I want for all my friends and family, and I'd love it for you.
If you're interested, go to mylifeforce.com backslash Peter to learn more.
Let's get back to the episode.
Let's take the conversation into a subject I care about, which is innovation and moonshots.
I care about, which is innovation and moonshots. So I don't think there are enough entrepreneurs working on the world's most important problems. How do you feel about that? Do you agree?
Yes. I think, though, that it's a multi-sided market.
It is.
Right? You know, like the concept of a two-sided market, like Uber is.
Of course.
The riders and drivers, right? So it like a two-sided market, like Uber is the riders and drivers, right?
So it's a multi-sided market where there's obviously the founders and the funders, okay?
But I think actually an underappreciated thing are the writers and the policymakers.
Because, you know, the writers, and that's like the, you know, specific people who are writing text, more generally the screenwriters for the world, right?
The folks who are basically screenwriting the media, the content, and so on out there.
Those influence the policymakers and they can move a switch that makes a new kind of founder
even possible. Yeah. And for example, a very famous example, NSF's acceptable use policy.
In pre-1991, as you may remember,
the internet was just an academic and military network.
And commercial traffic was actually not allowed because it was going to cause malware and porn and scams.
And they were all totally right about that.
But when enough folks pushed on enough policymakers
to flip the switch to just allow that to happen, to allow
commerce on the internet. Enormous amounts of founders and funders flocked in, and then this
entire frontier got populated, right? So it's often like one policy switch that is often not
thought of as being that important that just unlocks the whole kind of thing, right? And then
media is upstream of that policy switch because it's making the moral case
for why this is better to do rather than not do. And so to your point, I actually wrote this
article called The Purpose of Technology. I've got it here in the chat. And when you think of
it as a multi-sided market, the founders are sometimes not the first mover. They're sometimes
the last mover. Other folks have to sort of prepare the environment
such that a new kind of founder is possible.
For example, I mentioned NSF AUP.
Another example is Y Combinator made, you know,
Stripe and Airbnb and Dropbox feasible
because it said, guess what?
You don't have to be 30 something to raise VC.
You can just come and start the, you know, the water's warm.
This is something you can feasibly do. Right. And it has crazy ideas. Welcome. Crazy ideas. Welcome.
And you know, the thing is, I mean, if we like one thing I'm actually amazed by in retrospect,
if you think about how, like what Gates and jobs did before the internet, before that information
was out there to make the moves that they did in the seventies, before that information was out there, to make the moves
that they did in the 70s, it's actually insane to think, how did they build the sales team?
There's no guidance of any kind. They just had to figure it all out from scratch and just scale a
cliff face at whatever youthful age. It's actually bananas that they were able to do that. Maybe
there are other things at that time that they could rely on, but they didn't have the internet
and all this information. They didn't have Stack Overflow to debug.
They didn't have all this entrepreneurship advice.
They had nothing.
They had to invent all of that, right?
It's crazy.
But once that became more of a process, it smoothed it out.
A third example is just the fact of the US, for example, in the 1800s, all of this terrain out west was something that a new kind of founder was possible.
You know, basically someone who'd go out there and found a new community.
Of course, you know, like there are battles between the, you know, the U.S. state and the American Indians and so on.
But the very concept that one could actually go and do that was not something that was there before.
And, you know, this is something where, is something where I talk about this in the book.
Like some people will say, oh, my God, that was so terrible and so on.
And it's like there were actually a bunch of wars between different Indian tribes and
so on before the Westerners came in.
And this was-
It wasn't a peaceful existence.
It was not a peaceful existence.
It was like tribes N plus one and N plus two and N plus three coming in.
And had the American Indians,
Native Americans had, you know, sufficient technology, oceanic navigation, there's,
there's, you know, Harry Turtledove, and others have written alternate histories of how they
would colonize Europe, right? Just like the Mongols, when they had, you know, advanced
technology, you know, over the Europeans kind of came into Europe, just like, you know, various
Arab civilizations, they took Andalusia and what have you. So that's not something which is like good or bad. I just say that because we're like, Oh, my God, you know, you know, uh um arab civilizations they took andalusia and what have you so that's not
something which is like good or bad i just say that because we're like oh my god you know you
know like the the us expansion imperialism yes yeah if the new americans had had the technology
they would have expanded and because you know it's human nature yeah that's right so leaving that
part aside just to answer that for a bit this this politico-economic climate allowed a new kind of
founder and uh you know what now another example is something which is sort of a founder-driven this politico-economic climate allowed a new kind of founder.
And, you know, what now another example of something which is sort of founder driven thing is Elon showed that space innovation is actually possible.
Okay, like literally nobody thought of space as something that you could feasibly do
in the 2000s.
Like you're going to compete with NASA.
Good luck, right?
That was, well, I mean, that was, that was my focus for that decade, right. With the X, with the original X prize.
So this is my question. There are areas in the world today. Uh, and these are the basics,
uh, increasing access to food, right? We are post COVID there. The world food program is,
is being slayed to try and supply. I i mean there's more people starving in so many
different ways access to fertilizer access to water shelter health care all of these things
and for me listen i'm a techno optimist i fully agree i'm not going to solve with policy
and the world's not going to become smarter overnight i'm going to solve this with technology
i'm going to dematerialize demonetize and democratize stuff and make more food, water, energy available.
So I am on a mission to try and get entrepreneurs to focus on these things,
where I say the world's biggest problems are the world's biggest business opportunities.
They want to become a billionaire, help a billion people. So I'm just curious,
how would you drive innovation area? I'm using prizes, but are there other elements
that will create the right situation where entrepreneurs are focusing in? And importantly
as well, capital is coming in. Is there any kind of a role for venture capital for uplifting
humanity, for like, you know, making the world a better place so to
speak yeah i mean the thing is i think vc has to get into i mean it is kind of already there but
um content why because basically uh just talk about this for a second the current media media is upstream of all of this stuff
right media is the software that scripts the minds just like code is what scripts the machines
and so or scripts the minds in a negative way as well as a positive way correct that's right
and so all of these visions we have of the future are typically dystopian black mirror. And we want is not utopian, but positive bright sun,
you want a bright sun rather than a black mirror. And there's so many structural things that go into
this. I talked about this in the purpose of technology article, but I'll give a few.
The first is the fundamental incentives have to be changed. Because right now,
traditional media is about page views, prestige and or profit. And that seems like so obvious, how would you ever get away from that?
But page views mean you're attracting the most number of viewers, right? You're optimizing for
a mass audience. Prestige means you're trying to impress the kind of people who hand out Pulitzers.
And profit is very much short-term profit where if it bleeds, it leads, and you're just trying to
juice the numbers. And it's often something where you're incentivized to make it much more sensational or what have you right do you know what cnn stands
for uh go ahead cable news network no what is it yeah no the crisis news network crisis news
network exactly or the or the constantly negative news network yeah you know the summer of sharks
or whatever right whatever it is they're gonna you know add some spice to it it's literally
how many people do people sharks kill every year on the
average, I don't know, it's like 10 or something less than that.
Seven, seven. Yeah, it's on that order. Right? Exactly. And so
it's something where huge problems are not included. And
small problems are magnified, because it's not a dashboard.
It's on a numerical dashboard. It's a verbal thing, right? Like
a like a CEO does not manage their company by anecdote. You
know, I mean, the qualitative
can be helpful, don't get me wrong, but you also have the quantitative and the quantitative is
almost completely missing from many of these things. You don't have like, you don't have a
dashboard that's showing the tracking of certain problems over time. People don't have a sense of
the relative magnitude of let's say, I don't know, meth addiction versus shark attacks. It might
occupy similar space in their heads, right? Okay. So, so basically how would you get away from this
page use prestige and profit? Well, if you start with not trying to write content for the most,
but for the best, okay. So you're writing an article, which is meant to attract the next Zuck.
All right. And, or the next Vitalik or what have you. And so you're not writing it for just millions
of people to understand it necessarily. You're writing it. You're also not writing in a sycophantic PR way. It's a third way where
you're describing a problem and issues. You're not attacking people unnecessarily. You're saying,
here's a potential constructive solution, and if you're building something here,
just like we were just doing where we said, you know, we want to improve longevity. Here's the
things that are out there. I think a critical thing would be something that estimates age from
face. Here's a link at the bottom. We'll fund you. Okay? So you have content, which is investable content, right?
We have the credible capital and so on to do that. Somebody comes, we fund them, we see if it works,
right? And we may take the best of 10 or best of 100. This is the ex-fund rather than ex-prize
kind of model, very similar, right? Okay. You put out like sort of a pilot light and then you have
folks swim to that, right? Or a magnet. So that is the best rather than the most. So you're not doing page
views per se. You're doing that one person that comes that makes you $10 million rather than 10
million views. Prestige, rather than going for what is considered important by consensus today,
you're going for what is considered important by like societal
consensus in 10 years. The contrarian thing, for example, that Peter Thiel is known for,
it's actually overstated because it's not meant to be contrarian forever. It's meant to be
contrarian today, make a non-consensus decision, and then it's proven consensus in five or 10 or
15 years. If you're always non-consensus, you haven't won. You're an outlier. Yeah. then it's proven consensus in five or 10 or 15 years. If you're always non-consensus,
you haven't won. You're an outlier. Yeah. So it's temporary contrarian, right? You are essentially
somebody who's giving something here where you think it's underpriced, and then it's going to
come to its high bar, right? Yeah. The way I describe that is the day before something is
truly a breakthrough, it's a crazy idea, right? But it will eventually be a breakthrough. That's right. And of course, there's some crazy
ideas that remain crazy ideas. And we are the ones I think who can maybe hopefully parse through
that. If you have some technical background, you can parse it. Okay. And then the third is profit
rather than the short-term profit of, you know, there's a war or a famine or something. You have
the long-term patient profit of in 10 years, this problem is actually solved rather than have a lot of, you know, like traffic around, you know, exaggerating a problem, right? And so that's a
different model. That is the VC model of content, right? Where you put out a proposal, you attract
the best, not the most, you're proven right, but over the long-term rather than the short-term,
and you make money over the long-term rather than the short term, and you make money over the long term, rather than the short term. And that can fund an enormous amount of content that can fund movies, I believe, that can fund an entire parallel content industry that is positive some, as opposed to negative some and sensationalist, right?
It's interesting, your previous company, a 16 z is, is heading towards media play as well, right?
Yeah, they've got future.com and so on.
Yeah.
And I think this is something where we're going to see several different efforts on this.
We've seen, you know, kind of tech substacks.
Like my book is kind of another version, right? So we've got newsletters, podcasts, books.
I think the next level is we want to do movies video games all this stuff
and you make them quote free to play and you're not monetizing in game you're not monetizing
you know in the movie for example think about the social network movie you you know the one
from 2010 right okay so that was an interesting movie because um even though sorkin sort of tried to make
Zuck look bad in the movie,
he still, he couldn't help
but show the Nietzschean aspect of it, right?
Like how incredible it was
to build something from nothing to something,
being sued by all these people
at the same time and so on, right?
And, you know, I'm not taking any sides
in any of that, you know,
like all those folks have all settled
or whatever, right?
But the point basically being that there was something heroic about that, and that did inspire.
It's a flawed hero.
Okay, fine, in the movie.
But it's heroic nonetheless and inspired a lot of people to do this.
Welcome to the human race.
Welcome to the human race.
That's right.
And of course, the movie was highly fictionalized, and Zuck himself has disputed many of the characterizations of it.
And I think he's probably right about that.
But point being that if you look at Box Office Mojo, do you know how much that movie made?
No, I'll guess two and a half billion dollars.
No, much less than that.
Okay.
How much?
Worldwide gross 220.
Okay.
Right.
That's obviously that's pretty good right but it's actually in my view it's a fraction if that movie had been free and if there had been something
which and like even just that movie right and forget the better version for a second and there
being a fund that had funded it and then there was a call to action link at the end which was
we will fund your startup if
you're inspired by this movie easily would have generated more than 220 million you know how many
startups were inspired by the social network like absolutely insane number of things over the last
decade so these are these are business model changes for sure right which is where the most
interesting stuff is happening right now that's right and the reason these are important is it's
true yes it changes the economics but also changes the alignment and the incentives now you imagine okay uh you know for example there's another movie called the
founder about the founder of mcdonald's have you ever seen that i have yes okay it's quite good
right and so there's relatively small and then there's one which is like um gosh it's about the
uh yeah joy right um that's like you know uh also quite good right about um you know so joy or the
founder or the social network there's actually a lot of drama involved in building any large
business actually very difficult from the beginning there's a lot of risk and stuff right
and a bunch a bunch of the recent you know the fictionalization of of uber and uh and we were
being hostile yeah yeah they've been hostile and it's it's the uh but it's still
it's a fascinating journey exactly so well you know the thing is i've i've uh resisted watching
some of these recent ones simply because it's just like all right another thing which they're
you know i mean like the u.s media calling other people frauds is actually kind of bananas after Walter Durante and Edgar Snow and John Reed and all these guys, right?
But coming back, these are all the guys who enabled various communist dictators, covered
up famines, right?
I agree with you.
Coming back to if you were going to drive, so again, my ability to impact the world is
to inspire entrepreneurs to make
a change, right?
The ability, entrepreneurs are individuals who find a great problem and solve it.
The more entrepreneurs solving problems, the better the world is and focusing them on the
problems that create wealth.
Like the biggest problems are the biggest business opportunities, but also are uplifting
humanity because a world in which a mom knows her kids have access to the
best education and healthcare, food, water, energy is a more peaceful world. And I want to know,
do you, do you think about that? Do you think about that? Cause you have a voice to influence
individuals and, and you're in, and the network state in part is, is about driving innovation,
but do you think about directing innovation in a way
that's making the world better? And I want to, I want to, and so what's your, what's your message
to those entrepreneurs listening? Because I, the, excuse me to all the people who build photo
sharing apps out there, but my, my, my comment is, you know, do something that makes the world
a better place and don't build another photo sharing app.
I use photo sharing apps.
I like them.
I'm just trying to say I don't need another one.
Right, right, right.
So it's tricky because let me give a partial, completely understanding your critique of photo sharing apps, let me give a partial defense of them, right?
And that's, okay.
Can we focus on what you would do to focus people there? I will, I will. that's okay. Can we focus on the, on the, what you would do to
focus people there? Let's assume there is a defense. I agree there is a defense. But I'll
give it a counterintuitive defense. Counterintuitive defense is photo sharing apps and things of that
nature are building a remote society where people are now able to disconnect from the land around
them. That builds cloud communities that can eventually shape regulation on the earth.
This is how bits unlock innovation in atoms, okay?
And the speed of innovation
and permissionless innovation.
All of those things.
You have to essentially build
enough moral strength in the cloud
to descend like lightning bolt
and then clear the underbrush
so that people can build there.
You have to actually build that community of like mind
that can have enough policy influence to just move the laws out of the way and allow founders to
found. And photo sharing apps are actually along that continuum. This is something I talk about in
the network state book, right? It's not just photo sharing apps, obviously it's Slack and it's Zoom
and it's this, it's the Riverside stuff, it's remote work. So I think of what they're doing
as actually a useful precursor for what is fundamentally
important, which is the innovation in atoms, right?
Without thinking about it, they've actually built a subunit that helps us get towards
that because they built this cloud community that can reshape the land.
Okay.
Now to innovation in atoms.
The fundamental prerequisite is actually, in my view, not necessarily technological.
It is moral.
prerequisite is actually, in my view, not necessarily technological. It is moral. That is,
we just have to convince enough people of the moral rightness of what we're doing. You know,
you know, the thing where people will attack tech guys, they'll say, oh, you thought so much about whether you could, you didn't think about whether you should. Oh, right. You know, that thing from
the flip side of that is if there's a will, there's a way. Okay. If we can convince people, for example, that longevity is the most important thing that
you can work on, that universal healthcare is not enough, that we need eternal life,
right?
That's not just enough to share, to move some mashed potatoes around the plate for like,
you know, like to get plus two years, but you actually need to like really solve the
problem rather than pretend to solve the problem, right?
Getting that degree of moral alignment
of even a thousand like really, really intense, zealous activists, then the market will exist
because the policies, the laws are moved out of the way. And so you've cleared the underbrush and
it is now feasible to build. That's how I kind of think about it. Actually, you know, we have a
century of innovation in biomedicine that with the right zone,
which is the right special economic zone, like essentially a post-FDA zone, not a regulation
free zone.
People always think I say regulation free.
What I mean is actually something that is to the FDA what Bitcoin was to the Fed, a
better replacement, a better reviewer, something with, as we talked about earlier, better type
one and type two. Okay. Without the, without the biases that,
that unfortunately restrict innovation that is, is how can I put it?
You don't want to become, you don't want to just,
if you're the expert in a field,
you don't want that field disrupted since you're no longer the expert in it.
Right. Exactly.
How do you build a cloud regulator that is better than these land regulators
that can use information from millions of people around the world to get a better type one and type
two decision or rather, sorry, lower type one and type two error rates, a better binary
classifier for approving things.
Okay.
So if you have these various special economic zones or call them special innovation zones,
because they're more about regulation than taxes per se.
Okay.
If you have these different zones, we would like, I actually don't think tech is a barrier. You know, the Banting and Best, I mentioned them earlier. Are you familiar with
that example? Right? Basically, Banting and Best, 19, you know, early 1920s, they had the idea for
insulin supplementation. And, you know, once they had the concept, they did experiments on dogs,
it seemed to work. Then they did experiments on themselves. Didn't seem to cause big issues.
Then they had volunteer patients and people were like jumping out of bed.
Whoa, this is actually working.
Once they had that data, then within two years, Eli Lilly had scale production for the entire
North American continent and they'd won a Nobel Prize.
That was when pharma moved at the speed of software, when it was willing doctor, willing
patient.
Banting and Best in Canada, there's hospitals named after them.
They're Nobel laureates, okay?
They're not like fly by night.
This shows, remember the seen and unseen
that you talked about earlier, right?
This shows what is unseen,
the biomedical innovation we could have.
You know, I put it like,
this could be us, but you regulating, okay?
You know, like this could be us, but you playing, whatever.
It's like an online meme.
And right, so this could be us, but you regulating.
We could all be super fit we
could be you know we could have longer life uh all kinds of diseases could be cured if we could
somehow unlock this pent up you know because all this stuff is in is in research you constantly
hear stanford scientists discover harvard scientists do this all the stuff you see and it's
this giant wall that we could just unlock and just give some more kind of flesh on the bones,
more examples that might make that more credible.
In 2010, it turned out that it was taxi and hotel regulations
that were holding back hundreds of billions of dollars in value.
Okay, who'd have thought that was actually the big thing?
But that's Uber, that's Airbnb, that's abroad,
that's Grab and Gojek and Didi and so on, right?
This Lyft.
And then it turned out that it was the financial regulations, SEC, CFTC, you know, et cetera,
that were holding back trillions of dollars in crypto and Web3, okay?
And so the FDA and the entire US medical establishment is holding back tens of trillions
of dollars.
The reason I say dollars is it's at least a quantifiable metric.
It frankly understates the value that we're talking about.
Because we have, we have lives at stake. We have time at stake here, right? Which is almost,
yeah, that's right. So I want to, I'm going to, I want to hit on three conversations before I
overstay my welcome here. And they're, And they're important for me to think about.
Lightning round.
The lightning round, yes.
So it's a question I ask everybody on this podcast.
If I were to say, listen, Balaji,
I'm going to fund any XPRIZE you want.
We're going to launch it.
We're going to run it.
We're going to get the world to focus on it.
What is an XPRIZE challenge? What is something that should exist that doesn't exist
that we should challenge the world to do
or challenge the world to fix?
Do you have any ideas?
What would you want to launch?
So a very simple one,
and I'll put more thought into this,
but one that I think would have immediate benefit
is the longevity predictor phone app, right?
Very simple.
Remember the photo sharing stuff we talked about?
It's actually on a continuum with this.
Yeah, it is.
It's a prizable, yeah.
It's a totally prizable thing
where basically you hold up the thing
and it estimates your current age
and it predicts how many years you have to live.
And then it says,
here's all the interventions you can do to boost that.
I think that'd be,
so that would solve several different things.
First is it's core science, right?
The algorithm should be open source.
The data set is the hardest part.
You need those photos of people who've passed away, okay?
So you get that data set,
like clip, for example, was a very important thing.
Often in machine learning,
it's getting the data set together
that's a hard part more than the actual, you know, training of the algorithm. So the hard part, the prize would come for the
data set, which is the less sexy part. Okay. That's totally open, right? So once you've got
that, once you've got lots of photos of people with very good birth date, data photo, death date,
and maybe a lot of photos through their life. So you've got endpoints, right? Facebook, frankly,
has a job. Facebook itself could probably do this, because now that it's
almost 20 years old, it's got a lot of photos of people who have passed away. They're like later
in life, okay. But and of course, there's going to be some where they died of an accident or
something like that, you might, you might filter that out, right? But if they died from old age,
okay. So that that alone has many different qualities. It's, it's something which is
incredibly quantitative, right? Totally, you know,'s something which is incredibly quantitative, right?
Totally, you know, deterministic, how many days, right?
It is something which you can put in an app and package in a way that people instantly
understand.
They hold up the phone, they see it.
It will go viral.
It will stimulate.
You can have it have lots of education in there, which is get metformin, get this, get
that, et cetera.
Okay.
And then it's just
that thing alone becomes a jumping off point for longevity distribution. It's also, it's also
potentially a good business to do. It's a good business, but that's a different, if someone's
doing this, then get in touch with me and Peter on Twitter, if you're listening to this podcast,
we will, we will probably fund this if you're, if you're interested in this, or we can do a prize
for it. Yeah, absolutely. What's another area that you care deeply about that you might want to launch a prize?
And I'm not asking, I'm not, I'm not pitching you on launching a prize. I'm just trying to,
yeah, it's, it's like, you know, sometimes a great idea is more valuable than the cash.
Okay. So investigative journalism on the American regulatory state.
Okay. Why? This is actually upstream of lots and lots of stuff to an extent
that people don't get. Essentially, the, you know, for example, most people cannot even name somebody
at the Department of the Interior, or, you know, the FDA, right? And, and yet you can name all the
people who run giant tech companies. Right? And so there isn't a face.
There are people who are making decisions here.
There's something called harmonization.
Regulatory harmonization is the single most important problem to solve in technology,
in my view.
What is harmonization?
It is the process by which unelected and unfireable and anonymous US regulators impose regulation.
Are driving everything.
Yeah. They choke off regulation for the entire world.
And the way to think about it is just like a small company
might use Facebook login
rather than implementing login themselves,
a small country, okay,
might outsource their regulation to the U.S.
They've got 10 million people in, you know,
the Czech Republic or something like that.
Well, and they do that.
Many nations follow the FDA, the FAA's guidance.
Yes.
And this is the alliance of actually, it is, quote, big government, but it's also big pharma.
Why?
It makes sense if you're a businessman because you spend all this effort getting an FDA approval,
right?
And then you don't want to get a zillion other approvals from all these other countries around
the world with their own PICAUN regulations. Instead, what you want is one
approval, one bar to clear, and then you've got a common market worldwide, right? So that puts both
the FDA and the lobbyists from pharma on the same side in all these countries, pushing to standardize
and harmonize and so on. And, you know, the thing is that there's probably some point where that's
like, you can argue that was net good, where it's something like, you know, the whole romance of the three kingdoms thing,
the empire long divided must unite, long united must divide. There's something good to like a
global scalable uniform thing. That's what the app store is. That's what Google play is. And
then you want to bring it back, bring it back to the, bring it back to the idea on the regulators here.
Right.
So the prize would be, which is different than your normal thing, because it's not for
technological innovation.
It's for essentially the thing that's upstream of that would be like the Pulitzer Prize,
except it is for examples of regulatory abuse.
So we're incentivizing reporters to dig deep and find, basically, there's a watchdog prize on regulators.
Yes, because, just to put more flesh on the bones here, more detail, regulators have something called the Douglas factors, which are like Miranda rights for federal employees.
They basically can't be fired except if they bring the agency into disrepute.
except if they bring the agency into disrepute.
And what that means is anybody who's,
if you try to fire someone and you're within a regulatory agency,
they don't get fired.
They start appealing.
They're in the corner there.
They're waiting.
They're telling everybody,
oh my God, you're so bad for trying to fire me.
It's this huge process.
And so essentially these folks can't be fired.
They have tenure, okay, career tenure.
They're anonymous.
The US media is not going after them, or, you know,
holding them accountable, quote, unquote. And they exert enormous power over the entire world.
And most citizens, you know, somebody in the Czech Republic doesn't even realize often that
they're actually under the control of somebody in Silver Spring, Maryland, right? This is why,
for example, with the vaccines, like we could have had the COVID vaccine within days. Moderna,
you know, could have taken the sequence and turned into a vaccine. And we could have had
challenge trials where healthy people could have volunteered to go and be exposed to the virus
after first get the vaccine, and then in a monitored environment, be exposed to the virus
and see what happened. What biology is talking about here is that when the virus was deciphered,
was sequenced and sent from Wuhan to labs around the world, 24 hours later,
Moderna had basically an mRNA vaccine designed. Yes. And a challenge trial is the way you get
very rapid data where instead of just, you know, you're basically going to give
people a vaccine, you're going to expose them. And if it protected them, you know, pretty instantly,
whether it works or not. That's exactly right. And so the thing is that basically,
you know, here's the timeline I have, genetic sequence of the coronavirus in January 11th,
the next two days, they, you know, plot out a vaccine, and then you could synthesize it for, you know.
So first, Moderna shot to NIH for testing on February 24th, and volunteers are on March
16th.
You probably could have gotten it even faster with these challenge trials.
But here's the interesting thing.
Literally, the world spent trillions of dollars on lockdown and all these insane things because
they didn't have the moral innovation up front to challenge the FDA's regulatory establishment, right?
Millions of people died.
Trillions of dollars were destroyed because the upstream thing that enough people did not distrust the FDA's judgment.
That's the fundamental.
That's the prize of prizes, right?
Fundamentally, there's been much more investigative journalism on Theranos.
There's multiple documentaries made on that.
But people don't know about all the ridiculous abuses at FDA. Fundamentally, there's been much more investigative journalism on Theranos. There's multiple documentaries made on that.
But people don't know about all the ridiculous abuses at FDA. For example, the fact that, just as another example, during the pandemic, they held back EUA's emergency use authorizations for testing, which meant that people didn't know the extent of the pandemic since there wasn't any testing.
there wasn't any testing. And actually, folks in Seattle, I believe, had to do civil disobedience and had their lab go and test for COVID to show that it was actually on the loose in the US.
And that was somewhere they dissipated the FDA, and they could have like, you know,
the FDA is the regulatory police, they could have been thrown in jail for this. Okay.
So this is similar to NSFAUP, delegitimize the FDA, right? There's actually, if you want a whole set of stuff,
right? This is a deep rabbit hole to talk about, but so true. And so getting back to your prize
idea, this is about a watchdog for regulatory abuse. Like the Pulitzer Prize. It's a different
kind of Pulitzer Prize, right? Yeah. So it is. I like the actual, I like the prize of more rapid vaccine development as well.
That's right.
And there's some of these things, for example, where we have some of the threads that we
talked about, right?
Like, you know, this is 10 years old and this has like dozens and dozens and dozens of examples
from across the regulatory state, right?
If you just scroll through this, okay.
And by the way, I even talked about the photo sharing stuff
in here for 10 years.
So NHTSA, NHTSA ban on self-driving cars,
the harassment of Uber and Tesla,
like, you know, car dealerships couldn't sell direct.
John Carmack talking about his experience
with like Armadillo Aerospace,
you know, like how peers.org
had to like kind of, you know, fight for Airbnb,
drone startups in the FAA, like, just go through this. And if you scroll down a little bit further,
I'll show you a crazy example from FDA. I'm going on like, I don't know, a few more pages on page
page seven, right? That's a screenshot from a lawsuit,
which the FDA filed in 2010, right?
Taking the position,
this is their own lawsuit
that they wrote all the texts for.
There is no right to consume
or feed children any particular food.
There is no generalized right
to bodily and physical health.
There's no fundamental right
to freedom of contract,
meaning you are a slave of the FDA.
You cannot feed your, I mean, just think about this stuff.
It's like completely Orwellian stuff, right?
It's insane.
It's insane.
This is their official position.
You don't, I mean, the way that's marketed to the public is they're protecting you from
the big, bad drug companies.
In actuality, they take a very strong position that you have no control over your own human
body with the exception of-
Well, you don't know enough to have control.'s right no better that's right literally they they say the narrow
substantive due process precedence regarding abortion intimate relations and the refusal of
life-saving medical treatment meaning um the only things that they consider you to have your right
over is abortion euthanasia and uh like you know, intimate relations, right? But that's it, right? So it's not actually
your body, your choice for everything else, right? They've literally taken the position that you do
not have that. You don't even have the right to obtain whatever food you want, right?
Well, this goes back to our original conversation about a, you know, accredited patient that I
should have the right to take whatever meds I want, whether or not they're FDA approved or not.
Here's the thing, a relatively small amount of money here. I meds I want, whether or not they're FDA approved or not. Here's the thing.
A relatively small amount of money here.
I mean, you know, writing is not that expensive.
Calling people is not that expensive.
You know, journalists, quote unquote, are not paid that much, right?
Like, you know, for a relatively small amount of money, you could shine a light on something that people are just totally unaware of, right? These are terrible decisions that are being made totally out of the public eyesight
by folks who are completely unaccountable, who can't be fired,
who aren't subject to an election, who the current media isn't going after,
and who have control over all these people around the world
that have no say in American elections, right?
And it's just easier to keep things the way they are.
And unfortunately, the laws are all written for the incumbents that are funding everything.
That's right.
And so to be absolutely clear, as I mentioned earlier, like pharma and biotech has been
corrupted, in my view, by FDA and is now like a fusion, like this unholy fusion.
I do think of FDA as being upstream.
Normally, the public portrayal is that regulatory capture is that the big bad farm is
upstream of the state. It's actually the other way around because the state has the guns and can
bankrupt any pharma company at any time, right? But it is true that there is an unholy fusion.
And what you need is something from outside the system that, you know, can actually go and shine
a light on this, right? It's a different kind of XPRIZE, a Pulitzer Prize kind of thing for showing the abuses of the American regulatory state
and having them in short 140 second clips
that you can put online
along with a substantive article that accompanies it.
If you did a hundred of those on FDA,
it would change the world.
It'd probably be less than a few million dollars.
That's awesome.
All right, my second question for you.
I posit that mindset is the single most important thing that an entrepreneur has.
More important than their capital, their friends, their technology.
The right mindset is the distinguishing factor between someone who succeeds over and over and over again, like you have.
What mindset do you think has made you most successful?
Well, that's a great question.
What mindset? Something not limited to one. mindset do you think has made you most successful? Well, that's a great question.
What mindset? Something not limited to one. I think about an abundance mindset, a curiosity mindset, an exponential mindset, seeing where the world is going, a moonshot mindset. Maybe
these ring a bell for you. Maybe you have one that you think. But what mindsets do you have
that you think distinguish you and have served you in your successes?
So do you have a concept of the bicameral mind please tell me sure so this is a hypothesis from the
past you know where evidently um people had like uh two two voices in their heads like um it's a
hypothesis that the human mind once operated in a state where there was one part of the brain was speaking a second part which listens and this is how people like actually
thought they heard voices from god or whatever right okay so uh just to take that phrase and
just use it somewhat differently i think you don't need just one mindset you need a bicameral or
multi-cameral mindset i agree with that, by the way. critical, but also nobody else is going to cheerlead for you like you can. And it's like
the Hillel quote, right? Someone similar to the Hillel quote, which is, if I'm not for myself,
who will be for me? If I'm only for myself, who am I? That's a little bit different because it's
like individualism versus collectivism, but at least the first part of that is,
if you're not for yourself, who will you be? Okay. How does that relate here?
I think that you have to, at least for me, what's worked is on the one hand, I think I generally go into things with a, so I've maybe got four mindsets. You know, in India, they call it
Samadana Beda Dandam. Okay. And what does that mean? It's like, roughly, and this is a paraphrase,
and some people will disagree with this paraphrase, and some people will
disagree with this paraphrase, but it is, you start with a smile, and you're trying to figure
out how you can do things in a win-win fashion, right? If that doesn't work, you go to rational
argument, right? It's charts, it's graphs, it's like, this is actually feasible, et cetera, et
cetera, right? If that doesn't work, you have to get political and you go to economic incentives
or political incentives. You might have to go around a particular obstacle or whatever.
And if that doesn't work, well, then you just need the grim determination of just like plowing
through, right? And so those are like the four mindsets of which the last is by far the least
frequent. You always start with positivity, then rationality, then maybe you have to get political
or economic, and then grim determination as like the last step if it's a truly irreconcilable obstacle.
Yeah.
And so that's like four mindsets, you know, quadricameral, quadricameral.
Now, all of that, though, is, you know, maybe there's that fifth, which is what is the goal
in the first place?
And that's, I think, where you have to, it's a combination of both moral and logical
reasoning. You have to be that ideologue first, and you have that North Star that you're working
towards. And everything, at least, that I'm doing in my life works towards that North Star.
And for me, longevity is pretty important. But actually, even longevity is a subroutine
towards an ultimate goal. You know what that is? What is that?
The prime number maze. Have we talked about that?
We haven't yet. Is this sort of a life's purpose?
Yeah. Well, so this is, I think it's Chomsky. I may be misciting this, but the concept is,
and it might be apocryphal, but I like it at least as a thought experiment. A rat can be told to
navigate a maze every second turn, every third turn, et cetera. Okay. But it cannot be taught
to get out of a prime number maze.
That's too abstract. Two, three, five, seven, and you skip nine, you do 11. And so that's too abstract for a rat to navigate. It's not smart enough. In fact, most humans probably couldn't
find their way out of a prime number maze. It's actually pretty abstract. Yeah. And.
Depends how many turns you have to make.
Depends how many turns you have to make. Right. But it's actually like.
And if you have, do you have a calculator with you?
Yeah. Do you have a calculator, et cetera. Right. But, um, you know, the, the thing about a prime number
maze is, it's on the one hand, it's a great mental model, because it's such a simple pattern.
But also so far, it's so close, and yet so far, right? And so the structure of our reality,
is it is there some shimmering order in front of us
that is the equivalent of a prime number maze? Why live longer so that I can understand that,
right? So I can understand the structure of the universe, so I can get smarter with AI or
whatever to be able to understand that prime number maze. That's the kind of purpose,
that's the kind of thing that drives me. I love that. I love that a lot. And yeah, well, you know, if we had a few more hours, I'd dive into the conversation
of are we living in a simulation?
Zero or one?
Yes or no?
I think you can model things as being as if it's in a simulation because physical law
is so incredibly predictive.
I mean, the fact that physical laws exist and it's not random,
that you've got time invariant laws is amazing, right? But, you know, the weak form is physical,
the weak form of the simulation hypothesis is... I know it is. I'm asking your opinion.
Yeah. I guess I believe in the weak form in the sense of you can model reality as conforming to a simulation in the sense that physical laws do predict events.
I don't necessarily believe in, I don't believe in the strong form, which is therefore there's a simulator and we're all in a box and mine's in a box and so on and so forth.
I think that's too much of a jump, right?
In case you're curious, I think without question, we're living in a simulation and it wouldn't change anything that I do day to day. So it doesn't really matter. I mean, the, the, the, the challenge is,
does it, you know, you can, you can, you can choose whichever you want, but it's not going
to change, but that's not where I want to go. And in our final number three in our lightning round
here, I want to go into a topic that I'm focused on and thinking about a lot, which is philanthropy. And I want to close on this because I think it's
important. There is so much capital locked up, you know, trillions of dollars of wealth sort of
sitting on the sideline. And, you know, I talked about, and I was just speaking at the Forbes 400 conference in New York.
And it's like, you know, you've got the giving pledge on one end where people are giving their money, half their money while they're alive to philanthropy.
It's like, you can't take it with you.
So I'm not sure what the giving pledge is about anyway.
But how do we get people of means to use that capital to really make a dent in the universe, to really transform.
And yeah, I know a lot of wealthy people, as do you. And some of them like Elon or Martin
Rothblatt, or even Mark Benioff, Eric Schmidt are like reinvesting it and betting it all and
taking big bets and moving the world forward.
And a lot of people are just unfortunately sitting on it and having it just earn more
money for them. And I find that challenging at best. Your thoughts on that?
So I think the money should go towards starting new countries, reopening the frontier, longevity,
should go towards starting new countries, reopening the frontier, longevity, you know,
all of this kind of stuff that I talked about in the Network State book, optimalism, you know,
basically pushing the limits of technology and science.
I agree.
Broadly reopening the frontier. And I actually think that that's also probably the wealth maximizing thing,
not simply the human flourishing optimizing thing, because, you know, you're going to get 1% interest or something like that. How are you going to get like, how are you going to multiply a billion dollars? Well, longevity is actually the kind of thing that could do that, right? That could get you 1000x on a billion dollars, right?
Yes.
And new countries.
As is starting a new country, right? Starting new countries could get you $1,000x on a billion dollars. There's very few things that you can think of that could get you that much of a multiplier
on a huge amount of money.
And the $38 trillion fact, that's a great number.
I'm going to go and look at that and dig into it.
But I wouldn't be surprised that it's of the order of trillions for every extra year you
could add.
So it's both the thing to do that I think is the right thing to do and the economically
right thing to do. We just need to make people... Honestly, it's both the thing to do that I think is the right thing to do and the economically right thing to do.
We just need to make people, honestly, it's raising awareness, right?
It's making people aware that it's morally just, morally imperative to do it.
If you believe in universal health care, you believe in eternal life, or you should, right?
And if not, there's something inconsistent in your world.
You might just want state power as opposed to actually wanting to solve the problem,
right?
So A. B is that it's feasible to do so. So first, that it's desirable. Second, that it's feasible. Third,
that it's profitable. We've got all of those. We just need to make that case.
I'm curious, starting a new country, what about the immune reaction from the rest of the world?
So I think it's a great question. And I think three or four things on that,
because I've thought about this a lot, and we're going to put this into V2 of the book.
And I think three or four things on that, because I've thought about this a lot, and we're going to put this into V2 of the book.
The first is that something like this will have advocates and not.
And the reception to the book has been incredibly positive.
Like relative to 10 years ago, when I put some of these same concepts out there, I've been kind of talking about this continuously for a while.
Patrick Friedman, who's worked on seasteading, has as well.
There's a few people, just like cryptocurrencies,
for a long time, they sort of bounced around the bottom, right?
If you go back, there's Xiaomi and eCash,
and there's guys who talked about in the 90s,
and there's stuff in the early 2000s.
It's kind of just bounced around the bottom.
It didn't really have any traction.
And then Satoshi, and then whoop, just kind of went exponential, right?
I feel we're at that moment now.
The network state, we haven't that moment now. You know, the network state,
and you know, we haven't talked about it that much here, but people can read about it,
the networkstate.com. I've got a little movie, you know, NASDAILY has something,
how to start a new country, which has gotten millions of views over the last few days.
And this concept of starting a new country is now actually feasible.
I think that it took a long time to go from capital G Google to lowercase Googling like a search.
It took a long time to go from capital Uber to lowercase Ubering,
you know, traveling around.
It took like days.
Verbalizing.
Exactly, becoming lowercase.
It took days, weeks for the capital N network state
to become lowercase network state.
If you go to Twitter and you just put network state in quotes, it's out there.
It's gotten injected into the bloodstream.
The concept is out there.
People understand that this is now something that's technologically feasible to basically assemble a social network in the cloud, to have it crowdfund territory around the world, and to eventually gain diplomatic recognition.
I have proof points for each of those things, including the last, which is- How far are we from that happening the first time? What's your under-over prediction on
this? This is the goal for my next 10 years. Basically, by 23, I think it is possible. I'm
not saying, this is a thing where I think it's possible. I'm not saying it's deterministic or
anything like that. I think we have to try and it may not work. But I think it took about 13, 12 years from Bitcoin in 2009 to El Salvador
recognizing Bitcoin as a national currency in 2021. Okay. I think that by 2032, 2033,
we could have the first diplomatically recognized network state. So about 10 years from now,
right? And that's a goal that I want to shoot for. And I think it's about the
same timeframe as the El Salvador recognition of Bitcoin as a national currency, or Wyoming's
recognition of Ethereum as like something you can use to incorporate companies in Wyoming now,
the so-called Dow Law. And that's my goal for the next 10 years is, I mean, not make a billion
dollars, but start one new country. Yeah, I think that's beautiful.
And the beautiful thing about what you've outlined in your book,
and it's thenetworkstate.com.
Thenetworkstate.com with the the.
We might get a shorter URL at some point, but go ahead.
Yeah.
And please go check it out.
When's the Audible coming out?
Next year.
I'm working on that now.
Actually, I'm working on a huge refurbishing of the whole book and so on.
So a lot of great stuff will happen next year.
I honestly do think of this version as a V1.
But the V2, I think, will be pretty cool.
Well, the beautiful thing, of course, is the concept is can go exponential, meaning there's no limitation uh to the number of network states
that can come into existence you know i've often said i you know you and i had this conversation i
had a meeting years ago about how we go starting your country uh and it was less seasteading and
less going into space it was more making buying a country uh but you have to defend that country.
Sure.
Right?
Which is the biggest challenge in turning it into an ideal medical state.
So I'm going to go back to the question of the first network of state is created.
It's demonstrated, number two, three, four, five.
And, you know, hundreds could come into existence very quickly.
Yeah.
So, by the way, on the defense thing, by the way, just to quickly comment on that,
in the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991,
the reason that that happened as peacefully as it did
is the tanks did not fire on Yeltsin in Red Square.
Why did they not fire?
They had the guns,
but the moral argument had been won.
The blue jeans and the rock and roll
and Coca-Cola images of that.
Those Soviet tank commanders no longer felt they had moral legitimacy, so they didn't pull the trigger.
And so that's really the way, you know, I think people really underestimate the power of moral legitimacy and moral delegitimization.
That's one of the major takeaways I'm taking from this conversation we
had today is that the power of the moral argument, both for entrepreneurs, for investors, for anyone
who wants to make change in the world, rather than for the sake of change, having a clear moral
argument for why this is important for humanity. Yes. And this is implicit in what we do, but we're
so focused on true and false and profitable and
unprofitable that we take the moral argument as implicit. Of course, it's better to live longer,
of course, but we actually need to focus on that as explicit and run tracking polls to show that
we're winning with the key demographics that matter, with policymakers, with the public at
large, with entrepreneurs and with folks in media. And we don't necessarily need to win 99.1,
but we need to get it to at least 30, 70 or 50, 50
so that there's like a clear case for this.
And because good bad is upstream of true, false
and profitable and profitable.
If someone argues something is bad,
you can't just go back and argue that it's true.
They'll say it's bad that it's true.
Shut up, right? And, you know, or go back and argue that it's true. They'll say it's bad that it's true. Shut up. And, you know, or it's, it's, it's bad, but it's profitable. So you can't say,
like gambling or whatever is really good, right? You've lost the moral argument. If you're doing
it, you're like, well, it makes money, blah, blah, you're not, you know, if you can't win
morally, you can't win. And so have to win morally first. And this is just a new register for us to
speak about. But for example, you don't just get
the technology for self-driving cars to work. You make little movies that talk about how many people
died from preventable car deaths, right? And we can do this now with AI video. Hollywood is being
disrupted. It's being decentralized. That's happening now. That last hammerlock, that last
fortification has fallen, right? Yes, for sure.
Stable fusion is a world historical event
because it means that anybody can now tell high quality stories.
Persuasion has now been decentralized, right?
So we tell the stories that show why it's imperative
to have self-driving cars.
It causes less death.
Why it's imperative to have a successor to the FDA
that's a decentralized tech forward version
because of all the drugs
that are being held back.
Why we need this stuff.
And I think then we can win.
Yeah, it's a beautiful thing.
Last question.
I'm super curious.
Organizing principle around the first network state.
If you had a betting man, if you were going to start, and you probably will, is there
an organizing theme?
Yes.
So at least for me, and I'm willing to build,
and the point of the Network State book, by the way,
is it's a toolbox, not a manifesto.
Yes, it's open source for the world to follow suit.
That's right. And in particular, I want to build a large coalition
where there's lots of people who get their own network states
and their own vision of the good. There could be folks who have a Christian one or
a Jewish one, or there could be a vegan and a carnivory one, which are both incompatible with
each other, but potentially both improvements on the establishment, right? So there's folks who
want Catalonian network states because they're in Catalonia, they want to speak their language.
There's folks who, you know, there's all kinds of different things,
which they want, right? So I'm willing to build and want to build a large coalition of millions,
maybe billions of people. What is my personal goal? I want to get us to the, you know, to unlock all
this biomedical innovation, right? How do we actually have all this stuff that could benefit humanity that's
being held back by the American regulatory state and by the big pharma companies and biotech
companies? How do we actually unlock that? And so that large coalition is alignment where a lot of
other people get what they want, and then we get longevity and other things, and we build essentially
a political coalition that enables that. Count me in on your network state. Have you given it a name yet?
I have a name for it, but I don't want to unwrap it just yet. We'll see. We'll see.
The future is uncertain. It may turn out that I end up, you know, catalyzing the formation of other network states and, you know, versus driving one of my own. I don't know yet.
But I do think that the first step was to establish the feasibility of starting a new country. And we've done that. That's actually the amazing
thing. That's amazing take home to me over the last three months. You can see it on Twitter.
You put a network state. This is a thing. It's going to happen. The internet doesn't stop. It's
not just starting new companies and new communities and new currencies. We're going to start new
countries and it's going to be easier to start a new country than to form the fda just like it's easy it really is greenfield operations to reinvent that which could be in order to get
rid of the establishment which was uh is a beautiful place to go by the way it's going to
be one of the it's it's adding an accelerant or an exponential to the exponential yes right yes
yeah that's right um and you know maybe we can unlock that. All right.
I love that. Thank you for your time, buddy. Where do people find you?
Go to these days. Yeah. The network state.com. And for me personally, I'm at twitter.com.
Bala GS B a L a J I S. A pleasure, my friend. I look forward to continue the conversation on
X fund on longevity. Anyway, thank you. Have a beautiful day. A pleasure, my friend. I look forward to continuing the conversation on XFund,
on longevity. Anyway, thank you. Have a beautiful day. Thank you, sir. Okay. Bye-bye. See ya.